I have a terrible time leaving caprese alone. I just keep messing with it. Adding this and that. Changing it up. Or Down. In part, I’ve just been overrun with tomatoes, so why not eat them fresh while they’re heavy, fragrant, juicy, and ripe? Make hay while the sun shines.
Tomatoes
38 Power Foods, Week 14 — Tomatoes — Photos from my Tomato Gallery
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| Julia’s 100th Birthday post: Salmon Fillet en Papillote with Spinach and Tomatoes |
| Just for fun this time, I thought I’d share some of my favorite tomatoes and tomato dishes from both of my blogs … Enjoy my crop! |
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| Farro Salad with Canned Salmon (not on the blogs yet) |
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| Egg and Egg White Omelet with Cottage Cheese on Toast |
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| Basil-Tomato Egg White-Egg Omelet (not on blog) |
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| My Little Shop of Horrors 2 Cherry Tomato plants |
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| BLT Risotto |
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| Shrimp-Quinoa Salad with Feta and Tomatoes |
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| Guacamole Soup from my upcoming book, 30 Soups in 30 Minutes |
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| Grilled Chicken Salad with Boccacini and Asparagus |
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| Grilled Fish with Asparagus on Greens |
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| Just making sure you’re looking. No tomatoes, but a favorite picture! |
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| Bacon Caprese with a Green Bean and Mustard Vinaigrette at Center |
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| Linguine Caprese (from last Monday) |
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| Grilled Eggplant and Sausage Pasta–made totally on the grill |
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| Lunch Counter Chicken Salad Stuffed Tomato |
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| Garlic Bread Grilled Tomato under Grill Press |
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| Proscuitto Caprese with Pan-Roasted Brussels Sprouts and Crispy Parmesan Chips (not on blog yet) |
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| Closeup of above |
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| My ribs. My sauce. Dave grills! |
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| Rice and Bean Salad with Lime Vinaigrette |
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| Egg White – Spinach Omelet with Salsa and Fresh Tomatoes |
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| Garlic Bread Grilled Tomato Sandwich |
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| Chicken-Guacamole Salad with Fresh Lime Vinaigrette |
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| Plain old tuna salad for Dave’s lunch |
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| Diana Kennedy’s salsa |
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Sauteing cherry tomatoes for salad–I use the oil for the dressing
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| Eggs, tortillas and fresh salsa for breakfast |
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| Fried Egg and Potato Salad |
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| Not blogged, but Dave baked these breadsticks (made from my pizza dough) on the grill! |
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| This is just any old salad, though it tastes just the opposite with Minnesota tomatoes. |
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| Meatball Subs |
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| Walleye Salad |
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| Poached Egg Chef’s Salad |
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| Egg Salad |
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| Fish baked in tomatoes
These (above and below) are part of the BLT risotto preparation. |
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| Tapenade Salad (w/ lemon vinaigrette)–a summer favorite of mine |
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| Sole on Leeks with Salad (also on Food52) |
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| Ratatouille |
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| Alyce’s Homemade Tomato Soup with Fried Cheese |
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| Tomatoed Cod with Spinach |
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| Ratatouille-Steamed Salmon with Jasmine Rice and Spinach |
For information on the wonderful things tomatoes do for your body (besides make it happy,) visit LiveStrong. Thank for reading the blog today!
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I blog with a great group of food writers on Fridays as we cook our way through the list of foods from Whole Living Magazine’s Power Foods: 150 Delicious Recipes with the 38 Healthiest Ingredients:
Read more about beautiful tomatoes this week at these sites:
Sarah – Everything in the Kitchen Sink
Anabanana – adobodownunder.blogspot.com
Alanna – http://kitchen-parade-veggieventure.blogspot.com/
.
Join us:
If you’re interested in joining the gang writing each week, get in touch with Mireya from My Healthy Eating Habits: Mireya@MyHealthyEatingHabits.com
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These are my own recipes (with noted exceptions) and can be found on this blog or on my blog Dinner Place, Cooking for One. unless otherwise noted.
Photos/all copyright Alyce Morgan, 2012
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two dog kitchen and around the ‘hood
Today’s activity: brush, trim, bath, shake, dry on back porch, brush. Repeat. Don’t like it much.
Sing a new song,
Alyce
Linguine Caprese or How I Got My Tomatoes On
38 Power Foods, Week 11 — Spinach — B"L"T Risotto
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| Bacon, Spinach (the “L”), and Cherry Tomato Risotto |
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| Here spinach is mixed with baby kale for a powerful side. |
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| Herb-Spinach Egg White Omelet |
If I don’t make an egg white omelet, I make salad or have spinach instead of lettuce on a sandwich or..
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| Alyce’s Tomatoed Cod on Fennel with Sauteed Spinach |
I might pair it with fennel as a side for my fish.
Yesterday, my tomatoes (volunteers left on their own for the summer) were picked by a neighbor and deposited on my back step. She knew I’d been away; she’s a gardener.
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| These were volunteers from the yard and driveway. I left them to see what’d happen over the summer. They took over the side bed. |
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| Hybrids ready to eat; they were pretty tasty! |
Hot on the back porch, the tomato scent wafted dizzily through me when I reached down and picked up the container. What to do with them besides pop one (ok, three) in my mouth as is?
My larder isn’t full yet; we’ve only been home from Colorado for a couple of days. I did, however, have bacon in small packages in the freezer (one of my mainstays), rice in the pantry, and spinach (which serves as the L in BLT) in the frig. Way back in the corner was an old chunk of Parmesan our house sitter hadn’t eaten. B”L”T Risotto was born. Need I tell you this was the risotto from heaven? (Neighbor got a bowl, too.) Try it today:
b “l” t risotto
2-3 pieces bacon, chopped into 1″ pieces
1T butter
1 large onion, chopped
1 clove garlic, chopped
1 cup arborio rice
Pinch crushed red pepper
Kosher salt and fresh ground pepper
1 cup white wine
4-5 cups chicken stock, low sodium
1 cup cherry tomatoes, cut in half
1 cup grated Parmesan cheese
1 – 1 1/2 cups fresh spinach leaves
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| Set table before you begin. |
- In a heavy 4 qt saucepan, cook bacon over medium heat until nearly crisp and remove to a paper-towel lined plate leaving bacon fat in pot. Set aside. Add butter and onion to the saucepan. Cook 4-5 minutes until onion is softened; add garlic and rice. Stir in crushed red pepper, 1/4 teaspoon kosher salt and 1/2 teaspoon fresh ground black pepper. Stir well to coat rice. Cook 1 minute or so.
- Add white wine; raise heat a bit. Cook a few minutes, stirring occasionally, until wine is absorbed.
- Add 2 cups warm chicken stock and cook about five minutes, stirring occasionally, until broth is absorbed. Repeat. Add last cup of broth (if rice is still too hard to eat–you want it between al dente and fall-apart tender.) Please relax about constantly stirring the risotto. Pour a glass of wine, turn on the music, and stir only as necessary.
- Stir in tomatoes, Parmesan, spinach, and reserved bacon. Taste and adjust seasonings if necessary.
- Serve hot with steamed green beans or asparagus. (See below.) Pass black pepper at table.
I liked a crisp grassy Sancerre with this, but I like a crisp grassy Sancerre with almost anything. Chardonnay, which is lovely with creamy dishes, would also drink.
Note re seasonings: The heat of the crushed red pepper is one that will build in your mouth as you eat the risotto; be careful not to add too much black pepper at the end.
Cook’s Note: For ease of preparation, here’s how I do the asparagus or beans in the microwave while the last cup of broth is cooking away in the risotto pan:
Just 2 minutes for rinsed (no more water) asparagus on high:
Beans will take a couple of extra minutes unless they’re haricots verts. Add a squeeze of lemon and a sprinkle of pepper.
Sing a new song; eat risotto, too,
Alyce
38 Power Foods — Green Peppers — Alyce’s Ratatouille
Ah, summer. Here’s my favorite use for green peppers. Right after my mom’s stuffed green peppers, that is.
I loved the movie (Ratatouille).
Also “The Big Night”
And “Babette’s Feast”
Try them. Food movies. Ah.
I love the real deal better. If you become a devoted cook, your world will revolve around the seasons. Stews in winter. Apple pie in the fall. Berries in the spring. And…
High summer: Tons of vegetables at their peak.
38 Power Foods, Week 3 — Avocado– Chicken-Guacamole Salad
Chicken-Guacamole Salad with a Big Squeeze of Fresh Lime…
chicken-guacamole salad 3-4 servings
- 1/2 cup fresh cilantro, chopped roughly, divided
- 1/2 cup fresh green pepper, chopped in 1/2″ pieces
- 1/4 cup red sweet pepper, chopped in 1/2 ” pieces
- 1/2 jalapeño, minus seeds and veins, very finely minced (for more heat, use the whole pepper)
- 1/4 cup red onion, minced
- 1 cup roughly chopped tomatoes
- 2 ripe avocados, peeled, seeded, and roughly chopped
- 1 cup cooked rice seasoned with a light sprinkle of salt and pepper
- Kosher salt, freshly ground pepper
- 1 Lime, cut in half (Cut one of the halves into slices)
- 2 chicken breasts, grilled and chopped
- 2 cups baby spinach leaves
- 1/2 cup sharp cheddar grated
Mix cilantro through tomatoes in a large bowl, reserving 2 T cilantro. Stir in avocados. Mix the reserved 2 T cilantro into the cooked rice and add the rice to the guacamole salad. Season with salt and pepper. Taste and adjust seasoning. Squeeze half of the lime over the salad. Add chopped chicken breasts and spinach and stir gently. Sprinkle with cheese. Serve mounded, with a piece of lime on each plate to use at table.
Cook’s Notes: Don’t even have the energy to chop, stir, or cook? Buy a roasted deli chicken and pre-made guac for an even easier meal. Many shops now sell freshly-made pico de gallo or salsa. The packages of microwave rice would work well for this dinner and would cut both time and kitchen heat.
Wine? Not. It’s time for a margarita or a beer. (Ok, Sangria, Riesling or an Oregon Pinot Blanc if you have to have wine.)
Dessert? Lemon sorbet.
about avocados from the California avocado commission
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| courtesy ca avocado commission |
Calories, yes. Cholesterol, no.
Avocados provide nearly 20 essential nutrients, including fiber, potassium, Vitamin E, B-vitamins and folic acid. They also act as a “nutrient booster” by enabling the body to absorb more fat-soluble nutrients, such as alpha and beta-carotene and lutein, in foods that are eaten with the fruit.
Avocados and Cardiovascular Disease
Cardiovascular disease is the leading cause of death in the United States, but a healthy diet and exercise plan may help reduce your risk of developing the life-threatening illness.
The American Heart Association (AHA) Dietary Guidelines recommend a diet that has at least five servings of fruits and vegetables, contains up to 30% of calories from fats (primarily unsaturated) and is low in saturated fat, cholesterol, trans fats and sodium while being rich in potassium. Avocados can help you meet the AHA dietary guidelines because they have both monosaturated and polyunsaturated fat and contain potassium.
If you liked this, you might like other avocado recipes like Shrimp Cobb from More Time at the Table
or
Pico de Gallo Halibut on Warm Rice Salad with Bacon Pintos from More Time at the Table

……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………
Every Friday for the foreseeable future, I’ll be blogging one of the 38 healthiest ingredients from POWER FOODS : 150 DELICIOUS RECIPES WITH THE 38 HEALTHIEST INGREDIENTS by the editors of Whole Living Magazine.
38 Power Foods is a group effort! Stop by these other blogs and see what they’re cooking each week as we team up to bring you some of the healthiest cooking available:
Sarah – Everything in the Kitchen Sink
.
As we go along, I’m guessing we’ll get some other writers involved. If you’re interested in joining the gang writing each week, get in touch with Mireya from My Healthy Eating Habits: Mireya@MyHealthyEatingHabits.com
………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………
two-dog kitchen and around the ‘hood
first three taken with my iphone
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| Sweet Peas next door in front yard |
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| My hydrangeas from the west garden |
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| South garden hostas in bloom |
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| All the toys are mine, you see. Right? |
Sing a new song,
Alyce
50 Women Game-Changers in Food – #35 – Delia Smith
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| Would you cook with this woman? Meet Delia Smith. |
In North America, we might argue over who taught us to cook. While Julia really was on tv, I’m sure I learned to cook from a. my mother, b. James Beard, and c. SILVER PALATE. (We all teach ourselves right in our kitchen, don’t we?) But in the UK, there’s no question about who taught you to cook; Delia Smith, #35 in Gourmet’s 50 Women Game-Changers in Food, did. (photo courtesy BBC)
Way back in the ’70s (was it that far away?), you only had to tune in to the telly to learn how to make pastry (or lots else) with Delia in London or Edinburgh. For grins, scroll down to the bottom of the post and click on the video and see what the buzz was about. Could you bake a blind tart shell after watching that television program? I admit I missed Julia a bit as I watched!
After a couple of false starts as a hairstylist and travel agent, and without much education, Delia began reading cookbooks in the reading room at the British Museum. Not long after, she was cooking and writing for the Daily Mirror starting in 1969, where she met her husband, Michael Wynn Jones.
Many television episodes, newspaper articles, books (21 million sold), a website, and even a soccer club later, Delia continues to deliver basic, commonsense, always-trusted cooking advice, recipes, and technique. She’s so successful at delivering the goods that, within the world marketplace, there’s now something called “The Delia Effect.” Which means it’ll sell like the proverbial hotcakes, as her stamp on anything makes product fly off the shelves in the UK. Reportedly, egg sales in England rose by 10% after her book How to Cook was published.
Delia’s Complete How to Cook can be ordered through amazon.com, as can other volumes, though some appear to be more available overseas than here in the States. Time for a few days in London, I’d say.
Reading through recipes and trying to decide which to try for this blog, I found no shortage of tasty and wonderful-sounding things to cook. Oven-Baked Smoked Pancetta and Leek Risotto caught my eye, as did Grilled Venison Steaks with Red Onion, Grape, and Raisin Confit, a selection from Delia’s website under the banner, “What Should You be Cooking This Month?” There’s also a tab for ingredients and the available recipes to use them. Special diets, Under 30 minutes, Freezing, and Cooking for One are just a few of the sections you might want to peruse on the site. I especially enjoyed “Recipe of the Day” and “Competitions.” At the very bottom are links to lists of recipes like, “French,” “Pasta,” and so on. While it might not be true, the website has every indication of containing a good portion of her thirty-plus years’ recipes and information, which makes it a treasure trove, to say nothing of a great value.
You could make “Italian Baked Fish” (and who doesn’t want more baked fish recipes) as did I, and give Delia a whirl:
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| First: Make a little marinara with mushrooms. |
italian baked fish serves 4 (recipe courtesy deliaonline.com)
4 thick pieces of cod or other white fish (MN cooks: try our Lake Superior white fish here.)
2T olive oil (no need for extra virgin oil)
1 medium onion, finely chopped
1 fat clove garlic, crushed
1# ripe tomatoes or 400g tin of Italian tomatoes
4 oz (110 g) sliced mushrooms
1 T chopped fresh basil
1 T capers, chopped
Juice of 1/2 lemon
12 black olives (I opted for kalamata.)
Salt and freshly ground black pepper
method
Start by making a good, thick tomato sauce: heat the olive oil in a saucepan and fry the onion for about 5 minutes. Now add the garlic and tomatoes. Season with salt and pepper, then bring to a simmering point and cook gently, uncovered, for 15 minutes, stirring occasionally.
Next add the sliced mushrooms, making sure they are well stirred in. Simmer for a further few minutes until it looks like a thick sauce. Lastly, stir in the fresh basil and chopped capers.
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| Next, season the fish with lemon, salt, and pepper |
Now place the fish in a shallow baking dish or tin, season with salt and pepper and sprinkle a little lemon juice on each piece. Next spoon an equal quantity of the sauce on to each piece of fish and arrange a few olives on top. Cover the dish with foil and bake on a high shelf (in upper 1/3 of oven) for about 25 minutes, depending on the thickness of the fish. Serve with new potatoes or brown rice and a tossed green salad.
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| Last, top with marinara, and bake. |
I sometimes cook fish right down in a chunky tomato-onion-garlic-etc bath either on top of the stove or in the oven; you might try that idea if it appeals to you. Here’s my fast snapper in tomato sauce. Get your vegetables, honey.
Next week, join us when we’ll feature #36, Edna Lewis. “The granddaughter of an emancipated slave, Lewis, another Judith Jones protégée, brought sophisticated Southern dishes into the spotlight.”
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If you’d like to cook a few other gorgeous Delia Smith (or other) meals, click on the blogs of the food bloggers featuring Gourmet Live’s 50 Women Game-Changers in Food this (or another) week:
Val – More Than Burnt Toast, Taryn – Have Kitchen Will Feed, Susan – The Spice Garden, Heather – girlichef, Miranda – Mangoes and Chutney, Jeanette – Healthy Living Mary – One Perfect Bite, Kathleen – Bake Away with Me, Sue – The View from Great Island Barbara – Movable Feasts , Linda A – There and Back Again, Nancy – Picadillo Mireya – My Healthy Eating Habits, Veronica – My Catholic Kitchen Annie – Most Lovely Things, Claudia – Journey of an Italian Cook, Alyce – More Time at the Table, Amrita – Beetles Kitchen Escapades
~~~~~
What’s on Alyce’s blog about cooking for one, Dinner Place?
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| Pork Tenderloin Salad with Berries and Oranges and a Sherry Vinaigrette |
Thanks for stopping by.
just for fun, here’s the early video of Delia teaching pastry-making in the late ’70s. courtesy BBC Bake a new tart, Alyce
Homemade Tomato Soup and Fried Cheese on a Snowy Night or How’s the Second Week of Advent Goin’ for Ya?
The story goes that tomato soup and grilled cheese sandwiches…. Actually, I don’t know that story. If you do, tell me. I just can’t remember when I didn’t eat that comforting, homey classic Saturday noon meal. My kids grew up eating it, but mama’s got a brand new bag.
This time around, I made the tomato soup myself. No sugar, sweetheart. Just a drop of honey to counteract the acid in the tomatoes. And…no grilled cheese sandwich. Not for me. Dave had one. Instead, I fried my cheese and gently topped my soup with it.
It was creamy, crunchy and fulfilled all those grilled cheesey longings while I skipped the bread on a cold, cold night with the snow flying across the piano window:
Homemade Tomato Soup with Fried Cheese
In a food processor (or by hand, chopping) fitted with the steel blade, place:
- 1 small onion
- 2 stalks celery
- 1-2 peeled carrots
- 1/2 cup parsley
- 2 garlic cloves
- 1/4 of a lemon, including the peel
Process pulsing until the vegetables are evenly and quite finely minced.
In a 4-6 qt stock pan, heat over medium heat
- 1 T olive oil
When quite warm, spoon in the minced vegetables and let cook 5 minutes until softening.
Add:
- 1 28 oz can chopped tomatoes (I like Cento tomatoes.)
- 1/2 cup white wine or water
- 1tsp honey
- 1/2 tsp sea salt
- 1/4 tsp freshly ground white pepper
- 1/4 tsp of chili-garlic sauce or a few drops of Tabasco
Bring to a boil and lower heat to a simmer. Let cook slowly about 20 minutes, stirring regularly. If desired, puree using an immersion blender or by carefully returning (1/2 at a time) mixture to food processor. Taste and season again, if needed. Lower heat to very low and make the fried cheese:
Fried Cheese
You’ll need 1 large, thin slice of cheese for each serving. I used low-sodium Swiss Cheese, but Cheddar would also work well. Don’t use too soft of a cheese.
Directions: In a small skillet, heat 1T olive oil over medium heat. Place the cheese slice in the pan, and watching closely, let melt well. Meantime, ladle the soup into the bowl. Scrape out the melted cheese into a bowl full of soup and put the skillet back on the heat briefly. Using a good spatula, scrape the now crispy leavings of the cheese into the bowl. Eat while hot.
Two-Dog Kitchen and Around the ‘Hood
It’s the second Sunday of Advent. In my world, we’re moving daily through the journey toward the stable. Trying to figure out how to be ready for God to be born in our hearts. Taking a good look at what we’ve stored in there over the last year as it’s been that long since we took inventory and marked down the things that didn’t sell. Looking in dark corners. Blowing away the dust and sweeping away the cobwebs that can’t be there if we are to prepare him room. While it can seem odd, we are continually waiting for Jesus to come again.
So today, we sang and talked, and lit candles. Took communion together and sang, “Wait for the Lord, whose day is near.” Jody played the accordian and the sounds of the guitars, banjo, organ, piano, and steel guitar raised the roof to praise God and to make alive our wonders and wanders.
At home, we’ve got the tree, but it’s not up. Had a great day Saturday at Bachman’s looking at the decorations and buying a new tree, but it’ll sit out in the garage a while. The Christmas dishes are out. The table has the Christmas candles to grace it, and the many boxes of butter for the cookies are ready in the freezer. Down in the basement, there are stacks of flour, sugar, and chocolate. Almonds, raisins, and pecans. Invitations went out today to draw friends in for a bit of cheer on a Saturday afternoon not too far away. We’re finishing chores like the painted trim in the kitchen and getting curtains up… “What? Are you waiting for Christmas?” takes on new meaning.
The choir is working hard to be ready to sing our cantata next week. Joseph and Patricia Martin’s “Canticle of Joy” is our offering and our study…our way and our journey this year. All over the world, I’m comforted to think choirs are doing that same thing. Moving in on the music, getting it in their hearts, and making it one of their priorities. Makes you learn the story with your whole body when you sing it.
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| Here are a few at our rehearsal with Cabrini for Thanksgiving service. |
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| At Bachman’s looking for a tree…. |
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| Did you ever see a blue or purple poinsettia? |
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| Elephant topiary next to the poinsettia tree. |
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| Which one? |
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| Beautiful, but out of our price range. |
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| Finally getting our curtains up once we got home. |
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| The Tuckster’s been eating snow. |
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| Curtains! |
And so things are getting ready for Christmas… slowly, but surely. And at your house? Here’s a bit of Advent reading I thought I’d share:
Sing a new carol,
Alyce
Instant Supper or Why I love Eggs, Honey
There are days when you just don’t want to put that book down.
Remember those? As a kid, my mom would not argue with me at suppertime if I was under a tree on a blanket with my nose in a book. I try to do the same for myself nowadays on occasion.
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| This day, I just watched the dogs. No time to cook. |
Or there are times you’ve stayed on the phone too long with your sister.
Your best friend.
Your boss.
If you’re a piano player, your butt might have been stuck to the bench, right?
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| Here’s someone I’ve spent hours talking with. Thanks, God. |
Or maybe you’re just tired. Somebody burned up your brain online and you keep waking up at 4 and your cousin’s in an awful personal jam and work’s a mess and your dog got a thorn in his paw and you had to have a tooth pulled (like I did Friday) and … well… and..
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| Maybe you taught a piano student to make chocolate mousse that afternoon. |
Perhaps you broke down and spent the cash to go see a movie and got home at 7.
And then you just thank God for scrambled eggs. Maybe scrambled eggs and tomatoes, if it’s summer.
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| From my garden |
Could be scrambled eggs and toast. Or asparagus. Even a few fried potatoes (if you microwave them first, it’s even faster), eh?
In this case: in under five minutes, you can cook up some grated summer squash with a tish of onion or garlic, add your eggs, stir, plate, and top with salsa.
There’s nothing magical about it. Except that it tastes very good, is quite filling, and takes no time away from the weird novel your neighbor left on your porch. Or from listening to a Charpentier Christmas Cantata or David Russell’s guitar music. From playing with the dog. Chatting with your husband. Try it:
Scrambled Eggs with Grated Squash and Salsa– Serves 1; doubles or quadruples easily
Into a small skillet heated over medium heat, measure 1-2 teaspoons olive oil. Grate 1/2 cup summer squash (yellow, zucchini, etc.) and chop 1-2 teaspoons of onion or 1/2 teaspoon of garlic. Place vegetables in the skillet and cook for a couple of minutes until softened. If you like, throw in a teaspoon or two of the fresh herb of your choice here; I like basil. Meantime, whisk (or fork) together two eggs and a teaspoon of water and pour over the squash. Season well with salt and pepper. Let eggs cook until about half-way set and stir briefly. Remove from pan while still tender. Top with salsa and serve with sliced tomatoes or toast. Et voila. Dinner is served.
Two-Dog Kitchen or Around the ‘Hood
Whenever I start a new job, my brain is full. So goes it these last two weeks. Lots to dream of in this lovely worship space where God engages my heart…
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| Prospect Park United Methodist, Minneapolis, MN |
The beautiful thing is, I told Gabby and Tucker (who must wait at home when I’m gone),
is that I’m so very aware of the change-the transition–, once more, from writer-cook and pianist to church choral director. And while it isn’t easy in many lives, it is a truth that we are called to be together. And together singing–however it happens–is fun indeed. On 9-11, I’m so very grateful to be alive to share my voice. Thanks to all the singers in my life. And thanks, God!
Sing a new song,
Alyce
Chicken, Chicken, Chicken or It’s Still Hot Around Here
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| Don’t know what to do with chicken? How about cook it? |
I simply don’t know how to do anything without doing it with all my heart. In fact, I don’t. Unless it’s washing sheets (yes, I’ll do it today), cleaning the stairs (twice a week with golden retrievers), driving through construction (not on googlemaps, of course), going to the DMV, shopping for a pair of black pants at Macy’s (How many places could black pants be and how much should I pay?), or picking up the trash folks leave in my yard (the price for living in the city.) I mean, boredom or even half-heartedness is not interesting and I don’t learn or grow from it. Thriving on change is a good way to live. Especially since change is the way things are. The new normal. Change, in fact, is the status quo. Hmm.
So when I look at the stack of chickens in my freezer (Book club friend’s husband has a tie to great organic, free-range poultry and the order just came a couple of weeks ago.) and go, “Oh, no!” I rear my head in disappointment at myself and begin dreaming chicken.
With tomatoes
With pasta
In the oven
On the grill
On potatoes
Poulet au vin blanc (chicken with white wine)
In soup
Con poblanos (with green chiles)
Next to asparagus
For sandwiches
TACOS!!
In the crock pot
Snuggled up in noodles, celery, and onions
In a world where the hungry numbered 925 million in 2010, I am embarrassed that how I cook chicken is even a topic. I do indulge myself on this blog, however, and go on after breathing deeply.
The other night, I just couldn’t come up with anything terribly new and entertaining for chicken (in the summer) and just began throwing the parts into the pan. They’d get done, wouldn’t they? We’d eat, wouldn’t we? But, wait: first the parts should be seasoned very well with salt and pepper. (Leaving out an entrancing snout-full of pepper is what people often do with chicken. And it’s pale and insipid and oh, you fill in the blank. Same for salt. Poultry HAS to be well-seasoned, whatever you choose to do it with. Particularly if you’re eating it as is or the poultry is of the very inexpensive sort.) And, oh, let’s roll into the pan some fragrant olive oil if we’re just cooking it any which old way.
As this what-the-hell supper began to cook, here’s what it looked like:
You know the drill; you have the picture. Well, I don’t know what you do with yours, but I’m not standing there watching chicken cook. I had other fish to fry. (Right.) After it browned well on both sides (a good 5-7 minutes each side over medium-high heat), I threw that sucker in the oven to finish cooking for another 20-25 minutes or so:
And wondered what else was for dinner. Just like you. A quick bang of the pantry and frig doors showed pasta, rice, capers, carrots, yellow squash, celery, lemon, and feta. On the counter were onions and garlic because in Alyce’s kitchen, God (and a gardening neighbor) is good and those things are always there. A glass full of basil sat at the sink. Mint’s in a pot next to the tub of rosemary (that needed water so badly it looked like a Christmas tree in January) outside my backdoor. And because there’s a difference between eating and enjoying the meal with my husband, I began to grab pots, knives, cutting board, and so on. It soon appeared that an orzo salad was coming together as orzo cooks quickly and is a great home for savory and piquant additions. And oh how I love olives! with orzo and feta. No olives, though, more’s the pity. Capers would have to suffice unless I wanted to sprint to the store during rush hour. Probably not. Before the chicken was done, the salad was ready:
So you have the idea of the chicken. Season well, brown throughly on both sides, and finish in a moderate (350 F) oven until quite browned and juices run clear or thermometer registers 165 F. Unsure about temperatures, read the USDA guidelines–very simple. While the chicken is in the oven, cook the orzo and chop the veg and cheese. While this chicken with an orzo salad isn’t an instant meal, it’s fairly quick and hits the major food groups in a tasty way. And, hey! There would be leftovers for lunch. Yum leftovers. Who isn’t, after all that, glad to reach in the frig and pull out a piece of chicken come noon?
Take the time to season this baby (the orzo salad) lovingly. It takes a bit of thought, and trial/error, but you can go from “Yeah, that’s ok” to “Wow!” with attention, care, and a bit of knowledge. Generally the wow factor comes from one of these:
The best ingredients you can find
Thorough, but not over-seasoning
Not over-cooking
Use fresh herbs (usually at the very end before serving)
Appropriate addition of acid (in this case lemon juice)
If you’re unsure, take a small portion, add the questionable ingredient and try it. See if that’s going to make the difference. Take three small portions and try three techniques…which do you like? You have nothing to lose and everything to gain by this process. So here’s how I did it this time:
Alyce’s Orzo Salad on That Day (amounts are approximate) Serves 4 (as does a whole chicken)
1 cup uncooked orzo
1/2 cup each chopped finely diced carrots or cucumber, and yellow squash
1/4 cup chopped celery
2 cloves garlic smashed and finely minced (or more to taste)
2T minced red onion
2T ea chopped fresh mint and basil
1/4 c chopped fresh parsley
Pinch of oregano
1T capers (or a small handful of chopped kalamata olives)
1/2 t grated lemon zest
Kosher salt and pepper to taste (try just a bit of salt at first as capers and feta are salty)
Big pinch of crushed red pepper
1T white or red wine vinegar
3T extra virgin olive oil, divided (You’ll use some to flavor the hot orzo and some later for dressing.)
Juice of half a lemon
Optional: Top with 1/2 cup chopped tomatoes and a sprinkle of pine nuts or toasted chopped walnuts
Directions:
- Cook orzo according to package directions and drain well. Pour the orzo into a mixing bowl and stir in 1 T of the olive oil. Sprinkle with just a pinch of salt and pepper.
- Add vegetables (including garlic and onions), feta, herbs, oregano, capers or olives, and lemon zest. Stir well.
- Add salt, pepper, and crushed red pepper. Taste and reseason.
- Sprinkle with vinegar and stir. Drizzle in other two tablespoons of olive oil and stir again. Add tomatoes and nuts, if using. Taste and adjust seasonings if necessary.
- Squeeze lemon over all.
- Serve warm, at room temperature, or cold. Store leftovers in refrigerator, tightly covered, for 2-3 days.
Another cook might have added finely chopped fennel, marinated artichokes, green peppers, jicama….and so on.
Two-Dog Kitchen and Around the ‘Hood
It isn’t quite the last rose of summer (above), but there are moments, despite the heat, that I want to run to each flower and smell each one up close while I can. I bravely planted some new things last week near the perennial hibiscus in my corner garden. I’ll show you when they bloom. (Please bloom.)
What else I’m cooking:
I’m considering some new recipes for those who are in the healing process or need softer meals:
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| A lovely butternut (and other) squash soup with thyme for garnish. |
A healthier, chock-full of stuff zucchini bread is in the works and you’ll read about it here first.
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| Whole wheat zucchini bread with dried cherries, raisins, nuts and bits of dark chocolate for your heart. |
About the house:
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| And will it look like this again? Guess so. |
I am finally getting my house to make sense nearly three months after the moving truck arrived. While the kitchen, bedrooms and dining room quickly fell into place (though bedding and tablecloths still seem to be in short supply), the living room defied taming. A small, but pleasant light teal room that has a 3-season porch attached and boasts a bright, clean piano window (Thanks to my friend, Chris Brown:), it just made me shake my head (read that want to puke) whenever I took the time to look at it. Now my living room, unlike some, is in constant use. I often work at home and am at the piano or on the couch (with the good lamp) reading and studying. I run between the pots in the kitchen to the hymnal on the stand to the computer to write and I need that room to not only be comfortable, but to be feng shuied mighty fine. I nurse a glass of wine in there while enjoying the Sunday New York Times sometimes in the evening. (I never get it done on Sundays.) I sit and read while Dave naps with his head on my lap. The dogs have their favorite spot on the wool rug. To say nothing of sharing a cup of coffee with a friend. But the room had its own ideas about itself and it wanted to be tilted in the direction of what appeared to be a huge (it is) piano and a squeezed in sofa with two chairs nearly on top of one another in the corner with a beautiful table that cried, “Get rid of me. I’m too crowded.” It made my lip curl like Elvis and my brow crease like Bruce Willis when he’s in a real tight place. I said nasty stuff about my furniture. Talked about paying designers. Wrote friends who WERE designers. Hemmed and hawed. (What is hemmed and hawed?)
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| They aren’t concerned about what color the walls are; they just want to be together. Rightly so. Love dogs! |
Our physical selves often mimic our emotional or spiritual circumstances and, in this case, it was exactly so. (Thanks to old friend Rev. Virginia Memmott for knowing that.) As long as I hithered and thithered and dithered about the move, living in Minnesota , the hot summer, our Colorado house, the need for a job, etc, I couldn’t settle down enough to “see” how things had to be.
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| Living room the day the truck arrived |
One day last week, after receiving word of my new choir director job at Prospect Park United Methodist (Come sing!), I just walked in there, started moving stuff, called Dave down to pound nails in the walls for artwork, and found a way for that room to be arranged that not only made sense, but was downright charming. After a day or so, I also saw that the light had changed. The walls were more awake and you could read more easily as the sun was now in its late August position. No more cave feeling. And I like it. And so there, room. And, while it’s still hot outdoors, my eyes fall upon space that is welcoming, comfortable, and full of the things I love. I didn’t have to go buy all new furniture or consign the art; I just had to give myself time to breathe and want the space to work. Thanks, God.
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| A bit more welcoming, huh? |
Below: Late hostas blooming on the east side of the house. In other places, leaves are falling and the acorns crunch underfoot. The acorns are even falling on the patio table that sits below a maple tree. Now there IS an oak tree in the yard next door. And somehow the acorns are moving from the oak to the maple and falling on us during dinner.
Sing a new song,
Alyce































































































































