Monthly Archives: January 2011

Moroccan Lentil Soup

My husband and I met a friend downtown last Friday for drinks.  I’m not high maintenance by most standards, but it took me about 40 minutes and two outfit changes to switch over from teacher-mode to going out mode.  The mister, on the other hand, showered, shaved, chose a button up shirt and jeans, and carefully mussed his hair in less than 15.  He was sitting on the couch playing Angry Birds long before I emerged from the bedroom to ask him which shoes looked better.

My male counterpart is usually known around here by pseudonyms like Mr. Medium Rare, The Hubs and my favorite taste tester.  You may be surprised to know that he has a real name.  Meet Peder; 6 foot 4, blue-eyed and amiable, the keeper of  both random and highly useful knowledge.  Equal parts logical and creative,  stubbly and polished.  Peder has good kitchen sense, but cooks only occasionally.  He rarely reads cookbooks or browses food sites, and chooses recipes like he shops–thinks, decides, procures, purchases, and goes home to move onto more important things.  And the most endearingly annoying part? Every recipe he chooses is pure gold.

If you have been to my house in the past 3 months, you have undoubtedly heard about “the” Moroccan lentil soup.  You know, the one we mention every time the topic of food comes up (which is pretty frequently around here).  You may have even tried it, one of the ten times we have made it recently, at a school staff potluck, or a last minute dinner get-together.

I’d love to take credit for finding such a fantastic recipe.  After all, I read cookbooks like it’s my part time job.  I luxuriate in the glossy pages, and bookmark potentials with neon sticky notes.  I check Tastespotting on a daily basis, just to see what catches my eye. The problem is, I’m easily distractable…Um, what were we talking about again?  Oh, right.

It goes something like this:  I go to my massive shelf of cookbooks and pull out the Native Foods cookbook, Madhur Jaffrey’s Indian Home Cooking, and the latest issue of Bon Appetit.  Halfway through the sandwich chapter of my Native Foods cookbook, I remember my favorite portobello burger.  A good possibility…I move on to Madhur Jaffrey.  Before I can flip past the foreword, I remember a recipe I had bookmarked on Indian Simmer.  After deciding that the Malai Kofta would have to wait for another day, I head on over to another one of my favorite food blogs, Use Real Butter.  Oh, look, I can make ice cream using only bananas!  Hey Peder–I can make ice cream using only bananas!  You get the picture.

One day, three months ago, Peder decided to make lentil soup for dinner.  After a quick google search, he discovered this recipe buried deep in the comments section of another recipe (we later found the recipe in The Art of the Slow Cooker by Andrew Schloss).  He gathered the ingredients, mostly pantry staples.  It took him 20 minutes to chop and saute the onions and garlic with heaped spoonfuls of aromatic spices.  He added the red lentils, broth, and crushed tomatoes, and poured everything into the slow cooker.  6 hours later, something magical emerged.  The lentils were soft, but still toothsome, like perfectly cooked al dente pasta.  The broth had a layered complexity and was scented with turmeric, coriander, and a hint of cinnamon.  A couple pulses of the immersion blender thickened the broth slightly, turning the soup from light to medium-bodied.  A squeeze of lemon and some parsley and cilantro stirred in at the end woke up all the flavors and tied them all together.

At first, I was a little jealous that I didn’t find this fantastic recipe on my own.  Then…I tasted a spoonful, and thought, a girl could really get used to this!

Moroccan Lentil Soup

Adapted from The Art of the Slow Cooker by Andrew Schloss

Serves 6

  • 2 tablespoons extra-virgin olive oil
  • 2 large onions, chopped
  • 3 large cloves garlic, minced
  • 2 heaped teaspoons ground coriander
  • 2 heaped teaspoons ground cumin
  • 1 teaspoon turmeric
  • 3/4 teaspoons paprika
  • 1/4 teaspoon cinnamon
  • 1/4 teaspoon allspice (optional)
  • 1 1/2 to 2 teaspoons kosher salt (to begin with), then to taste
  • 1/2 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper
  • 7 cups vegetable broth
  • 1 24-ounce can crushed tomatoes
  • 2 cups dried red lentils, rinsed and picked over
  • a pinch of crushed red pepper flakes
  • juice of 1 lemon
  • a small splash of red wine vinegar (about 1/2 tablespoon)
  • 3 tablespoons chopped flat-leaf parsley leaves
  • 1 tablespoon chopped fresh cilantro

Heat the olive oil in a large saucepan or dutch oven over medium-high heat.  Add the onions and cook until tender, about 6 minutes.  Add the garlic, coriander, cumin, turmeric, paprika, cinnamon, and allspice.  Cook for another minute or two, stirring to coat the onions.  Add the broth, tomatoes and salt, and bring to a boil.  Pour into a slow cooker, and stir in the lentils.  Cook for 4 to 5 hours on high, or 6-8 hours on low, or until the lentils are tender.

Stir in the lemon juice, a small splash of red wine vinegar, red pepper flakes, cilantro, and parsley.  Season to taste again with kosher salt.   Cover and cook for an additional 10 minutes.


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Filed under Soups and Stews

“Bricklayer” Breakfast Tacos with Chipotle-Lime Salsa

Wanting what you can’t have makes it oh so much more desirable.  Before you get the wrong idea, my lust is strictly reserved for seasonal produce.  Now is the time of year where I start craving things that are nowhere to be found; warm weather, ripe tomatoes, and farmers market eats from trendy little busses.

Epicurious has a handy little seasonal ingredient map which will tell you what is in season in your area for every month of the year.  I click on Colorado, and am greeted with the following message:  “The growing season is currently dormant here; opt for items from storage, such as apples, pears, and root vegetables.”  It’s like the voice on the phone that tells you “If you would like to make a call, please hang up and try again”, or, “We’re sorry, but all customer service representatives are busy.  Your approximate wait time is….four months”.  I hate that lady.

If I eat another root vegetable, or cold storage pear, I think I may lose it.  Luckily, our wayward neighbors in California, Texas, and Florida are sending us vitamin C-filled grapefruit, oranges and tangerines, so at least we don’t have to add scurvy to our list of Winter woes (yarrr, maties).

Summer cooking is easy.  It just happens between bites of sugar snaps and cherry tomatoes. Winter stretches my creativity.  Luckily, Colorado is a sunny, albeit cold state, but on snowy days like this, I find myself trying to cheat winter by adapting my favorite summer foods to fit what is seasonal and available.

The subject of my Summer food craving last weekend was a Bricklayer Taco; from a taco stand with a highly inappropriate name, and ridiculously good street food (Hey, I’m a school teacher–we’re keeping it family friendly here).  Kevin Morrison started his colorfully named taco truck just last summer at the Cherry Creek Farmers Market, and from the looks of it, will be back next summer.

The original “bricklayer” starts with a small, locally made corn tortilla.  The bricklayer is formed with cotija, a salty Mexican crumbly cheese, which is griddled until it melts together and is speckled and golden on both sides.  Morrison tops the cotija with scrambled eggs, house-made tomatillo salsa, and cilantro.

My version mimics the original, with a corn tortilla softened in hot oil, topped with a golden layer of cotija and scrambled eggs.  I puzzled over the salsa.  Although tempted to re-create the tomatillo salsa, I knew that any tomatillos I could find at this time of year would pale in comparison to those in-season.  So, I set my sights on a can of chipotle chiles in adobo sauce–they’re readily available in winter, and have enough smokiness and heat to help me throw out all my notions of out of season produce (for now).

The grass is (literally) greener on the other side, but instead of whining for the next few months about things normal Denver-ites embrace, I’ve decided to take matters into my own hands.  Last year, when my blog was just a wee one, I had Project Snow Globe to help me make it through to warmer days.  This year, I’m feeling a little more feisty, so let’s all welcome a little acronym called P.O.W! (Project Outsmart Winter).  The Mister has agreed to let me P.O.W! (yes, it can be a noun or a verb), so my next order of business will be to paint my living room wall a color called “kumquat”….how will you bridge the gap to warmer days?

 

“Bricklayer” Breakfast Tacos with Griddled Cotija and Chipotle-Lime Salsa

Inspired by a colorfully-named taco truck

Makes 8 tacos

  • 12 ounces cotija cheese, crumbled
  • 8 large eggs
  • Kosher salt and freshly ground black pepper
  • 8 corn tortillas
  • Canola oil, to fill a small frying pan to 1/2 inch
  • 1 ripe avocado, halved, pitted and sliced
  • Chopped onion and cilantro for garnish
  • Chipotle Lime Salsa (see below)

Griddle the Cotija:

Heat a nonstick frying pan over medium heat.  Wait until the pan is hot, then place 1/4 cup crumbled cotija in the middle of the pan.  Spread the cotija into a circle about 3 or 4 inches in diameter.  Cover the pan and cook for one minute, or until the cotija is bound together, and the underside is speckled and golden.  Press it down with a spatula for 10 seconds, then flip.  Press down the other side and cook for an additional 30 seconds.  If not using immediately, the cotija patties can be kept warm in an oven set to the lowest temperature for up to 10 minutes.

Soften the Tortillas:

Set a plate covered with paper towels beside the stove.  Heat the oil in a small frying pan until hot and shimmering.  Cook each corn tortilla until softened and just beginning to puff up in spots.  Remove from the pan and set on the paper towels to drain.  Blot any excess oil from the top with additional paper towels.

Scramble the Eggs:

Whisk the eggs, and season with salt and pepper to taste.  Scramble them as per usual (I like Deb’s method, which you can find here).

Assemble the Tacos:

On top of each tortilla, layer the griddled cotija, scrambled eggs, salsa, avocado, chopped onions and cilantro.  Devour while hot.

Chipotle-Lime Salsa

This salsa is smoky, tangy, and pretty spicy, so a little goes a long way!

2 tablespoons adobo sauce, from one small can chipotle chiles in adobo sauce

2 chipotle chiles, from 1 small can chipotle chiles in adobo sauce

2 tablespoons freshly squeezed lime juice

1/4 cup chopped yellow onion

2 tablespoons chopped cilantro

1/4 teaspoon kosher salt

In a food processor, puree the adobo sauce, chipotle chiles, lime juice and salt.  Add the  onion and cilantro, and pulse until everything is finely chopped.

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Filed under Breakfast and Brunch

Walnut Cigars and a “Measure-less Monday”

 

 

The turning of the new year is a time for renewal, self-improvement, and un-attainable goals.  I should be making New Years resolutions…but instead I’m making dessert.

I enter the new year a little nervous, but hopeful for all that it may hold.  I can already tell my measuring cups won’t be neatly leveled off, and my tablespoons may be a bit over-filled, but I’ll gladly take that over the alternative.

And so without further ado, I’d like to introduce the first “Measure-less” Monday.  Cooking in the style of life.  I invite you to trust your instincts, throw most of your care to the wind, and just cook.  Measure-less Mondays won’t happen every Monday–or every other Monday, for that matter…that is not in their nature.  They will be sporadic, and improvised, with a little wiggle room for your own interpretation.

The first Measure-less Monday “recipe” comes from A Platter of Figs by David Tanis, and embodies everything I hope for you and I in 2011.  Honest ingredients like walnuts and honey…celebratory and a little indulgent with butter and sugar, and of course, made complex with a couple surprise ingredients, just like life.

Walnut Cigars

Adapted from A Platter of Figs by David Tanis

Makes 20 cigars (Supposedly.  I made 7 larger cigars)

A Platter of Figs reads like one of my favorite novels. Tanis’ recipes are specific when need-be, but explained in that “little bit of this, little bit of that” way that allows you to trust your instincts.

Ingredients:

  • 2 cups shelled walnuts, toasted if desired
  • Sugar
  • Melted butter (about 2 sticks)
  • Orange flower water
  • Almond extract
  • cinnamon
  • Phyllo dough from a package, thawed**
  • Honey
  • Shelled pistachios, chopped (I used salted pistachios and was pleasantly surprised)

Preheat the oven to 375˚F.

Make the Filling:

Chop the walnuts.  Add sugar to taste, and 3 tablespoons of melted butter.  Sprinkle with orange flower water (start with a small amount, taste, and adjust), a few drops of almond extract, and some cinnamon.  Add a splash of cold water (a few tablespoons) and stir.

Roll the Cigars:

For each cigar, brush a sheet of phyllo dough with melted butter.  Fold the sheet in half lengthwise, then brush with butter again.  Place 2 to 3 tablespoons walnuts (or more) in a strip along the short end of the phyllo.  Roll the phyllo around the walnuts (like an eggroll, see photos above).  Place on a buttered baking sheet, side by side but not touching.  Brush with more melted butter and sprinkle with sugar.

Bake for 20 to 30 minutes, or until golden and crisp.  Drizzle with honey and sprinkle with chopped pistachios.

Notes:

•I used whole wheat phyllo dough and was very happy with the result!

•To prevent the phyllo dough from drying out (and tearing), cover the stack of sheets you aren’t using with a damp (not wet) paper towel.

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Filed under Desserts