About jacky grace

I grew up in an Italian house with big meals, big flavors and big voices. My husband comes from an even bigger Greek and Armenian house with even bigger food and voices. Here in our tiny city kitchen, we adapt our family recipes for our small space without sacrificing any of the flavors, traditions or love.

Something from nothing – pasta salad

 

 

We were away for a week with my aunt Annie and some of my cousins.

It was one of those blissfully perfect beach days, that stretches long into the evening.

So long in fact that we all were sitting with grumbling tummies, still sandy and basking in the  sun at 7:30!

Dinner?

What does everyone want?

No one wanted to go out. No one wanted to go to the store.

But there was almost nothing in the house.

Almost nothing.

Annie said Don’t worry. I’ll whip something up from nothing. Just come over.

Normally, I’d be afraid when someone said this. But not when my aunt said this.

We showered quickly and walked into the house and it was filled with the smells of onions sauteeing, bacon frying, and fresh juicy tomatoes being sliced open.

I’ve got two kinds of pasta, she said.

From the kitchen with nothing came a rich and filling pasta topped with sauteed onions and bacon, salty and fatty and delicious, and a second pasta topped with fresh cherry tomatoes and sauteed summer squash.

We all sat on the floor with plates of pasta and plastic cups of wine.

My cousin’s Ipod was on shuffle, and the breeze blew from the front porch.

It wasn’t fancy, but it was good.

And that’s really what Italian cooking is. Simple. Rustic. Homey. And from basically nothing.

Inspired by that meal, and with bare cupboards after a week away, we whipped up our own something from nothing. A can of black olives, some tomatoes we brought back with us from the farmer’s market and some mozzarella cheese (I’m Italian. There is always some kind of cheese, even if there is nothing in the house), tossed with olive oil and bow tie pasta.

We were listening to the sirens on 2nd avenue instead of my cousin’s Ipod, and the wine was in our new glasses (Thanks Mrs. Follis!) but we were sitting on the floor eating something from nothing.

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Cobb Salad

 

This is a great almost-no-cook meal.

You know what I mean. One of those dishes where you kind of cook one thing and then just throw together a bunch of ingredients and say, dinner is made!

In this case, we’re frying up some bacon and assembling a delicious, hearty cobb salad.

Iceberg Lettuce, Chopped Tomatoes, Chopped Hard-Boiled Egg, Slices of Avocado and of course Bacon fried to perfection. To give this a little more heft, add some pre-cooked shredded chicken. Hello rotisserie, I’m looking at you!

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Top with your favorite dressing, oil and vinegar for something light, honey mustard maybe for something with a little zing.

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And enjoy!

Greek Chicken Pita Pockets

Since Greece is still alive in the World Cup and since it’s so damn hot out I thought we should have some Greek Chicken Pita Pockets.

Very little cooking involved (yay!) but very tasty results (I mean, it’s Greek. What do you know that’s Greek and isn’t tasty?)

So you can buy already cooked chicken and just jazz it up with a little lemon juice, or you can cut up some chicken breast, season with olive oil, lemon, salt and pepper and bake at 350 until done.

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Then, it’s just a matter of assembling your spread. We have diced tomatoes, shredded lettuce, cubed cucumbers and tzatziki.

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Cut open your pita, fill with ingredients and yell Ellas!

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Pasta with Broccoli Pesto

Pesto is one of my favorite things in life.

It’s garlicky. Yet somehow it’s still fresh and light and perfect for steamy summer nights.

Pesto doesn’t have to be just basil.

Steamed broccoli makes awesome pesto. Steamed broccoli + 2 cloves of garlic + 1/4 cup of olive oil

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Give it a spin in the food processor

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Boil up some pasta to al dente and drain the water.

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Top the pasta with the broccoli pesto.

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Give it all a big stir

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And dish it up in bowls. Top with Parmesan

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Grilled Eggplant Salad

It is way too hot to cook.

Thankfully, there’s some grilled eggplant in the fridge from dinner the other night.

A bed of baby spinach, some grilled eggplant, a drizzle of balsamic and a sprinkle of Parmesan.

Dinner. Done.

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1 Ingredient Vegan Banana Ice Cream

This is kind of life changing.

I mean, come on.

Did you read that title?

One Ingredient.

Vegan

Ice Cream!

I can’t believe how good it is and how ridiculously easy it is.

All you need are some bananas, cut up and popped into the freezer for a few hours (or overnight).

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Toss the frozen bananas into a food processor

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And keep pulsing and scraping down the sides as needed.

You’ll get something that kind of resembles Dip n Dots. Do you remember Dip n Dots? Do they still make Dip N Dots? MMM… Oh wait. We’re talking about healthy foods this week.

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When it reaches the point pictured above, dump into a tupperware container and give a stir with a spatula.

See that? Looks a lot like ice cream to me.

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Pop a lid on and stash in the freezer or enjoy right away.

We may have topped ours with some pieces of chocolate…

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Grilled Eggplant

I have been horrible blogger lately. And an equally bad wifey.

I haven’t really been cooking in the last few days – my friend’s band was in a 24 hour battle of the bands (they won!) and work has been crazy! So we’ve been doing the take out thing.

Why is it that food is the first sacrifice we make when things get hectic? It should be the last thing to get the ax. Good food keeps us going. So I’m going to try and be better.

And I’m going to try to give you some really simple and easy recipes in the process, so we both have no excuses.

I’m going to be trying to simplify some of my favorite dishes, or think about how to save time as much as I can. And, as always, churn out dinner in my itty bitty kitchen.

We just recently bought a grill pan. We used it once before when we made our steak fajitas  but since then it’s just been languishing in the cupboard. Hmm. Healthy. Fast. Easy dinner. With the grill pan.

How about some grilled eggplant sandwiches?

I’ve waxed poetically about my mom’s eggplant parm. plenty of times on this blog, but the thing is, it is not itty kitchen friendly (doesn’t stop me from making it) nor is it exactly something you can just whip up. So this is an easier, lighter, healthier, and did I say easier? spin. Also great for vegetarian friends if you’re having a BBQ,

You will need

  • eggplant, peeled and sliced
  • tomatoes, sliced
  • olive oil
  • salt
  • pepper
  • mozzarella
  • rolls (we used brioche)

Start by slicing your eggplant into 1/4 inc rounds.

 

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Drizzle with olive oil, salt and pepper and place on your pre-heated grill pan.

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Grill on both sides. Takes about 4 minutes or so a side.

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When all your eggplant is grilled, set the slices aside.

Place your rolls on the grill plan and place a slice of mozzarella on the bottom half of each roll.

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Add your eggplant

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And your tomato

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and then carefully remove from the grill and top with the bun.

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Nom.

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Three Cheese Spinach Lasagna

This one goes into the top 10 recipe hall of fame in our house.

Don’t ask me for the other 9. All I know is that this one is in there.

I was thinking about how long it’s been since I made lasagna.

Then I was thinking about the fact that I didn’t have any gravy on hand.

And lasagna is one of those things that I will NEVER use store bought sauce for. You can get away with it for other things, but not lasagna. Whenever a dish is only three simple components (in this case, pasta, cheese and sauce) you want to make sure that each is the best quality. And my gravy is the best quality. So lasagna was a no go.

Or so I thought.

We were watching Best Thing I Ever Ate and the one guy, Adam Gertler, was talking about his Hometown Favorite dish, spinach pizza.

And that was all I needed for inspiration.

Spinach, three cheese lasagna.

No sauce. Lots of cheese. Lots of sauteed spinach.

For this recipe you will need

  • Lasagna noodles (I used 9, 3 noodles for each of the 3 layers)
  • 2 bags of baby spinach
  • olive oil
  • salt
  • pepper
  • 1 egg
  • mozzarella
  • parmesan
  • 15 oz container ricotta (why is ricotta sold in 15oz containers? why not 16? If you are doubling a recipe that calls for 8 oz or if you need 16oz you are forced to buy two containers, all for that one extra once. It’s a conspiracy!)

Okay. Sorry about that side rant.

I’m calm now.

This lasagna has a calming effect because it’s so damn good.

Preheat the oven to 400 and bring a pot of water to boil on the stove.

Drop in your lasagna noodles and cook to package directions.

Drizzle olive oil in the bottom of a large skillet and toss in your spinach.

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Season with salt and pepper and cook until it is wilted down.

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It always amazes how so much spinach cooks down to that little pile.

Let the spinach cool down for a few minutes.

If your pasta is done drain that and set it aside to cool.

Dump the ricotta into a bowl and add your cooled spinach and one egg. We let the spianch cool a bit so it doesn’t cook the egg.

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Mix well.

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Now it’s time to assemble.

Lightly oil a 9×13 baking dish and place your first layer of pasta down.

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Spoon over half the ricotta spinach mixture.

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Then add another layer of pasta.

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Then the remaining half of the ricotta spinach

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And another layer of pasta

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Top with parmesan and mozzarella.

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Bake for about 25-30 minutes.

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The cheese will melts, the pasta will brown ever so slightly, and the layers will all sink into each other.

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Let it cool for a few minutes before you slice so it doesn’t just melt all over the place.

And there you have a spinachy, cheesy plate of comfort.

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PS. This is a great make ahead. I actually made it on Sunday, baked it, then popped it in the fridge. After a crazy work day, I just came home and popped it in the oven for about 10 minutes to heat it up.