Archive for January, 2006

Challenge me.

Tony bought a 2 1/2 pound bag of spinach at Costco, so it’s become my mission to use it before it goes bad. First we just had sauteed spinach with lemon and olive oil next to pasta; then I sautéed some with sesame oil and soy sauce to go with a stir fry (”But I like vegetables in my stir fry!” complained Ben, temporarily forgetting that he loves spinach. He ate it all up.) Yesterday, I tried a Martha Stewart recipe for sweet potatoes stuffed with kale (replaced with spinach) and tofu. Somehow it looked good to me in the magazine, and maybe it would have been better with the kale (though it couldn’t have been that much better). But half way through making it I realized that really it’s just one of those unimaginative vegetarian recipes that uses tofu, which then sits, cold and clammy, where it doesn’t belong. It would have given my nephew nightmares. (I can’t find the recipe online, but you don’t want to make it anyway). Still, the extra filling was ok fried up with some leftover rice, lots of sesame seeds, and some soy sauce, so not a total loss. Today, to redeem myself (and having found lots of sesame seeds in the freezer), I made a Moosewood recipe for sesame-crusted fried tofu with spinach (flavored with sesame oil, soy sauce, and for a change, chipotle Tabasco), and green rice, which is – you got it – rice tossed with pureed cooked spinach. Obviously we’re not the kind of people who need to sneak spinach into our kid’s meals to get him to eat it (I think if he didn’t like spinach, we’d just not make it), but he was pretty entertained by green rice, so this might become a regular around here.

Somehow I still haven’t made my favorite kind of spinach, sautéed with toasted pine nuts and raisins. Unless we start turning green, I’ll make that tomorrow.

4 comments January 30th, 2006

We’re back…

As of late December, we’re back in our house after some lengthy renovation. We’ll have pictures up soon. It feels good to be home. Thanks to everyone who made it out to Marin to visit us so we didn’t feel completely in exile.

1 comment January 26th, 2006

Sweet Potato & Black Bean Enchiladas

3 sweet potatoes, medium-sized
1 15 oz. can black beans
10-12 Flour tortillas
1 package jack cheese, grated (grate it as big as you want — truly whatever is fastest and easiest… it’s all going to get melted)
1 big (28-32 oz.) or 2 small (~15 oz.) cans of plain tomato sauce (just not “Italian flavored”)
1 jar of salsa … thinner is actually better than thicker — I use “Mrs. Renfro’s” which is in a lot of supermarkets (or if you find a can of “enchilada sauce” that would be fine too)
ground cumin
dash of cayenne pepper or hot sauce, if desired


Peel 3 medium sweet potatoes. Cut them into large chunks and boil them until you can easily stick a fork in them. You’re going to mash these, so they’re pretty forgiving.Drain the water, and put them back in the pot or into a big bowl. Mash the potatoes well, with a fork or potato masher.Drain most of the water from a can of black beans and add them to the sweet potatoes

Add a liberal amount of cumin (maybe 2-3 tablespoons… start with two and you can taste it and add more if you like )

If you’re so inclined, you could add a little heat — a dash of hot sauce or cayenne pepper. That’s the filling.

The sauce I usually just make from plain old canned tomato sauce (since it really kind of wants to be thin… not all homestyle-y like a good homemade pasta sauce). But you do want some kind of mexican flavor in there… so essentially I just spike it with something…

Some salsa from a jar (Mrs. Renfros, enchilada sauce, or some other not-too-chunky salsa) It doesn’t need a ton –just a little something, maybe 1/2 to 3/4 cup. As far as quantity goes, for a big dish of enchiladas, you probably want like a 32 ounce can of sauce to start with. That’s the sauce. NOTE: you don’t even have to cook this… just mix the plain tomato sauce and whatever you’re spiking it with into a bowl.

Then it’s just putting filling into flour tortillas (I’m sure corn would be great, too, but we usually do flour just for size, if no other reason) — maybe 1/4 cup or so… add a little bit of grated cheese (jack is what we usually use), roll ‘em up and tuck them in real close to each other in a big rectangular baking dish with the seam down.

It’s nice to have a tight fit… sometimes I use baking dish that’s a little smaller than the tortillas and just slice of 1/2 inch from two sides of the tortillas to “square them off” –but that’s not really necessary. Pour the sauce over and around… add some more grated cheese on top.

You can easily split this into two pans if need be… I probably get maybe 8 enchiladas in a big baking dish.

Then just bake it until it’s nice and bubbly… maybe 30-40 minutes at 350 or so… it’s all cooked, so you really just need to get it nice and hot.

I usually start with it covered with foil and then sometimes finish it with a few minutes under the broiler to let the cheese get nice and brown. The broiler’s not necessary, but you could at least just take the foil off for the last 5 minutes or so.

1 comment January 24th, 2006

Pasta Puttanesca

1 lb. pasta (works with either long noodles or shapes, e.g. penne)
40-50 pitted kalamata olives
4 tbsp capers
10 cloves of garlic (adjust to taste)
8 stalks of celery (especially the tender inner stalks)
1 cup tomato sauce
olive oil
fresh ground pepper
grating cheese


This recipe is for a pound of pasta, which would serve 4 adults. We usually just make a half pound for the two of us and Ben. I’ve never actually measured this stuff, it’s all eyeballed, so these quantities are my best guess.The celery might suprise you. The taste is really quite nice — it’s important to dice it finely so there aren’t big celery “crescents.” But the subtle crunch is really what you’re after.Note the rather small quantity of tomato sauce. This is decidedly not a chunky, olive-y marinara sauce. It’s very light on the tomato sauce… the small quantity of tomato sauce and some olive oil makes the sauce just barely fluid and helps it coat the pasta well.Either mince the garlic or slice it really thinly and saute in a frying pan with a generous lug of olive oil. When lightly brown, transfer into a bowl. Use a rubber scraper to get all the flavored oil as well.

Chop the olives coarsely and add to bowl. Rinse the capers in a strainer and then chop just once or twice and add to bowl.

Trim away any of the tough celery stalk bottoms. Cut the celery lengthwise into strips (about 1/8″) and then dice. Add to bowl.

Add tomato sauce to bowl. Add another couple tablespoons of olive oil. This is important to make the sauce nice and thick so it coats the pasta well.

Add as much ground pepper to taste — I’m a pepper freak, so I’d do about 30 grinds for a full pound of pasta.

Mix well and let stand. You can do this as far in advance as you like… the flavors will only improve. I wouldn’t do it more than a day in advance for fear that the celery would go soft. Although if you made this and froze it immediately, I imagine it would be great. I keep meaning to make a giant batch and try that some day.

Cook your pasta. Before draining the pasta, pull out a cup of the pasta water.

Drain the pasta really well. We can add water later, but we want to control the moisture ourselves.

Add the sauce and 1/4 cup of water to the empty pot or a large bowl. Add the drained pasta. Mix well coating all the pasta. Add more water 1/4 cup at a time if needed. The pasta should be nice and moist, but we don’t want a big puddle of liquid at the bottom of the pot.

Serve with lots of nice grated cheese at the table.

Mangia!

1 comment January 23rd, 2006

Let’s start something…

I know, I know… it’s so 2005, but here it is, the Caroline and tony (and Ben and Eli) blog… we’ll see what we can do to make this compelling.

January 22nd, 2006


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