What We’ve Been Eating

I haven’t been blogging much lately, but that doesn’t mean I haven’t been cooking. When I first decided to teach myself to cook, and started writing this blog six years ago, I shared every meal, because every one felt like a tiny revelation. I learned so much every night at dinner time. Now I have a solid set of techniques and favorite recipes in my apron pocket. I find that I don’t have as much to say about dinner, because these days it’s often something tried and true, with maybe one or two slight twists. I still love to cook, but I don’t feel the same thrill of learning something new (well, not all of the time, though there are still nights when I’ll pick an intense-looking recipe with some unknown-to-me ingredient or technique).

So what does the kitchen look like, now that I’ve settled into more of a predictable rhythm? What recipes are part of the Kitchen Illiterate repertoire these days?

Lentil and greens soup
I still love soup, especially now that the evenings are cooler. Soup is incredibly versatile, which makes it a no-brainer for a weeknight when there are things I’d rather do than cook dinner. I loved this lentil and swiss chard version, with carrots and turnips.

Chicken Pizza
Pizza is another favorite. You can see I’m a fan of flexible meals. You can put anything on a pizza. This one was particularly lovely, with some leftover cooked chicken and sauteed spinach. Yum.

Braised Chicken and Green Beans
Chicken has become a staple. This braised chicken, with couscous and green beans, was really bright tasting and tender. I believe the recipe was from Bon Appetit.

Johnny Machete
Remember Johnny Machete? Oh boy, I do. And it really is delicious. Throw off your disdain for the hearty casserole and dig in. You will not regret it.

Tomato Bake
One evening, I sliced up the last of the summer tomatoes and eggplant and zucchini very thinly, and layered them in a baking dish. I drizzled the whole thing with olive oil, and a sprinkling of salt and oregano, and baked it until everything was soft and melted together into one happy summery dish. We ate it simply with a baguette. I love this kind of dinner: no thinking required.

Ensalada
And there have been salads, crunchy green salads with peppers and radishes, cabbage and almonds, apples and avocado, and whatever delicious things I can find in our crisper. Sean makes a mean salad dressing. A salad and a grilled steak make for a perfect dinner sometimes.

My cooking has become an exercise in agility, using a template in my head and filling it in with the ingredients I have on hand. In some respects, my fascination with cooking has gone from a rolling boil to a quiet, steady simmer. I’ve focused my drive to learn and take on new challenges in other areas (I’m a little obsessed with my sewing machine right now). The years I spent teaching myself to cook have paid off, because I’m confident in the kitchen now, and I can whip up a healthy dinner any night of the week without having to think about it too much. I still love to try new recipes from time to time, and I do hope to still take the time to share those with you, but my singular obsession with it has dimmed a little, it must be said.

If you haven’t yet delved into the world of cooking, it is such a completely worthwhile endeavor. Knowing how to make a meal changes things. I eat better and healthier than I ever have in my life, and I would never be able to say that if I hadn’t decided, back in November of 2006, that I wanted to have a food blog.

Recipe Organization

Organizing!

If you’re interested in food, and you spend any amount of time on the internet, it’s likely that so many amazing looking recipes cross your path every day that you can’t possibly remember all of them. I’ve experimented with many different recipe organization tactics, but through it all, I always had my blue folder. This folder contained recipes I’ve been collecting since I was 10 years old. Most of them are printed from websites, and stained from use. There are pages torn from magazines, emails from aunts, and even some typewritten sheets from my youth, when I practiced typing by copying recipes from magazines.

The recipes have never been organized in anyway, and I rarely used them because it was too much of a pain to sort through the messy piles and find what I wanted. Last week, the folder finally gave up the ghost, and it was time to find a new solution.
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Friday Favorites

It’s finally Friday, and an absolutely beautiful day in the Bay. We’ve been promised some spectacular weather this weekend, and Sean and I are already dreaming about hiking in Marin tomorrow. We have tickets to the A’s game tonight, and I have an exciting Sunday dinner planned. I thought I’d jumpstart all the goodness by sharing with you some of the things I’ve been really loving this week.

Happy Girl Pickled Green Beans

1. These pickled cumin green beans were a Christmas gift from Sean. Yes, Christmas. I have no idea what on God’s green earth prevented me from opening them before now, but I was a fool, I tell you. These are a-a-a-mazing. I am imagining them chopped up in a hearty salad, topping off a perfect bloody mary, and tucked into a melty grilled cheese sandwich. You can check out the Happy Girl Kitchen Co. website to find out where you can buy them, if you’re local. If you’re not, might I suggest a trip to the Bay Area?
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Five Essential Cookbooks – And a Giveaway

Update again: We have a winner! Commenter Jen Martin will receive a copy of the cookbook of her choice. Thanks to all who read and commented. Stay tuned, as I’m sure I’ll be doing another giveaway soon.

Update: I’m extending this giveaway until Friday!

The Kitchn has been running a fun column: Their writers are sharing their top five essential cookbooks. I love cookbooks. I have a lot of them, and a constant penchant for buying more. Some people have a one in, one out rule for cookbooks, and while I have tried in the past to hold myself to that kind of a promise, I always knew from the beginning it would be an empty one. But when I started to think about which cookbooks on my shelf are truly essential, I realized that out of all the books I own, only a small handful truly fit into that category.
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A question about sardines

Sardines

I remember my dad cracking open a tin of sardines or herring, grinning with anticipation: For him, tinned fish was a special treat that I could not understand. Which doesn’t make a lot of sense, really, because I’ve always loved canned tuna. To this day I will happily eat it in tuna casserole, tuna sandwiches, macaroni and cheese, salad. I’ll add it to anything, really. But sardines, anchovies, mackerel, herring: these things have always made me squeamish. In the interest of getting over my food prejudices, though, I decided a few weeks ago to give canned sardines a try. I picked up a tin at the Bi-Rite market, and it sat in the cupboard, pressuring me daily to give it a chance. But how?
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Reflections on October Unprocessed

October Unprocessed 2011

October is over, and so is my quest to eat Unprocessed for an entire month. My quest, it was unsuccessful. Eating an entirely unprocessed diet is so much harder than I expected. I talked about some of these challenges earlier in the month: take out, snacks in the office kitchen, basic kitchen staples like chicken stock and chocolate. And these challenges didn’t get easier. We are surrounded by processed food, in places we might not even consider. And I wasn’t being as strict as some of my fellow Challenge Participants.

The hardest part was simply paying attention. Remembering. Being aware, and thoughtful. It is so easy to move through life without attention, focusing on work and relationships and family and even play, and taking in meals as mere sustenance, without care. It is so easy to put food in our bodies because we’re busy and stressed, without thinking about that food in a greater context, and not just the context of our own diets, but in the context of our communities, of the planet, of all those other things that are, inextricably, connected to what we eat. Eating well, in ways that are healthful for our bodies and our environment, requires planning and care, energy and time. And sometimes, these are the things we feel we do not have to spare.

I’m trying not to think of my October challenge as a failure, but as a starting point. Despite the many moments I slipped into thoughtless patterns of shopping, cooking, and eating, this experiment made me more aware. It’s experiments like this, and like the juice cleanse I did in September, and like reading and re-reading Michael Pollan or Eric Schlosser, that bring me back to awareness, and help me learn things about the kind of cook and eater I want to be. Changing habits doesn’t happen overnight, or even in one month. Real, life long change happens incrementally, and sometimes over and over again.

So, for me, October Unprocessed isn’t really over. The challenge to eat a diet that is sustainable, not just for the planet but for myself, is one that lasts far longer than a month. I won’t always succeed, but if I continue to try, it’s really impossible to fail.

October Unprocessed: Week One

October Unprocessed 2011

One week into my month-long attempt to avoid processed foods, and I have a confession to make: This is way harder than I thought it would be. I was under the impression that my diet was already very low in processed foods. I cook for myself, we subscribe to a CSA, we buy simple, artisan breads and natural peanut butter and fresh pasta without additives. But just a few days into October Unprocessed, I was already seeing how insidious processed food really is, and how easily it manages to sneak into my diet.
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Culinary Disasters: Gnocchi

Disastrous Gnocchi

As proof that I still encounter my fair share of disasters in the kitchen, let’s talk about gnocchi. Specifically, my attempt this past weekend to make some. I’ll just say up front, I did not eat gnocchi this weekend. This was an epic kitchen fail. In fact, it failed so hard that even my pictures didn’t turn out that great (I’m still trying to adjust to the new lighting situation in our apartment, six months in. I think it might be time to break down and buy some proper photographer’s lights). So what went wrong here?
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October Unprocessed

October Unprocessed 2011

Over the past few years, I’ve been slowly moving toward a diet based on whole, natural foods, and it gets easier and easier all the time. But there are always things that sneak into the refrigerator and onto the plate that hark back to the factory a bit more than the field. That box of penne purchased at Target, the crackers I pick up when I need an afternoon snack, or the hamburger bought from the stand down the road that probably isn’t using grass-fed, organic beef or locally made buns.

No one has to be perfect, and striving for some kind of ascetic culinary life probably isn’t very healthy, mentally or emotionally. But sometimes it can be good to step back and take stock of our real dietary habits, and to be more aware of what we’re putting into our bodies. When I read about the October Unprocessed Challenge, this sounded like a great opportunity to do just that.

Andrew Wilder at Eating Rules came up with this idea two years ago, prompted by the question, “What would happen if I went for an entire month without eating any processed food?” Last year, over 400 people participated, and this year, it looks to be growing. I decided to sign up.

Andrew’s definition of unprocessed includes anything that could be made by a person with reasonable skill in a home kitchen with readily available ingredients. I don’t know exactly what that means for me, but I’m leaning toward a definition gleaned from Michael Pollan: If a package has more than five ingredients, and you don’t know what even one of them is, it’s a processed food. I don’t know that I could make cheese in my kitchen, but I don’t necessarily consider it a processed food (although, that really depends on the cheese, or cheese product, as the case may be).

The point of this challenge isn’t to strive for perfection, or to attempt to reach some kind of holier-than-thou culinary position. It’s to spark thought and dialogue about where our food comes from, and how we relate to it. I’ll be writing about my experiences in an unprocessed kitchen over the next month, and I urge you to sign the pledge, too. Especially if you think it would be impossible. You never know unless you try, and I can’t think of anything more meaningful to try for.

Fig and Herb Salad (and a juice cleanse verdict)

Fig and Herb Salad

I finished my BluePrint Cleanse juice cleanse last Saturday, and the verdict is: totally worth it. I felt terrific: focused, calm, happy. At no point did I feel hungry, deprived, fatigued, or even cranky. The juice was super tasty, although I have to say, after three days I was ready for some new flavors. I couldn’t wait to get in my kitchen and cook some food again.

The timing of the cleanse was kind of perfect: I finished it up the day after my cast came off, so I was doubly ready to cook, to mess about with all the glorious produce we get from our CSA each week and experiment. It was the best feeling. There are a few things the cleanse experience made me realize: 1) I didn’t really know until after I finished that what it had largely been about for me was self-discipline. I needed something to bring me back into control, after a month of feeling very much that things were out of my control. 2) I love love love food. I think about food and cooking a lot. I read about food and cooking a lot. Food is kind of my life. 3) I eat a lot when I’m bored. Who doesn’t? But it’s not a great habit.
Continue reading Fig and Herb Salad (and a juice cleanse verdict)