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Stuffed Peppers ♥ My Aunt's Retro Recipe

My aunt's recipe for Stuffed Peppers, tomato soup and all
Today's vegetable recipe: My aunt's recipe for green peppers stuffed with a mixture of ground meat, fresh corn and rice or another starch such as quinoa, then topped with a tomato-y sauce and melt-y cheese. Low carb. Weight Watchers 2 to 4 points, depending on size.

My 3x5 recipe box is gill-packed with 'retro' recipes that date to the 1960s, 1970s and 1980s.

Thing is, the recipes weren't 'retro' then, not back when I copied ingredients and cooking instructions onto neat 3x5 index cards. They were just the recipes that my mother, my aunts and my older cousins were cooking. They were just recipes from good cooks feeding their families. They were just my family's best recipes, the family favorites, the ones we all loved.

So it felt funny to make my dear Auntie Gloria's Stuffed Peppers again for the first time in many years. Today's 'whole food' cook in me was tempted to substitute the can of tomato soup her recipe calls for with, say, a homemade Quick Tomato Sauce or Fresh Tomato Sauce made with fresh garden-picked tomatoes. But the 'family cook' in me wanted to honor the recipes of my family's past, however 'retro' that might seem today.

And so I bought the first can of tomato soup in ages, I spooned out its gloppy goopiness, I drizzled it over top of the stuffed peppers. And was glad of it. My aunt's Stuffed Peppers really hit the spot on a coolish July evening and again warmed up for breakfast (yes, breakfast!) a day or so later. It's not fancy food but it is mine. Canned tomato soup it is. Retro it is.

But you? You may be beholden to your family but not to mine. Use the sauce of your choice!

[Note to Vegetarians about the occasional recipe on A Veggie Venture that includes meat]

STUFFED PEPPERS

Hands-on time: 45 minutes (can be prepped ahead of time and baked later)
Time to table: 75 minutes - 90 minutes
Makes enough for eight small peppers (so 16 halves) or four large peppers (so 8 halves)

PEPPERS
Boiling water
8 small bell peppers or 4 large bell peppers
Ice water

STUFFING
1 strip bacon, cut into small pieces (or 1 tablespoon bacon grease or olive oil)
1 onion, chopped small
1 pound ground meat, broken into chunks (see KITCHEN NOTES)
1/2 cup cooked starch (such as cooked rice, I used cooked quinoa)
1/2 cup corn (frozen works, this time I used 2 ears of fresh corn)
1 teaspoon chili powder or more to taste
Salt & pepper to taste

TOPPING
1 can tomato soup
1/4 cup ketchup
Grated cheddar cheese

BLANCH PEPPERS Bring a large pot of water to boil. Meanwhile, wash the peppers well, especially around the stem end. If the stems are intact, trim a bit off the stem. Cut the peppers in half, cutting through the stem's center if you can, otherwise, cut a bit to the side so that the whole stem remains intact on one of the halves. (See NOTES.) Slice out the membranes and seeds and discard. Drop the peppers into the boiling water and blanch for 1 - 2 minutes. Drop into ice water to stop the cooking. Let drain, pat dry if needed.

COOK FILLING In a large skillet, cook the bacon pieces and onion until the onion is beginning to turn gold. Add the meat, letting it sear for a minute or two in the hot skillet before moving and breaking up further (the idea is to get a little 'burn' on the meat). Continue cooking until the meat is fully cooked. Add the corn, chili powder and salt and pepper (see NOTES). If making ahead, let cool to room temperature.

ASSEMBLE Pack the filling into the pepper halves and arrange in a baking dish. (If making ahead, stop here, cover and refrigerate for a day or so.)

TOPPING & BAKE If there's time, return peppers to room temperature. Preheat oven to 350F. Stir together the tomato soup and ketchup, drizzle over top of the peppers. Sprinkle with cheddar. Bake for about 30 minutes (if starting from room temperature) to about 45 minutes (if starting cold from the refrigerator) until hot and sizzly all the way through. If needed, put under the broiler for a few minutes to melt the cheese.


KITCHEN NOTES
Any ground meat will work, ground beef (or in my case, ground elk meat), ground turkey, ground lamb would be excellent.
You might want to cook a test pepper, just to see how much time to leaving them in the boiling water. You'll want them to be fully cooked (the oven only really rewarms them, doesn't cook any longer) versus barely cooked, though not so much as to get smooshy.
When making the meat mixture, be sure that it 'tastes' good (and has enough flavor) before packing it into the peppers. I've already upped the chili powder to a full teaspoon, you might want even more.

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Stacked Ratatouille ♥ A Fun Summer Recipe

Stacked Ratatouille ready for the oven
Another hit recipe from our favorite cookbook this summer, Seven Fires. Appearance-wise, it's dramatic; preparation-wise, it's ever so simple. It's just sliced rounds of baked (and 'burned'!) eggplant, tomato and summer squash, topped with a lemony spinach if you like. Works as well for one or two as for a crowd. Low carb.

Who remembers the 2007 movie Ratatouille? I watched it again recently on a rare wet and chilly summer night, snuggling into the story as much as a warm blanket. It's a classic, just like the classic French dish called 'ratatouille' which the movie brought into the mainstream. (And taught a whole generation, perhaps two, how to pronounce the word. Can you say rat-uh-TOO-ee?) It's a sweet pleasure, made for laughing out loud during a movie for two or in a theater with a crowd.

Stacked Ratatouille, too. It's rare to find a recipe that feeds one or two as easily as it feeds a crowd.

The first times I made this, the table was set for two and three so small oven-safe sandwich plates were the right size and looked so dramatic! For these small tables, we followed the inspiring recipe and topped the vegetables with lemony spinach greens. Wow. The vegetables roast to something almost creamy, topping them with that slight bitterness of spinach? Not to be forgotten. This version could easily make for a delicious vegan main dish.

Stacked Ratatouille for One or Two in individual serving dishes

The third time, I arranged the vegetables in circles in a quiche pan and topped them with fresh herbs. It added beautiful color to the buffet at my book club's annual summer party. Even the kids dug in like fiends!

Stacked Ratatouille for a Crowd

STACKED RATATOUILLE

Hands-on time: 15 minutes for only the Ratatouille, another 15 for the Spinach
Time to table: 40 minutes for only the Ratatouille, 1 hour including the Spinach
Serves as many as you like!

RATATOUILLE
Olive oil
Kosher salt

Asian eggplant (the long narrow ones)
Roma tomatoes (see KITCHEN NOTES)
Small yellow squash and/or zucchini

Oregano (see NOTES)

SPINACH
Fresh spinach leaves (not baby spinach, see NOTES), washed very well and tough stems removed, chopped
Salt & pepper to taste
Juice of a lemon (preserved lemon works too)

RATATOUILLE Preheat oven to 400F. Fill three bowls with a splash of olive oil and a sprinkle of salt. (See NOTES.) Slice thin rounds of eggplant in one bowl, tomato in the second, squash in the third. Splosh these around, covering all sides with oil. (If you're making the spinach too, I'd recommend cleaning it now, letting the vegetable rounds soak in the oil for just a bit. But it's also fine to keep moving.) Create rows of the rounds, eggplant, tomato, squash; eggplant, tomato, squash; arrange in an oven-safe baking dish. Sprinkle with oregano. Bake for about 20 minutes until the vegetables are cooked through. Place the vegetables under the broiler for a minute or two or five, putting a slight 'burn' on the tops.

SPINACH About 5 minutes before the Ratatouille is ready, cook the wet spinach in a hot skillet until just soft. Season with salt and pepper, sprinkle with the lemon juice. Arrange atop the Ratatouille.


KITCHEN NOTES
The trick is to get vegetables about the same size, hence the Roma tomatoes which are about the right size when matched up with Asian eggplant and small summer squash.
We tried both fresh oregano and dried -- and preferred the dried which held its distinctive oregano flavor better when confronted with heat.
Why not use baby spinach? I know, I know, it's so convenient to buy bags of cleaned baby spinach! But baby spinach is so tender that it almost melts when it hits the heat. It's too tender! I've learned to really appreciate the sturdier spinach, both for taste and texture, if it's being cooked.
Could you use one bowl? I suppose. But three bowls separate the vegetables juices/flavors until they reach the oven.



This recipe for Stacked Ratattouille is so quick and easy that I'm adding it to a growing collection of easy summer recipes being published all summer long in 2009 at Kitchen Parade, my food column. With a free Kitchen Parade e-mail subscription, you'll never miss a one!




MORE RATATOUILLE RECIPES
from Kitchen Parade
~ Ratatouille ~
the same vegetables but somehow an entirely different dish, also a huge favorite
~ Ratatouille Omelettes ~

from A Veggie Venture
~ Summer Vegetable Stew ~
again, many of the same vegetables but entirely different

~ more eggplant recipes ~
~ more Weight Watchers recipes ~
~ more low-carb recipes ~




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Looking for healthy ways to cook vegetables? A Veggie Venture is home to hundreds of quick, easy and healthful vegetable recipes and the famous Alphabet of Vegetables. Healthy eaters will love the low carb recipes and the Weight Watchers recipes.
© Copyright 2009

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Raw Eggplant Salad ♥ Recipe

Can eggplant be eaten raw? Yes!
Today's unusual salad recipe: Small pieces of raw eggplant tossed with celery, olives and capers. Surprisingly pleasant! Vegan. Low carb. Weight Watchers 1 point.

So. Can we eat raw eggplant? Yes! Do we want to eat raw eggplant? Yes again.

The inspiration for this simple summer salad came from a few slices of eggplant leftover from another recipe, just hanging out there on the counter whispering, "Try us, try us, we'll taste great, maybe." They'd been dipped in nothing more than olive oil seasoned with salt and pepper. How would the raw eggplant taste? Good!

The eggplant's white flesh is pleasantly spongy (definitely NOT mushy) and the skin provides great texture as well as color contrast. I do think that texture's especially important to consider when adding other ingredients, you don't want the whole salad to be soft, some crispness is important.

I also suspect that the more-tender Asian eggplant is the appropriate choice here, versus the big fat globe eggplants that are easier to find, at least in my supermarkets here in St. Louis. I do see Asian eggplant occasionally at Dierbergs but my local Schnucks added them when I asked, but dropped them when they didn't sell. I once compared several eggplants, their photos are here with the recipe for Eggplant Caviar.

UPDATE: I've learned from a reader/friend that like green tomatoes and green potatoes, raw eggplant contains a natural chemical called solanine that can upset the tummy! If yours is sensitive, you might choose another recipe.

RAW EGGPLANT SALAD

Hands-on time: 10 minutes
Time to table: 10 minutes
Makes 2 cups (easily adjusted for fewer or more servings)

VINAIGRETTE
Juice of a lemon (2 tablespoons)
1/2 tablespoon good olive oil
Agave or honey to taste (I used about a teaspoon)
Salt & pepper to taste

SALAD
1 Asian eggplant (those are the long slim ones)
1/2 - 1 rib celery, chopped small
Kalamata olives, pitted & chopped
1 - 2 tablespoons capers
Fresh basil, chopped

VINAIGRETTE In a bowl, whisk the vinaigrette ingredients.

SALAD Trim the ends off the eggplants. Lengthwise, cut the eggplants in quarters; cross-wise, cut the eggplants about 1/4-inch thick. Drop the eggplant into the vinaigrette and stir well. Stir the eggplant off and on while prepping the other ingredients, you want the pieces to soak up the vinaigrette. Toss in the remaining ingredients. Serve and savor!

OTHER IDEAS Red pepper, mini mozzarella balls, grated carrot, chopped fennel






PRINT JUST A RECIPE! Now you can print a recipe without wasting ink and paper on the header and sidebar. Here's how.


Looking for healthy ways to cook vegetables? A Veggie Venture is home to hundreds of quick, easy and healthful vegetable recipes and the famous Alphabet of Vegetables. Healthy eaters will love the low carb recipes and the Weight Watchers recipes.
© Copyright 2009

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Homemade Bread & Butter Pickles ♥ Freezer Recipe

Fresh as can be, straight from the freezer throughout the year
A recipe from a reader, easy bread and butter pickles. No canning required, can be kept in the freezer for months!

Many thanks to an anonymous reader who left her recipe for bread and butter pickles a couple of years back. I actually made these late last fall -- although too late to share -- and then nibbled on them off and on throughout the winter.

The pickles are great -- crunchy but not too crunchy, sweet but not too sweet, 'pickly' but not too pickly. They are as simple to make as opening a jar -- well, almost. There's no canning required, just plop them into freezer containers.

I love having homemade pickles on hand. Call me silly but somehow a quick sandwich seems more like a meal when there are pickles alongside.

HOMEMADE BREAD & BUTTER PICKLES

Hands-on time: 15 minutes
Time to table: 24 - 48 hours
Makes 4 - 8 pints

LIQUID
1 cup white vinegar
2 cups sugar
2 tablespoons kosher salt
1 tablespoon celery seed
1 tablespoon mustard seed

7 - 14 cups pickling cucumbers, blossom and stem ends trimmed, sliced into rounds if small and half-rounds if larger (see NOTES)
1 cup onion, sliced thin in rounds or half rounds, rings separated

Bring the liquid ingredients to a boil, let cool a bit. Place the cucumbers and onions in a large crock or glass jar. Pour hot liquid over top. Weight the cucumbers to submerge in the liquid (see NOTES). If desired, add more cucumbers over the next day or so. Refrigerate and let stand for at least 24 hours after the last cucumbers are added. Transfer to freezer containers and freeze until ready to use.

KITCHEN NOTES
Use the smallest pickling cucumbers you can find, otherwise they'll be full of seeds which aren't inedible but do affect the aesthetics of the pickles and don't agree with some digestive systems.
Add about 7 cups of sliced cucumbers straight off. They'll shrink considerably so add more cucumbers the next day as room is made.
For weighting the cucumbers, I used a small plate topped with an empty glass jar filled with water.




VEGETABLE RECIPES from the ARCHIVES
~ how to freeze corn ~
~ how to freeze tomatoes ~
~ Homemade Zucchini Relish ~

~ more 'canning' and preserving recipes ~
~ more recipes for 'refrigerator' pickles (no 'canning' required) ~




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Looking for healthy ways to cook vegetables? A Veggie Venture is home to hundreds of quick, easy and healthful vegetable recipes and the famous Alphabet of Vegetables. Healthy eaters will love the low carb recipes and the Weight Watchers recipes.
© Copyright 2009

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Tuna & White Bean Dip ♥ A Quick & Easy Recipe!

An easy bean dip, with a touch of umami from a simple can of tuna. Easy to make with a few quick pantry and refrigerator ingredients. Fresh tasting and endlessly variable. Positively addictive. Low carb. Weight Watchers 1 point.

Okay so you might think that this is just one more bean dip, nothing special about that. But I beg, think again.

For one thing, it's one of those pass-along recipes. It started with Ilda, neighbor to Tanna of My Kitchen in Half Cups who made it, along with my Pickled Beet Dip, for a meal of Little Bites. Then I made it for an impromptu sangria party on my patio and passed it along to two people. Two days later, I made it again for a birthday celebration -- passing the recipe along again -- and then snacked leftovers all week. Already, in just two weeks, this has become a staple summer recipe, for an easy party appetizer, for a small bite before supper, for quick lunches.

For another, what raises the bean dip several notches is the addition of tuna, which adds a certain savory meatiness that, when pressed, I'd identify as 'umami', the fifth taste sense.

OH and before I forget, see those cool crackers? You'll love these Herbed Saltines too. Yum.

This recipe is so quick and easy that I'm adding it to a growing collection of easy summer recipes being published all summer long in 2009 at Kitchen Parade, my food column. With a free Kitchen Parade e-mail subscription, you'll never miss a one!

TUNA & WHITE BEAN DIP

Hands-on time: 10-15 minutes
Time to table: excellent after resting a couple of hours, even better after 24 hours
Makes 2 cups

5 ounces canned tuna, drained
15 ounces canned white beans (see NOTES), drained
a good splash of apple cider or another vinegar (anything other than harsh plain white vinegar) or the juice of a lemon
1 clove garlic, minced
1 small red onion, chopped (or several green onions, chopped)
1/2 red pepper, chopped
Fresh basil, chopped - Tanna says to use a 'happy' amount!
Salt and pepper to taste
Olive oil - just enough to bind a bit, about 1 tablespoon

With a fork, gently mash the tuna and beans together (see NOTES). Stir in the remaining ingredients. Cover and refrigerate to let the flavors meld for a couple of hours or better yet, 24 hours. Serve with crackers.

Variations: Add chopped kalamata olives or chopped radish or bits of fresh peach. Substitute dill or cilantro for the basil.


KITCHEN NOTES
I like people to be able to 'recognize' what's in a dish so when I made this the second time, I mashed half the beans with the tuna, then stirred in the remaining whole beans with the rest. This worked quite well with beans from the 'Mexican aisle' at the grocery, they were quite small. It might not work as well with larger cannellini beans.
Note to Vegetarians


MORE RECIPES for DIPS & SPREADS
~ Guacamole with Tomatillos ~
~ Baba Ganoush ~
~ Caponata ~

~ more recipes for dips & spreads ~







PRINT JUST A RECIPE! Now you can print a recipe without wasting ink and paper on the header and sidebar. Here's how.

NEVER MISS A RECIPE! For 'home delivery' of new recipes from A Veggie Venture, sign up here. Once you do, new recipes will be delivered, automatically, straight to your e-mail In Box.




Looking for healthy ways to cook vegetables? A Veggie Venture is home to hundreds of quick, easy and healthful vegetable recipes and the famous Alphabet of Vegetables. Healthy eaters will love the low carb recipes and the Weight Watchers recipes.
© Copyright 2009

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Fire-Charred Tomatoes ♥ a Recipe from the 'Seven Fires' Cookbook

Fire-Charred Tomatoes
From the new and most-inspiring cookbook "Seven Fires" (much recommended as a Father's Day gift idea), tomatoes cooked on a very hot fire til charred, creating a smoky, luscious bite of summer. Low carb. Weight Watchers 1 point.

In 2007, I lucked into spending a day with author and writer Peter Kaminsky just back from Argentina where he'd been cooking over fire with Argentinian chef Francis Mallman. A book was in the works and Peter was stoked -- smoked?! -- with the idea of reducing cooking to no more than fire and food.

Seven Fires: Grilling the Argentinian Way is that book and truly, it's a treasure. For anyone who likes to grill, who's serious about barbecue, who cooks outdoors, this cookbook will be a real inspiration. But for others, too, the ingredient lists are short and accessible, the food spare and simple. There's plenty of meat in the cookbook but the vegetable recipes have really captured my imagination. I can see cooking from this book -- directly from its recipes but also on my own, just from its inspiration -- for a long time. It's an entirely new way to cook -- or perhaps, better said, it's an entirely OLD way to cook but made contemporary.

The 'seven fires' are the parilla (a grill grate set over hot coals); the chapa (flat cast iron griddle set over fire)' an infernillo (a two-story fire with a cooking surface in between); a horno de barro (wood-fired oven); a rescoldo (covering food with embers); asado (a vertical spit for cooking whole animals); and caldero (iron kettle).

So far, we've tried the charring technique over an open wood fire, on the stovetop and on the grill with a hickory log for smoke. The first real hit, the 'recipe' we'll make again and again all summer, is the fire-charred tomato.
THE TASTE OF BURNT "I adore dissonance in food -- two tastes fighting each other. It wakes up your palate and surprises you. As you'll see in many of the recipes in this book, charring or even burning adds an extra dimension to breads, vegetable, and fruit. The right amount of burning or charring can be delicious and seductive: a burnt tomato, for example, has a dark crust bordering on bitter, while the inside is soft and gentle in texture and taste." ~ Seven Fires, page 5

FIRE-CHARRED TOMATOES

Hands-on time: 5 minutes
Time to table: 15 minutes
Serves 4

Olive oil
4 medium-size perfect summer tomatoes
Kosher salt or another good coarse salt

Heat a cast iron skillet until smoky hot, adding a layer of olive oil after a minute or two. Cut the 'cap' off each tomato, about 1/4 to 1/3 of the way down. Press the salt into the cut surfaces. When the skillet is hot, place the tomatoes, cut-side down, onto the hot surface. DO NOT MOVE -- and let cook for exactly 10 minutes. Transfer to serving plates, serve and savor!


KITCHEN NOTES
Don't be tempted to move the tomato once it's on the skillet -- otherwise the charred skin won't develop.
There will be smoke so if you've got a good fan, turn it on, or can cook outside (on a grill's side burner, say), do that.

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This recipe is so quick and easy that I'm adding it to a growing collection of easy summer recipes being published all summer long in 2009 at Kitchen Parade, my food column. With a free Kitchen Parade e-mail subscription, you'll never miss a one!





Looking for healthy ways to cook vegetables? A Veggie Venture is home to hundreds of quick, easy and healthful vegetable recipes and the famous Alphabet of Vegetables. Healthy eaters will love the low carb recipes and the Weight Watchers recipes.
© Copyright 2009

reade more... Résuméabuiyad

Pickled Beet Dip ♥ Easy Recipe!

In a sea of 'brown' food, even the Peptobismol color of beets is much appreciated!
Today's vegetable recipe: A quick and easy dip made with pickled beets, cream cheese and horseradish. Quite addictive, smeared on bread. Great color for outdoor gatherings. Low carb.

No surprise that I loved this beet dip -- yes, when you collect beet recipes, people starting calling you the Beet Queen for good reason. But I didn't expect everyone else to love this beet dip -- but they did!

The dip starts with a jar of pickled beets and whizzes up in the food processor in just a few minutes. It keeps too -- making it easy to make ahead and keep on hand for several days.

Because you'll ask? Yes, the color is really truly that pink!

THREE DAYS LATER: Brilliant! My friend Tanna from the Dallas food blog My Kitchen in Half Cups made this dip using homemade pickled beets and substituting canned beans for the cream cheese! She served the dip at a 'Little Bites' Dinner detailed in a post called, Pink, Purple, Red or Rouge.

PICKLED BEET DIP

Hands-on time: 10 minutes
Time to table: 10 minutes
Makes 2 cups

1 16-ounce jar pickled beets, drained (see NOTES)
1 thick slice red onion
8 ounces low-fat cream cheese (also called Neufchatel)
Horseradish to taste (see NOTES)

Chop the beets and onion in a food processor until very small. Add the cream cheese and process until smooth. Add the horseradish. Spread over crostini or crackers.


KITCHEN NOTES
I used Aunt Nellie's Pickled Beets but these Swedish Beets (an easy homemade pickled beet recipe, no canning required) would work great too.
If you like, put aside one beet to garnish the top.
Commercial horseradish varies in hotness so this is definitely an ingredient to taste and adjust. I used two teaspoons, that wasn't enough for our taste.


MORE FAVORITE VEGETABLE RECIPES
~ Beets with Feta ~
~ Beet Carpaccio ~
~ more beet recipes ~

~ Baba Ganoush ~
~ Easy Easy Radish Spread ~
~ Beet Pesto ~
~ more dips & spreads ~

~ more Weight Watchers recipes ~
~ more low-carb recipes ~


This recipe is so quick and easy that I'm adding it to a growing collection of easy summer recipes being published all summer long in 2009 at Kitchen Parade, my food column. With a free Kitchen Parade e-mail subscription, you'll never miss a one!


PRINT JUST A RECIPE! Now you can print a recipe without wasting ink and paper on the header and sidebar. Here's how.




Looking for healthy ways to cook vegetables? A Veggie Venture is home to hundreds of quick, easy and healthful vegetable recipes and the famous Alphabet of Vegetables. Healthy eaters will love the low carb recipes and the Weight Watchers recipes.
© Copyright 2009

reade more... Résuméabuiyad