Thursday, October 30, 2008

Roasted Pumpkin and Arugula Salad


We bought a beautiful Hokkaido pumpkin this past weekend. Just the thought of it was distracting me at work on Tuesday -- the air has finally turned cold, and all I could think about were warm, fall-y pumpkin dishes. What to make??? Since we also had half a bunch of arugula left over, my daydreams turned into a plan for a warm roasted pumpkin, arugula, and feta salad, to eat with rice. Not only did it make a wonderful dinner, but some of the best lunches ever the past couple of days! Hokkaido pumpkin is sweeter, more strongly flavored, and less stringy than some other winter squashes, but really any winter squash would work well.

Roasted Pumpkin and Arugula Salad

1 5-lb Hokkaido pumpkin, cut into 1 inch chunks (this is the hard part... best to delegate)
2-3 cups torn-up arugula
1/2 cup crumbled feta
1/3 cup olive oil
2 tbsp low-sodium soy sauce
2 tbsp diced fresh ginger
2 tsp honey
1 tsp chili powder
1/2 tsp black pepper

Preheat the oven to 400 degrees.

Mix the oil, soy sauce, ginger, honey, chili powder, and pepper. In a large bowl, toss the pumpkin with this mixture until well coated. Spread the pumpkin on a rimmed baking sheet or two and roast about 20 minutes, until tender and slightly browned on the bottom.

Toss the pumpkin with the torn-up arugula and feta. Serve immediately with rice.

Serves 4 as a main dish, 8 as a side dish.

Tuesday, October 14, 2008

Vegetable Rice Patties with Tomatoes and Basil


Leftover rice + leftover vegetables + cheese + enough egg to hold it together = warm, toasty, vegetable-y patties! I used the vegetables and herbs we had on hand, but it could easily be changed to use up almost any vegetable

*My associate claims these should be called "Third Day Patties," because they have been "resurrected" from the depths of the fridge...

Vegetable Rice Patties with Tomatoes and Basil

2 cups cooked brown rice
2 eggs, beaten
2 small zucchini, or 1 large, grated and squeezed dry in a towel
1/2 cup grated Parmesan cheese
1/2 cup parsley, loosely packed, chopped (or another herb if that is what you have)
grated zest of 1 lemon (optional)
salt & pepper to taste
1 tbsp olive oil

topping: 2 tomatoes, diced
small handful basil, chopped

Mix rice, zucchini, cheese, parsley, and lemon zest in a bowl. Beat the eggs and add; mix until everything is very well coated.

Heat the oil in a large pan over medium-low heat. Scoop out about a half-cup of the mixture and form into a shallow patty in the pan. Repeat with about four or however many will fit in your pan without crowding. Cook until the bottom begins to brown, about 5-7 minutes. Carefully flip with a large spatula and cook until the other side begins to brown.

Meanwhile, mix the diced tomatoes and basil together.

When the patties are browned, serve, topped with tomatoes and basil.

Makes 7-8 patties, enough for two or three people.

Saturday, October 11, 2008

More Eggplant Dip



Yes, it's another eggplant dip. This one is flavored with yogurt and allspice; it is mellow and a little bit tangy.

Eggplant-Yogurt Dip

6 oz. plain nonfat Greek yogurt
2 large pinches allspice
1 large pinch cocoa powder
1 tbsp olive oil
salt, pepper
1 small (or 1/2) clove garlic
This much eggplant:



Preheat the oven to 450 degrees. Cut the eggplants into small chunks; toss with the oil, sprinkle with salt and pepper, and roast about 20-25 minutes, until very soft and fairly brown. Let cool. If you dislike eggplant skins, remove them at this time (but they are pretty, and in my mind, delicious).
In a food processor, combine eggplant, yogurt, garlic, allspice, and cocoa. Whirl once or twice. Pick out any large chunks of garlic you see. Continue to blend until mostly smooth.
Serve with pita, chips, or vegetables, or as a spread on toast.

Wednesday, October 1, 2008

Pasta with Creamy Broccoli Sauce

Now I'd like to introduce a guest cooker to this blog, my associate Ben. He'll be making appearances now and then, sharing his tasty recipes. Take it away, Ben.

Thanks, Alison. It's great to be here on alisoncooks.blogspot.com. I'm a big fan of the show. Nice desk you've got there, very authoritative-looking. My, this chair is so comfy!

Anyway, a short foreword is required before I can tell you about the mystical inspirations and geopolitical context that conspired to create "my" Creamy Broccoli Sauce. It's a confession of sorts, and my agent is going to kill me for saying this on the air. But in the name of all that is noble and true and delicious, I feel I must unveil the source of my culinary extravagance. Truth be told, my success in the kitchen is due to a 6-letter G word: (genies, gamete, and ghetto are all good guesses, but sadly incorrect) Google. It's true. When I want to cook something, my first step is always to google it and compare a few different recipes. (In this case I googled "broccoli recipes" because we had broccoli in the fridge.) It's helpful to google "[the food you want] recipes" because otherwise you have to wade through all sorts of broccoli fan pages, broccoli youtube videos, and "CHEAP BROCCOLI ORDER NOW!!!" before you get to the recipes. The next step is you pick a recipe you like most of the ones you've found, and follow that one generally, though you can include bits from others, or adjust it depending on what ingredients you have available. In biblical scholarship, this is called redaction. I should also note that I don't measure stuff very much, especially spices. I mostly just dump some in (sometimes more than I intend) and taste. Sometimes I don't even taste, or know what I'm going for really. But it usually works out in the end, due either to my extensive experience and accomplishment as an eater, or to some absurd streak of luck which will abruptly end and leave me with very large gambling debts.

But anyway, this Creamy Broccoli Sauce is inspired by a recipe I encountered on southernfood.about.com. I don't have any idea what, if anything, is Southern about this, except for maybe the call for both butter and heavy cream (in the original; I redacted it.) But anyway, this is a fun thing to do if you've got broccoli lying around and lots
of time to experiment with food. Also, it's tasty and healthy and exciting. Here goes:

Pasta with Creamy Broccoli Sauce

12 ounces pasta
florets from 2 stalks of broccoli
5 medium fresh basil leaves (original; I used dried basil and it was still yummy)
1/2 tablespoon butter
3 heaping tablespoons plain yogurt
1/2 cup grated Parmesan cheese
pepper to taste (perhaps 1 teaspoon--should be fairly peppery)


Cook pasta until tender; drain.
Boil broccoli in salted water 4-7 minutes.
In food processor with steel blade, combine 8-10 broccoli florets,basil, butter and yogurt. Pulse to purée. Add Parmesan cheese and pulse to blend.
Mix broccoli mixture and remaining boiled broccoli into drained pasta; stir.
Cook, stirring, over medium-low heat. Serve when heated through and well combined. (I forgot to do the whole second heating thing and it still worked out great, just a little colder.)

Serves 4.

Baba Ganoush

...and we're back. All moved into a new apartment in a new(ish) city; all settled into a new job. I even found a mini-food processor for $2 at a garage sale!

And I'm still really, really into eggplant. I saw these little red eggplants and, naturally, HAD to have them.

And, naturally, had to make dip out of them.


However, turns out they're more bitter any other eggplants I've cooked with; I'd stick with the long slender Japanese ones, or small globe eggplants, instead. In fact, I made baba ganoush yesterday with a mix of Japanese and small globes--it was far superior.

Baba Ganoush (Eggplant Dip)

Five or six small eggplants (enough that, when cut in pieces, they cover a baking sheet).
3-4 tsp tahini
1 clove garlic, smashed
1/2 tsp pimenton de la Vera (optional)
salt to taste
1 tbsp olive oil

Preheat the oven to 450 degrees.

Cut the eggplant into 1-inch to 2-inch chunks. Toss in the oil in a bowl, just to coat. Arrange cut side down on a baking sheet and bake until beginning to brown, 20-30 minutes.
When they have cooled slightly, combine eggplant, tahini, garlic, salt, and pimenton (if you want an extra smokey kick) in a food processor. (I like the texture, flavor, and color of the peels, but if you don't, you could peel the eggplant now. ) Process until smooth with some chunks. Serve with pita or chips.