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For all who follow my food column, Kitchen Parade -- well, it's got a brand-new 'kitchen'!

Check out the new digs, finally, over at KitchenParade.com!



SO WHAT IS KITCHEN PARADE, EXACTLY? Kitchen Parade is the food column that my Mom started writing for our family newspaper when I was a baby. Today it's published in my hometown newspapers in suburban St. Louis and features 'fresh seasonal recipes for every-day healthful eating and occasional indulgences'.

Where A Veggie Venture is 'pure food blog', full of experimentation and exploration, Kitchen Parade features recipes a modern cook can count on. All are thoroughly tested by a home cook in a home kitchen and many are family and reader favorites. All recipes feature easy-to-find ingredients, clear instructions and because I believe so strongly in informed food choices, nutrition analysis and Weight Watchers points. Want to know more? Explore the brand-new Kitchen Parade, including Kitchen Parade's Recipe Box!

WHY CAN'T I COMMENT ON THIS PAGE? Because I hope that you'll click through to the actual column and comment there!

A Veggie Venture is home of the Veggie Evangelist Alanna Kellogg and vegetable inspiration from Asparagus to Zucchini. © Copyright 2007
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Ripe-Tomato Relish with Peaches & Pears ♥ aka Sharon's Pickle

Today's vegetable recipe: Our old-old family recipe for Ripe-Tomato Relish. It’s a day’s production but there’s nothing the least it “hard” about it either. My mom and I used to make this together, now I manage it alone and it’s so very satisfying, hearing the canning jars go “pop” and storing away jars for later. Not just vegan, "Vegan Done Real".

Ripe-Tomato Relish is almost but not quite as thick as chutney. It's made from perfect summer tomatoes, peaches and pears. Even with fruit and sugar, it’s a savory relish, not a sweet jam.

In my family, we call Ripe-Tomato Relish "Sharon's Pickle" because my cousin Sharon has loved it so much for so long. The recipe comes from her Grandma Miller so it's now in at least the third generation. I need to work on the fourth generation, who are busy bearing babies aka the fifth generation!

Ripe-Tomato Relish is spectacular paired with pork, especially. But I often throw a tablespoon or two into chicken salad or egg salad or with sliced meat in a sandwich instead of ketchup or another spread. It's just one of those specialties that's, well, always special. I make it in pint jars for my own use, in half pints for gifts – it always gets rave reviews.

When my mom was alive, we'd make it together in May with tomatoes she and my dad hauled from Florida on their way north for the summer. It takes lots of chopping – so company does make the job fly by faster. But even working in solitude, it's nice, about two hours of prep work, then a long time on the stove, then quick work to fill and process the jars in a hot water bath.

What is a hot water bath? It's when you carefully place sterilized jars filled with the hot relish into a big vat of boiling water. It seals the jars to lock in flavor and color and destroy microorganisms that cause spoilage. NOTE: I'm the first to process jars of Sharon's Pickle. My mother, my aunts and certainly Grandma Miller never did. But canning specialists do recommend processing home-canned foods in hot water baths, even relishes with high vinegar content like this. And after all the hauling, all the blanching, all the peeling, all the chopping, all the time on the stove, the hot water bath seems like one last safe – and simple – step. And so I do.

If you're new to canning, check out my Practical Home Canning Tips, a sort of "what I wish I'd known beforehand" list I wrote four years ago during the Summer of Obsessive Canning.

And here's a quiz. Besides the lineup of pickles and preserves and jams and jellies, what's the most satisfying moment of home canning? It’s the "POP" that happens when the jars seal. There goes one now!

RIPE-TOMATO RELISH with PEACHES & PEARS
(in my family, we call it just "SHARON's PICKLE”)

Hands-on time: allow a whole day, about 2 hours for prep work, then several hours stove-time with frequent attention, then about an hour for filling and processing
Makes about 10 pints

6 large peaches
30 medium-size ripe tomatoes (about 14 pounds)
6 medium yellow onions
3 green peppers
2 jalapeño peppers (my addition)
6 pears, peeled and diced
4 cups sugar
1 - 2 cups (or more) white or cider vinegar or a mixture
2 tablespoons table salt
2 tablespoons pickling spices

BLANCH THE PEACHES AND TOMATOES Fill a large pot with water and bring to a boil for blanching the peaches and tomatoes. (To “blanch” is to cook quickly, just enough to soften the skins so that they’ll release easily from the fruit.) Wash the peaches and tomatoes well, I usually wash them first, then let soak in cool water to remove any further dirt.

For the peaches, drop the peaches into the water three or four at a time. Blanch for 1 minute until the skin splits, transfer to a colander to drain, then onto a baking sheet to cool. Let the water return to a boil before adding more.

For the tomatoes, cut an X in the skin of the blossom end of each tomato, then four or five at a time, drop into the boiling water. Cover and blanch for 1 - 2 minutes til skin splits, transfer to a colander to drain, then onto a baking sheet to cool.

When cool enough to handle, peel and then chop the peaches and tomatoes, discarding the peels and adding the pieces, juice and seeds and all, to a very large bowl.

PREP THE VEGETABLES In batches chop the onion, green pepper and jalapeno in a food processor and transfer to the bowl. Add the pears, sugar, vinegar and salt. Stir gently to combine.

PICKLING SPICES Wrap the pickling spices in two or three squares of cheesecloth or staple the spices in folded-over coffee filters, you’ll need as many as you have cooking pots.

COOK DOWN-DOWN-DOWN Fill two or three large, heavy pots about 2/3 full. Leave the covers off, bring the pots to a boil and let simmer until the liquid cooks off. Especially at the beginning and near the end, stir ever 15 minutes to monitor the temperature. My notes from other years say this takes 2 - 5 hours. My last couple of batches had so much liquid, it took nearly 9 hours to cook. Three pots make a difference, it’s easier for low heat to reach into the deep mixture. At some point, you will want to combine the pots, however, so that there is just “one” flavor mixture.

TASTE FOR VINEGAR A couple of hours in, taste the mixture. It needs to have a strong vinegar component, if it doesn't, add vinegar. Keep tasting throughout the cooking process as it cooks down, add vinegar along the way as needed. (My mom and I made a very unsuccessful batch one year, we realized too late it was because we didn't use enough vinegar.)

WHEN IS IT DONE? It's done with the liquid is cooked off and the whole mixture has turned a beautiful shade of reddish mahogany-brown. There are two ways to “hold” the mixture overnight – say if it's time for bed and you don't have the energy to fill and process the jars right then. The first is to refrigerate. The second is to cover and place in a 190F oven. (I actually “held” the mixture overnight in the oven twice in 2013, it worked just fine.) In the morning, return the mixture to a boil but be careful, once it's fully cooked, it's easy to accidentally burn the bottom.

FILL & PROCESS THE JARS IN A HOT WATER BATH Fill sterilized hot canning jars with the hot mixture and top with sterilized hot lids and rims. Immediately drop into boiling water and process for 10 minutes. Need more information on how to do this? Practical Home Canning Tips may help!

HOW LONG DOES IT KEEP? Use Ripe-Tomato Relish within a year or two.

ALANNA's TIPS & KITCHEN NOTES
TOMATOES It’s important that the tomatoes be really ripe. This means that the tomatoes might be a little bruised. Once the skins come off, they may be fine but be sure to cut off any actual bruised part.
PEARS Because pears aren't in season at the same time as peaches and tomatoes, I use three 15-ounces cans of pears in light syrup, including the syrup, the fruit diced small.
POT SIZES This recipe makes a lot! That means big pots are needed. I collect the chopped peaches, tomatoes and vegetables in a my mother's old bread bowl which holds 5 quarts and even it's not enough. For cooking, I use either a very large stockpot and two Dutch ovens or more recently, the very large stockpot and a large LeCreuset Dutch oven.


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Still Hungry?


MORE JAMS, PICKLES & PRESERVES
~ Homemade Zucchini Relish ~
~ Tomato Ginger Jam ~
~ Green Pepper Jelly ~
from A Veggie Venture

~ How to Make Rhubarb Jam & Rhubarb Jelly ~
~ Slow-Roasted Tomatoes ~
~ Cranberry Chutney ~
from Kitchen Parade

A Veggie Venture is home of the Veggie Evangelist Alanna Kellogg and vegetable inspiration from Asparagus to Zucchini. © Copyright 2007
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Delicious Microwave Sweet Potato ♥

A sweet potato cooked in the microwave is so easy, so good!
Today's microwave recipe: How to cook a sweet potato in the microwave. It's quick-quick and easy, whether for a fast at-home or office-kitchen lunch or a vegetable for supper.

I didn't mean to mislead. So many readers have clicked on 'microwave sweet potato' -- but wait! don't waste a click, that link leads only to a review of a plastic-wrapped 'microwave sweet potato' that costs twice as much and just isn't necessary.

It is so easy to cook a regular sweet potato in the microwave. It's my new go-to lunch! Plus since so many offices have microwaves, this could be a great lunch for work, too - though beware, it takes 10 minutes (or more) to cook a sweet potato in a microwave so might violate office etiquette during prime 'leftover reheat' times.

The source of this microwave technique for cooking sweet potatoes is the always reliable Vegetable Love by Barbara Kafka. Her vegetable cookbook is just so completely thorough! Barbara writes that microwaving a whole sweet potato is suitable for purées and pies, which intimates, doesn't it, that the texture is unpalatable for eating straight from the jacket? Not true! Just slice open a sweet potato cooked in the microwave, add a bit of butter and seasoning and voila, call it lunch! The texture is lovely, the taste is great!
Keep Reading ->>>
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Phyllis' Fresh Tomato Sauce ♥

Fresh Tomato Sauce
How to make tomato sauce, not for canning, but fresh for supper. Make it with summer's best tomatoes and eat straight-away, still-warm from the stove, laced with the essence of basil.

~recipe & photo updated 2010~

2005: In the years I was digging my roots as a cook, I had the great fortune to move to Texas - the good luck having zero to do with Texas itself and everything to do with the fact that my mother's best friend from grade school lived all of two miles away. Phyllis and her husband tucked me under their culinary bough and on occasion, I'd spend a Sunday on a stool in their kitchen, some times helping, mostly wide-eyed and soaking up the possibilities: I'd never heard of the stove-maker Viking, had never known a house with two ovens let alone a third, especially for warming.

So I have a whole collection of recipes bearing Phyllis' name. This is one. You'll see, it's not fancy food (though Phyllis would chide me for not blanching the tomatoes to remove the skins) but it is what I hope you think of as 'classic Alanna', simple food prepared well. .

The one requirement is really good tomatoes. If you're going to make tomato sauce from fresh tomatoes, at least a sauce this simple, the tomatoes must-must be perfect. That said, my notes say that Phyllis also makes it from boxes of Pomi Tomatoes, a good choice when good tomatoes aren't available, as would be San Marzano tomatoes which I used to make Quick Tomato Sauce.

2010: This is simple, spare fare, an easy way to revel in summer tomatoes.

PHYLLIS' FRESH TOMATO SAUCE

Hands-on time: 20 minutes
Time to table: 30 minutes
Serves 4

2 tablespoons olive oil
4 large fresh garlic cloves, sliced thin
2 pounds fresh tomatoes, blanched and seeded first if desired, otherwise chopped in bite-size pieces
8 - 10 fresh basil leaves, washed, cut in slices
Salt & pepper to taste
1/4 cup cream (reduced from Phyllis' 1 cup, I just didn't think it needed very much)

For garnish, freshly grated Parmesan (if you like but to my taste, 'just tomato' is perfect)
For garnish, a few more leaves of fresh basil

In a large skillet, heat the oil on MEDIUM HIGH till shimmery. Reduce the heat to MEDIUM, add the garlic and let sizzle a bit. Add the tomatoes and basil, stir to coat with fat and distribute the garlic. Let cook for about 10 minutes, stirring occasionally, watching the heat so not to burn, til all the liquid is cooked off. Season to taste. Slowly stir in the cream, stirring to distribute. Let cook down a minute and warm completely through. Adjust seasoning.

Serve over pasta or fish. If desired, top with Parmesan and additional fresh basil.


ALANNA's TIPS & KITCHEN NOTES
If you are in Phyllis' camp about removing the tomato skins, blanch the tomatoes first. To blanch, bring a large pot of water to a boil. Wash the tomatoes and cut an X in the skin on the blossom end. (This is opposite the 'stem end'. Think about it, you'll know which is which!) Drop into the water for 60 seconds, remove with a slotted spoon. When the tomato is cool enough to handle, use a knife to slip off the skin and discard.
Don't skip the basil when making the sauce, it adds a dimension that is much missed if it's skipped.

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MORE FAVORITE RECIPES for SUMMER'S BEST TOMATOES
~ Fire-Charred Tomatoes ~
~ Tossed Caprese Salad ~
~ Tomato Platter with Olives & Feta ~
~ more tomato recipes ~
from A Veggie Venture

~ Shrimp with Tomatoes, Spinach & Feta ~
~ Summer's Tomato Soup ~
~ BLT for Pasta Salad ~
~ more tomato recipes ~
from Kitchen Parade, my food column




How to eat more vegetables? A Veggie Venture is the home of Veggie Evangelist Alanna Kellogg and the best source of free vegetable recipes with 700+ quick and easy favorite vegetable recipes, the Alphabet of Vegetables, Weight Watchers low-point recipes and microwave vegetable recipes.
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Insalata Caprese ♥ A Simple Summer Treat

Insalata Caprese, the summer classic, just slices of perfect tomato and fresh mozzarella
Slices of perfect summer tomatoes and fresh mozzarella, drizzled with good olive oil and scattered with fresh basil. Gorgeous!

When I gushed over the taste of the summer's first tomatoes last month, several commenters suggested 'insalata caprese' as a simple way to revel in perfectly ripe home-grown tomatoes. "I've done that", I thought but then wondered, "Have I?" No, not really.

You see, way back on Day 87 (yes, I really did count each day during A Veggie Venture's first year, when I cooked a vegetable in a new way every single day, note to self: how mad was that?) I sliced tomato and fresh mozzarella and then drizzled it with good vinegar -- very good! delicious, in fact -- but not insalata caprese, which is drizzled with good olive oil, here, a truly gorgeous Meyer lemon olive oil from O Olive Oil.

So what is fresh mozzarella and how is it different? If you're new to fresh mozzarella, boy, are you in for a real treat! Mostly, we know mozzarella in the 'ripened' bricks of cheese wrapped in plastic from the dairy department at the grocery -- but for insalata caprese, only fresh mozzarella will do. Fresh mozzarella comes in balls about the size of an orange (and some times in smaller and even tiny balls great for small servings) and is packed in liquid to preserve the moisture.

In St. Louis, some supermarkets keep fresh mozzarella in big jars at the deli counter but you have to ask. Other times it's in small sealed plastic tubs, other times in those deli-type containers. Trader Joe's carries 'fresh' mozzarella but it's not very good though if your only source, go for it.

You can make fresh mozzarella at home though it involves plunging your hands into hot-hot-hot water, something I'm not anxious to do but sure wish my nearby cheese shop (the Wine & Cheese Place in Rock Hill) would, again. If you'd like to explore how to make homemade fresh mozzarella, this recipe and instructions for fresh mozzarella from cookbook author Beatrice Ojakangas seem good.)

2010 Update: For a more casual variation of Insalata Caprese, see Tossed Caprese Salad.

INSALATA CAPRESE

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

1 large tomato, sliced (here the gorgeous heirloom, the Brandywine)
1/4 pound ball of fresh mozzarella, cut in 4 slices
1 tablespoon good olive oil (here, the gorgeous olive oil from O Olive Oil)
Good salt (here, the lovely Maldon flakes)
Fresh basil, sliced thin

Arrange tomatoes and mozzarella on a platter or individual plates. Drizzle with olive oil, sprinkle with salt, top with basil. Devour!


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How to eat more vegetables? A Veggie Venture is the home of Veggie Evangelist Alanna Kellogg and the best source of free vegetable recipes with 700+ quick and easy favorite vegetable recipes, the Alphabet of Vegetables, Weight Watchers low-point recipes and microwave vegetable recipes.


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Kitchen Parade Extra: Herbed Ricotta with Roasted Cherry Tomatoes ♥

From Kitchen Parade, Herbed Ricotta with Roasted Cherry TomatoessFrom this week's Kitchen Parade column, a great summer appetizer.

'Got milk? We all recognize the slogan from the dairy industry’s ads featuring celebrities with milk-mustached upper lips. But here’s a new version. “Got milk? Got ricotta.”'

Get the recipe for Herbed Ricotta with Roasted Cherry Tomatoes -- made with your very own homemade ricotta -- at Kitchen Parade.



SO WHAT IS KITCHEN PARADE, EXACTLY? Kitchen Parade is the food column that my Mom started writing for our family newspaper when I was a baby. Today it's published in my hometown newspapers in suburban St. Louis and features 'fresh seasonal recipes for every-day healthful eating and occasional indulgences'.

Where A Veggie Venture is 'pure food blog', full of experimentation and exploration, Kitchen Parade features recipes a modern cook can count on. All are thoroughly tested by a home cook in a home kitchen and many are family and reader favorites. All recipes feature easy-to-find ingredients, clear instructions and because I believe so strongly in informed food choices, nutrition analysis and Weight Watchers points. Want to know more? Explore Kitchen Parade, including Kitchen Parade's Recipe Box!

WHY CAN'T I COMMENT ON THIS PAGE? Because I hope that you'll click through to the actual column and comment there!

A Veggie Venture is home of the Veggie Evangelist Alanna Kellogg and vegetable inspiration from Asparagus to Zucchini. © Copyright 2007
reade more... Résuméabuiyad

Romano Beans in Butter-Braised Garlic ♥

Just look at that caramelized garlic!Who knew that garlic could turn so sweet? The garlic cooks on a low flame in butter for nearly 45 minutes, seemingly doing nothing for the longest time, then quite quickly turning a sizzly golden color, all the while filling the air with gorgeous garlic aroma, then transforming into something I'm tempted to call 'garlic candy', sweet and yet still garlicky, not crunchy, the texture of, say, licorice. Garlic Magic!!

The beans are the flattish romano beans that I fell for last year -- ha! romano beans must really scream for garlic, check out Garlicky Romano Beans, especially if you limit saturated fat -- but any fresh green bean will do, I think.

NUTRITION NOTES The full 3 tablespoons of butter provides needed volume to braise the garlic. But it's also enough to 'dress' three or even four pounds of beans. For just one pound, it pools unappetizingly in the serving dish. Next time I'll set aside a couple of tablespoons of the braising butter for, say, a mean salad dressing, before dressing the beans.



OFF TO CHICAGO Tomorrow I'm off to attend Blogher '07, where I'm happy to meet so many food bloggers in person for the first time ('oh! you look nothing like the picture on your blog!' and 'you look so different than you sound on the phone'!). My primary question during four days of motivational speeches, geeky technology stuff (and no doubt, ooohing and aaaahing over smashing shoes) is to figure out why in the world anyone would blog about things other than food. Ideas? Oh! And food bloggers who aren't in Chicago? When your pots (get it?!) burn, you'll know ... we're laughing over your last kitchen mishap or nodding in admiration over that last wonderful cake. You'll be missed, one and all! TAG:blogme2007



FROM THE ARCHIVES See the Recipe Box for all the green bean recipes.

A YEAR AGO THIS WEEK Refrigerator Pickles! From my Kitchen Parade column, a pair of refrigerator pickle recipes, one with cucumbers and peppers, another with Brussels sprouts

TWO YEARS AGO Eggplant Sandwiches with Cilantro Hummus

ROMANO BEANS in BUTTER-BRAISED GARLIC

Hands-on time: 20 minutes
Time to table: 40 minutes
Serves 4

1 big pot of heavily salted water (this means 2 quarts of water and 1 tablespoon of table salt for a pound of beans)

3 tablespoons unsalted butter
4 or 5 or more large cloves of garlic, peeled and pressed flat with the blade of a knife (I used my own homegrown garlic)

1 pound green beans (or any snap bean), ends snapped
1 tablespoon fresh sage [the inspiring recipe says 1 teaspoon or a pinch of dried]
[1 tablespoon fresh parsley, suggests the inspiring recipe, I skipped this]
Good salt to taste (I used large flakes of Maldon salt for real bursts of saltiness)

Bring the water to a boil.

Meanwhile, in a skillet eventually large enough to hold the beans, too, melt the butter on the lowest flame. Add the garlic when it's prepped, COVER and let cook, watching the flame so the butter doesn't burn, letting the garlic warm slowly until it begins to sizzle and turn golden, watching very carefully after that. At some point along the way, chop or mash the garlic into small bits and return to the skillet to continue.

While garlic braises, cook the beans in the water til the desired doneness (I think just past tender-crisp is right for this, you want the butter to be able to soak into the flesh a bit when the time comes) is reached. Drain in a colander.

When the garlic is done, if you like, reserve a couple of tablespoons of the butter for another use, then stir in the beans and rewarm. Transfer to a serving dish, sprinkle with good salt and serve.



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How to eat more vegetables? A Veggie Venture is the home of Veggie Evangelist Alanna Kellogg and the best source of free vegetable recipes with 700+ quick and easy favorite vegetable recipes, the Alphabet of Vegetables, Weight Watchers low-point recipes and microwave vegetable recipes.

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