Sunday, March 25, 2012

Old-Fashioned Date Bars



I was suddenly nostalgic for those childhood date bars my mother used to make when the kitchen would smell like baked oatmeal with an undeniable sweet overtone. You know those bars - the ones that are oat-y, buttery, and sweet, but not too sweet because they are made with a high proportion of dates rather than granulated sugar?  Well, not too sweet until you eat too many!  Yes, those.  Yum.  I tried two variations from the traditional recipe. First, I used steel-cut quick oats.  They added a nutty, chewy texture.  I am not totally convinced it works perfectly, but it is an interesting change.  The second was to add a 1/2 teaspoon of ground cloves to the date mixture. I had some left over from the Caldo Verde I made last week.  Freshly ground spices are the best, so I couldn't help adding a touch since they were right there. The cloves blended well with the dates - I think I'll keep this addition.  Here's the recipe I followed with my tweaks:

Date Bars

Ingredients
  • 16 ounces pitted and chopped dates
  • 1/4 cup granulated sugar (if you like it less sweet, decrease this amount)
  • 1 1/2 cup water
  • 1/2 teaspoon freshly ground cloves
  • 1/2 cup butter
  • 1/4 cup shortening or lard
  • 1 cup brown sugar
  • 1 3/4 cup all purpose or whole wheat flour (or mixture)
  • 1/2 teaspoon baking soda
  • 1 teaspoon salt
  • 1 1/2 cups quick-cook oats (steel-cut for chewier, regular quick-cook for tender bars)
Preparation

Preheat oven to 400 degrees. In a saucepan mix the dates, sugar and water together. Bring to a boil and simmer over low heat for 10 minutes or until thick. Add cloves and cool slightly.

Blend the brown sugar and fat together until creamy.  Add rest of ingredients.  The mixture will be crumbly.  Pat half the mixture into a base crust in a 13x9 pan.  Spread date mixture over and then crumble the rest of the oat mixture on the top.  Bake 25-30 minutes.  Cut into desired bar sizes and let cool.

Tuesday, March 20, 2012

Bunny Chow



Bunny chow is the best take-away meal I've ever had.  I love curries and this is the ultimate curry to go.  Served in its own dish (a hallowed-out bread loaf), it is outstanding.  You can get them in 1/4 or 1/2 loaves (the picture is a 1/4 loaf).  Never heard of one?  Not surprising, I've only heard of them in South Africa and once on a world food cart in Los Angeles.  If anyone has a recipe to share I would love one!  The key is not just the curry, but the bread, which is not typical in America, but common elsewhere. The bread is dense without being heavy and prevents the curry from soaking through.

Sunday, March 18, 2012

Beans, beans, beans



Bean by Bean, by Crescent Dragonwagon (2011, Workman Publishing)

Have you ever wandered into a food aisle that had the most interesting dried beans - striped, mottled, pink, red, yellow, almost every color?  Here's a cookbook that will help you cook all of those and more.

Attention all my vegetarian readers - while this is not an exclusively vegetarian cookbook, it is full of delicious-looking vegetarian versions of the recipes.

Ms. Dragonwagon spells out the health benefits of beans, why beans sometimes produce gas ...and factors that can be controlled to greatly decrease or elminate the effect... and the ABCs of perfect beans - fresh or dried.  She also includes a description of many unusual beans you can find in places that carry heirloom, heritage or native varities.  I've always wondered what to do with those beautiful cranberry beans and now I know!

Make your winter dried bean soups now and get ready for midsummer beans at the farmer's markets!

Here's a recipe excerpt to tempt your wallet. Vegetarian version follows.  We had this for lunch right after it was finished, but I have a feeling it will be even better tomorrow or the day after as all the smoky flavors meld together.
Caldo Verde

"This is Portuguese soul food: healthy, hearty, garlicky. A bowl—which,with bread, is a very full meal indeed—will get you through any literal or figurative stormy weather. I found my way to my own take on caldo verde when working on my previous cookbook, The Cornbread Gospels; the soup is a classic go-with for the Portuguese-style yeast-risen cornbread called broa. For this recipe, I combined a dozen different versions with my own memory of a caldo verde eaten many years ago in Martha’s Vineyard. This rich, heady, and complex version—made with meat—is the result. It is followed by a variation for vegetarians.

Did I say this soup is garlicky? Yes, I did—and restoratively so. The recipe calls for 1 cup of garlic cloves. Since garlic heads, and individual cloves, vary greatly in size, you are probably looking at 3 to 4 heads of garlic to get the requisite cup. Although I’m usually fanatical about peeling my own garlic right before use, caldo verde requires so much that using the pre-peeled garlic available in the refrigerator case at the supermarket makes sense. You can make even quicker work of things by chopping the garlic in a food processor. I’ve simplified the recipe with the use of canned beans, but, of course, you know enough by now to easily substitute soaked and cooked dried beans, right?"

Ingredients
  • Vegetable oil cooking spray
  • 2½ quarts (10 cups) vegetable, beef, or chicken stock, or water
  • 6 to 8 medium potatoes (about 2 pounds), peeled and coarsely chopped
  • 2 bay leaves
  • ¼ teaspoon ground cloves
  • 1 apple (preferably Golden Delicious or Gala), peeled, cored, and halved
  • About 1 cup peeled garlic cloves (yes, you read this right), finely chopped
  • 3 to 4 tablespoons olive oil
  • 2 onions, chopped
  • ¾ pound fresh chorizo sausage, removed from its casing and crumbled
  • ½ to 1½ teaspoons crushed red pepper flakes, or to taste
  • 1 to 2 teaspoons Hungarian paprika (preferably smoked)
  • 1 pound kale, tough center ribs removed, cut crosswise into thin ribbons
  • 1 can (10 ounces) diced tomatoes in juice
  • 2 cans (15 ounces each) white beans, either navy or Great Northern
  • Salt and freshly ground black pepper
  • 2 to 3 lemons, quartered lengthwise
Preparations

"Spray a large, heavy soup pot with the vegetable oil, add the stock, and set it over high heat. Bring it to a boil, turn down the heat to medium, and drop in the potatoes, bay leaves, cloves, apple, and about half the garlic. Let simmer, half-covered, until the potatoes and apple are fairly soft, about 20 minutes."

"Meanwhile, heat the olive oil in a skillet over medium heat. Add the onions and sauté, stirring, until softened, about 5 minutes. Add the chorizo, lower the heat slightly, and continue sautéing until the chorizo is browned and has rendered most of its fat (which you may drain off if you like), a few minutes more. Add the remaining garlic, the crushed red pepper, and the paprika and cook, stirring, for 1 minute more. Turn off the heat."

"Back at the soup pot, scoop out about half of the cooked potatoes and some apple pieces (much of the apple may simply have dissolved into the soup) and transfer them to a heat-proof bowl. Mash these together using a potato masher or the back of a wooden spoon." (I used the blender and took enough liquid to puree the  potatoes and apple pieces.)

Scrape the chorizo mixture into the soup pot. Spoon a little of the simmering potato broth into the skillet, set it over high heat, and bring the broth to a boil. Scrape the bottom of the skillet with a wooden spoon to loosen any browned bits, then pour this into the soup pot.

"Add the kale to the soup pot and simmer, giving the occasional stir, until it is nice and tender, about 15 minutes. Stir in the mashed potato-apple mixture and the tomatoes and beans. Bring to a full boil, then turn back down to a slow simmer. D6 Let the soup simmer another 15 minutes, then season it with salt and pepper to taste (lots and lots of black pepper; in my view, the more the better), and serve. If you eat it right away, it’ll be great; cool it overnight and reheat it the next day, and it’ll be even better. Pass the lemons at the table; some like to squeeze a little lemon juice into the soup."

Serves 6 to 8

"Vegetarian Caldo Verde: I can almost hear the Portuguese fishermen snorting, but this is great. Follow the recipe above, using vegetable stock or water as the cooking liquid and substituting vegetarian chorizo, such as Field Roast, Lightlife, or Tofurky Chorizo, for the traditional meat sausage. Sauté the soysage separately in olive oil until browned; then slice it and add it just before serving."

Saturday, March 17, 2012

Simple Appetizer



I recently had the wonderful opportunity to host my old book club while on a return visit to the city I moved from eight years ago.  It was wonderful to see everyone and have them all read my current favorite book, Stealing Mona Lisa.  Among the few nibbles I offered the favorite was cream cheese with Jezabel Sauce.  It's a very simple appetizer  that is sweet and salty with just the slightest hot kick.  They begged me to put it up on my blog.  Next time I'm going to put this sauce over goat cheese.

Jezabel  Sauce and Cheese Appetizer

Ingredients
  • 8 ounces regular cream cheese, tofutti, chèvre or goat cream cheese
  • 2/3 cup citrus marmalade (e.g., orange, mixed citrus, kumquat)
  • 2 Tablespoons horseradish sauce, or more to taste (use prepared sauce, not freshly grated)
Preparation

Bring all ingredients to room temperature.  Mix marmalade and horseradish together.  Spoon over cheese and serve with crackers.  If using a cream cheese, you can save a little back and put into a piping bag and decorate the rest of the block with rosettes before spooning over the sauce.  The decorating works best if serving a large crowd and using the big blocks of cream cheese (3 lbs.) you can purchase at Costco or a restaurant food supply store.  You then have more cream cheese to decorate with. It's a little skimpy to do this with the 8 ounce block, but doable if you double all the ingredients.

My mother makes a delicious kumquat marmalade that really sets this dish off, so if you have a kumquat tree, it's totally worth making marmalade out of the fruit and using it for this recipe!

Serve with crackers.

You can also serve the Jezabel sauce with meats such as ham, beef, or lamb.