Showing posts with label Joy of Cooking. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Joy of Cooking. Show all posts

November 20, 2011

Minestrone Soup


As daylight savings kicked into gear this November, and we all 'fell back', I immediately went into 'one soup a week' mode. I have some great standbys like Tortilla Soup, Pozole, Veggie Chowder, Thai Dumpling Soup and Tom Ka Gai. But then I realized I absolutely love Minestrone, and had never made it before (as far as I can remember). Being Italian, I realized I had been ignoring my roots, and fell into the belief minestrone only came from restaurants and my Grandma Nonna. My beloved Nonna is no longer alive to ask for a recipe, so I looked through all my cookbooks, and put a recipe together from a few different sources, mostly Joy of Cooking and The Silver Palate Good Times cookbooks. On the first go I vastly underestimated the power of pasta, but by the second and third rounds I think I have the soup dialed. Here's what I came up with...

What's in it
olive oil
chopped carrots*
chopped celery
chopped onion
minced garlic
1 sprig fresh rosemary
sweet italian sausage (uncooked, casing removed)
salt
shredded cabbage or chopped kale
chopped basil
4-10 C chicken broth
28 oz can diced tomatoes
16 oz cannellini beans (white kidney), rinsed through
chopped zucchini
other optional additions (add with zucchini): bell pepper, green beans, parsley, parmesan rind
orzo or other small pasta noodle (macaroni, small tortellini, parfelles etc)
garnish with fresh grated parmesan and ground pepper

*I don't give any measurements, because what I use always comes out with a giganitic pot of soup, so if you want something more manageable it wouldn't help you. If you need recommendation, do one or two of each veggie (and 1/2 to 1 onion) with a half or whole pound sausage (or bacon, or pancetta).

How it's made
Prep all your veggies then heat olive oil (1-2 Tbl) in a large ceramic coated dutch oven or large stock pot. Add sausage and break into little pieces with your stirring spoon, cook in oil until browned. Add onion, celery, carrot and garlic add dashed of salt and saute until softened. Add rosemary (whole) and put cabbage/kale and basil on top of the cooked veggies, letting it steam on top for a few minutes before mixing in. Cook until wilted then add canned tomato, rinsing inside of can with water and adding it as well. Bring to a simmer, then add chicken broth and parmesan rind then bring to a boil. Reduce to a simmer and add beans and zucchini. If you want to speed up this part of the process, heat chicken broth and canned tomato in a pot separate so it is hot when added. Simmer until zucchini is al dente, then add your pasta. Go very conservative, it grows to about 10 times its size, especially if you don't eat the soup right away. Kind of like the magic growing dinosaurs - just add water. I use orzo because it is so small to begin with, and for a big pot of soup I use 1/4 to 1/3 cup. Simmer your soup until the pasta is cooked, then serve with crusty bread.

December 1, 2008

The Joy of Apple Crisp

Tonight I made this and brownies.  Yum!  The apples came from an apple farm just north of Occidental.  We got a free bag of apples since Andy's family bought a Christmas Tree from a farm up there.

This recipe is from the Joy of Cooking.  I never really appreciated this book until recently, and plus, everyone I know has it.  Again, this dessert is SUPER easy to make, and delicious.  I always have these ingredients on hand, so it's perfect if you have extra apples around.  You can also use any quantity of apples, and adjust the flour/butter mixture accordingly.

Ingredients

Apples (8 medium, about 2.5 lbs)
3/4 C flour
3/4 C sugar
1/2 tsp salt
1/2 tsp cinnamon
1/4 tsp ground nutmeg
1 stick (8 tblsp) cold unsalted butter, sliced

How it's done

Preheat oven to 375 degrees.

Wash the apples, then core them and cut into 1 inch chunks (you can peel them or not).  Spread them in a 2 quart baking dish (I used my cast iron skillet, and cut up enough apples to fill it).

Combine the dry ingredients in a bowl.  Add the butter and use 2 knives to cut the butter into the batter (like scissors) until it resembles coarse bread crumbs.  You can also use a pastry blender or food processor.  The food processor takes about 30 seconds, it's super easy.  Then sprinkles the mixture on top of the apples and tap the pan to make them settle.  Bake 50-55 minutes until brown and apples are soft.

Serve warm with ice cream!