Everyone’s definition of “comfort food” is different. When I was sick as a child, all I wanted was creamy oatmeal with raisins and brown sugar. Warm, soothing, with a hint of sweet. The following two recipes hit the mark for me as well. Freshly made pancakes with warm real maple syrup or homemade apple sauce. The perfect way to start a day when you know the afternoon will hold a nap. And the creamy garlic-infused pasta that calls out to be eaten on a chilly day when the rich fulsome sauce encourages you to give into your desire to snuggle under the covers with a good book after consuming a bowlful.
Pancakes
These really are wonderful pancakes. I started making them in Japan when my first son, Franz, was a baby and continued making them through the boys' teen years, mostly for breakfast but sometimes for dinner when I was down to eggs and milk in the fridge and flour in the cupboard.
¾ cup white flour
¾ cup whole wheat flour
1 teaspoon salt
2 tablespoons sugar
2 teaspoons baking powder
1 cup milk
2 eggs
3 tablespoons oil
1 tablespoon molasses
1. Sift the flours, salt, sugar, and baking powder into a large mixing bowl. If you don’t have a sifter, place all the dry ingredients in a large mixing bowl and stir well.
2. Pour the milk into a measuring pitcher.
3. Separate the eggs, dropping the whites into a small mixing bowl and the yolks into the milk. Add the oil and molasses to the milk mixture and stir to combine.
Note: The molasses will slip right out of the tablespoon if you use your tablespoon to measure the oil first.
4. Pour the milk mixture into the dry ingredients. Stir lightly until just blended.
5. Beat the egg whites, until they hold a soft peak. Gently fold into the pancake mixture.
Note: If you want to get some exercise beating your egg whites, use a whisk or an old-fashioned eggbeater. If not, use a hand-held electric mixer.
6. Pour about ¼ cup batter into a lightly greased large frying pan or griddle on medium high heat. You can probably cook about 3 pancakes at a time with room to turn them over easily. Cook until bubbles form in the pancake and the edges are set. Flip and cook until the bottom is brown and the pancake is cooked through.
7. You can keep the first pancakes warm in a 250°F oven for a short period of time while cooking the rest.
8. Serve with warm maple syrup, applesauce, jam, yogurt—or whatever you fancy.
Makes 10 regular-sized pancakes
Handwritten from a cooking notebook I kept while in Japan, 1971-73
As you can see from above, I added a photo to the page just recently.
A Creamy, Calming Pasta Dish with Sausage
4 heads of garlic or an equivalent number of garlic cloves
Note: Most supermarkets now-a-days have plastic containers of peeled garlic in the produce department. If you are pressed for time, this is the occasion to use them.
2 tablespoons olive oil
6-8 springs of fresh thyme
1 pound dried shell or tube-shaped pasta [I used Delverte’s No. 32 Penne Rigate]
2 cups heavy cream
Salt and pepper to taste
4 fresh sweet uncooked Italian sausages
2-3 sprigs of fresh thyme, stripped and chopped
1. Place the unpeeled whole heads of garlic or the equivalent peeled garlic cloves in a small baking pan. Drizzle with oil and thyme and place in a 400ºF oven. Roast the garlic until the cloves are very soft and sweet, 50-60 minutes for the heads and much less for the cloves.
2. Cool the garlic heads and then tear them apart and squeeze out the contents of each clove into a small bowl. [This step took nearly all of my considerable patience and is the reason I devised a simpler method.] Or place the peeled cloves in a bowl. Mash them into a paste, adding a small bit of your 2 cups of cream to help the process.
Note: You can use a mortar and pestle, a Japanese suribachi, a potato masher, a small food processor or a fork to smash and mash the garlic. You do not need to make it perfectly smooth unless you want to.
3. Put your pot of salted water (for cooking the pasta) on the stove on high. Bring it to a boil while you are working on the next two steps.
4. Warm the garlic paste in a sauté pan over moderate heat, pour in the cream, whisk the garlic and the remaining cream to combine, bring to a simmer, add salt and pepper to taste, and cook for several minutes.
5. Skin the fresh sausage, crumble the meat into a frying pan and fry until done.
6. Cook the pasta in your pot of boiling salted water until it is al dente. Drain in a colander, saving about ½ cup pasta water to use in the sauce as needed.
7. Tip the pasta and drained sausage into the cream, toss gently and heat until all the elements are warm and the cream is gently bubbling. If the sauce is thicker than you like it, add a bit of the reserved pasta water to thin it out until you reach the consistency that is right for you. Add more salt and pepper if needed. Ladle into plates or bowls and garnish with fresh thyme leaves.
I serve this pasta with steamed spinach; I like its bracing flavor up against the richness of the cream and pasta.
6 servings
Adapted from Nigel Slater’s Appetite
Tuesday, February 1, 2011
Just in the Nick of Time: A Last Crab Feast
Fresh Marinated Cracked Crab
I wanted to include this fantastic crab feast before crab season is over. I love crab with melted butter but I must admit that this marinated version has won me over. It is lighter and perfectly complements the crab. Hurry. You don’t want to have to wait until next December.
This is what one crab looks like.
3 Dungeness crabs, cooked and cracked
Marinade:
6 cloves garlic, minced
1 tablespoon salt
1 tablespoon ground black pepper
1 bunch Italian flat parsley, washed, leaves coarsely chopped
Sprinkling of crushed red pepper flakes or Aleppo pepper
1/3 cup fresh lemon juice
1 cup olive oil
Provisions for the table:
Plenty of paper napkins or paper towels to wipe off your face and hands.
Bowls for the shells.
Crab-eating utensils (crackers, forks, picks) so that you can get in the little tiny crevices for the best parts of the crab.
1. Drain your cracked crabs of any water that has accumulated in the plastic bag or wrapping paper. Stir all of the marinade ingredients together in a large bowl and toss in the drained cracked crabs. Refrigerate for several hours.
2. Remove from the fridge about 30 minutes before serving. Transfer to a large platter and place in the middle of the table. Have at it.
I love to serve this crab with warm bread and a nice crisp green salad, perhaps with grapefruit sections and pomegranate seeds.
Serves 6 moderate crab lovers. If you are serving extreme crab lovers, you may need to purchase a crab for each of them and increase the marinade accordingly.
Adapted from Peggy Knickerbocker’s Simple Soirées
I wanted to include this fantastic crab feast before crab season is over. I love crab with melted butter but I must admit that this marinated version has won me over. It is lighter and perfectly complements the crab. Hurry. You don’t want to have to wait until next December.
This is what one crab looks like.
3 Dungeness crabs, cooked and cracked
Marinade:
6 cloves garlic, minced
1 tablespoon salt
1 tablespoon ground black pepper
1 bunch Italian flat parsley, washed, leaves coarsely chopped
Sprinkling of crushed red pepper flakes or Aleppo pepper
1/3 cup fresh lemon juice
1 cup olive oil
Provisions for the table:
Plenty of paper napkins or paper towels to wipe off your face and hands.
Bowls for the shells.
Crab-eating utensils (crackers, forks, picks) so that you can get in the little tiny crevices for the best parts of the crab.
1. Drain your cracked crabs of any water that has accumulated in the plastic bag or wrapping paper. Stir all of the marinade ingredients together in a large bowl and toss in the drained cracked crabs. Refrigerate for several hours.
2. Remove from the fridge about 30 minutes before serving. Transfer to a large platter and place in the middle of the table. Have at it.
I love to serve this crab with warm bread and a nice crisp green salad, perhaps with grapefruit sections and pomegranate seeds.
Serves 6 moderate crab lovers. If you are serving extreme crab lovers, you may need to purchase a crab for each of them and increase the marinade accordingly.
Adapted from Peggy Knickerbocker’s Simple Soirées
Kale and White Bean Soup
This is a very comforting winter soup that can be cooked ahead and kept in individual portions for later use.
1 1/2 cups navy beans, cleaned and sorted and soaked overnight
3 quarts of water
1 bay leaf
3-4 sage leaves fresh or dried
2 large cloves garlic peeled
1 tablespoon olive oil
1 1/2 cups finely diced yellow onion
1 tablespoon nutritional yeast
1 teaspoon salt
freshly ground pepper
6-8 cups kale, stemmed and chopped to spoon size
Simmer the beans in 3 quarts of water with the bay leaf, sage and garlic cloves until the beans are completely soft, about 2 -2 1/2 hours.
Remove one quarter of the cooked beans, puree them in a food mill blender or food processor and then return them to the pot. The puree will give the soup a creamy background texture.
Heat a the oil in a skillet and add the onions cooking medium heat, til transparant. If it seems there is not enough oil you may drizzle a bit of water in now and again until it is done. When soft add the nutritional yeast, a teaspoon of salt, and several grindings of pepper. Stir frequently to prevent the yeast from sticking to the pan. Cook for 5 minutes then add the mixture to the cooked beans.
Cook the kale by sweating in a bit of water..not much..just to keep from sticking..combine it with the beans and add enough water to bring the volume to about 3 quarts. Bring to a boil and simmer for around an hour. Check seasonings and serve
This soup recipe is by Edward Espe Brown from his book The Tassajara Recipe Book. I have left out cream which he adds at the end. I have also lowered the amount of fat by substituting 1 tablespoon of oil for 2 tablespoons of butter.
1 1/2 cups navy beans, cleaned and sorted and soaked overnight
3 quarts of water
1 bay leaf
3-4 sage leaves fresh or dried
2 large cloves garlic peeled
1 tablespoon olive oil
1 1/2 cups finely diced yellow onion
1 tablespoon nutritional yeast
1 teaspoon salt
freshly ground pepper
6-8 cups kale, stemmed and chopped to spoon size
Simmer the beans in 3 quarts of water with the bay leaf, sage and garlic cloves until the beans are completely soft, about 2 -2 1/2 hours.
Remove one quarter of the cooked beans, puree them in a food mill blender or food processor and then return them to the pot. The puree will give the soup a creamy background texture.
Heat a the oil in a skillet and add the onions cooking medium heat, til transparant. If it seems there is not enough oil you may drizzle a bit of water in now and again until it is done. When soft add the nutritional yeast, a teaspoon of salt, and several grindings of pepper. Stir frequently to prevent the yeast from sticking to the pan. Cook for 5 minutes then add the mixture to the cooked beans.
Cook the kale by sweating in a bit of water..not much..just to keep from sticking..combine it with the beans and add enough water to bring the volume to about 3 quarts. Bring to a boil and simmer for around an hour. Check seasonings and serve
This soup recipe is by Edward Espe Brown from his book The Tassajara Recipe Book. I have left out cream which he adds at the end. I have also lowered the amount of fat by substituting 1 tablespoon of oil for 2 tablespoons of butter.
Kale and White Bean Soup
This is a very comforting winter soup that can be cooked ahead and kept in individual portions for later use.
1 1/2 cups navy beans, cleaned and sorted and soaked overnight
3 quarts of water
1 bay leaf
3-4 sage leaves fresh or dried
2 large cloves garlic peeled
1 tablespoon olive oil
1 1/2 cups finely diced yellow onion
1 tablespoon nutritional yeast
1 teaspoon salt
freshly ground pepper
6-8 cups kale, stemmed and chopped to spoon size
Simmer the beans in 3 quarts of water with the bay leaf, sage and garlic cloves until the beans are completely soft, about 2 -2 1/2 hours.
Remove one quarter of the cooked beans, puree them in a food mill blender or food processor and then return them to the pot. The puree will give the soup a creamy background texture.
Heat a the oil in a skillet and add the onions cooking medium heat, til transparant. If it seems there is not enough oil you may drizzle a bit of water in now and again until it is done. When soft add the nutritional yeast, a teaspoon of salt, and several grindings of pepper. Stir frequently to prevent the yeast from sticking to the pan. Cook for 5 minutes then add the mixture to the cooked beans.
Cook the kale by sweating in a bit of water..not much..just to keep from sticking..combine it with the beans and add enough water to bring the volume to about 3 quarts. Bring to a boil and simmer for around an hour. Check seasonings and serve
This soup recipe is by Edward Espe Brown from his book The Tassajara Recipe Book. I have left out cream which he adds at the end. I have also lowered the amount of fat by substituting 1 tablespoon of oil for 2 tablespoons of butter.
1 1/2 cups navy beans, cleaned and sorted and soaked overnight
3 quarts of water
1 bay leaf
3-4 sage leaves fresh or dried
2 large cloves garlic peeled
1 tablespoon olive oil
1 1/2 cups finely diced yellow onion
1 tablespoon nutritional yeast
1 teaspoon salt
freshly ground pepper
6-8 cups kale, stemmed and chopped to spoon size
Simmer the beans in 3 quarts of water with the bay leaf, sage and garlic cloves until the beans are completely soft, about 2 -2 1/2 hours.
Remove one quarter of the cooked beans, puree them in a food mill blender or food processor and then return them to the pot. The puree will give the soup a creamy background texture.
Heat a the oil in a skillet and add the onions cooking medium heat, til transparant. If it seems there is not enough oil you may drizzle a bit of water in now and again until it is done. When soft add the nutritional yeast, a teaspoon of salt, and several grindings of pepper. Stir frequently to prevent the yeast from sticking to the pan. Cook for 5 minutes then add the mixture to the cooked beans.
Cook the kale by sweating in a bit of water..not much..just to keep from sticking..combine it with the beans and add enough water to bring the volume to about 3 quarts. Bring to a boil and simmer for around an hour. Check seasonings and serve
This soup recipe is by Edward Espe Brown from his book The Tassajara Recipe Book. I have left out cream which he adds at the end. I have also lowered the amount of fat by substituting 1 tablespoon of oil for 2 tablespoons of butter.
Project 31 - Day 7
Day 7. Write a post to encourage another beautiful woman.
This one is dedicated to my lovely little sister. Well, she's not really little anymore, she's 27. She'll always be my little sister regardless of her age though, even though she's more mature and responsible than me. haha.
Dear Amanda
You are an incredibly strong woman. Although you say you don't really feel like you are and are scared at times, I want you to know how much I look up to you. You have done some seriously courageous things the past few years. Being a single mother, a full-time employee, a student & still have time to take Olivia to special fun places. You are seriously a super Mom.
I understand big changes are coming your way soon and I want to let you know that I believe in you. I just know you will be okay and succeed. You always do. I encourage you to follow your dreams in life and the upcoming is such an exciting path ahead. Please know that I will FOREVER be here for you, you are embedded in my heart and my door is ALWAYS open, should you ever need it.
I believe in you, and I love you. - Big little Sister
Day 8. Have a beauty secret (e.g. hair tip, make up tip)? Share, please!
Day 9. What virtues do you value in yourself?
Day 10. What are you learning as a wife, mom, or friend? (Or just woman in general?)
Day 11. Post a recipe. Or if you don't cook, try a new recipe and write about it.
Day 12. Write about what wears you out as a woman.
Day 13. Tell us something you would like to change about yourself for the better.
Day 14. Style 31. Post an outfit pic!
Day 15. Write to encourage a friend. Inspire her beauty.
Day 16. Write a letter to (daughter,niece,young girl). Tell her what beauty means.
Day 17. Write about 3 things that make you happy.
Day 18. Describe your personality.
Day 19. Write about your favorite comfort food.
Day 20. Write about your job and why you love it or hate it.
Day 21. Write a letter to your husband to encourage him.
Day 22. Write a letter to your family as a whole.
Day 23. What are your strengths? What are your weaknesses?
Day 24. What are you being taught you presently?
Day 25. Style 31. Post a pic of your favorite comfy clothes.
Day 26. What do you hope your grandchildren will say about you someday?
Day 27. Write a blog to encourage someone and build their confidence!
Day 28. Write about your insecurities as a woman.
Day 29. Write about "a day in the life of me." (Pics are great!)
Day 30. Who is your role model as a woman?
Day 31. Write about your dreams and goals as a beautiful woman!
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