Category Archives: Recipes

Squash Bread, Moroccan Stew, and Ginger Snaps. Oh, My!

img_4976Yesterday, the itinerary went as followed:

Item: Make squash bread—using Farmer Kev’s squash—and freeze. This will be one of our Christmas morning treats.

Item: Make Moroccan vegetable stew in slow cooker so that supper will not be a worry.

Item: Take the dog on a two-mile walk through the woods. Very cold but very beautiful.

Item: Tea and a snack on the couch while I read some of The Snow Child by Eowyn Ivey. (A wonderful book!)

Item: Make a double batch of gingersnaps—some for Clif’s party at work and some for a library party.

Item: Two very sore knees at the end of the day.

But what a good feeling to get everything done that needed to be done.

Next on the agenda: Ice cream pie, peanut butter balls, pie knots, and some kind of cookie. Stuffed shells and cheddar cheese soup.

Christmas is coming.

[amd-zlrecipe-recipe:34]

Biscuits and Chicken in Eight Photos—Or, What to Do with Leftovers

On Saturday, when Shannon came for a visit, I made one of my favorite Crock-Pot meals—chicken thighs on top of sliced carrots and potatoes. For spicing, I used garlic, dried thyme, sage, salt, and pepper. For a little something extra—a splash of olive oil. At noon, I set the Crock-Pot on high and then turned it to low when everything started to bubble. Around 6:00, the chicken and vegetables were cooked, and all I needed to do was make some cornbread to go with the meal.

Naturally, there were leftovers, and in our house, this is never a bad thing. Instead, it is a challenge to come up with a dish that will not only use the leftovers but will also be just as good if not better than the original meal. Because the leftovers were a little scanty, I knew I would have to add something to round them out, and to my way of thinking, biscuits are a good way of rounding out almost any meal. Biscuits on top of chicken, potatoes, carrots, and gravy definitely qualify as an old-timey meal, but that’s all right. Clif and I like old-timey meals.

When I packed away the leftover chicken, potatoes, and carrots, I also saved the broth in a separate bowl. After a night in the refrigerator, the fat rose to the top of the broth, and I skimmed off the fat. There are a couple of ways to make the gravy—with a roux of butter and flour (or that skimmed chicken fat) if you want it really rich. Or, for a less rich gravy a bit of cornstarch and water can be used. In this case, I mixed a tablespoon of cornstarch in 1/3 cup of cold water. I brought the broth to a boil, and stirring all the while, I added the cornstarch and water and let the gravy thicken for a few minutes. Then, I poured the gravy over the leftover potatoes, carrots, and chickens.

I poured the mixture into an 8 x 8 pan, made a batch of biscuits to go on top, and baked it in a 425° oven for about 25 minutes. “Pretty good,” Clif said, as he went back for seconds, and coming from a Yankee, this is high praise. In fact, Clif took so much for seconds that there probably isn’t enough left for both of us to have another meal. Never mind. Clif can have the biscuits and chicken, and I’ll have one of my favorite night-time meals—eggs and toast.

For new readers, here is a link to my mother’s biscuit recipe.

Biscuits and Chicken in Eight Photos:

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Walking to the Narrows on a Gray Day: Includes Recipe for Pasta with Sausage, Sage, and Browned Butter

img_4483Yesterday, my dog, Liam, and I took a walk to the Narrows Pond, about a quarter of a mile from our home. The day was gray, and it was sprinkling so lightly that I could hardly feel the drops on my raincoat. In fact, a rather nice day for a walk.

The Narrows Pond comprises the Upper and Lower Narrows, and the word pond does not do justice to these large, sparkling bodies of water. In my mind, ponds are small and what you find behind an old farm house. The Upper and Lower Narrows are more like lakes, and the Lower Narrows is quite deep—over 100 feet in some areas. My understanding is that what makes the Narrows a pond is the number of inlets—one—that flows into it. As with so many other things in life, when it comes to lakes and ponds, size doesn’t matter.

As Liam and I approached the Narrows, two crows sat at the top of a tree, and they called in warning as we walked past them. A string of ducks quacked and flew in their surging way, going from the Lower Narrows to the Upper Narrows. Way out on the water, so far out that I couldn’t see its distinctive profile, came the tremolo of a loon. “Where are you?” it seemed to ask. “Right here, right here,” I answered.

After the walk it was tea time on the couch, with the dog on one side of me and Sherlock, the orange cat, on my lap. Along with the tea—Earl Grey—I had an apple and a few pretzels. For a book, Gladys Taber’s Still Cove Journal.

By the time Clif came home from work—at 6 p.m.—it was dark, and the shades were drawn.  “What would you like for supper?” I asked. “Pasta with sausage, sage, and browned butter? Or, creamed tuna with dill and garlic over baked potatoes?”

Clif hesitated. “They both sound good.”

“What we don’t have tonight, we will have tomorrow.”

“Pasta and sausage, then.”

I suspected that would be his choice. Clif loves pasta, and he loves sausage, even if it is made with turkey rather than pork, as was the case last night. I had four big sausages—as opposed to the breakfast links—as well as plenty of sage growing in a pot outside.

This dish is so easy that it hardly needs a formal recipe, but for clarity’s sake, I’ll provide one anyway. The sage and browned butter over pasta is the base, and many, many things could be added or substituted: Shrimp, chicken, broccoli, mushrooms, and peppers, to name a few. This dish is so good that it qualifies as a company dish. It would go together easily while guests are finishing their wine and appetizers. Then, I guess, you would have to call it dinner rather than supper.

But midweek on a dark, wet night, the pasta with sage, browned butter, and sausage qualifies as supper.

[amd-zlrecipe-recipe:32]

The Walk for Hope 2013: Includes Recipe for White Chili Stew

The crowd surges toward UMA
The crowd surges toward UMA

Last Saturday was a beautiful sunny day for the Walk for Hope, which is a benefit for MaineGeneral’s breast care program. This year Team Good Eater—my daughter Shannon, our friend Alice, and me—really outdid itself. Thanks to the outstanding generosity of family and friends, the three of us raised $1,215 for the breast care program, and this surpassed what we raised last year—$1,075.  Holy guacamole! As I wrote ungrammatically in a recent email to Shannon and Alice, “We done good.” Many, many thanks to all who donated to Team Good Eater.

The Good Eater Gang (Liam is there, too, but he was hiding by Clif.)
The Good Eater Gang

Team Good Eater was joined by Alice’s husband, Joel; my husband, Clif; our friend Debbie Maddi; and the two dogs, Liam and Holly. (Shannon’s husband, Mike, had to work. We missed you, Mike!) We walked with well over 1,000 other people—men, women, children, mothers, fathers, aunts, uncles, sisters, daughters, sons, and brothers as well as many dogs. What family hasn’t been affected by breast cancer?

Spiked pink hair and high spirits
Spiked pink hair and high spirits

In a mass of pink, we flowed from the Sam’s Club parking lot and walked the trail at the University of Maine at Augusta. We saw many people that we knew, and the mood of the walk was as fine and as beautiful as the day. I am always impressed with how upbeat the tone of this walk is because, let’s face it, there is nothing upbeat about cancer, breast or any other kind. Cancer is always scary, even when it is treatable.

Pretty in pink
Pretty in pink

But on we all went on that golden October day. Many of us—including me—have already had breast cancer. Others were there to support the ones they loved. Down the hill we surged, through the woods at UMA and back up the big hill to Sam’s Club, where we were greeted by cheerleaders, complete with poms-poms. I must admit, I have never been cheered before, and it felt great. When I mentioned this to the cheerleaders, I got another loud and enthusiastic cheer.

After the walk, those who had walked for Team Good Eater came back to the little house in the big woods for a hearty meal of white chile stew, bread from Slate’s bakery, and a salad made primarily with greens from Farmer Kev’s garden. For dessert we had a moist and very tasty German apple cake that Alice made.

Oh, we were all good eaters. The three-and-a-half-mile walk whetted our appetites, and at the end of the meal, there was only a scraping of soup left in the Crock-Pot. I made the soup from a recipe I found online, but I fiddled with it so much in the making that I can now call it my own and share it with you. It’s a hearty stew that tastes even better if it is made the day before.

I served the salad in a pink drizzle bowl that belonged to my mother. Somehow, that bowl seemed very appropriate. Pink is the chosen color of most breast cancer organizations, and my own mother had breast cancer, too. She did not die from it, and she faced it bravely at a time when the breast cancer epidemic was just getting started—1974—long before there were any support groups to help women deal with this terrible disease.

Mom's pink bowl
Mom’s pink bowl

I walked for her as well as for myself and for all women who have had or will have breast cancer.

[amd-zlrecipe-recipe:31]

Carrot Ginger Soup with Esther

img_4145Last week, I went to Esther’s house for lunch. Esther doesn’t like to drive very far from her home—our houses are about 25 miles apart—which means I go to her house when we get together. Therefore, I offered to bring a ginger carrot soup, and Esther readily agreed.

Esther has a large, bright kitchen with a long wooden table. She made biscuits to go with the soup as well as a tomato and cucumber salad. For dessert we had apple cake with ice cream. As we ate, we talked about the volunteer work we do—the Winthrop Food Pantry (me) and the Homeless Shelter in Waterville (Esther). We both agreed that working with people who struggle opens the mind and the heart, and Esther spoke of a discouraged young mother who didn’t see any way to improve her situation. To get a job, the young mother would need training and education, but to get that training and education, she would need childcare, which she couldn’t afford. Certainly, it would have been a better plan to wait to have a child until training, education, and a job were already in place, but life doesn’t always go according to plan. And then what? Give up? The young woman’s situation illustrates the need for additional programs to help mothers who are in her situation.

After lunch, Esther and I went to Waterville, to the Colby College Museum of Art with its new Alfond-Lunder Family Pavilion. This is the third time I’ve been to the museum since the new addition opened, and each time I go, I notice something different. On this visit it was a painting by Louis Comfort Tiffany, who is best known for his stained glass work. The painting—Tin Peddler at Sea Bright—was painted in the late 1800s, and it is a slice-of-life painting that captures a time when peddlers went to people’s homes. What makes this picture interesting is that the customers are African-American, and Tiffany does a terrific job of portraying their modest circumstances without making the people seem desperately on the edge.

As Esther and I walked through the museum, I was once again reminded of how lucky we are in central Maine to have an art museum that not only has first-rate art but also has free admission. This means that viewers can come whenever they want without feeling that they have to look at everything in one visit. Such a gift!

In the collection, there were some Maine seascapes, of course. Esther asked, “When you think of Maine, do you think of the ocean first?”

“No,” I answered. “When I think of Maine I think of forests and fields. Lakes and streams. Factories and rivers.”

Esther nodded. “That’s because we’re both from central Maine.”

Yes, we are, and while we might love the ocean, it was not our first impression of Maine.

The view from Esther's house
The view from Esther’s house

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Harvest Time—All Good Gifts

img_4137Last night’s supper could be called a mostly Maine meal. To narrow it down even further, it could be called a mostly Farmer Kev meal. I made a green bean casserole with his beans and with it I served a baked potato and delicata squash, again both from Farmer Kev. There is nothing like eating a meal of fresh, local vegetables, and the crops that come in the fall are so good and so abundant. I love root vegetables—potatoes and carrots—and those that grow on a vine—all the varieties of squash. They are such good keepers that I order them in bulk from Farmer Kev and store them in baskets in my basement.

I’ve already posted the recipe for the green bean casserole, which has a homemade white sauce spiffed up with either yogurt or sour cream—no cream of mushroom soup, if you please. I’m sure I don’t need to give instructions on how to bake a potato. The delicata squash is so easy to prepare that it doesn’t even need a formal recipe. I cut the squash in half, lengthwise, and scoop out the seeds. Usually, one half is good for one person. I brush a pan with vegetable oil and set the squash halves in the pan. I brush more vegetable oil on the squash, sprinkle some brown sugar, and then season it with salt and pepper. I bake them until very soft in a hot oven—400 or 425 degrees—for about 45 minutes.

Last night, as I ate this harvest meal, even though I am neither religious nor spiritual, I was reminded of the lyrics of “All Good Gifts” from Godspell: “We thank thee then, O Father, for all things bright and good, The seedtime and the harvest, our life our health our food, No gifts have we to offer for all thy love imparts But that which thou desirest, our humble thankful hearts!”

Religious or not, spiritual or not, it is only fitting to give thanks “for all things bright and good, the seed time and the harvest, our life, our health, our food.” And to have a humble, thankful heart.

Good food should never be taken for granted, and yearly, at harvest time, I am reminded of this.

 

A Tempest and an Impromptu Sauce

In yesterday’s post, I complained, a little, about the cool weather we’ve had in the past week or so. Perhaps the weather gods heard me because yesterday was a sizzler, too hot even for me, and by 4:00 in the afternoon, all I could do was lounge on the patio and read North and South by Elizabeth Gaskell. In between reading about Margaret Hale, the snooty young woman from the south of England who goes to live in the dirty, industrial north, I watched for hummingbirds at the feeders. There were none, and it is possible that they have begun their long migration south. No more whizzing of fast-beating wings, no more zipping of iridescent bodies until next summer, and I am always sorry when these ethereal birds are gone.

Luckily, given my propensity for lounging and reading, I had made dinner earlier in the afternoon. My tomato plants—Juliette—did not do as well this year as they have in the past. Too gray and rainy for too long. But I have gotten some to eat with my lunch, and yesterday, I even had enough to make a very small batch of sauce. I washed the tomatoes, dried them, and cut them in half. I tossed them into a bowl with some olive oil and some salt and pepper. Then, I spread them in a 9 x 12 and sprinkled oregano on them. I roasted them at 350 degrees for about 45 minutes, until they were very soft and a little brown around the edges. When they had cooled, I blended them in the food processor.

Vegetables for the sauce (I ended up not using the red and green pepper because I didn't have many tomatoes.)
Vegetables for the sauce (I ended up not using the red and green peppers because I didn’t have many tomatoes.)

In my vegetable bin, I had lots of good things from Farmer Kev to use in the sauce. Item: one small summer squash. Item: one large clove of garlic. Item: one small yellow pepper. I chopped the pepper and the squash and sautéed them with a tablespoon or so of oil in a small skillet. When they were done, I added the garlic and sautéed this for about 30 seconds. Then I poured the sauce over the vegetables. The sauce seemed a little thick, so I thinned it with a bit of water. I tasted the sauce, and it was certainly good as it was—to me, nothing beats the taste of sauce made with roasted tomatoes—but I had a couple of leftover hamburg patties, and I crumbled them into the skillet. I covered the skillet, and let the sauce simmer for about 45 minutes. Another taste, and I seasoned with salt and pepper.

Simmering sauce
Simmering sauce

Clif and I had the sauce over penne, and we had just finished when lightening began to flash and thunder began to boom. As the rain started to pelt down, I called for the black and white cat, and compact and purposeful, she bolted into the house. Just in time. Hail pelted against the windows, and our power went out, not to come on until 5:30 the next morning. But cats, the dog, and people were snug inside as the rain poured down.

I thought of the people repairing the lines in this fierce storm, and I felt thankful for their steadfastness and hardiness. The power seldom goes out when the weather is good. For us, the loss of power is inconvenient. For those who work on the lines, it is a test of stamina and even bravery. (Would you want to be out in a storm messing around with power lines?)

Anyway, just figured it was time to give credit and thanks to where it was due.

Why Didn’t I Think of That?: Tomato, Chopped Egg, Olive Oil, and Salt and Pepper

img_4043Mid-September is upon us, and Clif and I are thinking about putting up the screens and pulling down the storm windows. Already, we’ve been spot heating, something you can do easily with electric heat, one of our heat sources. Summer is pretty much over, and my lunches on the patio are numbered. I’ve resigned myself to a cold house and colder weather. After all, I live in Maine, not San Diego. I know I need to buck up and bundle up, which I am doing.

Still, despite the colder weather, there are many things to look forward to in September and October: weekend bike rides if the weather allows; apples and apple pie, which I love to make; walks on the beach when we visit Shannon and Mike in South Portland; tomatoes (more about them later); and more time to read Victorian novels.

Not long ago, a friend and I decided to form a Victorian book club of two via email. (My friend lives out of state, and we met at a Franco artists gathering, where we discovered we both loved Dickens.) We started with Thomas Hardy’s The Mayor of Casterbridge, which I thought was brilliant. Hardy took a hard, deeply flawed man—the mayor—and made him so sympathetic that I actually cried at the end. We are now reading Elizabeth Gaskell’s North and South, which is not as well written as The Mayor, but is still very much worth reading. Again, Margaret, the main character, is flawed—although not as deeply as the mayor—-and like the mayor she is achingly human and therefore a sympathetic character. Next we will be reading The Warden by Anthony Trollope, and I am looking forward to this. Those Victorians knew how to tell a ripping good story that encourages a reader to read on and on when really she should be doing other things such as yard work, housework, or her own writing. At the same time, the Victorian novelists had something to say, larger points to make along with their ripping good stories, and modern writers certainly could learn some things—pacing and compelling characters—from the Victorians.

Now back to tomatoes. The tomatoes, which were in the doldrums because of the cool, rainy weather we had this summer, have now come into their own, and this is definitely a case of better late than never. Oh, how I love tomatoes, and every day I have one along with whatever else I am eating for lunch. Winter tomatoes are not very good, and I am gorging on fresh tomatoes now while I can.

Yesterday, as I was perusing a few recipes on Yahoo, I came across a simple suggestion for using tomatoes, so simple that I can’t believe I didn’t think of it myself as it combines some of my favorite things. In fact, this recipe is so basic that it would make Michael Pollan, that advocate of simple eating, whoop with joy. As the title of this post suggests, this recipe includes a chopped hard-cooked egg, a chopped tomato (half or so of a small one), a splash or two of olive oil, and salt and pepper. Combine everything in a bowl and use the mixture on top of either toasted pita or toasted bread.

After reading this suggestion, I decided to make it for my lunch, and the results were so good that I will be making it not only today but throughout the month, as long as there are fresh tomatoes.

Apples, fresh tomatoes, and Victorian novels all come together to take the sting out of fall and encroaching winter.

 

Embracing Leftovers—or, What to Do with Leftover Corn, Potatoes, and Steak

img_4003After the feast we had on Saturday to celebrate Shannon and Mike’s wedding anniversary, Clif and I had leftover steak, potatoes, and corn on the cob. We have always been a family that has eaten leftovers. I get extremely irritated when something gets pushed to the back of the refrigerator, and I recoil in horror at what I see when I open the container. Throwing food away seems just plain wrong—a waste of money and a waste of resources.

However, it’s one thing to gamely eat what’s left in the refrigerator and have your husband say, “Well, that wasn’t too bad,” and quite another thing to eat with gusto and hear your (Yankee) husband say, “Pretty darned good.”

With the steak, potatoes, and corn, I was aiming for “pretty darned good.” After all, they were more than pretty darned good the night before when they were freshly cooked and served. All Sunday, off and on, I thought about what to do with those leftovers, and what came to me was some kind of simple cold salad with the addition of roasted garlic and olive oil.

Therefore, when evening came, I dry roasted a clove of garlic, let it cool, and minced it. I chopped the potatoes and the steak, stripped the corn from an ear of corn, and tossed everything in a big bowl. I added the garlic, a generous splash of olive oil, and salt and pepper. How did it taste? Not too bad but not pretty darned good. It needed something else to give it a little pizzazz. Balsamic vinegar, I decided, and that did the trick.

As the evening was lovely and warm, Clif and I ate on the patio. We listened to Talking Heads, and behind them, in a chorus, crickets added their lovely high voices. We had rum and Coke and toasted the end of summer. Clif’s verdict? Not only did he pronounce the meal “pretty darned good” but also good enough to make on its own.

Now that’s what I call success.

Another Two-for-One Meal: Chicken in a Crock-Pot and Chicken Pot Pie

img_3940We are more than halfway through August, and what a lovely month it has been. The excessive rain has stopped, and while some crops have been harmed by all the moisture, others are doing just fine. When I called Lakeside Orchards in Manchester to get a progress report on their apples—specifically their organic macs—I was told that if things continue as they are, then there will be a bumper crop of organic macs along with conventionally grown apples, and the organic macs will be available mid-September. Good news! Lakeside’s organic macs are usually very affordable. I don’t know what the price will be this year, but generally they have gone for about 99 cents a pound.

With all the rain, Clif and I fell behind in our bike riding, and it looks as though we won’t be going on any long bike rides this season. Ah, well! Most nights we are putting in 10 miles, and in a week or so, we have planned a ride from Hallowell to Richmond, about a 20-mile ride trip. Maybe next year we will go on a 50-mile bike ride.

But rain or shine, any time is a good time for a Crock-Pot meal, and I want yet again to thank Shari Burke of Craftivist in the Kitchen for giving me so many great ideas for the Crock-Pot. One meal that I have been making regularly is with chicken thighs, potatoes, and carrots. After everything has cooked, there is a lovely broth left behind, and I have mixed it with rice and chicken to make a burrito filling. Then I started thinking, what if I cooked extra potatoes and carrots, mixed them in the broth, added some leftover chicken, and put everything in a pie shell for a chicken pot pie? How would that work?

Last week, I decided to see how this would indeed work. I was so confident of the results that I promised half the pie to our friends Steve and Margy. Steve recently had knee surgery, and it seemed to me that chicken pie would be just the thing to perk him up. At the same time, a part of me was worried. What if the pie did not come out as well as I thought it would? What if it didn’t come out well at all?

I pushed those nagging little thoughts aside and commenced with the process. On the night before I made the pie, we had meal number one—chicken, potatoes, and carrots. But, following Shari’s model, I cooked extra—10 potatoes, sliced small; 1 1/2 cups of carrots cut in rounds; 7 chicken thighs with the skin on; 2 cloves of garlic, chopped; 3/4 teaspoon of dried thyme; 3/4 teaspoon of dried sage; as well as salt, pepper, and olive oil sprinkled on top. The potatoes and carrots went on the bottom, and the chicken thighs went on top in one layer. I sprinkled the garlic, herbs, salt, pepper, and olive oil on top of the chicken. I always like to bring the food to a boil on high and then let it simmer on low until everything is done, about 7 hours from start to finish. (A family of four would probably have to use 2 Crock-Pots and double the ingredients. My Crock-Pot is 6 quarts.)

Clif and I ate and enjoyed the chicken, potatoes, and carrots. After we were finished, I used a slotted spoon to scoop the leftover carrots and potatoes into a dish. Discarding the skins, I took the leftover chicken off the bone and put the meat into a separate dish.  Into yet another dish, I poured the chicken drippings.

The next day, the fat had risen to the top of the drippings, and I skimmed off this fat. I always feel bad about doing this. Chicken fat is pretty tasty, but enough is enough. We would be having pie, after all. In a big bowl, I combined the vegetables and the chicken. In a small pan, I heated the chicken drippings—they had congealed—until they were runny and warm. I added the drippings to the vegetables and chicken.

Next came the crust. Now, I like making pie crust, and I seldom buy store-bought ones, but there are some good ready-made crusts at the supermarket that could be used.

I made a pie crust, filled the pie, crimped the edges, and put foil strips around the edges so that the thin edges would not burn before the thicker middle was done. I preheated the oven to 425 and set the timer for 25 minutes, at which point I took out the pie, removed the foil strips, and returned the pie to the oven to cook for another 15 minutes or so until the whole top was nicely browned.

The results? Here is what Clif said: “It couldn’t be any better.” High, high praise coming from my Yankee husband, and I have to admit the pie was pretty tasty.

With a light heart, I delivered the pie to Margy and Steve, and I already have plans to make another chicken pie again soon. I do want to note that the filling is very stiff, which I like. It makes it easier to slice the pie. However, for those who like the filling to be a little softer, milk or cream could be added to the potato and chicken mixture.

I’ve been thinking that the chicken mixture could also be put into a pan and topped with biscuit dough. But that is an idea for another post.