my so called kitchen

January 10, 2010

Caribou Stew

WARNING: If you don't like meat or hunting then you can just skip this post. Just read the first paragraph for a quick personal note and then move on.

As much as I enjoy sharing my culinary exploits on this blog I am anticipating an even greater lull in blogging activity in the coming months. A crawling baby (soon to be walking I expect), a long recovery after knee surgery for my husband and maybe even some academic pursuits for me will have me running around like a caribou with my head cut off. That was lame.

On to the meat of the story (Oh that was even worse. Perhaps taking a break from writing is a really good idea).

A generous friend recently gave us some caribou meat. Generally speaking I am not opposed to hunting as long as the intention is to use the animal as fully as possible.

We were very grateful for the meat because as a meat lover I am always conflicted when it comes to buying it. To me, meat from a wild animal, killed and prepared locally is a sustainable and healthy choice.

Caribou Stew

Now on to the deliciousness. I wasn't quite sure what to do with the ground caribou but I quickly envisioned a stew of sorts. A quick scramble in the fridge yielded this "recipe." I confess that the measurements are approximations. I did not measure while cooking but I am pretty good at judging quantity. And I really think that things like this can't be messed up too badly.

If you don't have a generous, hunting friend or a gun of your own I think ground beef, lamb, bison or even soy crumbles would work well. However, if the opportunity presents itself I suggest trying caribou. It was unbelievably delicious.

Caribou Stew

Serves 4

1-2 Tbsp. olive oil
1 Tbsp. butter
1 pound ground caribou
Large onion chopped
1 carrot diced
1 stalk of celery diced
1-2 cups chopped mushrooms
1-2 cups cut green beans
1 small sweet potato peeled and chopped
Pinch of dried thyme
1 bay leaf
2-3 cups chicken or beef broth
2 Tbsp. flour mixed with 1/2 cup cold water or broth

In my large soup pot I browned up the meat with about 1 Tbsp. of olive oil then removed it from the pot. The caribou was quite lean and I didn't need to skim any fat. I did keep all the juices.

Next saute the onion, carrots and celery with a bit more oil. After a few minutes add the mushrooms and butter. I personally think mushrooms need butter. Add the thyme and bay leaf and continue cooking until the mushrooms are tender but not too soft.

Return the meat to the pot along with the broth, sweet potato and green beans. Simmer for about 10 minutes (until the sweet potatoes are almost done). Add the flour and water mixture a bit at a time and let the stew simmer, gradually adding more flour mixture until the stew reaches the desired thickness.

We devoured the entire pot with popovers from the Tassajara book. It would also be delicious over rice, quinoa or good ole egg noodies (aka noodles).

chopped

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November 30, 2009

Spice-Rubbed Pork Tenderloin and Cranberry Sauce

As I prepared my contributions for this year's Thanksgiving feast I experimented with my standard cranberry recipe. A little orange zest, a cinnamon stick and some fresh ginger. After "testing" a few spoonfuls I used some of the sauce as a yogurt topping. It was delicious and I decided I would need to take better advantage of cranberry season.

Thanksgiving was less than a week ago and I am still having fond memories of the cranberry sauce. Yes, everything else was delicious but I can't get my mind off the cranberries.

cranberry sauce

I actually grew up eating Ocean Spray, canned, jellied cranberry sauce, which I really enjoyed, but after my first time making it fresh years ago I will never go back. They really aren't the same thing at all and I suppose each is suited to its own purpose, although I can't think of what that might be for the canned variety (I don't mean to disparage it's just how I feel).

So this week at the supermarket I snatched two bags with plans of making more sauce and maybe freezing some. I considered what would accompany my cranberry sauce, other than more plain yogurt, and decided on a Spice-Rubbed Pork Tenderloin. A preparation simple enough for everyday dinner but certainly snazzy enough for guests.

We also enjoyed simple, sauteed cabbage and sweet potatoes on the side.

cabbage

Spice-Rubbed Pork Tenderloin
Serves 4

2 tsp. brown sugar
1 tsp. chili powder
1 tsp. paprika
1/2 tsp. salt
1/2 tsp. onion powder
1/2 tsp. ground cumin
1/4 tsp. garlic powder
1/4 tsp. dried thyme
1 pound pork tenderloin, trimmed

Preheat oven to 425 degrees. Combine the sugar and spices in a small bowl. Rub the tenderloin with the spice mixture and refrigerate for 20 minutes. Cook on a lightly greased pan for 20 minutes or until a meat thermometer registers 160 degrees. Let is stand 5 minutes then cut into 1/4-inch-thick-slices.

Cranberry Sauce

My standard sauce relies on sugar and apple cider for sweetness. Delicious on its own, it really shines with a few extras -- a teaspoon of orange zest, a tablespoon of freshly grated ginger and a cinnamon stick while simmering.

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October 17, 2009

Lentil, Kale & Butternut Squash Chicken Soup

At dinnertime my three-year old sometimes pretends she is a baby and I am the mommy who feeds her. I am happy to oblige because it means she actually eats a hearty meal when she might otherwise have just picked at it. Am I worried she'll never eat on her own? No.

bay leaf

Tonight was one of those nights and I took great pleasure in spoon feeding her bite after bite of this incredibly healthy soup, while simultaneously feeding myself and the baby (little bites of squash pulled directly from my bowl).

Am I some sort of super-mom? No. Martyr? Maybe a little. Isn't getting pleasure from feeding others, especially ones own children, an intrinsic part of being human (or being someone's Jewish/Italian/German/insert ethnicity of choice here Grandmother).

Before my first baby was even born I imagined how we would eat as a family. I envisioned bowls of lovingly, homemade baby food being slurped off the spoon with abandon, cozy family dinners where everyone ate each and every dish I had prepared.

kale

Are you laughing at me yet? I have thrown away countless portions of rejected baby food and spent many meals wondering why I ever lift a finger. But I still do it. Every day. I set the table and offer the food.

And ever day, amid the crying, fighting, throwing, spitting, and complaining there are lulls. Moments where everyone is eating, we laugh or share a story. And it is these moments strung together that make it all worthwhile. That, and I just really like eating so I'd do it all no matter what.

onion
Lentil, Kale & Butternut Squash Chicken Soup
Serves 4-6

I realize the title is a mouthful but how could I leave anything out? In fact, I did leave something out because it has sausage too!

For this soup I used fully-cooked, packaged sausage (the butcher's line was too long today) and some left over cooked chicken. This soup would certainly work without the meat, just add extra lentils.

2 Tbsps. olive oil
1 large onion chopped
2 bay leaves
2 sweet Italian sausages sliced into bite size pieces
3 cups cubed butternut squash
1 cup french lentils
4 cups chicken stock
2 cups water
1 bunch of kale (I used Lacinato) chopped

Warm the oil in your favorite soup pot. Add the onion and bay leaves and cook until the onions smell so good you don't think you'll make it until dinner without a snack.

Add the sausage and cook on a high enough heat to brown them a bit. Add the squash and stir it all around. I don't know why I like to do this, cook the squash directly over the heat of the pan first, but I do. Add the lentils, stock and water.

Simmer for about 15 minutes then add the kale and cooked chicken. Continue to simmer until the lentils are soft. The squash should also be tender enough to feed a baby and if you have one then, by all means, feed some to him or her! It's delicious.

Set the table, pour some good wine, cut the bread, ladle the soup into your favorite bowls, sprinkle each with Parmesan cheese, take a breath, give thanks for all you have and eat.

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October 15, 2009

Eat this NOW!

Seriously. This was so good. Like apple pie but better and healthier so there was no guilt or sugar hangover. Just a lot of plate licking. Yes, plates were actually licked.

baked apples

I had been experimenting with my Cottage Cheese Pancake recipe using ricotta cheese instead of cottage. Wow...so good on it's own. Then I was inspired by a friend who mentioned baking apples and putting them on yogurt. A fine idea in itself but since I was making the pancakes...

So while frying up the pancakes for my hungry brood I popped some apples in the oven. I don't have any brilliant process for the apples. I just sprinkled them with a pinch of brown sugar and cinnamon, another pinch of flour (about a teaspoon to two apples) and a dab or two of butter. Ten minutes in a 350 degree oven got a nice enough result.

Since I will be making this everyday I may try to refine the apple baking (suggestions welcome as usual) but I honestly don't think this can be screwed up or even dramatically improved upon. They're apples! They do just fine without a lot of fuss.

P.S. The baby also really liked the little bits of cooked apples I gave him. Bonus! No baby food needed.

October 9, 2009

Broccoli Soup

These days I take great pleasure in eating all by myself in complete and utter silence. Today's solitary dining experience and this blog post are made possible by Marshall's nap. Enjoy.

lunch brocc soup

This is one of my most favorite soup recipes. It is rich and satisfying without the floury, gloppiness of the Broccoli Cheddar my girls enjoy from fine establishments such as Panera or Au Bon Pain.

Since I don't have time to perfect my cream-soup making skills (something about butter and flour and, of course, all that cream which I rarely have on hand)...there's potato, which works well enough but doesn't offer much substance, what's a busy mama to do? It's so simple I can't believe I didn't figure it out sooner.

I think the original inspiration for using white beans to thicken the soup comes from Eating Well. If I recall correctly, their recipe doesn't call for onion and that is just weird! I never trust a recipe that doesn't call for an onion. Would you? So I call for three cups. That oughta do it.

broccoli soup

Broccoli Soup

Serves 4-6

2 Tbsp. butter
1 Tbsp. olive oil
3 cups chopped onion
1/4 cups Tamari
3 cups water or stock
6-8 cups chopped broccoli (crowns and thinly sliced stalks)
1 can white beans with liquid
1 cup grated cheese (e.g., cheddar, soft gouda)

Warm the butter and olive oil in your favorite soup pot. Add the onion and let them cook until they smell really good and start turning a bit brown.

Add the water, tamari and broccoli. Bring to a boil and add the beans. Simmer until the broccoli is very soft. About 20 minutes. Let everything cool a bit.

Puree with a stick blender (or in batches using a regular blender but I really recommend getting a stick blender ASAP). Add a little water or stock to get the consistency you like.

Add the cheese and stir until it melts. Eat some right away because it's really good!

Sometimes I reserve some chopped broccoli to steam and then stir into the pureed soup.

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September 18, 2009

Coconut Red Lentils

All right everyone, here it is. Despite my exhaustion yesterday I still had a few dinner ideas...well, cooking.

princess for dinner

This past week I had been challenging myself to use up all the food we already had at home instead of making an expensive trip to the supermarket. We had some things from Thursday's farmer's market -- peppers, onions, leeks, eggplant, chard, cabbage, carrots and corn. That's a lot when you add in pantry items like beans and grains and some frozen meat.

It was the extras I was worried about. We usually have lots of fruit (and other snack/lunch food) available and I knew our supply was meager. But I also knew how often I end up throwing things out. We were running low on bread but had plenty of eggs and milk from our co-op.

So how did I do?*

The kids and I did go for some greasy lunches but we didn't really have to. We just wanted to! Otherwise we had plenty to eat during the day and I got a respectable dinner on the table every night, which everyone ate.

I used to think I was more comfortable having a fridge full of food. I believed it meant I had more options. In the future I plan to challenge myself to buy less at the supermarket knowing how far a few things can stretch. In fact it seemed easier to come up with ideas when there was less to work with.

It looks like we'll need to go shopping today. We're running out of coffee and that's one thing I can't do without.

Coconut Red Lentils
Serves 2-4

I was already cooking leeks for the filling in my Parmesan-Leek Quiche. After sauteing the leeks in butter and a little olive oil I removed most of them, leaving about 1/2 cup in the skillet. Onions would work too.

I added 1 cup of red lentils, 1 cup of water, 1/4 tsp of curry powder, 1/2 tsp of cumin and a can of coconut milk. Covered and simmered gently for about 20-30 minutes adding a bit more water as they cooked. Salt to taste.

We have a very spicy curry powder blend and even 1/4 tsp made it too spicy for some of the diners in my cafe. So curry powder amounts really depend on your blend and your appetite for heat.

We ate ours over cous cous but I think it might be even better over rice.

I should mention there are no photos of the lentil dish. Red lentils are delicious but not photogenic...and I was hungry.

sweet potato circles

* In case you were interested...

Monday - Lentil and Kale Soup
Tuesday - Grilled chicken , cole slaw, corn on the cob
Wednesday - Black Bean Soup and corn bread
Thursday - Parmesan-Leek Quiche, Coconut Red Lentils and sweet potato circles
Friday - oh dear...what am I making tonight?

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September 2, 2009

From My So-Called Knitting Basket

stripes

I knit this hat last fall using some extras from my stash. It didn't really fit either girl (and it wasn't pink) so I threw it in my knitting basket and forgot it. Looks like we finally have someone to wear it...and sooner than we thought.

Why is it that September 1st just feels like fall? Could summer really be over? I'm ok with that.

I have been spending a lot of time in front of the computer lately. Researching activities for the girls, recipes, knitting patterns, homeschool philosophies, blogs and more blogs.

Sometimes when things get this way, and my eyes are crossing from looking at the screen too long, I feel a need to simplify. Pen and paper. Knitting needles. Books. Libraries. Taking a walk instead of worrying about dance vs. gymnastics vs. art class.

One thing I have been reading more about is Montessori. Since moving in we haven't really taken the time to try and create spaces for the kids...something integral to the Montessori philosophy. Renting has a way of making you say, "Why Bother?" So while we won't create the ideal environment I will be spending some time making a few modifications.

And we will be taking more walks, bike rides and trips to the library.

We'll be back soon. I can never stay away for long.

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