Chili Salad
by marymary
Inspired by Jenn Reese’s Quinoa Chili I invented Chili Salad. It tastes like chili but doesn’t require all the time on the stove and all the heat from having the stove on, so it’s nice for summer.
I didn’t have any quinoa in the pantry but still have plenty of barley and wheat berries, so used the former in place of the quinoa.
I cooked up 1 c of dried barley (in water) then tossed it with 1 can of beans, 1 can of diced tomatoes, 1 t of Penzey’s Chili 9000 spice, 1 diced jalapeno (from the garden), and 4 oz of cheese.
It was tasty but, as Reese points out, required the addition of salt. In this case, I put in a half teaspoon. In the future, I’d like to try her suggestion about eating it with corn chips.
Other additions I’d like to try include red and green bell pepper, corn kernels, raw rather than canned tomatoes.
It was surprisingly easy and a great way to eat up whole grains.
Gardening, Grub | Comment (0)Cookbook Review: Mollie Katzen’s Get Cooking
by marymary
I am clearly not the intended audience for Mollie Katzen’s new book, Get Cooking. However, I do usually enjoy her recipes and so it seemed worth picking up the book.
If you’re looking for something to ease you into the kitchen, her introductory section will likely appeal to you. As I already know how to chop things and am not afraid of shopping lists, I skipped it. Happily, the whole book is in a normal typeface, as opposed to all her Moosewood cookbooks which are in a forceably-cheering handwriting font. (The Sunshine Cafe is also in a normal typeface and is what I consider her best cookbook.)
I found a number of recipes that looked like I would make them repeatedly and wanted to capture them here because I’m not sure I will buy the book. The chapter on burgers makes it very tempting and I’m not even that much of a burger fan, honestly.
The twist in this cookbook that appealed to me most were the “get creative” sections. In this sidebars, she suggests easy ways to modify the existing recipe. And since recipes, to me, are all about a good structure and varying the ingredients, I thought this was a brilliant addition to the book.
I made the Mushroom-Zucchini Ragout over Creamy Polenta. Once through the recipe was enough to get the structure (cook awesome veggies in tomato to make stew-like stuff then serve over cheese+corn) although I substituted cheese grits for polenta. Summer squash, mushrooms, and cheese grits are pretty wonderful together.
dmm made the Tuna Burgers. Very excellent and it happily reminded me how cheap tuna is. They are 12 oz tuna, 2 eggs, 1/3 c breadcrumbs, 1/2 c onions, parsley, pepper, and fresh lemon juice.
Ah, the burger chapter. I would buy just the chapter, if I could.
I was underwhelmed by the poultry recipes, partially because the photography in the book is kinda poor, mostly poor color combinations that don’t make the food appear appetizing. The veggie/sides chapter is good if you haven’t cooked with them before but I know most of these structures.
Recipes that I haven’t tried but would like to: Homemade Chicken Noodle Soup, Creamy Tomato-Basil Soup, all the salad dressing recipes (brilliant!) on p. 36-37, Farfalle with Roasted Garlic, Nuts, and Raisins, Vegetable-Tofu Stir-Fry with Orange-Ginger Glaze (which sounds rather Asian Kitchen Sink, doesn’t it?).
The orange glaze from above is 1/2 c oj, 2T cider vinegar, 1 T soy, 1 T brown honey, 1 T fresh ginger, 2 t fresh garlic, 1 t sesame oil, .5 t red pepper flakes, and 1 T cornstarch. Wet cornstarch then add it to remaining ingredients. Add to the stir-fried veggies after they are cooked.
I would really like to make the Chocolate-Peanut Butter Crunchy Things and the Gingery Gingerbread but it was the dessert chapter that really made me wish that she’d included nutritional information in the book. I like desserts, and I eat desserts, but I’d like to know how much of one is an acceptable serving.
So, my recommendation is that Jmac should read this book and cook something out of it. And that I figure out how to get my hands on just the burger chapter.
Grub, gabbing | Comment (0)Experimentation
by marymary
When I put the chicken away yesterday, it ended up next to the jalapenos in the fridge. And so I thought, I should cook those two together. I didn’t buy the jalapenos for a recipe; we simply eat them often enough, if we have them in the house, so into the shopping cart they went.
I went to Simply Recipes because Elise always has a recipe for whatever I’m looking for. Searching on “chicken” and “jalapenos” lead me to Spicy Garlic Cashew Chicken. I looked over the ingredients: there’s nothing in the house remotely like cashews, so what if I just left them out?
I ended up putting the following into the food processor:
- 1 T brown sugar
- all the parsley in the house (about 2 c chopped)
- the juice of the single, wimpy lime
- 2 T soy sauce
- one very large garlic clove
- one jalapeno, seeds and all
- 2 T vegetable oil
I pureed that, then put it into a bag with the 2.5 lb chicken, to marinate. I added a little extra oil in the bag, to make the puree mush around the chicken.
It tasted fantabulous raw. I can’t wait to see how it is with the chicken.
Grub | Comment (0)Cooking Conversation
by marymary
“I welcome your experiments.”
“Science is tasty!”
“If I pour it, you will drink.”
Grub, gabbing | Comment (0)Saturday Food
by marymary
Today I made the following absolutely yummy things:
- Oatmeal!
- Eggplant faux parmesan (which is better with basil than salad mix but still tasty)
- Barbecue (not local) ribs (from the farm) with parmesan (not local) celeriac (from the farm)
- 2 loaves of the Joy of Cooking’s Sandwich Bread
- APPLE PIE (local apples, non-local butter, sugar, and flour)
January Bread
by marymary
The winter task for the dehydrator has become bread-riser. It works wonderfully. And fresh bread is wonderful, not only for a house-ful of aroma but for toast.





Sner Emowgency
by dmm
Yesterday was the first big snow of the season - a snow emergency was declared, plows were roaming the streets, and it was a great day to stay home and hide.


First, of course, we had to shovel our walk. But then we stayed inside, baked, cooked, and played games all day.





Thankful
by marymary
We’re thankful that yesterday we helped folks carve turkey and contributed to conversation and laughter.

At the House of Roses, we roasted (rose-ted?) turkey

made stuffing



made gravy (!!)


and ate.













