Somebody recently over-purchased lemons. I'm not saying who. In any case, we had about 20 lemons lying around and Tim noticed that some of them were teetering on the edge. I needed a quick but tasty way to use up the extra lemons; to preserve them (har har).
Thursday, March 31, 2011
Preserved Lemons
Labels:
lemon,
lemon juice,
preserved lemons,
recipes
Monday, March 28, 2011
Belated Birthday Magic Bars
Tim's birthday was last Saturday, but I didn't get around to baking something sweet in honor of his 32nd until Sunday. And we were hungover. So basically we ended up with whatever I could easily make with goodies out of the cabinet.
Ta da: Magic bars! A perennial favorite...
Ta da: Magic bars! A perennial favorite...
Wednesday, March 23, 2011
Tofu and Veggie Fried Rice
Labels:
beet greens,
carrot,
fried,
garlic,
ginger,
green onion,
pilaf,
recipes,
rice,
sesame oil,
soy sauce,
Sriracha,
tofu
Horovatz in Mer Nation's Capital
As I said last week, Tim hosted a mini Peace Corps Armenia reunion this weekend in mer nation's capital (i.e. DC)... having practiced some Armenian-style cooking last week, we were pretty well prepared to host the metz kev (big party) for a horovatz (BBQ).
Friday, March 18, 2011
Belated St. Patrick's Day Treat: Irish Soda Bread
Inspired by this Endless Simmer post on "authentic" Irish soda bread and with memories of my grandmother's version in my head, I baked up a loaf for St. Patrick's Day. I took a middle route, a hybrid approach somewhere between the authentic version and the version I ate as a kid.
I basically followed the directions from Endless Simmer, with a few modifications:
1) I used about 1.5 cups of cake flour, with the addition of approximately 1 cup of all-purpose unbleached flour because I a) ran out of cake flour and b) found the dough to be super sticky, wet and unmanageable without additional flour
2) I threw the loaf directly onto a pre-heated baking stone rather than use the cast iron pot
3) Finally, in deference to my grandmother's recipe (which I'm sure was only remotely related to the recipe above- yogurt not being a resident in her fridge), I threw in about third of a cup of raisins.
It came out pretty delicious! More moist than I remember, but still with that crusty, craggy top. Mmmm. And, yes, I drank some stout whilst mixing up the ingredients for this tasty treat.
Labels:
baking soda,
bread,
Irish,
milk,
raisins,
recipes,
soda bread,
vinegar,
yogurt
Monday, March 14, 2011
Sunday Dinner: Armenian Meal
Wednesday, March 9, 2011
Chocolate Sponge Cake Roulade with Chocolate Ganache... AKA Giant Homemade Ho Ho
Kate has been having some serious pregnancy cravings... lots of fruit, lots of sugar... and for the last couple weeks she's been talking about those tasty childhood favorites: Ho Hos.
I told her I could make a homemade version, and since her birthday is this week, so I took the opportunity to give it a try. I searched the internets for a homemade Ho Hos recipe, but all of the recipes I found had poor reviews or the cooks were having trouble executing them without having them fall apart. Ho Hos are really just thin chocolate cake rolled up with a creamy filling and coated in a layer of chocolate, though, so I went to a reliable source for a recipe for a chocolate sponge cake roulade with chocolate ganache. Basically a fancified, giant Ho Ho. Super fluffy flourless cake, lightly sweetened whipped cream, silky ganache. Yum.
Tuesday, March 8, 2011
Chicken Stroganoff
Labels:
chicken,
egg noodles,
mushrooms,
parsley,
recipes,
sour cream,
stroganoff
Grilled Cheese and Tomato Soup
I had a hankering for some tomato soup today, so I went and found this very delicious tomato soup by the Other Martha. Meg and I had bought this soup from Costco a year ago or so, but were never able to find it again. From what I remember my homemade version is pretty good and similar to the Costco version. Also made a yummy grilled cheese with cheddar and Boursin cheese, got the idea from Red Derby.
Sunday Dinner Sliders
Ranch-Style Chicken Burgers:
1lb. lean ground chicken
1/4 tsp garlic powder
1/2 tsp Tabasco sauce
1/2 tsp seasoned salt
1/2 tsp black pepper
1 T cilantro, finely minced
2 T Ranch salad dressing
Tony also added 1/3 cup bread crumbs and subtracted 2 T diced green chile peppers
Ricotta- and Berry-Filled Crepes
O'Brien and Brewster came over this past rainy Sunday for brunch. The Real Martha had given me a gift basket she received that had crepe mix in it, so I decided to bust it out for the occasion. I know it's cheating to use a crepe mix, but I made up for it by making the ricotta with which the crepes were stuffed, right?
The ricotta-making went very well... the curds formed and hung together better than last time I made it. Perhaps my cheese-making skillz are improving? 
For the crepe stuffing, I mixed the ricotta with some lemon and orange zest, a couple squirts of honey, some toasted almonds, and fresh blueberries and raspberries. Then I topped the stuffed crepes with a blueberry raspberry sauce (frozen blueberries and raspberries, a little sugar, a little water, a little lemon juice, simmer, puree). Pretty good! I think next time I would mix some sour cream or something creamy into the stuffing to give it some more moisture. That's probably my only complaint, though. The flavor was pretty good!
Labels:
almonds,
blueberries,
cheese making,
crepes,
honey,
raspberries,
recipes,
ricotta
Sunday, March 6, 2011
Split Pea Soup with Bacon, with Whole Wheat Pita
I don't think I'd ever had split-pea soup until I made this recipe. For some unknown reason, I bought a bag of split peas at the grocery store last week, so I gave the soup a try.
While split pea soup is traditionally made with ham hocks, they kinda weird me out. As an alternative,I gave my soup a salty, smokey base by cooking a couple slices of bacon in the pan, removing them, and then cooking the onion, garlic and carrot in the bacony grease. Then I served the soup topped with the crispy bacon bits. Delicious!
The soup called for some hearty bread to dip into it, and since the white pita went so well last week, I tried pita using a whole wheat dough. Pretty good! Not as tender as the white pita, but still poofy and tasty!
The soup called for some hearty bread to dip into it, and since the white pita went so well last week, I tried pita using a whole wheat dough. Pretty good! Not as tender as the white pita, but still poofy and tasty!
Labels:
bacon,
carrots,
garlic,
onions,
pita,
recipes,
soup,
split peas,
whole wheat
Apple Pomegranate Fruit Rolls
I had amassed a collection of various types of apples from the CSA that Tim and I never got around to eating for some reason. Since my beef jerky success, I've been wanting to make use of my dehydrator again.
Apples + dehydrator = fruit roll-ups!
I peeled and chopped 3 apples, threw them in the food processor with the seeds from half of a pomegranate and the juice from one orange and half a lemon, pureed. Spread the puree on a fruit-roll sheet (and the extra on parchment paper) and dehydrated for about 4 hours.
Pretty good! I need to find a way to strain the puree to rid it of the pomegranate seeds, but still get all of the apple goodness, as the texture was a little weird. But overall, they were pretty tasty, and I didn't have to add any extra sugar.
Apples + dehydrator = fruit roll-ups!
Pretty good! I need to find a way to strain the puree to rid it of the pomegranate seeds, but still get all of the apple goodness, as the texture was a little weird. But overall, they were pretty tasty, and I didn't have to add any extra sugar.
Labels:
apple,
dehydrating,
fruit rolls,
lemon juice,
orange juice,
pomegranate,
recipes
Thursday, March 3, 2011
Orange Pan-Glazed Tofu
Colleen sent me this tasty looking orange pan-glazed tempeh/tofu recipe a couple weeks ago, but I didn't get around to giving it a try until this week, and she's busy hiking the Inca Trail... good news is, the recipe is great, so I'm happy to make it for her when she gets back. I bet at that point, she'll probably be ready for a break from Peru's national dish, guinea pig.
Crispy tofu coated in a sour, sweet, gingery glaze was delicious served with rice (to which I added some lime juice, cilantro and minced scallions) and roasted broccoli. The only change I made to the recipe (because it seems like I'm incapable of making a recipe word-for-word these days) was to add a couple big squirts of Sriracha to the glaze prior to adding to the tofu, because I like it spicy.
Tuesday, March 1, 2011
Easy Wall Art
Since moving into our new apartment, I've been looking for cheap and easy things to decorate. Meg found this wall art idea online.
Labels:
crafting,
decorating,
fabric
Baked Tortellini with Bacon
So last year Meg got Tony a subscription to Everyday Food (a Martha Stewart magazine.) We've been using a bunch of the recipes since moving in together, but this baked tortellini with bacon seemed exceptionally good and easy!
Labels:
bacon,
milk,
parmesan,
recipes,
tortellini
Compost Cookies: Meh.
Remember when I made that addictive and delicious crack pie based on the Momofuku Milk Bar delight? I loved the combination of sweet and salty so much, so I decided to take a crack (har har) at making another recipe from the Milk Bar: compost cookies. These cookies looked awesome: a compost-like combination of traditional sweet baking items (chocolate chips, white chocolate chips, etc.) and salty snacks (potato chips, pretzels, etc.). The recipe also uses a funky, non-traditional method for making the batter than involves creaming the butter, sugar and eggs together for over 10 minutes.
Sadly, while the unbaked dough was to die for, I can't say I'm super excited about how the cookies came out. The were super flat, despite the fact that I refrigerated the dough as the recipe suggested. They were also super greasy when baked... maybe due to the added grease from the potato chips? Finally, they were just too big... 6 ounces of dough makes a cookie that is literally bigger than the plate I wanted to put it on.
I think I may try the recipe again, and make the following changes in the hopes that the final product lives up to the hype: for my salty snacks, add fewer greasy potato chips and supplement with some pretzels, skip the extra long creaming process, and make the cookies half the size.
Labels:
chocolate chips,
compost,
cookies,
meh,
Momofuku,
potato chips,
recipes
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