Paprika, Sweet Potato, Chickpea Stew

It was great to escape the hustle and bustle of the city this weekend and trade it in for the flash and glitz of the casino.

There’s this sensation in a casino, or state of being maybe is the better phrase, that doesn’t happen anywhere else. There are no clocks, so time doesn’t exist. There are no windows, so day, night, sunny, cloudy, doesn’t matter. And everyone is in the same place for the same reasons – booze, gambling and fun.

It was great to spend time with his family and even better to put a rough week behind us. And I like the occasional night off from cooking.

But all day at work I couldn’t help but be antsy to get back to my kitchen.

It may be teeny, but it’s mine.

After a few overindulgent nights, we needed something light, healthy and vegetarian for Meatless Monday. I wanted fresh, crisp vegetables after so many vodka tonics and greasy fries. I saw quite a few people posting about sweet potatoes on Twitter today. I love sweet potatoes. That got the wheels turning.

I started googling recipes. I came across a sweet potato and chickpea curry. Close. But not quite. That led me to a Moroccan chickpea stew. Again, close, but not ….

Wait a minute!

Why not take the parts from each I like and do a mashup?

This is really the first recipe I’ve completely made up and winged it on.

You will need

  • 1 clove garlic, diced
  • 2 tablespoons shallot, diced
  • 2 sweet potatoes, cubed
  • 1 can diced tomatoes
  • 1 can chickpeas
  • a few handfuls baby spinach
  • paprika
  • salt
  • pepper
  • vegetable oil

Drizzle the bottom of the pot with vegetable oil and add in the garlic and shallots, cooking until brown.

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Meanwhile, peel the sweet potatoes. Look at that color! So much good stuff packed in there – potassium, Vitamin C. Okay. I’m not all health and nutrition knowledgeable. So I’ll stick to the cooking. IMG_0756

Dice up the sweet potatoes into bite-size cubes and toss them into the pot, seasoning with salt, pepper and paprika ( a lot of paprika).

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From this point on, it’s just about layering flavors into the pot. Once the potatoes, shallot and garlic are chopped, there’s very little counter space required. This, like most soups, is a great itty bitty city kitchen friendly dish. Okay, let the potatoes cook for about 10 minutes, stirring once or twice so they don’t stick.

Add the can of tomatoes, juice included, and stir.

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Add the can of chickpeas, rinsed and drained.

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Add enough water to the pot to cover the veggies. For me, this was two fills of the chickpea can.

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Cover and let simmer for 15-20 minutes, until the potatoes are soft. Just before serving, tear up some baby spinach, stir in, and let it wilt a bit.

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Serve up in bowls with a dollop of Greek yogurt.

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This may be a soup with some hints of Thanksgiving, but it’s still light and refreshing enough for a healthy summer dinner.

Runny Egg Vegetable Stew

I came across this recipe in a magazine months ago.

It was a mix of beans and peppers and tomatoes topped with a fried egg.

The veggie mix was seasoned with an exotic mix of cumin and coriander and curry powder.

I wrinkled my nose when I read that part of the ingredient list.

Those are some very polarizing spices. They’re in the same category as cilantro. You either take a bite and say oh my god! What is that? This is delicious. Or, you take a bite and say oh my god! What is that? This tastes like soap.

Yes, it’s true. Due to chemical makeups in the body, some people get a soapy taste when they bite into cilantro (for more information check this New York Times article).

So anyway. I was a fan of the concept of the recipe but not all of its parts.

But that’s one of my favorite things about cooking – you can adjust to your tastes.

So I took the basic components of the recipe, sauteed peppers, tomatoes and cannelini beans topped with a fried egg, and replaced the spices and seasonings with those more favorable to my palate.

Since we had chorizo and scallions from out Chipotle salad the other night, I took this dish south of the border.

You will need

  • 2 green bell peppers, diced
  • 1/2 a pint of cherry tomatoes, halved
  • 1 can cannelini beans, rinsed and drained (you can use any kind of bean, black beans for a more Mexican flavor, red kidney beans for more of a chili feel, chickpeas for a ratatouille. I just happen to have cannelini beans in the cabinet)
  • 2 tablespoons chorizo, diced
  • 2 scallions, chopped
  • vegetable oil
  • salt
  • pepper
  • eggs

Drizzle a pan with olive oil. You can use a big frying pan or a big pot. I like my aluminum one for this because I have tendency to throw things onto my stove when I use a shallow pan.

(My nickname in college was Calamity Jane. I’m not quite as calamatous. But still a bit)

Toss in the peppers and the chorizo.

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This dish is cooked in layers as the cooking times vary on the vegetables.

When the peppers start to soften and the chorizo is starting to brown, add the tomatoes and cook until the tomatoes release their juices.

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Add the beans and the salt and pepper and stir.

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In a frying pan, crack 2 eggs per person, and fry them so the yolks are still runny.

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A runny yolk is absolutely necessary to this dish. You can change the chorizo and scallions out for prosciutto and basil, or you can make it vegetarian with some parsley and oregano, but you cannot do this dish without a runny yolk.

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While the eggs cook, the vegetables will simmer together and the juice from the tomatoes and the oil from the chorizo will make a thick stew like sauce. That sauce will mix with the runny yolk… but I’m getting ahead of myself.

Add the chopped scallions and let them warm through. I like to let them stay crisp for a difference in texture.

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Scoop out the veggie mixture onto a plate.

Top with the fried eggs.

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Run your knife through the yolk and let the deep yellow yolk mix with the red, spicy tomatoey chorizo sauce.

I highly recommend some crusty bread to mop up all those juices.

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Happy Hour Eats – Salami Bread

The first thing I ever cooked for my boyfriend was salami bread.

When I told him I was going to make salami bread, he made a weird face.

You’re making me salami and bread?

He obviously did not grow up in an Italian house.

Salami bread is one of the simplest things you can make. It’s insanely good. And everyone will eat it and think it’s complicated, because it’s so good.

I know this because we just hosted a happy hour at which this happened.

Yup. A happy hour

In the Itty Bitty City Kitchen.

It’s been a long week. And it’s only Thursday! I swore all day that it was Friday. Today felt like three days happened during the 8 hour work day. Yea. It was that kind of week.

It had been worse for my boyfriend and his coworkers, so we decided a happy hour with some hard drinks and some good food was in order.

The girls brought over watermelon salad (such a great summer staple) and a pasta salad with prosciutto and sun dried tomatoes (maybe they’ll share the recipe).

The guys brought booze.

And since we were hosting, I figured it’d be our (read: my) job to make something warm and substantial.

You want something that’s easy to eat when you have a drink in hand.

 

Salami bread is perfect for that. It’s also super easy, and something that you can easily make in large quantities even in a small space.

I made 4 loaves for the number of people we had. I’ll give you the steps based on one loaf and then you can double or triple as you need.

  • Frozen pizza dough, defrosted
  • 1 egg, beaten
  • 1/4 pound genoa salami

This requires some thinking ahead as you need to defrost the dough for a few hours. Take it out in the morning and put on a floured plate, covered with a towel.

When you’re ready to make, preheat the oven to 425.

 

Roll out the dough into a sort of oblong shape.

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Pour the beaten egg on the dough, spreading it with the back of a spoon.

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Layer on the salami.

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Note, make sure you buy good salami. That’s the key here. You only have pizza dough and salami. Make sure both are good quality.

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Take one end of the dough (going longways) and start to roll the dough and the salami like a jelly roll.

Place the loaf of rolled dough on a foil-lined cookie sheet.

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Repeat as you need.

Bake for 20-25 minutes, depending on the doneness you prefer.

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Slice up the loaves, stack on plates and let there be vodka tonics!

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Chipotle Craving – Deconstructed Taco Salad

I had a massive craving today.

And you know me and my cravings- when I want it, nothing else will do.

Today, I was actually sitting at my desk and daydreaming about a Chipotle salad.

Yes, yes, I know. Still on the salad kick.

But a Chipotle salad is so much more than a salad. It’s – it’s a deconstructed taco!

And if you’ve been reading, you know how much I love to make deconstructed things! (See here for deconstructed spicy tuna roll salad.)

I just read that back. Make deconstructed things. Can one make something that is deconstructed? Isn’t the thing which is deconstructed inherently unmade?

Pardon my philosophical ramblings. Chalk it up to the hunger!

So what was it exactly about a Chipotle salad that I was craving? Breaking it down to its parts, it’s the crisp and crunchy lettuce with the creamy black beans and the fatty avocado. And the sour cream. And the tomatoes. And the citrus.

I got this.

Ready?

We’re going to make a deconstructed taco salad.

You will need

  • corn (fresh or from the can)
  • black beans (I used from the can, rinsed and drained)
  • scallions
  • tomatoes
  • avocado
  • romaine lettuce
  • chorizo
  • olive oil
  • juice from one lime
  • salt
  • pepper

In a large bowl, drizzle the olive oil and squeeze in the lime juice. Add salt and pepper to taste and the chopped scallions. Whisk.

Now add in the corn, the black beans, and the tomatoes.

I actually, in all honesty, threw it all in a Tupperware, so instead of mixing, I put the lid on and shook it all up. But that’s our little secret.

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Make a bed of romaine in each bowl.

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Top with the veggie mix.

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Next, dice up the avocado and add to the top.

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I don’t put the avocado in with the other veggies because it is delicate and you don’t want it to bruise or get all broken up.

Pop the salads in the fridge for a bit.

Meanwhile, chop up the chorizo and toss it in a frying pan. Cook over medium until nice and warm and slightly crispy.

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When the chorizo is done, remove the salads from the fridge and top them with the warm chorizo. Warm and cold gives you the making of the perfect salad.

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For an extra flourish top with Greek yogurt mixed with some lime juice. You can use sour cream, but this is a healthier option.

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You can also grate some moneterey jack cheese over top and let the heat of the chorizo melt it slightly.

On the side, what Mexican salad would be complete without nachos?

The cheater’s way?

Pile some chips on a microwave safe plate.

Top with grated cheese.

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Microwave on high for 10-15 seconds.

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And Ole!

A deconstructed taco salad with a side of nachos.

Not quite Chipotle, but good enough to satisfy the craving.

Parsley Pesto Pistachio Pasta

Lordy lou is it hot!

Pardon my slipping into the mouth of an 85-year-old southern grandma, but that’s the only thing I can think to say.

Everyone is melting in the heat. But rather than rant and rave about it, I want to take a moment to share this picture I snapped on my way home from work.

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You know it’s hot when the sidewalks are that empty!

We’re experiencing a full on heat wave here and today really is another salad day. But I think my boyfriend will rebel if I plunk another salad on the table and call it dinner.

Tonight needs something fresh and bright though.

And when I think fresh and bright, I tend to lean towards parsley. And tomatoes. Which I have a ton of still left over from making yesterday’s shirazi salad.

So the wheels started turning.

How about a bright and fresh parsley and mint pesto with tomatoes over some pasta?

Pasta is quick cooking, so less time standing in the hot kitchen, and the pesto just requires  some ingredients to take a trip in the Cuisinart. Brilliant!

Pesto can be made with anything. Take some herbs, some garlic and some olive oil and blend it up and you have pesto. The standard variation is basil and olive oil. There’s usually pine nuts or walnuts, but I prefer to leave the nuts out of the pesto itself and instead chop them up and sprinkle them on top of the pasta. I like the texture.

Tonight, I wanted something really light and fresh and with a bit of a different flavor. So I chose to go with parsley and mint as my herbs and then sunflower seed oil in stead of olive oil. Everyone makes basil and olive oil pesto. March to the beat of your own drum!

I usually don’t like mint. But I do like mint and parsley together. Strange? Oh well.

So into the Cuisinart go the garlic, parley, mint and oil.

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Whiz it up until smooth.

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I suggest popping in the fridge for a bit so the flavors can meld. If you don’t have much time, just the few minutes it takes to boil the water and cook the pasta will suffice.

Part of the reason for the trip to the fridge is my love of temperature differences. The steaming hot pasta and the cool pesto in one bite. Yum. It’s the same concept as warm brownie and cold ice cream.

I used mini shells, but you can use any pasta you have on hand.

Cook the pasta to al dente.

Toss the pasta with the pesto and some diced tomatoes.

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For some texture, sprinkle over chopped pistachios. Pistachios are so summery to me. Maybe I associate them with sitting on a beach towel, cracking the shells and snacking after a swim in the ocean. They also compliment the parsley and mint nicely. But you can use any nut. Walnuts would be great, too.

For a final layer, some parmesan cheese.

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A bright and colorful bowl of pasta bursting with flavor. The mint and parsley bring enough freshness to the table that you’re not weighed down in this heat.

And dinner is on the table in about 15 minutes, so you can spend the rest of the evening lolling on the couch with a cocktail.

Experiment with the herbs in your fridge! Share some of your favorite combinations with me and I’ll give them a try.

Salad Days – Persian Shirazi Salad

My salad days,
When I was green in judgment: cold in blood,
To say as I said then! But, come, away;
Get me ink and paper:
He shall have every day a several greeting,
Or I’ll unpeople Egypt.

So spake Cleoptara in Shakespeare’s Anthony and Cleopatra.

And there is the meaning of the phrase salad days. A period of time in one’s life that points to one’s youth, to blissful abandon, to idealism. I tend to associate Salad Days with Richard Hell and punk rock in general.

In the reviews of Richard Hell’s book I Dreamed I was a very Clean Tramp, the reviewers have noted that “In the end, the demiworld salad days came crashing down.”

There’s a novel about growing up in the 80s punk scene by Charles Romalotti by the name Salad Days.

In any event, salad days and punk rock are linked in my mind.

Which I suppose isn’t that far off from it’s true definition of idealism and youth…

But I digress.

The phrase kept coming to mind today when I was trying to think of what to make for dinner. It’s hazy, hot and humid here in the city, with hair frizzing uncontrollably, and a walk to the coffee shop inducing loads of sweat.

So when dinner came up, I thought, well today is surely a salad day.

I was flippin gthrough Bon Appetit Magazine and came across a colorful and exuberant spread on Persian dishes. Cool and crisp salads with fresh cucumbers, tomatoes and herbs; even cooler creamy yogurt dips for pita breads.

Persia is speaking my language.

Tonight is about combining ingredients we love in a different way. It’s about bright, refreshing flavors and even brighter colors. This is a super simple vegetarian option for Meatless Monday, a great make ahead for lunch for work or a great way to start a meal.

We are going to make beet yogurt dip and shirazi salad.

Shirazi salad is simply a salad of cucumbers, tomatoes and herbs. There is a “right” way to prepare the “traditional” salad, but I’m a firm believer in adjusting for your tastes. But here’s the recipe if you want it.

You want a mix of different tomatoes for contrast, cucumbers for crunch, one or two herbs, and then the dressing.

Here’s what you need for the dressing:

  • red wine vinegar
  • olive oil
  • juice of half a lime
  • salt
  • pepper
  • 1 garlic clove, minced
  • 1/2 shallot, minced

Whisk up the dressing in a large bowl. I went with 3 parts oil to one part vinegar, plus the lime juice. But again, adjust to your tastes.

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Now, get ready to start chopping. I used 2 English cucumbers, almost 2 pints of campari tomatoes and almost 1 pint of yellow grape tomatoes.

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I quartered the camparis and halved the yellows.

Peel and cube up the cucumbers.

Toss it all in the bowl and coat with the dressing.

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Tear in your herbs. I went with parsley and mint and a touch of scallions. The recipe calls for terragon and chives, but the groery store didn’t hae them. Salads should be thrown together with things you like and they shouldn’t be stressed about. It’s too hot to stress. So use the herbs you like and that will give some more freshness to the dish.

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We added some crisp romaine to the mix as a bed for the tomato and cucumber mix.

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I definitely suggest making this the night before or the morning of so it can sit in the fridge and, say it with me now, fester.

Truly, all jokes at dad’s expense aside, this is something that tastes better the next day.

To accompany the salad, you can easily do the crusty bread and butter route. You can also whip up some hummus and warm some pita bread. But, well, we just made hummus. And I don’t want you all to think I’m boring!

You know my obsession with Greek yogurt though. I put tzatziki on everything and dunk berries in the stuff for an afternoon snack.

But again, we’ve made tzatziki before.

But the beet yogurt recipe next to the shirazi salad. Now that caught my eye. A bright purple bowl of yogurt to dip bread into? Now that livens up a table!

I love beets. Beets are one of those things I am greateful is good for you. Loaded with nutrients and antioxidants and they have anti-inflammatory properties.

And did I mention the beautiful purply pinky color?

But back to the dip. You will need

Preheat the oven to 400.

The only cooking involved is roasting the beets. You are going to put them in the oven for an hour and then walk away. That’s it. I promise.

Trim the ends off the beets and wash them.

Lay out two sheets of aluminum foil, doubled, on the counter. You are going to wrap the beets up in a packet so make sure the foil is large enough to surround the beets.

Place the beets, skins on, in the center of the foil. Fold up the sides of the foil, leaving an opening at the top.

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Drizzle in some olive oil and some salt and pepper.

Close ’em up.

Into the oven for one hour.

Flip through a magazine. Vacuum the apartment. Paint your nails.

Remove the beets from the oven.

Pop them in the fridge to cool them off if you’re in a rush, otherwise let them sit on the counter until they are able to be handled.

Take a paper towel and use it to rub the skins off. You can peel them off before you roast (I used to) but this is way easier.

Discard the skins.

Grate the roasted beets into a bowl.

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Scoop in one small container of Greek yogurt (like the individual serving sizes).

Start mixing until the beets are well-incorporated with the yogurt and it takes on this beautiful purple color.

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Add salt and pepper to taste and a minced garlic clove. Tear in a few mint leaves and mix.

Warm the pita in the oven, serve up the salad  and slather the bread with the beet-infused yogurt.

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Between the creamy yogurt and the bursting tomatoes, you will forget about the heat outside.

Drunken Oven-roasted Shrimp

One of the best things we ate when we were in Hawaii came from a graffiti-covered trailer parked on the side of the road on the North Shore.

No kidding.

Seems that places covered in writing serve up great food. Remember Burger Joint yesterday?

What is this awesome meal I’m talking about?

A plate of white rice and steamed shrimp from Giovanni’s Shrimp Truck.

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The North Shore is shrimp country. The roadside is lined with trucks like this serving up freshly-caught steamed shrimp in a ton of sauces. I had the straight up lemon and garlic. My boyfriend had one of their spicy options.

They were both phenomenal.

So incredibly simple.

But so freakin’ good.

And peeling and eating shrimp on the side of the road on the North Shore is an experience everyone needs to have in their life. It was hot. I was covered in saltwater. The shrimp was fresh. And we were a mess.

Shrimp will never taste the same as it did sitting at that picnic table.

But I can try, if not recreate, reminisce about that meal in my own kitchen.

This recipe is a slight tweak of the Pioneer Woman’s Spicy Lemon Garlic Shrimp. Mine has beer. It was that kind of day.

You will need

  • 1 pound frozen shrimp, shells on
  • 1 bottle Corona (half the bottle for the shrimp, the other half for the chef)
  • 2 tablespoons butter
  • juice from 1 lime
  • salt
  • black pepper
  • A loaf of crusty bread for sopping up the juices

Preheat the oven to 375.

Drop the butter, lime juice, salt and pepper in a blender or food processor.

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Whiz it up so the ingredients are blended, but the butter is still in pea-sized or bigger clumps.

Pour the beer over the butter chunks and let the butter soak up the flavor.

Rinse the shrimp under warm water to remove any chunks of ice.

Dry and lay on a foil-lined cookie sheet.

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Drop the butter mixture over the shrimp.

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Bake for around 15 minutes.

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The shrimp will turn pink when they are done. The whole apartment smelled like beer and lime and butter.

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Dish up the shrimp in two bowls and pour the sauce over each.

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Get ready to dig in, make a mess and dunk the bread into the buttery, beery saucy goodness in the bowl.

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The city streets below aren’t quite the sounds of waves crashing on the shore, but it will do for now.

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I say meatball, you say kebab- an Italian girl makes a Middle Eastern Meal

I love Italian food. It’s what I grew up with, it’s what my mother cooks, it’s the smells of home.

But I have a very culturally diverse palate. Mexican, Brazilian, Chinese, French, you name it. Since dating my boyfriend, my appreciation for Middle Eastern flavors has really grown.

I always loved Greek salad and kebabs and gyro and falafel and hummus. (I really like food in general and there’s very little I’ll say no to.) Then I ate homemade hummus and babaganoush and tabouli and my mind was blown. And no salad will ever hold a candle to his dad’s.

What meme makes in her kitchen is magic. I had never had a stuffed grape leaf (dolma) I really truly loved until I had hers. Instantly addicted.

Thankfully, meme always sends us care packages. Because much as I try, mine never tastes quite like hers.

Also thankfully, there is an amazing Turkish restaurant near us that makes food that tastes almost, almost, like meme’s. We even brought meme there. It has the meme seal of approval.

So if we’re really having cravings, we have that down the street.

But I was away from itty bitty city kitchen yesterday. I had a lovely trip to D.C. with my coworker for a day in our office there, but you know I hate eating out two days in a row.

I’m a good cook. I’ve watched meme in the kitchen. I can do this.

I’m going to tackle one of my boyfriend’s favorites. He’s had a rough week. And a rough week surely calls for Adana Kebabs.

Adana Kebabs are essentially minced meat (lamb, beef, veal, whatever, though lamb is traditional) with some vegetables and seasonings that is mixed and formed into logs, skewered and then grilled.

I’m switching it up and baking mine since there is no room in my city kitchen for a grill, but I’m working with all the Middle Eastern ingredients, so the flavorings should be similar enough to make up for the lack of grilled taste.

Now call me crazy, but doesn’t that sound like a meatball? Some ground meat with some stuff in it to add to the flavor? So it’s a log shape instead of a ball shape. Details, details.

This isn’t totally the traditional way, but hey, I’m an Italian girl from Jersey making kebabs.  Kebabs, meatballs. Same thing!

I used

  • 1 pound ground beef (you can use lamb. Grocery store didn’t have any today)
  • small green bell pepper, diced
  • 1/3 white onion, diced
  • handful of parsley, chopped
  • paprika
  • all spice
  • salt and pepper

Throw all of the ingredients in a bowl

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and mix until well combined.

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Form the mix into sausage-shaped logs. I almost said mini meatloaves, but meatloaf is one of the few foods I cannot stand, so I will not draw that comparison.

Lay out the meat logs (haha meat logs, don’t know why but that makes me laugh) on a foil-lined baking sheet.

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Pop in the fridge for a bit to set up.

When you’re ready to cook them up, remove from fridge and let them come to room temperature.

Preheat the oven to 400.

I’m making a side dish of paprika roasted cauliflower over couscous.

For that, throw cauliflower florets into a foil-lined baking dish, drizzle with olive oil and douse with paprika.

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Roast for 40-45 minutes. The cauliflower takes on a golden orangey hue.

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The kebabs will take about 20 minutes to cook, so throw them in with the cauliflower about halfway through its roasting time.

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Whip up some tzatziki and some quick cook couscous, or warm up some pita bread and yemek!

(That’s eat in Turkish!)

Not bad for an Italian girl from Jersey.

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Eggplant Parm Pie

The only thing I love more than my mom’s meatballs is her eggplant parm.

If you’ve only eaten eggplant parm out at a restaurant, you have never eaten eggplant parm.

Sorry restaurants. But mom’s will win every time.

Bobby Flay should really come do a Throwdown with my mom.

Here’s the thing about her eggplant though. It’s a process. Totally worth it in the end, but it involves a lot of time over a hot stove. First you make the gravy, then you fry the eggplant in batches, then you layer the gravy and the eggplant in a casserole dish, then you top with cheese, then you bake for an hour, and then, during that hour, you clean your grease-splattered stove.

In the summer, my itty bitty city kitchen is ridiculously hot.

So no thanks.

But I was thinking about eggplant. And so I came up with this. It’s not at all the same thing as mom’s, but it’s quick and it’s light.

Think of it as the summertime cousin to mom’s cheesy, melty, tray of eggplant wonderfulness.

A sort of quichey, eggplant pie.

You will need

4 eggs

1 eggplant

1 tomato

1 heaping scoop ricotta cheese

mozzarella

splash of milk

olive oil

salt

pepper

butter for the dish

Turn your oven to 400.

Peel the eggplant and slice into discs. The more even the width, the more evenly they will bake.

Lay them on a foil-lined cookie sheet.

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Drizzle with olive oil, salt and pepper and roast for about twenty minutes. IMG_0727

When the eggplant is nice and browned up, remove from the oven and set the slices aside. Slice up the tomato in rounds and place on the foil-lined sheet you just removed the eggplant from. Drizzle with olive oil, salt and pepper, and roast for about ten minutes.

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This recipe sounds a little lengthy, but to me roasting time isn’t really cooking time. I throw things in the oven and forget about them for a little bit, taking the time to unwind after a long day or to swiffer the floors or to do some previously neglected tasks. Like paying the bills. While the tomatoes roast is the perfect time to pay the bills.

When the tomatoes are done, butter a baking dish or pie pan. I’ve extolled the virtues of my pie pan before. Namely, that it is dishwasher safe. So between the foil-lined cookie sheet and the pan that goes in the dishwasher, this is a no cleanup necessary dinner.

Line the bottom of your pan with eggplant.

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Next add a lawyer of tomatoes.

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Top with the remaining eggplant.

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In a small bowl, beat together the eggs, a splash of milk and a scoop of ricotta cheese. This is serving as the parmigiana part of the dish.IMG_0744

Pour the mix over the eggplant and tomatoes and then top with mozzarella.IMG_0745

Lower the oven to 350 and bake for 45 minutes. Again, a long baking time, but there’s very little active cooking time in this recipe. There’s a lot of hang out, put your feet up, sip some wine and let the smells fill the apartment time.

Remove from the oven when the eggs are set.

Slice up and serve with a side salad and some crusty bread.

It’s not mom’s but it does the trick.

For now.

Baked Potato Soup

I love soup.

It could be 100 degrees in the shade and it won’t deter me from having soup for dinner if that’s what I’m craving.

And soups are very itty bitty city kitchen friendly. They usually just require some space for your cutting board and then it all goes into one big pot.

I was thinking about summer barbecues and some of my favorite flavors from them.

I love me a big juicy burger, covered in ketchup, cheese melting down the sides.

But the supporting cast has a lot to offer too. Like potato salad. A big scoop of potato salad beside your burger. Yum.

That made me think of potatoes in general. I feel like potatoes get a bad rep for being starchy and fatty. When you fry ’em, yea, they’re not so good for you. And when you cover ’em in mayonnaise in potato salad, they’re not so good for you.

But guess what? That little spud had 45% of your daily value for Vitamin C, 10% of your B6, and more potassium than a banana.

Go Idaho Potato!

I’ve turned baked potatoes into dinner before, stuffing them with broccoli and cheese and adding a side salad. But today was a day when I wanted soup.

Lightbulb!

Baked potato soup.

Bonus? It’s vegetarian. So it’s Meatless Monday friendly.

You will need

  • 3 baking potatoes
  • carrots
  • celery
  • onion
  • olive oil
  • 1 cup whole milk
  • salt
  • pepper

That’s for the base of the soup. If want to, you can add toppings such as scallions or chives, grated cheddar cheese, a dollop of yogurt or sour cream, and, if you’re not making this as part of meatless Monday, a crumbling of bacon.  But the toppings are entirely up to you.

Here’s how you make the soup.

Bake the potatoes at 400 for about an hour, being sure to poke holes so they don’t explode in your oven.

If you don’t want to spend an hour baking potatoes after work, bake them up over the weekend. But really, baking potatoes requires no effort. You throw them in and walk away. So come home, go to the gym, take a nice long hot shower. Flip through a magazine.

The potatoes will be fine.

When the potatoes are done, remove from the oven, cut in half and let cool.

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Leaving the potatoes to cool, drizzle some olive oil in the bottom of a pot.

Toss in the chopped carrots, celery and onion. I used two carrots, two ribs of celery and about a third of an onion. I know I’m going to add scallions on top, so I don’t want to overwhelm the soup with onions.

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Cook the vegetables until they are soft, but not brown.

Add salt and a few grinds of black pepper.

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Stir and cover for a few minutes.

Peel the skins from the potatoes and discard (or snack), adding the insides to the pot.

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Using the back of a spoon or a potato masher, mash the potatoes into the carrots and celery and onions.

Add more seasoning and then add enough water to cover the potatoes.

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Cover and cook for a few minutes until the water softens the potatoes more.

Lower the heat, and, using an immersion blender or transferring to a food processor or blender, blend the soup until smooth. Pour back into the pot and cook over low, adding in a cup of  milk for some richness.

Let cook a few more minutes so the rawness of the milk is gone and the soup is warmed through.

Serve up in big bowls and add your toppings.

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Leftovers of this are great.

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If you have any.