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Posts tagged ‘Autumn’

so what’s in a salad?

Fresh-air markets, booths and stalls stretching for blocks and blocks, wooden tables piled high with newly-picked fruits and vegetables.  Luscious juice-sweet fruits, all round-body shapes and colors. Rustic root or bright green vegetables some with the earth still clinging to them. Farmers in aprons, their hands, soil-worn and calloused, paring off samples for us to taste. And we held out our hands and we tasted, and we bought what we couldn’t resist. But we’d made some kind of cosmic mistake! We had no kitchen to take our booty to, no salad bowl, no wooden tongs. No aprons of our own. So it happened that everywhere we went, my longing for brilliant color tossed in a bowl grew. We had some nice salads while away, but they weren’t the salads of home. And  the salads of home are the foods I miss most of all when we’re away.

So here, for you (and for me) brilliant color in a bowl. (and between us, so delicious it’s startling!)

Once again, as is usually the case with salads around here, a list of ingredients but no amounts. I’ll give some rough guidelines, but you know how you like your salads from home, so no one will be as good a judge as you …

 

Brilliant Winter Green Salad with Pomegranate, Apple & Almonds

Baby Spinach – or Arugula  (which do you prefer, mild and green, or slightly bitter? Or maybe a mix of the two.)

Apple, cored and sliced

Pomegranate seeds (see a previous post for the most ingenious way to remove these wonderfully tart & crunchy little seeds)

Basil - leaves laid out on top of one another, rolled tight like a cigar and sliced thinly

Slivered Almonds, toasted brown

Shallot, sliced thinly and sauteed to a toasty brown in a bit of oil

Soft, mild goat cheese – Optional

Vinaigrette (see below)

__________

Thinly slice the shallot and drop it into a small medium-hot skillet to which you’ve added a small amount of oil. Stir occasionally until browned. Remove to a paper towel.

Toast the almonds – in a 350° oven for perhaps 15 minutes. Check frequently. (The last bit of browning goes very quickly.) About the last 5 minutes you might (might!) want to place the shallots in the oven along with the almonds to dry and crisp them a bit more. 

Remove the seeds from the pomegranate. (See previous post link above. You’ll also find another delicious salad there.)

Toss all ingredients into a bowl (reserving a little of the seeds, nuts and shallots for sprinkling on top.) Toss with a little vinaigrette. Taste to see if amply dressed. Drizzle more as desired. Sprinkle bits of brilliance on top.

Would you like me to taste it for you and tell you why it’s so good?

Even this time of year, most markets will still have fresh crisp baby spinach leaves. These leaves taste mild and green and like Health itself. (Arugula, a little or a lot, but only for those who like the mildly bitter. I do!) Crisp sweet-tart apple, toasted almonds tasting of the hearth, threads of fresh basil winding throughout (these you nearly taste in your nose), crunchy smoky bittersweet bits of shallot, bursting tart seeds full of juice…and then…if you like this sort of thing…mild and creamy, exquisite white cheese of goat.

I . love .  this .  salad !

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autumn waffles

My daughter Ashley and her three – Sici, Jewel-bug and LaLa, were coming for breakfast. What would I fix them? I know that one of their very favorite things in all the world (and they would tell you this) is our traditional Christmas morning breakfast. I knew that at least two of them might be guessing (and even hoping) they’d be having it in November too. How could I thrill them with the familiar and yet surprise them with something different, all at once?  And then it came to me -

German Apple Waffles !

~ ~ ~

For the lightest waffles, I beat the egg whites separately and fold them in at the end. It’s not necessary to do this if you’re horribly pressed for time – but then again why would you choose waffles if you’re in a hurry? The difference though with beaten egg whites is one you’ll appreciate once you’ve tried it. Also, for tenderness, buttermilk instead of plain milk .

German Apple Waffles

For the waffles:

(makes 5 or 6 waffles)

  • 3 eggs, separated
  • 1 cup whole wheat pastry flour
  • 1 cup all-purpose flour
  • 1 teaspoon baking powder
  • ½ teaspoon baking soda
  • ½ teaspoon cinnamon
  • ¼ teaspoon salt
  • 1½ cup buttermilk
  • ¼ cup canola oil or melted butter
  • 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
  • 1 cup finely chopped pecans (optional)

For the apples:

  • 4 apples (at least 1 tart, such as Granny Smith, plus others for variety)
  • ¼ cup unsalted butter
  • ¼ cup sugar
  • 4 teaspoons cinnamon
  • ½ teaspoon freshly grated nutmeg

to finish:

  • juice from ¼ to ½ lemon (depending on sweetness of apples & your own tastes)
  • splash maple syrup
  • whipping cream
  • powdered sugar & vanilla extract

Preparing the waffles:

In a medium-size bowl, beat the egg whites until stiff – set aside.

While you have your mixer out, now is a good time to prepare the whipped cream.  Beat approximately 1 cup of whipping cream until it starts to thicken. Add approximately 1 tablespoon of powdered sugar and a splash of vanilla extract. Continue beating until soft peaks form. Set aside or chill for serving.

In a medium bowl mix the dry ingredients for the waffles – the flours, baking powder and soda, cinnamon and salt. Stir to combine.

In a separate bowl, combine the wet ingredients - lightly beaten egg yolks, the buttermilk, oil or melted butter and vanilla extract.

Add the wet ingredients to the dry, all at once, stirring just enough to combine. Batter will be lumpy and we like it that way. (It won’t be evident in the finished waffle.) With a light hand, gently fold in the beaten eggs whites. Your waffle batter is finished.

Preparing the apples:

Peel and core the apples. Slice lengthwise into approximately ¼-inch slices.

Using a large cast iron or other heavy skillet, melt the butter. Add the sugar, cinnamon and nutmeg, and the apple slices. (If using a non-stick pan, you won’t get quite the same caramel-y results.)

On medium or medium-low heat cook the apples until they’ve softened but aren’t mushy. This may take about 15 minutes. Some varieties of apples will turn soft faster, but the variety in tart-versus-sweet and barely-soft-versus-very-soft is nice. (Plus, if you’ve several varieties of apples you’ll get slight variations in color too which is so pretty.)

Once your apples have softened and the caramely sauce is coating them, add a splash of lemon juice and a splash of maple syrup. Adjust as needed to suit your tastes. You want enough sauciness to moisten your waffle and you want a good balance of flavor which, to my mind, means not overly sweet.

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carrot cake cupcakes

Ever since spreesgratefulguineapig left his comment on morning glorious muffins, word has spread quickly. I might never have admitted to it if he hadn’t spilled the beans first – but I confess, it’s true, I’m married to a rodent. And today is my dear rodent’s birthday! In honor of the occasion, there will be no lab experiments today, no spree in her lab coat, no need to ask with forced cheerfulness,  ”so what exactly is this, honey?” Just a few of his favorites – and my grateful guinea pig loves carrot cake!

Happy Birthday, love!

And thank you, for being such

 a good sport!

Carrot Cake Cupcakes

(makes about 20 cupcakes)

  • 1½ cups all-purpose flour
  • 1¼ cups granulated sugar
  • 1 cup plus 2 Tablespoons canola oil
  • 3 large eggs
  • 1½ teaspoons pure vanilla extract
  • ½ teaspoon kosher salt
  • 1½ teaspoons baking soda
  • 2¼ cups finely grated, peeled carrots
  • 1 cup chopped walnuts, toasted (see NOTE at bottom of recipe)
  • 2½ teaspoons ground cinnamon

Cream Cheese Frosting

  • 6 oz. cream cheese, room temperature (this is 3/4 of a standard-size cream cheese container)
  •  ¼ cup unsalted butter, room temperature (½ stick)
  • ½ cup powdered sugar
  • 3/4 teaspoons pure vanilla extract
  • 1 cup chopped toasted walnuts (see NOTE)

Preheat the oven to 325°F.

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madeline’s cinnamon apple cake

I don’t often find myself in an extended baking mood, but everything the past few days has conspired to cast such a spell. Outside, the rain was falling in torrents, soggy leaves were blowing around our front door, sticking to the windows, filling our bird bath and our gutters.  An elderly neighbor of ours, a lonely sweetheart of a woman, lost her husband last year; I hadn’t seen her in a while and missed her.  I wanted something warm in my hands when I knocked on her door. And then, there were the apples, shiny and green, just fresh off their trees.

It wasn’t exactly a straight line, the weather – to my neighbor – to the cake. I tried several things along the way. One bombed completely; the other was decent, but only that; and then there was …

Madeline’s Cinnamon Apple Cake -

and it was lovely and mellow and warm… Read more

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