Category Archives: Recipes

Basic Vinaigrette

I’m always amazed at the percentage of folks who’ve never made their own vinaigrette, or salad dressing and prefer to buy ranch, blue cheese or thousand island at the grocery store.

Please visit my pantry series for what to have on hand. A basic vinaigrette is nothing more than acid, oil and seasoning. But there are thousands of combinations that you can tailor to your own tastes once you know the rules.

An acid can be lemon or orange juice, cider vinegar, balsamic, sherry or raspberry vinegar. The oil should be extra virgin olive oil if lemon, balsamic are used. Otherwise use something tasteless like canola. Some higher-end dressings include walnut or hazelnut oils, which must be refrigerated.

If you’re afraid the vinaigrette won’t bind use a binder such as Dijon mustard. Get a Pyrex measuring cup and a good whisk. See if you can find a sauce whisk, which is quite straight to get into the corners of a sauce pan, rather than a balloon whisk that you’d use for egg whites.

Next thing is level of acidity. Depending upon the amount of dressing you need, the French say one part acid to 3-4 parts oil. I do more of a 1:2 ratio because I like the acidity (which is why I buy Jim fat-free Ranch at the store).

Take one part acid. Salt and pepper to taste. Add a teaspoon or so of Dijon mustard and whisk to combine. Whisking all the time, slowly drizzle in oil (that’s why you’re using a measuring cup) until you have 2X the amount of acid. Dip in a spoon and taste. Are the seasonings right? Do you want more oil? Doctor it up. This is to your taste, not mine.

Even if it “breaks,” you’ll know because it will have separated. Add another tsp mustard and whisk and it should come back together.

After you master the basic version there are so many permutations out there that it’ll boggle the mind. I know, I was tested on them! Happy cooking!

Bacon/Cheese Pitas

Mom used to make these. I think I’ll have one for dinner tonight. This serves one.

Pita bread, halved (or slice top half down middle for nicer presentation)
good Cheddar, thinly sliced
2-3 slices bacon (microwave 90 seconds plus on 3 paper towels)

Stuff the pitas with cheese and bacon. Add sliced tomato if you want but not enough to make it soggy.

Place in 375 degree oven for 15 minutes, as long as you can stand to wait, until cheese is bubbly and pita bread is crisp.

Another cheater meal until Jim gets back home tonight. Zoe gets her regular fare.

Mom’s Lazy Chicken

Legend has it that this is a Romanian recipe. It’s lazy because everything is in the pan and cooked together.

1 chicken, cut into serving pieces or 4 chicken breasts
1 onion, large, cut into 8 wedges lengthwise
2 large carrots, peeled and cut into 3″ spears
2 cloves garlic, smashed
8 medium red potatoes, halved
1/2 c chicken broth
1/2 c dry white wine
Thyme, salt and pepper
Butter

Prepare all the meat and veg, place closely in pan. At 450 degrees, continue to add ingredients to pan. Salt and pepper and thyme and butter at the last moment. Make sure things stick up. Place in the oven for an hour, basting at 20 and 40 minutes.

The chicken will be succulent beyond belief, and veggies roasted until soft and toasty. Yum. This is one of my favorite dishes.

My brother (a great cook) asks “what’s lazy about it?” It has more than five ingredients and everything is ready at the same time so you don’t need separate pots and pans for everything.

Zoe and the Goats

Zoe’s instincts as a herder kicked in and she went in looking like a scared pup, barked fiercely a couple of times, ran around the goats with no purpose and was sent out of the gate scared once again by baby goats.

Last night she saw the goats through the fence in the pen, and barked fiercely, once.

This morning we packed up to go home and she hates being left behind. Our car was right in front of the goats. Even for a couple of days we pack heavy to go to the farm, with extra clothes in case of a business trip, food and other items.

Well, before we had the car packed, Zoe zoomed out of the door, and ran to the car, no goats in mind at all though she was running right to them. She jumped into the back seat, paws in between the driver and passenger seats with her tongue out. She stood there and would not be moved for anything.

It’s good to know that she gave up her 20 second career as a goat herder to herd her family back home. As to that, it took us all day to get back home. It’s all work from here.

Jim’s Mom is growing tomatoes and many herbs. I made Boursin (this post) also Cuke Salad (same) with her herbs, and pickling cukes with my grandmother’s recipe. There’s nothing like fresh cukes.

I love picking out fresh fruits and vegetables from the garden, so that’s what I did with my FIVE year-old nephew (I was corrected as to his age), picking tomatoes and cucumbers together with a basket to catch all the goodies. Joseph is such a joy to spend time with, and a handful!

Where we live, we can go to a farmer’s market but on the farm one uses what one has. That is a philosophy unknown to urban wanna-be growers.

My heart goes out to all farmers for what you do to feed this country. Not to mention other countries. If you want to have an eco-tourism adventure ask about going to a farm. Before you book at a picturesque one in Tuscany, consider your own country.

Learn how they live, because they’re making you breakfast, lunch and dinner. Every day.

Eat low on the hog,
Dee

The Fourth

Menu is being compressed as there are now six. We’re going to our neighbor’s for dessert.

Tonight I made a great indoor burger on a ridged cast iron grill pan. I took 1.5 lbs. 85/15 Angus beef and added 2T finely chopped chives, a few dashes of Worcestershire sauce, a bit of salt and about 14 cracks of pepper. Then I added one egg yolk and enough plain bread crumbs to bind.

Served them on toasted rolls (pickle relish on the bottom, Vermont cheddar on top with Stubb’s BBQ sauce and a touch of good mayo) with fresh corn on the cob. I wanted to make a compound butter for the corn with butter, salt and pepper, chives and basil and cayenne pepper, rolled in parchment and refrigerated, but ran out of time.

Time is a powerful issue. Thanks for being here! D

Chicken Fajitas

Note to reader: I cook for two, actually for three because Jim’s 6′ 4″ and eats more than I do.

3 half-breasts of chicken, boned and skinned and cut in bite-sized pieces
2 limes, juiced
salt and pepper
dash of cayenne pepper

1 red onion, cut into bite-sized pieces
2 bell peppers, cut into bite-sized pieces

Marinate the chicken for at least an hour, stirring as needed. Prepare the vegetables.

10 flour tortillas, toasted in a dry skillet until they puff and soften, kept warm
Guacamole
Monterey jack cheese, shredded
Salsa or pico de gallo
Lime wedges
Sour cream
Use your imagination!

For guacamole take two ripe Haas avocados, juice of one lime, salsa or pico de gallo and mash with a fork until it is as chunky or finely textured as you like. Salt and pepper and diced jalapeno if you like.

Make your own fajitas! Enjoy!

Broccoli-Cheese Soup

2 broccoli stems/crowns, cut in 1″ pieces
4 T butter
1/2 tsp salt
pepper
Pinch of freshly grated nutmeg (microplanes are great for this)
Dash of cayenne pepper
4 T flour
2 1/2 cups milk
1 cup shredded sharp cheddar cheese
chicken or vegetable broth
additional salt and pepper to taste

Steam the broccoli until just done. Melt butter, adding seasonings. When melted add flour and cook for one minute to minimize “raw” flour taste. Add milk, stirring often. It can burn or stick to the bottom quickly and you don’t want to start again!

When it is thick enough to coat the spoon, take it off the heat and add cheese.

Place broccoli in food processor or blender with enough of the bechamel (white sauce) to process. You may have to do this in two batches. Mix with remaining sauce. Taste for seasonings and add salt and pepper as needed. If it is too thick, thin it with broth. Briefly reheat and serve.

Notes: This is quite a thick bechamel, so thin with flavor (broth). Also add salt sparingly at the beginning. The sharpness of the cheese you use will change the salt level.

Bon appetit! Dee

Lazy Sunday Menu

Jim was up late playing the latest PS-3 game so I let him sleep away the morning, took out and fed Zoe (the dog), went to the store and had some organic strawberry yogurt for breakfast.

For lunch I cut up half a roast chicken made the other day and added s&p, 1 celery rib, 2 scallions, 1T dried tarragon, 1/2 c toasted and lightly chopped farm-fresh pecans and mayonnaise to bind. Served it on artisinal wheat French bread with a bunch of green grapes on the side.

Tonight I’m using a cast iron ridged grill pan (too hot to grill outside) to make boneless pork loin “steaks” with John Henry’s Texas BBQ Rub and quartered radicchio now marinating in extra virgin olive oil, s&p. I just took corn bread out of the oven and am using a large can of maple-flavored baked beans the way Mom used to make them, with 1/2 c grated sharp cheddar cheese and 2 slices microwaved, chopped bacon (applewood smoked, from the butcher).

A large load of laundry is about to finish drying, and after I fed Zoe Jim took her out to play with her buddies so I have some time to write.

No more laziness. It’s going to be a busy week so I’ll get to the blog as I can. Cheers! Dee

PBK’s

In a recent post I stated that I didn’t cook for the dog. This isn’t exactly “cooking.” Kongs are wonderful things. They have red ones for moderate chewers, and black ones for serious chewers. Zoe eats frozen solid raw food so is of the serious variety.

She now has five Kongs. With a knife, I insert about 1T peanut butter into the large hole in the bottom, and freeze solid. When we both leave the house, Zoe gets fresh water and a frozen Kong in her crate.

On weekends, she waits impatiently for us to leave to go to lunch and a movie. She runs into her crate eager to eat her peanut butter Kong or what we call a “doggie popsicle.”

She used to be left with full run of the place, but a couple of years ago, she had a friend over. I took them out for a walk, then left them for eight minutes while I walked the neighbor’s dog.

During my brief absence. they flipped the privacy deadbolt (no key on the outside) and locked me out. No cell phone…. I went down to the office to tell them I was locked out and they offered me a key. Then I said “no, you don’t understand” and awaited the inevitable laugh.

It took a maintence man three hours to get me back in, finally drilling a three-inch hole and inserting an extra deadbolt with a key on the outside. We’re the only unit with two-keyed entry.

That’s why Zoe is crated, but the PBK’s assure that crating is not doggie jail.

Hope you’re having a great weekend. Dee

Cranachan

This recipe comes from The Open Arms Hotel in Lothian, Scotland

Cranachan is very Scottish, served traditionally at Halloween when charms with special significance were folded into the mixture. You might find a ring for marriage, a button for bachelorhood, a thimble for spinsterhood, coins for wealth, and horseshoes for luck. Unfortunately my Cranachan at the Open Arms contained none of these, but the flavor combination of lightly toasted oatmeal, cream, sugar, and whisky was Scottish!

• 1-1/4 cups (4-6 oz) pinhead oatmeal *
• 5 cups cream, beaten until thick
• honey
• whisky
• Strawberries or any fresh fruit in season
• Petticoat tails or shortbread biscuits

1. Preheat the oven to 180 deg. C (350 deg. F)
2. Put the oatmeal in a baking dish and bake until lightly brown.
3. Mix the oatmeal and cream together, flavour with honey and whisky according to your taste.
4. Serve in individual glass dishes topped with strawberries (or other seasonal fruit) and garnished with a petticoat tail or shortbread.

* Pinhead oats are groats that have been chopped into small pieces. They’re chewier than rolled oats, and grain aficionados often prefer them for certain recipes.

Contributed by Carolyn Sherry

Thank you for sharing! Carolyn is a member of the Scottish Council and has urged her fellow members to share ancient family recipes with you.