Tuesday, October 13, 2020

Tomato, Cranberry Bean and Pumpkin Soup with Escarole

We found the recipe for this soup in Franny's Simple-Seasonal-Italian a wonderful cookbook given to me by my amazing daughter. All you had to do is look at the photo of the finished soup from the book to know you had to have some - 


Description from the book - 
"It is a brothy autumnal soup that embodies the transition from summer to fall, with the last of the seasons tomatoes and cranberry beans and the first showing of pumpkin and escarole." 

The borlotti beans (cranberry beans) are cooked in water with Parmasan cheese rinds, pieces of roasted pumpkin, fresh tomatoes, fennel, celery, rosemary, sage and escarole. The pumpkin adds sweetness, the cranberry beans add satisfying pops of richness and the tomatoes do what they do best all set off by the mild bitterness of the escarole.

Serves 6 - 8

Ingredients

4  medium ripe tomatoes peeled and roughly chopped
1/4 cup olive oil plus more for drizzling
1 cup chopped sweet onion
1/2 cup diced fennel bulb
1/2 cup diced celery
4 cloves of garlic minced
Parmigiano-Reggiano rind
1 large sage sprig
1 large rosemary sprig
1 1/2 cups dry cranberry beans soaked over night
5 1/2 cups water
1 1/2 tablespoons kosher salt
2 cups peeled and diced pumpkin ( about 3/4 inch pieces)
6 cups chopped escarole - 2 heads
Freshly cracked black pepper

In a large stock pot, heat the olive oil over medium heat. Add the onion, fennel, celery and garlic. Cook until tender.

Add the tomatoes and cook until their juices are  released (the liquid should be about level with the tomatoes). Lower the heat to a simmer.

Add the cheese rind cut into small pieces, the sage and the rosemary, the beans, water and salt to the pot and bring to a simmer, then reduce the heat to low. Cover the pot and cook until the beans are tender - about 45 minutes.

Meanwhile brush the pumpkin wedges with olive oil and sprinkle with salt. Roast at 375 for 30 minutes. When done cut the slices into pieces about 3/4 inch square.

Stir the pumpkin in with the beans, cover the pot and cook for 20 minutes more.

Add the escarole to the pot, cover, and stir every few minutes until the escarole is wilted. Remove the sachet and squeeze it over the pot to release any remaining flavor into the soup.

Ladle the soup into bowls and serve, drizzle with olive oil and a few turns of pepper.


Eggs in Purgatory 2.0


We love eggs cooked in spicy tomato sauce - known as uove in purgatorio (eggs in purgatory) in Italian or shakshuka in the middle east. 

Here is a slightly different take we tried for breakfast this weekend. So I'm calling it Eggs in Purgatory 2.0.

Ingredients
Eggs
Grape tomatoes
Garlic
Rosemary
Soppressata - hot Calabrian salami
Cheese
Chili pepper
Olive oil
Salt and pepper


Serve over English muffins or biscuits or toast


Thursday, October 8, 2020

Red Pot Whiskey Rebellion Bread

 

I'm calling this Red Pot Whiskey Rebellion Bread  because I added some of the spent grains I used in making my own whiskey and it's baked in a red cast iron Dutch oven. It's a safe bet you don't have spent cracked rye, malted barley and wheat berries that are used in making home made rye whiskey. They give this bread a sweet, earthy, nutty flavor but not like rye bread.  You can substitute a little whole wheat flour though that will approximate the taste. 

Just a little back story - 
The Whiskey Rebellion took place in SW Pennsylvania and parts of Virginia and Maryland in the early 1790's. It was an armed, but mostly peaceful, revolt against the newly mandated excise tax on whiskey. Farmers in the western frontier were accustomed to using their surplus rye, barley and wheat to make whiskey. These farmers resisted the tax. In these regions, whiskey often served as a medium of exchange because hard cash was simply not available. Many of the resisters were war veterans who believed that they were fighting for the principles of the American Revolution, in particular against taxation without local representation.  It was the first big test of the power of our new nation's federal government. George Washington, largely influenced by Alexander Hamilton, sent an army of 12,000 soldiers to western Pennsylvania to shut down the insurrection. The farmers lost, the government won. Come to find out, I had 4 gr gr gr + grandfathers on my mothers side who participated in the Whiskey Rebellion on the side of the rebels.  Once I found that out I put it on my bucket list to try making rye whiskey myself. And I did.

Ingredients - makes 1 loaf
3 cups unbleached all purpose flour plus more for sprinkling
1/2 cup whole wheat flour
2 teaspoons salt
3/4 teaspoon active dry yeast
1 1/2 cups lukewarm water
 
Equipment
Large bowl
Plastic wrap 
Large Dutch oven with oven-safe lid
Parchment paper
Whisk
Spatula
 
Instructions
Place the flour, salt and yeast in a large bowl and whisk to combine. Make a well in the center, and add the water into the well. Stir until it forms a wet shaggy dough.
Cover the bowl with plastic wrap. Set aside in a warm place to rise until doubled in size and bubbly, 6 to 8 hours.

After that first rise, fold the dough over on itself several times in the bowl with a rubber spatula then re-cover and put in the refrigerator to slow rise over night. Letting the dough slow rise overnight will give more flavor to the bread. 
(If you are in a hurry, you can omit the slow rise in the refrigerator).

Take the dough out of the refrigerator and let come to room temperature- at least an hour or more.
Lightly flour a piece of parchment paper. Turn the dough out of the bowl onto it, folding it over on itself at least once while you do so. Quickly shape the dough into a round ball. 

Meanwhile preheat the oven to 
450°F and place a large Dutch oven with its lid on the rack. Let it heat up for about 30 minutes. .

Using the parchment paper as a sling, carefully transfer the loaf, still on the paper, to the Dutch oven. If desired, make a slash or shallow cut on the top of the dough with kitchen shears or a sharp knife so that the bread can expand while baking.


Place the lid on the pot and put it in the oven. (Be careful, the lid is hot!) Bake covered for 30 minutes. Then remove the lid and bake for 10-15 minutes more.

Remove the Dutch oven from the oven and use the parchment paper to transfer the bread to a wire rack. Let cool at least 15 minutes before slicing the bread.


Slather with REAL butter while still warm and ENJOY!!! 

Tuesday, October 6, 2020

Pasta with Pistachios


We recently had dinner at Hoffstot's Café Monaco here in Oakmont. Lisa ordered their Pasta Pistachio. It was so good that we decided to try to recreate it at home. Their menu describes the dish like this - 

"This simple dish is a chef’s favorite. Imported fusilli pasta tossed in butter with garlic, basil, oregano, fresh tomatoes and spinach then topped with toasted pistachios and Parmigiano-Reggiano cheese".

These are the original key flavor ingredients- Pistachios, Garlic, Tomatoes, Basil, Oregano, Spinach, Parmigiano-Reggiano Cheese

The dish was delicious as is but we wanted to make two changes right off the top: 

1) They used whole pistachios but we thought it would be better if it were a mix of whole pistachios and roughly chopped pistachios. 

2) They used fusilli but we felt a different type of pasta such as mezzi rigatoni would hold the nuts and other ingredients better and help prevent the bigger pieces from all ending up on the bottom of the pasta bowl.

But the more we thought about it, we came up with other ways to do a pistachio and pasta dish without getting too carried away. Like mixing all the original ingredients into ricotta and stuffing that into large shells or into pacheri (a short wide tubular pasta). Maybe do the original 7 ingredients but in a cream sauce or add crisped up pancetta as an additional ingredient

We finally settled on these ingredients - 

1 box Mezzi Rigatoni
1 cup Shelled Pistachios - chop half of them and leave half whole
1 pint multi colored Grape Tomatoes
1 Red or Orange sweet bell pepper - cut in thin ribbons
Half and Half - 1 1/2 cups
1/2 cup grated Pecorino cheese plus more for 
5 cloves Garlic - minced
Arugula - hand full
Good big handful fresh Basil
Oregano - 1 tablespoon fresh or 1 teaspoon dry
Fresh Hot Chili Pepper - 1/2 teaspoon minced or more to taste (optional)
Salt and Pepper to taste

How to - 

Bring a big pot of water to boil for the pasta. Add a tablespoon of salt and stir. 

In a medium sized frying pan on medium heat saute the garlic in olive oil for a 3-4minutes.

Add the pistachios and stir together.

Add the oregano, chili pepper and sweet peppers. Saute for another 3-4 minutes

Meanwhile drop the Rigatoni in the pasta pot.

Add the tomatoes to the pan with the pistachios and peppers. Add the Half and Half and Pecorino cheese. Stir everything together, salt and pepper to taste and cook to thicken.

When the rigatoni is done, drain and put in a large serving bowl, then add the ingredients in the pan along with the basil and arugula and stir everything together. It's important to add the basil at the end to keep it's flavor strong.

Put this delicious stuff in pasta bowls and top with grated pecorino cheese. 
Dig in and enjoy!!!

Fancy Pants Mussels Rockefeller

You've heard of Oysters Rockefeller. This is their cousin Mussels Rockefeller. We love mussels and were planning to have them this past Friday our favorite way - steamed in a wine and herb broth and served over linguine but Lisa said "Hey, babe, let's change things up. I've found a cool recipe for mussels Rockefeller maybe we can play around with the recipe and have them that way." I replied, "Why not?" And so we did and lived happily ever after.... Wait, that's another story. I'll save for another time. 😄

Typically oysters Rockefeller are prepared by mixing together breadcrumbs, garlic, herbs, some kind of green - usually spinach, and butter and topping oysters on the half shell with that mix and baking or broiling them.

Mussels Rockefeller is done the same way but with a little different, and necessary, prep twist that we discovered pretty quickly. Like oysters, mussels don't like to have their shells pried open. Oyster shells are much harder than mussel shells, but with a little practice, you can easily pry open raw oyster shells at their hinge with a shucking knife without damaging the oyster inside. But mussel shells are delicate and if you try to pop the shell open at the hinge you will just end up cracking or breaking it and destroying the mussel meat in the process. What you have to do is "coax" the mussels into opening their shells by themselves. How do you do that? By heating some water in a pan to just boiling and tossing the tightly closed mussels in. About 5 - 10 seconds later the mussels will have opened up on their own. Then fish them all out with a strainer. The shell can easily be snapped apart leaving the mussel meat on the other half ready to be filled with the delicious breadcrumb herb topping.

The ingredients in the topping we made - for 2 dozen mussels (about two pounds) -

Garlic - 3 cloves minced
Olive oil
Fresh Thyme - 1 tablespoon finely chopped
Fresh Flat Leaf Parsley - 1 tablespoon finely chopped
Red pepper flakes - to taste
Splash of white wine
Bread crumbs - 2 cups
Butter - 3 tablespoons
Salt and Pepper to taste

In a small frying pan, sauté the garlic in a little olive oil until just translucent, add a splash of white wine and turn down the heat to simmer, stir in the herbs, salt and pepper and bread crumbs. Stir regularly until the bread crumb mixture gets toasty. Remove from the heat and add the butter. 

After taking the shells apart by the method above, place the half shell mussels on a foil lined baking sheet. Top each mussel with about a teaspoon of the bread crumb mixture


Move the oven rack to the top of the oven and bake at 425 F for 3-4 minutes. Turn off the oven and turn on the broiler. Broil for just a minute to put an extra crunch in the bread crumbs.

Remove from the oven and hit each one with a spritz of lemon juice. Enjoy!

We served these with a side of arugula, basmati rice and mandarin orange sections.


Planting a Fall Vegetable Garden

We like to keep our vegetable garden areas going through the fall. 

Here is a link to an article on Gardenality, a gardening web site with some great tips and info on planning, planting and maintaining a fall garden.