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Cauliflower, Leek, and Gruyere Soup

02.22.2014 by J. Doe // 4 Comments

I have a talk with the Cleaning Lady, and we say our goodbyes, and the whole thing is surprisingly easier than I thought it would be; it probably doesn’t hurt that I feel so bad about it that I cry as I tell her I simply can’t afford her services anymore.

 

The Child pitches in, as she had promised she would, and helps out with the vacuuming, and sometimes surprises me by making my bed for me or cleaning my bathroom. I do the same for her, and the whole thing is off to a good start, and she wants to talk about vacations. She remembers our trip to Belize, and thinks how nice it would be to go back, but without The Departed. It would, I agree, but it’s not in the cards. I show her the cruise I am thinking about, on a ship that leaves from Seattle (no additional airfare), everything included in the price (so I don’t have to spend the trip worrying about money). She looks at the video tour of the cruise ship, mesmerized by the size of it and all the buffets it has (she can eat what she wants and lots of it).

 

She keeps helping out around the house, and though I don’t love how she loads the dishwasher, I do love that she’s not only willing to do it, but loads it better than the Cleaning Lady, and in far less time than The Departed, so that even when we procrastinate a bit about cleanup, it’s not an insurmountable obstacle to having dinner at a reasonable hour.

 

It was on such a night that I made this soup: The Child cleaned the kitchen and loaded the dishwasher while I walked the Red Dog, and when I came home, I simply cooked in my clean-ish kitchen. I forget where I found this recipe, originally from the Saltie cookbook, but I had been waiting to try it. The Child likes both cauliflower and gruyere cheese, so I figured I had a winner on my hands.

 

The soup was very easy to make, and I made only two adjustments to the recipe: I omitted the cup of fresh parsley it called for, both because it seemed like too much parsley and also because I forgot to buy any; I also used packaged vegetable broth instead of chicken broth, since The Child theoretically might eat it. The soup turned out more brothy than I expected – I somehow thought that it would be a thicker, cheesier affair, at the end – but I didn’t mind. The cheese added a lot of flavor to the broth, and the final result was filling and oh so delicious.

 

I slurped with abandon.

 

The Child was more mixed in her praise, which is a roundabout way of saying that she couldn’t decide if she liked it or not. She thought oyster crackers might help. I thought it was perfect just as is.

 

Cauliflower and Gruyere Soup

 

Cauliflower, Leek, and Gruyere Soup
 
Print
Prep time
10 mins
Cook time
30 mins
Total time
40 mins
 
Author: slightly adapted from Caroline Fidanza of Saltie, via Grubstreet
Serves: 4
Ingredients
  • 1 head cauliflower
  • 3 tbs. unsalted butter
  • 3 tbs. olive oil
  • 4 leeks, white and tender green parts, thinly sliced
  • salt
  • 1 chunk Gruyère (about 5 ounces)
  • Vegetable stock, as needed (about 4 cups)
Instructions
  1. Prep the cauliflower: Remove the outer leaves, cut into large florets, and break apart into small florets with your hands or a knife.
  2. In a soup pot over medium-high heat, melt the butter in the olive oil. When the butter begins to sizzle, add the leeks and a pinch of salt. Sauté the leeks until they begin to wilt, about 5 minutes. Add the cauliflower and another pinch of salt, and cook the cauliflower and leeks until they start to come together, about 3 minutes longer.
  3. Add the gruyere, and give everything a good stir. Add just enough stock to cover the vegetables. Turn the heat down to low, and simmer until the cauliflower is tender, 20 to 30 minutes. At this point, the cheese will have mostly melted.
  4. Taste and adjust the seasoning and serve hot.
Notes
The original recipe calls for chicken broth, but I substituted vegetable broth. The original recipe also calls for the addition of one cup of fresh parsley at the end of the cooking, which I omitted.
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Categories // The Joy of Cooking Tags // cauliflower, cheese, leeks, soup

Granola Jam Bars

02.14.2014 by J. Doe // 3 Comments

I wake up at 3am that night: The panic finally kicks in and I can’t sleep. The Red Dog is thrilled, happy-dancing in the dark and following me downstairs, where I lie on the sofa and read before drifting back to sleep, soothed by the sound of his snoring.

 

When I wake up again, it’s morning, and the snow outside sparkles with cold, while the house is full of quiet and warm.

 

I’m not going anywhere. I decide the next time I leave my house will be to retrieve my car. It’s official: I’m suburban.

 

I don’t really need to go anywhere, because I’ve been good lately about keeping my pantry full of staple foods, and the freezer is fairly full, too. I can spend my day in the kitchen, where it’s warm, and if I get an urge to experience the cold, the Olympics are on TV. I start looking at recipes for home made pizza, specifically the sauce, and notice that all of them seem to involve oregano, one of the very few things I don’t have on hand.

 

The Child wants to go out. She needs things from the mall, she says.

 

No, I tell her. No car, remember?

 

I’m bored. We should take the Red Dog to the dog park.

 

No, I reply. No car, remember?

 

Finally, her friend up the street calls. Can I go to her house?

 

I’m not thrilled about The Child having to walk along the same road that gave me so much difficulty just a few hours earlier – there’s no sidewalk – but there’s also not much traffic, and the mom of The Child’s friend is happy to send her back home with a teaspoon of dried oregano. Permission is granted, The Child heads out, and I start baking.

 

I start with Rice Krispie Treats, just the regular recipe off the back of the box, with a teaspoon of pumpkin pie spice added to make it more wintery. They’re delicious, and I cut them into pieces and leave them on a plate for The Child, when she returns, just like the cup of tea she set out for me.

 

I have the idea that I’ll make a batch of chili to eat during the week, and some cornbread to go along with it. I recently checked The French Market Cookbook out of the library, and there’s a recipe in it for Savory Pumpkin and Cornmeal Quickbread, which sounds delicious, if unusual, and claims that I can use other types of winter squash such as butternut, which I have, already cooked, left over from another recipe. I run it through a ricer, and complete the rest of the recipe, and am rewarded with a loaf of a vibrant, somewhat disturbing shade of orange, reminiscent of my least favorite aspect of babies, and that’s all I have to say about that.

 

I taste it, and though I truly want to like it, the texture and mix of flavors is just off, so I set it aside to try again later, and photograph for you, dear reader. It didn’t taste better when it cooled,  and try as I might, I could not find a way to make it photogenic.

 

The Child returns, and tucks into the plate of Krispie Treats, and hands over a bag of oregano. I start making sauce with lots of garlic and onion and oregano, which smells delightfully appetizing in a way that the Savory Loaf should but just doesn’t. It sits resentfully on the cooling rack while I set about making pizza dough. I could swear it’s glaring at me, but I ignore it. The sauce smells too good.

 

The dough, however, will not rise. I followed the instructions, but the ball just sits there, not doubling. I do a bit of research and learn how and why to proof yeast (to prove it’s still good); and upon discovering that mine isn’t foaming the way it should in a cup of water, do a quick calculation: Purchased two years ago + not stored in freezer = it’s expired.

 

I swear I can hear the Savory Loaf laughing, but when I catch a glimpse out of the corner of my eye, it’s still just sitting there, aglow with orange.

 

I make the pizza in spite of the dough, and The Child and I agree, it’s almost good – nothing that can’t be solved with some fresh yeast and a food mill (the sauce is a bit too chunky).

 

A few days later, I’m still making things out of the pantry – practicing for the next snow day. One of the recipes I found was for “Back To School Raspberry Granola Bars,” from Food & Wine, and it doesn’t sound like much, but the recipe promises that it can be made from pantry staples, and sure enough, it can. Although it calls for raspberry jam in the original, I only had strawberry jam, and it worked fabulously – any jam will. Everything else is stuff I usually have on hand, and it mixes up in a few short minutes.

 

The bars themselves are a satisfying combination of salty and sweet – there’s just enough salt in the crunchy, sweet bar, and a bit of chewiness at the edges from the jam and sugar caramelizing against the pan. The bars are solid enough to withstand travel, but not hard at all. Perfect for school lunches and snow days.

 

After I make the bars, I revisit the Savory Loaf, angry and orange on the counter. I still can’t decide if I like it, which I’m pretty sure means I don’t, and can’t think of a good reason to make it again when there are granola bars like these, ingredients just sitting in the pantry, waiting to be made special.

 

 granola jam bars

 

Granola Jam Bars
 
Print
Cook time
45 mins
Total time
45 mins
 
Author: Karen DeMasco, Food & Wine
Ingredients
  • 1 cup pecans, coarsely chopped
  • 1½ cups all-purpose flour
  • 1¼ cups old-fashioned rolled oats
  • ⅓ cup granulated sugar
  • ⅓ cup packed dark brown sugar
  • 1 teaspoon kosher salt
  • ½ teaspoon baking soda
  • 1½ sticks unsalted butter, melted, plus more for greasing the pan
  • 1 cup strawberry jam
Instructions
  1. Preheat the oven to 350°. Butter an 8-inch square baking pan and line the bottom and sides with parchment paper. Spread the chopped pecans in a pie plate and toast for about 5 minutes, until lightly browned and fragrant. Let cool.
  2. In a large bowl, whisk the flour with the rolled oats, granulated sugar, brown sugar, salt, baking soda and pecans. Using a wooden spoon, stir in the melted butter until the oat mixture is thoroughly combined.
  3. Press two-thirds of the oat mixture in an even layer on the bottom of the prepared baking pan and top with the raspberry preserves. Sprinkle the preserves with the remaining oat mixture.
  4. Bake the bars for about 45 minutes, rotating the pan halfway through baking, until the top is golden brown. Transfer the pan to a wire rack and let the granola bars cool completely, about 3 hours. Cut into squares and serve.
Notes
The original recipe uses raspberry jam. Use whatever you have on hand.
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Categories // The Joy of Cooking Tags // granola, snack

Kate Smith’s Griddle Cakes

02.06.2014 by J. Doe // 3 Comments

I learned how to cook in my grandmother’s kitchen, making the thing she made that I loved best: pancakes. I don’t have the recipe and if there was one, it was not written down. She would add all the ingredients to her bowl while I stood on a stool next to her, holding her electric mixer and beating egg whites until they were light and stiff.  She taught me how to fold them in, and explained why this was such an important step. It holds all the air, she said. It makes them fluffy.

 

I didn’t really see how that worked, since the egg whites were gone when you folded them in, but I remembered the lesson even as the years went on and I took the inevitable shortcut: pancake mix. Just add water.

 

When I found myself with leftover Squash and Apple Compote, which just cried out to be served as part of a brunch, it occurred to me that pancakes from a mix just wouldn’t do, so I pulled out my 1940’s era pamphlet of Kate Smith’s Favorite Recipes, and found her pancake recipe, which folds in egg whites at the end, the way my grandmother and I used to. So, Mr. Faraway went to work beating egg whites, spilling egg whites, and then successfully beating a second batch of them into stiff peaks, while I assembled the remaining ingredients.

 

In a very hot, lightly oiled griddle pan, these pancakes cook up almost as light as air, or as Mr. Faraway pointed out, as light as angel cake, which was my other favorite thing from my grandmother’s repertoire. The outside browned perfectly and stayed crisp. The pancakes didn’t have much taste to them, making them the perfect vehicle for pretty much anything sweet you might want to add – syrup, fruit compote, whatever. They are not good on their own for the same reason.

 

Kate Smith's Griddle Cakes

Kate Smith's Griddle Cakes
 
Print
Author: from "Kate Smith's Favorite Recipes"
Ingredients
  • 1 ¼ cups sifted cake flour
  • 1 ¼ tsp baking powder
  • ½ tsp salt
  • 2 egg yolks, lightly beaten
  • ¾ cup milk
  • 2 tbsp butter, melted and cooled
  • 2 egg whites, stiffly beaten
Instructions
  1. Sift flour once, measure, then add baking powder and salt, and sift again.
  2. Combine egg yolks and milk; add gradually to flour, beating only until smooth.
  3. Add melted butter. Fold in egg whites.
  4. Cook on a hot, greased griddle or frying pan. Makes about 10 griddle cakes.
Notes
These griddle cakes are fantastically light but also very plain - best served with your favorite syrup or fruit topping.
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Categories // The Joy of Cooking Tags // breakfast, vintage recipes

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