Thursday, June 10, 2010

Never Give Up on the Sweet Potato

Let's face it, everyone has a vegetable, meat, grain, sweet etc., that they just don't like. You can't say why you don't like it and you've tried a million different preparations; yet you still just can't add it to the list of things you can't wait to eat.

I am no different than everyone else. There are few foods I don't like, most of them are processed foods like those Jenny-O turkey roasts, Velveeta cheese and instant mashed potatoes (unless of course they are mixed with Stove Top Stuffing, no I don't know why I like that either). But when it comes to fresh food, aka vegetables, okra, lima beans (outside of vegetable soup) and French cut string beans just send me hiding.

Then there are the ON THE FENCE foods, the ones that I can't believe I have a hard time enjoying; like olives that aren't brined in vodka or stuffed with garlic, bleu cheese (really, there is mold put in there on purpose, come on now)and Sweet Potatoes.

Don't get me wrong, mash them up, fold in a bag of mini-marshmallows and you will need to pry the empty bowl out of my fingers. I feel the same way about them when they are french fried, but pretty much any other preparation and I am just not going to knock you over to get to them. It is sad really, they are so rich and full of vitamins, they are easy to prepare, you can steam them, boil them, bake them, saute them, wrap them in pasta, bake them in a pie, mash them, grill them and french fry them; they are inexpensive to boot.

We made sweet potato ravioli a few months ago that we topped with sauteed sausage and cauliflower and it was good, but it just didn't jump off the plate as my next favorite vegetable like fennel did when I made that for the first time.

The story is the same for all the different squashes out there; acorn, spaghetti and pumpkin. I love love love zucchini, but my lack of love for all the others just mystifies me.

But here at the Wanamaker House we are not quitters and although I will continue to try and vindicate all the different squashes out there, I am starting with the sweet potato first.

Here is what we had for dinner last night. It was good, even David said it was good despite the sweet potatoes...poor orange spud, I promise not to give up on you yet.

Smothered Sweet Potatoes

4 thick slices pancetta, diced
1 lb. Apple Sausage, removed from casing and broken into bits
2 lbs. sweet potatoes (peeled and cubed)
5 cloves garlic, thinly sliced
5 fresh sage leaves
4-6 tblsps. butter
4-6 tblsps. olive oil
salt/pepper to taste
eggs (1-2 per person eating)


Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Peel and cube sweet potatoes, place in a 13x9 inch baking dish and set aside.

In a large heavy bottomed skillet on medium-high heat combine 3 tblsps. of olive oil and 3 tblsps. of butter. Saute garlic and sage leaves until garlic is transparent and sage is a dark green and a little limp.

Pour olive oil mixture over sweet potatoes, sprinkle with salt and pepper and toss till all the cubes are coated.

In the same pan that you heated the oil/butter mixture, saute the pancetta and sausage until the pancetta is just starting to crisp and the sausage is almost completely cooked, but not quite. Salt and pepper to taste. You may need to add a little more oil to the pan if it is too dry.

Pour sausage mixture over sweet potatoes, cover with foil and bake until sweet potatoes are fork tender.


In the same frying pan that you sauteed everything else, fry one or two eggs sunny side up (dippy at my house) per person. Spoon sweet potato mixture onto your plate, top with fried eggs and enjoy. The point of the egg is to provide a simple sauce to the whole dish.


I also made some pan sauteed asparagus to go along with it because I love the drippy sauce of the eggs with asparagus.

Sunny side up eggs, asparagus spears and zucchini fritters makes a fantastic breakfast, especially if they are the zucchini fritters my mom makes from the zucchini we grow in the garden. I'll post that recipe when we get into zucchini overload season.

I hope those of you that are already sweet potato lovers will enjoy this and maybe those of us who are on the fence will keep trying new ways until it hits us that we just can't live without them.

Hugs,
dina

Saturday, June 5, 2010

GDYNIA Polish Market at the Allentown Farmer's Market


I think you all realize by now that it has become my goal to investigate as many foods outside of my culinary safety zone as I can. Being of Italian/German descent, with more of an emphasis on the Italian, food of all ethnicities has always been intriguing but cooking it is another story.

With this is mind, my mom and I paid a visit to the Allentown Farmer’s Market on Friday. With my daughter's camera and my debit card we walked down the aisles in search of something fun that would make a delicious meal and interesting blog.

Okay, let's tell the whole truth, we got through the double doors and stopped at Charlie K's Pizza for 2 slices of plain pizza and a medium root beer. Mom and I always talk about eating somewhere else, but we always end up on a red bar stool laughing and enjoying our pizza.

We walked down the first aisle snapping pictures and talking to vendors (I got a lot of stuff for a few days worth of blogging) until we ended up at GDYNIA Polish Market. Everything in the cases looked delicious, Mr. & Mrs. Brodowski looked up and smiled making me feel like maybe this was the adventure I needed today.

So, 15 minutes later after talking to the Brodowskis and a lovely young woman who helped with a few words of translation, we walked out of there with about two pounds of the most delicious and juicy looking Polish sausages, Kielbasa and Kapusta Sauerkraut this side of the Atlantic as well as rough directions on how to prepare it. Did you know that Polish sauerkraut has shredded carrots in it? Have I ever told you I am not a huge fan of the "carrot"? Well I gave it a shot anyway. So here you go:












Polish Sausage and Sauerkraut

2 lbs. Fresh Polish Sausage from GDYNIA Polish Market

2 lb. Kapusta Sauerkraut

1 cup water

1 onion, sliced

4 tblsps. butter

salt/pepper to taste


Place sauerkraut into a colander and squeeze out excess juices. In a heavy bottomed frying pan on medium – high heat, sauté sliced onion in butter until translucent and lightly browned. Add sauerkraut and ½ cup water, stir well. Cover and let cook for 10 minutes.

Slice sausage into 3-4 inch pieces and lay on top of sauerkraut. Add remaining water. Cover and cook 15 minutes or until sausage is hot through and slightly plumped. Salt and pepper as needed.










Now let me tell you a little bit about this meal. First, my husband, despite being 100% Pennsylvania German, just hates pretty much anything having to do with cabbage, sauerkraut is not an exception. But he is now a convert. I think its because all that sour juice from the sauerkraut was squeezed out and didn't have such a bite. It also didn't have that really "hey you must be making sauerkraut" smell that takes over the house for a few days either, which in my book is a really good thing.

So the vote was unanimous, we will be going back to GDYNIA in the near future for all of our Polish sausages and to see what else we can try.

GDYNIA Polish Market at the Allentown Farmer’s Market offers a dozen different kinds of fresh Polish meats and cheeses as well a multitude of other products direct from Poland to tempt your palate into trying one of each and everything they offer.

hugs!

dina

Thursday, June 3, 2010

Girls' Night a Celebration of Friendships - New and Old

What a night! There were 12 amazing women at my house Saturday night enjoying great food, wine, music and conversation. It has been such a long time since we’ve all gotten together that I was a little nervous about what the neighbors would say when we started laughing and boy did we laugh.

Dinner gave me an opportunity to experiment with new foods and introduce my friends to foods they’ve never had. Although our soup for the night and our entrée was something I’ve been making for years, the appetizer was something that came to me in the middle of the night and I found the recipe for the dessert in a cook book called “Tongue Twisters – Sexy Food from Bin 941 & 942,” I only changed it up a little bit because I didn’t have the Kahlua it called for.

Appetizer
Pancetta cups filled with polenta and topped with mini crab cakes and sautéed baby portabella mushrooms and shallots

Soup

Crespele – a delicate crepe sprinkled with freshly ground parmesan cheese, rolled up and served in a bowl topped with chicken broth

Entrée

Homemade Manicotti with Italian Meatballs

Dessert

Toffee Espresso Pots de Crème

The first one is something that came to me at about 3:00 a.m. last week, I sat straight up in bed and thought, hey, I think this would make a great appetizer for the girls. I apologized in advance if it didn’t turn out well, but it was unnecessary because it was amazingly delicious and I will be making it again and again.


Pancetta Cups Filled With Polenta and Topped with Mini Crabcakes and Sauteed Portabella Mushrooms and Shallots

16 slices of pancetta + two ½ inch pieces finely diced

1 box quick polenta prepared according to box instructions

1 cup of freshly grated Asiago cheese, plus some for garnish

3 shallots, thinly sliced

2 cloves garlic, sliced very thin

salt/pepper to taste

Preheat oven to 350 degrees F. Place slices of pancetta onto the back of muffin cups and bake till slightly crispy and holds the shape of the muffin cup. It is necessary to put this upside down muffin cup pan on a cookie sheet because the pancetta releases a lot of fat when baking.

Prepare polenta as per the directions on the box, adding the Asiago cheese at the end.

Heat olive oil in a large heavy bottomed skillet on medium – high heat; add shallots, garlic and diced pancetta, sautéing until shallots are translucent. Add mushrooms and sauté until mushrooms are slightly tender and pancetta is slightly crispy. Be careful not to burn the garlic or you will need to start all over again. Remove mushroom mixture to a small bowl and set aside. Put approximately 3-4 tblsps. of olive oil into the hot skillet and sauté crab cakes till lightly browned on both sides, remove from pan and set aside. Put mushroom mixture back in pan to reheat.

Gently place pancetta cup on plate, fill with a generous dollop of polenta, top with 2-3 crab cakes and a generous spoonful of mushroom mixture. Sprinkle with Asiago and enjoy.


Mini Crab Cakes

1 lb. fresh crab meat

1 egg

½ cup Italian seasoned bread crumbs

2 tblsps. Mayonaise

1 tblsp. Old Bay Seasoning

salt/pepper to taste

Olive oil

Place crab meat and all other ingredients except olive oil in a bowl large enough to get your hands into it to mix all the ingredients thoroughly. Since you will be making very tiny crab cakes, you will want to use an actual 1 tablespoon size measuring spoon to scoop out the crab mixture and shape into patties. The crab cakes should be about the size of a quarter.

Sauté crab cakes as directed above.


Toffee Espresso Pots de Crème

2 cups sugar

scant 1 ½ cups water

18 egg yolks

3 cups milk

3 cups heavy whipping cream

6 oz. Espresso Vodka

Combine sugar and water in a large heavy bottom pot. Cook on medium – high heat until caramel in color, stirring occasionally and using a wet brush to push the sugar crystals that form on the side of the pot back into the boiling mixture. This process can take up to 25 minutes, but can burn in an instant if not watched carefully.

While sugar mixture boils, bring the milk, cream and vodka to a simmer, stirring occasionally so that it doesn’t burn or develop a skin on top.

When the sugar mixture is a rich caramel color and milk mixture has come to a simmer, remove sugar mixture from heat and slowly, carefully add milk stirring constantly. This sugar is very hot and will bubble up really high; it might be safer to do it over the sink.

Place toffee into the refrigerator to cool completely. While toffee is cooling, separate eggs and whisk gently until very smooth.

Whisk egg yolks into cooled milk mixture.

Pour enough of the milk/egg mixture into clean ramekins so that it reaches the little ridge just below the top of the ramekin. Place filled ramekins into a bain de marie, cover with foil and bake approximately 50 minutes or until there is a only a soft giggly spot about the size of a dime in the center. Cool, then keep refrigerated until ready to use, can be made up to 4 days in advance if covered tightly with cling wrap. Serve with a generous dollop of home made whipped cream and a sprig of fresh mint.

This was an amazing night! I love all my friends and family and can’t wait to do this again.

hugs,

dina