New review of Patti LaBelle’s much-lauded mac and cheese recipe is now posted at my other blog. It’s good, but not that good, Oprah!! Get a grip on yourself, woman!
New review of Patti LaBelle’s much-lauded mac and cheese recipe is now posted at my other blog. It’s good, but not that good, Oprah!! Get a grip on yourself, woman!
This is a gynormous box of bacon, photographed at Camellia Grill in New Orleans. The box is about the same size and shape as a box of paper reams. That’s a lotta bacon!
The bacon is layered onto some kind of paper, and when the griddle clears, another few pages of salty meaty goodness are slapped on.
Every July, I have a big cooking weekend to stock the freezer with lots of yummy scrummy. The goal is to not need to actually cook again until autumn. Well, not entirely, but any supper I can fake by plopping a frozen brick of something into a saucepan and getting out of the kitchen while the stove is hot is a good supper.
This recipe is my reworking of the Mediterranean Meatball Soup that appears in a Better Homes and Gardens Special Interest publication called Our Best Diabetic Recipes. Carbs are not my friend, and these magazines often inspire me to up my vegetable consumption in a fancy and interesting way. (These magazines also include an alarming number of recipes that call for fat-free Cool Whip and other forms of Better Eating Through Chemistry, so be warned.)
Although this soup is chock-full of goodness I was surprised to find that the original version wasn’t all that delish, and the barley sucked up so much liquid it resembled porridge. Ew. My version below gooses the flavors and provides enough liquid to keep it brothy. I also substituted frozen bell pepper strips and frozen spinach for the fresh called for in the magazine recipe. Lazy? No, just realistic. I choose my conveniences carefully.
Frozen veggies usually work fine in soup — but I will never, ever stoop to using that pre-chopped garlic from a jar, because it doesn’t taste like anything at all. It smells but it doesn’t taste.
My other main tweak is I altered the meatball ingredients in the direction of more moistness and fewer carbs. The original recipe called for 3/4 cup of breadcrumbs and the meatballs were tough. Reducing the crumbs and adding a grated onion improved the situation dramatically.
Better Homes and Gardens specified a can of Great Northern beans, but any variety of white bean will work fine. Because they taste so much earthier and beanier I usually prefer to cook big batches of dried beans and store portions in the freezer until needed, but the cupboard was bare so I picked up a can of Trader Joe’s white kidney beans. (The frozen peppers are also from TJ’s. Love that store!)
When reheating this soup throughout the summer, I plan to throw in other Mediterranean flavors such as diced artichoke hearts, black olives or the season’s amazing fresh tomatoes. I think a fresh sprig of rosemary won’t hurt, either.
Mediterranean Meatball Soup
Adapted from Better Homes and Gardens Serves 6 ½ cup whole wheat breadcrumbs (or RyKrisp crackers of All Bran cereal that’s been run through the Cuisinart) 1 egg 4 cloves garlic, minced (divided) 1 small onion, grated 3 teaspoons fresh rosemary or 1-1/2 teaspoon dried rosemary (divided) ¼ teaspoon black pepper 1 pound lean ground beef or turkey 1 Tablespoon olive oil 3 carrots, chopped 2 red, green and/or yellow bell peppers, cut into bite-size strips 1 small onion, chopped 3 cans beef broth (14oz each) 2-4 cups water, as needed 1 can white beans, rinsed and drained (15oz) ¼ cup pearl barley 4 cups fresh baby spinach leaves or 5-6oz frozen spinach Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Line a rimmed baking sheet with aluminum foil. In a large bowl, combine breadcrumbs, egg, 2 cloves garlic, grated onion, half of the rosemary and black pepper. Add ground beef and mix well. Shape mixture into 1” meatballs and place on lined baking sheet. Bake for 15 minutes or until cooked through. Set aside. In a biiiig soup pot, heat olive oil over medium heat. Saute carrots, bell peppers, chopped onion and the remaining garlic until onions are translucent. Add broth, beans, barley and the remaining rosemary. Bring to a boil; reduce heat and simmer until barley is tender. Add water if you require more soupiness. Add cooked meatballs and spinach and heat through.I recently gushed about enjoying a cocktail featuring a fancy hipster ice cube and someone scoffed that this could not possibly be a “thing.”
Oh yes. It’s a thing. It’s a big thing in certain circles. Bartenders are building reputations on their ice cube expertise. Check it out:
This article explains the principles behind the craze.
Here’s a vendor of specialty ice cubes. Peep their gallery! Order their products! Faint upon learning the FedEx charge!
No, please don’t pass out. Look, here’s some advice for DIY-ing your very own fancy big ice.
Because you know you want to.
I like soup.
I like making soup. I like eating soup. I like pretty much everything about nearly all kinds of soup.
And since there’s nothing a blogger appreciates more than a regular feature that provides a modicum of structure to her otherwise unfocused blatherings, I will be blogging about soup. Let’s say, every Sunday. And see how it goes.
First up is cream of asparagus soup. Fresh asparagus is so good and so inexpensive right now, I’ve been roasting it, grilling it, stir-frying it, prosciutto-ing it and even eating the most slender stalks raw in a delicious marinated salad. I did not even know you could eat raw asparagus. Thank you, Anne Burrell!
For my soup, I used Sunny Anderson’s recipe with one minor alteration: I added plain Greek yogurt instead of sour cream. The recipe was dead simple and turned out to be quite rich and tasty.
When it was time to take the photo, I wished I’d reserved some of the asparagus tips and blanched them to use as a garnish, maybe perched atop a dollop of yogurt. If you are a fancypants cook you might give that a whirl. Instead, I tossed a few garlicky croutons into the bowl for visual interest and called it lunch.
I use a stick blender to puree my soups but if all you have is a regular blender, be sure to vent the lid when you zap your potion. Otherwise, you may end up with hot soup all over your kitchen.
Sunny Anderson’s Cream of Asparagus Soup
Source: Food Network
Melt butter in a large saucepan over medium-high heat. Add onion and garlic, and saute 5 minutes. Season with salt and pepper. Add asparagus and saute another 4 minutes. Add the chicken stock and bring to a boil. Reduce to simmer and cook for 30 minutes, until asparagus is very tender. Carefully puree until smooth. Stir in sour cream and season with salt and pepper, to taste. Transfer to serving bowls. Dust with paprika and serve.
Over at my other blog we’ve become a bit demoralized by a series of Bad Macs from restaurants, so I fired up the oven for the first time in months to prepare an actual recipe. It was easy, it was cheesy, and I recommend it to all.
PS Suzy Gruyere and Hilary Havarti are approaching our one-year bloggaversary — and to think, people said we’d run out of stuff to write about such a “limited” topic (heretics!). To celebrate, we’re going to be giving away a supercool prize — hint: just because it looks like a duck and it quacks like a duck does not necessarily mean it is a duck! – so if you are a mac and cheese lover, be sure to subscribe so you don’t miss a thing.
Sooooo… Yesterday I explained all the preparation steps for making your own jam. The tools, the pots, the timing. Pretty dry stuff, actually. Today’s lesson is a lot more drool-inducing, so grab a hanky and read on!
In an ARTitude Zine article about clearing out her studio, Marilee Fosbre quoted this folk wisdom: “If you have to swallow a lot of frogs, you might as well swallow the biggest one first.” In my case, that meant tackling the lemon curd first, because I’d never made it before and it requires a lot more attention to detail than regular jam does. Plus, I wanted to eat some as soon as possible.
Lemon curd is supposed to be cooked in a double boiler but I don’t have one, so I improvised by setting a large metal mixing bowl over a couple inches of boiling water in the Dutch oven.
In case you don’t know what lemon curd is, it’s a mixture of moderate quantities of lemon juice and lemon zest with about ten tons of sugar, whole eggs, extra egg yolks and butter. So how could it be bad? It’s delish on toast, waffles, between layers of cake…etc. And as numerous gift recipients reported, it’s not too shabby on a spoon, straight out of the jar.
To my surprise, the recipe suggested I use bottled lemon juice rather than freshly squeezed, because the bottled stuff is standardized to a certain acidity and flavor profile, while individual lemons may vary dramatically. This is important because canning is Better Living Through Science! and the acidity plays a vital role in keeping your gift recipients alive. Hey, using bottled lemon juice saved me a ton of work so I choose to believe that line of reasoning. And I still had to microplane the zest off nine lemons and about a dozen limes (the limes were my idea and they really added some zip!), so I was happy to pour juice out of a bottle.
I combined the ingredients in my improvised double boiler and stirred and stirred and stirred until I thought I would go mad. It takes a while for the enormous quantity of butter to melt, and then it takes another while for the mixture to thicken, but once it starts it happens pretty quickly.
That’s when I had the pleasure of forcing this giant pot of scalding, viscous goo through a strainer to remove the zest. It imparted its flavor to the curd and outlived its welcome, so it had to go. Stirring with a sterilized spatula helps to keep the zest from clogging up the fine mesh of the strainer, but no amount of elbow grease or prayer will ever restore that strainer to its pre-zest condition.
It’s more labor intensive than making regular jam, but the lemon curd is so incredibly delicious it’s worth the hassle. Oh, here’s a handy dandy tip from Suz: I strained my curd directly into a four cup Pyrex measuring cup, which allowed me to pour the curd straight into the prepared jars rather than having to ladle it in via a funnel. That was one of my Best. Brainstorms. Evah! (By the way, any containers or spatulas or anything else that comes in contact with the jam should be impeccably clean and it wouldn’t hurt to give it a dip in the sterilizing pot.)
One batch yielded three half-pint jars and two or three half-cup jars, so I guess I made four batches in all. That’s four dozen egg yolks, people! And three pounds of butter! And I forget how much sugar, but it was a lot.
A typical jam recipe will say to bring a lot of fruit and a little water (and a dash of life-preserving lemon juice) to a boil, then add some packaged pectin and bring back to a boil, THEN add the half-ton of sugar and bring to a hard boil for a certain amount of time. The stuff is pretty syrupy after the pectin step but then the avalanche of sugar really clogs up the pot for a moment. Just keep stirring and it will incorporate. And tell yourself, “At least jam needs a hell of a lot LESS stirring than that damn lemon curd!” And then dunk your finger into the remnants of sticky, delectable lemon curd still clinging to the sides of the Pyrex measuring cup, and savor, and sigh.
Isn’t this a gorgeous color? It just makes me happy.
And this, the amaretto-peach-jam-whose-name-shall-not-be-uttered-in-polite-company, makes me happy for a whole bunch of other reasons too.
This is what a hard boil looks like. It’s a boil that you cannot stir down, if you know what I mean. A fierce boil that sends hellishly hot splatters of molten goo flying out of the pot and onto your supple and inviting decolletage. Again, it’s worth it.
Once the stuff is cooked, it goes into the sterilized jars while everything is still piping hot. A wide mouth funnel helps a lot but it is still sticky work. You must avoid leaving any smears of jam on the jar rims because that could compromise the seal. Follow the Ball website recommendations slavishly, okay? Wipe those rims! Of course, the jars are coming straight out of a sterilizing bath so it helps to have asbestos fingers, or heavily scarred and calloused fingertips from a lifetime of embroidery or beading.
Place a lid and a band onto each scrupulously prepared and filled jar, tighten the band to what they call “finger tight” and place gently into the canning bath as shown below (actually I could have fit several more jars into this pot, but that’s all I got out of one batch of lemon curd, and you can’t exactly wait around for the next batch to be ready for the bath).
Processing jam is easy. Load the canning bath, put the lid on, bring to a full boil and roll along merrily for however many minutes the recipe recommends. Lemon curd is a lot fussier. The curd must be cooked to a certain temperature, then transferred into jars, then placed into the canning bath when the water is at a certain temperature that is not yet a boil. Something like 180 degrees. The total time is however long it takes to get the pot back to a boil, plus however long the recipe says to process the curd. It is a bit of a production number. But as previously stated: So. Worth. It.
You don’t screw the bands onto the jars super-tight because air has to exit the jar during processing. That’s what creates a vacuum in the jars, keeps the food safe and sucks the lid middles down with a satisfying chorus of “thunk! thunk! thunk!” as the jars cool. The next day I tested the lid “buttons” to make sure they didn’t wiggle, retightened the bands that loosened during processing, and then I had a playdate with labels, Sharpies and about three miles of bubble wrap to make sure my work would survive the journey to my loved ones.
I can’t believe I neglected to take a photo of the ten million jars of finished jam! I guess I was delirious from the heat and the stirring and the 35 pounds of sugar. Did I mention that I was diagnosed as pre-diabetic a month later? True story. I gave away nearly all the jam but just being around that much sugar can be bad for your health, apparently.
Naturally, the moment one sets up a special place for the precious jam jars to cool for the obligatory 24 hour resting period, one’s cat decides that THAT is the exact spot for a perfect and long-overdue cat nap. Here is Quality Control Manager Panda, maintaining a vigil over the dwindling supply of homemade jam while I packaged the rest for delivery to loved ones. Thank god he was willing to pitch in help. He’s a giver. Maybe next time he can do some of the stirring??
In addition to the ornaments and scarves, last year’s holiday season at Casa de Suz was all about jam. I lost count of how many jars I prepared, but I know I used up a 35 pound bag of sugar!
Many people are nervous about making (or even just eating) homemade preserves, but if you follow the rules you won’t kill anyone. The only hard part is fitting enough big pots on your stove, and keeping each one on schedule so that each step synchronizes perfectly with the next.
I had a rather stressful December, and keeping my hands busy with all of these repetitive, rhythmic tasks really helped. I couldn’t WORRY while I was counting crochet stitches, and on jam making days my time was chopped into ten or fifteen minute segments so that didn’t allow much time for moping either. The rattling of glass jars against metal pots was a pleasant white noise that kept silence from feeling oppressive. And presto — no xmas shopping!
I made numerous batches of lemon curd, blueberry jam, and peach jam with either brandy or amaretto. The amaretto peach stuff kicks ass. Seriously! My friend Maria and I made some several years ago, and it was so delicious we spontaneously christened it with a very, very naughty name. (Filthy, actually. But this is a PG blog.)
If you decide to try home canning of preserves, be sure to check out the Ball website because they make the jars and tools, and they will tell you everything you need to know. They have good recipes, too. You can buy the tools, ginormous pots and other supplies at hardware stores like True Value or Ace (Walmart usually carries them too, and you should be able to find a set including a canning bath pot, rack, funnel, lifter and lid gizmo for about $50).
I’d like to say that I bought all of my fruit from the farmers market, but since I cooked this jam in December we all know that would be a lie. The lemons and limes were real. The berries and peaches were frozen. Yes! Frozen works fine, and it’s usually harvested and processed at its peak so the flavor is usually terrific. A ten pound bag of frozen peaches was enough for two batches of jam.
The first step is to wash the jars and bands in hot, soapy water. I always feel so happy with a platoon of adorable squeaky clean little jars taking shape on my counter! You can reuse canning jars and bands, but you need fresh lids each time (most supermarkets carry them).
Next, boil water. Lots of it. Baby-birthin’ quantities. I have my three largest pots on the stove the entire time. The huge one, which is officially a steam canner but I use it upside down as a regular water-bath canner instead, is where the filled jars get processed. Some pots come with a rack to keep the jars up off the bottom of the pot. I always put the rack in while the water comes to a boil, then when I put the first batch of filled jars into the rapidly boiling water I suddenly remember that this rack complicates my life unnecessarily and I have to fish it out with tongs while it is blazing hot. Not a good plan at all. But the jars do fine sitting on the pot floor, and the absence of a rack allows me to use taller jars.
The pot shown here needs more water in it, because the boiling water must cover the filled jars by at least an inch. And of course, water boils off all day so I top off the pot in between batches. That little hole in the pot (near the rim, at ten-o’clock) is how the steam escapes during processing.
My stock pot is called into service as a sterilizing bath. I keep it simmering all day on the back burner with a load of washed jars gently clanking together in there, while I cook the next batch of good stuff to fill them. I also dunk the lids into this boiling water, right before the lids go on the jars.
There is a nifty little tool, basically a stick with a magnet on one end, that makes this task fun, and there’s another nifty little tool that helps lift the jars out of whatever pot they are in (filled or not). I generally do not believe in single-task gadgets but these are worth ten times their weight in gold.
The third pot on the stove is where the cooking happens. I use an enameled cast iron Dutch oven. You should use a pot that has a heavy bottom and is much bigger than you think you need, because the jam will boil up to an unexpected volume and you don’t want more mess than is absolutely necessary.
Gawd, I’m exhausted and we haven’t even stirred our first batch yet. Thanks for reading this far. The actual cooking takes place tomorrow so come on back!
The folks behind the annual No Cookie Left Behind bake sale have put together a similar charitable day for Haiti relief. Tai Kim’s Scoops gelateria, which is my favorite ice cream joint in all of Los Angeles, will host the Cookies Without Borders bake sale, where professional and amateur bakers will sell everything from vegan treats to decadent whoopie pies, all to benefit Doctors Without Borders.
I never need an excuse to go to Scoops but now I have one!
The Cookies Without Borders bake sale will take place this Sunday, January 31 from 2pm to 5pm. Scoops is located at 712 N. Heliotrope Drive (located around the corner from the Ukrainian Cultural Center, on Melrose just west of Vermont).
Last year, through the magic of Facebook, I reconnected with my dear friend Hilary. We used to paint this town red on a regular basis, but during the last several years we’d drifted apart for no particular reason. Having been reunited, we found ourselves on our third consecutive dinner date featuring our mutual favorite dish, macaroni and cheese, and that night Hilary threw down the culinary gauntlet by casually remarking, “You know, we ought to blog about all our macaroni and cheese finds.” Any normal human would have laughed it off, but I took her seriously and now, nine months later, we are making a name for ourselves in the cutthroat world of mac and cheese investigative journalism. And that name is: www.weheartmacandcheese.com!
C’mon, everybody likes macaroni and cheese, and some of us LOVE macaroni and cheese, and here in the northern hemisphere it’s definitely high season for warm and creamy comfort food, so I hope you’ll peek in on what’s been cooking. We feature honest and entertaining recipe reviews from the sublime to the ridiculous, as well as reviews of restaurant macs in Los Angeles and from our growing team of intrepid mac investigators nationwide.
And yeah, we know, we hear it from everyone: YOUR MAMA makes the best macaroni and cheese, or your gramma or maybe even YOU. You may be right. But we’ll be the judge of that — at least, we’d like to be. We welcome guest chefs to share their favorite m&c recipes. If you’re ready for your fifteen minutes of weheartmac fame, please email me for our guidelines and start grating that cheese!