Posts Tagged tomatoes

Cari’s spending: now with added civic responsibility

Working the leftovers transformation challenge. Stale bread became croutons. Green tomatoes ripened in a paper bag. As usual, tastier than it is pretty.

Working the leftovers transformation challenge. Stale bread became croutons. Green tomatoes ripened in a paper bag. As usual, tastier than it is pretty.

Billy’s been on jury duty this week. The first day, I packed him a lunch of leftovers as usual. Yeah. Not a great idea. At work he’s got access to plates, utensils, and a microwave, etc. Oh–and a place to sit and eat. Not so much at the court house. So that first day he had to buy lunch at the food court in the mall. Cheap, it turns out, and filling, but not healthy. He reports that he spent $5 on a heaping saucy plate of something vaguely Asian. The next day he spent $6 for a heaping plate of same (or similar, I guess. I don’t know what the extra buck went for). On the third day, we remembered our humble friend the sandwich, and he went out and bought some meaty stuff and some cheesy stuff and now lunches are back in budget compliance for the duration of the trial.

Besides the two days it took us to figure out the jury duty lunch thing, this week was uneventful, budget-wise. I made some good first steps toward the leftover re-imagining goal. We did, indeed, use leftover beans and rice as burritos for dinner one night. And I made croutons out of some about-to-go-stale bread and then tossed them with oil and vinegar and chunks of tomato from a few of the garden tomatoes that are ripening VERY nicely in paper bags in the sun porch. And then last night I took leftover pasta (elbows, the kid’s current preferred shape), a bag of mixed soup-friendly beans that had been collecting dust in the cupboard, a can of pureed tomato, and the usual soup suspects (onion, garlic, carrots, celery, water), and waved my hands around and turned it into a rather nice minestrone. The celery and carrots were also leftovers of sorts, hanging around from that dinner party last weekend. All I had to buy to make the soup was the pureed tomatoes ($2.99) and a couple onions ($1.21). We had a delicious dinner, and used up a bunch of pasta that would have been tossed most likely or eaten when we didn’t really want it, and a bag of mixed beans that I’d been neglecting because I’m not in the habit of using them. (I’m kind of in a lentil, mung bean, adzuki bean, black bean rut. There are many more beans out there, and I should branch out.)

Anyway…using the leftovers in a different way than how they were first served made for much less drudgery. Leftovers shouldn’t have to be a chore, yeah? I’m thinking the key to leftovers (to be used that same week, rather than making a huge batch of something to freeze and eat again later) with vegetarian food is to plan based on beans and grains. Vegetables are, of course, much better fresh so I try to only harvest and cook as much as we’re going to eat at that meal and maybe for lunch the next day.

Oh yeah…the budget. Here’s the breakdown:

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Kale: It’s the new zucchini

Okay, so maybe it’s not as bad as all that. I do foresee a day in the not-too-distant future when I’ll want to eat kale again. Sadly, that day has not yet come. I say sadly, because the main bed of our fall/winter garden looks like this:
kale

Each of those plants is nearly two feet tall. And no, that’s not all the kale. There are nine more plants not pictured there. (Though what you can see on the left of the photo are our glorious Brussels sprout plants, which I love dearly. In the front is the sprawling monster of a tomato plant that set so many heavy fruits it Broke Its Cage. Yeah. Thing’s a beast. It’s trying to take over the world, starting with my kale patch.)



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Simple Summer Soup: Gazpacho

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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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It Sure Is Tomato Season

bruschetta

I don’t get excited for baseball season or football season, or even for watermelon season. But I sure as hell get excited for tomato season.

Though my own fledgling plant has yet to be fruitful, and tomato season is delayed for many because of the cold, rainy summer, enough farmers in my general area have been lucky enough to  allow me to get in on the tomato action.

For at least a month now, I’ve been getting wonderful hydroponic tomatoes from local farms through my CSA (the yellow ones) and last weekend I picked up some great ripe red ones from a roadside stand in Southern Missouri. While I can’t tell you which ‘breed’ any of my tomatoes actually are, I can tell you that they are perfectly ripe and delicious. And when mixed with a little balsamic vinegar, olive oil, salt, pepper and fresh basil from the only plant on my balcony that’s producing anything, they’re a great topping for CSA sourdough bread that’s toasted on the stove in butter, lots of butter.

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French Press, I Hardly Knew Ye

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My French press during its 15 minutes...

My dad came up to Kansas City on Friday to help my uncle move. Because they worked well into the evening I made him spaghetti with meat sauce (with tomatoes and bison beef from my CSA, of course) and he stayed the night, even though there was a comedy show happening in my dining room (literally, not a dinner gone awry or anything).

As any good daughter who has a memory foam mattress and a dad with a creaky old back would do, I gave my him my bedroom and slept on the couch (the comedians were in my guest room).

Like me, my dad is a coffee drinker (and peanut butter addict). Unlike me, he is an early riser. But on Saturday morning I, too, woke early… to the saddest sound ever. Read the rest of this entry »

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My First Time: Quinoa

quinoa

Do you ever stop and look at something you’re eating or cooking and think, “My ten-year-old self would never have eaten this?” Are you then a little proud of yourself for eating it, and even liking it?

That is exactly how I felt about this sort-of “curried” quinoa soup-type thing I accidentally made last night when trying to cook with the “super grain” for the first time.

Like first-time sex, my first-time quinoa was a little sloppy and I didn’t quite know when it was done. And like sex, my ten-year-old self probably would have said “Gag me with a spoon!” when thinking about it while my adult self really wants some more.

Here’s how it all went down: Read the rest of this entry »

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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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How to Cook a Steak (dot com)

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I’m in love with my CSA. Not only do I get farm fresh vegetables—tomatoes, green onions, potatoes, cabbage and lettuce—I get milk, eggs, meat and bread. Sometimes I even get nuts, cheese and tofu. But this week’s treat was especially exciting, if not a little terrifying: steak!

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