I had quite a bit of produce that needed using and 2 cups of thawed homemade chicken stock....soup! We had eaten a big lunch with our friend Jeri, and I thought a lighter dinner was in order.
IngredientsTuesday, June 15, 2021
Dateline: June 7, 2021 Clean out the fridge soup
Sunday, May 16, 2021
Timeline: May 14 , 2021 Long Time No Post!
Hello again! My paws has been because we have a couple of kittens staying with us. As of this writing, I do not know for how long!
They are adorable and frisky, which makes for a lot of herding of them. I have been so entertained by their antics that I have completely gone off the blogging!
This is an effort to turn some preserved lemon marinaded grilled chicken breasts from the previous night into a Chinese inspired stir fry.
The chicken was cut into strips, an onion, garlic, bell pepper, ginger, and last night's veggies were then stir fryed with some Pixian bean paste and a splash of shaosing wine, dark and light soy sauces and some rice vinegar.
It turned out quite nicely. I was unsure if the lemon would overpower and make it, well, gross. But success.
Thursday, March 25, 2021
Dateline: March 22, 2021 Sheetpan Merguez Redux
Another nap ate into prep time for dinner, I think it is now a nasty habit which is playing havoc with my sleeping at night.
What was in the freezer -- ah, merguez sausage, done. Veggies in fridge, done. Ok sheetpan dinner coming up.
I used for the veggies, brussel sprouts, baby peppers, red cabbage, green cabbage, collards, carrots, butternut squash, broccolini, and onions. Chop into reasonable pieces, coat in olive oil, salt, and pepper and top with frozen sausages and throw into a 350°F oven for 45 minutes. At 30 minutes, turn the sausages over to brown on the other side and set the table.
Fresh out of the oven |
plateful of goodness |
Wednesday, March 17, 2021
Dateline: March 14, 2021 Bill's Excellent Adventure - Mole Chicken Breast Sheet Pan Dinner
Knock me over with a feather, Bill offered to make a sheet pan dinner! Alan, keep up the pressure!
I had been making mole earlier in the afternoon, and we decided that chicken breast on a bed of veg topped with Mole sauce would be an excellent dinner option.
Bill chopped up the veg: potatoes, carrots, brussel sprouts, onions, broccoli, and cherry tomatoes. He marinated the bunch in olive oil, garlic, pinto beans, salt, and pepper. Topped with the chicken breasts and into the oven they went (after putting oil on the chicken, along with salt and pepper). In the pan I added some chicken stock and white wine, hoping to hurry the veggies along.
After 30 minutes, I slathered on the mole sauce and returned them to the oven to finish cooking through to 160°F (minimum). Bill's back was bothering him so he was resting while I did this.
20 minutes later, out of the oven it came and we ate.
The veg under cooked and the breasts were a little dry at the thin end. But the flavors were very good. I think next time, veggies in first, then top with breasts. and finish cooking until everything is crispy and cooked through. The pinto beans got a little crispy crunchy, and extra starchy, I think that they belong on the bottom with everything else protecting them from the oven's drying heat.
Repurposing everything for the next day, I chopped up the remaining chicken added more mole sauce, chicken stock, and a can of chick peas. Brought to a boil and let simmer until veggies were cooked through and soft. Delicious.
Tuesday, March 9, 2021
Dateline: March 7, 2021 Sheet pan #7 Merguez over Vegetables
We had a zoom that could run a little long, so I had to put dinner on the table easily and something that would cook while we talked....Sheet Pan!
I took the homemade merguez out of the freezer and chopped up some random clean out the veg draw veggies. I created a paste to mix in the veggies by using preserved lemon, garlic, smoked paprika and olive oil. Mashed it up good and slathered it all over the tray. I placed the sausages on top along with some canned tomatoes and put it in the oven. After 1/2 hour, I added to drained and rinsed cans of chickpeas, turned the sausages over and put it back into the oven for another 1/2 hour.
Seasoning Paste
chick peas and another 1/2 hr |
ready for the oven |
I finished off the dish with a sprinkling of chopped parsley... like a little black dress and pearls.
I have really fallen in love with adding tomatoes to the sheet pan dinners. They get kind of jammy and the flavor is really intensified.
Wednesday, March 3, 2021
Dateline: March 2, 2021 Korean Rotisserie Chicken with Vegetables
After yesterday's lack of spice, I was really wanting a good dose today. There in the fridge was a lovely little chicken just begging to be marinated in something and twirled around the oven on a spit.
For the marinade: 3 T gochujang, 3 cloves chopped garlic, 1 T dark soy sauce, 2 T sesame oil, 2 T white wine or water. Mix well and slather all over chicken after putting it on the spit. (If no spit, then it can be split open and spread on a backing sheet, or just placed whole on baking sheet. Rub the vegetables, with oil and a generous amount of the spice marinade.
The surrounding vegetables were broccoli, cauliflower, celeraic root, and cherry tomatoes. Be sure to salt and pepper both the chicken and veggies. The sauce will be quick spicy at this point and you may think it too spicy, if so, add 1 t sugar or agave syrup to tame it a bit.
Roast at 350° F and after 40 minutes, raise temperature to 400° F for another 1/2 hour. Test the inner thigh of the chicken to be sure it has reached at least 180° F. If you split the chicken, your timing will be different, the chicken will cook faster, so cook for 30 at 350° before bumping up to 400° 15-20 minutes.
The cherry tomatoes came out nice and jammy, they added just enough moisture to keep the veggies from burning. The marinade on the veggies, however, did get a bit charred, but it added some textural and flavor interest.
Finished Chicken |
Roasted Veggies |
Dateline: March 1, 2021 Sheet Pan #5 - Empty the Fridge and Cover it in Bacon
I had a ton of vegetation that needed to be used up, rutabagas, brussel sprouts, carrots, celery, broccoli, onions, garlic, collards, kale, and bacon.
Everybody got chopped and mixed with a spice mix from Penzey's called Florida, which was mostly salt, pepper, garlic, oregano, and a touch of sugar. I layered the spicing as I placed the veggies in the roasting pan. I ended up shaking a 14 oz can of diced tomatoes over top, and a can of cannelloni beans. As I contemplated the product, I realized that what it needed was bacon, so 4 slices were laid on top and into the oven it went.
When it was done, my test was were the rutabagas soft, out it came, and only then was it apparent that there was a TON of it.....
I thought it was a bit bland, but Bill really liked it. I felt that I had been really wagging the spice lately, so this was a welcome switch up.
Monday, March 1, 2021
Dateline: February 28, 2021 Orange Beef Redux
I had a package of beef strips in the freezer and decided to make orange beef again. I used the NYTimes Sam Sifton recipe again, as a framework and riffed on it.
The riffs this time were adding more vegetables, broccoli again, green bell peppers, onions, and red finger peppers and jalapeno. The big change was kind of Koreanifying it but sauteeing until crispy some dduk rice cakes. These are the finger thickness 2 inch round rice cakes that are sold in asian markets either vacuum packed or frozen. These were vac packed. I grabbed a couple of handfuls from the package and cut them into thirds so they would be these crispy nuggets coated in orange sauce.
Tuesday, February 23, 2021
Dateline: February 22, 2021 Rotisserie Chicken with Roasted Vegetables
I had a very cute small chicken that needed cooking. I wanted rotisserie chicken, so I stuffed the cavity with some fennel stalks and fronds and a tiny half onion left over from another night. For the vegetation over which the chicken would slowly rotate I had some cubed up rutabaga, aforementioned fennel, onion, brussel sprouts, red bell peppers, carrots, and a couple of small white potatoes.
Everything got chopped up and doused with olive oil, garlic, red finger pepper, and a chopped up preserved lime. Yes, a preserved lime. I tried out preserving citrus fruits other than lemons in saline solution and have limes and oranges sitting in the fridge. The limes add a level of sourness that the preserved lemons do not. In judicious amounts it will work. Because I preserve mostly Meyer Lemons, the sharpness of the acid was a bit of a surprise when I tasted a tiny piece before dumping it into the veggies. In the finished product, it did not overpower at all, in fact, it seemed to be a factor that pulled everything together a bit tighter.
As I was prepping things for the meal, I was also making chicken stock. I read an article in Cook's Illustrated that discussed the differences between bone broth and stock. Who knew, I have been making bone broth for 30+ years, OG hipster here! It seems that the big difference is the amount of collagen that is present in the finished product. Bone broth has lots of it, stock, not so much. How do you know if you have collagen in your stock/broth, let it cool after cooking. Does it set up, and look like Jello, you have a lot of collagen in that batch. You can always cheat and add powdered collagen to a finished product to duplicate that particular umami-ness.
As a music history professor would tell us, "Label that digression in your notes". Back to the chicken.
I rubbed it with some oil, and salted and peppered it, ran the skewer through, tightened the prongs and poked the end through the hole in the back of the oven. I never had a built in rotisserie in an oven before, I will never be without one going forward. I started the temp at 400° F for about 35 minutes, or until you could smell the chicken. I lowered the temp to 350° F and added a cup of chicken bone broth to the sheet pan below. Set the timer for another 30 minutes, and voila! Chicken-y nirvana with unctuous roasted veggies with a touch of char to them. It hit every bell for me!
Roasted Veggies |
Rotisserie Chicken |
Saturday, February 20, 2021
Dateline: February 19, 2021 Sheet Pan Dinner #4, variations on a theme
Again, I didn't want the same old, same old. Thursday, in our weekly call with Alan and Lyn, tajine came up. Hmmmmm, I could do a variation on that theme.
Ingredients
Pre Oven |
Dressed in Cilantro |
Note:
front of package |
Dateline: February 18, 2021 Just for the Halibut (see what I did there)
I had some very fresh halibut from FD that I wanted to cook. I rooted around in the veggie bins and found some string beans, and the left over veggies from the night before....what was left of them. Bill had finished off the broccoli, so it was just potatoes, bell pepper slices, and some onions or shallots. But, I didn't just want the same old flavorings, I wanted something different....ROMESCO SAUCE!
A eureka moment. Did I have everything....almonds, check, roasted red peppers, check, tomatoes, check, garlic, check, onions, check, pimenton, check....I was in business.
I used a NYTCooking recipe from Florence Fabricant for the Romesco Sauce. Naturally, I made a few changes as I always do. I used white wine instead of water and used lots of piquillo peppers from a jar I had sitting around that really needed to be used. I used my homemade red wine vinegar as well.
I blitzed the toasted almonds in the VitaMix for just a few seconds, didn't want almond butter! I sauteed the onions and added garlic, peppers, vinegar, wine, and spices. My tomatoes were canned that I scooped out trying not to take too much juice with them. This then got added to the blender jar and after adding in a bit more of the tomato juice and some water, I got the blender to puree everything into loveliness. And it tasted great, needed a bit more salt and pimenton, but other than that, delish.
For the veggies, I put them in a pan, added a few more potatoes and bell peppers and stuck it in the oven until I was ready to cook the fish.
The fish was 2 halibut fillets, about 8 oz. each, they were a beautiful white firm fish. I rarely, if ever, have cooked halibut before. I decided to gently pan fry in the cleaned pan from the romesco sauce. I heated up some oil and patted the fish dry and then oiled with some olive oil and salted and peppered it. I cooked presentation side first, that was the side without the skin for this dish. Gently flipped the fish when it had started to become opaque about 1/2 of the way up the side of the fish. After flipping, I shook the pan to keep the fish from sticking to the pan. Sprinkled a bit of pimenton on top of the cooked side and waited until the opacity had climbed to the middle on the other side.
This was a delicious dinner. The romesco sauce went beautifully with everything, veggies, taters, fish, you name it. It was just plain YUM.
Wednesday, February 17, 2021
Dateline: February 15, 2021 Vegetarian Sheet-Pan #3
In rummaging through the pantry, I came across a box of Israeli couscous. That then sent me on an expedition into what to do with it. I came across Melissa Clark's Couscous with Feta Cheese on NYT Cooking. Using it as a framework, I tweaked it, naturally, of course.
I had a bunch of collard greens, which I sliced into ribbons after taking out the thick stem in the center. I didn't have a pint of fresh cherry tomatoes, so I used 2 cans diced tomatoes and I added 1 red finger pepper chopped up, a couple of oil cured sun dried tomatoes, vegetable stock, 1 can chickpeas.
This is the set up before baking. After the suggested time, I then added in the pearled couscous and stock and put it back in the oven again. After the suggested time, it was still a bit soupy, so I returned to the oven again. I pulled it out and then crumbled in the feta cheese, stirred, and returned to the oven again to melt/soften up the cheese.
Finished product with its garnish of cilantro.
This was a real keeper. I was absolutely amazed at it. It had the necessary spice for me, courtesy of the red finger pepper and I could hardly believe that it was vegetarian. Not vegan because of the cheese, but that could be remedied easily by using tofu or other substitute.
Husband unit loved it.
Friday, February 12, 2021
Dateline: February 10, 2021 Chinese Hot Pot to Celebrate Lunar New Year a Bit Early
Bill and I went to Industry City yesterday to wander around the various stores that were there. We went into Japanese Village and I saw some thinly sliced meats for shabu shabu and decided to do chinese hot pot for dinner. I picked up some thinly sliced beef, round and rib eye, and also some thinly sliced Kurobuta pork loin as well. I then searched the veggies and grabbed some lotus root, pre sliced, and some Enoki mushrooms. I had other vegetation at home as well as the necessary spice for the hot pot flavoring.
I used Fuchsia Dunlop's recipe for hot pot broths. One is based in a beef broth, the other in a chicken, but I made it vegetable broth.
Dipping Sauces |
Meats, beef above, pork below The carrots and peas are at the top and the cabbage and root veggies at the bottom |
Vegetation |
Broths: top is spicy and below is not |
Wednesday, February 3, 2021
Dateline: February 2, 2021 Chicken Thigh Sheet Pan Dinner #2
I had a bunch of broccoli, some shisito peppers, 1/2 a butternut squash and some carrots.....plus some chicken thighs. What to do?
Option 1 - Tajine
Option 2 - Sheetpan
Feeling lazy, I took option 2. I piled the chopped veggies into a sheet pan along with a sliced onion and mixed it with some olive oil and salt and pepper. Added the chicken thighs on top and drizzled them with oil and salt and pepper, and popped it in the oven, 350°F for 30 minutes, rotated the pan, and set the timer for 15 more minutes. Chicken was cooked, and veggies were nicely browned.
Yum!
Pre Cooking |
Here is the finished product. I was quite pleased with the results and will definitely play with this sort of thing again!
Saturday, January 30, 2021
Dateline: January 30, 2021 First foray into sheetpan dinner
I had a ton of veg that needed to be used in some creative way. I decided that I would attempt a sheetpan dinner using some homemade brats and the vegetation that was in the fridge.
Veg and Brats
Ingredients
Pre sausage veggies |
Friday, January 22, 2021
Dateline: January 22, 2021 Ma La Shrimp and Stir Fried Mixed Vegetables
OMG this dinner was superb! No brag, just fact. I am in heaven, spice, tingling mouth, crispy veggies and SHRIMP.
Ingredients
Tuesday, January 19, 2021
Dateline: January 18, 2021 Curried Vegetables with Chick Peas
I had to clean out the vegetable bin and decided to try a prepared curry spice mix that I had. I used Shah's Vegetable Masala mix.
Ingredients
Sunday, January 17, 2021
Dateline: January 16, 2021 Chorizo, Black Bean Stew-Soup or Stoop
A new butcher shop opened in the area, YEAH, and I made my first purchase there, some chorizo and chicken backs for stock.
I had about 1 lb of boar left over from last night, so I decided to make some chorizo myself and we could have a "taste off". The boar was quite lean, and I didn't really think about that part. I didn't add more fat until the very end. I used mexican oregano, garlic, both fresh and granulated, cloves, hot smoked paprika and sweet paprika, beef trim (for fat), salt, pepper, vinegar and white wine.
After cooking off a small amount, I realized that I did not have enough fat in the mix. I pulled the beef trim out and ground some of that up and added it to the mix. It was better, but needed tweaking. I add more garlic, more vinegar, more of both paprikas and salt. I also added some olive oil.
For the taste off, I liked my flavor but the butcher shops texture. Bill liked both. I felt that the butcher shop chorizo would crumble a lot better in a stew, so I used that in the stoop.
Ingredients
Wednesday, January 6, 2021
Dateline: January 4, 2021 Homemade Merguez with Vegetable Stew
I made some sausages, brats and merguez, the other day and after eating vindaloo for 2 days, we needed a break So out of the freezer came the merguez and I raided the fridge for suitable vegetation for a morrocan stew-ish kind of thing.
I browned the sausages and after browning them, I sweated some onions and garlic.
Sausages |
sweating the onions |
Once that had softened, I added some stock and wine to deglaze the pan. Next went in quite an interesting array of veggies, some orange bell peppers, string beans, broccoli, preserved mandarin, collards, and cabbage.
start of the veggie melange |
veggies in Instant pot |
Wednesday, December 9, 2020
Dateline: December 9l 2020 Soy Marinated Chicken Thighs and Assorted Stir Fried Vegetables
The inspiration for tonight's dinner came at lunch. I was eating some doctored ramen, and I added mandarin orange peels. Why, I'm not sure, but it tasted great!
Out came the chicken thighs and I marinated them. Cooked them first, then cleaned the wok and stir fried the veggies. Added what was left of the marinade and a cup of brodo. Voila! Winner Winner, Chicken Dinner!
Marinade