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Veselka’s Oatmeal Raisin Cookies

06.07.2015 by J. Doe // Leave a Comment

The Child and I drive to IKEA, again. Two years after The Departed’s possessions were removed from our home, we’re still figuring out what to do with some spaces. This journey is for shelves that will fill the corner of the family room that his desk and piles of computer equipment once noisy occupied; the shelves will hold the books that were banished to the garage with the introduction of e-readers to our household, but are now being welcomed back with the realization that it’s nice to be surrounded by knowledge and pleasant memories. I find my old Dorothy Parker compilations, my childhood copy of the complete work of the brothers Grimm, and some forgotten, barely used cookbooks, bought mostly as souvenirs rather than with any intent of actually using them.

One of them is The Veselka Cookbook, from a Ukrainian restaurant in New York located not too far from where I grew up. There were lots of Ukrainian and Polish restaurants in the area then, because the neighborhood was full of immigrants who ran them and ate at them, along with high school students who discovered you could stretch your meager lunch budget quite far by filling up on potato pierogies.

Veselka is still there, but the last time I went, the rest of those places were gone. One particular favorite, Christine’s, had been replaced by a place that sells grass-fed beef hamburgers at prices that seem out of the reach of the average hungry student, but the school is no longer there, either, so it probably doesn’t matter much. I had a burger and it was quite good, even if it wasn’t what I was looking for.

If my Old School Friend and I still lived around there, I’d take him out to one of those places, and we could fill up on comfort food until 2am, talking all the while, and feeling satisfied and happy at the end. But neither of us is there anymore, and our hometown has been transformed into someplace “new,” a place that other people have reinvented into irrelevance, with trendy, award-winning, unsatisfying brownies.

I don’t remember ever eating Veselka’s Oatmeal Cookies back in the day, but it’s hard to mail borscht or pierogies, and in any case, cookies were promised. I send them off with a note of explanation and two jars of marmalade.

Two days later, a message arrives: I’m speechless, he says. Speechless and grateful and I realized you may be the friend I’ve known the longest.

Old friends are the best friends.

He rambles on a bit, telling me he’s turned a corner, but also that the arrival of an unexpected package reminded him of the last unexpected package he received, which contained his ex’s unopened birthday gifts.

It just takes time, I say. Time to feel better, time to redecorate, time to open those boxes in the garage and remember who you were when you bought the contents.

The cookies are quite good. Oatmeal cookies can be quite heavy, but these are – ironically for a restaurant that specializes in hearty, heavy foods – quite light. One reason for the lightness is the flour used; the original recipe calls for two cups of cake flour, which I didn’t have, so I substituted a blend of all-purpose flour and cornstarch, which works very well. There are also none of the usual walnuts; instead, coconut adds a bit of variety and texture.

If you make them, you’ll definitely want to use parchment paper underneath the cookies when they bake. They are too fragile to remove from the cookie sheet, otherwise, until they have cooled completely.

 

Veselka Oatmeal Raisin Cookies

Veselka's Oatmeal Raisin Cookies
 
Print
Author: Tom Birchard, The Veselka Cookbook
Ingredients
  • 16 tbsp (2 sticks) unsalted butter, softened
  • 1 tsp vanilla
  • ¾ cup brown sugar
  • ¼ cup plus 3 tbsp sugar
  • 2 eggs
  • 1¾ cups all-purpose flour
  • ¼ cup cornstarch
  • 1 cup rolled oats
  • 1 cup sweetened shredded coconut
  • 1 tsp baking powder
  • 1 tsp baking soda
  • ¼ tsp salt
  • ½ tsp cinnamon
  • 1 cup raisins
Instructions
  1. Preheat oven to 350⁰F. Line several cookie sheets with parchment paper and set aside.
  2. In the bowl of a stand mixer, cream together butter, vanilla, and sugars, until light and fluffy. Add the eggs one at a time, blending until combined and scraping down the sides of the bowl between additions.
  3. Whisk all the dry ingredients except raisins together in a bowl. Add the flour mixture to the butter mixture, blending until fully incorporated. Fold in the raisins.
  4. Use a cookie scoop or tablespoon, drop cookies by rounded tablespoons onto the prepared sheets, leaving three inch spacing around each cookie. Bake until cookies are nicely browned, 10-12 minutes.
  5. Lift the cookies and parchment paper onto wire racks to cool.
Notes
If you have cake flour handy, use two cups of it, instead of the all-purpose flour and cornstarch.
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Categories // The Joy of Cooking Tags // cookies, oatmeal, raisin

Popham Shrimp Casserole

06.01.2015 by J. Doe // 4 Comments

An old school friend posted a brief rant on Facebook last week. He’s been in the midst of a divorce for a while, but also in the midst of an on-again-off-again transitional relationship with another former classmate, one who is also given to public displays of self-pity that I mercifully don’t see anymore – not since she unfriended me.

I was never really sure what prompted her to friend me, since we were never friends in the first place, but I am pretty sure of the reason she unfriended me:  every time their relationship hit a bump, I reached out to him. It’s one of those things you do for people who are actual friends: The ones who walked to elementary school with you, played Risk with you in middle school, are in your high school graduation photos. The ones you see when you’re in their neck of the woods, and vice versa.

The Old School Friend and I chat for a bit and, as usual, he politely leaves out the details, and though he’s frustrated, he also seems to be mentally moving forward: Enough already. Enough with the bumps, the drama, the on-again-off-again.

I mention I’ve been on Jdate, but stop short of actually suggesting he sign up. Though it hardly seems possible that any person could have worse luck than mine on that site, the fact that he lives in a small midwestern college town means the possibility is very real. It doesn’t matter, though. He shudders at the idea of online dating: It didn’t even exist the last time I was single, he despairs. I don’t want to have to learn it.

I feel helpless, and begin searching for something I can do. Would you like some cookies or jam?

Actually, he says, some cookies would be really nice.

I would have preferred he requested jam, since I made a little bit too much Meyer Lemon Marmalade when it was Meyer lemon season.  Still, any reason to make cookies is a good reason, and I have a folder full of recipes I’ve saved for just such an occasion. I choose the most promising one, the one I’ve been looking forward to trying since I found it in the Ovenly cookbook: Cinnamon-Chile Brownies.

Sounds amazing, right?

There is something horribly wrong with a brownie that a child won’t eat, and strangely enough, it wasn’t the flavor of cinnamon or ancho chile that she objected to. How could she? They were barely noticeable. What was noticeable, though, was the texture of the brownies, which was all wrong: Dry in a way that suggested the brownies were stale, even though they emerged from the oven not five minutes before we sampled them.

They did not improve overnight, and although there was more flavor of cinnamon and chile the next day, it was still no more than a vague aftertaste – not enough to overcome the awfulness of the texture. The brownies sat around for a couple of days, and every so often I tasted a tiny piece, hoping that this time, they would taste better. Perhaps it was something I ate right before the brownies that was throwing off the flavors, or maybe they just needed to sit a bit longer for the flavors to meld or become pronounced or something.

And then I had my own epiphany: Enough already. Enough imaginative recipes from groundbreaking and/or experimental and/or creative bakeries. I had an hour to make cookies for a friend and ended up wasting both my time and some perfectly good chocolate.

The universe seemed to agree with me. A day or so later, I stopped at the local thrift shop to hunt for a men’s shirt for a costume event, but since I had to pass the cookbook section on the way to the men’s department, I glanced at the books, and what should catch my eye but a hardcover copy of Beard On Bread, on sale for a dollar. I wonder who on earth would get rid of that; perhaps its the same people who like their brownies to be powder-textured. Whoever they are, they didn’t think much of James Beard at all: I found two more of his cookbooks (The New James Beard and James Beard’s New Fish Cookery), each for a dollar.

None of them seemed to have ever been used.

A day after that, the library emailed that a book on which I’d placed a hold some time ago was finally available: A reissue of the 1960 classic How America Eats, now retitled The Great American Cookbook, by Clementine Paddleford.

Who? you ask.

In the 1930’s, Clementine Paddleford set out to chronicle regional American cooking, traveling the country to find the best local cooks and talk them into sharing their recipes – at times, even piloting her own plane. The massive book includes recipes from all fifty states, set in the context of the people who shared them and the communities and cultures in which they lived. It’s a wonderful, engaging tome, and reading it feels a bit like having dinner with your favorite neighbor.

Most days, at the end of the day, I don’t really want a voyage of culinary discovery, I just want dinner. A good dinner, tasty and satisfying. Some days, it is bread and cheese and maybe some berries. Other days, a nice, simple casserole will work.

The first recipe I tried from Paddleford’s book was Popham Shrimp Casserole, a dish that originated in Charleston, a beautiful old city that, many years ago, I spent a week in, feasting on shrimp. I have fond memories of Charleston and its food: You cannot go wrong with Charleston shrimp.

And I didn’t.

The casserole’s ingredient list offers a hint as to why it is likely to be beloved by all: It’s loaded with butter, then topped with bacon and, yes, the rice does a lovely job of absorbing it all. The shrimp emerge from the oven in a mellow, buttery bath of sauce with just the right amount of kick from the red pepper.

I divided the original recipe in half, since it serves eight. It’s just enough for 3-4 people, especially if it was served with a salad and some good bread alongside. You could serve butter with the bread, if you like, though you’ll likely find your dinner is buttery enough.

There are a couple of things I will do differently, the next time I make this: I will get some standard-cut bacon, rather than the thick-cut I normally use in my cooking, which didn’t crisp up (and probably added more fat than needed, though I’m not complaining). Also, I used diced tomatoes, rather than crushed, as called for in the original recipe, but I think the final casserole would be saucier with crushed. I came up a bit short on tomatoes, too, since can sizes have gotten smaller since the recipe was originally published (the amount would be sixteen ounces if you’re feeling precise).

Still, I’d be completely happy to make this recipe again and again, exactly as I did the first time – it’s very forgiving, easy to make, and completely delicious. We’ll just forget about the calorie count, or maybe skip dessert.

I’m still hunting for the perfect cookie to make, worthy of sending to an old friend, so dessert will have to wait.

 

PophamShrimp2

Popham Shrimp Casserole
 
Print
Author: Clementine Paddleford, The Great American Cookbook
Serves: 4
Ingredients
  • ½ cup unsalted butter (1 stick)
  • ¼ lb onions (about one medium), finely chopped
  • 1 15 ounce can crushed or finely diced tomatoes
  • 1 lb shrimp, peeled
  • ½ tsp Worcestershire sauce
  • ¼ tsp paprika
  • pinch red pepper flakes
  • pinch mace
  • salt
  • 2 cups cooked white rice
  • 3-4 strips bacon
Instructions
  1. Preheat oven to 375 degrees F. Grease a 9-inch square baking dish and set aside.
  2. Melt the butter in a large heavy skillet over medium-low heat. Add the onions, tomatoes, Worcestershire sauce, paprika, red pepper flakes, mace, and salt, and simmer for a bit; then add the shrimp. Simmer until the shrimp is cooked through and sauce is reduced somewhat, about 15 minutes. Stir in the rice.
  3. Pour the mixture into the prepared baking dish and arrange bacon strips on top. Bake about 25 minutes, until the rice mixture is bubbly and the bacon is crispy. Serve immediately, if not sooner.
Notes
The original recipe calls for "paprika" and since I have smoked paprika, that's what I used. Use whatever type you have handy. The original recipe also calls for simmering the shrimp in the pan for 30 minutes before baking it in the cassrole for another 25 minutes. This struck me as an inordinately long time to cook shrimp, so I reduced the simmering time to about 15 minutes; you may wish to reduce it further. Finally, I tend to keep very thick-sliced bacon around the house as I find it cooks better and adds better flavor to long-simmered dishes. In this case, it did not crisp up well and I'd recommend going with a regular thin-sliced bacon.
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Categories // The Joy of Cooking Tags // fish, shrimp

Blueberry Focaccia

05.23.2015 by J. Doe // Leave a Comment

The Child was on a school trip this week, leaving me on my own. Although it feels like I should have taken the opportunity to go on a trip somewhere myself, the truth of the matter is, there isn’t anywhere in particular I want to go. Or at least, there isn’t anywhere in particular I want to go that I can get to and from in between the times I need to deliver her at and retrieve her from the airport.

But having one’s house to oneself is a sort of vacation, especially when one suddenly has more time, fewer schedules. For example, there’s no one to drive to school in the morning, so I can wake up a little later – or I could have, had The Child not forgotten there was a time difference and called at 5am, urgently needing a document emailed to her.

I should have minded, but it was nice to be needed, just for a moment: A moment isn’t the same as all the time.

The rest of the time was my own; I came and went on my own schedule, and ate and cooked as I pleased.

Left to my own devices, with no one to please but myself, I cooked a couple of meals, a stir-fried dinner of sausage and vegetables, and a lunch salad of leftover chicken, grilled bread, and fresh spinach that was pretty tasty. But mostly, I didn’t feel like cooking, and preferred a big hunk of crusty bread with lots of butter, and a side of fresh berries. Simple, satisfying.

One of the leftovers I had was this lovely focaccia bread that I made before The Child left. It’s from Samantha Seneviratne’s upcoming cookbook, The New Sugar and Spice, which is available in the UK, while the US edition will be available this fall and can be pre-ordered on Amazon. I was lucky to receive an advance copy for review purposes, and it’s one of the nicer baking books I’ve seen recently: Recipes are organized by type of spice used in the recipes (Cinnamon, Cardamom), with each section introduced with an essay that is a little bit of personal reminiscence,  and a lot more history of the spice, how it is used, its origins.

The recipe is in the cinnamon section, but since I love the combination on blueberries with lemon, I swapped out the cinnamon for some grated lemon zest. It’s a very simple, forgiving recipe – you can use any kind of berry, or use the cinnamon, or maybe some vanilla sugar – whatever you want to top it with would probably work. I got a little impatient during the last rise, so I probably didn’t let it rise enough, but it was still light and tasty – and definitely bread, not cake, which is just as well, because it doesn’t need any more sweetness with all the  juicy berries and sweet, crunchy sugar crust on top.

It’s a lovely way to start the day, especially a warm, lazy day, when you have no particular place you need to be except right where you are.

 

blueberry focaccia

Blueberry Focaccia
 
Print
Author: adapted from Samantha Seneviratne, Sugar and Spice
Ingredients
  • ½ cup unsalted butter, melted and cooled, divided
  • 2 cups bread flour
  • 2 cups all-purpose flour
  • ½ cup sugar, divided
  • 2½ tsp active dry yeast
  • 1 tsp salt
  • 1½ cups warm (not hot) water
  • 2 cups fresh blueberries
  • ¾ tsp grated lemon zest
Instructions
  1. In the bowl of a stand mixer fitted with the paddle attachment, combine the flours, ¼ cup of the sugar, the yeast, and the salt.
  2. In a small bowl, combine the warm water, ¼ cup of the melted butter, and the egg.
  3. Turn mixer on low speed, add the water mixture, and mix until a dough starts to form. Switch to the dough hook, and use it to knead the dough about five minutes, until smooth and elastic. The dough should still be somewhat sticky; this is fine.
  4. Butter a large bowl. Form the dough into a ball and place it into the bowl, covered with plastic wrap. Set the bowl in a warm place until it doubles in size.
  5. Remove the dough from the bowl onto a buttered work surface, and knead it several times, then put it back in the bowl until it has doubled again.
  6. Spread two tablespoons of the remaining melted butter in the bottom of a jelly-roll pan. Tip the dough into the pan, then use your fingers to stretch it out to fill the pan. Set the dough aside to rise (yes, again), until it is higher than the pan sides.
  7. In a small bowl, combine the remaining ¼ cup of sugar with the lemon zest.
  8. When the dough has finished rising, heat over to 450 degrees. While you wait for the oven to heat, use your fingers to poke small dimples all over the dough surface. Then, spread the remaining melted butter all over the top. Sprinkle half the lemon-sugar mixture on top of the butter, then scatter the berries over the sugar. Sprinkle the remaining sugar mixture on top of the berries.
  9. Bake until it's a delightful shade of brown and completely set, even under the berries, about 25 minutes. Let cool slightly in the pan, then move to a cutting board, cut into pieces, and enjoy while still warm.
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Categories // The Joy of Cooking Tags // baking, blueberries, bread, breakfast

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