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Thomas McNaughton’s Braised Short Ribs with Pasta

10.26.2014 by J. Doe // 4 Comments

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I got a review copy of Thomas McNaughton’s Flour and Water: Pasta– one of the most-talked-about cookbooks of the fall – and did a terrible thing: I laughed as I perused it.

It’s not that I’m ungrateful: in fact, I felt excessively guilty about my reaction. A considerable amount of time and passion went into the recipes and photos, and someone out there in the publishing world deemed this blog worthy of an advance copy. But why? It appears to be the sort of book that is displayed prominently somewhere and says to people, “A serious foodie lives here. Where shall we go for dinner?”

It’s not that I object to recipes whose names involve words I have to look up: Wild Boar Strozaprettii; Cocoa Tajarin with Brown Butter-Braised Giblets, Butternut Squash, and Sage; and Pappardelle with Braised Goat Shoulder, Anchovy, and Collard Greens. I have a dictionary. I know how to google.

Nor do I object to including things like duck giblets, fuyu persimmons, or spigarello, on my Safeway list – why not turn a routine chore like grocery shopping into a scavenger hunt? It keeps things lively – count me in.

No, my objection is this: Who has time to toast faro and make pasta out of it using a custom bastoncino dowel and hemp comb on a Tuesday night after work?

Still, it was hard to see the cookbook popping up on Amazon and the Tasting Table newsletter and Bon Appetit’s Facebook feed and not think that maybe there was more to it, so one evening I sat down and read a bit of the introductory section, which had some very useful tips for cooking pasta, notably this one: cook your pasta about 80% through in salted water, but then finish the last 20% of cooking in the sauce. It infuses much more of the sauce flavor onto the pasta.

Genius, I thought, and read on.

It turns out, the authors really view the recipes as starting points: If you want to try your hand at making pasta, there are recipes and instructions and helpful tips for doing so. But if you don’t, they make suggestions for store-bought alternatives. There are alternatives for the more challenging ingredients, as well – apples for fuyu persimmons. I can do this.

Armed with that information, I discovered plenty of recipes I could make at home, in a regular suburban kitchen, on a chilly autumn Sunday afternoon, when I have time to cook something in a long, slow, braise. I chose a recipe that would require the fewest substitutions – Toasted Farro Garganelli with Short Ribs, Hazelnuts, and Radicchio – and then took their advice for simplifying it, by simply serving the braised meat on a bed of polenta.

It’s possible I am the world’s worst polenta maker, and also possible that their advice was a bit off the mark here, but whatever the reason, it didn’t work: the resulting plate was watery and bland, unless you just ate the braised meat off the top, as The Child did, and fed the polenta to the Red Dog without even a pretense of hiding it from me. The meat was pretty good, she said, but dinner was weird.

The next day, though, I found myself picking on the leftover meat in the refrigerator, and the following evening, we got home, I boiled pasta in one pan and reheated the braised meat in another, and then finished the pasta just as they suggested, cooking it in the sauce for the last couple of minutes.

It may have been the best pasta I ever ate. The Child agreed, declaring it The Best Pasta You Ever Made, eating two servings, and taking the small bit of leftovers to school for lunch the next day.

I omitted the hazelnuts and radicchio from the original recipe, though I think the radicchio in particular would be a welcome addition to the dish. I chopped the carrots and celery into the three-inch chunks as directed, but it would make more sense to me to cut the pieces smaller to begin with, rather than slice them twice. Some of the quantities listed in the recipe were off (I had two cups of meat after braising, rather than four as stated, but it was more than enough), and it called for mysterious quantities – how much is 1/4 bunch of thyme, anyway? I grow my own, so I took a guess and used four three-inch pieces, and that worked out fine. My cooking time was much shorter than indicated, possibly because I cooked it on the stovetop rather than in the oven.

And yet, it all worked, and rather deliciously at that.

Finally, this dish can easily be made ahead of time – do the braise when you have time, then refrigerate until you’re ready to make pasta and serve. And the leftovers are a fantastic lunch.

braised short ribsDon’t do this. Serve it with pasta.

 

Thomas McNaughton's Braised Short Ribs with Pasta
 
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Author: slightly adapted from Thomas McNaughton's Flour + Water: Pasta Cookbook
Ingredients
The Braise
  • 2 lbs bone-in short ribs
  • 2 tbsp olive oil
  • 3 carrots, cut into 3-inch chunks
  • 1 onion, quartered
  • 2½ celery stalks, cut into 3-inch chunks
  • 3 cloves garlic, minced
  • 1 tbsp tomato paste
  • 1½ cups red wine
  • 6 cups chicken stock
  • 2 bay leaves
  • ¼ bunch thyme
  • ½ spring rosemary
  • 1 lb dried casarecce (penne would also work well)
To finish
  • ¼ cup unsalted butter
  • 2 tsp sherry vinegar
  • parmesan cheese
Instructions
  1. Season the short ribs with salt and pepper. In a large pot, heat olive oil until almost smoking. Add short ribs and sear on all sides until deeply browned, about 15 minutes. Remove short ribs and set aside.
  2. Add the carrots, onion, and celery to the pan and cook until the onion is translucent, about 8 minutes, then add garlic and cook another minute. Add tomato paste and cook a minute more, then pour in the red wine, and cook it down until it is almost gone.
  3. Return the short ribs to the pan and add chicken stock, bay leaves, thyme, and rosemary. Bring to a boil, then decrease the heat to a simmer, cover, and cook several hours, until the meat is falling off the bone.
  4. Allow the short ribs to cool in the braising liquid, then pick the meat from the bone and tear it into pieces. Remove the vegetables and chop into small pieces. Add the meat and vegetables back to the braising liquid, and refrigerate if not using right away. (You may also wish to skim some of the excess fat from the pot at this stage.)
  5. To finish: Bring a large pot of salted water to a boil; bring the pot with the short ribs to a simmer. Cook the pasta about 80 percent through, then drain and add it to the simmering short ribs along with the butter. Cook until the sauce coats the back of a spoon. Add the sherry vinegar, and salt and pepper to taste.
Notes
The original recipe called for one half onion; I used a whole onion and liked it. I didn't really know what they meant by ¼ bunch thyme, so I used four three-inch pieces of fresh thyme. For ½ spring of rosemary, I used a two-inch piece of fresh rosemary. The original recipe also calls for oven braising, which can be done in a dutch oven, in a 325 degree oven, for about 5 hours (cook until the meat is falling off the bone). Finally, McNaughton uses his own, fresh-made "garganelli" pasta in this dish, but suggests penne as an alternative; I used casarecce, which is similar.
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Categories // The Joy of Cooking Tags // pasta, ribs

Macrina Bakery’s Tomato and Fennel Soup with White Beans

10.11.2014 by J. Doe // 1 Comment

I talk to Mr. Faraway a few days later, on the phone, and spend a lot of the time crying, although the conversation isn’t really unpleasant; nothing happened that he didn’t expect, and he’s not one for saying unkind things, no matter the circumstances. A few days later, I receive a birthday gift in the mail, the one he’d bought to give me at the now-canceled dinner; it arrives complete with a typed note on formal letterhead, and finally, one of us gets mad, and it’s me.

Really? Letterhead? I text him. I didn’t know we were at that point.

He calls me a bit later, and protests, but it’s my personal letterhead, because you’re a friend.

Lawyer, I tell him. You’re such a lawyer.

We feel strangely normal again, and I feel less lonely after we chat for a while and hang up.

I try to be careful – stressful times are always when I gain weight, and I’m at the point where I desperately need to lose it, rather than gain more. It’s not that I care what the scale says, but the last pair of pants I own that fit are telling me it’s time to do something, so I resolve to manage my stress with dog-walking rather than eating, and to try to eat healthily.

Eating healthy and comfort food don’t have to be mutually exclusive, I decide, and check out several cookbooks from the library in an attempt to prove the point.

When I get home, I realize I’ve checked out three baking books.

One of the books is from Seattle’s Macrina Bakery, which I’ve never been to but whose breads I can buy at the local upscale supermarket; mercifully, the Macrina Bakery & Cafe Cookbook has a chapter of lunch items, one of which sounds perfect: Tuscan Tomato & Fennel Soup with White Beans. I don’t actually care much for tomato soup, or tomatoes in general, but somehow I managed to produce quite a few Roma tomatoes in my garden this year, and grilled cheese with a bowl of soup sounds like the perfect way to use them.

For some reason, I got the idea that this would be a very tomato-y soup, thick and red. There aren’t any pictures in the book to guide me, and the recipe calls for 10 Roma tomatoes, but I have a sneaking feeling that I didn’t use the correct amount of tomatoes – my garden tomatoes are smaller than the ones I typically see at the supermarket. The soup was a mellow broth full of vegetables and filling beans, savory and flavorful. I wouldn’t change a thing, except maybe to measure and write down the volume of tomatoes I actually used (my best guess: about half).

If the end result is delicious and satisfying, then it hardly matters if the recipe was exactly followed – I loved it and so did The Child, who helped herself to seconds and pronounced it The Best Soup You Ever Made.

Tomato Fennel Soup

 

Macrina Bakery's Tomato and Fennel Soup with White Beans
 
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Author: Leslie Mackie, Macrina Bakery & Cafe Cookbook
Ingredients
  • 1 cup dried white beans
  • 2 bay leaves
  • ¼ cup olive oil
  • 1 medium yellow onion, diced
  • 2 medium fennel bulbs, diced
  • 1 tbsp ground fennel seed
  • 2 tbsp chopped fresh thyme (or 2 tsp dried)
  • 10 Roma tomatoes
  • 6 to 8 cups vegetable stock
Instructions
  1. Soak beans in water overnight.
  2. Drain beans and place in a medium saucepan with two bay leaves. Cover with water and cook over medium heat until slightly tender, about 20 minutes. Reserve 1 cup of the cooking liquid. Drain beans and set aside.
  3. Boil water in a large pot. Core tomatoes and score bottoms with an x. Plunge tomatoes into the boiling water for about 30 seconds, then remove tomatoes and plunge into a bowl of ice water. Peel skins from tomatoes, then seed them and cut into pieces.
  4. Combine olive oil, onion, and fennel in a large pot. Cover pot and cook for about 15 minutes over medium heat to sweat the vegetables, stirring occasionally. When the onions are translucent, add garlic, fennel seed, and thyme. Cook one more minute, until garlic is fragrant.
  5. Add tomatoes and cook 20-30 minutes over medium heat, until tomatoes are falling apart. Add reserved bean liquid and 6 cups of the stock, bring to a boil, and simmer another 20 minutes over medium heat to bring the flavors together. Add more stock as needed.
  6. Add the beans, heat through, and season to taste with salt and pepper.
Notes
I used approximately half the amount of tomatoes called for, which resulted in a nice, brothy soup. I inadvertently used whole fennel seed rather than ground, which I don't recommend unless you like little chewy seeds in your soup. the original recipe calls for garnishing the soup with fresh fennel fronds and aioli, either of which would be nice, but aren't necessary.
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Categories // Matchless, Peerless, The Joy of Cooking Tags // beans, fennel, soup, tomato

Two Roads Diverge, Part 5

10.10.2014 by J. Doe // Leave a Comment

After I send the email, I drive to The Child’s school, and she asks if we can go to the Old Drive-In and get burgers, so we do, and eat them, parked in the car, listening to Buddy Holly piped in overhead and sharing the extra french fries in the cupholder between us. I listen to her day at school, and how one of the boys thinks she’s awesome because she loves shoes and Lord of the Rings, and most girls like one or the other but not both and he was like Mind, Blown.

After she’s done with her news, I let her know that Mr. Faraway and I broke up, but I expect we’ll stay friends.

I will miss the flowers he brought, she says. It was so romantic.

It was, I say. I’ll miss them too.

She wants to know if I’ll ever get married again, and I tell her, No. This bothers her, but not me.

I’ll probably date again, I tell her. But I won’t get married.

Don’t go on Match again, she says.

I laugh, well, maybe just for entertainment, but not for real.

As we drive home, we pass a yard sale, and The Child insists, we have to stop, we have to see what they have. A lot, as it turns out: it’s an older couple, downsizing for a move into a retirement home. There are hair irons for the child and an extra colander for me and a fantastic 1960’s giant plastic lighted black cat that I simply have to have. There are piles of vintage cookbooks, and as The Child asks questions about slide viewers, I go through them all. There are several by an author I am familiar with, and though I have one of her cookbooks on my Wish List, that particular book isn’t here, so we settle up the bill and move on.

 

Categories // Matchless, Peerless Tags // dating

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