Friday, December 6, 2013

240: Garlicky Kale and Quinoa with Sweet Potatoes


A mess. Not bad, and only a tenuous CSA connection (hey garlic!), but hard to make this one look pretty. Sauteed kale with onions, added the garlic on the late side to leave it nice and pungent. Mixed with quinoa and served with a sweet potato. It needed more moisture of time kind (wanted to add beans and have a bit of broth to it, but couldn't find them in my cupboard), or a better savory : sweet potato ratio.

Thursday, December 5, 2013

Leftovers: Beet Ketchup (231) in Action


Thanksgiving leftovers, meet CSA leftovers. Can't see the Beet Ketchup in there? Here you go:


A little goes a long way with this guy. Borrowed some regular bread from the roommate (too tired/lazy to walk someplace decent), a little beet ketchup, kale, turkey and goat cheese.

It was good, but needed a little something.


Version 2.0 at work the next day. The same, but (slightly) better bread and the addition of sweet potato. The ketchup ended up a little too vinegary/clove-y, so the added sweetness helped temper that a bit. I'd probably go a little lighter on it next time, get better bread, and shred the turkey- or at least make thinner slices as opposed to the hunks featured here.


It did help make everything lovely and rainbow colored, though. Leftovers ftw.

Wednesday, December 4, 2013

239: Kale Salad with Garlic Beet Vinaigrette


This does have share ingredients in it- two, in fact. A little brine from my pickled beets, and some garlic. They exist in the dressing, along with a little olive oil, salt, pepper and dijon mustard. The salad itself is just kale.


In love with the color, the flavor is nice but obviously very simple. And super garlicly. Would at least add some scallions next time, maybe a little goat cheese or apple.

Tuesday, December 3, 2013

238: Turnips with Yogurt and Tomatoes


So my yogurt sauce separated. To be fair the picture accompanying this Saveur recipe seems to show a little separation, too. Don't get me wrong, this tastes lovely, but looks mean a lot with food and I'm not sure I'd serve this to someone else... at least until I figured out what happenend.

Part of it is my ratio- I only used one (large) turnip and scaled back everything...except still used one whole tomato. More liquid = longer heating to thicken the sauce = yogurt graininess. I also read that high fat yogurt will hold up better to heat (this was fat free), so were I try this again I'd have a few avenues for improvement. There is another yogurt dish I've been meaning to try with the remaining bits of my share, maybe I'll put it into practice there.

Monday, December 2, 2013

237: Beet and Carrot Latkes


One of my more favorite things about beets is how ...bloody they are. Cut up a bunch and it looks like you murdered someone. Make a batch of pickles and dye your onions a lovely shade of pink. And, as I demonstrated with me beet burgers a while back, make the rarest veggie burgers ever. 

So no, those aren't raw meat patties with my eggs, they're beet and carrot latkes, which I made for thanksgivukkah, despite the whole not being Jewish thing.


It was as easy as grating a few medium beets, carrots and an onion, then binding with an egg and some flour, adding salt and pepper to taste. Fry them up in a pan with oil, then let them dry out in a low oven a bit. As always I am impatient and could've stood to leave mine on a little longer to get some color and crispness, but I didn't realize my family was expecting them for breakfast and I was in a rush to get them out.

Totally recommended. Fritter all the things.