Saturday, April 19, 2008

Applesauce Spice Cake

From Nov. 2006 issue of Real Simple. This cake came together in a snap. Dumping all of the ingredients into a saucepan of melted butter makes it a fast one. Original recipe calls for 1 c of raisins, but I left them out this time.

2 c flour
2 t baking soda
1/2 t salt
1 stick unsalted butter
1 c sugar
1 2/3 c applesauce
2 t ground cinnamon
1 t ground ginger
pinch ground nutmeg
1 t vanilla extract
2 large eggs

Heat oven to 350. Butter and flour (or spray with canola spray) a 9-inch springform or round cake pan. (I used the bundt attachment in my springform.) In a small bowl, combine the flour, baking soda, and salt. In a large saucepan, over medium heat, melt the butter. Remove from heat and stir in the sugar, applesauce, cinnamon, ginger, nutmeg, vanilla, and eggs. Add the flour mixture and stir just until combined. Pour into prepared pan. Bake cake until a tester inserted in the center comes out clean, 35 to 40 minutes*. Transfer pan to a wire rack to cool for 10 minutes. Using a knife, loosen the cake from the pan. Invert it onto a serving plate. Sprinkle cake with confectioner's sugar, slice into wedges, and serve with ice cream.

*Actual cook time for me was 55 minutes.

Roasted Beets with Sour Cream and Dill

I tried to replicate the yummy beet side dish we had at the bistro last week, and while this didn't taste like it (maybe I erred on the side of simplicity.. is there an obvious spice missing?), this turned out yummy in its own right. 

10 small beets, ends trimmed
olive oil
2/3 c sour cream
4-5 T chopped fresh dill

Mix together sour cream and dill. Set aside.

Preheat oven to 375. Put beets in covered casserole dish with a drizzling of olive oil. Roast in oven for about 1 hour. Let cool. I'm sure there's a better way, but what I do is rub the skins off once beets are cool enough to handle. Cut skinned beets into slices. Top with sour cream mixture. Can be served warm or cool. Makes about 6 servings.

Pineapple-Jicama Salsa

I made this once before and served it over grilled turbot. I'm not sure what recipe it was derived from, but there was so much leftover after the fish was gone I was content to eat it straight and call it a salad. This one ended up with more heat from only 1/2 a serrano than I expected, but I still found it to be nosh-able by itself. J whipped up some chicken & black bean tacos with it this afternoon. 

1 whole pineapple, peeled and diced
1 whole jicama (small), peeled and diced
1/2 serrano pepper (or less)
juice of 1 1/2 limes
1/4 chopped fresh cilantro
1/2 red onion, diced

Combine all ingredients in a bowl.

Saturday, April 12, 2008

Sardines

Have I said enough good things about sardines? This has been another pregnancy mainstay. They're more flavorful than canned tuna, do not poison fetus and I with mercury, and are high in Omega 3's for brain-developing goodness. Not too shabby in the protein and iron departments either. My preferred kind is the wild caught skinless & boneless sardines packed in water. 

I had been throwing a can together with a little mayo and some capers and calling it a day.. maybe spreading it on some whole grain bread with some fresh slices of tomato if I was feeling particularly fancy. But today I added a few elements from the salmon sandwiches of last week's shower: chopped green onion and horseradish... upping the zazz quotient considerably. 


The Last Supper?

Two weeks from D-Day and good friend V suggested we make a date at the restaurant where she works. As the lack of action on this blog for the past few months might indicate, I've been cooking little and eating like a toddler: i.e. plain chicken and slices of avocado will go down as favorite pregnancy dinner of all time. The "flavors together" concept most dear to the fundamental nature of cooking has been on the outs with me this entire trimester, with a few notable exceptions. This meal, for one.

J and I ordered a full dinner from the menu only to be surprised by additional plates of things V felt we should try. This made for quite a feast- and plenty of leftovers.

We got to Bistro C at 6 and were seated in a romantic window seat in the front of the restaurant where we could watch the rain coming down in their outdoor gardens and the people rushing by on Lincoln Ave. Within the hour the restaurant filled up around us, but our location still felt very private and intimate (and I'm quite sensitive to feeling crowded in lately!). Our initial server came over and explained the specials, but then V saw us and took over. We didn't expect such treatment, but soon she had a glass of champagne in each of our hands as a proper start to what would be an epic 3-hour meal that consisted of:

A carmelized onion strudel appetizer
A salad consisting of a soft-boiled egg atop a creamy mash of celery root beside some poached asparagus
A shaved fennel salad with pea shoots
(J, reserving his red meat trists for such nights out:) Boeuf Bourguignon
(Me, the constant chicken-eater:) Roasted chicken with wild mushroom ragout and onions frites
Brussels sprouts with brown butter
Roasted beets with dill cream
Buttery mashed potatoes

With this I enjoyed a nice glass of Clos Chanteduc Cotes-du-Rhone, 2006 and J had the Malbec (Chateau Lagrezette, Zette, Cahors 2003).

J found a little room to help me with dessert, the lemon tart with Chantilly cream, and V brought out a scoop of Bistro C's homemade mango sorbet for good measure.

This meal will go down in infamy. What a celebration of our soon-to-be next adventure. 

Saturday, April 05, 2008

April Showers


Today was my baby shower and while friends generously offered their hosting services, I felt adamant about making the food myself. (Acupuncturist K laughed at hearing this, saying that last year family members had to twist her arm not to cater her own wedding.) 

With mimosas and tea sandwiches as the rubric, I commenced with making several varieties of teeny sandwiches, improvising a bit, keeping the mayo to a minimum.. so these recipes are approximations.

Also served: a fresh fruit salad of kiwi, blackberries, blueberries, honeydew, cantaloupe, and pineapple; a cheese board of smoked gouda, herbed chevre, and brie with water crackers; vegetable crudites; white bean hummus; nuts; a yummy spicy tuna salad on crackers brought by V; ginger biscotti made by my mom; an artful and delicious yellow buttercream cake with a branch of acorns sketched on it in dark chocolate brought by Jenny; and the incredibly large, heavy, dense, rich Chocolate Genache Cake I ordered from Bleeding Heart Bakery. (Any disparaging remarks I've made in the past about BH's homemade seitan are expunged from the record with the excellent service I received when ordering this cake, and the cake itself left no dark chocolate diehard unwowed.)

As for those teeny sandwiches...

Curried Chicken Salad

8 cooked chicken breasts (Trader Joe's sells a bag of frozen chicken breasts that are hormone free and cook up quick and easy... this has been my cooking mainstay for the last few months. I cooked up about 8 of these in a little olive oil, let them cool and then chopped them up for the chicken salad)
3/4 c finely chopped walnuts
4 celery stalks, finely chopped
salt, to taste (approx. 2 t)
mayonnaise, enough to moisten (approx. 1/2 c)
curry powder, to taste (approx. 1 T)
loaf of fresh country white bread

With a rolling pin I flattened the pieces of bread. I'm not sure why I did this. Maybe to make them denser like the little cocktail bread slices I had seen in the store (which, by the way, are full of corn syrup and weirdness). Mixed up all ingredients and spread on these flattened pieces of bread, making half a dozen or so proper-sized sandwiches. Then I cut these into two-bite pieces, so I got about 2 dozen little sandwiches out of them. 


Smoked Salmon Sandwiches

4 T minced green onion
4 T minced fresh dill
4 T capers
3 t prepared horseradish
approx. 1/2 c mayonnaise
pepper to taste
8 oz. smoked salmon
6 oz. cream cheese
1/2 loaf pumpernickel bread

Mix together green onion, dill, capers, horseradish, mayo and pepper. Roll out slices of bread (again, for same reasons stated above.. not necessary). Spread mixture onto one slice of bread. On other slice of bread spread cream cheese and cover with salmon slices. Put them together, cut into quarters or more, and repeat. Again, I think I got about 2 dozen sandwiches out of this. The horseradish gives the spread a great kick.

Other sandwiches I made, which don't really warrant detailed recipes here: Egg salad with fresh dill, and cucumber sandwiches with cream cheese and green onion.