Monthly Archives: August 2010

Hearty Bean Soup with Smoked Pork Neck

On one  of his many trips to the grocery store this week, Jon made his habitual pass past the meat. “I am always looking for cheap meat.” Smoked Pork Neck! “What the heck is that? Well, I don’t need it, but I am up for the challenge.” When he got home he searched for recipes and found a site called cheapassfood.com and a recipe called “Hearty Bean Soup with Smoked Pork Neck,” just perfect for a rainy Saturday. He did make a few small changes to the original recipe. Total cost- $3.80, with enough to last several meals.

1 lb 16 bean dry mix

1 large onion chopped

2 celery stalks

2 medium carrots, unpeeled

2/3 jalapeno, with seeds

5 cloves garlic, chopped

3/4 lb smoke pork neckbones

4 cups chicken broth

2 cups water

2 bay leafs

1 sprig of Rosemary

Fresh basil

Soak bean mixture in water overnight “to get the farts out.” Sautee in the soup pot, onion, celery, carrots, jalapeno and garlic in a tablespoon of Olive Oil, until onions and celery are softened. Rinse and add beans. Add pork neck bones, chicken broth, water, rosemary, basil and bay leafs. Bring to a boil. Cover and simmer on low, 3 hours. Remove bay leaves and any stems from the herbs. Remove neck bones, separate meat and return to soup. Add salt and pepper to taste. Serve with Saltines.

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Ginger Snaps

This morning, The Anthony Wayne Rotary Club hosted its 2nd Annual 5k for Polio. As a Rotarian, I signed up to help with registration and volunteered to bring food. I was assigned cookies and was prepared to head to the store to buy some. Jon would have none of that and insisted on baking some for me. The result? The best Ginger Snaps I’ve ever had. And they were a hit. One older gentleman who had just finished the 5k discovered the cookies amongst the store bought supply and swiftly grabbed 5… he came back 2 or 3 more times.

4 cups all-purpose flour

1/2 teaspoon salt

2  1/4 teaspoons baking soda

2 teaspoons ground ginger

1  1/4 teaspoons ground cloves

1  1/4 teaspoons cinnamon

1 stick (1/2 cup) unsalted butter, softened

1/2 cup vegetable shortening

3  1/2 cups sugar

1/2 cup unsulfured molasses

2 large eggs

Preheat oven to 325°F. and lightly grease 2 large baking sheets.

In a large bowl whisk together flour, salt, baking soda, ginger, cloves, and cinnamon.

In another large bowl with an electric mixer beat together butter, shortening, and 3 cups sugar until light and fluffy and beat in molasses. Beat in eggs, 1 at a time, beating well after each addition. Gradually beat in flour mixture and combine well.

In a small shallow bowl put remaining 1/2 cup sugar. Form dough into 2-inch balls and roll in sugar. On baking sheets arrange balls about 4 inches apart and flatten slightly with bottom of a glass dipped in sugar.

Bake cookies in batches in middle of the oven 15 minutes, or until puffed and golden. (Cookies should be soft.) Transfer cookies with a metal spatula to racks to cool.

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Tilapia Fillets with Homemade Tomato Sauce

Because the Tilapia Fillets just looked so good, Jon picked some up and came home to start cooking. And because we have more tomatoes from the garden than we know what to do with, he whipped up some tomato sauce to go with them.

Tilapia

2 Tilapia Fillets

Salt

Pepper

Flour

Wash fish, pat dry. Sprinkle and press in salt and pepper. Toss in flour. Pan fry in a thin layer of Canola oil.

Tomato Sauce

2.5 pints of garden grown grape tomatoes

6 cloves of garlic

½ large Vandalia onion, cut in half

Salt

Pepper

Oregano

Fresh Basil

1/3 jalapeno with seeds, cut off tip, quartered

¼ cup pine nuts

Roast the tomatoes, onions and garlic in the broiler till slightly charred. Place all ingredients in blender, blend until smooth.

*Note, Jon would do without the pine nuts next time

Yummy!

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See How Our Garden Grows

I went out of town over Memorial Day Weekend, and when I came home, I discovered that Jon had been busy. He planted our very first garden, full of tomatoes, broccoli, rosemary, basil, chives, cilantro, and red bell peppers. It was so cute in its freshly planted status. We had no idea what to expect; we’d never done this before after all. Whoa, how our garden has grown. We now have 7-foot tall tomato plants. We’ve had two cuttings of broccoli, a couple bell peppers, an endless supply of rosemary, basil and chives, and more tomatoes than we know what to do with.

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A Sunday Project- Take 2

We had so much fun making the first pizza, we decided to make another one using the leftover dough. This time, we used a bunch of stuff we had in our refrigerator: Apricot Ginger Salmon, Apricot Ginger with Horseradish Marinade, Artichokes, Capers, Bacon, Shredded Cheese, and Tomatoes.

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Pesto Veggie Pizza- A Sunday Project

Yesterday, during our what-shall-we-eat brainstorming session, Jon and I decided to try our hand at making homemade pizza. We love cracker-thin crust and just haven’t found any we truly love in town. So, we looked at various recipes and used a combination of several to create ours. We prepared the dough yesterday and refrigerated it overnight. Today, we rolled it out and prepared our choice veggies. Usually, I let Jon do all of the prepping and cooking, but today I helped out and enjoyed myself immensely.

Ingredients

3 small eggplants (about ½ pound total), sliced diagonally ¼ inch thick

Fire roasted red and green peppers

Homemade Pizza Dough (http://www.pizzamaking.com/thincrust.php)

Fresh mozzarella

Pesto (http://www.pickyourown.org/pesto.php)

Salt

Pepper

Oregano

Directions

Follow instructions for pizza dough (we used ½ flour and ½ Quaker Masa Harina De Maiz). Because we like cracker thin crust, we rolled it very thin. Dice eggplants, roast red and green peppers and remove skin, and slice mozzarella. Spread pesto over pizza crust and mozzarella, tomatoes, red and green peppers, eggplant, salt, pepper and oregano. Put back into the oven at 500 degrees and cook for 12-16 minutes or until the dough is crispy and brown. (We cooked ours for 16 mins and rotated half way through).

This was, perhaps, my favorite of all time!

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His Version of Garbage

I would have been satisfied with cereal for breakfast, but Jon had other plans. He offered to make me an omelet and disappeared into the kitchen. When he emerged, he held a plate overflowing with yummy goodness: fried potatoes, scrambled eggs and toast. Of course, these weren’t  just any ol’ fried potatoes, scrambled eggs and toast. Jon added his “twist” to them and the result was pure perfection. And the best part is, he made everything from stuff we had leftover in the refrigerator, hence the title of this post- His Version of Garbage.

Potatoes

Sliced Red Potatoes

Sliced Sweet Potatoes

Fresh Rosemary from the Garden

White Onion

Tossed in a skillet and fried in bacon fat

Eggs

2 Eggs

Skim Milk

Broccoli and Red Pepper mixture (leftover from the Sweet Potato Shepherd’s Pie he made last week)

Onion

Shredded Colby Jack Cheese

All ingredients scrambled up in a pan over medium heat

Served with Brownberry’s Country Buttermilk Bread, toasted.

Delicious!

And in the background, Jon made sure to capture our friend Clint Roth’s new CD- Appetite for Construction. Clint is amazingly talented and we’ve enjoyed listening to this.

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Docs vs. Suits Softball Game

I am playing in the Docs vs. Suits softball game to benefit Indiana University School of Medicine – Fort Wayne on Sunday, August 29. You should come out to cheer me on! I will be on the Suits team, of course, because I am not a doctor… yet.

http://fortwayne.medicine.iu.edu/default.cfm?id=95

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Baked Salmon and Kohlrabi Leaf Salad

Hello world! It seems appropriate that my first blog post should center on food. My husband, Jon, loves to cook and he is really, really good at it. Over the course of the past year or so, he’s found his niche, taking existing recipes and adjusting them just enough to make them his own. Tonight was no exception. As we brainstormed about what to eat, he set off for the store for four items: flour, eggplant, fish and batteries (obviously this last item was not for a recipe). He returned with most of those items, though he forgot the flour and the batteries, along with some fresh kohlrabi, and he set to work. The result? Baked Salmon with Apricot Ginger Sauce and a Kohlrabi salad with home grown veggies and homemade dressing.

Salad:

Kohlrabi leaves

Tablespoon of tarragon vinegar

Tablespoon olive oil

Teaspoon of sugar

Leftover roasted corn off the cob

White onion

Grape tomatoes

Salt

Pepper

Main Dish:

Salmon, skin side down

Apricot ginger sauce with bacon and horseradish

Tablespoon of bacon grease

Baked in a cast iron skillet

(Beg pardon for the sub-par photos. I am no photographer!)

After dinner, Jon put together a phenomenal dessert: Coconut pound cake and Fresh Blueberries from the East State Farmer’s Market, Breyers Natural Vanilla Ice Cream and Red Wine Reduction Syrup, which he whipped up a couple weeks ago to have on hand, just in case.

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