Monday, July 29, 2019

Chicken Soba Salad

This Chicken Soba Salad is adapted from this recipe published  in Cooking Light in May 2004.  It's a nice dinner on a hot summer night.  From the CSA I used some carrots, purple cabbage and red onion.  If you've got cooked chicken on hand, it comes together pretty quickly!

Ingredients
  • 8 oz shredded cooked chicken breast (see note).
  • 1 tbs rice vinegar
  • 1 tbs toasted sesame oil
  • 2 tbs soy sauce
  • 1 tbs mirin
  • 1 tsp siracha or chili-garlic paste
  • 2 cups of a mixture of grated carrot, shredded cabbage or broccoli slaw (see notes)
  • 1/3 cup minced red onion
  • 1/4-1/2 cup chopped thai basil (can also use italian)
  • 1 tbs chopped mint (optional)
  • 2 cups cooked soba noodles (one 4 oz bundle)
  • 1 tbs chopped dry roasted peanuts
  • lime wedges (optional)

Instructions:
Whisk together the dressing ingredients (rice vinegar through siracha), pour over shredded chicken and toss to coat.  Let stand at least 5 minutes.

Add the carrot/cabbage slaw mixture, red onion, basil and mint to the chicken, toss to mix.

Cook the soba noodles according to package directions, drain and rinse with cold water.  Toss with the chicken and vegetable mixture.  Divide between two bowls, sprinkle with peanuts, garnish with lime wedges if desired and serve

 Notes:
The original recipe called for poached chicken breast, but I've used grilled chicken or leftover rotisserie chicken.  Now I use sous vide chicken breast I cooked at 150°F for 2 hours.

I will use a mixture of carrots and cabbage (more cabbage than carrots) or a bag of broccoli slaw.

Some pictures!
The cabbage and shredded carrot ready to go in:

All the veggies tossed together:
Time for dinner!
Dudley is exhausted from begging for chicken:







Sunday, July 28, 2019

Slow roasted tomatoes

As I think I've mentioned, we're overrun with tomatoes right now, including a couple of pints of mixed cherry tomatoes:

Deb Perelman at Smitten Kitchen has this recipe for Slow Roasted Tomatoes, which is as delicious as it is simple. It takes 3 hours, but it's hands-off and perfect for a lazy Saturday afternoon while you Netflix and chill:


Deb's pictures are way more gorgeous than mine will ever be, but here's what they looked like coming out of my oven (I subbed a Silpat for the parchment paper.:
Serving suggestions:
1.  Stand in front of the stove and eat them directly off the baking sheet.

(not pictured)

2.  Smash on some toast you rubbed with the roasted garlic, top with fresh mozzarella and basil.

I'm sure you can think of other things to do with them...

Tuesday, July 23, 2019

Grilled veggie sandwiches

A lot of produce to use up this week!  A huge zuchinni from last week, and the eggplant is starting up again, along with the bell peppers.  Plus we got a good bunch of basil (not to mention the plants in my yard going crazy) and the red onions are starting to pile up.  Time to grill some veggies!  Slice up whatever veggies you like about 1/4" thick or a little less, spray or brush with olive oil and season with salt and pepper.  Grill on a HOT grill about 3-4 min per side.  One exception, for peppers, slice into planks and grill the skin side until blackened and charred a bit, transfer to a bowl, cover tightly with foil and let cool.  Once cooled, peel the skins off.  After all that you get a nice looking collection of veggies:
Get yourself some nice crusty rolls (I used some square ciabatta rolls from Lowes), slice in half, then spray or brush with olive oil and toast.  Spread the bottom half with some basil pesto (2-3 tsp). Pile on whatever and however many of the veggies you like (eggplant, peppers and onions are my fav), then top with sliced fresh mozzarella and run it under the broiler until the cheese is good and melty.  Spread the top half of the roll with some basil pesto (2-3 tsp), smash on top of the sandwich and eat!  In retrospect it might be good to sprinkle the roasted vegetables with some balsamic vinegar as well.

Here's the pesto recipe I use, it's an old Cooking Light recipe from September '95, I can't find it online and they killed my favorite magazine so I reproduce it without guilt here:
Basil Pesto (makes about 1 cup)
2 tbs pine nuts
2 large garlic cloves
3 cups packed fresh basil leaves
2 tbs grated parmesan cheese
2 tsp lemon juice
3 tbs olive oil

If you can do it w/o burning them, toast the pine nuts in a dry pan.  If you're like me and you've burned them and you just want to get the damn recipe done and have dinner,  substitute untoasted, they'll be fine.  You can also try other nuts - I want to check out pistachios some day.  Anyhow, once you've resolved whatever nut crisis you might be having, fling them and the rest of the ingredients into some kind of food processor and process until it's a smooth paste.  Keeps a few days in the fridge and can be frozen (ice cube trays work great!).


Tomato, corn and avocado salad

So, I might have mentioned we've got a thousand tomatoes?  Also, this weekend I might have enthusiastically overbought the first corn of the season (for me anyway), and I had half an avocado kicking around so here you are. 

A pile of cherry tomatoes, some corn, some red onion (also from the CSA!), cilantro, olive oil and lime juice and it's a very nice salad.  Add some chicken chunks and it's a very nice lunch.  Here's the recipe.

Note I did not grill the corn, but used some leftover boiled corn from this weekend.  Still very nice.


Sunday, July 21, 2019

Pan con Tomate

We are in high tomato season here at the CSA.  This week's box had a pint of cherry tomatoes and 2 pounds of regular tomatoes.  And, since I also have a friend's CSA because she is out of town, that means I've got 4 pounds of tomatoes!
Obviously that means that there are BLT's, fresh tomato pasta and gazpacho in my future.  I also used one of the tomatoes to make a quick snack that I learned about in Spain, Pan con Tomate.  I think this is supposed to be a tapa, but every morning at the hotel breakfast in Spain there was a bowl of tomato pulp so you could have it for breakfast.  I used this recipe, more or less as written (but with just one tomato and a few slices of bread since it was just me), and forgot to take pics.  One change I made: I used Italian bread from Cheesecakes by Alex (I've explained how good bread comes from a cheesecake place here)

There's a lot of arguments in the comments about how to make the dish and who it belongs to (it's Catalonian, not Spanish), but I think you can put it together however you want, just make sure you've got great:
  • Bread
  • Tomatoes
  • Olive oil
  • Salt
  • Garlic