Saturday, December 31, 2011

5x7 Folded Card

Rough Edge 5x7 folded card
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Monday, December 5, 2011

Grape skins

Legend has it that a 2nd-century Roman soldier, thirsty from a hard campaign but unable to procure the grapes to make his own wine, fermented a mixture of grape skins, pulp, stems, and seeds.  He called the resulting drink grappa, and the concoction remains a specialty in northern Italy to this day.

We haven't been making any questionable liquor ourselves these days, but I was reminded of this story by a very different drink that we made the other afternoon.  Matt had the day off and I was able to come home early due to icy roads and inclement weather, so we had the chance to make a fun lunch together.  A smoothie sounded like the perfect drink!  The only fruits we had in the refrigerator were red grapes and mandarin oranges... I'd never put grapes in a smoothie before, but it sounded like a fine combination.

After combining the fruit, ice cubes, and some vanilla yogurt in the blender, we remembered why we hadn't been eating these grapes very quickly: they have really thick skins, to the point of leaving a slightly bitter note on your tongue.  Oh well, too late... everything was covered with yogurt by this point!  We blended it together, and gave it a try.

The colors didn't come out so well in this photo, but the smoothie was a lovely pastel orange with bright red-purple flecks (the grape skins).  The sweetness of the mandarin orange juice and vanilla yogurt, combined with the much small pieces of grape skin, eliminated the bitter taste we had been experiencing when eating the grapes by themselves.  The flavors went together very well, too!

Tuesday, November 15, 2011

Quick Comfort Food

There's nothing like getting home a few hours before dinner time, cold and tired, and realizing that you didn't pull out any meat from the freezer to thaw that morning.  You could try to hurry up the thawing process now: leave it under cold running water for an hour or two and hope that it thaws in time to throw in a pan before dinner time, but if you have a slow cooker on hand, there's an easier solution.

I found myself in just this situation the other day: I got home later than expected, the car hadn't warmed up much higher than the -17 F air outside all the way home, and pretty much all of the food we possessed was rock-solid in the freezer, with the exception of condiments and lunch meat.  I'm not eating processed meats these days, so we weren't even going to contemplate the culinary possibilities of Worcestershire sauce and deli turkey.  Fortunately, the meal I'd been planning for the evening could go in the slow cooker: chicken and biscuits.

Two chicken thighs went directly from the freezer to the slow cooker, set to "High".  If you have one of the newer models with multiple time settings for "High" and Low", this would have been the shortest time setting.  There wasn't going to be too much color in this dinner, so I decided to chop up two purple potatoes and add them to the pot.  I added water and chicken broth until it just covered the frozen thighs, stirred in a healthy amount of marjoram, thyme, sage, basil, savory, and rosemary, put the lid on it, and walked away.

About forty-five minutes before we wanted to eat (that's three hours into the cooking, if you're counting), I made a quick batch of biscuits and threw them in the oven while I checked on the chicken.  It shredded easily with two forks, so it was time to thicken it up a little and add vegetables.  Normally I would have added some carrots, onions, and /or celery along with the potatoes, but we were kind of out of vegetables...  We did have a bag of mixed vegetables in the freezer, though, which warmed up quickly in the chicken broth and added some extra color and nutrients.

To thicken, the only thing I really had was flour.  Next time I think I'll add extra salt and pepper at this stage, because the gravy didn't have as much flavor as I would have liked.  It turned out pretty well overall, though, and what was more important, dinner was on the table on time and it was warm and filling!


If you use regular potatoes instead of purple potatoes, yours won't turn out this funny color :-)

Saturday, November 12, 2011

Sunday morning pie

Because his work schedule changes frequently, there are often weekends that Matt only has Sunday off. It's nice to be able to get up slowly on these Sunday mornings and make a fun brunch before we go to Mass at noon. One of the better recipes for brunch I've found is this quiche--it's quick, easy, tastes great, and since there are only two of us eating it, we have breakfast ready for the next few days!

Cheese and Onion Pie
Pastry for one 9-inch piecrust, well chilled
2 Tbsp butter
1 onion, chopped
1 Tbsp flour
2 c cheese, shredded (I used a combination of Jack and Cheddar)
3 eggs
1 c milk
1/2 tsp salt

Place pastry in pie plate; chill. Preheat oven to 400 degrees.
Melt butter over medium heat. Sauté onion until tender. Spread evenly in piecrust. Chill.
In medium bowl, toss flour with cheese; sprinkle over onion in piecrust.
In same bowl, beat eggs with milk and salt; pour over shredded cheese.
Bake 10 minutes. Turn down oven to 325 degrees, and continue to bake 30 to 35 minutes longer, until a knife inserted in center comes out clean.
Let stand 10 minutes before cutting.


Tuesday, October 25, 2011

Stir Fry Night!


So.

This is Matt. I have never posted on this blog (or any blog, for that matter) before, so bear with me on this one.

My wife has, as you have seen, been posting fun recipes and such, and so when I made a good stir fry for dinner tonight, she said "You should post this on the blog." Of course, I immediately tried to convince her (with much flattery) that she was a MUCH better writer, and that she should put it on the blog. However, I was convinced by the point that if I don't ever post, it won't be our blog. Fair enough. The only problem was that I wasn't using a recipe, and it is pretty simple anyway.

So to preface the "recipe," I feel I should say that stir fries fall into a very specific cooking category in my mind. The category goes by many names, including "mess-of-stuff" (thanks to Luke Hansen) and "leftover velcro" (thanks to Alton Brown), and includes any recipe which you can throw whatever you have in the fridge (within reason) into it, and it will still be good. That being said, on with the recipe!

1/2 Green bell pepper, chopped
1 carrot, julienned
1/3 rack of pork ribs, boneless, cut into pieces
2 eggs, scrambled
a bit of canola oil (technical terms!)
a bit more soy sauce (more technical terms!)
even a bit more teriyaki sauce (tired of this yet?)
1 tsp dried onion flakes
1 tsp dried grated ginger

So it started with a nice hot wok with the canola oil in it. To that, I added the main ingredients in order from longest cooking time to shortest. That order was pork, carrots, pepper (with onion flakes and ginger), eggs. I vigilantly stirred the whole mixture as it cooked to make sure it didn't burn (much), and then added soy sauce and teriyaki toward the end. After letting the flavors come together a bit, it was finished and removed from the heat. We served it over white rice.


So there it is! Hope you enjoyed!

Sunday, October 23, 2011

Explosive Apple Cinnamon Bread

Most mornings during the work week we don't really have time to sit down and eat breakfast, so we wind up eating a slice or two of bread as we run out the door.  We go through one loaf of a breakfast bread in a little over a week, so every weekend or so I throw together another loaf.  For the past several weeks we've been enjoying banana bread with peanut butter, but this week we were out of bananas, so we decided to come up with something more creative.

I've found that you can have a lot of flexibility with ingredients in quick breads and muffins as long as you keep a balance between the basic categories (fats, sweetener, additions, etc).  This is really helpful, because I'm kind of known for running out of key ingredients and making weird substitutions.  My experiments usually turn out okay, but they work a lot better when I have a flexible recipe in the first place!  Here is my basic quick bread/muffin recipe:


2 - 2.5 c flour (today I used all purpose flour with flax)
0.5 c sweetener (today I used brown sugar)
2 tsp baking powder
1 c milk
0.25 c fat (today I used oil)
1 egg
up to 1.5 c additions (today I used chopped apples)
spices, optional (today I used 2 T cinnamon)

For muffins, bake at 400 F for 15-20 minutes.  For bread, bake at 400 F for about an hour.  Makes one loaf or 12 muffins.


We're not entirely sure why it wound up like this; it appears that the top crust formed quickly in the baking process, and later on when steam built up inside, it couldn't force its way through the top and wound up erupting out the side of the loaf.  I may try baking it at 350 F or 375 F next time, to see if that helps.

Sunday, October 16, 2011

Autumn Dinner Party

Cooking for a group can be a lot of fun, and with adequate planning, it doesn't have to be stressful. It seems like we often think that cooking for people outside of our immediate family has to involve something big and fancy, and dinner hostesses often stick to a 'turkey dinner' sort of menu. Not that I have anything against turkey; I enjoy both cooking and eating it. Just because I'm having dinner guests, though, doesn't mean I feel a compulsion to pull out the cranberry sauce.

This Saturday evening, Matt and I enjoyed a casual evening with friends from the Catholic Student Association at our home. Matt wound up having to go in to work, so I spent the bulk of the day on my own in the kitchen. It was surprisingly relaxing; I knew what I was making and how long each thing cooked, so I started with the time we planned to eat dinner and worked backward, assigning each dish or dishes an appropriate time slot in the oven. For example:

10:00 squash halves in
11:00 squash halves out
12:10 beans on
1:30 squash bake in
2:30 squash bake out
[3:00 pick Matt up from work]
3:40 bread rising
4:00 crumble crust in
4:20 crumble crust out
4:55 pie in
[5:00 straighten house]
5:30 apples on to stew
5:40 pie out, bread in
5:55 squash bake in to warm up
6:00 bread out, apple crumble in to brown topping
6:10 squash bake out, apple crumble out, beans done
6:15 dinner

It was so nice to be standing in the kitchen 15 minutes before I was expecting people to walk in the door, knowing that everything was going to be finished at the same time and I didn't have to worry about hurrying anything!

It snowed this morning, so we may finally have to give up pretending that it is still autumn; yesterday evening was definitely not yet winter, though, and we made a wonderfully autumnal meal to celebrate: one of the girls brought a green salad, and I made calico beans, butternut squash bake, and purple potato bread, with pecan pie and apple crumble for dessert, and hot apple cider to drink!

Calico beans is a dish I grew up on, and one Matt has come to enjoy since moving to Alaska. For me, it is a favorite not only because of how it tastes, but also how easy it is to make: throw everything in a slow cooker for 6 hours, and dinner is ready!

Calico Beans

2 lb ground beef
1 lb bacon
0.5 onion, diced
1 can great northern beans, drained
1 can chopped green beans, drained
1 can pork and beans, drained
2 cans kidney beans, drained
0.75 c brown sugar
1 c ketchup
3 Tbsp vinegar, white or cider
2 tsp salt

Cook bacon. Remove to paper towels, drain grease from pan. Chop into pieces roughly an inch long. In same pan, brown ground beef and onion. Combine all ingredients in slow cooker. Cover and cook on low for 5 to 6 hours. Serves 10.

Purple Potatoes!

Last week, members of the Catholic Student Association spent several evenings digging potatoes, and wound up with many more than they had room to
store. About 20 pounds of potatoes made their way to our apartment, where they spent several days spread across the entire living room floor to dry -- I finally found time to sort through them and box them up a few nights ago. Quite a few had been speared in the harvesting process, and it seemed best to cook them up right away so they didn't have a chance to go bad. I began by washing what I had been told were reds.

From under their heavy coats of dirt emerged delicate, smooth skins of the deepest, richest, glossiest shade of purple I have ever seen. The first few millimeters of flesh beneath the skim were creamy white, beyond which the majority of the interior of the potato was a soft, marbled lavender.


I was so excited... Think of the exciting food possibilities presented by purple potatoes! Purple mashed potatoes, purple potato bread, purple potato cinnamon rolls, My Little Pony-colored shepherd's pie... I guess that might be a little weird; what would you put in it? Sweet corn, Lima beans, and beets? Anyway, I quickly chopped them up and threw them in a pot to boil. We worried that they might lose some of their color as they cooked, but there was no need for concern; not only did the potatoes remain purple, but the water in which they cooked turned a bright blue-green!



The idea of purple potato bread sounded fun, but it was getting pretty late, so I mashed up the potatoes and put then in the refrigerator to work with the following day. When I got home from work Friday afternoon, I was amazed at how the color had changed; the mashed potatoes had gone from a nice lavender to a vibrant indigo! This bread was going to be exciting...


It did turn out a lovely shade of purple, somewhere between the original color of the potatoes and the neon mashed potatoes; unfortunately, the whole loaf disappeared at dinner last night before I remembered to take a picture! My refrigerator bread recipe worked well with the mashed potatoes, though, and it is so convenient to be able to make dough before you go to bed one night and have it ready to throw in the oven the next evening for dinner, so I wanted to share it.

(Purple) Potato Refrigerator Bread

2.25 tsp active yeast
1.5 c warm water (use reserved water from boiling the potatoes for extra flavor!)
0.5 c sugar
3.5 Tbsp brown sugar
1.5 tsp salt
0.67 c shortening
2 eggs
1.5 c mashed potatoes
7 to 7.5 c flour

In large bowl, dissolve yeast in warm water. Stir in rest of ingredients except flour. Mix in flour gradually until dough is easy to handle. Knead until smooth and elastic. Cover with wax paper, then a damp towel. Place in refrigerator at least overnight; dough will keep several days if necessary. About 2 hours before baking, shape dough into loaves, rolls, cinnamon rolls, etc. Cover and let rise until doubled, 1.5 to 2 hours. Bake at 375 for 30 to 35 minutes for loaves, 15 to 20 minutes for rolls. Makes two large loaves or two 13x9 pans of dinner rolls.

Saturday, October 8, 2011

Lemon-basil salmon turnovers

For savory turnovers, I don't believe anything can beat a cream cheese pastry crust.  Rich, smooth, flaky but without any of the sweetness common to many pastry recipes, it pairs well with meats, fish and vegetables.  Adding herbs to the dough can provide a real complement to your filling as well!

Basic cream cheese pastry:
8 oz cream cheese
1 c butter
1.5 c flour

Mix together cream cheese and butter until well blended.  Mix in flour until fully incorporated.  Pat into ball; refrigerate while making filling.

For the feast of Our Lady of the Rosary yesterday, I made a lemon-basil salmon filling for our turnovers.  I'm not sure what kind of salmon I used; it was shared by one of my parents' friends.  Anything made with salmon is of course better when you use Alaskan red (sockeye) salmon, but you can probably come pretty close to what we had last night by using whatever salmon is available near you.  :-)

2 T butter
1/2 medium onion, chopped
8 T lemon juice, divided
3 T dried basil
1 to 1.5 c cooked salmon, flaked
1/2 c ricotta

Saute onion in butter with 2 T lemon juice; when onions become translucent, add basil and remaining 6 T lemon juice.  Cook off most of the liquid.  On lowest heat, add salmon.  Simmer 3-5 minutes.



Remove from heat and fold in ricotta.  Roll out dough to approx. 1/4" thickness and cut into 3" rounds.  Place moderate amount of filling on one side of each round; fold over and pinch edges to seal.  Prick tops with fork to allow steam to escape.  Bake at 350 F for 15 min or until edges begin turning golden brown.


If you'd prefer, you can put the unbaked turnovers in the freezer to use later; if baking frozen pastries, expect them to take an additional 5-10 minutes in the oven.

Friday, October 7, 2011

Our Lady of the Rosary and the Battle of Lepanto

"And the Pope has cast his arms abroad for agony and loss,
And called the kings of Christendom for swords about the cross.
The cold queen of England is looking in the glass;
The shadow of the Valois is yawning at the Mass;
From evening isles fantastical rings faint the Spanish gun...

...The North is full of tangled things and texts and aching eyes,
And dead is all the innocence of anger and surprise,
And Christian killeth Christian in a narrow dirty room,
And Christian dreadeth Christ that hath newer face of doom,
And Christian hateth Mary that God kissed in Galilee, --
But Don John of Austria is riding to the sea..."
- G. K. Chesterton, Lepanto, 9-13, 80-85

These telling passages provide a glimpse into the state of much of Christendom in 1571, when Pope Pius V called for help against the encroaching Ottoman empire -- a Christendom whose people had largely lost touch with what it meant to be Christian, whose leaders all failed to answer the pope's call; all but Don John of Austria, the "last knight of Europe," as Chesterton calls him.  The illegitimate son of the Austrian empire was the only leader, out of all of Christian Europe, to come to the defense of the pope and of Christianity.

The Ottoman forces outnumbered the Christians, known as the Holy League, in ships, sailors, and soldiers.  The soldiers of the Holy League, as well as many Christians gathered in Rome, implored Our Lady's intercession by praying the rosary while the great naval battle took place off the coast of Lepanto, Greece.

Through Don John's willingness to answer the call when all other leaders turned a deaf ear to the pope, through the faith of many lay people and religious who piously prayed the rosary, and through the miraculous intercession of Our Lady, the Holy League won a decisive victory over the Ottomans, keeping the Mediterranean Sea open to Christian vessels, protecting Italy from invasion, preventing the Ottomans from advancing further into Europe, and freeing 10,000 Christian slaves.

Following the battle, Pope Pius V instituted the feast of Our Lady of Victory in thanksgiving.  The name has since been changed to Our Lady of the Rosary, which is celebrated on October 7.

Chesterton's poem, Lepanto, is a wonderful five-minute read for today... I highly recommend it!

Thursday, October 6, 2011

A feast for the feast day

In celebration of St. Faustina and Bl. Francis Xavier Seelos, we had a very Polish/German dinner yesterday:  Polska kielbasa with roasted potatoes, carrots and onions.  I also made a chocolate peanut butter pie for dessert:

Roasted vegetables are one of my favorite fall and winter meals because they are so filling and hearty, but also because they are so quick to make!  It took me less than an hour, including all of the preparation:

1 medium onion, chopped into 1-2" pieces
3 carrots, chopped into 1" pieces
2 potatoes, chopped into 1" pieces
1 lb polska kielbasa, cut into 1" pieces
4 T olive oil
Rosemary
Sage
Marjoram
Black pepper

Preheat oven to 425 F.*  Put chopped vegetables into a large zip-top plastic bag.  Add olive oil and seasonings; seal bag and shake well, until all pieces of the vegetables are coated.  Pour vegetables out onto foil-lined baking sheet and add kielbasa.  Mix well.  Bake for 20 minutes.  Remove from oven and stir well; put back in oven to bake for another 20-25 minutes or until the vegetables are cooked through.


*Some newer models of smoke detector are set up to go off if they detect a certain level of heat, even without smoke.  The one in our apartment was definitely worried that I was trying to burn the building down simply by having the oven at 425 F...  Does yours have the same problem?  How do you get around it?

Feast of St. Faustina & Bl. Francis Xavier Seelos

Happy feast day!  (That is, yesterday...)

St. Maria Faustina Kowalska (1905-1938)
Helena Kowalska was born in a small Polish village, the third of ten children.  She entered the Congregation of the Sisters of Our Lady of Mercy shortly before her 20th birthday, receiving the habit the following year and taking the name Maria Faustina of the Most Blessed Sacrament.  Throughout the 1930s, St. Faustina received many messages and visions from Christ, Who desired her to spread the message of His Divine Mercy.  She was canonized by Bl. John Paul II on April 30, 2000.  The Chaplet and Novena of Divine Mercy are the most widely-known of the revelations she received; the full text of her diary can be found here.

Bl. Francis Xavier Seelos (1819-1867)
Francis Xavier Seelos was born in Bavaria, where he began seminary studies in 1847.  He joined the Congregation of the Most Holy Redeemer (Redemptorists) a few months later, and emigrated to New York to finish his studies in their seminary.  He served German immigrants in Pittsburgh, Baltimore, Cumberland, and Anapolis, and was known as a remarkable confessor and spiritual director, marked by a "cheerful holiness."  In 1960 he was proposed as a candidate for bishop of Pittsburgh, but asked to be excused from consideration; he spent the next six years as an itinerant preacher, reaching out to the poor and uneducated.  He was assigned to a parish in New Orleans in 1866, but just a few months later contracted yellow fever as he tended to the ill among his flock, and died.  He was canonized by Bl. John Paul II on April 9, 2000.  Information about his cause for canonization can be found here.

October 5 is a very special day for our family:  I have had a devotion to the Divine Mercy and St. Faustina for many years, so her feast day is close to my heart.  Shortly after we were married, a priest friend gave us a first class relic of Bl. Seelos, asking us to learn more about him and ask his intercession for our marriage.  We were so happy to learn that he shares a feast day with St. Faustina, because it gives us twice as much to celebrate!  I invite you to learn more about this holy priest, and to pray for his cause for canonization.

The last burger of summer

(This post has been waiting to go up since Labor Day weekend, but it took me this long to get the picture off of Matt's phone!)

Matt's employer very kindly gave him the day off for Labor Day, but my boss decided that we were staying open, and I wound up having a very hectic day. The last thing I wanted to do when I got home was spend another hour in the kitchen, so we were looking for a quick and easy supper that evening.  What else would make more sense for a fast meal to make on Labor Day than burgers?  It was perfect... we even had ground beef thawed and waiting in the fridge.  The only thing missing was the bread.

We had a couple of frozen heels from old loaves of wheat bread, which would have worked fine, I suppose.  It just wasn't quite what we had in mind.  We discussed having burgers without buns, we wondered about baking fresh buns, we even contemplated pizza... then Matt pulled out the bag of corn tortillas.

While the Applebees chain is fairly common in cities across the United States (there's even one in Anchorage, AK), there isn't one anywhere near us.  Which is sad, because we really like their food!  But for those of you who have never experienced one of their quesadilla burgers, or who, like us, live in a city without an Applebees, we have a solution for you.



Matt's Quesadilla Burgers
1 lb ground beef
8 slices cheddar cheese
8 slices Monterrey jack cheese
8 corn tortillas
thick, chunky salsa*

Form ground beef into burgers; cook in skillet or on grill.
Meanwhile, lay out tortillas on large sheet pan.  Brush very lightly with olive oil.  Broil, checking often to make sure they don't burn.  When tortillas are slightly crisp, remove from oven.  Flip over and lay two slices of cheese on each tortilla.
When burgers are just about ready, put tortilla pan back under broiler just until cheese begins to melt.  Remove from oven; put burger and salsa between two tortillas.

We enjoyed ours with home-made potato crisps, made by peeling and thinly slicing two potatoes, brushing lightly with oil, and broiling.  If the pieces aren't uniform, the thinner ones will char while the thicker ones are still raw... it wasn't very fun, they didn't taste all that amazing and wonderful, and next time I would probably just take the same amount of time to whip up a quick potato salad.  The rest of the meal was wonderful, though!

*If your salsa has too much moisture in it, this is going to be a very messy meal!  We strained ours through paper towels, and just put the chunks of tomato and peppers on our burgers.

A Tale of Two Pastas

Since our wedding two months ago, Matt and I have learned a lot about our backgrounds through our different instincts when it comes to food.  Neither of us are picky eaters, so the main difference has been in the place different starches hold in our minds.  For Matt, who is half Sicilian and grew up eating a lot of Italian food, pasta is a basic element of most meals:  If we go too many days without eating pasta, he feels like he hasn't really eaten dinner.

For me, with my hodgepodge Scandinavian/German/Irish ancestry, that central place is shared by hearty breads and potatoes.  I like pasta, but I don't feel that I've put a whole meal on the table if the pasta isn't accompanied by breadsticks, garlic bread, or the like.

Nevertheless, pasta is admittedly easier than fresh bread, and decidedly faster than potatoes, so we've eaten quite a bit of pasta in recent weeks as I've been working full days and haven't had the energy to bake for the next day when we get home at night.  We try to vary the pasta dishes, though, and have come up with a couple of good, simple versions that I wanted to share.

This is our variation on a ham carbonara, which is probably far enough away from the original recipe that we should find something else to call it entirely.  I basically omitted the sauce, which is what technically makes it carbonara, simply tossing the ham, vegetables and pasta with a touch of olive oil.

1 box pasta (we used farfalle, but any short pasta would work)
5-6 slices cooked ham, chopped into pieces about 1" wide
10-15 olives, sliced
1 red bell pepper, sliced
olive oil
parsley
red pepper flakes
Parmesan cheese, grated

Cook pasta according to directions on box, making sure to use enough water (Matt says this is very important).  Drain and return to pot; add ham and vegetables, toss with olive oil.  Season with parsley and red pepper flakes.  Top with grated Parmesan cheese.

The ham carbonara is fast and easy to prepare, but looks impressive enough that I would feel comfortable making it if we were entertaining for dinner.  If you don't have the time to chop all of the little pieces, though, here is a pasta dish that comes together even more quickly:

Literally 20 minutes from walking in the door to sitting down for dinner, and so simple I don't even have a name for it.

Spaghetti
1 link sausage per person
1/2 c frozen broccoli per person
Parmesan cheese, grated

Cook spaghetti according to directions on box.  Add frozen broccoli to spaghetti pot a few minutes before pasta is done.  Slice sausages into 1/4" pieces.  Drain pasta and broccoli; add sausages.  Heat until sausages are warmed (about 5 minutes).  Top with grated Parmesan cheese.

As you can see, I did manage to serve this meal with bread: just a slice of Italian bread with a piece of mozzarella cheese on top, toasted under the broiler for a couple of minutes.

Friday Lasagna

Pasta is a frequent meal for us on days when we get home from work tired and hungry, and didn't manage to prepare anything for dinner before we left in the morning.  This particular day, though, I had planned ahead to make a fancier pasta dish than the typical spaghetti-and-marinara:  I had the box of lasagna set out next to the stove, the spinach thawed and squeezed dry, and a container of Matt's home-made tomato sauce thawing in the refrigerator.  All I had to do when we got home was throw everything in a pan, put it in the oven for an hour or so, and we would have dinner.

Except, nothing is that easy.  Our recipe called for one box of frozen chopped spinach, and I'd purchased the only size of box that our grocery store carries.  Apparently the person who wrote the original recipe shops at a store where they sell monster boxes of frozen chopped spinach: my little pile of spinach was nowhere near enough greenery for a 13x9 pan of lasagna.

Fortunately, we had just visited my parents the evening before, and been sent home with a small crown of fresh broccoli from their garden.  I chopped it up and threw it in a skillet with some garlic to soften up, adding the spinach for the last few minutes to let the flavors merge before adding the mixture to the rest of the lasagna.

 
It turned out pretty well, and we enjoyed leftovers for the next few lunches.  The broccoli added interest and texture to the lasagna, which otherwise would have been very uniform: cheese, lasagna noodles and spinach are all smooth, thin and stretchy.  I definitely plan on trying out vegetable lasagnas with other atypical veggies in the future!


Broccoli Spinach Lasagna
9 uncooked lasagna noodles
2 T olive oil
4 cloves garlic, chopped
1 c spinach, chopped
1 c broccoli, chopped
3 - 3.5 c ricotta
2.5 c mozzarella
2 qt pasta sauce
2 T Parmesan, grated

Preheat oven to 350 F.  Heat oil in medium skillet.  Add garlic; saute 1 min.  Add spinach and broccoli; cook, stirring, 3 min.  Season with salt and pepper if desired.  Combine 1/2 c mozzarella with ricotta; mix well.  Lightly cover bottom of 13x9 pan with pasta sauce.  Layer 3 noodles, sauce, 1/2 of the ricotta mixture, 1/2 of the spinach mixture, 1/2 c mozzarella.  Repeat.  Top with remaining 3 noodles, remaining sauce, and 1 c mozzarella, making sure noodles are submerged in sauce.  Cover with foil and bake for 1 hour 15 minutes or until noodles are cooked.  Remove foil and grate Parmesan onto top.  May add more mozzarella if desired, or if all your original mozzarella stuck to the foil when you took it off.  Bake 15-20 min uncovered until cheese is browned and excess moisture cooks off.

Make-up day

I'm home by myself today with no cleaning to do (did it all yesterday), no dinner to make (we're visiting my parents tonight), no freelance writing to work on (finished my last assignment this morning), so it's finally time to catch up on all of the blog posts we've been meaning to put up over the past few weeks!*  Bear with me; there are probably going to be several today.



*Except for the photos of our trip to Gakona.  I'm sorry, Alice!  They will be up soon, I promise!  They're still on Matt's phone.

Preparing for winter

I was talking with a friend in New Jersey the other day who remarked that fall was just beginning there; the first few leaves changing color, the weather still uncomfortably warm and humid.  As she talked, I looked around and laughed:  I was sitting at a frost-covered picnic table, yellow leaves around my feet and a barren tree behind me, with the last Canadian geese honking good-bye as they sped south to avoid the approaching snow.  The temperatures hover around freezing well into the middle of the day now, and the weathermen have been calling for snow every other day the past two weeks; our autumn is nearly over.

Matt spent last weekend making sure that our car will be ready when the snow flies:



He took advantage of a sunny, if chilly, afternoon to re-attach the weather stripping across the top of the windshield.  We also brought home some windshield washer fluid rated to -60 F.  As far as we can tell, they don't even sell windshield fluid rated to such cold temperatures in most other states!

Friday, September 30, 2011

And then life struck.

We honestly meant it when we said that we intended to update every week, really we did...  Then I got sick, and the next weekend we took a road trip, and the next weekend neither of us remembers what happened, but the blog slowly slid off of our radar.  Thanks to a number of serious changes to our regular schedule, though, we're hoping to be posting more regularly soon.

You probably know that I have been working at a local coffee shop for the past five months; you may also know that I am allergic to caffeine.  In the past, I had only experienced a negative reaction when I actually drank a caffeinated beverage, but over the past few months I have gotten to the point where merely being around espresso makes me ill.  For the sake of my health, I am leaving my job at the coffee shop, and just yesterday evening was hired as part-time secretary for the new pastor of the parish where we were married.  The part-time hours will be nice: more time for cooking and cleaning, for my freelance work, and for the blog!

Sunday, August 28, 2011

Ice Cream in our Igloo

I'm finally pretty much over my week-long virus, and to celebrate, we decided to try out the ice cream maker we received as a wedding gift!  The machine came with a booklet of simple recipes, and I suggested that we start with something easy, like vanilla.  Matt was up for more of a challenge, though, so we searched through a few websites of ice cream recipes and combined a few together to come up with Minty Cookies and Cream.  It is amazing... I'm pretty sure we're done buying ice cream.


We did a cost comparison, and found out that it cost about $1 more for us to make 1.5 qt of ice cream than to buy a carton the same size from the grocery store, but that quart and a half was a lot less expensive than getting two small ice cream cones from Cold Stone Creamery or another local ice cream maker.  Plus, we know exactly what is in our ice cream; there are no preservatives, no chemicals, nothing that we don't want to be eating.

If you'd like to try it, here's our recipe:  (It does require having an ice cream maker, unfortunately... you could theoretically sit in your freezer and stir it for 20 minutes instead of putting it in a machine, but I don't recommend it... you might get frostbite).

1.5 cups milk (we used 2%)
1.125 cups sugar
2.75 cups heavy cream
1 Tbsp vanilla extract
1 tsp mint extract
15 crushed Oreos

* Make sure your ice cream maker is frozen according to manufacturer's directions.
* Combine the milk and sugar in a medium bowl until the sugar is dissolved.  Mix in the cream, vanilla, and mint.
* Pour into ice cream maker and allow to run as per manufacturer's directions.  Add the crushed oreos about 3 minutes before the cycle finishes.

The ice cream will be soft, because it doesn't have any of the gums that commercial ice cream manufacturers add to keep it hard; store your ice cream in a tightly sealed container in your freezer to keep it firm!  If you like more of a contrast between the black and white in your cookies & cream, don't crush the oreos as finely; we crushed ours pretty finely to get a thorough distribution of oreo-crumb flavor.

Remember that each time you remove the ice cream from the freezer, allow it to partially thaw, and then put it back in the freezer, larger ice crystals form because the liquid and the solids are not being combined as they refreeze.  This is why, if you've had a carton of ice cream open in the freezer for a while, the last servings are not as smooth and creamy as the first were.

Boring First Post

Welcome to our blog!  We are so far away from so many of the people whom we expected to be sharing the beginning of our married life with, and starting a blog to share stories and photos seemed like the best idea for keeping up with far-flung friends and family.

The idea for the blog originally came after I spent the entire third week of our marriage sick in bed with a very unfriendly virus, and had lots of leisure time (between naps) to browse the Internet and see what many of our friends were up to.  From "doesn't that sound fun?" to "we are totally doing things at least as interesting as that!" wasn't a very far jump, and Igloo for Two was the next logical step.  We thought it would be particularly fun to share the interesting things we cook or do around the house, and we're planning to try to include a recipe in most posts.

We hope you enjoy sharing our adventures!