Saturday, December 31, 2011

Mushroom Bisque Soup


A shitake mushroom block that I purchased at the 2010 Mt. Pisgah Mushroom Festival from Rain Forest Mushroom Company has sat in the bottom of my refrigerator for the past 14 months. I had already grown the oyster mushroom block, but just hadn't found the perfect time for the shitake block. Last week when I checked on it, the mushrooms were already starting to sprout! So I set up the mushroom block in an old fish tank, and in less than a week we had a full crop of mushrooms. My son thought it was great fun to harvest the mushrooms.


I have two favorite mushroom soup recipes in the Moosewood Cookbook. One is a Hungarian Mushroom Soup and the other Mushroom Bisque soup. Today was a Mushroom Bisque soup day! This the first time that I have made this recipe with anything other than button mushrooms. And I normally use plain old milk, but today used up some half-and-half in the refrigerator. We served ours with additional garlic toast for mopping up the soup and Ninkasi Sleigh'r Ale. Yum.

Mushroom Bisque Soup
2 fist sized potatoes chopped (from CSA)
1 1/2 c water
1 onion chopped (from CSA)
2 T olive oil
several cups of mushrooms chopped (grown at home)
1 t salt
2 cloves garlic (from CSA)
1/4 t thyme
3 T dry white wine
2 T soy sauce
fresh black pepper
1 1/2 c half and half (milk is fine too)
homemade croutons
green onions chopped(from CSA)
spinach chopped (from CSA)

Place chopped potatoes in a pan of water and boil until potatoes are soft.

Saute onions in olive oil until soft. Add in mushrooms and salt and cover until mushrooms are cooked through. Add in garlic and thyme. When soft, drain water from potatoes and add to mushroom mixture. Stir in wine, soy sauce, pepper, and half and half. Reserve part of soup mixture. Blend the rest of the soup with a hand blender or food processor), and then mix again with chunky soup.


Serve with garnish of croutons, green onions, and spinach.

Croutons and Spinach
1 slice of bread per person cut into croutons sized pieces
Garlic
Olive oil
Butter
Spinach

Melt butter and add garlic. Add bread pieces and coat in butter/garlic mixture. Add olive oil and cook until browned. The croutons can be browned more in the oven (we didn't have time to do that and they were just as yummy).

After the croutons have cooked, add more olive oil and garlic and saute spinach until just wilted and bright green.
Happy New Year!

Thursday, December 29, 2011

Easy Winter Roasted Vegetables


Only recently have I discovered how wonderful winter roasted vegetables are to eat!

Winter Roasted Vegetables
Parsnips (from CSA)
Beets (from CSA)
Potatoes
Onion
Garlic (from CSA)
Sweet Potatos

Cut vegetables, coat with olive oil and a little salt. Bake 350 F for 45-60 minutes. Enjoy.

Monday, December 26, 2011

Butternut Squash Chowder


Today is a day for a warm winter soup. This is a slow cooker recipe adapted from Slow Cooker Revolution by America's Test Kitchen.

The original recipe calls for bacon; however, the last recipe that I made in my cast iron pan was Okonomiyaki and hadn't yet cleaned out the bacon grease, so I've just cooked the aromatics in the bacon grease and called it good. I also started with frozen chicken broth and added it frozen to the slow cooker. It took several hours even on high to completely defrost. The original recipe calls for heavy cream, but we have 2% milk at home instead.
Butternut Squash Chowder
1 onion minced
3 garlic cloves minced (from CSA)
1/2 t thyme
1/8 t nutmeg
1/3 c flour
4 c chicken broth
2 c water
3 lbs butternut squash, peeled, seeded, chopped into 1/2 inch pieces (from CSA)
2 bay leaves
1 T olive oil
salt and pepper
8 oz kale
1/2 c milk
1 T sage
1 t brown sugar
Parmesan cheese

Chop butternut squash.
Saute chopped onion, garlic, thyme and nutmeg in bacon grease until onions are translucent. Add 2 c water and whisk in 1/3 cup flour. Stir until thickened. Transfer mixture to the slow cooker. Add in chicken broth, bay leaves, and half of the chopped squash.

Put the other half of the squash into a foil packet and coat with oil, salt, and petter. Put foil packet on top of the soup.
Cook until squash is tender, 4-6 hours on low.

Remove foil packet. Add in chopped kale and cook on low 20-30 minutes. After kale is cooked, put squash from packet back into the soup. Stir in milk, sage, and brown sugar. Add salt, pepper, nutmeg, and cheese as desired.

Sunday, December 25, 2011

Christmas Blueberry Roll

Yum. This is one of my favorite family Christmas recipes. It never tastes quite as good as when my mom makes it (I know she doesn't use whole wheat flour and probably adds more blue berries), but the combination of gooey blueberries in sweet bread is just delicious. Everyone in our family has been snacking ALL day long!

Swedish Tea Ring

Dough
1 c scaled milk
1/2 c sugar
1 t salt
1/2 c margarine

Heat milk until just before it boils. Remove from the stove and put into mixer. Stir in sugar, salt, and margarine. Let mixture stand until lukewarm and the sugar and margarine has melted.

2 1/2 t yeast
1/4 c warm water
1 t sugar

Dissolve yeast in water and 1 t sugar. Let grow about 15 minutes until bubbly. Add to milk mixture.

1 egg beaten
4 cups unsifted flour (mixture of whole wheat and white)

Add to egg and 2 c flour to milk mixture. Beat until smooth. Add additional 2 cups of flour to make a stiff batter. Place in a lightly oiled bowl and cover tightly with plastic wrap. Cool in refrigerator for at least 2 hours of up to 2 days.

Filling
2 c blueberries (from McKenzie River Farm)
1/2 c brown sugar
1/2 c flour
1/2 c chopped nuts (Filberts from Thistledown Farm)
1 t cinnamon
3 T melted butter

Mix sugar, flour and cinnamon together. Add blueberries and nuts.

Roll our dough into a square. It can be made into 2 smaller rolls (rectangle 7"x14") or one larger roll. Smaller rolls are easier to handle.

Put melted butter on dough once rolled out. Spread filling over the dough.
Roll up and pinch the edge to seal.
Form into a ring on a greased baking sheet (stuff in more blueberries before sealing ends together) with the sealed edge down.
Cut 2/3 through the ring at 1 inch intervals.
Twist each section sideways.
Cover and let rise in a warm place until doubled (about 1 hour). Bake at 375F for 20-25 minutes.

Warm Christmas Salad

I needed a side dish for our Christmas dinner that would allow me to use many of the leafy green vegetables from our CSA this week. In my Moosewood Cookbook, I found and adapted this recipe for Warm Salad. I chopped all of the vegetables the night before and stored them in the refrigerator so all I had to do was cook everything together. This recipe made a huge amount of salad. It was enough for the eight adults at our dinner with plenty of left overs!

Warm Salad

1 bunch Swiss Chard chopped (from CSA)
1 bunch Sugarloaf (aka Castel Franc0 Chicory) chopped (from CSA)

8 cabbage leaves chopped--in this case one whole small cabbage (from CSA)

Olive oil
Salt and Pepper
3 leeks chopped (from CSA)
1 red onion chopped
3 cloves garlic minced (from CSA)
10 mushrooms sliced
1 stalk of celery chopped
3 T balsamic vinegar
1/2 c Parmesan Cheese




Heat oil in a large pan. Add in greens a little at a time and salt before adding more greens. Cook until the greens are wilted but still retain some of the color. Remove from the heat and place in serving dish. Add more oil to the pan and saute leeks, onion, garlic, mushrooms, and celery together until onions are soft. Add to the greens dish. Toss with balsamic vinegar and cheese. We served it warm, but the recipe instructions indicate that it can be served at any temperature.

Friday, December 23, 2011

Okonomiyaki

Several years ago, my husband and I spent a wonderful December vacation in Japan with our friend Ben. He took us to an okonomiyaki restaurant in his hometown where we cooked our own vegetable and meat filled pancakes on a griddle at our table. The resulting okonomiyaki were very flavorful, and it was great fun to sit around the table and make our giant pancake dinner. We haven't had okonomiyaki in the United States, but a friend of a friend posted this version online recently. I thought it would be nice to try since I still had cabbage left from an earlier CSA bag, and everyone in my family likes bacon.

They were very similar to the Cabbage Fritters that I have made in the past. While we enjoyed having bacon for dinner, I'm not sure what was missing, but these did not taste like the ones we had in Japan. I do like the idea of a cabbage fritter with more vegetables in the batter.


Okonomiyaki
3 eggs

1 1/2 c flour

1 c water

1/2 t salt

2 T freshly grated ginger
1/2 head cabbage shredded (from CSA)
1 onion (from CSA)

6 mushrooms sliced (or chopped and added to batter)
1/2 lb bacon strips cut in half

Beat eggs and stir in water, flour, salt and ginger. Add scallions and cabbage. Heat a stove top skillet or griddle. Cook one piece of bacon in the pan and remove. Scoop some batter and make a pancake. Place mushrooms and bacon on top of the uncooked pancake. Cook until the bottom of the pancake is browned (3-4 minutes). Flip and cook the second (aka bacon side) until the bacon is browned.

Tuesday, December 20, 2011

Mexican Wedding Cakes, Russian Tea Cakes, Snowballs


These crowd pleasing cookies are called Mexican Wedding Cakes, Russian Tea Cakes, and Snowballs in our family. My husband's mother included this recipe in a lovely book she made for us of family recipes. I wanted to use up a little rye flour that was in my freezer so tried to make these with rye flour rather than wheat flour. I liked the taste, which was a little "earthier." My four-year old proclaimed that they were delicious and ate many cookies!



Recipe
1/2 c butter
4 T powder sugar
1/2 c ground nuts--filberts (from Thistledown Farm)
1 t vanilla
1 c rye flour (from CSA)
Powdered sugar for top

Grind nuts in food processor. In mixer, beat butter until soft, add sugar and beat well. Mix in flour, nuts, and vanilla and beat well. Roll into small balls or scoop with melon baller and place on cookie sheet. Bake 325F for 10-12 minutes until lightly golden. Remove from pan and roll in powdered sugar or dust tops and bottoms with powdered sugar.


Monday, December 19, 2011

Kenyan-Mexican Fusion

This meal was inspired by a comment from my friend and Kenyan host sister Lilian. When I stayed with Lilian and her family we often had sukuma wiki, ugali, beans, and chapatis as a base for dinner. My family lived in a rural part of Western Kenya and the cooking was done in a cooking house behind the main house over an open fire.

This meal is meant to be eaten with your hands (specifically one hand). Sukuma wiki is typically collard greens cooked with an onion and tomato. Ugali is similar to polenta, but it is used to pick up the greens, beans, or meat served with the meal. Chapatis reminded me of tortillas that my mom makes to eat as burritos on a hot/dry pan; however, the chapatis were fried in oil or lard. On one occasion, I cooked for my host family and made refried beans with garlic and a chilli powder. I modified everything a little bit based on the ingredients that we had at home.

Sukuma wiki
1 bunch mustard greens (from CSA)
1 onion
2 cloves garlic (from CSA)
grapeseed oil

Chop onion and cut greens into strips. Heat oil in a pan and cook onions until translucent. Add greens and garlic and cook until greens are wilted and brightly colored.

I liked the mustard greens. Yum!

Ugali
2 c water
1 c corn flour (from CSA)
1 t salt
1 T butter

Heat water and salt until boiling. Slowly add in corn meal (or flour) stirring quickly to prevent (or remove) as many lumps as possible. Add in butter near the end.


I am quite out of practice and my ugali was very lumpy and didn't hold up well when picked up by hand, but tasted great when paired with the greens.


Chapatis
4 c flour mix of whole wheat and white
4 T butter
1 T baking powder
1 t salt
1 1/2 c water

Mix all ingredients together using hands or a pastry knife. Roll out into rounds chapatis.


Cook over medium heat and flip when bubbles start to appear. Can be cooked with oil or without on a griddle or cast iron pan.


My chapatis were not quite round even though I used my Kenyan chapati board and rolling pin. I could hear my Kenyan host mom in my ear reminding me to make them as round as possible. But they tasted great and held up for several days for a variety of toppings!


Beans
1 can garbanzo beans
2 cloves garlic (from CSA)
1/2 onion
2 t cumin
2 t chili powder
oil

Heat oil and cook onions until translucent. Add in beans, spices, and garlic. Cook until heated through.
The beans were a nice addition to the meal. I think especially with the more typical Mexican flavoring it was a nice compliment to the other parts of the meal.


Thursday, December 15, 2011

Karen's Roasted Beet Vishyssoise

On dreary fall days, I enjoy enjoy eating potato-leek soup. I often make mine with a milk base, but thought I'd try the dairy free version my friend Karen wrote about on her blog. It's a modified potato-leek (from our CSA) soup with roasted beets (from our CSA) and a very flavorful vegetable scrape broth.

She has wonderful pictures, recipe list, and step-by-step instructions on her blog.

I did make a couple of modifications to the recipe. First, I roasted both the beets and the potatoes in the oven. The beets were gorgeous when I cut into them; some were red and white stripped and others were yellow and white stripped.

I also did not make the pesto, but instead added ginger and garlic (from our CSA) directly to the soup in the last stages of cooking.

The beets were super sweet and so the soup has a very sweet taste. And because of the coloring of the beets the color is more pink-light brown than the vibrant red in the original on Karen's blog. The soup was also delicious with a little cheese sprinkled over the top.

Tuesday, December 13, 2011

Rutabaga Fries

The first time I cooked a rutabaga was last winter when they were included in our CSA bag. They are a cross between a turnip and cabbage, and I think taste like a mild Brussel sprout. Last year, I made a Waldorf salad with the rutabagas.

When our CSA share had two Rutabagas this week, I decided to make them into fries with a recipe suggested by our famers. I want to like rutabagas because they have a lot of Vitamin C and dietary fiber, and they have such a great name.

The recipe is fine and easy to make. However, honestly none of my family liked them very much. I haven't acquired a taste for rutabagas yet, and consequently, I don't think I would purposely seek them out. However, this is one of the reasons I enjoy getting a CSA share--as a challenge to eat foods that are not part of our normal repertoire. Next time we get rutabagas, I might try to make them into mashed potatoes to see if we like them more that way.
Rutabaga Fries

Rutabagas (from our CSA)
Salt
Olive oil
Water

Cut rutabagas into large fry shapes. Place in boiling water for 5 minutes. Drain. Coat with olive oil and salt. Bake 30 minutes in 400F oven until browned.


Sunday, December 11, 2011

More Butternut Squash

Several weeks ago we made butternut squash ravioli adapted from Vegetarian Cooking for Everyone. The original recipe calls for a brown butter sauce with pecans and sage; however, we were out of both so I used filberts and the other herbs. The ravioli and sauce were delicious, but it was quite a project to make the ravioli pasta. I still had butternut squash and filberts left from my thanksgiving pies, and wanted to try it again. This week, I didn't have the time or energy to make the pasta. I decided to use gyoza wrappers to make the ravioli; however, unfortunately, the ones we bought at the store were moldy when I opened the new package. I had a handful of lasagna noodles, mozzarella cheese, spinach, and mushroms at home, so I decided to make the butternut squash filling into a lasagna.
Butternut Squash Lasagna
12 lasagna noodles
large handfuls of spinach (from CSA)
5 mushrooms sliced
6 oz mozzarella cheese diced
Olive oil

I often make a tomato based lasagna without cooking the noodles first, but decided that because this time I was not going to use a sauce, I needed to cook the noodles first.
Sautéed chopped mushrooms and baby spinach with garlic in olive oil. Layer cooked lasagna noodles with butternut squash filling, spinach, mushrooms, and cheese. Add another layer of noodles and repeat toppings. Add one final layer of noodles, cover with cheese.
Add water to the bottom of the pan. Cover with tin foil and bake 350F for 30 minutes. (I neglected to cover the pan at first and the noodles on top got a little too crunchy.) When cooked through, top with brown butter sauce (this really finishes the pasta--it's not nearly as good without the flavors of the sauce).
Butternut Squash Filling
2 c butternut squash roasted (from CSA)
2 T butter
Salt and pepper to taste
1/2 c Parmesan cheese
1/2 c bread crumbs (I've tried this with just a toasted and food processed piece of bread and matzo meal--both work fine)

Mix all of the ingredients together in the food processor until very smooth.
Brown Butter Sauce
4-6 T butter
1 clove garlic
2 T dried parsley
2 t dried thyme
1/2 c chopped filberts (from Thistledown Farm)

Add all ingredients to skillet and cook until butter is melted

Wednesday, December 7, 2011

Cabbage Fritters

This is such a simple recipe which has become one of our favorite cabbage ideas. Our Open Oak CSA farmers suggested this recipe developed by one of their farm hands during the winter 2010 season. It's a super easy weeknight dinner.

5 eggs
1 1/4 c rye flour (from CSA)
cabbage cut into strips or shredded (by hand or in the food processor)--enough to be completely coated by eggs and rye flour
oil for cooking

Whisk eggs, flour, and cabbage together. Cook over medium heat on the stove top until browned on both sides. Serve plain or with yogurt, ketchup, or hot sauce.

Monday, December 5, 2011

Wheat berry breakfast


I had some cooked wheat berries left over from the chili that I recently made and turned it into breakfast!

I defrosted blue berries, which we had picked and frozen during the summer, and mixed in Nancy's Vanilla yogurt.

Simple, delicious, and very filling!

Saturday, December 3, 2011

Corn Flour Waffles

I love making breakfast on the weekends. This corn flour waffle recipe from The Joy of Cooking was given to us by our CSA farmers last year.

I like to have a variety of toppings for waffles too so that I can alternate between blueberry syrup, maple syrup, and yogurt. The blueberry syrup recipe from my mom is so simple to make and delicious. I use the leftovers with yogurt during the week. Our maple syrup comes from Funks Grove in Shirley, Illinois; we restock our supplies when we visit my brother and family in Illinois. Yum!


Corn Flour Waffles

4 T butter
1 1/2 c milk
3 eggs
1/2 c corn flour (from CSA)
1 1/4 c wheat flour
1 T baking powder
1 T sugar
1/2 t salt

Melt butter, cool, and mix in milk and eggs. Add in dry ingredients and mix well. Cook on waffle iron. Remove when golden brown.















Blueberry Syrup

1 1/2 c sugar
1/2 c water
1/4 t cinnamon
3 slices lemon or oranges
2 c blueberries (Willamette Valley)

Mix sugar, water, cinnamon, and lemon/orange in a pan. Heat until boiling, and boil 5-7 minutes stirring constantly. Turn down heat and add in blueberries. Continue to stir and simmer 5-6 minutes.