Archive for Local Organic Recipes

Cooking Beyond Recipes, part 3

Nadine shares more recommendations for cooking styles, food choices and good cookbooks to have in your kitchen.  She will continue to provide tips in this Cooking Beyond Recipes column.  If you missed her first two posts, click here for part one and click here for part two to be introduced to her concepts.

Have you ever thought about when, what and how much you eat?  Here are four simple ways to help your body through food.  By experimenting and carefully observing, we can each find the optimal way to benefit our respective bodies through what we eat.

I would add the following eating concepts:

  • Eat modest portions, and eat slowly.
  • Avoid processed foods, especially anything with more than a handful of ingredients or a list of  mystery ingredients, even if  they’re certified organic. Most of the ingredients you don’t recognize are what I think of as the Horcruxes of corn—tiny bits of the souls of whole kernels of corn that have been extracted by food “science” and embedded in food simulations.
  • During the day, eat every few hours to avoid food cravings. Eat breakfast, lunch and dinner, plus small snacks of whole, fresh fruit, raw vegetables or nuts (not processed snacks) between meals.
  • Try eating animal protein at lunch instead of dinner—you may find that you sleep better.

Summer Tomato Salad from Amy

Thank you to everyone that attended the food preservation class last night.  We learned about hot water bath canning and pickling while enjoying this salad as an appetizer.  It is adapted from Gourmet Magazine to fit the ingredients in my garden.  I have grape tomatoes, basil, tarragon, mint and parsley growing in my yard.  This version will feed eight to ten people.

Summer Tomato Salad

Adapted by Amy

1 to 2 cloves garlic

3/4 tsp kosher salt

1-1/2 tblsp fresh lemon juice

1 tblsp sherry vinegar

1-1/2 tsp Dijon mustard

3/4 tsp sugar or agave

1/4 tsp fresh black paper

6 tblsp extra-virgin olive oil

2-1/2 lbs cherry tomatoes, cut into quarters

1-1/2 lbs cucumbers

1/2 cup scallions

1/3 cup chopped herbs (tarragon, basil, parsley, mint)

Combine the garlic through olive oil and shake in a small jar.  Place tomatoes, cucumbers and scallions into a large bowl and mix.  Add the dressing and herbs before serving.  Enjoy.

Cooking Beyond Recipes- part 2

Nadine shares more recommendations for cooking styles, food choices and good cookbooks to have in your kitchen.  She will continue to provide tips in this Cooking Beyond Recipes column.  If you missed her first post, click here to be introduced to her concepts.

Cooking Beyond Recipes

I am neither original, nor alone, in advocating these cooking concepts:

  • Start with real, whole food, locally grown whenever possible—ingredients that burst with flavor before the cooking begins.
  • Let the ingredients inspire you. I sometimes come home from the farmer’s market, lay out my purchases on the kitchen counter and ask, “What would Alice Waters do?” For a beginning or hesitant cook, Alice Waters’ The Art of Simple Food is a wonderful reference. I also like the Fanny Farmer Cookbook for classic American recipes (when I ask, “How many things can you do with apples?” for example), and The New Basics Cookbook by Julee Rosso & Sheila Lukins of Silver Palate fame.
  • Prepare food simply, so the ingredients can continue to speak for themselves: raw, steamed, sautéed, grilled, roasted.

Quick Tomato & Basil Sauce

Tomatoes, Peppers, Zucchini and Basil all love the sun and are available at the Farmer’s Market in August.  A quick sauce can be created using the fresh ingredients.  It is also an easy recipe.

One make-ahead step is roasting the bell peppers and storing in the refrigerator.  Buy a few more than you would eat in one meal and roast them on the grill until they are charred on all sides.  Cover them as they cool and the skin can easily be removed.  Chop into small squares and use throughout the week.

The other ingredients can be cooked at the same time as boiling water for pasta.  Lunch will be ready in 20 minutes if you are using the pre-roasted red bell peppers.  Enjoy.

1 Small Onion, diced

2 Cloves of Garlic, diced

1 Small Zucchini (or half of a larger one), diced

1 Roasted Red Bell Pepper, diced

2 Tomatoes, diced

1 Bunch of Swiss Chard, chiffonade or slice into strips

Fresh Oregano

Pinch of Red Pepper Flakes

Kosher Salt

Fresh Ground Black Pepper

Olive Oil

1.5 Cups of Penne Pasta (or Two Handfuls)

1 Bunch of Basil, chiffonade or slice into strips

Wash and dice all of the vegetables on a cutting board to prepare for cooking the dish.  Heat a saute pan to medium heat and drizzle olive oil in the bottom.  Add the onion, garlic, pinch of kosher salt and about three grinds of black pepper for about three minutes of cooking time.  This will help them soften for your sauce.

Start the pasta water.  Cook the pasta according to instructions with a little salt added with the shells.  It typically takes 10 minutes.  Add the swiss chard to the same water with five minutes left on the timer.

Add the remaining vegetable ingredients, oregano and red pepper.  Cook for about 10 minutes.  Remove the pasta and greens from the boiling water and add to the saute pan.  It is good to have a little pasta water to give the sauce texture.  Cook all ingredients for a few more minutes.  Top with basil and parmesan cheese.

Cooking Beyond Recipes

Cooking Beyond Recipes

From Nadine

In grad school, I shared an apartment with two aspiring librarians. Rosemary often cooked for us and would go to the store to buy dried oregano if a recipe called for ¼ teaspoon and we didn’t have it on the shelf. One lovely Midwestern morning, I went to the farmer’s market and came home with zucchini, onion, eggplant, bell pepper and tomato, chopped them up and stewed them into ratatouille. At dinner, Cathy expressed her appreciation and asked for the recipe. With disapproval in her voice, Rosemary responded, “There wasn’t one. I watched her make it.” I tell this story often, because it says so much about different approaches to cooking.

When I was married, my husband would sometimes ask that I make a particular meal again—and of course I couldn’t reproduce exactly whatever I’d improvised two weeks ago. So there are some advantages to the “go buy the ¼ teaspoon of oregano” school of thought.

I treat recipes as references, sources of ideas and inspiration. I follow recipes more closely when I bake, since the chemistry of baking requires certain proportions of key ingredients. I often read several recipes to make something new or outside my usual repertory. (Checking various cookbooks recently, I discovered that my grandmother’s recipe for short cake is classic.) Occasionally I will draft a recipe from my sources, note what I actually do and keep that recipe so I can reproduce it if I like the result. A friend once gifted me with some cookbooks as she cleaned out her library, and I still enjoy reading the notes she made as she modified recipes.

Do you have a delicious recipe?

Butter Lettuce Spring Salad

Butter Lettuce Spring Salad

Lots of us have favorite recipes that we fall back on again and again because they’re fast, easy and delicious. What’s yours? Add a recipe to our mix and you’ll be put into a monthly drawing for a free LOMB cooking class! Just be sure to include clear directions, measurements and local and organic ingredients. Let the creative cooking begin!