Posts Tagged recipes

Simple Summer Soup: Gazpacho

gazpacho_1

I can’t believe that I’d never made—or worse, even had—gazpacho before. Well, actually, I can. I didn’t grow up eating the most exotic, or daring—or hell, even sophisticated-sounding—foods. I was 23 before I realized that a crudité is just a veggie plate and that chèvre is goat cheese. And while I’ve known that gazpacho was just pureed tomato-based soup for quite some time, I still hadn’t actually attempted to make it—until Monday, when I looked in my fridge and realized I had the basic foundation for a simple gazpacho: tomatoes, cucumbers and onions.

After glancing at a few recipes online (anyone who has read my book knows that in my life I’ve only followed one recipe from start to finish) I decided I would up the bell pepper factor—most recipes called for one green pepper, I saw that green pepper and raised it a yellow one—make it a tad spicy and try something I now like to call the half-and-half method.

The half-and-half method is, simply, halving all of your gazpacho ingredients and pureeing one half while chopping the other—both in the blender, separately—and then combining the two.

While I have very little to compare it to (remember, I’d never had gazpacho before) I’m considering it a success.

Recipe after the jump…

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Super Simple Summer Salads: Cucumber and Tomato

cucumber_salad

There are few things I hate more than wasting food so before I left town Thursday I made sure to use up at least the majority of the perishables I had in the house. I had an abundance of CSA tomatoes and cucumbers so I decided to make one of my favorite simple salads. It took less than five minutes to prepare and I had enough for a free airplane dinner and even gave a Gladware full to the friend who drove me to the airport. Plus I got to use some of the basil I have growing on the balcony.

Recipe after the jump. Read the rest of this entry »

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A Few Dozen of My Favorite Green

brussels_sprouts_fresh

Recently after a friend had three servings of a Basmati rice and sweet pea dish I’d made for a vegetarian potluck she said, “You really are the queen of simple food!” She then quickly apologized. She was worried she’d offended me. But I was not at all offended; she was right. I do simple food and I do it damn well.

While Adam and Cari’s ideas of eating well might be a tad more elaborate (and sophisticated) than mine—and to be honest, I’d rather be having dinner at either of their places—I pride myself in my ability to get the most flavor out of as few ingredients as possible. This is especially important when trying to eat on $50 a week. And believe it or not, of my favorite one-ingredient, one-dish dinners is roasted Brussels sprouts… not that I always liked them so much. Read the rest of this entry »

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Easy as Custard

custard

I am incredibly adventurous when it comes to eating other people’s food. My own? Not so much. I buy the same thing at the grocery store almost every time I go and my daily menu is usually some variation on the following:

Breakfast:
Plain, fat-free yogurt with cinnamon and whole wheat

Snack:
Apple
Peanut Butter
Peanut Butter
More Peanut Butter

Lunch:
Tuna salad on whole wheat or peanut butter

Dinner:
Rice or whole wheat pasta with Cascadian Farm sweet peas or Roasted Brussels Sprouts washed down with lots of red wine or Jameson

Dessert:
Peanut Butter

Such a diet might make it easy to stick to a $50-a-week budget, but as I mentioned last week, I recently joined my local CSA. The $25-a-week share provides me with vegetables, bread and various staples that normal people might already have in their fridges including a half-gallon of milk and a dozen eggs. I have never been able down a glass of milk on its own—though I’ll buy it by the pint for my coffee—so a half-gallon is excessive as far as I’m concerned. And I rarely buy eggs unless I’m making something that requires them.

As I was standing in front of my fridge yesterday—already feeling guilty about draining all of that energy—I worried the eggs and milk might go to waste. Any time I buy more than a pint of milk it always sours before I can finish it, and to make matters worse, I’m leaving for Bonnaroo, a music festival in Tennessee, tomorrow.

I had plans to attend a roving vegetarian potluck last night and wondered what I could make; eggs and milk… eggs and milk… eggs and milk… custard! I was extremely proud of this idea because 1. I’d never made a custard before and 2. the weekly event often lacks dessert.

I looked online for the basics of making a custard and found that it is ridiculously easy. So easy, in fact, that I felt shame for all of the milk and eggs I’d let go to waste over the years. I decided to modify this recipe because, as anyone who’s read the intro to my book knows, I never follow a recipe from start to finish—even if I have no idea what the hell I’m doing. Luckily it worked.

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