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Chickpeas With Chard

04.21.2012 by J. Doe // 6 Comments

There are seasons to cooking, or so I’ve always thought: Grill in summer. Slow cooker in winter. Roast in fall. Brunch in Spring.

Yes, I know “brunch” is not a cooking method.

But today it’s spring with a vengeance in Seattle, and I think I’ve got everything mixed up. I should be out enjoying the sunshine, before it disappears behind another Seattle cliche cloud.

I recently picked up a copy of Not Your Mother’s Slow Cooker Cookbook (NYM Series), mostly because it is full of vegetarian recipes, and I am desperate for ideas for The Child that don’t involve pasta or fish sticks. The first recipe I tried, Chickpeas with Chard, was worth the price of the book: Tasty, fresh, and light.

Like spring – in a slow cooker.

The Child refused to eat it, which was disappointing, but then again, she’s also sleeping through the first sunny day we’ve had here in over a week. She doesn’t know what she’s missing, which is okay – this recipe, I’ll make again, so she can try it then.  Can’t guarantee any more sunny days though.

Chickpeas with Chard from Not Your Mother’s Slow Cooker Cookbook (NYM Series)

1/2 cup dried chickpeas

1 bunch swiss chard (I used rainbow chard because it’s so dang pretty)

2 cups water

1/4 cup olive oil

2 small white onions

2 tablespoons tomato paste

1/2 teaspoon salt

pinch cayenne pepper

pinch black pepper

Rinse chickpeas; soak overnight in three inches of water. Drain, put in slow cooker, add the two cups of water, and cook on high setting until tender, about three hours. Make sure chickpeas are covered with water at all times.

Chop the chard, blanch in boiling water for three minutes.

Chop the onions, and cook with the olive oil in a small skillet until almost golden and browned around the edges, about eight minutes.

Add chard, onions and oil, and remaining ingredients to chickpeas and water in slow cooker. Cook on high setting another 1 1/2 hours.

This is my contribution to Weekend Cooking, hosted by Beth Fish Reads. Why not swing by and see what other simple pleasures await?

Categories // The Joy of Cooking Tags // beans, chard, recipes, vegetarian, weekend cooking

Fannie Farmer’s Banana Bread

04.14.2012 by J. Doe // 12 Comments

One of the things I want to do this year is move. When The Departed left, initially I spent a lot of time on spreadsheets, working out the economics of staying in my house. Why should I be forced to move? I thought.

But the longer The Child and I rattled around the house by ourselves, the more we realized – we didn’t really like it. It’s too big for two people, but more than that: it’s too generic for these two people.

I poked around online at ads for house rentals, apartments, townhouses, and ran across an ad for an older house, described as “cozy,” which is of course code for “small.” It hadn’t been updated in some time, and what updates there were seemed to be in keeping with the 1940’s character of the place.

I want that house, I thought. That’s my house. In my mind, it is already full of my grandma’s kitchen gear, and I’m crocheting something in a cozy corner.

Home: Something this large, generic house I live in has, oddly and in spite of my best efforts, never managed to be.

I’m stuck in this house for now, until The Departed and I can come to some sort of agreement – or the courts sort it out for us, one way or the other. In the meantime, I console myself with daydreams of a future that is firmly rooted in my past: A simpler world, with less fuss and much less stuff.

So the other morning as I found myself up much too early, rattling around my much too large kitchen, I reached back into the past for some comfort food. While my morning coffee brewed, I pulled out my 1940s-era copy of The Boston Cooking School Cookbook, by Fannie Merritt Farmer, and made myself a loaf from the simplest and best banana bread recipe I’ve ever found.

Best eaten warm, with butter.


Fannie Farmer's Banana Bread
 
Print
Prep time
15 mins
Cook time
1 hour
Total time
1 hour 15 mins
 
Author: Fannie Merritt Farmer, from The Boston Cooking School Cookbook
Ingredients
  • 3 ripe bananas
  • ¾ cup sugar
  • 2 eggs
  • 2 cups flour
  • 1 tsp salt
  • 1 tsp baking soda
  • ½ cup chopped nuts (I use walnuts)
Instructions
  1. Crush bananas with silver fork. Add eggs, beaten light, sugar, flour sifted with salt and soda, and nut meats. Bake one hour in moderately slow oven (325 degrees F).
Notes
You can use a regular fork, they work just fine. Silver is prettier, though.
Wordpress Recipe Plugin by EasyRecipe
3.1.09

 

This is my contribution to Weekend Cooking, hosted by Beth Fish Reads. Why not swing by and see what other simple pleasures await?

Categories // The Joy of Cooking Tags // bananas, recipes, vintage recipes, weekend cooking

Nutella Pound Cake

03.31.2012 by J. Doe // 19 Comments

One of the weird things about raising a child these days is feeding them. When I was growing up, it was: “Eat what’s on your plate or you go hungry.” If that didn’t work, I was made to feel both hungry and ungrateful because, after all, “Children are starving in China.”

Not so anymore: Every child has some dietary restriction that must be honored by everyone who comes into contact with them. Usually it’s an allergy or intolerance – gluten, or more frequently, peanuts. Sometimes it’s self-inflicted, as with The Child, who pronounced herself pescatarian at the age of 10 and never looked back.

I have no problem with most of this by itself, but try adding it all together and then figuring out what to put into a child’s lunchbox.

  • No PB&J (peanuts are completely banned at the school).
  • Tuna is OK, but only once a week (mercury, you know).
  • A bagel with cream cheese? Okay, but only sometimes.
  • And so on, et cetera.

I won’t bore you with the list of things I can’t put in the lunchbox with the sandwich. I don’t know who buys all that stuff in the snack aisle at Safeway, that’s all I’m saying.

Then we discovered the Wonder Food: Nutella.

It doesn’t violate any food rules. The Child will eat it – often. And you can add healthy things like bananas to a sandwich and they suddenly seem awesome, too.

So now our pantry is filled with giant Costco jars of Nutella, which raise the inevitable question: What else can we do with this Wonder Food?

I was thrilled when I discovered this recipe for Nutella Pound Cake on Yumsugar. Sounds like a wonderful thing to make on a Sunday afternoon, then slice up and toss into a week’s worth of lunches. If it lasts that long, because – seriously – Nutella Pound Cake? Like that’s going to last a week in our house.

So I made it. It started off well enough:

But then I put it in the oven, which it didn’t like, and tried to escape:

And after I baked it about a half hour longer than I was supposed to, due to its refusal to be done, I gave up and removed it, salvaging what I could.

It tasted kind of like brownies, but not quite. It was sort of tasty, but needed … something.

No, we didn’t love it. But yes, we did eat it. It wasn’t possible to actually slice it, so we just kind of nibbled at it for a couple of days.

I’m not sure what went wrong, but re-reading the directions, I think the pan I used was too small. I didn’t like it enough to re-try it in another pan.

We haven’t given up on Nutella, though. We’re convinced there are many joys that await us with the Wonder Food.  How could there not be?

 

This is my contribution to Weekend Cooking, hosted by Beth Fish Reads. Maybe someone else had a better recipe this week – why not cruise on over and find out?

Categories // The Joy of Cooking Tags // kitchen disasters, nutella, recipes, weekend cooking

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