Thursday, September 30, 2010
Herbed Olive Oil
Strange Mushrooms In the Garden
A16 Food and Wine
Last night I tried out a couple of the recipes, one for sardines and the other for a salad. I had most of the ingredients for the sardine recipe (“Roasted Sardines with Bread Crumbs, Green Garlic, and Mint”), but substituted green onions for the green garlic, which is not in season. They turned out great, though the bread crumbs on top were a bit small (and not as orange as in the picture). I had to improvise a bit more with the second recipe, since it called for cauliflower and I had only broccoli. But “Roasted Potatoes and Broccoli (instead of cauliflower) with Red Onion, Capers, and Chiles” also turned out well—and it may have been more attractive, with the green broccoli. I will be cooking some more things from this terrific new cookbook, as soon as I do a bit of shopping.
We made another tian a few nights after the first one, this time with potatoes, eggplant, onions, herbs and some feta cheese, as well as parmesan. It was good too! I really recommend this method of vegetable-cooking.
Tuesday, September 14, 2010
Summer Garden A Bust!
Salmon with Herb Butter
Summer Food
¼ cup of olive oil, plus more for top
1 medium leek, sliced, with about 2-3 inches of green
2 small potatoes, 1 red and 1 Yukon gold, thinly sliced
1 medium round green squash (zucchini would work too), sliced
½ of a yellow squash, sliced (the other half was no good!)
2 small heirloom tomatoes, sliced
Ground pepper and salt (Costo’s grinders are terrific for the kitchen!)
¼ cup of grated parmesan
Preheat the oven to 425º.
Sauté the leeks in the olive oil in a medium oven-proof sauté pan until slightly wilted, and move to one side if you plan to cook the tian in the pan.
Arrange vegetables in the sauté pan, or a pie plate or a shallow baking dish, overlapping and alternating them (but don’t worry about have equal amounts of each). Sprinkle the leeks on top.
Grind black pepper and salt over the dish and sprinkle with the grated parmesan. Drizzle another tablespoon of olive oil over the top, if desired.
Bake for 30 to 40 minutes, or until the potatoes are tender. Serve immediately or at room temperature.
The salmon with herb butter is a variation on a dish I usually make with an olive butter. The herbs included about 2 Tb. purple basil, a small amount of marjoram, 6-8 chives, and about 2-3 Tb. of chopped parsley, but garlic could have been added as well. I added about 3 Tb. of softened butter to the chopped herbs and dotted the fish with about half of it—I saved the remainder to add at the end. Before topping the salmon with the butter, I ground pepper and salt over it and brushed it with olive oil. The salmon can cook in the same over as the tian, for about 10 minutes at the end.
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