Showing posts with label basil. Show all posts
Showing posts with label basil. Show all posts

Monday, December 10, 2012

Potatoes & Parsley




Or storage shares and the end of the fresh herbs.

My freezer and other storage areas for food have gotten awfully full at the end of the bumper crop fall – all that sunny weather at the end.  And now I need to get out the row-boat and boots because boy-o-boy is it raining.

So I’m on a kick to use what I have in and around the house – and I currently have a thing for savory sour.  Spanish food is a fun place to look – and somewhere I haven’t looked much.  The storage shares of potatoes and onions from my CSA work in the Spanish milieu, as does the determined, but rapidly drowning parsley in my herb pots.
It might be a little weedy... and mossy,
but I can tell which is the parsley.
Now if you look up this sort of recipe on the internet (and elsewhere) it will be “Papas something.”  One of the most famous versions of this sort of roasted (and sautéed) potato dish is Papas Bravos, potatoes served with a spicy garlicky mayonnaise type sauce (an aioli technically).
Lots of others have tomato based sauces – spicy or mild , and most of the rest have an herby element.   And that is what I’m really after here.  Warm and cozy roasted potatoes with deep flavors, and a little kick at the end – today sour, maybe later spicy.

Since I am working in my kitchen, I have lots of the wrong ingredients.  In this case – Ponzu Sauce.  I used it at the end because my potatoes needed a little more seasoning, a little more of a savory flavor, and a last kick of sour.  Don’t have Ponzu sauce, don’t know what it is?  Don’t let the fancy names intimidate you.  It is basically soy sauce and lime juice, and you can easily sub that in – or any tart citrus.

Now lets get cooking!

Spanish Style Potatoes
(Use up the parsley version - and if you have cilantro, basil, spinach or arugula cluttering up your fridge use them instead)

Equipment:
large pan for the oven
sauté pan for the sauce
spatula for stirring
knife
cutting board
fork – for testing potatoes and eating it all up.

Ingredients:
3 medium – large potatoes
1 medium onion (or ½ a big huge one)
salt & pepper
oil
cider vinegar
a whole bunch of parsley (a big handful?)
Ponzu Sauce (the secret ingredient!)
Prep:
Turn on the oven to 425˚F.
Wash your potatoes vigorously if they need it.
Chop them into chunks about the size of the top joint of your thumb.  (I made some of my pieces too big, and they had tasty outsides but bland insides).  Place them on the large pan, drizzle with 1-2 tsp of oil, sprinkle with salt, and toss with clean hands until they are all coated.
Toss them in the oven – set the timer to 20 minutes.
Turn to the onion.  Cut it in half through the root end.  Peel off the outer dry layers. Make 2 or 3 cuts from near the root end to the tip.  Cut the onion into slices about the width of your pinky.
Rinse the parsley and pull the leaves off the big central stem.  Chop the parsley roughly.

Cook!
Place your sauté pan over medium high heat for about 3 minutes with 1-2 tsp of oil in it.  When a small piece of onion sizzles merrily, the pan is hot.  Add in all the onion and a pinch of salt to help the onions sweat.  (Just a little, you’ll adjust for salt and pepper at the end.)
Stir the onions over the heat.  They should be getting translucent and soft, not really brown (if the edges are blackening, turn down the heat a little!) 

Somewhere in here – the potato timer is going to go off.   When it does, stab one with a fork, and bring it out of the oven.  Cut it in half with a fork, and blow on it until it is cool.  Try a bite.  If it is still a bit crunchy and raw, the potatoes may need up to 15 more minutes (but start with 10).  If the potato is almost done – but not quite – try 5 more.  And if the edges are brown, one surface crispy and puffed, and the inside is soft and fluffy – your potatoes are done.  So cook your potatoes ‘til they get there. 
When they do.  Take them out of the oven and put them to the side.

Back to the onions.  When they get soft and translucent, open a window or turn on a fan.  Then pour in about 1/4C of the cider vinegar.  Cook it down until most of the liquid is gone. 
(Did you add the vinegar without turning on a fan?  Bet you wish you had.)
When the onions are shiny and damp (rather than swimming in a pool of liquid), toss in the parsley, and stir it into the onions.  Then turn the heat to low, and stir in the hot potatoes. 

Taste one.  Add pepper and maybe a little salt if it really bland.
Then break out the Ponzu Sauce, and add about a teaspoon.  Stir it in.  Taste.  Repeat until you have savory, sour potatoes.

Serve with something else yummy.

(A Spanish tortilla, which is a sort of omelet, is nice.  Or spicy sausage and lentils – maybe with a little shrimp?     It makes for a great base to a hash – and the leftovers are great too.)

Tuesday, May 8, 2012

Spring, Herbs & Tuna Salad

Spring is really here, the new herbs are potted, the old ones repotted at last, and I've finally got a sunny day, so my garden has a chance of growing.

dill, new oregano and tarragon peeking through in the back
And to celebrate the herbs it is Tuna Salad Day*.  Also because it is Tuesday, but that's another thing.  And really it is more of a Take Back Tuna Salad day.  I don't know how we let this perfectly nice, low-stress, tasty way to transform leftovers into something delicious into a vilified sink of greasy blandness, but we have.

It must stop now.  Lunches, snacks and dinners need to be revived with the real deal, and we can all make it ourselves, especially when we're in a hurry, or have nothing in the the fridge.


Basic Tasty Tuna Salad
Eat as a sandwich, or my favorite, scooped up with grainy-seedy crackers. 

Equipment:
fork
knife
cutting board
small bowl
measuring spoons

Ingredients 
3 oz tuna - or other leftover fish (about 1 small can's worth/ 1 generous palm full)
1 garlic clove or a bit of leftover onion
1/2 rib of celery or *additions*
1 tsp mustard 
2 Tbs mayonnaise
splash of vinegar
salt & pepper 
bread or crackers (or tortillas?  flatbread?)

Prep & Cook:
Place the tuna in the bowl.  Slice up the celery and smash, peel and finely chopped the garlic (or something similar to the onion).  Add these to the tuna.  Stir in the mustard, only 1Tbs of the mayonnaise. Taste.  
Add salt, pepper and vinegar until it tastes almost right.  
Taste!
Stir in some of the rest of the mayonnaise until you get to a taste and texture you like.  This may mean a bit more mayo, vinegar, salt & pepper (maybe even a bit more mustard) and it may mean less than the full 2Tbs.
Always add a bit, and then taste again.  Easy to add more, tough to remove.  Let your own personal taste be your guide.

But that is only the basic recipe.  Back to the herbs that brought me here.  Time to get out the scissors and start clipping to make up some spring time specialties.

My three favorite combinations so far this spring have been:

1) French Inspired Tuna Salad 
Take out the watery sweet celery and instead use 
-a few leaves of nice sour sorrel
-a few leaves of mysterious licorice-y tarragon 
-and some lemon (or regular) thyme.  
If it is in your fridge, go for the spiky flavor of dijon mustard.  
Maybe add a few more leaves of sorrel as the lettuce on your sandwich.


oregano front, marjoram next to the ball

2) Italian Leaning Tuna Salad
If you have some oil packed tuna - this is a great place to use it.
Track down all the Mediterranean leaning herbs (even that "Italian Seasoning Blend" will do in a pinch!)
Skip the celery, and instead use
- a sprig of thyme
- a few leaves of peppery oregano
- a sprig of marjoram (if you don't have it fresh, toss in some dried)
- leave out the mayo, and use olive oil to make up the creaminess.  
- use red wine vinegar
Bonus: throw in a chopped tomato if you happen to have some about.

chives almost ready to bloom




3) Swedish-ish Salmon Salad 
OK, this one isn't a tuna recipe, but it was the perfect way to rescue the overcooked parts of the salmon.
- replace the celery with a half a pickle chopped into smallish pieces
- add a few sprigs of chopped dill, until it tastes dill-y enough for you
- add some chives if any are on hand
- use onion instead of garlic, and use thin slices of onion instead of chopped bits
- salt, pepper and mayo, and adjust the vinegar accordingly.



*No I don't know if there is really Tuna Salad Day.  In fact I bet there is one, but this has nothing to do with that.


This need not stop with tuna.  Other leftover aquatic denizens - salmon, shrimp, trout... benefit from the same treatment.  Egg salad is begging to be perked up in the same way.  And chicken salad, or even as a way to use up that last little bit of steak.  Stay tuned and learn the secret to cilantro/basil/sriracha steak salad.  It'll be here soon, now that there is enough sun to keep me awake during the day.

Break out the scissors and get clipping.


Sunday, August 15, 2010

Necatarines, Sweet Onions, Corn and CRAB!

Local Produce wise, it is the Most Wonderful Time of the Year. Seriously - take your pick! The salmon and crab are in full flower, the stone fruit is rolling in, berries are burying us, and corn, peppers and onions and herbs are coming up like weeds.





The New England Clam Bake makes so much sense, but out here, crab and salmon and mussels take center stage.

Anyway - a wonderful meal made: Crab Salad with a Fresh summer Relish... and of course Corn on the Cob!


*Nectarine and Sweet Onion Relish*
(please remember - all these amounts are "-ish" and to your taste!)

A firm Nectarine (a good place to use the one that is not quite ripe) cut into small chunks.
A small sweet onion, or 1/2 of a larger one, again, cut into small chunks
a 1/2 cup of sweetish white wine (sparkling if you have it)
1 tsp fresh oregano, chopped
about the same of basil, Thai Basil is really nice here... but any will do (as would none...)
Salt and Pepper to taste

Let this sit for a few hours, overnight if you are thinking ahead.

*Catch some Crab and Cook it Your Favorite Way*

I steam mine live and whole for about 10 minutes and let them cool.

*Cook the Corn*

While the crab is cooling, boil a big pot of water, place the corn in the water, and boil for about 3 minutes. Pull the corn out and cool. Serve with butter, salt & pepper.

.... when the crab has cooled, quickly
pop the shell off, and clean them. With dungeness crabs, cut off the shell around the legs and body meat. All you need is a strong set of kitchen shears to cut and crack, and the crab toes make great picks.

Or if catching/cooking is not an option, get a bunch of the freshest crab meat you can.

Chop up some sort of crunchy leafy veg... Purple cabbage, butter lettuce, what ever comes to hand.
Dress it with a nice light vinaigrette (oil, vinegar, a little garlic, salt, pepper, mustard as emulsifier).

Dressed chopped salad on the bottom
Crab meat goes on top.
A big spoon of the nectarine relish goes on top.
A cob of corn
Napkins!
The rest of the wine you were cooking with!

Enjoy!