This salad was the start of a very lovely and tasty dinner. It was made with organic mixed greens and butter lettuce, sliced honey tangerines, blood oranges, & kumquats, topped with chopped toasted pistachios. The dressing was tangerine zest, tangerine, blood orange, & navel orange juices, agave nectar, rice vinegar, canola & olive oils. It sounds like it could be too sweet, but it wasn't...it was light, fresh and slighty sweet. To find creative seasonal salads, I often turn to Annie Somerville. This recipe is from Everyday Greens. This cookbook was a lucky find at the local used book store.
For the center of the plate entree, I wanted to make something festive and capture the season. These filo purses fit the bill. They are filled with roasted asparagus & cremini mushrooms, caramelized red onions & leeks, fresh garden thyme & parsley, Asiago & Parmesan cheeses, and a couple fresh eggs with a tiny bit of cream. Once the filling is made the purses come together rather easily. A whole tray of these coming out of the oven is gorgeous! They didn't taste too shabby either!
I've been a frustrated home baker...especially after seeing what a professional bread oven can do for artisan-style breads. While looking for dessert recipes a couple weeks ago, I stumbled across a simple technique in Cooks Illustrated (Jan/Feb 2008). They suggested baking the bread in a preheated covered dutch oven. I was pleasantly surprised at how good the oven spring was and how crispy and thin the crust turned out. My friend Sunni loaned me her beautiful and well-loved Le Creuset dutch oven for this loaf. This bread uses a levain culture that I got from the San Fransisco Baking Institute. The recipe is Vermont Sourdough from Bread: a Baker's Book of Techniques and Recipes by Jeffrey Hamelman (a great book for both professionals and home bakers alike)
Dessert...my favorite part of the meal
I made a lemon cheesecake. It had three distinct layers. The crust was made with Barnum Animal Crackers (I find great comfort that they still come in those little boxes with a string handle), butter and sugar. The filling was cream cheese, cream, eggs, sugar, lemon zest & juice, vanilla and salt. The topping was a tart layer of lemon curd. I modified the curd recipe by steeping fresh rose geranium leaves with the lemon juice. It added a slight floral nuance. The flower is rose geranium.
Next week's dinner
Tuscan White Bean Soup - A rustic soup made with three different beans and a tomato-garlic-rosemary-wine broth. I make it a day ahead because it actually develops better character as the flavors have time to mingle and marry.
Seasonal Salad - romaine and mixed greens, sun-dried tomatoes, Hard-cooked eggs, olives, sourdough croutons and red wine vinaigrette
Artisan-style Bread - Brio's Pan au Levain
Fresh made Rose-Geranium Ice cream and Buttery Shortbread - oh boy...this is an experiment...let's see if we can keep the ice cream cold enough! I suggest that you bring an ice pack when you pick-up or just rush home quickly and eat the ice cream while the soup is warming on your stove!
Recent Comments