Tag Archives: arugula

Adventurous Eating

We went on a trip this weekend and saw my father for the first time in nearly four years, as well as our other family.

We met at a new Tuscan restaurant owned by my adoptive family and they were all there when we arrived. Surprise! I can’t tell you how wonderful it was to see everyone after many years. We usually only see each other at weddings or in Florence.

When I met my husband, he was living in a man cave and only had a 72 oz. Dr. Pepper in his frig, plus individually wrapped string cheese. In the freezer was one boxed lasagne bought by his mother several months before. There were several string cheese wrappers on the carpet between the frig and his mega-computer.

Now he critiques my new dishes and tells me they always taste better the third time I make them. He likes feta and goat cheese. He loves my chicken saltimbocca with proscuitto and Fontina, and my spaghetti alla carbonara.

This weekend, he ordered the arugula salad! Five years ago I made him a “wedge” salad of iceberg with Thousand Island as a joke and he loved it. But now I have him eating healthy greens! Greens that taste like something!

He loves my soups and stews in the winter and even my version of our family’s “cold dinner” in the summer with heirloom tomatoes, potato salad, hard-cooked eggs, good fresh bread and ham.

And he says I created a food snob. I have a photo of him on the frig. He’s four years old, making toast. It only took him 30 years to learn how to make a grilled cheese sandwich. He’s a physicist and software engineer so is capable of doing so, but never cared when he was single and would rather go to local restaurants instead of cooking for himself. In fact, what he brought to our kitchen was one blue colander and some Corelle plates that his mother gave him to take to college.

Since we moved and got all our stuff out of storage after three years, the Corelle went back to his mother for the grandkids and the colander, who knows. I probably gave it away as I have at least eight more. If you want to talk about recycling, this family does it in a big way. And an important way, recycling for generations.

Now that we are in America’s Dairyland, he likes more than Monterey Jack cheese. I grew up on sharp Canadian cheddar and he now likes Wisconsin’s 4 year-old sharp. Amazing. Food snob, indeed. I did good. Dee

Bitter Greens

I know that older generations and folks from different parts of the US and world grew up on bitter greens. How about the younger generations? I don’t know only that I didn’t. We lived in a small town and had farmers markets for 2-3 months in the summer. But if we were to have a salad it would be iceberg lettuce.

As to dressing, I’ve no clue what my mother used before she got the cruet so one could open the packet, put in the mix, add vinegar then oil and shake. That was so cool! And I’m sure she probably had to use cider vinegar at best, and probably vegetable oil. Back then there were not 28 varieties of extra virgin olive oils on supermarket shelves, especially in a small town.

Spinach was always a favorite, especially done in my grandmother’s way, which I’ll have to ask Dad about, if he remembers. Romaine was one of the first to try probably in the 80’s and I loved it. Now I make arugula salads all the time, and learned about cavolo nero (dinosaur kale) and Trevisano (the elongated radicchio of Treviso). I pan-saute the cavolo nero with garlic, and cut the radicchio in halves or quarters, toss with olive oil, salt and pepper and place on the grill.

The next challenge was to get my husband to accept anything other than a lettuce wedge with Thousand Island or mixed greens at a restaurant with Ranch dressing. Mr. Meat and Potato is coming around a bit but still prefers Ranch to my homemade vinaigrettes, so I buy him nonfat!

He does like my interpretation of Chasen’s endive and beet salad with walnuts, which I make on special occasions. In certain restaurants he even orders a salad with candied pecans and dried fruit. But he hates spinach. What can a cook do?

Notice I haven’t given up yet. Just as I weaned him from “sweet tea” both the true variety and the non-southern variety laden with sugar or sugar substitute, to herbal tea, I can do this! The next challenge for me is the really bitter greens, including mature collards, kale, chicory and dandelion. That needs more research and testing. I’ve some of the best teachers around, but they’re in books in storage. Edna Lewis, you are a treasure that is certainly missed in life. Is it OK to miss your book too? Cheers, Dee