Archive for May, 2009

Farm Line

Friday, May 29th, 2009

Wednesday morning I visited Chicago’s Green City Market. I decided that there is really no other way I would rather spend my mid-week morning. The visit made me realize that I pose as a “wanna-be-farmer.”

The summer after I graduated from high school I called my soon-to-be roommate, Monica, from central Illinois. We chatted, and went through the routine conversation of who would bring the refrigerator, the carpet, and the TV. Before the conversation was complete, I also learned that Monica owned a pig that won first prize at the state fair. She had pigs to care for; I had brothers. I imagined going to college and living with my opposite, but the more I thought about it, we were not as different as it might seem.

I went to farm camp when I was nine. It was not simply a farm camp; it was a nineteenth century farm camp. The counselors wore period clothing, we churned butter, and called lunch “dinner” and dinner “supper.” Dinner and supper were always fresh thanks to the farm’s “kitchen garden.”

I remember there was a big red barn that was the hot spot for the campers to congregate. The barn housed loads of haystacks that were piled three times our size. Each of us would climb the ladder to the barn’s loft and leap into the cows’ feed. We later came to find out that there were pitchforks hidden in the hay. Luckily no parents received a call that their child was speared in the spirit of the 1800’s. My only story of commotion was getting an undeserved lick from Betsy the cow.  While most of my friends were at Girl Scout camp; I was stuck in the past century and all smiles.

The farm attachment was strengthened when I saw “Field of Dreams” for the first time. I saw the movie for the second time as a 20-something and felt like I should leave the city, grow corn, and maybe build a baseball field.

For now, urban living has a strong hold on me, but maybe someday I will listen to the voices inside my head. The closest I am going to get to farm fresh produce this summer are my mornings trips to the market.

Rules of the market:

Go with no expectations

Talk to the farmers

Bring cash and big bags

Plan your meals each week around the key produce purchased at the market. Simplify your cooking this summer and let the fresh food do the work for you. Try this dish.
ps- I am on a pasta/pine nut kick and I cannot guarantee that it will end here.

Asparagus Pasta
Adapted from Bon Appetit

¾ pound pasta (cavatappi)
1 bundle of farmer’s market asparagus (I used purple asparagus) – trimmed and chopped
1 shallot – chopped
2 cloves of garlic – minced
1 handful of flat leaf parsley – chopped
½ lemon – juiced
½ cup toasted pine nuts
1 log goat cheese crumbled
s and p
parmesan

Prepare the pasta. In a large pan, sauté the shallot for 4 minutes, add the garlic and cook for another minute. Drop the asparagus into the boiling water with the pasta. Cook 2-3 minutes. Remove the asparagus with a slotted spoon and add to the shallot mixture. Toss the pasta and ¼ cup reserved pasta water into the sauté pan. Add the chopped parsley, pine nuts, lemon juice and crumbled goat cheese. Season with salt, pepper and parmesan cheese.

Party On

Friday, May 22nd, 2009

I love a good party. I was at one this past weekend, but the only difference: I was the cook and had a crew of helpers (Billy, Brian, and Gretchen). It was my first official, “unofficial” gig and it was a success.

75 people gathered at a downtown party room to celebrate two hardworking graduates. I would be a liar if I said that I was calm the week leading up to the event—I wanted the food to be just right. But, Saturday hit and my nerves mysteriously settled; it was go-time.

Both high schoolers and gourmets enjoyed the menu selections. The clear champs were the sweet potato chips with a garlic mashed potato dollop and the pulled pork. I should also mention that people were extremely eager for the warm chocolate chip cookies.

At one point, I realized the night was moving along very smoothly, and had a feeling I was in for it. Soon after that thought occurred, I opened the refrigerator and a piece of Tupperware cascaded down to the floor. The plastic cracked open and black beans splattered everywhere. The night was now complete with at least one clumsy moment that I could claim as my own. Thankfully it was as painless as spilling the beans.

My favorite part of the evening was easily walking around with the chocolate chip cookie tray—it was my victory lap. I did it.

The next day I was tired. My body shut down. For some reason, I was under the impression that I had enough energy to make a simple dinner. Instead it was a night of me, the couch, and one really long nap. I did not cook on Sunday night, but if I did, I would have made this dish.

Fresh Tomato Pasta
Adapted from Alice Waters’ Fanny at Chez Panisse

5 cups cherry or grape tomatoes – diced
1 cup olive oil
2 TBS red wine vinegar or balsamic vinegar
generous handful of basil – chopped
1 large garlic clove – minced
s and p
toasted pine nuts or walnuts
spaghetti
parmesan cheese

Combine the tomatoes, olive oil, vinegar, basil and garlic in a medium size bowl. Season with salt and pepper. Set aside. Prepare the pasta. Let the pasta cool. Combine the pasta with the tomato mixture. Add nuts and parmesan cheese.

The Icing on the Cookie

Thursday, May 7th, 2009

I used to walk into a home where every last table, counter, and bookshelf had a cookie tray of shortbread just waiting to be frosted. The business was Sweet Caroline’s and my mom was the baker. My friends envied the thought of having an in-house pastry chef and living among cookies.

These friends did not realize that we could not just grab a cookie on our way to the dinner table; these little nuggets were a commodity. We were subjected to the unfrosted, toasted cookies, but, I actually liked those cookies better; in my mind, I did have it made.

“Sweet Caroline’s” were iced art. My mom recreated dot candy, Chicago Bulls jerseys, and conversation hearts in cookie form—they were hip. I tried my hand at frosting the cookies one day and quickly scooted out of the kitchen, realizing that I was single-handedly destroying the shortbread. I recognized that Sweet Caroline’s was never going to employ Caroline. My shaky hands did not make the cut.

I needed to bake something that would get noticed. One day, I pulled out the Nestle Tollhouse Chips and constructed some simple chocolate chip cookies. The house was filled with the aroma of brown sugar and butter; I soon had a kitchen full of people. The cookies were barely cool and were already consumed.

My mom and I were the ideal cookie duet—she created the delicate morsel and I was in charge of the simple slices. It is a good day when mother and daughter work together.

Chocolate Chip Cookie Baking Notes:
The ideal chocolate chip cookie = soft center, crispy exterior, non-cake-like and the presence of walnuts.

er and an even better day when the daughter realizes that mom actually did have street cred.Apply this technique to your favorite chocolate chip cookie recipe:


Creaming Method:

-All products at room temperature
-Mix dry ingredients
-Cream butter and sugar until JUST combined (uniform, not
fluffy)
-Combine eggs and vanilla
-Add one egg at a time
-Add flour all at once, mix until just combined
-Add chips and nuts
-KEY: Do not over mix
-Over mixing creates air filled, tough cookies
-For chewier cookies, bake at a lower temperature than stated
(keep watch)