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Ricotta and Tomato Tart

I bought a giant tub of ricotta ten days ago, and we only used a bit of it last week, so I’ve been looking for recipes that used ricotta that weren’t

  • desserts
  • lasagnas
  • ricotta salata dishes

Finally found one on the WeightWatchers online site (where I’ve been a relatively happy weight-loser for 4 years and 45 lbs): I don’t know if you can read it without being a member, but Ricotta and Tomato Tart takes you there.

Diet food, of course.  The recipe calls for zero-fat ricotta and fat-free egg substitute (whatever that might be).  I used my low-fat ricotta and regular eggs.

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Not a flattering picture, but the result was pretty tasty.  I think well of Weight Watchers: they’re doing yeoman’s work trying to get diet food to taste good.

Again, home alone.  Debbie still out of town and Josh not yet home for the weekend.

Onward and upward.

Stuffed Squash

I don’t know why, but I have this yen to make the untasty taste good.  Earlier this year (but before Crummy Cook, I think) I tried to make a decent-tasting kasha dish.  Debbie actually succeeded with this later in the year by the time-honored expedient of using boatloads of butter.

Squash (of the non-zucchini variety) is pretty un-tasty in my book, so as the first winter squashes start to come out I’m going to try various ways to make it taste good.

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Here’s the first shot.  Even Epicurious shies away from calling this stuffed squash: Orzo and Cheese baked in Acorn Squash.  I thought I had “white” orzo but only had whole wheat, and the cheddar I got was a Life’s DHA cheddar from Giant which was deeply insipid.  The net result was something pretty much like other stuffed squash I’ve had in the past: not inedible, but nothing that would redeem the stuff-ee.

Fortunately, I was alone.  Debbie was out of town and it was just me.  But I will try again: maybe I should just bite the bullet and poach it in a cup of butter.

Chiles Rellenos

Debbie had bought some poblano peppers with the idea of making chiles rellenos.  When some days (well, ok, weeks) had passed and it looked like her travel schedule was not going to “support” making them, I took over and determined to CrummyCook them last Wednesday.

We have an older Mexican cookbook from Diana Kennedy which Debbie had always “praised with faint damn” by saying it was “too complicated.”  I looked up the chiles rellenos recipe in the book and was intrigued because it stuffed the peppers with picadillo instead of the usual gooey bland cheese, but when I went over it in detail Debbie was right: you had to make the picadillo, you had to roast and peel the peppers, you had to stuff them, and you had to make a sauce for them.

Mark Bittman  to the rescue with a simpler approach.  Still plenty daunting, still roasting/peeling, stuffing, and sauce, but the stuffing itself was straightforward and Mark had a less take-no-prisoners approach to the sauce.

IMG_20100929_170011Unfortunately, my stuffing didn’t go much better with these chiles than my frustrating encounter with the squash blossoms in July.  I think I roasted the chiles too long, and, although they were easy to peel, the chile innards began to fall apart and they resembled Franken-chiles by the time I patched them together with toothpicks and skewers (above).

No matter, the final result was tasty enough, and I will work on less vigorous roasting next time around.

Polenta and Sausage

The problem: hot turkey sausage (which Harry says shouldn’t even count as “sausage”), red peppers, and hulled corn (Debbie bought a pack of it at Whole Foods for reasons I couldn’t divine).

There were actually some interesting Epicurious recipes for sausage and corn (yes, Harry, even turkey “sausage” and corn), but for whatever reason sausage a polenta, a dish Debbie makes very well, spoke to me.

Don’t tell anyone, but we have used Barbara Kafka’s microwave recipe for polenta for some years.  Easy, tastes fine.  I’m sure my faithful readers, at least some of them, are calling foul.  But we do it anyhow because we love polenta and don’t love excess work.

So, polenta was spoken for.  The sauce was c-cook improvisation: I wilted down onions and peppers in olive oil, then added the sausage (which wasn’t going to contribute much to the fat department, else I would have had them first), then garlic for a brief fragrant moment, then deglaze with red wine, then add store-bought tomato sauce.

Not the most adventuresome recipe I’ve ever made (although I gave myself points for improvisation).  Unfortunately, it didn’t taste that great to me.  Probably cut too many corners.  The sauce wasn’t so hot.  Some gourmet stuff in a jar, but all the heartburn of tomatoes with none of the mouth feel and finish of a really great tomato sauce.  Would have been better to do my own.  I made a great Bolognese Sauce once or twice from Marcella Hazan.  These things are well within my powers.  Oh, well.

Debbie and I both thought what I made was pretty good.  But I’ll have to aim for a higher bar next week.

Southwest Turkey Burgers with Corn Salsa

I made these last night, in a nod to the classic Friday pattern of crummy cooking (Debbie and I were out on actual Friday night).

Not bad, certainly tastier than they sounded.  Maybe the secret here was that Debbie told me we had ground turkey and we really had ground chicken thigh, which has a little “nature” to it that turkey never had and never will.

Ended up making the corn salsa from scratch – tomatoes, onions, fresh corn cut off the cob, cilantro, etc. – because we didn’t have any store-bought in the house.  Have to learn how to make different kinds of salsas.

Back in the saddle: Chicken & Edamame stir fry

Vacation and other trouble completely discombobulated my cooking routine… and even more so my blogging.  Hopefully, we’re back in the saddle again.

IMG_20100825_192229 I made this Brown Rice and Chicken Stir-Fry with Edamame and Walnuts from an Epicurious search on chicken and edamame.  It sounds kind of disgustingly healthful (my cousin Nina said, “Edamame, isn’t that like lima beans?”), but it wasn’t bad.  The generic stir fry flavors – ginger, garlic, soy, sherry, stock – overwhelmed any lima-bean aspects.  Debbie and I really liked it.  (The dark stuff in the picture, by the way, is toasted walnuts, not some Essence of Health Food.)

Simply Grilled

On Martha’s Vineyard this week, with Liz and her boys, Josh, and Debbie.  Last night everyone had finally arrived.

Pre CrummyCook we went out a lot when we went to the Vineyard.  The kitchen environment in a by-the-week rental is often not what you would want, and things don’t work well.  Plus the whole island is really moist (what you’d expect from some land in the middle of the ocean, I guess), and things (like crackers, cereal, pasteboard boxes, etc) get so moist they’re downright flexible.

But all that has changed with the Cook’s Point of View, and so we’re making more food.

We did swordfish on the charcoal grill last night.  My Universal Grilling Method (heat to iron-melting temperature and cook really fast) works extremely well with this use case.  The fish was actually pretty good.  I thought it was a little too dry in the middle, but Liz said her piece had a part that was perfect.

That and chard and salad and corn on the cob (not Island corn, but picked the same day on the mainland) seemed to please everyone.

Adobo-rubbed Pork Tenderloin

This started out because I wanted to grill something, and I knew we had a pork tenderloin in the freezer.  But this recipe for pan-seared and then oven-roasted tenderloin spoke to me, mainly because the rub sounded exotic (and the basic theory of rubbing, as opposed to marinating, was unfamiliar to me).

It’s another Self magazine recipe, which means less tasty but more healthy than, say, Gourmet or other Conde-Nast properties.  But it was good.  There’s a pico de gallo topping built around black beans which had a pretty simlar taste to the rub.  I was worried it was going to be monotonous, and perhaps it was a bit.  But Debbie was happy, and so was I.

We had a salad on the side.

Squash Blossoms

Squash blossoms was the stretch vegetable this week.  They had them at the farmers’ market.  I’ve always wanted to think of myself as someone who knew how to prepare them.  And, with the help of Epicurious, I am.  Sort of.

Here they are.  It’s a delicious recipe, and not too hard (by Epicurious standards).  It took me about the 40 min they mention in the recipe.

The hard thing is actually getting the stuffing into the darn squash blossoms.  They’re fragile.  They’re floppy.  They lack structural integrity.  I would get one open and the leaves would flop back into place while I was pushing the stuffing in.  Or I would push too vigorously the leaves would tear.  And nothing I could do seemed to be able to get the stuffing into the very bottom of the flower.

In any case, Debbie thought they tasted great.  I could have used more stuffing.  Next time I’ll get a pastry bag or a big plastic syringe and do it right.