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2/13/12

What to do with Leftover Hamentashen Dough? Cookies with Caramel Pear Preserves

Confession: I tend to hoard things. Those things include art supplies, cards, shoes, clothes (that no longer fit), people (for whom I've lost that warm and fuzzy feeling) and food!

My pantry is filled with items that I haven't used for over a year, and my freezer holds things such as chicken, pizza dough, and sorbet that I may or may not ever consume.

I need to stop hoarding.

I really must.

But it's hard. I'm sure many of you can relate.

A few weeks ago, I took a tiny little step toward the goal of dehoarding, and it was a very sweet step!

Last year, almost one year ago in fact, I made hamentashen filled with fig preserves. They were delicious, but required a ton of work. So much work, in fact, that I ended up freezing half of the dough to deal with later.

The "later" finally arrived!

Here is the hamentashen dough!


Allow the dough to defrost in your refrigerator.

Preheat the oven to 350F degrees.

Roll out the dough on a lightly floured surface to about one-quarter inch in thickness. Then, using a ravioli cutter, cut out the shapes. Of course you can use whichever cutting utensil you desire: biscuit cutter, ♥-shaped cutter, or even a plain glass. I love the ridges the ravioli cutter makes.


Using a fork, make a few indentations in the dough, but don't pierce all the way through.


Then, you'll need a pretty thick jam to fill these cookies. Lucky for me, I had Caramel Pear Preserves from my friend Cecilia. If you are not lucky enough to have Cecilia as a friend, you can use store-bought preserves or Nutella.


But first, you'll have to bake the cookies. Mine took about 18 minutes. You want them to be a bit brown on the edges. It's best to bake these cookies on a parchment-lined cookie sheet. Don't worry about leaving too much space in between: the cookies don't really spread out. Allow the cookies to cool completely before moving onto the next step.


Next, it's time to spread the preserves on half of the cookies and then top with the remaining cookies. Seriously, how simple is that? Get your kids to help out!


All done!



Beauty shot:


These cookies are crispy and sweet. Store them in a tightly sealed container for a few days...but most likely they'll be gone before then.

Before you leave, please head out and vote for my lamb recipe! Thank you.

2/10/12

Marinated Lamb with Crispy Polenta Cakes, Roasted Tomatoes & Yogurt Dip: Recipe for Pro Am DC (Fans of Lamb)

I was born in the year of the sheep under the astrological sign of Aries--it's no wonder, then, that I LOVE lamb.

I tend to order lamb whenever I eat out at Indian, Mediterranean or American restaurants and am also not a stranger to cooking lamb.

Some of my favorite dishes include Shepherd's Pie with Goat Cheese Mashed Potatoes, Lamb Pizza, and Lamb Sausage, Mozzarella & Arugula Sandwich.

When I received an email invitation from the American Lamb Board to participate in a recipe competition with twelve other DC area bloggers, I could not say no.

The task was to create an original recipe using a boneless leg of lamb provided by Craig Rogers who owns Border Springs Farm.

The recipes will open for voting {The voting will start Monday and go through February 17th}, and the top four bloggers will compete at the American Lamb Pro-AM event on March 4th.

Once I accepted the invitation, I had to decide what to make. My initial plan was to make a soup from my childhood called harcho. It is made from lamb, potatoes, rice, tomatoes, carrots and onions. Unfortunately, since my dad is not a fan of lamb {and that's putting it mildly}, my mom has only made the soup a few times and could not recall the exact recipe. I thought it might be best to come up with something else.

And then one night, as I was falling asleep, it hit me: lamb and polenta. And spicy tomato sauce. And yogurt dip! I on my nightstand lamp and quickly wrote down the idea so I wouldn't forget it in the morning.

WARNING: this dish is not Kosher or vegetarian; it's definitely not vegan or low calorie. Make it at your own risk.

Note: the nice thing about the following recipe is that you can make most of it in advance. Roast your tomatoes and prepare polenta two nights ahead; marinade the lamb a night before, and then on the day of the dinner party all you have to do is cook the lamb and crisp up the polenta cakes.


Marinated Lamb with Crispy Polenta Cakes, Roasted Tomatoes & Yogurt Dip
Serves 4-8 depending on how hungry you are

Ingredients

For roasted tomatoes
8 Roma tomatoes, sliced
olive oil
salt & pepper

For polenta
4 cups water
salt
1 cup polenta
1/2 cup half & half
1 cup freshly grated Parmesan

For lamb
2 pounds boneless leg of lamb
1 large white onion, peeled and thinly sliced
2 tablespoons smoked paprika
ground pepper
4 garlic cloves, peeled and smashed
4 cups buttermilk

For yogurt dip
1/2 cucumber, peeled, seeded and diced
2 teaspoons chopped dill
1 cup 2% Greek yogurt
salt & pepper

Directions
1. For roasted tomatoes: Preheat the oven to 350F. In a bowl, coat tomato slices with oil and season with salt and pepper. Arrange the tomatoes in a single layer on a parchment-lined cookie sheet and roast for 90 minutes. Try not to eat them right away or you'll have none left for the recipe. Store these roasted tomatoes in a tight container in the refrigerator until you are ready to put the whole dish together.


2. For polenta: Bring to boil four cups of water, season with salt. Whisk in the polenta and continue to whisk for the first five minutes. Depending on how fine your cornmeal is ground, continue to cook the polenta for 15-40 minutes. When it has reached the consistency you desire, stir in half & half and grated Parmesan. Pour polenta into a PAM-sprayed 9x13 Pyrex dish, allow to cool, and then store, covered, in the refrigerator.


3. For lamb: in a large bowl, combine 1" cubes of lamb, sliced onions, paprika, smashed garlic and buttermilk. Cover and refrigerate overnight or for a few days.


Let's put it all together!

4. Right before your dinner, use a large biscuit cutter to make round polenta cakes. Carefully saute them in olive oil.
5. Remove the onions from the marinade and saute them in olive oil until they are slightly charred. {I used my cast iron skillet.}
6. In a separate skillet, heat olive oil and cubes of lamb, that have been patted dry. Cook for a few minutes on two of the sides: you want the lamb to still be pink on the inside. Sprinkle the lamb with salt as soon as you take it out from the skillet. {Alternatively, you can bake or broil lamb, but I think pan-sauteeing gives the best results, but also takes the longest amount of time.}
7. Combine all the ingredients for the yogurt dip.
8. To plate: add charred onions on the bottom of a plate. Place one of the polenta cakes on top of the onions, top it with a few pieces of roasted tomatoes and 2-4 cubes of lamb.


9. Top the lamb with yogurt dip, another polenta cake and one slice of roasted tomato. Garnish with fresh dill and dig in!


Variations: you can serve the cubed pieces of lamb in a bowl with soft polenta and top them with charred onions, roasted tomatoes and yogurt dip. That would make the dish a bit more rustic, but equally decadent.

I had a great time developing this recipe and hope you will give it a try.


You can vote now through February 17th.

2/8/12

Feta Stuffed Olives

One of the lessons my parents taught me from an early age was not to show up at someone's house empty-handed. You always bring something: wine, flowers, a gift for the kids, or something you baked.

When I was offered a preview copy of Gourmet Gifts: 100 Delicious Recipes for Every Occasion to Make Yourself & Wrap with Style by Dinah Corley, I could not wait to see what recipes and wrapping ideas I would be able to use for my next hostess gift.

The book is filled with ideas for everything from the elaborate to the quick and inexpensive. The photographs by Alison Shaw are bright and make you want to try every single recipe and decorating idea. I thought I'd start with something simple: Black and White Olives.


Do not adjust your screen! The olives in the photograph above are not black. They are green. My grocery store did not have the black California olives needed for the recipe, so I used giant green ones.

 

Feta Stuffed Olives
Slightly adapted from  Gourmet Gifts: 100 Delicious Recipes for Every Occasion to Make Yourself & Wrap with Style by Dinah Corley

Ingredients
12 ounces extra-large pitted green olives
4 ounces feta cheese
1 teaspoon dried oregano
4 garlic cloves
6 bay leaves
3 de arbol dry chiles, slightly toasted in a skillet
1/2 to 2/3 cups olive oil

Directions {I pretty much simplified the directions that were in the book to fit my lifestyle}
1. Drain and dry the olives
2. In a bowl, mash together feta, oregano and a bit of olive oil.
3. Stuff the olives with the feta filling. Prepare to have a mess on your hands. {I tried to make little sausages from the feta and stuffed them into olives. I used a chopstick to push the feta filling down and then, if there was any space remaining, added more filling.}


4. In a large jar, add sliced garlic, del arbol peppers, bay leaves and olives. Fill with olive oil.



I used a napkin and a ribbon to decorate my jar, and brought it over to Jenna's house for The Bachelor viewing ;)


My thoughts: I think this needed a bit more spice. Perhaps, red pepper flakes would have been a good addition. I did not cure the olives in a dry cool place for 24 hours as required in the book: I just did not have the time. Maybe that would have given a bit more bite to this appetizer. Still, I thought it was a fun project.

I can't wait to try some of the other recipes from the book including Mango and Tomatillo Salsa and Two Sisters, Side by Side: Cumin Tortilla Chips and Black Bean-Fresh Corn Salsa.

When you are a guest in someone's house, what's your favorite hostess gift to bring?

2/6/12

Mushroom Stir Fry Recipe

I love mushrooms! I have such fond memories of going mushroom picking with my parents and my sister when I was a little girl. Of course, we had to leave our Moscow apartment and head to the outskirts of the city to find a forest first. We would make a day trip out of it: pick mushrooms, make shashliki {kabobs} on the fire, and head home exhausted, but happy. My parents would then saute, marinate, or dry the mushrooms.

Years later, after my family left Russia and moved to the US, my parents still pick mushrooms--these days in their suburban Seattle neighborhood. I get phone calls from them occasionally telling me how they have a sink full of mushrooms that need to be dealt with.

It's been a while since I've picked mushrooms. What a shame. I just stick to the ones I buy at the grocery store or farmer's market.

A few weeks ago, my friend Cindy surprised me with three packages of mushrooms from a local Asian store!

Look at these beautiful Maitake, Bunapi Champignones and Oyster mushrooms!


Of course I could have used these mushrooms to make some fancy dish, but that's just not my style. Plus, to be honest with you, I did not feel like going grocery shopping: I decided to use whatever I had on hand and came up with this Mushroom Stir Fry recipe.

Mushroom Stir Fry

Ingredients
1 tablespoon chili oil
2 carrots, peeled and thinly sliced on a diagonal
1 cup snow peas, trimmed, halved
1 green pepper, thinly sliced
2 garlic cloves, chopped
3.5 ounces Maitake mushrooms
3.5 ounces Bunapi Champingnon mushrooms
3.5 ounces Oyster mushrooms
1-2 tablespoons tamari

Suggested additions {if I actually went to the grocery store}: minced fresh ginger to add at the same time as garlic, fresh cilantro and toasted cashews or peanuts to add at the end of the dish.







Directions

1. Heat the chili oil in a skillet or wok.

2. Add carrots and stir fry for two minutes.

3. Add snow peas and peppers and stir fry for two minutes.

4. Add garlic and mushrooms and stir fry for five minutes. {If you are using ginger, you would add it in this step.}

5. Add tamari.















How simple is this dish? You can obviously add different colors of peppers, green beans, and/or zucchini. Serve this over rice or noodles, or eat on its own.



How do you like to cook mushrooms?

2/5/12

Guest Post on Bella Nutella: Nutella Panini with Apple & Walnuts

Guess what today is? Nutella day!!!

Do you love Nutella? I do!

Know who else loves Nutella? My friend Paula! Paula and I met during the Pomegranate Trip. She's funny, talented, beautiful, and carries individual packages of Nutella with her wherever she goes. What's not to like?


When Paula asked me to do a guest blog post for Bella Nutella, I said YES!

Here's my little story:

I don’t remember the first time I tasted Nutella, but it must have been sometime after my family moved from Russia to the USA. This means I was deprived of Nutella for the first thirteen years of my life. Somehow I’m going to have to forgive my parents for this.
Since then, I’ve enjoyed Nutella in the US, and while on vacation in such places as Puerto Rico and France. One of my favorite moments of my trip February trip to Paris {years ago} was eating a Nutella-filled crepe from a street cart; it was the best treat during the cold winter month.


One of my friends asked me how I eat Nutella. I was dumbfounded: what kind of a question is that?
I eat Nutella on a spoon (straight up!), spread on bread, or with slices of apples or oranges: the possibilities are endless. 
I love spreading Nutella on white bread, and adding thin slices of a Granny Smith apple and toasted walnuts.


But for Paula, I had to step it up a notch. I used the same ingredients, but turned them into a Nutella Panini with Granny Smith Apples and Toasted Walnuts! Go check out the recipe on Bella Nutella!

How do YOU like to eat Nutella?




2/3/12

Buttermilk Pancakes with Boozy Persimmons and Mangoes

When it comes to breakfast, I'm a savory girl. It's very rare I crave cereal, granola or pancakes. Bagels with cream cheese and lox, an omelet, or roasted potatoes? Those I would take any day.

This past Sunday, I woke up at 10:30 am. No, I did not go salsa dancing the night before. In fact, I even took a nap that Saturday. Maybe I just needed extra sleep. Or maybe, I did not want to face the messy kitchen I had to clean after a cooking date the day before.

Anyway.

I woke up, turned on my computer, got caught up with Twitter, FB, checked my blog statistics, turned on the TV and tried to decide what to make for breakfast.

That's when I decided to make pancakes. Why? Because I had some buttermilk left over in the refrigerator after making cheesy scones on Saturday.

I did a quick search on line and found a recipe for Buttermilk Pancakes on Joy of Baking. You might be shocked to read this, but I followed the recipe exactly!

Instead of topping the buttermilk pancakes with syrup {boring!}, I decided to peel and cube a few persimmons and champagne mangoes {Thank you, Cindy!} and let them chill in a bowl of Cava {Thank you, Melissa!}


The recipe for the buttermilk pancakes is incredibly easy: First, you combine all-purpose flour, baking powder, baking soda, salt and sugar. In a separate bowl, you whisk together an egg, buttermilk and a bit of melted butter. {I'm just now realizing that I forgot to add melted butter! It still came out great.}

You then add the wet mix to the dry mix and incorporate the two without over-mixing the batter. A few lumps are fine.


I cooked the pancakes in a bit of melted butter. The best way to know when to turn your pancakes is to look for little bubbles to appear on their surface. Flip. Cook a few more minutes and you are ready to eat.

How fancy does this look?


I served these buttermilk pancakes with boozy persimmons and champagne mangoes and a dusting of confectionery sugar. Not one to waste things, I drank the Cava that made those persimmons and mangoes boozy.


The pancakes were fluffy, sweet, and crispy on the edges. This recipe is definitely a winner.


Make this recipe tonight for dinner, or for breakfast over the weekend.

Have a great weekend! See you next week.

2/1/12

Chickpea Soup with Potatoes, Rainbow Chard & Other Vegetables

Monday I shared with you a recipe for cheesy scones. While they were amazing, Melissa and I needed something else to round up our cooking lunch date and decided to also make soup.

The starting point for the soup was a can of chickpeas. Then we picked up other vegetables, added a few pantry ingredients, and ended up with Chickpea Soup with Potatoes, Rainbow Chard & Other Vegetables.

This soup, like most of my recipes, is incredibly versatile. If you use vegetarian broth, you'll have a completely vegetarian dish.

If  you can't find Rainbow Chard, use Swiss Chard, spinach or kale. Feel free to add zucchini or peppers, and use any kind of beans you like.

Melissa, who s chickpeas, thought the soup could benefit from two cans of chickpeas instead of one. You be the judge!






Chickpea Soup with Potatoes, Rainbow Chard & Other Vegetables

Ingredients
2 teaspoons olive oil
1 large red onion, peeled and chopped
3 carrots, peeled and chopped
2 teaspoons smoked paprika {Smoked paprika was Melissa's idea: and what a brilliant idea it was! It added depth the soup otherwise would have missed.}
2 teaspoons tomato paste
4 cups chicken broth
4 cups water
4 medium potatoes, cubed {we used potatoes with really thin skin, so there was no need to peel them}
14.5 ounce can of fire roasted tomatoes
19 ounce can of chickpeas, drained & rinsed
1 large bunch of Rainbow Chard, cut into ribbons

To serve: sour cream and cheesy scones

Directions
1. Heat olive oil in a skillet. Add onions and carrots and saute until they are tender. Add smoked paprika and tomato paste and cook for about five minutes. You want the flavors of the smoked paprika and tomato sauce to marry with sauteed onions and carrots.
2. Meanwhile, in a large soup pot, cook potatoes in chicken stock and water until the potatoes are almost fork-tender.
3. Add chickpeas, tomatoes, Rainbow Chard and onion/carrot mixture to the soup and cook just until the chard wilts.
4. Serve in soup bowls topped with sour cream and a few cheesy scones on the side.


The soup was filling, colorful, so very good for you, and has held up as leftovers for four days now!

Also, check out my new dishes from World Market: they are non-reflective, which makes them great for food photographs. I bought two soup bowls and two plates. How did I find out about them? Pinterest, of course.