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Tuesday, October 30, 2012
Napa Cabbage Slaw with Miso Peanut Ginger Dressing
October 18th and 19th I attended the School Nutrition Association of Vermont's fall conference. It is always nice to step away from my children for a couple days and have the opportunity to miss them, plus I got to spend time with a close friend who already works for Burlington School Food Service. However the highlight was being surrounded by people who are passionate about children and how to feed them. There is so much press right now about what is wrong with school meals and little understanding of the federal program that funds school lunch and the limitations it has. Then there is the challenge of making nutritious meals that the kids will actually eat with limited funds.
Before I worked as a lunch room monitor I dreamt of making lunch longer. Every day my kids would come home carrying most of the lunch they took to school. However now I know that most students eat their lunch in the first 15 minutes, and as soon as they are done eating the behavior issues begin. Now my dream is to have a math and science teacher for every school. Then teachers could have a break while their students were learning math and science, and they could be with their students for lunch and recess.
However this post is not really about what needs to change in lunch, or even ways that innovative food service staff is working to change it already. Instead this post is about Napa Cabbage and what the $#@%! I was supposed to do with the one Lewis picked up at the CSA while I was at the conference. Somehow he did not notice what I seem to be happy to bring home and what I only take when there are no other options. So I was left last week, on the day before my CSA pick up, with a head of Napa Cabbage as the only vegetable option for dinner. I ended up channeling several Asian slaw recipes, including the ginger carrot dressing I love so much. The Napa Cabbage Slaw with Miso Peanut Ginger Dressing I made was light and bright with a understated richness from the peanut butter. Sebastian declared to his brother, who was stubbornly refusing to eat it, "You should really have some. Even I like it, and that's saying something." But Julian stuck to the role reversal and refused a cabbage salad his brother was happily eating. If you cannot serve peanuts in your house, try it with sun butter or tahini instead.
Napa Cabbage Slaw with Miso Peanut Ginger Dressing
2 Tbsp Ume Plum vinegar (you can sub rice wine vinegar or cider vinegar if you really have to, but the ume plum vinegar is really special)
6 tablespoons water
2 tablespoons white miso
1 tablespoon sugar
1 tablespoon mirin
1 - 1 1/2 Tbsps finely chopped peeled fresh ginger
1 Tbsp smooth peanut butter (sub sun butter or tahini if there are any allergy issues)
2 -3 small to medium carrots (about 4 1/2 to 6 oz's)
3 tablespoons grapeseed oil
2 to 3 pound head of cabbage finely shredded (I did not shred the bottom 4 inches and saved them for a stir fry another night)
1 red pepper, seeded and sliced thinly, slices then cut into thirds (optional, I omitted this the second time I made it)
Place the ume plum vinegar, water, miso, sugar, mirin, ginger, peanut butter, carrots, and grape seed oil in a quart jar and blend until smooth with an Immersion Blender or puree in a mini food processor or blender. Pour the dressing on the shredded cabbage and red peppers. Mix well and serve.
Monday, October 15, 2012
Pear Pancakes. an excuse to write something
I have been struggling in the midst of a home renovation and finding my place in the working world to find a recipe to share with you. The honeymoon phase as the lunch room monitor is long since over and I am realizing what a mistake this was. I took the job because I wanted to have an impact on how children eat, to try to make a more positive environment. However I have learned that one adult with good intentions, in a room with 80 + children, can only do so much. When one table gets too loud the children at the next table have to get louder so they can hear each other. Soon the lunchroom is filled with yelling children and you have no idea where it got started.
I was convinced to apply for this job by friends who know about my passion for feeding children. So instead of continuing to stand in a roomful of children desperately trying to keep things calm, I am going to work on feeding them. Next week I will say good-bye to being a lunch room monitor and join Burlington Food Service at the High School. There will be some minimal food prep to start and I know they are always looking for better ways to feed the students. The head of food service here calls me, "Chocolate Milk" because I first met him at a meeting where I tried to convince him to take it off the menu. We may disagree about chocolate milk, but we both believe in feeding kids.
Amid all this we are also having work done on our house. I will save the details of that for another post. So I have been struggling to find a creative enough recipe to share here, I also have been aware of explaining to the guys working on the house why I am outside leaning over a plate of food with my camera. I have shared my pancake recipe here before, but I love the flavor of pear pancakes enough to give them their own post. Plus, for new readers, this really is a great pancake recipe. The pears become soft and tender in the batter, with the heat bringing out their sweetness. I like them best with a little cinnamon added to the batter, topped with melted butter and pure Maple Syrup. I have given the recipe as both the original size and 1 1/2 times the recipe, which is enough to feed the whole family when everyone is hungry and tastes better because of the increase in eggs
Pancake Ingredients (original batch size)
1/2 cup unbleached all purpose flour
1/2 cup white whole wheat or whole wheat pastry flour
2 Tbsp sugar
2 tsp baking powder
1/4 tsp baking soda
1/4 - 1/2 tsp ground cinnamon
1/2 tsp salt
1/2 tsp salt
1 cup milk (you can use regular milk or buttermilk, the baking soda makes the recipe flexible)
1 large egg
2 Tbsp butter melted and slightly cooled
1 to 2 pears, sliced in quarters, core removed, and then thinly sliced. Peers with thick skins should be peeled first.
Pancake Ingredients (one and a half batches: enough to satisfy all 4 people in my family)
3/4 cups unbleached all purpose flour
3/4 cups white whole wheat or whole wheat pastry flour
3 Tbsp sugar
3 tsp baking powder
3/4 tsp salt
1/4 to 3/4 tsp ground cinnamon
3/8 tsp baking soda (I often just use 1/2 tsp baking soda here)
1 1/2 cup milk (you can use regular milk or buttermilk, the baking soda makes the recipe flexible)
2 large eggs
3 Tbsp butter melted and slightly cooled
2 pears, sliced in quarters, core removed, and then thinly sliced. Peers with thick skins should be peeled first.
Sift the dry ingredients together. Measure the milk and add the egg/eggs to the milk and whisk to combine and beat the egg/eggs (I use a large glass measuring cup and then whisk the 2 together by spinning the whisk between my hands. Both my boys can imitate this move perfectly with their toy whisk). Add the wet to the dry ingredients and mix until just combined, a few lumps are fine, overmixing is not. Add the butter while still mixing in the wet ingredients.
Use a small ladle or measuring cup to pour pancake batter onto a preheated hot griddle that has a light film of butter on it (I set my electric griddle to 350°). Press slices of pears into the pancakes as they cook. Flip the pancakes when they appear to be dry around the edges and holes appear across the surface of the pancakes. If you are unsure if they are done lift a corner of a pancake with your spatula to check the color. Cook the second side until light brown and either keep warm in a 200° oven or serve immediately with butter and real maple syrup.
Thursday, September 13, 2012
Dilly Beans
In case I had been previously confused, I now know for certain, high paying jobs that impress other people are not important to me. Instead I am motivated by jobs that match my values and allow me to parent the way I want. As this blog should make very clear I am heavily invested in how people eat. Because of this I spent a year at the VNA Family Room working for poverty level wages as their Americorps Vista Healthy Food Coordinator. At the end of the year the Family Room was making lunches for their preschool in house instead of relying on food from the school district. My menu included several bean dishes and all the grains where whole grains. Plus, the children actually ate the food, including vegetables, I prepared. Watching a child who said the only vegetable he likes was canned corn devour kale chips made me want to do back flips through the classroom. (It is probably best for everyone that I have never learned to do a back flip).
So this summer when a friend started to tell me how my children's school was hiring a lunch room monitor for the first time and I really should apply for the job I stood there listening to her and shaking my head no the whole time. When she was done talking somehow I stopped shaking my head and decided I could make the most difference in how the children at the school ate by being there every day. So now I spend 3 hours smack dab in the middle of the day in a lunch room filled with boisterous children. I walk around and remind them to eat, offer them taste tests of a new healthy food available in the salad bar that I am sure they will like once they taste it. I try to keep the children happy and social without tipping over into crazy chaos and bedlam.
I have had feedback from many adults in the building that they would not have taken this job on a bet. But I have also had several staff I really respect tell me I am doing a great job and they have never seen the lunch room with such a nice kid vibe and still efficient. I calmly tell them they have not seen me with the classes that are the most challenging.
Truth is most of the time, I love it, and not just because Julian finally has to stop taking chocolate milk. But man is it exhausting, three hours is like a marathon. For me to post here I think it will have to be during the window after I drop my boys and school and before I return for work. Once I decide these Dilly Beans are done curing my boys will bring them to lunch. Because most of the time my boys still bring lunch from home. Because I make them slightly spicy with 1/4 tsp of crushed red pepper flakes in every jar, both boys will eat them and sip milk between each bite.
Dilly Beans
Adapted from Ball Blue Book Guide to Preserving to replace cayenne pepper with crushed red pepper flakes (this does not affect safety, I just prefer this type of heat)
2 pounds string beans (I used Rattlesnake and Purple Pole beans from my garden)
1/4 cup canning salt
2 1/2 cups 5% acidity cider vinegar (you can use other 5% acidity vinegars but I prefer the more mellow flavor of the cider vinegar. Although many prefer the clear color of white vinegar in the brine)
2 1/2 cups water
1 tsp crushed red pepper flakes, or to taste, divided
4 cloves garlic
4 heads dill
Trim ends off beans so they fit in the jars with 1/4 inch headspace (I used the new Ball Pint and a Half Jars). Combine the salt, vinegar and water in a saucepan and bring to a boil and cook until the salt is completely dissolved. Pack Beans into jars with 1/4 inch headspace and add 1 clove of garlic for each pint or pint and a half jar with 1 head of dill and 1/4 tsp crushed red pepper. For quart jars use 2 heads of dill, 2 cloves of garlic and 1/2 tsp crushed red pepper flakes. Ladle hot brine over the beans with 1/4 inch headspace. Use a bubble wand or other nonmetal utensil, to press the beans away from the wall of the bar to release any trapped air. repeat carefully all around the jar.
If need be top up the liquid after removing any air bubbles to maintain 1/4 inch headspace. Use a damp paper towel to clean the rims of jars before placing lids and rings on top and tightening by hand. Place filled jars in the canner and process for 10 minutes once the canner comes up to a full boil. After the 10 of processing time turn the heat off and remove the lid of the canner. Let the jars and canner rest and cool for 5 minutes before removing the jars to a kitchen towel or receiving blanket to cool on the counter with at least 1 inch of space between all the jars. Allow the beans to cure in the jars for 2 weeks before joyfully sampling.
Monday, August 27, 2012
Lobster Rolls: Keep it simple
All that remains from our vacation to Cape Cod this year is a pile of dirty laundry and a dusting of sand on everything we took with us. This year we spent the early part of the summer working on swimming skills for the boys. As a result both boys are very confident in the water and enjoy hanging out in water over their heads. Unfortunately I do not share this same confidence as Julian needs to duck under the water for a moment every few strokes to take a break. We spent time on an ocean side beach with friends where Julian exalted in boogie boarding. As I watched him one time, a wave tumbled him upside down before spitting him out on the beach. When I asked if he was okay he flashed me a huge grin and said, "That was the best ride of my life."
Sebastian still approaches the ocean cautiously, preferring to stand at the waters edge watching our friends boogie boarding to getting on himself. He stood and welcomed the boys, who are 13 and 19, onto the beach when they caught a good wave, pointing out where the best waves were, and establishing an elaborate scoring system for who was the most successful. I love these glimpses into the differences between my boys in contrast with the many ways they are the same.
They both agree that lobster meat is not something they wish to try and fish should be enjoyed every few weeks at the most. The problem for them is while on vacation I refuse to cook meat that is raised in a way I am uncomfortable with. As we vacation every year next to the ocean this means I limit myself to eating from the sea. I love this chance to play in the kitchen with what is usually a occasional treat. Both boys continue to refuse to eat lobster, which means Lewis and I can indulge in a large lobster for dinner with the leftovers filling rolls for lunch the following day. I was unsure if I would share the recipe here until yesterday when we attended a catered event that featured lobster rolls. The sad truth was ours were so much better, and not only because there was so much more lobster meat in each.
Lobster Rolls
1/4 cup mayonnaise
2 Tbsp freshly squeezed lemon juice
1/2 tsp dijon mustard
1/8 tsp kosher salt
freshly ground black pepper to taste
1 to 1 1/2 cups lobster meat
sliced avocado (optional)
Favorite roll (I used a Portuguese sweet bread roll, I would also love challah or brioche rolls. Purists would insist on New England Hot Dog Rolls)
Mix the mayonnaise, lemon juice, mustard, salt and pepper. Fold the mayonnaise mixture into the lobster meat until it is evenly combined. Pile the lobster meat on the roll and top with sliced avocado if desired. If possible eat on a beach in the sun.
Monday, August 6, 2012
Blueberry Pie
I first attempted to make pie crust the summer I was twelve, as a surprise for my mother who was coming home from the hospital. The crust I made for that blueberry pie was beautiful, golden brown, with each strip of the lattice top perfectly even. It looked beautiful because I sat watching "The Price is Right" carefully shaping it, squishing up the dough when it was not perfect and rerolling it. It was the most beautiful pie crust, and made with love, but inedible. All that time I spent reworking the dough made it tough, the gluten forming in the dough erasing the delicate nature the crust should have had.
Shortly after I pulled the pie from the oven I left the apartment to have lunch with my mother's college physics professor. My brother decided to stay home for lunch, informing me he would have a piece of pie. When I returned home I found my pie with one slice neatly removed from it, and all of the filling carefully scraped out and eaten. My brother had helped himself to all the filling, leaving the crust, that he had decided was inedible, as an empty skeleton. I am sure that I screamed at him, and equally sure he really did not care.
When my mother returned home from the hospital she claimed to enjoy the chewy, tooth breaking crust. Every night after dinner she somehow consumed a slice of crust until the pie shell was gone. That memory of my mother and her love for me, because I highly doubt she really loved that crust, was from the last few months she was alive. All this is important because now I can make a really great pie crust, and she died 30 years ago today.
Without my mother, somehow it is true that I married a man my mother never met, that my mother never had the chance to meet my children, or even to know me as an adult. When I was younger my mother had shared her plans for when she was old, only using a wheelchair if it had a top speed of 70 miles an hour and teaching my children every curse word she could think of. Unfortunately she did not get to realize these plans, but Sebastian, my ten year old, tells me he knows and loves my mother from the stories about her I share. The stories of a woman who brought me to cooking even though she hated it, was a feminist and a humanist, had a love of the absurd and laughter, and always knew her own mind, even when it was different from what others thought. She knew that she wanted to be a physicist, and jumped through all the road blocks, including the ones set by her college, to obtain a PhD.
Every year I am aware of the anniversary of my mother's death. I have found that I am more sensitive on that day, that it really is not a day to tackle challenges. So this year I decided to intentionally notice the anniversary of her death, even if it is only with a blueberry pie. The filling of this pie is just as good as it was 30 years ago, good enough to scrape out and eat an entire pies worth. The crust, rolled with a light hand, working it as little as possible, is tender and flaky, with a flavor that will remind you of a shortbread cookie as it melts in your mouth. Nothing like the first time I tried to make this recipe.
Shortbread Pie Crust
Adapted from The Nero Wolfe Cookbook (My mother was a huge Nero Wolfe fan)
As this post points out, it is very important to work this crust as little as possible. Roll it in a ball and set it aside as soon as it comes together and roll it out gently, only gently pressing the crust together as needed, instead of rerolling it. Unlike many crusts this one is very delicate, so plan on a more rustic look and embrace it, instead of a perfect layered lattice crust. The delicate shortbread taste and texture are worth the extra care.
1 cup whole wheat pasty flour
1 cup unbleached all purpose flour
2 egg yolks
2 Tbsp sugar
1/4 tsp kosher salt
1 cup (2 sticks) butter
vodka, kirsch, or ice water (I now use alcohol in place of the ice water because it reduces the formation of gluten. For a berry pie I use kirsch because it is a great flavor with the berries. However you do not always need the extra liquid)
Either sift the flours together into a large mixing bowl or fluff it up with a fork. Make a well in the center of the flours and place the egg yolks, sugar, salt, and butter cut into teaspoons or small chunks in the center. Use a pastry blender, 2 knives or your fingers to blend the wet flour with the other ingredients to form a stiff dough. If the dough is too dry add one or two drops of liquid of your choice (vodka, kirsch, or ice water). Roll the dough into a ball and wrap in foil or waxed paper. Put the dough in the fridge to rest for one hour.
Divide the dough into 2 pieces. Roll one half of the dough out for the bottom crust and line a 9 inch pie plate with it. Roll the other half of the dough out and cut into 1/2 inch strips to make the top lattice crust. Some pie makers get fancy and weave the top crust, I find this shortbread crust is too delicate so I just lay all the strips down in one direction and then lay the other strips down on top going the other way.
Blueberry Pie
Adapted from The Nero Wolfe Cookbook
When I was a child we would ask in restaurants if the blueberry pie was runny. When they proudly said no we would often, disappointedly, choose to order something else. If you don't like your blueberry pie runny consider adding another tablespoon of flour or corn starch.
5 cups blueberries
6 Tbsp sugar (1/4 cup plus 2 Tbsp)
1/8 tsp salt
2 Tbsp unbleached all purpose flour
juice of 1 lemon
1 Tbsp butter
1/4 cup milk
Preheat the oven to 400°. Pick over the berries and remove any stems, leaves, unripe, or squishy berries. Mix the berries with the sugar, salt, flour and lemon juice before pouring into the bottom crust in the pie plate. Dot the berries with the butter and layer the lattice crust on top. Brush the crust with milk, dump the extra milk into the pie before baking for 40 minutes, or until the top crust is golden brown.
Wednesday, August 1, 2012
Mexican Grilled Corn
We recently went to a local Mexican restaurant for lunch with my dad where all the adults ordered a side of "Mexican Grilled Corn." My margarita was tasty and my taco was easy to eat, but the corn was what has me still dreaming of that lunch. There was the salty, crumbly cortija cheese, the creamy melted mayonnaise and butter coating all the kernels and then the unexpected contrast of the ancho chile powder. When we had all finished out meals the waitress came to clear our plates and ask about dessert. Lewis said, "For dessert I will take another ear of that corn please." Then he didn't share!
So I I begged the waitress for the details of how the corn is prepared so I could make it every time I find corn on the cob. Since then we have made it whenever I have the good sense to buy corn. The first time I had to use Grana Padano in place of the Cortija cheese because my favorite store, City Market, does not carry it. Since then I have found the cheese at at Healthy Living. Comparing both versions I don't think there is enough of a difference to warrant buying cortija again. However I have not done a side by side comparison yet.
Mexican Grilled Corn
4 ears of corn
4 Tbsp room temperature unsalted butter
4 Tbsp mayonaise
2 ounces grated cortija, Grana Padano, or parmigiano reggiano (I used a rotary cheese grater to prep the cheese)
1 tsp ground dried chile's (I used Ancho chiles, which I ground myself, because that was the variety the restaurant used. But any favorite chile will work)
lime wedges for serving
Grill the corn without the husks, turning frequently, until charred in spots on all sides. (You can also just bring a pot of water to the boil and add the husked corn. When the water comes back up to the boil add the corn and turn off the heat. Corn will be ready in a few minutes but it can be kept in the water to stay warm). While the corn is cooking mix the mayonnaise and butter well and grate the cheese.
When the corn is cooked take it off the heat and spread the mayo/butter mix allover. Sprinkle the corn with the cheese and dried chile powder to taste. Serve with lime wedges on the side.
Saturday, July 28, 2012
Blueberry Crumb Cake
Last weekend as I baked this blueberry crumb cake I told Lewis to call a friend to see if they wanted to have a 2 family pot luck that night, because we would have cake. Somehow I did not feel badly about basically inviting ourselves over for dinner, when one of our dinner contributions was a freshly baked cake, warm from the oven, which smelled softly of cinnamon, lemon and blueberries. Somehow I wasn't phased by the fact this was the first time I had made this cake because sadly I make a practice of serving new dishes to friends.
Happily my faith in this recipe was well placed and everyone who tried it insisting on a second piece. The genius part of the recipe was the use of bread crumbs to dust the butter on the sides of the pan so the cake would not stick. I always find the usual flour dusting the pan makes for a white smear on the outside and sometimes the faintest taste of raw flour. The bread crumbs disappeared visually and the only taste was the cake and maybe a hint of more butter.
Maida's Blueberry Crumb Cake
adapted from The Essential New York Times Cookbook
2 cups blueberries
1/2 cup dry bread crumbs (I used mostly corn bread, with about 2 Tbsp random bread crumbs squirreled away in my freezer)
1/3 cup whole wheat pastry flour
1 tsp ground cinnamon
1/2 cup sugar
8 Tbsp cold unsalted butter, divided use
3/4 cup sugar
1 tsp vanilla extract
1 large egg
2 tsp baking powder
1/2 tsp kosher salt
1 cup unbleached all purpose flour
1 cup whole wheat pastry flour
1/2 cup whole milk
finely grated zest of one lemon
1/2 cup finely chopped walnuts (Optional, I did not use the nuts because my children do not like nuts in their baked goods)
Wash the berries and drain well in a sieve before drying with a paper towel. Set aside to dry completely while you make the batter.
Preheat the oven to 375° Butter a 9 inch square cake pan (I used a pyrex baking pan) and dust with the bread crumbs.
Combine the 1/3 cup whole wheat pastry flour, cinnamon and 1/2 cup sugar before cutting in 4 Tbsp of the cold butter with a pastry blender or 2 knives until it is cut into uniform sized coarse crumbs. Set aside.
Beat the other 4 Tbsp cold butter with the 3/4 cup sugar in a stand mixer with the flat beater blade or in a large bowl with a hand mixer, until light and fluffy. Scrape down the sides of the bowl, unless you are using a self scraping beater blade, Beat in the vanilla and egg followed by the baking powder and salt. Beat until it everything is completely incorporated.
Sprinkle 2 Tbsp of the flour over the blueberries and toss gently to coat the blueberries in flour.
Stir 1/3 of the flours into the wet ingredients, followed by half the milk, then the next 1/3 of the flours, then the rest of the milk and lastly the remaining flour. Stir in the lemon zest before spooning the batter over the berries and folding gently with a silicone spatula until just combined.
Scrape into the prepared pan, sprinkle with the nuts if using and then the cinnamon sugar topping.
Bake for 50 minutes until a knife or cake tester comes out clean when inserted in the center of the cake. Cool the cake in the pan on a rack (or in the back of a car on the way to dinner).
Friday, July 13, 2012
Green Coriander
With the recent hot weather we have been experiencing, chances are some of your herbs are starting to bolt. When my cilantro goes from lush foliage to flowers to seeds instead of missing the herb I greedily gather the green seeds before they dry out and become brown. Green Coriander has a softer taste than brown coriander seeds with an herb like freshness. Its flavor is reminiscent of both cilantro and dried coriander. My children like to eat it fresh in the garden. I store as much as I can harvest in the freezer to use all year long.
Some of my favorite uses are in a white wine chicken or pork braise, in a sauce for fish, dressing up extra virgin olive oil to drizzle over fresh tomatoes, and in an Indian curry. This year I have several cups stored away, so I am sure I will be adding to the list of my favorite uses.
The last time I was in my community Garden Plot I pulled out all of my cilantro plants and brought them home to harvest. One more day and I would have had fully ripened coriander, missing the opportunity for this gardener's only special ingredient.
Sunday, July 1, 2012
Announcing Hippo Flambé's Preserving Index
As the canning season begins in ernest more and more people find my blog looking for answers to canning questions and recipes. To make this easier for everyone I have created a canning and preserving index for Hippo Flambé's blog posts. If you have any canning questions feel free to ask in a comment.
Hippo Flambé's New Preserving Index
Friday, June 15, 2012
Maple Drop Scones
This past Winter I made batch after batch of Maple Drop Scones, developing and perfecting the recipe for the Spring issue of the new Edible Green Mountains. The scones are now a family favorite and I hope a favorite of many Vermonters who picked up the Spring Issue of Edible Green Mountains. A friend who tried the recipe was impressed that she finally found a scone recipe she could make at home that produced a moist scone that did not fall apart. They were created to celebrate the Spring crop of Vermont Maple Syrup, but they are perfect any time of the year. I have grown to love them with rhubarb jam dolloped on the top but I also love them plain.
Scones have always been a breakfast favorite in my house, easy enough to bake even without having had any coffee yet. However these maple drop scones can even be made the night before, because the maple syrup helps them retain their tender crumb without drying out. I spent two weeks baking several variations of these scones before I found the balance I was looking for. By the final batch I began to fear my family would grow tired of them and refuse to eat them for months. After eating the last scone my 7 year old glared at the now empty baking tray, complaining that there were none left. It is rare to find any baked good that can be coveted by my picky children after eating it several times a day for two weeks!
The maple in these is admittedly subtle; however, none of my testers would allow me to think about adding more. “If you hadn’t told me these were maple scones, I would not have known what the amazing flavor came from. Don’t change a thing, though; they are perfect. I don’t usually think of food as making me happy, but eating this is making me happy.” I think the scones are a balance between sweet and rich with a slight nutty flavor from the wheat and an elusive taste from the maple syrup. Every person I have shared them with has loved them, never noticing the whole wheat flour. A first grader, who was not my child, took a bite and stopped running, looking down at the scone in his hand with a look of surprise. “Whoa! This is so good.” I have to remember to give food to other people’s children more frequently. Although my kids did each give me 20 digits up (yes, I scored fingers and toes), there wasn’t the same level of surprise and awe.
Maple Drop Scones
When I make these scones I use a measured scoop to portion the dough. Measured scoops look like ice cream scoops and are available in a range of sizes at kitchen supply stores. I always hated the fiddly task of scooping dough with one spoon and then using a second spoon to scrape it out. The end result is never even and places sticky dough all over me and my kitchen. With these, I just scoop, and then squeeze the trigger to release the dough. If you don’t have a scoop, you can always use a small measuring cup and a spoon to measure the dough.
2 cups whole wheat pastry flour or white whole wheat
1 cup unbleached white flour
1/2 teaspoon kosher salt
1/3 cup sugar
1 tablespoon baking powder
3/4 cup cold, unsalted, butter cut into chunks or tablespoons
1 egg
1/4 cup grade B maple syrup
1 1/4 cup heavy cream
Preheat the oven to 375° (or 325° if using convection)
Pulse the dry ingredients in the bowl of a food processor to mix. Add the cold butter and pulse the food processor until the mixture is broken into course crumbs with no large pieces of butter. Add the heavy cream, maple syrup and egg to the dry ingredients and pulse again until the dough is mixed and comes together. Use a light hand when mixing the wet ingredients in; if you mix the dough too much, the scones will be tough.
Scones can also be made by hand: Mix the dry ingredients well in a large bowl before adding the cold butter cut into chunks. Use a pastry blender, 2 knives, or your hands to mix the butter into the dry ingredients until it is broken up into coarse crumbs with no large pieces left. Beat the egg lightly and add it with the maple syrup and heavy cream, mixing thoroughly but gently. Be careful not to mix the dough anymore than what is necessary to combine everything evenly. Extra mixing will lead to tough scones.
Scoop out the dough onto two half sheet pans, using a commercial scooper, leaving 1 ½ inches between scones. Use anywhere from a #16 (5 ½ tablespoons) to #30 (2 ½ tablespoons) scooper. Bake for 15 to 20 minutes depending on size, or until some of the scones are toasty brown around the edge.
Note: If you want a more obvious maple flavor, replace the sugar with ¼ cup maple syrup, and reduce the amount of heavy cream by 2 tablespoons. That being said, I suggest you try them as is first.
Monday, June 11, 2012
Strawberry Freezer Jam Workshop!
This Wednesday, June 13th, from 7 to 8 pm I will be teaching a workshop at Buttered Noodles on making strawberry freezer jam. Freezer jam is a great way to capture the brief Vermont strawberry season for the rest of the year. Strawberries are the only fruit I don't preserve in a traditional jam because I prefer the uncooked strawberry flavor. Plus this jam is such a staple in my house and the season is so brief I am not sure I could make enough cooked jam to last more then 2 months.
After the workshop all participants are welcome to shop with a 10% discount (very few items are excluded from the discount).
Buttered Noodles
64 Harvest Lane
Williston, VT 05495
(802) 764-1810
Tuesday, June 5, 2012
Creme Fraiche Rhubarb Pound Cake
This morning we had my most recent attempt for breakfast and at first both of my boys complained. "It's not sweet enough. Why is there no lemon in this. You should have made the other one." Once they were done complaining they both happily asked for seconds. Personally this version is my favorite, the flavor is rich from creme fraiche and barley flour with juicy interruptions from chunks of rhubarb. The barley in the batter not only adds flavor but it also makes the crumb fine and light. Plus, the lack of sweetness my boys complained about at first make this cake a perfect breakfast treat.
The crumb is so light the cake needs to cool completely in the pans before slicing or removing. A fact I discovered when I tried to put one cake on a cooling rack, as you can see in the photo above. Part of the lightness and fragility is from the barley flour, which contains very little any gluten and so does not have the structure of whole wheat flour. With half barley flour you don't have to be so nervous about gluten formation when mixing, it would still be possible to toughen the cake with over mixing but it might take a little work. The barley also has a sweetness and rich flavor that pairs really well with the rhubarb.
Creme Fraiche Rhubarb Pound Cake
6 Tbsp butter, plus more for greasing the pan
1 cup barley flour
1/2 cup whole wheat pastry flour or white whole wheat
1/2 cup unbleached all purpose flour
3/4 cup sugar
1 tsp baking powder
1 tsp baking soda
1/2 tsp kosher salt
1 tsp ground cardamom
3/4 cup whole milk
1/2 cup creme fraiche
1 egg
2 cups chopped rhubarb
Preheat the oven to 350°. Generously butter a 1.5 qt loaf pan.
Melt the butter in a small saucepan and set aside while you prep the other ingredients. Mix the flours, sugar, baking powder, baking soda, salt and cardamom in a large bowl and set aside.
Add the milk to a clear 2 cup measuring cup and add the creme fraiche until the total volume of the milk and creme fraiche is 1 1/4 cups (3/4 cups milk plus 1/2 cup creme fraiche is 1 1/4 cups). Add the eggs to the measuring cup and whisk the liquid ingredients well (I place the whisk in the measuring cup and spin the handle between my hands).
Add the wet ingredients to the dry ingredients and stir a few times with the whisk before adding the butter and mixing until everything is fully incorporated. Add the rhubarb and fold in well with a spatula, making sure to fold all the way down to the bottom of the bowl.
Pour the batter into the prepared pans and bake in the center of the oven until a cake tester or sharp knife when inserted in the center of the cake comes out clean, 45 to 50 minutes in my oven. Allow to cool completely in the pan before serving or taking out of the pan.
Sunday, May 20, 2012
Chickpeas with Chard and Caraway
I have been struggling with this post for days now. I first tried writing about how Sebastian came to suddenly like beans last spring. I tried talking about the month this winter when the boys and I decided weeknights would mean there had to be beans of some kind for dinner. Lewis thought we were crazy, I had only meant it as a joke, but both boys loved the idea. My favorite part was the easy answer to "What's for dinner?" Everyday I would happily reply, "Beans, and something else."
However every time I tried to write this post it was mind numbingly boring. I could not even write more then a few sentences before I was too bored to write anymore. Then this evening I finished off the leftovers as part of a clean out the fridge dinner and I realized I needed to give up on the cute back story. I just needed to share the recipe with you, before I totally lost the taste memory and could not describe it.
This dish is a chick pea and vegetable sauté with the simple twist of caraway seeds. It is funny how we tend to associate certain flavors with a single dish, like caraway with rye bread when really their flavor is very versatile and refreshingly unexpected when used elsewhere. The carrots add a subtle sweetness, the chick peas are nutty, the chard has a slight bright tang and the caraway is the unexpected note that makes you crave more. I enjoyed it as much at room temperature tonight mixed with plain Greek yogurt as I did the night I made it and the Greek yogurt with the olive oil stirred in.
Chickpea Saute with Chard and Caraway
Adapted from Plenty: Vibrant Recipes from London's Ottolenghi: A cookbook I have been really enjoying using recently
Note: All the vegetable measurements can be tweaked depending what you have on hand. If you don't have chard the author suggests using a combination of spinach and chard without blanching them and adding a sprinkling of ground sumac or ground Persian lime, personally I think an extra squeeze of lemon juice would also give you a similar brightness, and I would try kale as well.
2 large bunches chard leaves
1/3 cup extra virgin olive oil, plus more for serving
4 medium to large carrots (mine were large and I would not want less carrot), peeled and cut into 3/8 inch pieces
1 tsp whole caraway seeds
2 cups homemade chickpeas, or substitute rinsed, canned chickpeas
1 clove garlic chopped fine
1 Tbsp fresh mint chopped fine
2 Tbsp fresh cilantro chopped fine
1 Tbsp fresh lemon juice
kosher salt and freshly ground black pepper to taste
1/2 cup Greek yogurt
1 tbsp extra virgin olive oil
Bring a large pot of water to the boil, while the water is heating separate the chard leaves from the stems, reserving both. Add salt to the boiling water and blanch the stems for 3 minutes before adding the leaves to the water. Continue cooking the chard leaves and stems for another 2 minutes before draining. Rinse the chard under cold running water to stop the cooking process. When completely cool, squeeze all the excess water from the chard and then roughly chop the chard.
While the chard is blanching heat the olive oil over medium heat and cook the carrots and caraway seeds and sauté for 5 minutes. Add the chard and chickpeas and cook for 6 minutes, stirring occasionally. Add the garlic, lemon juice, salt and freshly ground black pepper to taste. Remove from the heat to cool before tasting to adjust the seasoning.
Before serving stir the yogurt with the olive oil, salt and freshly ground black pepper. I served the yogurt on the side so everyone could decide for themselves if they wanted the yogurt on top.
Saturday, April 28, 2012
Simple Rhubarb Jam (No Commercial Pectin)
At the end of the month I am teaching a canning rhubarb jam workshop and I need to settle on a recipe. I have been making a Rhubarb Apricot Jam for the last few years now, but in that jam the rhubarb only plays a supporting role to the apricot. The workshop schedule was set in early March, so I had a lot of time to think about what I wanted to do before there was any rhubarb to play with. Looking through my cookbook collection and online for rhubarb flavor pairings I found the ubiquitous strawberry rhubarb, ginger rhubarb, vanilla rhubarb, rhubarb and beer etc but nothing that inspired me. Earlier this week I finally found rhubarb at my local food co-op and I bought enough for one test batch of jam along with several ounces of loose tea I thought I might add.
In the end I decided to highlight the subtle flavor of the rhubarb instead of cluttering the jam with lots of other noise. The sugar is scaled back from many traditional rhubarb jams, allowing the subtle tartness to blend with the sugar instead of being drowned by it. The more I play with rhubarb, whether it is in a savory rhubarb recipe or a simple jam the more I fall in love with its complexity. This jam has a lot going on, especially for such a simple list of ingredients. I will be making many more batches of it before the end of the rhubarb season, not just for my own toast. Sebastian, my 9 year old declared it his second favorite jam. His first favorite will probably always be Tomato Orange Marmalade. For now, it is the only jam I want on my toast.
Before I make another batch of jam I need to wait for the plants in my yard to cooperate. Although while waiting I need to find a use for the tiny stalks I picked for the photos!
Simple Rhubarb Jam
Yield 4 half pint and one 4 oz jar
1 Kilogram rhubarb, stalks halved lengthwise and then chopped into 1/2 inch or so pieces
600 grams sugar
juice of one lemon (I like to microwave my lemon for 40 seconds before squeezing it to get the most juice out)
Combine all the ingredients in a non reactive pot or bowl (non reactive means, anything but copper, aluminum or cast iron). Stir well and cover with a lid or a towel before placing in the fridge at least over night, I usually allow mine to rest for 24 hours.
Remove the pot from the fridge and uncover it, stir well and place over high heat. Heat the jam over high heat, once the fruit is boiling stir constantly until the setting point is reached. With this jam I used the cold plate test to test the set: Place a dollop of your jam on a plate you have previously set in the freezer. Place the plate and jam in the fridge. After about 5 minutes test the jam by pushing it with your finger, if it wrinkles up it is gelled and it's time to can your jam.
Ladle hot jam into hot jars, leaving 1/4 inch headspace. Wipe the rims clean with a damp paper towel or cloth and place on 2 piece lids and tighten by hand. Place filled jars in a water bath canner with water covering the jars by at least 1 inch. Bring water back to boil. Boil for 10 minutes more, when the 10 minutes is completed turn off the heat, remove the lid and leave the jars in the canner for another 5 minutes. Remove jars and place on a towel, dish cloth or receiving blanket or a cooling rack, with at least 1 inch between jars. Allow to cool completely, 12 to 24 hours. Once cool take off the bands, test the seal by pushing up on the lid with your thumbs. Any jars that have not sealed properly can be placed in the fridge. Clean the top of the jars, label and store in a cool dry place.
Wednesday, April 18, 2012
Peanut Butter Oatmeal Chocolate Chunk Cookies
Last week was not a week dedicated to cooking. Sebastian, my oldest was in the school play and Lewis was handling the lighting. Dinner was about the balancing act of late rehearsals and bedtime, not experimenting with new recipes and playing in the kitchen. However the first night of the play the boys got out of school at 11:30 am and I decided to bake cookies while they played outside. Who needs a balanced dinner when there are cookies? These cookies are actually low enough in sugar they could be served as a bread serving in the school lunch or CACFP (Child and Adult Care Food Program). so they could even be dinner!
When I gave both boys a cookie to eat I told them I was finally done looking for new peanut butter cookie recipes because I had found my favorite. Sebastian, who apparently knows me well replied, "Unless you find one you want to test." So yes, unless I find a peanut butter cookie recipe I want to test these are my new favorite. Chewy without being crumbly, full of peanut flavor and chunks of peanut for crunch, a depth of flavor that comes from the oats and wheat flour and then pools of dark chocolate to contrast with the peanuts.
Adapted from Martha Stewart Living April 2012
These cookies can also be made with other nut butters and matching chopped nuts (or use sunflower seeds and sunflower butter for a nut free version).
1 1/2 sticks (3/4 cup or 12 Tbsp) butter, divided use
1 cup rolled or old fashioned oats
1 tsp baking soda
1/4 tsp kosher salt
1/3 cup white sugar
1/2 cup brown sugar
1 egg
1 tsp vanilla extract
1/2 peanut or other nut butter
1/2 cup coarsely chopped salted peanuts (or other nuts)
1/2 cup bittersweet chocolate chunks or chips
3/4 cup plus 2 Tbsp whole wheat pastry flour or white whole wheat
3/4 cup white flour
Preheat your oven to 350° with the racks in the upper and lower thirds of the oven.
Melt 1/2 stick (4 Tbsp) butter in a medium saucepan over medium heat. Add the oats to the melted butter and continue to cook over medium heat, while stirring, until the oats are toasted, about 5 to 7 minutes. Remove the pan from the heat and stir for a little longer until the pan cools down a little, just a minute or 2. Alternatively you can dump the toasted oats onto a parchment lined baking sheet to cool.
Beat one stick of butter (8 Tbsp or 1/2 cup) in a mixer on medium high with the sugars until pale and fluffy. If you are not using a self scraping beater blade, stop the mixer occasionally to scrape the bowl. Add the egg and vanilla, beat until well incorporated before adding the nut butter. Beat on medium speed until the mixture is well combined. Add toasted oats chopped nuts and chocolate, beat on medium speed until combined.
Add both flours and beat until just combined. Scoop out dough using a 1-1/2-Tablespoon scoop or roll dough into 1 1/2 inch balls. Place cookie dough 1 inch apart on parchment lined baking sheets. Bake for 12 to 15 minutes, until golden, switching the pans front to back and between racks after 6 minutes. Allow cookies to cool completely on the baking sheets. Be sure to eat several cookies while they are still warm.
Saturday, April 7, 2012
Matzo Oven Pancake
Last night instead of attending a seder we went out for tortillas. Our seder this year is tonight. Tonight we will gather with friends and family to read through the Haggadah, eat matzo and ask the 4 questions. As we ate our tortillas I mentioned that it was the first night of Passover. "What!" Said Sebastian in horror as he looked at his dinner. "I don't want to eat bread during Passover this year."
"Don't worry honey." I replied, "It is still light out, Passover has not started." He looked at the bright sky, sighed happily and finished his quesadilla. I did not think much more about Sebastian's observance of the Passover holiday until this morning when I recognized we had a problem. I have not bought any matzo yet. Normally for Passover we as a family add matzo to the food we regularly eat, without subtracting anything. Clearly without matzo, matzo brei was not an option. Besides, for Lewis and I matzo brei has alway been our traditional breakfast the morning after our seder. All we had for Passover provisions was a canister of matzo meal. So what could we make for breakfast that Sebastian could eat?
Then I had an inspiration, matzo meal oven pancake. I have played enough over the years with modifying recipes to use matzo meal, so I had a good idea of what to do. However Lewis is usually in charge of making the oven pancakes. So I began preparing the dough as Lewis watched, often disapprovingly. However in the end it turns out I did know what I was doing as I pulled a golden brown and puffed pancake from the oven. With fresh lemon juice squeezed on top, our preferred way to serve oven pancake, it was a delicious breakfast. It would have been delicious even if it was not Passover.
Sebastian happily ate his share. However as he ate it he informed me that the regular oven pancake would have been fine. "I don't want to eat any bread with yeast in it this week. Flour is fine though."
Matzo Meal Oven Pancake: Kosher for Passover
3 eggs
1 cup milk
1/2 cup matzo meal
2 Tbsp unsalted butter, melted
1/4 tsp salt
1 Tbsp sugar
1/2 tsp vanilla extract
2-3 Tbsp unsalted butter
Preheat the oven to 450°
Combine the eggs and milk in a large bowl and beat well to combine. Add the matzo meal and mix well before stirring in the melted butter (don't worry about over mixing the dough, because matzo has already been baked the gluten is set and cannot make the mixture tough).
Add the salt, sugar, and vanilla extract and mix well. Allow the dough to rest for 15 minutes so the matzo meal can absorb some of the liquid and soften a little. Near the end of the dough resting place 2 to 3 Tbsp butter in a large cast iron skillet (10 to 12 inches wide) or a pyrex dish (9 x 13 or a little smaller). Place the skillet or pan in the oven until the pan is hot and the butter is fully melted. Pour the dough into the pan and place in the oven.
Cook for 20 to 25 minutes until golden brown and set. Do not check on the pancake until it has cooked for at least 15 minutes so it does not deflate. I often place an oven mitt over the handle when I remove a hot skillet from the oven. When I don't I always seem to forget and grab the burning hot handle.
Slide the pancake out of the pan and onto a cutting board. Slice into wedges and serve with fresh lemon juice squeezed on top and if you wish a sprinkling of powdered sugar (I never use the sugar). To get more juice from your lemons place them in the microwave on high for 40 seconds before slicing into them.