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Posts Tagged ‘cheese’

Despite the fact that I love to cook, love to eat, and am a quote-”foodie,” over the past year I’ve eaten out a surprisingly dismal amount. Between work, school, externship hunting, and cooking at home often for both practice and the blog, eating out fell by the wayside. So along with a slew of other resolutions, when 2012 rolled around, I vowed this would be the year I got back on the New York City restaurant scene. Adam and I instilled a weekly Thursday night date with plans to try new restaurants more often, and at the very top of our list was “Sauce.”

Sauce opened late last year on the Lower East Side, just a few blocks from Adam’s apartment, which meant we both walked past it multiple times a week. At first we were intrigued by the restaurant’s sign, which instead of being emblazoned with just the name, was covered in endless white words upon a black backdrop: “ricotta” “grass-fed” “meatballs” “butcher” “for sale.” We heard that the neightborhood newcomer was owned by the same guy who runs “Lil’ Frankies,” which we love, and “Supper” in the East Village, and our interest grew. But it took us until weeks after the restaurant actually opened to spot the small, glowing orange script on the front door that read, simply, “Sauce.” Oh. Right!

So we planned a date, and one Thursday night, had a thoroughly enjoyable evening at Sauce on Rivington Street. Despite being closely jammed next to other couples in a row of two-tops, we were able to focus on each other, and the food, which proved to be the restaurant’s main draw. Sauce has mainly small plates, sort of an Italian spin on “tapas,” so we started with their signature meatballs, which were reminiscent of my grandmother’s and melted in your mouth. We moved on to the raw escarole, apple, and ricotta salata salad, speckled with castlevetrano olives and pine nuts, and despite our trepidation over the raw escarole, devoured ever bite of the well balanced dish.

A small bowl of handmade butternut squash tortelloni in a rich brown butter sage sauce (my favorite) along side a plate of rustic, braised grass-fed pork and beef with a caramelized pear polenta, and I knew there was no going back. We had found a true neighborhood gem; one that was well-priced, casual yet trendy, and struck a balance of excitement with its open kitchen, but comfort with its rich dishes. After four plates and much bread, we were full but not bursting, so we opted to order one more dish.

The stuffed pepper.

I’d jealously observed some other diners enjoying this small, gratined creation, and had no hesitation in ordering it. When it arrived at our table, the breadcrumbs crispy and browned, the cheesy oozing as our forks cut into it, the excitement built. And from the first bite to the last, it did not disappoint.

I’ve had plenty of stuffed peppers before – from homemade Italian, to the more Eastern European chopped-meat-and-rice variety, to even those obnoxious Stouffer’s frozen ones (thanks, college). But never had I had one loaded with chewy, dense farro and sweet, fennel-laced sausage. So rich! So creamy! Such complex flavors! I knew as we walked out of Sauce that night I would have to recreate this at home.

And so, I did. My rendition, I’ll admit, is perhaps slightly cheesier than Sauce’s – I  opted for more mozzarella than breadcrumbs on top, to give it more of a cheesy pizza-type topping. But the filling is that same sweet, tomato-based farro and sausage medley that makes Sauce’s stuffed pepper so unique. As I made these Friday night, I literally was jumping up and down with excitement (and trust me, I got teased for that), because I so rarely cook this richly for no reason, and because I could tell it would be oh, so worth it.

And it was. You’ve gotta try this. That is all.

Farro & Sausage Stuffed Peppers – makes 6 portions

Inspired by Sauce Restaurant 

Ingredients

  • 1 cup of uncooked farro or spelt berries
  • 2.5 cups of chicken broth
  • 3 green peppers, cut in half from stem to base, with seeds and gills removed
  • 8 ounces of ground sweet Italian pork sausage
  • 1/2 a medium onion, chopped
  • 1 teaspoon of olive oil
  • 8 ounces of plain canned tomato sauce
  • 6 ounces of water
  • 1 teaspoons  chili powder
  • 1 teaspoons garlic powder
  • 1/4 tsp dried oregano
  • 1/4 tsp dried basil
  • salt and pepper to taste
  • 8 ounces part skim mozzarella cheese, shredded, divided
  • 1/4 cup parmesan cheese, divided
  • 2 tablespoons of Italian breadcrumbs

Method

1. To start, cook farro by combining the 1 cup of uncooked farro with chicken broth. Bring to a boil, reduce to a simmer, cover and cook for about 50 minutes or until farro is tender, but retains its chew.

2.  Remove seeds and membranes from peppers and rinse well. Fill a large pot about with an inch or so of water and top with a steamer. Bring water to a simmer, add peppers and cover. Steam for about 10 minutes or until tender-crisp. Alternatively, you can boil water and cook peppers in boiling water for 10 minutes.

3. Place the olive oil, sausage and onions in a large skillet. Cook over medium high heat until the onions are tender and the sausage is brown. Reduce heat to medium and stir in the tomato sauce, water, chili powder, garlic powder, oregano, and basil; bring to a low boil. Reduce heat to low, and simmer for about 10 minutes

4. Meanwhile, preheat your oven on the Broil setting.

5. Once the sausage mixture has simmered for 10 minutes or reduced to a sauce consistency, add the cooked farro, half of the shredded mozzarella cheese, and half of the parmesan. Stir well until the cheese has melted. Season with salt and pepper to taste. Spoon sausage-farro mixture into the steamed peppers.

6. Top each pepper with a bit of the remaining shredded mozzarella, Parmesan, and breadcrumbs. Place in the oven and broil until the top of each pepper is bubbling and golden, about 5 to 7 minutes. Serve immediately.

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Hello 2012!! I hope everyone had a wonderful holiday season and very happy New Year celebration! It’s been pretty quiet around the blog, and the hiatus is a true testament to how lovely Christmas break was. Sometimes logging off, shutting down and unplugging is just what you need to re-energize for the new year.

Speaking of the new year, one topic has been popping up quite a bit in the food world since the clock struck midnight on Saturday. It’s a topic that I have always had pretty clear-cut feelings on, and yet the more I look around the blogosphere and flip through food magazines, the larger the grey area (and controversy) around this topic seems to grow.

Somewhere in the past couple of years, this whole notion of “cleansing” has come into vogue. Like most trends, it started in the upper echelons of eccentric celebrity behavior (see Gwyneth Paltrow’s website GOOP for further proof), but has now trickled down to the rest of us common-place Americans. You can now buy juice cleanses everywhere from your gym, local yoga studios, grocery stores, and the Internet. You can even make cleansing broths and juices yourself with recipes that run rampant on the web! And while people are now embracing “the cleanse” for all sorts of reasons, and at all times of year, cleansing has joined aggressive gym attendance and crash dieting as one of the many activities that sees a turbulent uptick in the first few weeks of January.

Personally, I’ve never done a cleanse. I have a ravenous appetite that requires me to chew on actual foods, whether they be fibrous vegetables, tender meats, or chewy cookies (okay, usually cookies) multiple times a day. And while partaking in a short-term juice or broth cleanse seems like a great idea in theory – flush toxins and salts out of your body, break addictions to sugar and dairy, basically hit the dietary reset button – it’s also never struck me as something a “food-lover” would participate in. And that is mostly because I love food, and I would never do a cleanse.

But maybe I’m wrong. I know plenty of people who do cleanses, and then go out to fabulous restaurants and truly enjoy their meals, or whip up delicious dishes at home (Gwyneth Paltrow included, I’m sure).  It seems reasonable that these things need not be mutually exclusive. And this month, self-proclaimed food-magazines that normally teach the average  cook how to make a triple layer red velvet cake with three inches of icing, or to render the duck fat for their duck confit at home are filling their pages with their own takes on cleanses, and blowing up with Twitter-verse with cleanse-laden comments. So really, who’s to say what’s right any more?

I do know this, though. The first week in January is a standard “detox” week for most people. Coming down off the high-calorie, alcohol-ridden glorious binge that is the Holiday season, the idea of another cheesy appetizer, baked good or syrupy cocktail is suddenly something we’re all ready to turn our noses up to for fear of our health, dignity and sanity.

Fully knowing that I would not be purchasing a juicer or guzzling Swanson broth for dinner any time soon, I came up with my own version of  a “cleanse” meal, starting with pulling every vegetable I had out of my fridge, setting them down on the counter and sizing ‘em up. With a little creative thinking and a few different slow-cooking methods that drew out the natural flavors of these vegetables, I pulled together a rich, flavorful, hearty and soul-satisfying soup that injected some much-needed vegetables back into my life. Gratining the top with just the slightest sprinkling of low-fat cheese will leave your taste buds satisfied and your metabolism smiling knowingly.

Besides, wouldn’t you rather detox with an antioxidant filled, fiber-rich, tangy, spicy soup than… wheat grass?

I thought so.

Hearty Vegetable Soup au Gratin – Serves 4

Ingredients

  • 2 onions, peeled, halved and thinly sliced
  • 2 shallots, peeled, halved and thinly sliced
  • 2 tsp butter
  • 1/4 tsp dried thyme
  • 1 dry pint grape tomatoes
  • 6 cloves of garlic, not peeled
  • 1 quart of low sodium beef broth
  • 1 cup of diced tomatoes
  • 1 cup sliced white or baby bella mushrooms
  • 1 16-ounce can black beans
  • 1/2 tsp of balsamic
  • 1/2 tsp soy sauce
  • Hot sauce to taste
  • 1 cup of a low-fat shredded cheese or cheese blend

Method

Preheat oven to 350 degrees F.

In a medium saute pan, melt the butter and add the onion, shallots and thyme. Cook over extremely low heat, stirring occasionally, until the onions are soft and caramelized, about 40 minutes. Add the mushrooms to the onion/shallot mixture in the last ten minutes, and continue cooking until soft and golden brown.

While the onions are caramelizing, toss the grape tomatoes and garlic cloves with little cooking spray in a roasting pan.  Sprinkle with salt and roast at 350 F for about 30 – 40 minutes, or until the tomatoes blistered and popping and the garlic is soft.

In a large pot, bring the beef broth and diced tomatoes to a simmer. Allow the broth to simmer over low heat while the other ingredients finish cooking. Add the roasted tomatoes. Remove the skins from the garlic, coarsely chop and add to the pot. Add the onions and mushrooms, the black beans, balsamic, soy sauce and hot sauce. Season to taste with salt and pepper. Simmer for another 2 – 3 minutes until flavors incorporate.

To serve, ladle soup into an oven safe bowl or individual soup crock. Top with about 1/4 cup of shredded cheese and place under a broiler for a few minutes until the cheese is melted and bubbling. Serve immediately.

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Anyone ever have Hamburger Helper when they were a kid?

I may be part of a minority of Americans whose childhood was not, at the very least, punctuated by the presence of this warm, hearty genre of meals. Along with a myriad of other pre-packaged foods, Hamburger Helper was on my parents mental black list of food that would rarely, if ever, see the inside of our cabinets, and in exchange my brother and I were treated to a variety of delicious home-cooked meals each night, made usually from scratch (although Kraft Macaroni and Cheese was, thankfully, an exception).

Despite the fact that, growing up, I rarely wanted for anything more delicious than what my parents put in front of me nightly (except for on Fish Fry nights, I truly hated that flounder), I wonder if I was perhaps missing out on a quintessential childhood experience of a small box of Hamburger Helper transforming ground meat into a delightful family experience and delicious meal. Every time I saw those commercials, a little part of me would wonder…

Until now! On Friday, one of my favorite food bloggers, Kristen at IowaGirlEats, posted her traditional list of Friday Favorites, and among it was this recipe for Homemade Chili Mac from Babble. Although it was well before lunch time when I perused her post, I immediately began drooling over the picture for this recipe, and filed it away in my inbox while making a mental note to prepare this over the weekend.

During a stroll around town on Saturday afternoon, my craving and curiosity still hadn’t waned, so I hopped into the local grocery store and picked up the onions, peppers, ground meat and cheese necessary to create this self-proclaimed Hamburger Helper remake. But as I walked around Gristedes, grabbing items from the shelves, I had a clear sense of satisfaction in that not a single ingredient I picked up came in a colorful box labeled with indecipherable ingredients. This would be Hamburger Helper 2.0 – a cleaner, fresher, though not quite healthier version.

I’m starting to sound like a broken record in saying that “I can’t believe how easy this was to make,” but it’s true! Honestly, it’s fool proof – the trickiest part of this recipe, perhaps, is over cooking the meat, but since it’s simmered in beef stock while the elbow macaroni cooks, it’s nearly impossible to achieve anything but juicy, tender hamburger meat. And while the meaty base may taste a bit flat, even with the savory meat and added spices, that mild cheddar cheese provides just the right amount of tang and thickness to bring the whole dish together.

Needless to say myself, my roommate, and my boyfriend all went back for more of this. As in seconds. And thirds. We even compared it to these, which is probably one of the more delicious creations to come out of my kitchen. Moral of the story? If you’re a home cook who prefers to cook “au natural” and avoid pre-packaged meals, you can capture the rich, home-style flavors of a hamburger classic all on your own. And, if you are a lover of Hamburger Helper, why not give this homegrown version a whirl? You might be pleasantly surprised with what you whip up on your own :)

Homemade Chili Macaroni and Cheese

(Adapted from Babble.com)

Ingredients

  • 1 lb lean ground hamburger
  • 1 medium onion, diced
  • 1 medium bell pepper, diced
  • 2 cloves garlic, diced
  • 1 tablespoon ground cumin
  • 1 teaspoon smoked paprika
  • 1 teaspoon dried oregano
  • ½ tablespoon of hot sauce, like Chili-Garlic sauce (or less, to taste)
  • chili powder to taste (optional)
  • 4 ounces of tomato paste
  • 1 – 15 oz can kidney beans, rinsed and drained
  • 4 cups beef stock
  • 2 cups elbow macaroni
  • 2 cups mild cheddar shredded cheese
  • 1 can (15 oz) diced tomatoes
  • Canola oil 

Method

 Preheat a large skillet or pot. Drizzle with canola oil. Add ground beef, onions, bell peppers and garlic. Season with salt and pepper. Cook until beef is browned and vegetables are tender.

 Add cumin, paprika, and oregano to ground beef. Add hot sauce (or chili powder) at this step if you want a spicier dish. Add tomato paste, kidney beans, diced or canned tomatoes and beef stock. Bring to a boil and add macaroni.

 Turn to a simmer and cover. Cook until macaroni is tender, about 10 minutes. Add cheese and mix until blended. Serve immediately.

Want to lighten this up? Substitute lean ground turkey or chicken for the ground hamburger meat, whole wheat elbows for the pasta, and use low fat cheddar cheese instead of the full fat version.

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The last few weeks of summer have been flying by in great galloping windows of time, between day-job business, learning the intricacies of Italian cuisine by night, and most recently, a weekend of forced relaxation brought on by Manhattan’s response to hurricane Irene. The city was all but shut down, with the subways and buses on hiatus until the storm had passed, rain beginning Saturday afternoon and pounding on into the night, making our city that never sleeps a veritable ghost town. At my own apartment, we stocked up, battened down, and waited for the rapidly downgrading storm to pass.

Click for source

Pass the storm did, rather quickly, and by Sunday afternoon Irene had left behind slightly sweeter smelling city air and a power-washed version of the Upper East side, despite the fallen branches and leaves plastered to curbs everywhere. The clearing skies drove us out of the house as soon as we could manage, increasingly eager to escape the cabin fever that had set in, strong and unsettling in only twenty-four hours.

The walk started out as a mission to explore any and all aftermath of the storm, but even the East River looked placid – so smooth it was almost glass-like with no boats out to ripple its surface. Once we acknowledged that there was little stimulation to be found in surveying Irene’s damage, the  most exciting development became the fact that grocery stores had reopened, and all talk turned to dinner (as per the usual). Savory seemed the order of the day, considering we had spent most of our “rained-in” period consuming two types of chocolate chip cookies, chocolate covered pretzels, and basically anything sweet we could get our hands on.

Twenty blocks of clean pavement later, we decided on enchiladas. Personally, the realization that I had never made enchiladas left me somewhat stunned (why don’t they teach this in culinary school?), and beyond that it’s seemed both a large enough and well-priced dish to feed myself, Adam, and both of our roommates, who were still bunkered down at the apartment from the overestimated hurricane lock-in.

A few hours later, after much experimenting, taste-testing, and finger-licking, the enchiladas were ready. We all grabbed plates, forks, and piled up with enchiladas and a few spoonfuls of on-the-fly mexican rice, and retreated to the couch to dig in (yes, couch, who has dinner tables in New York City?)

Before my first forkful of enchilada had even hit my lips, Cara piped up: “Wow. This is seriously one of the most delicious things I’ve had in a long time!” I took a bite, and was even more pleased with the result. These enchiladas were good – no, they were actually pretty darn great! It was silent in the living room as every chowed down, punctuated only by “mmmm”s of approval. Graham, for one, couldn’t stop thanking us for making the dinner as he inhaled two large enchiladas.

And at the end of the meal, Cara boldly declared the enchiladas one of, if not the best thing I’ve ever made, and showed me her clean plate. Then she followed up with “If I had a food blog, this is something I’d definitely be blogging about.”

Subtle? Nah. That’s just not our style.

Cheesy Chicken Enchiladas

Serves 3-4

Ingredients

  • 6 chicken thighs (note: use 1 rotisserie chicken for a quicker version)
  • Spice rub: 2 tsp cumin, 1 tsp chili powder, 1/2 tsp Cayenne pepper, 1 tsp smoked paprikia, 1 tsp kosher salt
  • 1/2 yellow onion, small dice
  • 1 clove of garlic, minced
  • 2 cans of enchilada sauce (such as Old El Paso 10-oz cans)
  • 1 small can of green chilis
  • 2 Tbsp of hot sauce (I love Cholula Garlic-Chili sauce)
  • 1 tsp of white wine vinegar
  • 1.5 cups of shredded mexican cheese
  • 8 10-inch white flour tortillas
  • 1 Tbsp Olive oil
  • Cumin, smoked paprika, and salt, to taste

Method

Preheat the oven to 375 F. Clean and dry the chicken thighs, and lay skin side up in a oven-safe pan. Peel back the skin, and apply spice rub liberally to each thigh. Fold the skin back over the spiced-flesh. Roast thighs for about 25 minutes or until cooked through (it’s best to leave them slightly under cooked since they’ll finish cooking in the sauce). Remove from oven and cool. (Note – for a faster version of this recipe, use a whole rotisserie chicken, skin removed, and shred the meat.)

While the chicken cools, heat a large skillet and add olive oil. Add the diced onion and saute until softened, about 5 minutes. Add the garlic and cook until fragrant, about 1 minute more. Add the green chilis and saute until the mixture is slightly dry, about 2 more minutes. Add one can of enchilada sauce, hot sauce (to taste), and white wine vinegar to the pan. Simmer mixture until slightly thickened, about 10 minutes.

While the sauce is simmering, remove the skin and bone from chicken thighs and shred the meat using two forks to pull the meat apart. Add the shredded chicken to the reduced enchilada sauce. Toss the sauce well to combine, and season to taste with cumin, smoked paprika and salt. Continue cooking until the chicken mixture is very thick and moist, but not runny - if the filling for the enchilada is too wet, they will become soggy. Add half a cup of cheese to the chicken mixture and stir well to combine, until all the cheese has melted.

To make enchiladas, spray a medium casserole dish with cooking spray. Fill each of the 8 tortillas with an eighth of the chicken-cheese mixture, roll up the tortillas, and lay them in the casserole dish side by side. Place the enchiladas in the oven to toast up for about 10 – 15 minutes, or until the tortillas have begun to crisp slightly. Then, top the enchiladas with the remaining can of enchilada sauce (you can also jazz this up with cumin and smoked paprika if desired), and the remaining 1 cup of cheese.

Bake for about 15 to 20 minutes until the cheese is melted and bubbling. Serve hot with Mexican Rice (http://allrecipes.com/Recipe/mexican-rice-iii/detail.aspx), and use brown rice for a slightly healthier version. Proceed to enjoy your delish enchiladas – oh, and all the compliments your dinner guests will give you!!

The. End.

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