Monday Menu

Super Bowl Sunday is apparently the best time to go to Costco. It wasn’t empty, but there were an awful lot of empty spaces in the parking lot and the check out lines were short. We made a family outing of it, and the kids ate samples while we crossed items off our list. We rewarded the kids with a big box of Pirate’s Booty for school day snacks, and congratulated ourselves for only buying what was on the list–exciting things like pasta, rice and canned tomatoes. It felt good to go home, unpack the car, fill the pantry and know that once again, we’ve got the building blocks for some good meals without having to dash out to the store.

Monday: Pasta pesto (this one with a mix of herbs, basil and arugula)

Tuesday: Pot roast with pickles, noodles, steamed carrots

Wednesday: Soup & Salad Bar: Baked potato soup, salad, focaccia, hummus and veggies

Thursday: Sesame noodles, potstickers, edamame

Friday: Hamburgers

Barley in duck broth and sour cream scones

There is nothing that makes me feel thriftier than making soup from scratch, homemade broth and all. Sometimes my no-recipe soups have tasted a little flat, but I think I’m finally learning.

I saved and froze the carcasses from the two ducks we roasted for Christmas dinner. They had been stuffed with sage, garlic and oranges. The morning of the day I planned to have soup for dinner, I plunked the frozen duck bones into the slow cooker, tossed in a couple carrots, and covered the whole thing with water. I cooked it on high for four hours, and on low for another four. I strained the stock into a big bowl (it came to about two quarts), and then proceeded to make this soup. When the soup was about ready, I decided we needed a little something to round out the meal, so I mixed up these cheesy scones from what I had on hand. The sour cream makes them very tender and light, and a chunk of white sharp cheddar made a nice accompaniment to the soup. A very happy experiment that I’m looking forward to repeating.

Barley in Duck Broth

2 Tbsp. olive oil

1 onion, diced

3 cloves garlic, minced

2 carrots, sliced thinly

4 ounces white mushrooms, chopped (very finely, so they were unrecognizable to my picky eaters, but you can leave them bigger)

2 quarts duck stock (really, any rich homemade stock–chicken or beef would be fine)

1 cup barley, cooked and drained

1/2 tsp. dried thyme

1-2 Tbsp. sherry vinegar

salt and pepper to taste

Sauté the onions in olive oil over medium heat until softened. Add garlic and cook another 2 minutes. Add sliced carrots, mushrooms, and stock. Bring to a boil and then turn down heat and simmer until carrots are tender. Add thyme and barley and heat through. Taste broth, and adjust seasoning (sherry vinegar, salt and pepper).

 

Sour Cream Scones with Cheese

1 1/2 cups all-purpose flour

2 tsp. baking powder

1/2 tsp. baking soda

1/2 tsp. salt

1/2 cup grated cheese (sharp cheddar works nicely)

2 Tbsp. cold butter

3/4 cup sour cream

1 beaten egg

Heat oven to 450 degrees. Line a baking sheet with a silicone mat or parchment paper. In a large bowl, whisk together flour, baking powder, baking soda and salt. Either grate cold butter into bowl, or rub it in with your fingers until there are no big lumps of butter left. Stir in grated cheese. Whisk together sour cream and egg, and then stir the mixture into the dry ingredients until moistened. Dump the mixture out onto a floured counter and gently knead and press it all together into a ball. Form into a disk about 1/2-inch thick, and cut into 8 wedges. Bake the scones for 12-15 minutes, until golden brown. Serve warm.

 

Monday Menu

After several weeks of digging deep into the freezer and pantry to plan meals, it’s time to admit that we are nearly out of staples. (Except for flour. Plenty of that.) It’s been good to empty the freezer and pantry and know that we’re not wasting food or storing things that are past their prime. So February is going to be the Month of Restocking the Pantry. I am weirdly excited by the idea of making a list of staples, stocking up, and then organizing and inventorying the goods. Doesn’t that sound fun?

This week I’m working with the last few items in the freezer…a couple of Christmas duck carcasses, tofu, edamame, and the little post-Christmas sale turkey that the Hub roasted yesterday. A few pantry items: spaghetti, rice, barley. But after that, we’re kind of out of everything, unless we plan to survive on condiments and liquor. Probably not the breakfast of champions.

It feels good to start fresh.

 

Monday: Turkey dinner leftovers (yum!)

Tuesday: Duck and Barley Soup (this going to be an experiment), tomato salad

Wednesday: Turkey Tetrazzini, carrots

Thursday: Tofu Stir-Fry with Pork, rice, edamame

Friday: Penne with Vodka Sauce, green salad

 

If you had a completely empty pantry, what would you buy first?

Chocolate cake and tomato soup

But no, NOT in the same recipe.

Behold, the cake:

That, my friends, is a Chocolate Blackout Cake. Three layers of devil’s food cake filled and frosted with chocolate pudding and covered in more devil’s food cake crumbs. Get your fork and a tall glass of milk.

The original recipe was created in a Brooklyn bakery called Ebinger’s, and you can read a little history about it here. Google tells me there have been many attempts to recreate the recipe, and though I’ve only tried one and have no opinion as to its authenticity, I can heartily recommend it. Gale Gand shared her version in the latest issue of Food and Wine, and I found it on her own website as well. Compared to some other recipes for blackout cake, this one is streamlined, using the same chocolate custard for both the filling and the frosting. It’s rich, it’s moist, it’s cake AND pudding, for goodness’ sake!

I just thought you should know about it, in case you have a birthday coming up soon, or maybe you’re thinking about Valentine’s Day. Mr. Ten asked for chocolate cake for his birthday last week, and he was not disappointed.

But what of the tomato soup? It’s Friday, it’s cold (we even finally have snow on the ground), maybe you just want something simple for dinner. Grilled cheese (properly known as the Cheese Toastie) and tomato soup. I love a cheese toastie, but I never much liked tomato soup from a can. Too sweet for me, and don’t canned soups tend to have too much sodium and other unnecessary stuff? Somewhere along the line, I tried the tomato soup from New Recipes from Moosewood Restaurant, and will never go back. I don’t even consult the cookbook anymore. It takes about two minutes of effort, and it still relies on opening a can. And when I answer the what’s for dinner question with, “Grilled cheese and tomato soup,” I get a “Yay!” Sometimes you want a good review even if you didn’t put in a lot of effort.

Tomato Soup

serves 2-3 people (I have to double it)

Open a 28-oz. can of tomatoes (whole, diced, crushed–doesn’t matter). Heat 1-2 tablespoons of olive oil in a saucepan over medium heat. Mince or press 1-2 cloves of garlic and add them to the oil. Add a couple shakes of mild paprika (if you like hot or smoked paprika, go for it). As soon as the garlic is fragrant, but not too brown, pour in the tomatoes. Stir and heat through. Blend until smooth with an immersion blender (easiest) or in a regular blender. Add salt and pepper to taste. If you like, stir in a few tablespoons of cream.

Monday Menu

It’s 11 degrees outside right now (-7 windchill), and I have no desire to set foot outside the door today until I absolutely have to. The kids are home from school today on this Martin Luther King Jr./Inauguration Day. My big plans for the day include a little laundry and swabbing down the kitchen while I watch the inauguration festivities on tv. So my meal plan for the week is based completely on what food we already have in the house. We have enough milk to get us through the week, and if I get crazy and make a big batch of banana bread, maybe the kids won’t notice that we’re nearly out of cereal.

Monday: Potato soup (best soup on a cold day EVER)

Tuesday: Lasagna (that one I put in the freezer a few weeks ago); Brussels sprout slaw (the one I didn’t make last week)

Wednesday: Herb-rubbed top sirloin steak (maybe broiled instead of grilled) with roasted tomato and garlic relish; oven fries; asparagus

Thursday: Egg salad on Seven-grain bread

Friday: Beef ragu (made from a portion of pot roast in the freezer) with spätzle; green salad

Saturday: Roast turkey dinner

 

What meals can you make this week without a run to the store for ingredients?

Monday Menu

I’m shivering in front of my computer, despite my quilted slippers and fleece scarf. Still no snow, but winter temperatures have finally arrived, so I’m especially grateful that we got all our grocery shopping done over the weekend and I don’t need to venture out again this morning. We huddled inside on Sunday, planning the menu, supervising homework, wiping runny noses, doing a few chores and working through several games and puzzles that were unearthed during the game cupboard reorganization. The Hub and Miss Seven baked a carrot cake, dark with cinnamon and dusted with powdered sugar, and we all sat down to tea. We’re looking forward to more cake next weekend, as Mr. Nine becomes Mr. Ten (!!!).

We shopped first, buying what was on sale or looked appealing, and then planned our menu. I usually work the other way around, but it can be a fun challenge to search for recipes based on ingredients you have on hand. Today I got even more organizationally inspired, and wrote on my week’s to-do lists when to defrost the chicken and when to soak the beans. The best laid plans can all come to naught if you forget to soak the beans.

Monday: Spaghetti with cherry tomatoes and feta, fennel salad

Tuesday: Cauliflower frittata, Brussels sprout slaw

Wednesday: Thai-style ground beef, coconut rice, stir-fried broccoli

Thursday: BBQ chicken pizza, green salad

Friday: Red beans and rice, pan-roasted asparagus

Saturday: Dinner with friends

Sunday: Indian Butter Chicken Curry, rice, naan, birthday cake

 

What are you cooking to keep you warm?

 

 

Lasagna

If you’re looking for a 30-minute meal, this isn’t it. Frankly, this recipe is a lot of work, and I wouldn’t waste my time making it for just anyone. There are some things you only make for someone you love (or maybe someone you want to impress). It’s the first meal I ever cooked for the Hub, and nearly 15 years later, he’s still remembers it. If I had an Italian grandma, this is the dish I could imagine her making. I’m not trying to scare you away, exactly. I just want you to understand the seriousness of this lasagna. You make it for an Occasion. Company, a birthday, Sunday dinner. Do it right.

The recipe originally came from a cookbook my parents bought on a trip to Italy, and the instructions are deceptively brief. Turns out, there’s a good bit of prep work, and you have to coordinate the cooking of two different sauces. There are no shortcuts (except for the wonder that is no-boil lasagna noodles), no grainy store-bought ricotta, no sauce from a jar. I’ve made that lasagna, and eaten it happily, but this isn’t it. This is a northern Italian version of lasagna, light on the tomato, with a silky white sauce that melds with the deep flavors of soffritto, sausage and wine. It’s rich, but not heavy. As they say, it’s a labor of love. Set aside an hour or two, put on some music, and maybe pour a glass of wine (but save some for the sauce).

A couple of months ago, my mother offered to bring the lasagna when they came for dinner one day. I had made it the weekend before, but would never say no to the good fortune of eating lasagna twice in one week, especially one made by someone else. But tasting her version and my version so close together, I discovered that they weren’t the same. She has adapted the recipe over the years and never told me. All this time, I had been making perfectly good lasagna from the original recipe (really good, in fact), when I could have been making lasagna that was sublime.

Well. Now that I have the secret to sublime, I’m going to share it with you.

A few notes: Doubling the recipe is a good idea. Not because there isn’t enough to feed a good-sized family, but because if you’re going to the trouble, you should get an extra meal or two out of the deal. Bake it, cool it, wrap it and freeze it for another day. Thaw it overnight in the refrigerator before reheating it in a warm oven (or even a slice at a time in the microwave). If you don’t have celery root, you can substitute parsnip, or skip it and just add an extra carrot and rib of celery.

Lasagna with Italian sausage and béchamel sauce

1 large onion

2 medium carrots

2 ribs of celery

small chunk of celery root, peeled

2-3 large cloves of garlic

2-3 Tbsp. olive oil

1 pound Italian sausage (mild or hot–up to you)

2 cups white wine (dry sherry is fine)

1 28-oz. can of tomatoes, diced or crushed

1 bay leaf

4 Tbsp. butter

4 Tbsp. flour

4 cups milk (at least 2%)

2 cups freshly grated parmesan cheese

1 cup freshly grated mozzarella cheese

1 package no-boil flat lasagna noodles (Barilla seems to be easiest to find around here)

Dice the onion, celery, carrots and celery root in a very small dice (1/4-inch or smaller). Mince or press the garlic. Heat the olive oil over medium heat in a large, deep skillet or Dutch oven, and then add vegetables and sauté until soft, 8-10 minutes. Don’t let them burn. Transfer the cooked vegetables to a bowl and set aside. Split the sausages (if still in their casings) with a sharp knife, peel off and discard the casings. Brown the sausage in the same skillet over medium-high heat, breaking the meat into small pieces as you stir. When it has browned and the fat has rendered, drain off the fat and add the vegetables back to the pan. Pour the wine over the sausage and vegetables and bring the mixture to a simmer. Add the tomatoes with their juices, the bay leaf, and salt and pepper. Let simmer, uncovered, for about 20 minutes, or until the mixture reduces and thickens slightly. Taste and add salt if necessary.

While the sauce is simmering, start the béchamel sauce. Heat the milk (I use my glass batter bowl and heat it in the microwave for 3-4 minutes). In a large saucepan, melt the butter over medium-low heat. Whisk in the flour until there are no lumps, and continue whisking the mixture for 2 minutes. Slowly pour in the hot milk and whisk until smooth. Turn up the heat to medium-high and whisk continuously, until the sauce comes to a simmer and thickens noticeably. Turn off the heat and stir in one cup of grated Parmesan. Add salt and pepper to taste.

To assemble the lasagna, grease a 9″ x 13″ baking pan. Spread a couple ladles-full of béchamel in the bottom of the pan. Then add a layer of uncooked noodles, breaking them in pieces to fit the pan, if necessary. Spread a layer of meat sauce, then a layer of béchamel, and then a little grated mozzarella. Repeat (3-4 layers of noodles usually fit in my pan), and end with a layer of béchamel. Make sure to cover all the edges and corners of noodles with sauce. Sprinkle on the remaining cup of grated Parmesan on top, and cover with foil. Bake in a 350 degree oven, covered, for about 45 minutes. Remove the foil and bake about 15 minutes more, or until the top is bubbly and the noodles are tender when a thin knife is inserted into the lasagna.

Let the lasagna rest for at least 15 minutes before serving. It works fine if you bake it early in the day (or the day before) and reheat it gently, covered, in a 300 degree oven.

Monday Menu

After all that holiday gluttony, it’s time to get back to the routine. The kids are all back in school today, my to-do list is yards long and I finally have a hope of accomplishing some of it, so I was thrilled to read the Dinner: A Love Story post full of dinner ideas for me to steal. A couple of them even match the stuff that’s already in our fridge and pantry, so I can put off shopping until tomorrow. It couldn’t have come at a better time, because as we all know, the hardest part of getting dinner on the table is coming up with an idea. I got up early this morning, showered, did the dishes, started the laundry, made the lunches, and have almost finished with my grocery list. I’m counting on this desperate burst of productivity to carry me through the rest of the day.

If you need some fresh ideas for dinner, go check out DALS right now. You won’t be sorry.

Monday: Crispy Black Bean Tacos/Quesadillas and guacamole

Tuesday: Lamb meatballs, pita, hummus

Wednesday: Moosewood Tomato Soup and grilled cheese sandwiches, salad

Thursday: David Lebowitz’s Olympic Seoul Chicken, rice, edamame

Friday: Taco pizza

Saturday: Pasta with caramelized cabbage, anchovies and breadcrumbs

 

Are you trying a new recipe this week, or sticking with old favorites?

Blue cheese cheesecake

This year I’ve been craving a quiet Christmas. Just a little time to celebrate our blessings in the darkest days of winter. No elaborate craft projects (just one little upcycling sewing project–but I won’t spoil the surprise for the recipient just yet!), no week-long baking frenzy (just a couple of batches of simple cookies so far), no last-minute dash to the mall. I even did all the holiday grocery shopping on Thursday so we don’t have to fight the crowds over the weekend.

What is on the agenda? The Hub and I still need to have our annual late-night gift wrapping session. The kids are looking forward to decorating cookies today. I’m baking up some fragrant gingersnaps so we can pipe designs on them with white glacé icing. (Cookie cutters and multicolored icing are too much for me this year.) I plan to do a little more cleaning–if I’m going to be home all week, I want to enjoy a clean house–and prep a few meals ahead of time. No doubt there will be more cooks than the kitchen can hold on Christmas Day, so I plan to make my contributions early, set the table, and then sneak out of the kitchen to go help assemble some Legos and play with the Christmas toys.

We do have one holiday party to attend, and so last night after the kids went to bed I baked. With the help of my mom and her Gourmet magazine index, I resurrected an old recipe for a blue cheese cheesecake that will make you cry, it’s so good. It comes from the Hub’s well-worn October 1990 issue of Gourmet, and I had never baked it before. It’s impossibly rich, so save this one for a crowd, or you’ll find yourself huddled in a cream-induced coma under the kitchen table.  I think you could also halve the recipe and serve thin slices as a first course with bread and a little green salad.

Blue Cheese Cheesecake

adapted slightly from Gourmet

1/4 cup freshly grated Parmesan

1/4 fine dry breadcrumbs

2 cups heavy cream

1/2 pound blue cheese, crumbled

three 8-oz packages cream cheese, softened and cut into chunks

4 large eggs

Heat the oven to 325 degrees. Combine the Parmesan and bread crumbs in a small bowl. Butter a 10-inch springform pan very well, and coat the inside of the pan with the mixture, shaking out the excess. (If you only have a 9-inch pan, you will have extra batter. Do not be tempted to cram it all in the smaller pan–you’ll be setting off the smoke detector and scrubbing out the oven. Pour the excess into a small baking dish or some ramekins and try not to eat it all yourself.) Scald the cream in a saucepan (bring it to a simmer and then turn off the heat). In a large bowl with an electric mixer, beat the blue cheese with 1/4 cup of the hot cream until the mixture is smooth. Add half the cream cheese and 1 cup of cream and beat again until smooth. Finally, beat in the remainder of the cream cheese and cream and beat until smooth. Beat in the eggs, one at a time. Pour the batter into the prepared pan (no more than 2/3 full) and smooth the top with an offset spatula. Bake the cheesecake in the bottom third of the oven for 1 hour and 15 minutes, or until the center is just set and the top is golden brown. The cheesecake may be puffed up like a soufflé when you take it out of the oven, but it will sink as it cools.

Let the cheesecake cool completely in the pan on a rack. You can make it ahead, and cover and refrigerate it overnight.

Run a thin spatula or knife around the edge, unmold and serve sliced very thin or as a spread on crackers or toast points as an hors d’oeuvre.

Monday Menu

After a weekend packed with holiday fun (concerts, elementary school dance, dinner with friends, the annual trek to Home Depot to pick out a Christmas tree), and more to come this week, we are keeping it simple in the kitchen. We’ve got to pace ourselves–and save some time and energy for cookie baking.

Everything on the menu is a pantry or freezer meal (several are pulled straight from the freezer and just need reheating), and the only grocery shopping required was for a few supplies for this final week of packed lunches and some cookie ingredients.

Monday: Roast chicken, Thanksgiving sides pulled from the freezer

Tuesday: Potato soup

Wednesday: Lemon-parsley pasta with chicken, fruit salad

Thursday: Hoisin burgers, sesame noodles, edamame

Friday: White bean and ham soup, sandwiches, broccoli salad

 

Do you have enough in your freezer or pantry to put together a few meals this week?