Roasted Potato and Fennel Soup

This recipe is adapted from Ina Garten’s The Barefoot Contessa Cookbook. There’s a tattered copy on our shelf — stained with years of reverent use. Though we love Ina, we also routinely doctor her recipes to reduce the fat and salt content. She’s heavy-handed in these areas, but her recipes are always simple, pure and consistently satisfying. You can omit the cream (or reduce) if you like, but it adds a lovely richness. We’ve already reduced it by half from the original. If you have leeks, substitute one for some of the onion.

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White Beans and Collard Greens

This recipe traces roots in many directions: the Boston-style baked beans of my youth (who knows how that got imbedded in my mid-western heritage); Southern slow-braised greens and black-eyed peas; and spicy Indian stews are among the inspirational muses. The sauce has a mildly spicy, sweet-sour tang that permeates the creamy beans. Collards are the perfect leaf for this dish since their substance loves a slow braise — they don’t go all mushy on you, but hold their character even as they become tender.

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Homemade Cheese with Ease…

No matter the day job, anyone can don an apron and moonlight after hours making artisan cheese — at home. Armed with little more than milk and a few lemons, you’re on your way in less than an hour to turning out fresh cheese without fuss, the way home cooks around the world have done for hundreds of years. Unlike aged varieties crafted in dank cellars using peculiar, mold-nurturing science across weeks or months, fresh cheese is simple to produce and ready to eat almost immediately — no arcane technique or delayed gratification involved. We’re talking about some famous national treasures: Italian ricotta, Mexican queso blanco and Indian paneer.

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Beijing Bok Choy with Mushrooms


Adapted from Najmieh Batmanglij’s Silk Road Cooking: A Vegetarian Journey. The author has travelled extensively along the famous trade route from China all the way to the Mediterranean. Her book contains a wealth of authentic meat-free recipes from the region.

Feel free to throw in additional vegetables as well — sliced green onions, celery or matchstick carrots, for instance.

(Serves 4)

Ingredients:

  • 1 teaspoon cornstarch
  • 1-1/2 tablespoons light soy sauce
  • 2 teaspoons rice vinegar
  • 1 teaspoon toasted sesame oil
  • ¼ teaspoon chili paste (optional)
  • ½ teaspoon sugar
  • ½ teaspoon freshly ground pepper
  • Vegetable or peanut oil
  • 2 cloves garlic, peeled and crushed
  • 1 tablespoon minced ginger root
  • 4 cups sliced mushrooms
  • 4-6 baby bok choy rinsed well and quartered lengthwise

Method:

  1. In a small bowl, dissolve the cornstarch in one-half cup water. Add soy sauce, vinegar, sesame oil, chili paste, sugar and pepper. Stir well and set aside.
  2. Heat 2 tablespoons vegetable or peanut oil in a wok. Add garlic, ginger, a splash of water and mushrooms.  Stir-fry for two or more minutes over high heat until mushrooms brown on at least one side. Remove from pan and set aside.
  3. Add a little more oil to the pan and heat.  Add bok choy in a single layer and cook until the vegetables begin to brown.  Turn and brown on the other side.  Add sauce, reduce heat, cover and simmer over low heat for 5 or so minutes until bok choy are just tender.  Add mushrooms to the pan and stir.
  4. Adjust seasoning to taste and serve over cooked linguine noodles or rice.

Welcome, Year of the Dragon

It’s been a few weeks since the last holiday celebration.   Given the continuous stream that begins in October with Diwali and Halloween, by early January we’re usually tuckered out after more than two months of on-and-off revelry.  Now that we’ve had a few weeks to refocus on business-as-usual — resurrecting the house, finally toting the holiday decorations back to the garage, and generally getting back into a healthy routine — we’re thoroughly bored with our resolutions and ready for an excuse to party once more.  Luckily, Chinese New Year is upon us.  Welcome, Year of the Dragon.

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