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Recipes that include zucchini

Zucchini Cous Cous

Wednesday, January 13, 2010

I wonder if anyone else hates winter as much as I do? I don’t mean to be all negative but winter just kills it for me. Since this is a food blog, I won’t go into details about my skin drying and cracking, the headaches from wind blowing at my head (this is NOT psychological), and my seasonal affective disorder. However, I feel entitled to go off on a rant about how terrible New York produce is in winter. I’m going through tomato withdrawal, daydreaming about cracking open fresh pea pods, and cursing at the boxes labeled “raspberries”. As I stared at the emptiness in the farmer’s market, I thought to myself, that’s enough, I can’t just eat apples and celery root all winter.

forkful of Zucchini Cous Cous

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Ratatouille Terrine

Friday, September 4, 2009

When I first started buying cookbooks, I was attracted to books that seemed vast and comprehensive, with tiles like 1,000 Indian Recipes, The Soup Bible, How to Cook Everything, and The Cake Bible. I wanted big and heavy hard covers with lots of pictures. I was an excited culinary student who wanted to learn how to cook every dish known to man. I still want to learn every dish, but years later, I now realize it will take 4 lifetimes, possibly more. What makes it even harder is that there are dishes and books you want to go back to and repeat.

The idea behind this dish is a Broiled Vegetable Terrine in one of my first cookbooks, The Italian Cooking Encyclopedia. I made that recipe with the guidance of my wonderful neighbor, at the time, Carol Gelles, who ironically wrote and gave me a copy of 1,000 Vegetarian Recipes. For the 3-ish years that I lived next door to her, I accumulated a ton of great cooking memories. As I flipped through The Italian Cooking Encyclopedia recently, I landed on a picture of the vegetable terrine, which made me smile, think of Carol, and then really want to make it again. The original recipe has an onion and raisin mixture  that I thought was a little awkward in the dish and also made it more work so I removed that but left the wonderful concept of layering that give you different textures in each bite. The colors will impress your guests, but the natural sweetness of fresh vegetables is what will have them asking for more.

Colorful Vegetable Terrine with Balsamic Reduction 3

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Stuffed Zucchini Boats

Tuesday, August 18, 2009

Stuffed Zucchini Boat 2

Lon and I fell in love with Stuffed Zucchini when his Aunt Heather made some for us last summer. (Click here for pics.) Not knowing the recipe, Lon had to make his own when he had to have it one night. It’s so hard to get Lon to write down his recipes but he did leave me some chicken scratch to start from, which of course I could not read half of. Doing my best to interpret ingredients that looked like “2 T parade” (what?), I made yet another reincarnation of the recipe so that I could write out a recipe to share. I’ve made this at least three times now because it’s a perfect vegetarian side dish or party appetizer.

This recipe is easier to follow if you use the same size zucchini I used. Look for ones that are roughly 1 3/4″ to 2″ in diameter. You’ll need 10 segments that are 3″ long each, so you’ll get 2 segments out of one that’s roughly 6″ or three segments out of one that is roughly 9″. I hope that makes sense…It’s a pain because zucchini vary in size so much.

3 inch Zucchini stumps

Stuffed Zucchini Boats
~20 (3″) boats

  • 10 (3″) segments zucchini (roughly 1 3/4″ to 2″ diameter)
  • 3/4 cup breadcrumbs
  • 1/4 cup chopped fresh parsley
  • 8 cloves garlic, minced
  • 2 tablespoons fresh lemon juice
  • 1 teaspoon hot paprika
  • 1/4 cup olive oil
  • kosher salt and freshly ground black pepper to taste

Instructions –

1. Preheat oven to 350 degrees F. Cover a baking sheet with aluminum foil and spray with non-stick spray.

2. Cut all zucchini segments in half lengthwise.

3 inch Zucchini halves

3. Cut a thin strip off the curved side of each so that it has a flat surface to stand on. This prevents wobbling. Reserve the strip you cut off.

leveling zucchini boats 1leveling zucchini boats 2
leveling zucchini boats 3

4. Use a spoon to scoop out the middle of the zucchini.

hollowed out zucchini

5. For the flesh you just scooped out, cut off the parts that are seeded. No need to be precise, but you want the solid flesh on the left side of this picture, not the seeded stuff on the right side.

suzzhini pulp

6. Dice the solid zucchini flesh and the strip you cut off earlier into little cubes (no need to be precise). Toss it in a bowl with bread crumbs, parsley, garlic, lemon juice, paprika, and olive oil. Season with 1/2 teaspoon salt and a few pinches of pepper.

Stuffed Zucchini Filling

7. Arrange zucchini on the prepared baking sheet with scooped side up. Sprinkle with salt and pepper. Fill with zucchini bread crumb filling. Pack it down gently.

Stuffed Zucchini Boats 3

6. Bake on the top shelf of the oven for 20 minutes. Turn your oven to broil and color just until golden, about 2 minutes. Serve immediately.

Stuffed Zucchini Boat

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Shrimp Bibimbop

Tuesday, August 4, 2009

This is not a traditional bibimbop, but I think of bibimbop as one of those “everything but the kitchen sink” recipes. I make it when I’ve got a bunch of random vegetables I want to use up and I want it all to amount to a one-bowl meal. Most commonly, bibimbop has bulgolgi, a Korean marinated beef. I didn’t have any beef so this one uses shrimp. I didn’t have any bean sprouts, but that’s ok. Traditionally, it’s an egg with runny yolk but Lon doesn’t like those so I chose to make a thin omelet and slice it up. See how flexible it is? I feel like every college kid should learn the jist of bibimbop because it’s an easy way to make a healthy meal. Where I use water convolous, you can use spinach or any greens. Instead of shrimp, try chicken, pork, or beef. If you prefer, use brown rice. You get the idea…All you need is the red pepper sauce (gochu chang) and it’ll be delicious!

Shrimp close-up 2

Shrimp Bibimbop
~4 servings

Red Pepper Sauce

  • 3/4 cup hot red pepper paste
  • 3 tablespoons sugar
  • 2 tablespoons sesame oil

Toppings

  • 1 cup julienne carrots
  • 5+ teaspoons vegetable oil, divided
  • 3 large eggs, beaten
  • 2 cups julienne zucchini
  • 8 cups water convolous, stems and leaves seperated into 5″ to 6″ segments
  • 2 cloves garlic, minced
  • 8 scallions, cut in 3″ segments (cut thicker parts in half lengthwise)
  • 4 cloves garlic, thinly sliced
  • 2 teaspoons kecap manis
  • 32 medium shrimp, peeled and deveined and tails removed
  • kosher salt and white pepper
  • 4 cups steamed white rice
  • garnish with roasted seaweed and sesame seeds (optional)

Instructions –

1. Make the red pepper paste by stirring the ingredients together in a small bowl. Set aside.

Korean Red Pepper Sauce

2. Throw carrots in boiling water for just a few seconds. Remove and rinse with cold water. Drain. Set aside.

3. Heat 1 teaspoon of oil in a large flat pan on medium heat. Pour in egg mixture and swirl to coat the bottom. As soon as the bottom is solid, try to flip it over. It should finish in 2 seconds. Remove from heat immediately. When it cools enough to handle. Slice it in long strips. Set aside.

sliced egg

4. Heat 1 teaspoon oil in a wok on high heat. Toss in zucchini with some salt and pepper. Toss around just until tender. Remove to a bowl and set aside.

5. Return wok to heat with 2 teaspoons of oil. Add the stems of the convolous with minced garlic and salt. Toss around until tender. Add the leaves with a little more salt. Toss around until leaves wilt. Remove from heat to a bowl and set aside.

6. Use that same wok again with just a light coating of oil. Add scallions and sliced garlic with kecap manis. Toss around just until the scallion has softened a bit but is not mushy. Remove from heat to a bowl and set aside.

7. Rinse the wok and return to the flame to dry it. Once it starts smoking, add 1 teaspoon oil. Swirl it around and add the shrimp. Add 1 tablespoon of the red pepper sauce and toss to coat the shrimp. Stir around until the shrimp curl up and there’s no more grey. (It’s a little bit hard to see in this dish with the red pepper sauce.) Remove from heat immediately. Set aside.

8. Divide rice into 4 bowls. Divide each topping into the 4 bowls, keeping each topping in a neat pile and put the shrimp in the center. Top with seaweed and sesame if you want. Serve with red pepper sauce on the side for each person to add as much as they want.

Shrimp Bibimbop 4

Usually the dish is served as pictured above, then the person eating it will add sauce and stir it all up.

Mixed Shrimp Bibimbop 2

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Summer Squash Chili with White Cheddar Cornbread

Tuesday, July 21, 2009

Summer Squash Chili with White Cheddar Cornbread 5

My friend Emily has been studying for the New York State Bar Exam and decided to spend her birthday studying in Washington Square Park. She had this great idea, inviting friends to join her in the park, to study or read a book, or just say hi. Of course, I wanted to bring her some food. It’s really the best or only way I know how to say Happy Birthday!

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Brunch: Veggie and Goat Cheese Sandwiches, Manchego Mini Quiche, and Danish Apple Pastry

Monday, September 15, 2008

We had our friends, Peter, Jeff, and Erin, over for brunch. Since brunches are around noon, you have to plan to make some things in advance, unless you want to get up way too early. I’m pretty anal about optimal eating, meaning I won’t allow for something that’s ok because of convenience. I’ve got to eat and serve things the best way possible. For that reason, I use roasted and grilled veggies a lot. They taste better (in my opinion) the next day. So, the night before, I fire roasted peppers, and grilled eggplant and zucchini.

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Zucchini Apple Bread

Thursday, September 4, 2008

It‘s that transitional time of year, where we still have some summer produce, like zucchini, and fall goodies are coming in, like apples. I decided to make something exactly for this window of time, Zucchini Apple Bread. I also wanted something relatively healthy. Lon and I have been putting on some weight. Relatively is the key, because I never let flavor and texture suffer for health purposes. I don’t like fake sugars and fat free baked goods.

This recipe yields a wonderfully moist and mildly sweet quickbread, with a very natural flavor. The visible zucchini pieces may even make you feel healthier when eating them. The only problem is that it tastes great, so you may eat too much.



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Chocolate Cheesecake Marbled Cupcakes

Thursday, August 7, 2008

I was reading this post on A Southern Grace, and it reminded me of these amazing marbled muffins, sold at a gourmet market near my high school. They called them muffins, but I think it’s technically more of an un-frosted cupcake. It’s over 10 years since I’ve had these muffin/cupcakes and the store is no longer there so I decided to make something like it, myself. This recipe uses the cream cheese swirl from Grace’s recipe and the cake batter is an improvement on the Chocolate Zucchini Cake I wrote about.



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Spring Soba Salad

Tuesday, April 22, 2008

Lon doesn’t really like soba but sometimes I like a challenge. He gave his thumbs up on this one and I loved it! It’s pretty darn easy too.

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