There was an article about Japanese curry in the New York Times Magazine this weekend. It's got a recipe, but that's a lot of work since I can buy pints of curry sauce to bring home directly from Go Go Curry on 38th Street in Manhattan.
I am interested, though, in trying to make something like the red pickles they serve as a side dish at Go Go Curry: fukuzinzuke. A Google search doesn't come up with many recipes, but this one is simple and promising, and this one looks interesting. We've got two daikons to use still, even after I made the Korean pickles from Quick Pickles.
Monday, October 27, 2008
Sunday, October 26, 2008
Molto radicchio
Sunday, October 19, 2008
End of Salad Days
Monday, October 13, 2008
Jim and Monika Lasagna
Ok, not really, but at their wedding recently the food was really good. The thing I wanted to make at home, though....? Butternut squash and mushroom lasagna. Here's my first attempt, informed by this recipe on epicurious and a number of its commenters, and also by my very vague memory of theirs. Kels says it had less squash and more sauce (this actually makes roughly one cup more sauce than I used tonight). No doubt he's right. For reasons that aren't clear, I loved the lasagna at the wedding but didn't pay as much attention as I normally would have to ingredients and how it was put together. Probably the good company and fun time we were having, but my attempt at re-creating it is now suffering.
Sorry for the rough recipe, but hey, this is what you get when I really do it off of the top of my head.
Start with two butternut squash. I don't know how many pounds, because our scale only works when it wants to, which is rarely when I want it to. Biggish. You know, a little more than average. Cut them in half, scoop out the seeds, and roast them. Scrape out the innards. Melt about 3 T. butter in a saucepan, put in the innards, with about 5 frozen chicken stock cubes (ice cube tray sized) and heat everything up. Puree with a stick blender. Add water as necessary. Season with a fair amount of cayenne pepper and freshly-grated nutmeg, a moderate amount of ground ginger, a dash of ground clove, and salt to taste. Cook until pretty thick. Cool. You should have what looks to be way more than you need.
Chop a Vidalia onion fairly finely, and clean and slice 10 ounces of crimini/portabello mushrooms. Mince two cloves of garlic. Melt 3 T. butter in a pan over medium, gently sauteeing onions for several minutes. Add garlic, a very generous sprinkling of thyme, salt and pepper, and saute for another minute. Add mushrooms and cook for a long time, until most of the liquid cooks off. Set aside.
Make a bechamel sauce with 4 T. butter, 4 T. flour, and 3 cups milk. Stir in about a half pound of shredded fontina cheese.
Shred about a pound of mozzarella.
Assemble, using no-boil lasagna noodles, in a 13x9 pan: put a little sauce (about 1/4) in the bottom, then add a layer of noodles. Top with 1/3 of the squash, 1/2 of the mushrooms, cheese, 1/4 of the sauce, and then noodles. Repeat a full layer. Top with remaining squash, remaining sauce, remaining mozzarella, and then grate some parmesan on top. Wish that you had more sauce and fret that it isn't saucy enough for no-boil noodles. (Don't despair, it is.) Bake about 40 minutes at 350 degrees.
Hmmm....tempted to tag this with "comfort food" as well as the obvious ones. Dense but good. Shows promise.
Sorry for the rough recipe, but hey, this is what you get when I really do it off of the top of my head.
Start with two butternut squash. I don't know how many pounds, because our scale only works when it wants to, which is rarely when I want it to. Biggish. You know, a little more than average. Cut them in half, scoop out the seeds, and roast them. Scrape out the innards. Melt about 3 T. butter in a saucepan, put in the innards, with about 5 frozen chicken stock cubes (ice cube tray sized) and heat everything up. Puree with a stick blender. Add water as necessary. Season with a fair amount of cayenne pepper and freshly-grated nutmeg, a moderate amount of ground ginger, a dash of ground clove, and salt to taste. Cook until pretty thick. Cool. You should have what looks to be way more than you need.
Chop a Vidalia onion fairly finely, and clean and slice 10 ounces of crimini/portabello mushrooms. Mince two cloves of garlic. Melt 3 T. butter in a pan over medium, gently sauteeing onions for several minutes. Add garlic, a very generous sprinkling of thyme, salt and pepper, and saute for another minute. Add mushrooms and cook for a long time, until most of the liquid cooks off. Set aside.
Make a bechamel sauce with 4 T. butter, 4 T. flour, and 3 cups milk. Stir in about a half pound of shredded fontina cheese.
Shred about a pound of mozzarella.
Assemble, using no-boil lasagna noodles, in a 13x9 pan: put a little sauce (about 1/4) in the bottom, then add a layer of noodles. Top with 1/3 of the squash, 1/2 of the mushrooms, cheese, 1/4 of the sauce, and then noodles. Repeat a full layer. Top with remaining squash, remaining sauce, remaining mozzarella, and then grate some parmesan on top. Wish that you had more sauce and fret that it isn't saucy enough for no-boil noodles. (Don't despair, it is.) Bake about 40 minutes at 350 degrees.
Hmmm....tempted to tag this with "comfort food" as well as the obvious ones. Dense but good. Shows promise.
Sunday, October 12, 2008
Brassicaceous!
We often get only small amounts of broccoli from the farm, enough for a small side dish for two, but rarely enough to do much else with. Today we got two small heads of broccoli, and we still have the one from last week, so we have plenty. We also got cauliflower, and since we have from arugula from last week that we still need to use up, it is perfect for Marinated cauliflower salad with arugula. Sometimes the necessary recipes are forced upon us by what we get in the box.
With chinese cabbage this week, and a big head of cabbage from last week, I am threatening to make both sauerkraut and kim chee to use them up.
The tomatoes that looked green last sunday ripened nicely, so I expect this week's to do the same. Hard to believe that we're still getting decent tomatoes. This is a good thing, since salads are once again mandatory.
With chinese cabbage this week, and a big head of cabbage from last week, I am threatening to make both sauerkraut and kim chee to use them up.
The tomatoes that looked green last sunday ripened nicely, so I expect this week's to do the same. Hard to believe that we're still getting decent tomatoes. This is a good thing, since salads are once again mandatory.
- Broccoli
- Cauliflower
- Chinese Cabbage
- Dandelion
- Daikon
- Kale
- Lettuce
- Parsley
- Peppers
- Radicchio
- Spinach
- Butternut squash
- Tomatoes
Sunday, October 05, 2008
Fall is here
Tons of greens, and real winter squash. The pumpkin is quite small (dwarfed by this week's cabbage), but we were among the last to pick up veggies in South Orange this week, so they were presumably picked over (the pumpkin was outside the box).
- Arugula
- Beets
- Broccoli
- Cabbage
- Chard
- Cilantro
- Kale
- Lettuce
- Peppers
- Radicchio
- Spinach
- Winter Squash - Butternut + Sweet Dumpling
- Tomatoes
- White Turnips
- Pumpkin