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HOW TO FREEZE PEACHES, CORN AND GREEN BEANS FOR WINTER

Last week, we discussed freezing zucchini to enjoy later, but there are other items available in late summer which can be similarly preserved to have handy during the months ahead. I’m not talking about ‘stocking up for the winter’. That’s far too time and space consuming for today’s lifestyle. This is about having enough of certain produce items to make a featured dish for a holiday feast, or to serve as occasional reminders of warm, sunny days during cold, snowy ones.

Still, not all of the produce so plentiful in the early fall is suitable for freezing. The best way to tell is to check the glass cases in the supermarkets. If an item isn’t there, it doesn’t commercially flash-freeze well and won’t survive the slower domestic process. This especially applies to things with high water content and soft flesh, tomatoes, plums and eggplant for example. The frozen water content forms crystals which attach to the other frozen elements in their make-up, thaw faster and drain the item of its juice and flavor, leaving a deflated, pulpy mass. These items are better canned, or for tomatoes, optionally, dehydrated, allowing the juices to remain or dry in the flesh, retaining flavor.

You’ll probably think that the best choices from the late summer crops to freeze, green beans, corn and peaches are ‘Ho-hum already done’ and you’d be right. However, I can promise you the difference in texture, flavor and appearance between commercially processed and what you do yourself, will be a happy surprise, no, make that shock.

There are a few tips to simulate the commercial flash-freezing process which help to assure a good result. The difference between treatment of the 3 items discussed here is noted at each step. Of course, they should be cleaned and prepped first; the beans trimmed, any strings removed, the corn husked and silk brushed off, the peaches washed, stems removed.

  • For corn and peaches bring a pot of water to a boil, for beans use a skillet.
    1) Immerse the beans only until they turn bright green (blanched) about10-15 sec.
    2) Dip the peaches about 10-30 sec. until the skins will peel easily
    3) Cook the corn on cob about 5 min. until just beginning to tenderize.
  • Immediately run cold water over the produce to stop the cooking
  • Spread a counter top with paper towels
    1) Lay the beans and corn cobs out, separated, to dry
    2) Using a sharp knife, peel the skin off the peaches. Do not allow to dry. Start freezing prep.
  • Cover cookie sheets with waxed paper
    1) Spread the beans out separately on the cookie sheet and freeze
    2) Brace the bottom of each corn cob in the center of a tube pan. Using a sharp knife, slice off the kernels, letting them fall into the pan. Spread them evenly over the lined sheet and freeze.
    3) Slice the peaches, about 6 per half, directly onto the lined sheet, not overlapping, and freeze.
  • Freeze the produce according to your freezer’s rate, usually between 40-60 min.

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To Package: The reason for freezing the produce on cookie sheets is to capture color, freshness and taste. The reason to take pains to be sure there’s no overlapping is to avoid clumping and damage in storing, as well as to make it easy to remove a desired portion. It’s important the packaging maintain these assets.

  • Use zip lock bags or square plastic boxes with secure lids, like those used for dinner entrees.
  • Do not let the items thaw, package for storage quickly
  • Place the items in the containers individually, not overlapping
  • If layering is necessary to fill the container, separate them with accordion-like folds of waxed paper-not plastic wrap
    1) the corn is best in bags and should be spread to an even thickness
    2) The beans can be arranged in a uniform layers in bags or boxes.
    3) The peach slices should be placed individually in each layer, and dusted with a thin coating of powdered sugar before being covered with the paper for the next layer, in boxes.
  • Make room in the freezer to store these containers flat, even stacked, but never on end, allowing the contents to clump together

Cooking: Because these items have been blanched and domestically frozen, which takes more time than the commercial flash method, they take a few minutes less time to cook. Here are some general guidelines. Individual recipes follow.

  • Normally green beans need 15 min.to steam or boil. These should be checked at about 10 min. frozen, 8 min. thawed. Take about 5 min. off roasting time too.
  • It takes about 2 ears of corn for a single serving as a side dish and that’s a lot to freeze. If you have room for this-fine, but if not use this corn to add to casseroles, salads, side combos or even salsa. Done this way it will stand up to cooking in a dish or just being tossed in a salad.*
  • The peaches quickly lose their juice when thawed and are best used directly from the freezer. Remember they have a thin coating of sugar and adjust other ingredients accordingly

*I come from a state famous for its white table corn. My Mother-in-Law was a master at freezing it. She taught me the tube pan trick and her winter dinners occasionally featured sides of buttered corn. She froze it in 1 cup bags which she considered a single portion or the amount usually required for adding to 4 portion dishes. She stored the bags in large plastic containers in the freezer. If you’re a corn lover and have access to a lot of it, plus the freezer space, this is the way to go.

Now on to the recipes.

Beans: Hand select the beans to be frozen, choosing the largest, firmest, straightest ones. This assures even freezing and makes the best presentation later. As stated above, they cook as directed for commercially frozen ones, only for a bit less time, depending on your appliances and can be used in the same ways. Always serve these whole; cut beans are too ordinary to be ‘special ‘.

 

 

Of course, the easiest and often most attractive way to serve green beans is simply to add toppings. Fresh herbs such as thyme, sage and rosemary are favorite toppings and mushrooms and Karmelized onions are popular add-ins too. Broiled portabellas, sliced, are wonderful, so are button caps first lightly broiled in butter with soy sauce added, then reheated, poured over the beans. A good entrée suggestion is:

Ham and Beans au Gratin: Serves 4
1 lb. beans or about 80 whole beans
8 slices Deli ham – custom cut 1/16 to 3/8 of an inch thick
½ cup grated sharp cheese
2 cups milk
4 Tbs. butter
4 Tbs. flour
¼ tsp. garlic powder
Salt& pepper
Paprika and dried parsley for garnish
1 envelope chicken bouillon granules –optional
Parboil the beans until crisp tender, about 8 min. Shock under cold water and drain well. Divide the beans into 8 piles of 10 beans each, and wrap each bundle in a slice of ham. Place bundles in a greased dish, seam side down. Make a simple cream sauce by heating the butter in a saucepan until it foams, Add the flour and stir to a smooth paste. Quickly add the milk, return to medium heat and stir constantly until sauce becomes smooth and thick, about 3 min. Add seasonings; pour the sauce over the bean-ham bundles and top with the cheese and garnish. Bake at 350 deg. until bubbly and cheese melts and browns slightly, about 15 min. Serve hot at once. Tip: plate with a spatula, taking care to serve the bundles intact.

Corn: Don’t try to freeze corn-on-the-cob. It isn’t that great commercially and even worse domestically. Make sure the ears are silk-free before you cut the kernels off because shreds of silk will mat them when frozen and can ruin any dish.

As stated, the best use of the corn is as an addition to another dish, and, of course, that depends on the recipe for the dish. If it’s a cold salad or salsa, dip the bag with the corn into boiling water for about 3 min. then shock under cold. Otherwise just add to the recipe as directed. The following salad is a refreshing change in winter

Corn Salad: Serves 4
2 cups corn kernels-thawed and parboiled-see directions above
½ a jarred fire-roasted red pepper- in thin strips about ½ inch long

 

 

2 scallions-white and light green portions only, sliced thin
1/3 of a green bell pepper –finely diced
1/3 cup light vinaigrette
4 medium tomatoes seeds hollowed out or 4 Roma tomatoes, halved lengthwise and seeds removed.
Mix the vegetables; toss with the dressing, fill the tomatoes and chill before serving.

Peaches: Keep the peaches in the boiling water only long enough to loosen the skin. The riper the peach the less time it takes. Hold the peach on a slotted spoon under cold water, until cool enough to handle; prick it with a paring knife and peel off the skin. Place the peaches on a waxed paper covered flat surface until all the fruit is peeled, then begin slicing each for freezing over the paper covered cookie sheet, making sure the slices don’t touch. Freeze, then lightly dust with powdered sugar as boxed.

When frozen, place the slices in a 4 inch square freezer box. Supermarkets sell these in 3-packs. Place the slices, without touching, in layers and separate the layers with a long strip of waxed paper woven accordion style between layers. Peaches are best used frozen and thawed in a dish’s preparation. Remember in using them that they are lightly sugared and adjust the recipe.

Frozen this way peaches consume more room than packaged in bags, so, unless you have a lot of space, they’re best reserved for accessory dishes like salsas and sauces. If you plan a dish using a quantity of them, like a pie, for a winter event, make it, then freeze it in a metal pan, and bake it frozen, just add about 15 min. to the oven time.

Peach Salsa; Yield 3 cups
2 cups peaches
½ cup sliced grape tomatoes-or chopped tomato
½ green bell pepper-chopped
1 scallion-thinly sliced-white and green parts only
Generous dash garlic powder
Dash cayenne pepper
1 Tbs. chopped fresh cilantro
1 tsp. lemon juice
Salt and pepper to taste
Mix all the ingredients in a bowl and allow flavors to meld for about 20 min. Store covered and chilled for 2 days. Serve with fish, poultry and rice.

Peach Syrup Topping –Filling: Yield 1 ½ cups
1cup peaches
1 Tbs. butter
1/3 cup apple juice

 

 

1tsp.lemon juice
1 tsp. corn starch
Pinch powdered ginger-optional
Sugar to taste-if needed-preferably brown
1 tsp. – 1 Tbs. Brandy, rum, Madera or Triple Sec-optional—extracts may be substituted
Mix the liquids and flavorings in a cup and dissolve the corn starch. Melt the butter in a skillet over medium heat and add the peaches, gently stirring and shaking until the color brightens 1-2 min. Add the liquid and continue stirring gently until the mixture thickens and clarifies-3 min.

Use over ice cream or slices, optionally toasted, of pound or angel food cake.

Quick Dessert Cups: Serves 6
12 wonton wrappers
2 Tbs. butter
1 ½ cups peach filling
½ cup whipped cream or flavored yogurt
2 Tbs. all fruit spread-optional, but keeps pastry from becoming soggy if cups are prepared ahead.
6 cup muffin pan
Place a wrapper diagonally in each muffin cup. Brush with butter and lay another diagonally across the first, so the 4 corners stand up in points. Brush with butter and bake in a preheated 350 deg. oven for 10 min. until golden. Cool and remove from the pan; can be done ahead. Spread a teaspoon of the jam in the bottom of each wonton cup, and divide the filling among them. Top with a dab of yogurt or whipped cream.

Don’t forget the thawed peach slices can be used by themselves scattered over ice cream, meats, in salads, mixed with winter fruits in compotes and other ways, even over cereal to brighten a dreary winter morning.

SAVE SOME ZUCCHINI FOR WINTER

At the end of summer we’re often so focused on the luscious stone fruits, peaches, plums, etc., the big, ripe tomatoes and the sweet yellow corn that we tend to take another currently plentiful produce item for granted-the zucchini, which may be most versatile ‘vegetable’ of all. (Zucchini is actually a fruit, specifically a berry.) It has an interesting history too.

Zucchini is not Italian, but like all squash, native to the Americas. It was brought to Europe centuries ago along with its cousin the yellow squash. Together they were called ‘summer squash’; a name still used for the yellow ones. The Northern Italians, especially the Milanese and Tuscans developed the green squash into the product as we now know it, as well as a golden version, and gave it its present name, which is generally universal, though in England it’s called a ‘Marrow’ and in France a ‘Courgette’. Zucchini’s easy cultivation and adaptability to other ingredients led to its quick inclusion in ethnic cuisines as far East as Turkey.

It didn’t return to the U.S. until the late 19thcentury and remained relatively unnoticed until we began our culinary expansion in the 1970s. Now it’s hard to find a cookbook without several listings and, like cantaloupe, a cultivated, cosmetic, version is available all year at a stable price. It’s so versatile that it can be found in dishes for every meal in everything from bruschetta starters, to entrees, to baked goods. For this reason, I’m not going to include a long list of recipes for zucchini but rather deal with how to use it and/or preserve it especially the farm produced local crops.

Zucchini is very prolific and there’s often a surplus at the end of the season, even for back-yard gardeners. One partial solution, I’m told, is to eat the flowers before they mature. These are delicious prepared stuffed or fried in recipes readily available especially on the web, but usually there is still over abundance at this time of year.

Due to high water content, zucchini doesn’t freeze well, even by commercial flash-freezing. Whole it deflates when thawed and slices clump in freezing. So how does one avoid wasting the extra? I’ve had some success for short periods, freezing thick slices on a cookie sheet before bagging them or freezing it in a sauced dish like ratatouille. However, one of the best ways to preserve zucchini is to accept the fact that it’s going to change texture, become limp and combine it, with other ingredients, into a ‘base’, which will keep for several months, for future dishes. Food Tips and Cooking Tricks by David Joachim has an excellent recipe for such a base and ideas on how to use it but, of course, once made, you can use it as you please.

 

 

Zucchini Base; Yield 8 cups
5 lbs. zucchini –shredded*
1 onion -finely chopped
1 garlic clove- minced
2 Tbs. oil
Saute onion and garlic in oil until softened. Add zucchini and stir until soft. Cool drain most of the moisture by squeezing in a towel or pressing in a colander. Freeze in desired sized containers with firm lids.
* To shred, use a food processor or the large teeth of a hand grater, but avoid the seedy core.

USES: Add salt and pepper as desired to all the below
Chilled Zucchini Soup
: 4 servings
1 chopped onion
1 minced garlic clove
2 Tbs. butter
2 tsp. curry powder
1 tsp. coriander
1/8 tsp. red pepper
3 ½ cups base
3 ½ cups chicken or vegetable broth
1cup plain yogurt
¼ cup chopped toasted walnuts
Saute the onion and garlic in the butter until soft. Add the base, seasonings and broth. Simmer 10 min. Add the yogurt and chill. Puree if desired and serve garnished with walnuts.

Hot Zucchini Soup: Serves 4
Follow the directions for the chilled soup omitting the coriander, reducing the curry powder to 1 tsp., changing the yogurt to light cream and optionally choosing beef broth. The addition of left-over meat is welcome as are cooked pasta, diced potatoes or rice.
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Primavera Sauce: Serves 4
1lb. shaped pasta
Follow the directions for the soups, slicing the onion and substituting oil for the butter. Omit the seasonings and add 3 medium chopped tomatoes and 2 Tbs. chopped fresh basil with the base. Cook 2 min. and serve over cooked pasta garnished with ¼ cup grated Parmesan cheese and pass extra cheese.

Stuffed Eggplant: Serves 4
2 eggplants -split lengthwise, seeds removed and most of the meat scooped out and diced
Follow the directions for the sauce, mix it with the diced eggplant and use it to stuff the eggplant shells. Top with the cheese and bake on a sheet in a preheated 350 deg. oven until tender, about 30 min. Serve at once.

Another way to reduce a zucchini surplus is to cook it into baked goods. There are recipes for zucchini bread, muffins and cakes everywhere. Once baked, these items can be frozen and enjoyed months later. Chocolate Zucchini Bread is a real treat in winter. Just add ½ cup unsweetened cocoa powder to the flour and stir ½ cup mini chocolate chips in with the zucchini to convert any bread recipe. For more great sweet zucchini recipes see The Moosewood Restaurant New Classic Cookbook.

Of course, zucchini is best fresh. If confronted with a quantity, it keeps only a few days at room temperature but over a week refrigerated. There are several ways to prepare it which require larger amounts per serving. One is to grill it because it shrinks over the fire.

Stuffed Zucchini: Serves 4
Follow the above recipe substituting 4 zucchini for the eggplant. Simply remove the seeds, stuff with ground meat and cook in the preheated 350 deg. oven for 20 min. for beef, 30min. for other meats, topping with the cheese halfway through. Serve hot with tomato sauce on the side.

Grilled Zucchini: Allow double the amount per portion. This serves 3-4
Cut in thick slabs and marinate in Italian vinaigrette for about an hour. Alternately for 1 ½ lbs. zucchini mix ½ cup salad oil, ½ tsp. garlic powder and ½ tsp. dried basil, plus salt and pepper to taste for the marinade. Grill about 2-3 min. per side until slightly charred.

Roasting zucchini also shrinks it so a larger amount is required per portion. For 1 ½ -2 lb. Toss with 2 Tbs. oil, pinch each garlic powder, crushed fennel seeds (optional) dried basil and dried oregano, salt and pepper to taste. Roast on a sheet in a 400 deg. oven 25-30 min. until vegetables are tender and browned. Serve with Parmesan curls or crumbled Feta.

Fried Zucchini is a great way to use extra zucchini. Allow 1 ½ to 2 per person. Cut the zucchini lengthwise and remove seeds. Cut across into 4 quarters and Julianne each into 3 pieces. Drain on towels for 1 hr. then dredge in flour, shake off excess and lay pieces out on a cookie sheet. Freeze slightly to firm, about 20 min. Heat about 3 inches oil in an open pot and fry zucchini in batches until brown. Drain on paper towels and salt lightly. This works best in an open pot, not a ‘fryer’ but be careful adding the cold zucchini as the oil will sputter.

Baked Zucchini Sticks are an easier option to frying. Cut zucchini as above but only into 8 pieces. For 3 medium zucchini, dip into 3 lightly beaten egg whites mixed with ½ tsp. water then roll in a mixture of ½ cup flour, ½ cup grated Parmesan. ½ cup breadcrumbs, ½ tsp. garlic powder and ¼ tsp. salt. Place on a cookie sheet and bake in a preheated 375 deg. oven for 20 min. until golden. Serve at once. Makes 24.

Microwaving zucchini is my favorite method to cook it for everyday eating. It’s so easy to slice one, add a quarter of an onion sliced, a drizzle of oil, pinch of garlic powder, salt, pepper and herb(s) of choice, basil, oregano, rosemary, fennel ,and nuke it for 3-5 min. until crisp tender. Topped with Parmesan, it’s a great vegetable side, but it’s also good on toast as a snack or sandwich.

 

 

The addition of tomatoes and, optionally, peppers turns it into an instant ratatouille, which is not only a good side, or sandwich filling but makes excellent bedding for fish. Simply spread it in the bottom of a dish, place the fish on top and bake or broil until cooked. Yum!

The added advantage, when made with canned diced tomatoes, is that this concoction freezes for about a month and can be perked up with the addition of cooked cut green beans, mushrooms or spinach to serve at a later date. The addition of rice and sausage, leftover ham or hot dog slices turns it into a quick dinner casserole. It’s a way both of using up fresh zucchini, and also preserving surplus.

So if you see zucchini sales in the market, pass a farm stand with a sign, or are a backyard gardener coping with a big crop, don’t worry. There are ways to take advantage of the sale prices and/or excess without wasting it and you’ll be glad you did. As ordinary as the taste may seem to us now, I can guarantee it will be a welcome change in January.

 

EASY DINNERS FOR BUSY FALL NIGHTS

Fall may be the ‘busiest’ time of year. Getting back into regular routines and adjusting to new schedules, often involving orientations, can be stressful. To those responsible for providing dinners, it’s even more so because the time to prep has to be figured into their day as well. The choice of meal can be a problem too. Sometimes it has to be delayed, and occasionally served in shifts, which means it has to hold well, or be a quick-fix.

As a provider, read Mother, who was often involved in school activities, I had a couple of other requirements. The dinner had to be easy to clean-up and not involve a cooking method that could necessitate a wardrobe change- NO frying, even sautéing.

Over the years, I collected several recipes that I turned to each September. Please check the site Archives for Sept. 2013 Quick Weekday Dinner Recipes for Busy Families and Sept.2015 Amazing Back-to-School Dinners. Simply click BLOG on the header and then select the month and year from the drop-down box on the right side of any page. This year’s entries are a whole new group of recipes and perhaps a bit more upscale, but still well within my requirements.

Unlike past years, some of these recipes require sides. My go-tos are usually frozen French Fries, or Couscous cooked with an envelope of bouillon granules, 1 Tbs. dried parsley and ½ tsp. lemon juice. Of course, a can of sweet potatoes, red beets, or (1) 15oz. can of creamed corn, plus (1) 8 oz. can of whole corn mixed with 2 eggs and sprinkled with cinnamon, microwaved for 2 min.to make a quick corn pudding are also side solutions, as are the many available packaged rice and pasta mixes. Only one recipe will need a vegetable as well.

Most of the dishes below can be made ahead and refrigerated for days, even frozen and finished in the oven or microwave. All will make your weeknights easier.

Make Ahead Beef Skewers: Serves 4 –A make-ahead, easy cook meal. Can be cooked in shifts.
½ cup oil-canola preferred
1/3 cup Teriyaki sauce
2 Tbs. Soy sauce
3 Tbs. red wine vinegar
¾ tsp. mustard powder OR 1 tsp. spicy brown mustard
½ tsp. garlic powder OR 2 tsp. fresh minced

 

 

 

 

1 ½ lbs. lean beef in 2 inch cubes-round, or chuck
2 medium zucchini in 2 inch slices
2 medium summer squash in 2 inch slices
1 red (or other color) bell pepper in 1 ½ inch pieces
(12) 10 inch skewers
Mix first 5 ingredients for the marinade. Alternately thread the meat and vegetables on the skewers, place in a glass or ceramic pan and pour the marinade over. Cover with plastic wrap and refrigerate for up to 4 days. Uncover and broil (allowing dish to warm a bit) 4-6 inches from heat for 4-5 min. Turn and finish cooking to taste. These arealso great for grilling.

Flounder Rolls: Serves 4- Quick cooking, easy to prepare. Can be cooked in shifts.*
I devised this some years ago, for a child who loved spinach but hated fish. Then I was surprised to find out it freezes well using fresh fish, and can be cooked frozen, simply add 6 to 8 min. to the cooking time. Otherwise, just use frozen flounder or tilapia.
4 fish fillets – divided in half lengthwise
(2)10oz boxes of frozen chopped spinach – thawed and drained
2 envelopes chicken or beef bouillon granules
2 eggs
Ground nutmeg
2 tsp. butter
1 lemon quartered
Toothpicks
In a bowl, mix the bouillon packets and the eggs with the spinach, making sure they’re well combined. Divide the mixture into 8 portions, and roll a strip of flounder around each, tail end over the thicker one, leaving enough overlap to secure with a toothpick. Alternately, for larger rolls, divide the spinach into 4 portions and wrap each with 2 pieces of fish over lapping on each side. Press the tops and bottoms to compact the filling.

Preheat oven to 350 degrees, and melt the butter in an ovenproof dish large enough to hold the fish rolls comfortably. Using a spatula, transfer the rolls to the dish, but be sure they are upright and the sides are straight. Sprinkle the tops with nutmeg, and bake about 20-25 min. until fish is very white and opaque, and eggs bubble out of the top making a white foamy sauce. Serve at once with pan juices. Garnish with lemon wedges.
* Can be frozen if using fresh fish, just allow about 5-8 min. of extra cooking time. Otherwise cook within 24 hours of making them, but store well chilled and covered.

 

 

Many methods, others than CBT, have also been suggested. order viagra on line You don’t have to worry much as it happens to almost everyone. buy generic cialis It is very frustrating when you are looking through the site cost of sildenafil ensure that the customer service contact details are functioning before you actually make a payment. tadalafil vs cialis It offers patients a genuine and branded medication, without any doctor’s prescription. Marinated Chicken in Orange Sauce: Serves 4- A make ahead, easy cooking recipe. Can be served in shifts*
1 cup orange juice-preferably fresh
1 Tbs. orange zest
4 Tbs. fresh lemon juice
1/3 cup honey
1 Tb. Worcestershire sauce
2 tsp. dried tarragon
1 tsp. spicy brown mustard
Salt and pepper
4 boneless, skinless breasts or skinless thighs
Place the chicken in a glass or ceramic dish. Mix the first 8 ingredients and pour over; cover, marinate refrigerated overnight. Allow dish to warm a bit and then bake in a preheated 350 deg. oven 30 min. (40 for thighs) basting at least once. Plate and serve hot, with sauce over.
*This dish cooked, can be frozen. Cook about 5 min. less and reheat in 350 deg. oven for about 15 min. To cook it in shifts-prepare dish and set aside a portion. Reheat portion in the microwave for 2 min.to serve.

Linguine Salad with Ham and Vegetables: Serves 4-Can be frozen and eaten cold, room temperature or warm in shifts. Smoked turkey can substitute for the ham.*
8 oz. – 1 full 8 oz. cup frozen cut green beans or chopped broccoli – cooked(easily done in the microwave)
(1) 14 oz. can seasoned diced tomatoes- Italian or Mexican
½ lb. Deli sliced ham julienned or smoked turkey
½ cup grated Parmesan
¼ cup Monterey Jack cheese shredded
1 medium onion in thin slices
(1) 2.25 oz. can sliced black olives – drained
½ cup oil
¼ cup cider vinegar
1 pkg. Good Seasons dressing mix
8 oz. cooked linguine
Optional for serving, toss with 1 ½ to 2 cups ‘baby’ spinach leaves, stems removed
Mix the dressing packet with the vinegar and oil; measure out 2/3 cup and save the rest for another use. Place all the other ingredients in a large bowl and toss with the measured dressing. Serve at room temperature, warm slightly or chill for later. Toss with or bed on spinach if desired, just before serving.
* Freeze, well covered. Thaw in the refrigerator and it’s ready to eat or be heated.

 

 

 

Couscous with Sausage and Vegetables: Serves 4-Can be made2 days ahead and served in shifts*
½ lb. Pork or Turkey link sausage Or 2 pkgs. Brown ‘n Serve sausage
3 cups cooked couscous*
1 each- medium zucchini and summer squash – cut in half lengthwise and sliced
2 small carrots -sliced
1 small onion cut in half and sliced
1 red bell pepper in large dice
¼ tsp. garlic powder
2 Tbs. oil
¾ tsp. curry powder
¾ tsp. cumin
½ tsp. crushed red pepper
1 cup vegetable bouillon
Salt to taste
1/3 cup chopped fresh parsley or 1 ½ Tbs. dried
Heat the oil in a medium pot with a lid and sauté the vegetables until soft, about 5 min. over medium heat. Remove vegetables to a plate and cook couscous* in the same pot, as directed on box. Return vegetables to the pot, with any juices, add the spices and bouillon; cover and let stand for 5 min. Meanwhile cook sausage in the microwave until most of the fat is exuded. Drain fat, slice sausage. The smaller ones in 4 pieces, larger links in about 6 slices each. Add sausage and parsley to couscous mix and adjust salt. Serve at once or refrigerate and reheat in the microwave as needed.

LIKE FROZEN YOGURT? THEN DIY THE FLAVOR

I seem to be stuck in a cold foods’ rut the past weeks, but with all the heat waves this summer it feels natural. So continuing along that path, this week’s posting is for the more health minded people—Frozen Yogurt or Fro-Yo. Hey, you guys, why stick to the flavors in the glass case, when it’s so easy to create your own?

Yogurt is made by fermenting any type of milk, cow, sheep, goat, even soy, full fat to skim, with bacterial cultures. It’s simple to make but whether commercial or home-made, once finished, it must be kept chilled and should be used while fresh. About 2 weeks or 10 days after the sell-by date, the active cultures start to dissipate.

Heating kills the live cultures, so be aware that while yogurt tenderizes meat, moistens baked goods and adds flavor and body to soups and sauces, it doesn’t bring any special ‘health’ benefits to cooked food. On the other hand, freezing inhibits the cultures yet doesn’t totally destroy them, but Fro-Yo isn’t just freezing a container of fresh yogurt. Yogurt, even Greek yogurt contains too much water to freeze evenly; even strained it will separate and be ‘icy’ or ‘gritty’ when frozen.

There are several ways to overcome this. The addition of sugar or corn syrup, which inhibit ice crystals forming, cream, mascarpone, boosted by a bit of cornstarch, even beaten eggs to give a creamy texture all help, but the final step in starting with plain yogurt, always seems to be the use of the ice cream maker.

However, I’ve made it a point in passing on recipes during this very hot summer, especially the ‘Treat’ ones, to avoid space and time consuming requirements. So I’m going to simplify this right now. If you want to make Frozen Yogurt from scratch, to preserve the tartness, Google directions and then use the following recipes to make Fro-Yo in your choice of flavor. Otherwise, start with a container of a commercial brand vanilla frozen yogurt. Incidentally, these recipes also work with ice cream.

One of the beauties of yogurt is that it readily combines with other flavors. When heated it blends in but chilled it hosts them, even spotlights them. So use these recipes as base directions and feel free to take off and follow your fancy. The important thing is to mash the ingredients together until well incorporated so they freeze together smoothly.

Have on hand 2 cups =1 pint vanilla frozen yogurt for (4)1/2 cup=1 scoop servings. Soften in the refrigerator 20-30 min. then mix in the any of the following combinations and refreeze at least 30 min. When soft this can be spooned into popsicle molds and frozen for easy eating.

Bananas Foster
1 large very ripe banana
2 Tbs. rum
1 Tbs. light brown sugar
Slice, then mash the banana with the rum and sugar. Mash again into the yogurt until well mixed. Refreeze.

Burnt Almond
1/3 cup chopped toasted almonds
2 Tbs. grated chocolate
2 Tbs. Amaretto
2 tsp. honey
Mix ingredients and add yogurt, mashing until blended. Refreeze
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Peach-Bourbon*
2 peeled peaches chopped
2 Tbs. bourbon
1 Tbs. dark brown sugar
Mash the ingredients well and mash again with the softened yogurt until blended. Refreeze

Peña-Colada*
8 oz. can crushed pineapple-well drained
2 Tbs. dark rum
1 Tbs. dark brown sugar
1/8 tsp. coconut extract
Mash ingredients well, then mash again into yogurt until well mixed. Refreeze

*Recipes courtesy of Food Tips and Cooking Tricks by David Joachim

It’s easy to imagine more flavor combinations. For example, just off the top of my head:

Baked Apple
2 apples, peeled, cored and chopped
2 Tbs. light brown sugar
1 Tbs. apple juice or cider
1 Tbs. brandy
Pinch cinnamon
Microwave the apple with 1 Tbs. sugar, cider and cinnamon until soft -about 3-5 min. depending on machine. Mash with other ingredients and allow to cool. Mash again with yogurt until well mixed and refreeze.

HOW TO STOCK A VACATION KITCHEN-EVEN FOR A WEEKEND

August is a big month for vacations, but increasingly people are choosing September, even October when the resorts are less crowded, especially for long weekends. If your destination has kitchen facilities, be it for a long weekend in a motel efficiency unit or an extended period in larger digs, it’s often more stressful on the person responsible for the meals than staying home. Not only must they get acquainted with the equipment but making the time to shop and cook shouldn’t intrude on planned activities. Whether for 5 days or 3 months, it can be a daunting task requiring prior planning.

I learned this lesson the hard way. The first summer I was married, we rented a cottage at the seashore near my in-laws vacation homes. My 11 yr. old step-daughter and I were to spend August, with my husband joining us on weekends and for the last week. Though I grew up in a shore resort town, and had had my own city apartment, this was my first vacation rental, and my first time packing for a family. I thought I covered everything, clothes, equipment, toiletries and towels, even toilet paper but the first morning we woke up with NOTHING to eat or drink! Needless to say, we spent it introducing me to the local supermarket and other ‘survival’ important local sites.

This was where I made my second mistake, though not so glaring as the first. Stressed, ‘winging it’ without a definite plan or list, I over bought staples and made impulsive purchases. I should have paused to think more often. I had the situation under control within a week, but was still left with a surplus of products to use or lug home and this wasn’t just packaged food, but wraps, bags, paper, soaps, everything to do with a kitchen.

The next year, I bought a small trunk which I knew would hold ‘collectable memories’ for the return trip. I was in the midst of packing it with staples when I had another revelation. I was looking at this project through the wrong lens. I wasn’t ‘stocking up’ for an extended period; it was 1 month=4 weeks, with a supermarket at hand in case I miscalculated. We didn’t use 4 lbs. sugar a month in winter even with possible baking. At the shore, I might make a rustica (free form pie using ¼ cup) but sugar was really only for beverages. The same was even more true of flour; especially since Kara and I were the only ones there 4 days a week and I don’t fry much, if ever. We only needed to take what we would normally use. So I filled quart jars from my open supplies, and put the new packages in the home pantry.

After that the other supplies fell into line. I found 6-compartment plastic spice/herb carousels in The Dollar Store. I filled 2 of them with my favorites and figured if I ran out, I’d buy more, but I never did. I had worried about taking care of my husband, whose involvement in kitchens began and ended with the dinner table, but then I realized that he was only ‘batching it’ a total of 12 days and of those he had regular plans for 2 days a week while I was gone. So I made him 4 lasagna and 4 chicken in cream sauce, over rice dinners, and planned to send him home with weekend leftovers. That more than covered his wellbeing because he really only needed 6 dinners. It was all a matter of seeing things in the right perspective.

I bought the smaller, lighter household items, wraps, bags, sponges and added them to the trunk, but the larger ones, detergents, a boom, pail, mop etc. I got on vacation in one stop. Also in the trunk were condiments, and just so history didn’t repeat were coffee, dry creamer, tea, a box of cereal, a can of pineapple rings and 2 boxes of honey buns as well as the utensils I had learned I’d need. A full list of these follows.

The first morning that year was very different. We had breakfast! My husband went golfing while Kara and I headed to the Farmers’ Market, which she loved. We bought fruits and produce and from the adjacent dairy we got bacon, sausage, cheese plus local milk, cream, eggs, and butter. The next stop was a prominent marina restaurant with a fish market and artesian bakery. I bought fish, and crab cakes for the next night, lemons, vinaigrette, Cole slaw and a couple of loaves of bread.

By noon, a cold vegetable dish and salad were ready for dinner, the fish chilling and fruit was marinating for dessert. We had fresh BLTs for lunch, and I was ready to enjoy a free afternoon knowing I was set for days as far as meals were concerned. In fact, I don’t think I even went to the supermarket more than twice that whole month, and only food shopped once a week. So I guess I can say that long before I thought of becoming a personal chef, I had discovered from vacation rentals the advantages of planning in advance and shopping once a week. It gives you so much more time!!

None of this would have been possible without my being willing to take time before leaving for vacation, to calculate exactly what I would need and in the proper amounts, or at least in approximation, as with the flour and sugar. Each year I noted what ran out, what was in surplus, what meals were popular and what weren’t. It let me shorten the preparation time and expense, as well as eliminate stress in creating the menus.

As the years passed, so did the long rentals to be replaced by more exotic trips and short get-aways, but the rule of basic food supplies and utensils to include remains solid. Of course the prime one is in any DIY situation, plan a breakfast for the first day! It does set a tone. Nothing fancy, a jar of instant coffee, plain envelopes of tea bags and sugar packets, a jar or envelope of non-dairy creamer or dry milk, even a can of evaporated milk, dried fruit or a can of pineapple rings and a shelf-stable pastry such as honey buns will do and gets the motor running. Of course if only a short car trip is involved, a bag or container of fresh fruit is an option.

The other staple items, in quantity for a long stay or simply replacement ingredients for a short one, should be determined by individual need and use. The one I NEVER skim on is salt. It’s the best extinguisher for a grease fire. In any rental situation, one place that may not have been totally cleaned is the oven, and who knows what a previous tenant cooked? Salt also inhibits mold and in a pinch can clean a greasy sink and drain.
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Utensils, too, are determined by the length of the stay.
For electrical appliances: Rule one is- never take anything valuable or irreplaceable. Coffee lovers can learn to accept old-fashioned percolator or for short term, instant. The only other things I found I needed for a long stay were a hand blender and a mini-chopper. Before packing any electrical appliances, check the type of current at your destination.

Hand Held Utensils: Several of these are handy for even the shortest of stays

  1. Pot holders- A necessity for any stay away from home. These are never provided in any rental kitchen and it can be hard taking hot coffee or warmed-up take out from the microwave with a bath towel.
  2. Towels, both paper and dish-A roll of paper ones can be used as napkins and are great for spills, but the micro-paper ones in 2 pack which are reusable and washable are good for dishes and can be tossed.
  3. Spoons-or at least 1-that stands heat.-A few plastic ones are fine for a weekend, but metal ones and a serving spoon are needed for longer.
  4. Manual can opener– Always a good companion as is an old-fashioned Church Key opener
  5. Knives– A short paring knife to be used for small jobs and for longer stays another with a blade long enough to trim meat or slice bread. For an extended stay there should be a carving knife as well
  6. Hand held knife sharpener-Because no knife is worthwhile if it can’t cut
  7. Scissors-Not shears, but a pair with enough strength to do some kitchen work, yet pointed enough to be useful with mending.
  8. Plastic chopping board-Protects counter tops and provides a clean surface for your food. Light and flat fits in the bottom of a suitcase.
  9. Packets of plastic containers with lids– found in supermarkets in 3paks- most can be microwaved
  10. Small pan with lid-Able to boil a couple of eggs, make a sauce or heat a can of soup–for longer stays or traveling with children

All the above hand held items, with the exception of the knife sharpener and, possibly, the metal spoons can be found in The Dollar Store. Some stores have the plastic containers too. No matter the cost or how well equipped the rental kitchen, chances are it will have none of the above items.

For a more relaxed vacation, just follow these tips and listen to your better judgment. Above all take time to stop, evaluate and plan. You’ll be glad you did!!

Cool Meals For Hot Days

I always thought the coolest thing about learning to cook was being able to have whatever dish you want, when you want it and exactly how you like it. After all the hot weather this year, I’m realizing that the coolest thing, literally, is knowing how to make nutritious, appealing meals with as little cooking as possible!  When it’s too hot outside to fire up a grill, who wants to stand over a hot stove, or even eat  warm food?

The trick is to limit any actual cooking to tasks requiring little supervision, and combine as many of them as possible.  For example, if the week’s menu includes a chicken salad one day, a dish requiring hard-boiled eggs another and a pasta salad on a third, boil the meat and the eggs in the same pot, finish by using the hot water to cook the pasta.  Then simply refrigerate them until needed. That’s the basis of 3 meals in less than 1hr. and no further cooking needed. Even vegetables can be added with other items and kept chilled for later use, though I prefer frozen ones or to blanch fresh for, say Pasta Primavera, done in a microwave

The microwave is a great alternative to the stove for many things, especially in hot weather, but although it reheats meat well, it tends to toughen it cooked from raw. Another option, when a heat wave is forecast, is to prepare a turkey breast and/or a ham to have chilled, ready to cut for different recipes.  To see more salad recipes, check the slider on our Home Page and consult the Archives.

Whichever way you choose to greet the heat, the following dishes will make it more comfortable, even enjoyable. All need only  good artesian bread, so stop at the market bakery and load up or to insure freshness, check my recent post on breads, though it will put you in the kitchen longer.

A few tips on cooking the ingredients for these salads ahead:

  • Boil chicken with bone in. Boneless chicken meat tends to curl unattractively. Rule of thumb, a thigh per serving but 2 large split breasts can do 3 with other ingredients.
  • Boiled eggs are easier to peel fresh from the pan. Run under cold water, crack shell all over with a spoon and peel. Store refrigerated in water in a covered container. They keep for several days, so cook a batch at once.
  • Italians swear by cooking pasta in stock. When the chicken is finished, scoop it out and use the water for pasta.  Drained and drizzled with a bit of oil, pasta will keep, salad ready, for several days in the fridge.

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Shrimp Louis: Serves 4
1 ½ lb. head Romaine lettuce-torn In bite sized pieces
4 hardboiled eggs-quartered
@ 1lb. cooked shrimp with tails—allow about 6-12 per serving depending on size
Dressing
½ cup mayonnaise
1/3 cup sour cream
Pinch mace or nutmeg
Ketchup
Stir the above well in a cup and add Ketchup to equal 1 cup
Toss the romaine in a bowl with 2/3 cup of dressing. Divide among plates and arrange the shrimp over the top. Drizzle with remaining dressing and decorate each plate with 1 quartered egg.

Poached Salmon with Dill Sauce: Per serving
1 Salmon fillet or steak
2 Tbs. mayonnaise
2 Tbs. sour cream
½  tsp. dried dill weed
½ cup frozen cut green beans
1 medium tomato –roughly chopped
Garlic powder, salt and pepper
1 Tbs.oil

½ tsp. dried basil

Fill a pan 1/3rd  with water, add beans. Bring to a boil add salmon and poach 5-8 min. at a simmer. Turn off heat. Remove fish, run under cold water and remove skin and bones, if needed. Place on a plate, covered with plastic wrap and chill. Drain beans and run under cold water. Mix beans with tomato, oil, basil, garlic powder, salt and pepper to taste then chill. Mix mayo and sour cream with  dill and chill, serve on top of salmon with tomato-bean salad on the side.

Tuscan Bean Salad; Serves 2—For more, simply double (leftovers make good brown bags)
(1) 6 oz. can of tuna- drained-solid or chunk white preferred—oil or water optional
(1) 15 oz. can cannellini beans – or navy or Great Northern white beans – drained
2 Tbs. salad or canola oil
1Tbs. balsamic or red wine vinegar
1 Tbs. Dijon mustard
1 tsp. lemon juice
¼ cup fresh basil leaves-chopped or 1 tsp. dried
Oregano-to taste- optional
Whisk the last 6 ingredients in a bowl. Stir in the beans and tuna. Allow to sand a few minutes for the flavors to meld, or refrigerate up to 8 hrs.

Excellent served on spinach leaves, and accompanied by tomato wedges or small whole grape tomatoes.

Tuna with Pasta – 4 Servings
½ lb. (1/2 box) tricolored corkscrew pasta
(1) 5 oz. can solid white tuna
½  cup sliced ripe olives
1 small green bell pepper julienned
2/3 cup halved cherry or grape tomatoes
4 sliced green onions
1 Tbs. capers – optional –minus heavy green tops
Lettuce or baby spinach leaves
Bottled dressing to taste-a vinaigrette, Italian, Greek  or Caesar Or make ½  the vinaigrette recipe under Pasta Primavera.

Put all the salad ingredients, except the pasta and lettuce, in a bowl and drizzle with 1 Tbs. lemon juice. Allow to marinate 5 min. Add cooked pasta and gently toss with dressing. Marinate chilled 8 hr. or overnight, tossing occasionally. Serve well chilled over lettuce or spinach leaves.

Sashimi Salad – 4 servings.
This is one of my few uses for Sashimi, or fish processed to imitate shellfish. There are several brands the most famous label is Louis Kemp.
1 lb. package of sashimi-imitation crab or lobster
1 small head iceberg lettuce, or 1 lb. Romaine
1 medium onion halved and in thin rings
2 cucumbers peeled and seeded, cut in chunks
Salt and pepper
2 Tbs. oil
Bottled Russian, Catalina or French dressing to taste – OR-
2/3 cup mayonnaise and 1/3 cup ketchup with a ½ tsp. ground mace-optionally use nutmeg
Toss the lettuce, onion, cucumber, and sashimi in a bowl with the oil. Pour over the bottled dressing to taste, or the home made Russian dressing. Serve chilled.

Garden Chef’s Salad – 4 dinner servings
6 cups iceberg or romaine lettuce torn
1 small cucumber, peeled, in thin slice
1 medium red onion in thin slices
2 medium tomatoes in large chunks
1 carrot sliced thin
6 radishes, without tops, sliced thin
1 large stalk celery -diced
1/3 cup each, cooked ham, chicken and cheese, either Swiss or cheddar, in 1 inch sliced pieces
1 tsp. dried oregano
1 tsp. dried basil
¼ tsp. sugar
Salt and pepper to taste+ 1 tsp. sugar
¼ cup olive oil
1 Tbs. cider vinegar
Juice of ½ a lemon
½ tsp. garlic powder

Parmesan cheese -optional rather than including cheese in the salad.
Place all the vegetables, except the lettuce, in a bowl. Toss with oil vinegar, dried herbs, salt pepper, and sugar. Cover with lettuce and top with lemon juice and garlic powder. Allow to marinate in the refrigerator for 30 min. Toss well, then add meat and cheese to gently incorporate, and more oil if needed. Optionally garnish with grated Parmesan if using.

Bean Sprout with Beef– 4 servings
2 cups bean sprouts
1 cup pea pods or snow peas- cooked to crisp-tender and sliced on the diagonal
2 cups peeled cucumber cut into matchsticks
½ cup sliced radishes
4 green onions sliced
6 cups torn romaine lettuce leaves
8 oz. sliced roast beef or steak—leftover or Deli
Dressing:
¼ cup soy sauce
1 Tbs. olive oil
1 Tbs. sesame oil
2 Tbs. rice vinegar or white vinegar
1 ½ minced pickled ginger or 1 tsp. minced candied ginger
1/8 tsp. red pepper flakes
1 Tbs. toasted sesame seeds—as garnish
In a blender or jar, thoroughly combine all the dressing ingredients. Line the plates with the lettuce, then divide the bean sprouts equally on top. Arrange the vegetables in equal amounts on top of the sprouts and drizzle the dressing  equally over them. Lay the curled beef slices on top and garnish with the sesame seeds.  .

Cranberry Walnut Chicken Salad:  4 Servings
This is one of my very favorite dinner salads. Can be served in a bowl or plated individually.
1 ½  cups cooked chicken meat in bite sized pieces—leftover turkey or duck can be substituted.
6 cups romaine or iceberg lettuce
½ cup dried cranberries
¼ cup chopped walnuts-toasted is best
½ cup crumbled feta cheese—blue can also be used
@ 1/3 cup bottled raspberry and nut –walnut or pecan – dressing
Salt and pepper to taste
Place the lettuce in a bowl, or on a plate, then add, in order, the cranberries, chicken, nuts, salt and pepper, dressing and last the cheese, which doubles as a garnish. Don’t toss—present layered. Then toss.

Chicken and Fresh Fruit Salad: Serves 4
2 cups cubed meat or 4 thighs, breasts or mixed —see above for cooking tips
½  lb. seedless grapes, halved—I like red for the color or pitted cherry halves
½  cup thin celery slices
½ cup equal parts mayonnaise and sour cream
1 tsp. curry powder and 1 Tbs. chopped fresh herbs to taste. I prefer cilantro
Combine everything well. Chill and serve on a bed of lettuce. Garnish with fruit and herbs.

Both these chicken salads go well with green beans or asparagus, boiled to crisp tender, and drizzled with vinaigrette while warm, then chilled until ready to serve.

Melons-The Mid-Summer Fruits

My favorite supermarket’s flyer features cantaloupes this week.  It’s only a small notice at the bottom corner of the front page, but it started me thinking about our changed perception of melons in the past few years. I come from a state known for its summer produce, including several varieties of melons. We always considered the seasonal appearance of fruits to be in three ‘Acts’ actually over a period of half a year.   Berries usher in the warm weather, then by mid- season watermelons introduce the other melons signaling high summer. Finally, as the summer matures so do the stone fruits, lingering into early Fall.

What startled me was that, here we are in July, and this small notice was the only mention I’d seen of a melon sale. Where are the banners on the front page, or at least in the produce section? I see watermelons and some honeydews in the markets, but where are the Casabas, Persians and, my Mother’s favorite the spicy-sweet Crenshaws? I don’t find them even in the Farm markets.

Cantaloupes have always been the most available melon but now they appear to be the whole category.  I did realize this past winter, that they were always in stock at a reasonable price but am surprised that those prices prevail in July, 2/$4 or 2/$5, depending on the week. This week’s ‘feature’ is 3/$5, only slightly lower than normal and almost double the usual cost in season.  Honeydew’s cost hasn’t changed since December; watermelons are slightly higher than last year.

Poor melons! They are given less attention, less representation of varieties, so a lowered profile, and less marketing than ever before. This is not a case of ‘less is more’. I’m afraid it’s a case of removing the category from the consumers’ attention. Cantaloupes are rather bland, especially when mass grown for commercial use. Combine this with their constant presence all year at an unchanged price and people, unable to compare them to others in their class, consider melons a ‘Ho-hum’ item.

In fact, I doubt if the trend continues, that most consumers are aware of the existence of the other types of melons in a few years. The mid-summer is already becoming a gap between berries and stone fruits, not a period with a special offering. ‘Act II’ is disappearing from the Summer Fruit Parade.  The only remedy would seem to be to raise awareness of this exceptional class of fruits. So here’s my contribution to the Melon Fan Club: recipes for every course.

One fun fact is that, a true symbol of high summer when we don’t feel like cooking, melons are the only fruit that is never cooked. The rind may be pickled but the meat can’t stand heat.  Generally, their taste is mild, their flavor subtle, and the flesh, high in water content, is substantial in volume. Consequently, though delicious alone, melons combine well with other ingredients and the meat makes excellent bedding in salads and compotes.

To pick a melon, the best test is to thump it and listen for a hollow sound.  Ripe cantaloupes have a faint, sweet fragrance as well. If the stem stump is indented, the melon was vine ripened and easily detached, rather than being harvested on a schedule and cut away. Finally, shake the melon and if you hear the seeds, it’s apt to be dry. Unlike other fruits, melons don’t ripen once picked, so eat them soon.

Now, a few tips on working with melons.  Wash the outside well, before cutting into one. A knife slicing through the rind can carry contaminants into the flesh. Melons are loaded with nutrients but they quickly disintegrate when exposed to light and air, so avoid buying cut segments. Once opened, cover the exposed flesh with plastic wrap and store chilled. I put mine in a black plastic bag in the fridge.

RECIPES:
Melon con Prosciutto

This classic Italian presentation traditionally Involves simply draping thin slices of dry-cured ham over slices of melon. It can be transformed into a canapé by cubing the melon and wrapping it in ham secured by a toothpick.  Baled ham or smoked turkey create a reasonable facsimile.

Honeydew-Pineapple Soup: Serves 4
4 cups seeded, cubed honeydew
2 cups cubed, fresh pineapple
2 Tbs. honey
1 Tbs. lime juice
½ cup sour cream
½ cup yogurt
Pinch all spice
Blend everything to a puree and chill. Serve garnished with chopped fresh mint.

Moosewood Melon Soup: Serves 4*
6 cups cubed cantaloupe
14 oz. can coconut milk
2 Tbs. fresh lemon juice
2 Tbs. grated fresh ginger
2 Tbs. chopped mint
1 tsp. almond extract
Dash cinnamon
@¼ cup brown sugar or to taste
Puree all the ingredients, adding the sugar to taste. Chill well. Serve garnished with mint leaves.
*Recipe from the Moosewood Restaurant New Classics Cookbook

Melon Salsa: Serves 4
Wonderful with chicken or fish
½  small  cantaloupe –seeded and cubed
4 scallions- white and light green parts in thin slices or ½ small onion in small dice
½  green bell pepper in small dice
1 Tbs. chopped fresh mint
½ lime juiced
Pinch salt
Combine all ingredients and chill well. Serve as a side with the meal.

Melon-Scallop Salad; Serves 4
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1 ½  cups chopped tomatoes
½ cucumber-seeded and cubed
1 small onion in thin rings
1 Tbs. fresh mint
1 head green leaf lettuce
1/3 cup citrus vinaigrette
1 lb. broiled scallops
Toss first 5 ingredients and divide among lettuce lined plates. Top with scallops and drizzle with vinaigrette.

Watermelon-Shrimp Salad: Serves 4
3 cups cubed seeded watermelon
1 cup cherry or grape tomatoes –halved
1 small onion in thin rings
1 Tbs. fresh lemon balm or lemon thyme (lemon-pepper to taste is a substitute)
1/8 tsp. Kosher salt
Freshly ground pepper to taste
1/3 cup Balsamic vinaigrette
Small head Romaine lettuce –torn
½ lb. cooked shrimp-tails off and halved if large
Have all ingredients chilled. Gently toss and divide among plates.

Melon Sherbet: Serves 6-8
1 medium melon-cantaloupe or casaba
Juice of ½ lemon
4 egg whites
6 oz., sugar-super-fine or ’bar’ sugar is best
¼ -1/2 cup cherries or berries for garnish-optional
Fresh mint leaves for garnish-optional

Cut the melon in half, in a zigzag pattern if to be used it for serving. Remove seeds and cube meat. Blend with the lemon juice until smooth. Pour into a 1 ½ quart container and freeze until beginning to set. Beat the egg whites until stiff and gradually add the sugar.  Gently whisk or beat the melon mixture until broken up and light. Fold in the egg whites and return to the freezer and freeze until firmly set. Serve by the scoopful, in the melon shell or dishes. Garnish with fruit and/or mint. Keeps frozen about 1 month.
NOTES: Choose overripe fruit to make sherbet.
For anyone concerned over Salmonella, I recommend substituting Wilton Meringue Powder in any recipe that calls for directly adding raw beaten egg whites.  See June 30, 2016 posting on Icy Desserts.
Watermelon Granita: Serves 4
1 small watermelon-seeded and cubed
Sugar to taste
Dash hot pepper sauce and/or lime juice and/or salt to taste
Blend the melon meat and strain through a fine sieve or cheesecloth. Add sugar and allow to dissolve, and then add the other flavorings sparingly. Put into a metal 9 X 13 inch pan. Freeze, scraping with a fork to break up every 20-30 min., for 2-3 hours until resembles fluffy shaved ice. Store in a covered container in the freezer for 1 week. Scrape to fluff before serving. (The ice chips don’t clump during storage.)

Melon with Ice Cream
This is a recipe my Mother, who was from a different part of the country, introduced to my Father’s family. At first skeptical, they learned to love it and even had competitions as to the combinations.

Cut a thin slice off one end of the melon and stand it up. Cut a slice off the top just low enough to expose the interior. Scoop out the seeds and fill with softened ice cream or sherbet. Secure the ’cap’ piece with toothpicks and freeze until ice cream is firm. Serve cut in wedges or in rings. Garnish with a drizzle of liqueur- Triple Sec or Crème de Menthe.
Suggestions: Vanilla or peach ice cream with cantaloupe—Triple Sec
Lime sherbet with honeydew –Green Crème de Menthe

Melon Tequila : Serves 4*
1 large ripe cantaloupe
½ cup tequila + extra for dipping glass rims
4 Tbs. sugar + extra for dipping glass rims
Salt and pepper
Using a scoop make melon balls. Place melon balls in a bowl with other ingredients stirring to dissolve sugar. Cover and chill for 30 min. Dip glass rims in extra tequila then sugar to coat. Fill the glasses with the melon balls. Spoon over any remaining marinade. Serve at once.
* A recipe from Rozanne Gold’s Recipes 1-2-3 Menu Cookbook

How To Choose And Use Vinegars In 2016

Vinegar is another summer favorite, though most of us don’t realize it. It’s the tenderizing agent in marinades, and gives dressings their zing. Balsamic, on its own, is a tasty sauce for fresh fruit. Like oil, vinegar is ancient. There are records of it in Egypt before 3000 B.C., but unlike oils which are extracted by pressing, vinegar is the result of natural fermentation, with one exception.

The exception is White Vinegar which is a dilution of distilled grain alcohol, usually about 5%, in water.  The commercial brands have a very mild taste and can be used in cooking, but it’s often recommended for cleaning and deodorizing purposes too. Rice vinegar and malt vinegar are also made from grains but through fermentation not distillation.

Fruit is the most universal basis for vinegar dependent on regional produce.  Apples and grapes, also pears, peaches, and apricots lead in western cuisines whereas plums are favored in Japan.  Eastern European countries use beets to make vinegar and Asian cuisines favor rice vinegar, often seasoned. A newcomer to the commercial scene is coconut vinegar, from the tropics, prized for its nutritional value.

The fruit based vinegars are easy to make and a perfect project for this season to perk up your winter meals. If you’re working with fruit, or have some over ripe-caution, not spoiled–to use, make sure it’s well washed, then put the cores, peelings or large pieces into a wide-mouth jar or non-metal bowl, cover with water and store, well covered, in a warm place. You can add more peelings later too. A scum or ’Mother’ will form. This is the agent that will produce the vinegar. When sufficiently strong in taste, strain the fluid, first through a colander then through a gauze lined fine strainer. Pour into a glass bottle with a tight lid. Stored in a cool, dark place, vinegar will keep almost indefinitely.

A simpler way to make vinegar is an annual occurrence for me. Every winter, I serve ’mulled’ cider. I put ½ gal. cider, a clove studded apple and about 4 sticks cinnamon in a pot, bring to a boil and pour into a punch bowl. The leftovers I funnel, minus the apple, back into the jar and relegate it to the garage. By summer I have cinnamon-flavored cider vinegar to use; even sooner if the bottle is left open or loosely capped. The same thing will happen with leftover wine or beer; leave it in the opened bottle and wait about 4 weeks.

Flavoring vinegar is easy and decorative too, as was popular a few years ago.  White wine vinegars are best for this, to allow infusion of taste. Simply put the flavoring agent, peppers, herbs, spices etc. in the vinegar and wait for the desired result. So long as the agents are clean and dry, the acidity prevents mold or impurities from developing as they can when flavoring oil. See post on oils 6/30/16

Tips on working with vinegar in the kitchen:

  • Be sure to stick to stated amounts in a recipe, or if ‘winging it’ add in small increments. Too much acidity ruins the taste of a dish.
  • Wipe-up spills with a towel and then wipe area with another dampened with clear water
  • Don’t try to flavor with any substance that can disintegrate. It is difficult to remove by straining and will cloud the finished item.
  • Adding small amounts to soups, stews, sauces and gravies can boost taste and give depth to the flavor.
  • A bit of vinegar added to water cooked in metal containers will prevent discoloration.
  • A few drops of vinegar added to beaten egg whites gives them stability.
  • Use as a replacement for citrus juice in dressings, sauces and some recipes.
  • Commercial imitations are made from red wine vinegar, fortified with concentrated grape juice and caramelized for color. They’re fine to deglaze sauces, flavor dressings or season slow-cooked meats. Any vinegar can be used for pickling but the most widely used are cider in the west and rice in Asian cuisines.  It’s a case of using native products in each region.

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A note about Balsamic vinegar; Balsamic is the Gold Standard of vinegars. Made in Modena, Italy, from Trebbiano white grape juice, it is aged in a succession of barrels, each of a different wood to impart its special taste, for at least 10, but often 50 or even 100 years. It is not to be heated and is rarely combined with other ingredients. Pure balsamic is labeled ’balsamico tradizionael’ and meant to be savored drizzled over steaks or fresh fruits, especially berries. Usually seen in a deep brown, there is also a White Balsamic which has an equally intense flavor. Commercial imitations are made from red wine vinegar, fortified with concentrated grape juice and caramelized for color. They’re fine to deglaze sauces, flavor dressings or season slow-cooked meats.

Sherry vinegar goes through a similar process, being aged for 6 years in a network of barrels called solera. The best come from southern Spain and say Jarez or Xeres on the label.

 

A General Guide to Vinegars and Their Uses:
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Balsamic (see note)             Distinctive, intense, full bodied                      A garnishing drizzle over steak;
semi-sweet taste. Comes in light and            sauce for fresh fruit; alone
dark varieties                                                      drizzled over a salad
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Cider and Fruit                   Unpasturized  will have the best                       Deglazing, vinaigrettes. Cider is
flavor. Mild, taste multipurpose                        good for pickling

Distilled White Vinegar     Higher percentages of grain alcohol                  Commercially used in processed
give a harsh pungent flavor, 5% is mild            foods and preserves. Home use

mostly cleaning and deodorizing

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Flavored Vinegars           Best based on white wine vinegars                 Excellent for vinaigrettes or to add

Infused with fruits, herbs, spices.                    Subtle flavor to chicken, fish or

vegetable dishes

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Malt Vinegar                    Mild flavor depending on type of beer           Pickles, dressings for vegetable
Often considered a condiment                         salads, fish & chips

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Red Wine Vinegar         Best from a wine region, Italy, France or               Deglazing sauces; flavor boost;
California. Good all-purpose kitchen choice         combine with other ingredients

for robust vinaigrettes

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Rice Vinegar                 Favored in Asian cuisines. Made in 3 vanities

                                        White-delicate flavor, pale golden color                Sauces for chicken, fish,

Chinese is harsher than Japanese              vegetables

                                        Red                                                                                 Dipping sauces

                                        Black – Very esoteric                                                   Pickling

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Sherry Vinegar          Sweeter and more complex than other                   Excellent vinaigrettes. Deglazing

Wine vinegars                                                              for pan sauces for chicken, pork or

beef

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White Wine or                   Subtle flavor and delicate                              Vinaigrettes especially for seafood

Champagne Vinegar                                                                                 chicken salads. Sauces for chicken

and fish. Delicate pickling

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