This post is a two-for to make up for the blog post I didn't do on Sunday.
Sunday I made...wait for it...beans and rice.
Pigeon peas and sofrito sauce with brown rice, to be exact. There wasn't a whole lot to blog about there. I basically followed the pigeon pea soup recipe from over the summer except that I skipped the butternut squash and plantain and used frozen diced green peppers because that's what I had. I think I also forgot to use the same amount of Yucateco because it wasn't as spicy as I expected. Truth be told, this was good except that I wish I'd stirred in some tomato paste once the pigeon peas and sofrito sauce were combined. It would have added some additional color and flavor variety that was lacking from this dish without the butternut squash from the soup. Oh, and don't leave the peas soaking in the fridge for a day in a half unless you don't mind them sprouting a teeny bit.
Tonight I'm fueling up for another 13-miler, so I made spinach and artichoke pasta. This used up the last of a bag of fresh spinach, some leftover canned artichokes and a lemon. And the last of a small block of Romano cheese. Mmm...pasta.
8 oz. whole wheat linguine
2 tbsp Earth Balance
2 oz. fresh baby spinach
1/2 can of artichoke hearts, drained
juice of one lemon
1/4 cup freshly grated Romano cheese
salt and pepper to taste
Cook the pasta according to the package directions. Drain the pasta, lower the heat to medium and stir in the Earth Balance. As soon as it melts, stir in the spinach and artichoke hearts and cook until the spinach wilts, tossing the ingredients well in order to blend them. Stir in cheese and add salt and pepper to taste.
Both dishes this week yielded ample leftovers, and since I haven't been hungry for more than a salad most evenings, the leftovers are all getting eaten for lunch. And since I'm running long first thing tomorrow morning, I'm sure I'll be loving the ready-and-waiting pasta leftovers when lunchtime rolls around!
Showing posts with label Romano. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Romano. Show all posts
Thursday, March 3, 2011
Friday, January 28, 2011
Stuffed Portabella Mushrooms and Broccoli Risotto
Last night's dinner and today's leftovers. I bought a package of portabella mushroom caps on impulse at Earth Fare early in the week, and stuffing them just seemed like the thing to do. The original plan was to make a stuffing mixture out of spinach and breadcrumbs (the incidental ones from when I made my own croutons for our Thanksgiving stuffing), but I made the mistake of adding too much of the nasty Chardonnay from last Friday to dampen the breadcrumbs, and the result was...nasty. I realized this just as I was getting ready to spoon it onto the mushroom caps and ended up scrapping it and starting over sans breadcrumbs. It was just as well - I wasn't sure how much stuffing these mushrooms would hold with the gills intact, so I just chopped up the spinach as finely as I could and mixed in a little lemon juice, pepper and feta.
Spinach and Feta-Stuffed Portabellas:
3 Portabella mushrooms, stems intact
1/2 cup fresh spinach, finely chopped
1/2 tbsp olive oil
1/2 tbsp lemon juice
pepper to taste
1/2 cup crumbled feta cheese
Preheat oven to 400 degrees.
Remove and finely chop stems from mushrooms. Combine chopped stems with spinach, olive oil, lemon juice, pepper and about half (1/4 cup) of the feta cheese. Spoon onto mushrooms, packing it with spoon. Top mixture with remaining feta cheese, place on greased (or foil-covered) cookie sheet or shallow baking pan in oven for 20 minutes.
The risotto seemed as good a pairing with the mushrooms as any, plus I haven't made it in a while. This didn't use anything out of the fridge except some veggie base, but it was still an easy side dish to whip up while the mushrooms were in the oven.
Broccoli Risotto:
2 tbsp Smart Balance or Earth Balance
1 cup onion, chopped (I thawed some chopped onion from the freezer)
1 cup arborio rice
3 cups vegetable broth (I used Better than Bouillon vegetable base)
1 cup frozen broccoli florets, thawed
1/2 cup freshly grated Romano cheese
fresh ground pepper
In a 2-quart saucepan, heat the Smart Balance over medium heat. Add onion and saute until softened, about 3 minutes. Stir in arborio rice and cook for one minute. Begin adding hot broth to the rice mixture 1/2 cup at a time, stirring often, until the rice has absorbed that amount of liquid. Repeat until the rice has absorbed all the broth. Broccoli may be added at this point or at the same time as the last addition of broth. Stir in Romano and pepper and serve.
Next up: something to dispense of all the parsley, cilantro, red cabbage and carrots in the bottom drawer...
Spinach and Feta-Stuffed Portabellas:
3 Portabella mushrooms, stems intact
1/2 cup fresh spinach, finely chopped
1/2 tbsp olive oil
1/2 tbsp lemon juice
pepper to taste
1/2 cup crumbled feta cheese
Preheat oven to 400 degrees.
Remove and finely chop stems from mushrooms. Combine chopped stems with spinach, olive oil, lemon juice, pepper and about half (1/4 cup) of the feta cheese. Spoon onto mushrooms, packing it with spoon. Top mixture with remaining feta cheese, place on greased (or foil-covered) cookie sheet or shallow baking pan in oven for 20 minutes.
The risotto seemed as good a pairing with the mushrooms as any, plus I haven't made it in a while. This didn't use anything out of the fridge except some veggie base, but it was still an easy side dish to whip up while the mushrooms were in the oven.
Broccoli Risotto:
2 tbsp Smart Balance or Earth Balance
1 cup onion, chopped (I thawed some chopped onion from the freezer)
1 cup arborio rice
3 cups vegetable broth (I used Better than Bouillon vegetable base)
1 cup frozen broccoli florets, thawed
1/2 cup freshly grated Romano cheese
fresh ground pepper
In a 2-quart saucepan, heat the Smart Balance over medium heat. Add onion and saute until softened, about 3 minutes. Stir in arborio rice and cook for one minute. Begin adding hot broth to the rice mixture 1/2 cup at a time, stirring often, until the rice has absorbed that amount of liquid. Repeat until the rice has absorbed all the broth. Broccoli may be added at this point or at the same time as the last addition of broth. Stir in Romano and pepper and serve.
Next up: something to dispense of all the parsley, cilantro, red cabbage and carrots in the bottom drawer...
Friday, January 21, 2011
Garden Pasta with Green Olive Pesto and Mushrooms in Chardonnay
I just have to toot my own horn - tonight's dinner was the nuclear bomb!
I knew I wanted to fuel up for tomorrow's long run with a pasta dish and was inspired by this recipe for pasta tossed in a green olive pesto. It calls for basil, which I wasn't able to find at three different supermarkets, but I did find some Italian parsley and figured I could slightly alter the pesto recipe. Then I got to thinking that it might also be neat to transform the Barcelona Chicken I made back in June into a pasta dish with green olives (in the pesto), mushrooms and very dry white wine. So, I made the pesto as described in the above link, but with about a cup and a half of chopped parsley and without the lemon juice - just because I forgot to add it amid all the stress of learning to work the new Cuisinart food processor. Then I heated a couple of tablespoons of Smart Balance in a frying pan, added about 12 ounces of sliced baby bellas, salt and pepper and let them cook on medium heat until they started browning. At that point, I added about half a cup of Turning Leaf Chardonnay, which Steve cheerfully surrendered for this purpose after discovering what a nasty wine it is to drink.
It was much better in the mushrooms! After tossing the pasta (we had garden pasta on hand, hence the title of this post) with the pesto, I plated it up, spooned the mushrooms on top of that and added the garnish. Before I made this, I was afraid the pesto would be too strong. Turns out that if you use enough greenery, the olives don't really register. If I make this again, I might change the ratio of olives to parsley, or basil, or whatever. But it was still good this way, and the mild flavor of the pesto really set off the delicious mushrooms, which had time to start caramelizing after the wine had reduced down and been absorbed by the mushrooms.
Turning Leaf Chardonnay - nasty to drink, good for cooking mushrooms!
I knew I wanted to fuel up for tomorrow's long run with a pasta dish and was inspired by this recipe for pasta tossed in a green olive pesto. It calls for basil, which I wasn't able to find at three different supermarkets, but I did find some Italian parsley and figured I could slightly alter the pesto recipe. Then I got to thinking that it might also be neat to transform the Barcelona Chicken I made back in June into a pasta dish with green olives (in the pesto), mushrooms and very dry white wine. So, I made the pesto as described in the above link, but with about a cup and a half of chopped parsley and without the lemon juice - just because I forgot to add it amid all the stress of learning to work the new Cuisinart food processor. Then I heated a couple of tablespoons of Smart Balance in a frying pan, added about 12 ounces of sliced baby bellas, salt and pepper and let them cook on medium heat until they started browning. At that point, I added about half a cup of Turning Leaf Chardonnay, which Steve cheerfully surrendered for this purpose after discovering what a nasty wine it is to drink.
It was much better in the mushrooms! After tossing the pasta (we had garden pasta on hand, hence the title of this post) with the pesto, I plated it up, spooned the mushrooms on top of that and added the garnish. Before I made this, I was afraid the pesto would be too strong. Turns out that if you use enough greenery, the olives don't really register. If I make this again, I might change the ratio of olives to parsley, or basil, or whatever. But it was still good this way, and the mild flavor of the pesto really set off the delicious mushrooms, which had time to start caramelizing after the wine had reduced down and been absorbed by the mushrooms.
Turning Leaf Chardonnay - nasty to drink, good for cooking mushrooms!
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