Showing posts with label desserts. Show all posts
Showing posts with label desserts. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 17, 2013

The Nutty Professor

Afterlight

Welcome to Sundae School. Have you taught your toddlers about banana splits? You don't want them to learn about it in the streets.

The Nutty Professor

Starter Sundae for a 27-month old
  • Banana, cut into fourths
  • Neapolitan Ice Cream (for toddlers who like pink) or Ben & Jerry's Peanut Brittle (really, really good)
  • Whipped cream
  • Jean's Java Hot Fudge Sauce
  • Sprinkles
  • Raspberries (cherries are in season, but we didn't have any in the house)
  • Optional: More nuts (for accompanying adults; they're a choking hazard for the kid)
I think Mom and Dad were more into this than Tot, but a good time was had by all.

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Adventures in CSA: Week 5 Recipes



I'm late! I'm late! For a very important post!

It's too early in the season for me to be half a week behind, y'all. Here I am, at last, with a (hopefully) better-late-than-never report of how we ate our CSA vegetables during week 5, which ended this past Saturday. I hope you haven't been hungry, waiting. You have to eat to keep your strength up!

Week 5 Produce (vegetable share, and first week of fruit)
4 or 5 cucumbers
1 head green cabbage
1 bunch tatsoi - CHALLENGE VEGETABLE
4 or 5 garlic scapes
1 head Tuscan kale
1 head lettuce
1 bunch dill
1 bunch carrots
1 pint cherries
1/2 pint blackberries
1 jar blackberry jam -- CORRECTION: it was actually black currant jam

Okay, I just have to interrupt myself here to say that the classical music radio station I'm listening to while typing this is now suddenly playing Jingle Bells. Is that because it's been so hot we're wishing for winter? Or has someone fallen asleep at the switch?

Despite the brutal heat in NYC this week, I'm not wishing for winter. I'm too into these summer vegetables and fruits. So, without further ado, descriptions of what we et last week begin . . . NOW.

Week 5

Cucumber Sesame Salad - We were invited to an impromptu backyard-baby-pool-and-salads potluck party, and this is what I pulled together to take as our dish. I found the recipe in an issue of Cooking Light magazine. It called for miso or low-sodium soy sauce, and I didn't have any miso in the house, so I used the latter, but I'd love to make it again with miso. It was very good, and I think miso might make it "next level," if you will grant that a cucumber salad could be "next level."

Instead of toasted sesame seeds, I actually used a toasted sesame seed and salt mixture called gomashio. You could make your own if you can't find it in stores (or are the sort of person inclined to make your own condiments). It added a depth to the dish that I appreciated.

Week 5

Side note: Have I mentioned how glad I am to have a subscription to Cooking Light? If you're like me, you might be put off by the "Light" in the title. For years, I assumed it was a "diet" magazine, and I'm mightily suspicious of the diet industry. But, thanks to a post recommending this magazine to food-lovers on the Chowhound home cooking board (a great place to find ideas for CSA veggies, by the way), I know now that I can blithely ignore that "Light." It really just means "healthy," as far as I'm concerned. Over the past few years, I've found each issue to have really approachable ideas, attainable ingredients, multiple recipes I want to and am able to make -- in the time I've allotted myself in life for cooking, if you know what I mean -- and it has a focus on seasonal produce that keeps me subscribing. Above is a picture of my recipe file. Most of the pages from magazines have been ripped out of Cooking Light.

p.s. No, the Cooking Light people didn't put me up to this. I've never gotten one red cent from them, and they have no idea I exist. But I love them anyway.

Back to week five's CSA share, and the food it inspired!


Week 5

Tatsoi and Kale Rice Bowl - Dan put this dish together. I couldn't really detect the difference between the tatsoi and kale, once it was all cooked together, but I suspect the tatsoi may have been responsible for some slightly more tender bites. There was also some chicken in here, and maybe some garlic scapes, as well as dried (soaked) mushrooms and soy sauce. The leftovers were good for two or three days, though the chicken got a teeny bit chewy with reheating.

I like having dried mushrooms in the house. They've been working well with off-the-cuff CSA dishes.

Week 5

Apple Cider Blackberry Popsicle - Look, I tried to talk the kid into a more seasonal beverage, like lemonade, to pair with the CSA berries, but he's a fiend for both Halloween and apple cider. We made several of these with our Zoku (again, not a paid advertisement; I got two as a gift from my Aunt Debbie) and they were yummy! The best news is that the kid gets full before he eats a whole popsicle, so I "have" to help. The worst news is that I think these need to be eaten outside, or followed by a thorough floor-mopping, next time.

Week 5

Chai-Spiced Carrot Cake, topped with blueberries - If you've read past years' posts (and you should, because I used to have a lot more time to blog thoughtfully and creatively!), you may know that I make a carrot cake every year around the beginning of July. That's because it's Dan's preferred birthday cake, he happens to have a birthday every year in early July, and I aim to please.

I really think the Cooks Illustrated recipe I use (online here) results in the best carrot cake of any I've tried, and lately I've been using the 2005 print issue's "chai spiced" variation, which includes a good amount of black pepper and cardamom. Sebastian said "no nuts," when asked to weigh in on that option, and he's a boy after my own heart. I was happy to oblige. I like nuts, but not so much IN cake.

New this year was my idea to top the cream cheese icing with CSA blueberries. Yes to blueberries on carrot cake! By the way, in case you're wondering if you can accidentally use a whole stick of butter in your cream cheese icing (instead of 5 Tablespoons) and still have it taste good, that answer is also yes. Yes, yes, yes! Everything is yes (except for nuts, which is no), when it comes to this cake!

p.s. I no longer subscribe to Cooks Illustrated, but that's another story.

Week 5

Black Currant Jam on Toast - The jam the farm sent us is excellent. My "secret" to toast-making is to use slightly more butter than necessary. Butter it IMMEDIATELY upon its emergence from the toaster. Then, let it melt with the pieces of toast sandwiched together (butter-sides-in) before separating your slices and putting on the jam. You probably already do this. It's not rocket science, after all. My secret to a lot of things is to use slightly more butter than necessary. I'm pretty sure this doesn't even technically qualify as a secret.

Week 5

Blackberries and Whipped Cream - Most of our CSA cherries and blackberries were devoured raw, but a few made it into some whipped cream we happened to have in the house (leftover from introducing our son to the classic banana split). My shame: it's not homemade whipped cream. It almost always is, I swear! I wasn't the one who went to the store!

Week 5

Week 5

Scrambled Eggs with Spring Onions and Garlic Scapes - I'm not sure where the spring onions were from. Maybe left over from week 4? At any rate, they weren't too wilted, so I sliced them into rounds (greens and whites) and sauteed them in butter until they almost melted, then scrambled some eggs on top of them. When the eggs were almost cooked, I cut up and added the grilled garlic scapes (grilled on an indoor grill pan that may have still had some sausage grease on it). Sebastian thought the scapes were green beans; he's so unsophisticated!

week 5

Simple Salad - It looks dull. It wasn't. These fresh lettuces we keep getting are so delicious and tender they hardly need anything added to them. Dan dressed this week's head with lemon juice, walnut oil, and coarse salt. I couldn't stop eating it.


So, that's most of it! A few odds and ends:

The dill we got just barely made it to the beginning of week 6, and you'll see what we did with it, and one leftover cucumber, in the next recipe post. I also just realized we didn't use the cabbage in week 5. Better dig through the fridge and see what kind of shape it's in!

Did anything from your CSA share go missing in your kitchen this week? 


Week 5

Monday, June 18, 2012

Eating Smorgasburg: June 16, 2012

East River State Park

Saturday was a glorious day in NYC. We started it off by picking up our CSA share, then upped the ante with a relatively quick trip to foodie flea market Smorgasburg (I took this picture in the adjacent East River State Park). It was quick, sure, but I still had time to stuff myself with...

Smorgasburg June 16, 2012



Smorgasburg June 16, 2012

Brooklyn Piggies' pigs in a blanket. We got three (2 spicy, one original) with BBQ sauce. BEST OF! Seriously, these are awesome. Eat them, eat them. I didn't want to share.

Smorgasburg June 16, 2012 Smorgasburg June 16, 2012

I always want to drink every flavor of lemonade and limeade being served by The Stand. Today we chose strawberry-rhubarb.Though I don't think the two should be baked together, I love them smushed into lemonade together. And I love that the drinks at The Stand are never too sweet. They're perfectly refreshing.

Smorgasburg June 16, 2012

Not pictured: another olive breadstick. Here's a correction, too. These are not from TomCat Bakery, as stated in that previous post. They're from Commerce. Sorry for the error, Commerce! The baby and I still love how tender and flavorful these are. 

Smorgasburg June 16, 2012
 Smorgasburg June 16, 2012 Smorgasburg June 16, 2012
The Maine lobster roll from Red Hook Lobster Pound might be the most expensive item at Smorgasburg ($16). I'd heard great things about it, and I finally bit the bullet. You know what? I think I'm just not that into lobster. The pickle was great. The toasted bun and toppings were swell.  The lobster was pretty good, but I kept thinking, "I wish there was less lobster and it cost less." You know what? I think I just wanted a hot dog. If you're a lobster lover, you'd probably love this. Turns out I'm not.

Smorgasburg June 16, 2012

Two pieces of buttermilk fried chicken and cheddar waffle with maple-vinegar dipping sauce by BFC (from the folks at Buttermilk Channel). I've had Buttermilk Channel chicken and waffles before. They are famous in their neighborhood -- and beyond -- for good reason. This chicken was moist and the breading was delicious. It was a great choice (by Dan) to round out the savory part of our meal this time around.

Smorgasburg June 16, 2012 Smorgasburg June 16, 2012

Now, on to the desserts! We started with one of Nana's (from Cecile Dyer of Pies ’n’ Thighs) frozen bananas with crushed almonds, coconut, and sea salt.  The woman who applied the toppings said it was only the second frozen banana she had made, so she was clearly new to the stand. Her technique wasn't great, and most of our coconut, nuts, and salt blew away on the wind (the photo above is of our banana's "best side"). When she was finished, she asked the woman training her, "How was that? Good, right?" and the trainer actually said no. But we still had to pay $6 for it, so...that was a bummer. Not worth the price (though I expect she'll get better at making them). One thing I did like about it was that the banana wasn't frozen solid. I've gotten them before (from other vendors) and find them really hard to eat if you have to saw at the banana to bite through it.

 Smorgasburg June 16, 2012

A "Strawberry Supreme" ice cream sandwich. Visiting The Good Batch to see what they're offering has become a tradition. This excellent ice cream sandwich featured brown butter cookies, strawberry semifreddo, fresh strawberries, and Adirondack Creamery vanilla ice cream. It was good, but that salty lemon cookie ("Laughter and Lemon") of a few weeks ago still haunts my dreams...


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Au Currant(s)


Blank Slice


Wondering how to eat the berry of the season? The berry all the celebrities are raving about*? Over the weekend, I used a quart of red currants for three different dishes.

Currants

First, currants served as a garnish for Mark Bittman's fluffy pancakes from How to Cook Everything. Though they are too tart for some to enjoy raw, I think the sweetness of the syrup cut their tartness just enough that even currant newbies could enjoy them this way. Dan added lemon zest to the pancake batter, which complimented them nicely.

Tart

I also made a rhubarb and red currant tart using a recipe from The Paris Kitchen. I used this alarmingly simple (just watch the screamingly hot bowl) French tart dough recipe method recounted by David Lebovitz. I doubled the sugar in the tart recipe when I realized that it was described as "savory." I wanted something sweet and tangy, not savory. That was a good move. It was still very tart, which I like. I also found that it needed only 40-45 minutes to bake, which worked out well because any longer would have burned the tart crust.

You know how there are a zillion recipes online for strawberry-rhubarb pie? I love rhubarb, but I've always railed against pairing it with the traditional strawberry. I just don't think that baking it with strawberry adds much in terms of flavor or texture. Currant, on the other hand, gives the sour fruit more dimension (says I) and it only becomes a bit softer with baking, so there's still something in the pie or tart on which to chew. Rhubarb is also good with sour cherries, and I've always wanted to try baking rhubarb with cranberry, but don't forget that it's swell on its own.

I have now officially typed the word "tart" too many times. Where's my thesaurus?

Limoncello fruit salad

Finally, after sharing a few raw handfuls with my 15-month-old, who apparently is as big a fan of currants as I, the remaining berries went into Ina Garten's fruit salad with limoncello recipe. I also used this week's CSA strawberries and blueberries, as well as a few bananas. Without the time (or multiple lemons) to make my own lemon curd (though I've done it in the past and recommend it), I mixed the yogurt topping with a spoonful of lingonberry preserves. This is an excellent summer dessert, side, or breakfast (I tested it three times, of course).

Currants! They're so now! They're so trending! They're so sassy! They're so you.

*Celebrity raves and currant trends may be fictional. I've loved currants since finding them growing on a bush near my childhood home in Dubuque, Iowa. A previous resident must have planted them, and I loved the novelty of being able to eat something right off a plant in my backyard, as well as their sharp, fruity, almost bitter flavor. I think I may also have enjoyed that they look a bit like they'd be poisonous.

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Monday, April 23, 2012

The Case of the Encoded Cookie Cake

Cookie Cake

Slice

Someone at work shared his cookie birthday cake from the Milk and Cookies Bakery on Commerce Street here in NYC. I found my slice to be fine and pleasingly crumbly. Though the dark chocolate ganache on top was slightly more rich than I would have liked, it was still a good mid-afternoon diversion.

Don't ask what was written in icing across the cake. Apparently, it's something of a secret. Inside Joke Cake!

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Thursday, September 29, 2011

Good News!

Bluebottle S'more

Not only does my pediatrician give out delicious lollipops, but her office is located right around the corner from this.

My only issue with this Blue Bottle Coffee s'more was that the "fancy" graham crackers don't really make it better.  They do, however, make it more portable.  So go ahead, y'all.

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Saturday, April 23, 2011

Things in Jars

Jarred

My friend Nick brings things in jars.

Jar-less

This thing, from his latest visit, was a sort of loose, unsticky, chocolate cereal treat.  It had dried fruit in it -- cherries? raisins?  It reminded me of the treats discussed in this post, but seemed blessedly less healthy.

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Saturday, April 16, 2011

My compliments

Five Leaves

We did nothing to deserve a complimentary Lemon-Brown Butter Mochi Cake with kumquat sauce, black sesame streusel, and Il Laboratorio Buttermilk Ice Cream, but were thrilled when it was brought to us at one of our favorite neighborhood spots, Five Leaves.

Thankfully, our relative unworthiness did not sour its flavor.  Delicious!

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Friday, February 4, 2011

My pants are too tight. Oh, hello, Pudding.

Pudding

Yes, I'm too lazy to shop for maternity pants.  The pair I'm wearing today have to be completely unbuttoned when I sit down.  I'm spending my Elevenses eating leftover pudding from The Food Emporium anyway -- tight pants be damned!

FYI, marshmallows left in pudding overnight take on a sort of soft-foam texture.  Odd.

Also!  While I have mentioned I found Whole Foods' chocolate pudding to be TOO chocolatey and rich, the F.E. pudding is just my speed. The only thing I don't like about this in-store brand is the packaging.  Because the pudding cup is "rippled" around its sides, it is impossible to scrape all of the pudding out with any utensil.  Wasted pudding is a disgrace.

p.s.  Here's a funny picture of my cat wearing my hair as a wig. It is un-staged (i.e. he crawled under my chin and sat down like that):

Laffs



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Thursday, January 27, 2011

Shower Power!

Shower 6

Jeff and Michelle are having a baby (they beat me to it).  I felt privileged to attend one of their baby showers last weekend -- and not just because the food served there was excellent.

Shower 4

But it was.

Shower 1

Shower 5

Shower 2

The party was held in the back room of, and catered by, a charming local bar called The Richardson.  They laid out a great spread of grilled sandwiches/panini, veggies, pickles, cheese, deviled eggs, pretzels, and meats.

Shower 9

I believe I ate quite a bit. 

Shower 7

Shower 8

Seriously intense, moist, and attractive cupcakes (chocolate, vanilla, red velvet, and carrot cake) were provided by another local favorite shop, The Blue Stove.

Congratulations, Jeff and Michelle!  And thanks (also to Jeff's mom, who hosted) for the party!

Shower 3

Saturday, January 1, 2011

Other stuff I ate last year:

Grey Dog cookie

Grey Dog cookies are huge!  Big cookies have to be soft for me to like them, and this chocolate peanut butter one worked for me. Several times.

Wrapped

Unwrapped

Molly and David gave me pie!

Pies from Ian

Ian gave me pie!

Plum cake

I made a plum cake!

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