Saturday, March 3, 2012

A 5 Minute Egg

It is something so very simple yet so delicious, a soft cooked egg. A very German breakfast food, it is traditionally served in an egg cup.


I gently simmer an egg for 5 minutes until the yolk is soft and golden and the white is firm, lovely with a sprinkle of sea salt and served with buttered toast.


I know the chickens who lay these eggs which come out in soft hues of green, blue and brown with the occasional dark brown in between.

Monday, February 6, 2012

Meyer Lemon Baby Cake

We only just planted one tiny Meyer lemon tree, and it already bears so much fruit: Lemon tree, very pretty! Now I am constantly looking for recipes that have lemon in it and ran across this one in my messy recipe box. I think I must have been holding on to it for a very long time, the newspaper clipping is yellowed and brittle. And then I baked these little yummy cakes and dusted them with powdered sugar. I bet a little whipped cream wouldn't hurt and neither would a cappuccino!


1 cup all-purpose flour
1 teaspoon baking powder
1/4 teaspoon salt
1/2 cup unsalted butter
1/2 cup sugar (divided use)
2 eggs, separated
juice of one Meyer lemon (or any other lemon)
grated peel of lemon (if not organic, please wash very well in hot water)


Preheat oven to 375 degrees. Sift together flour, baking powder and salt.
In large bowl, cream the butter; gradually adding 1/4 cup sugar until light and fluffy.
In a separate bowl, beat egg yolks until thick and light in color, stir into creamed butter. Add dry ingredients alternately with lemon juice.
In another bowl (I know, lots of bowls) using clean beaters, whip egg whites until foamy, gradually adding the remaining 1/4 cup sugar, until soft peaks form. Gently fold egg whites and lemon peel into batter. Spoon into 8 paper-lined muffin cups, filling each about 3/4 full. Bake 20 minutes or until lightly browned.



Monday, November 7, 2011

Soup with Yams, Apples and Cream

The following soup was meant to be served at my nephew's daycare. But he and all the other 2 year olds had one spoon full and spit out the rest. I chalk it up to undeveloped taste buds.

The soup was, however, enjoyed by me!

1 small onion
3 medium yams
1/2 apple
olive oil
curry powder
salt
vegetable broth
1 tbs cream or crème fraîche

Sauté onion very gently in olive oil until translucent. Add the cubed yams and apple and cook for a few more minutes. Sprinkle with a little curry powder and stir. Add enough broth to barely cover the vegetables and simmer until soft. Let cool for a few minutes and blend in blender or puree with a hand blender. Season with salt and add cream just before serving. Drizzle with olive or walnut oil.

Friday, November 4, 2011

Sweet Pickles!!

Here is something fun and easy to make. I found this recipe in an United In-Flight magazine, imagine that! I have made this with little tiny green and yellow cucumbers that I bought at the Farmer's Market and then quartered them lengthwise. I have also used the little Persian cucumbers from Trader Joe's. Next, I will try it with radishes, why not? Pickles are in....

Raw vegetables
1 cup water, piping hot out of the faucet
1/2 cup rice wine vinegar
6 tb sugar
2 1/4 ts kosher salt

Combine water, vinegar, sugar and salt and stir until sugar has dissolved. Pack the vegetables tightly in a quart container or any glass container you have laying around. Pour brine over vegetables, cover, and refrigerate. Let sit for 3 or 4 days at minimum, or a week for optimum flavor. Should be consumed quickly!

Tuesday, July 5, 2011

Simply Quinoa

Quinoa is such a great accompaniment to pretty much anything. I love that the Incas grew it so long ago. They knew even then that quinoa is high in protein, calcium and iron, a perfect food! They even fed their army with it.

The most important thing is to rinse the Quinoa in water before cooking to remove its bitter coating. I really urge you to do it, it makes all the difference.

My sister-in-law Renee has given me this wonderfully simple recipe which serves 4:

1 tb Virgin Coconut Oil (the one with the coconut flavor) or to taste
1 garlic clove, minced
1 cup Quinoa, rinsed
2 cups vegetarian broth (cubes are fine)

Melt the coconut oil in a pot, add the garlic clove and toast until fragrant. Add rinsed Quinoa and stir adding the broth. Bring to a boil and simmer covered for 20 minutes or until all the liquid is absorbed. Serve warm and enjoy!

Thursday, June 9, 2011

A Nice Little Lentil Soup

I haven't posted anything in a while, but I thought the lentil soup I made today deserves a little air time. I don't have a recipe as such, but here it goes:

I cook tiny black organic lentils in vegetarian broth until tender, maybe 30 minutes or so. In the meantime, I cut half a red onion into small dice (use only a quarter if onion is big) and sauté it in olive oil with a few shakes of red pepper flakes. Then I add 3 tbs or so tomato paste and a few pinches of curry powder and continue sautéing until fragrant. Now I pour in some filtered water until the mixture has a nice soupy consistency. I toss in 2-3 cups of the cooked and cooled lentils and let it simmer until the flavors come together. I season the soup with sea salt and serve with a little chopped chives sprinkled on top, that is it!

Enjoy......

Thursday, August 26, 2010

More Cilantro!


I made this stew for my friend Brigitte on her birthday. We tried to convince Stefan, who desperately hates cilantro, that there was absolutely no cilantro in it, so Stefan served himself a large portion and was almost in tears when he tasted it, but as a good German, he finished bravely what was on his plate!

The recipe comes from my absolutely favorite food writer Ruth Reichl, specifically out of her book "Tender at the Bone". It's highly recommended, the book and the stew.

I personally use only 2 cloves of garlic and pork tenderloin from Trader Joe's.

The Swallow's Pork and Tomatillo Stew
Serves 6

• 1/4 cup vegetable oil
• 8 large cloves garlic, peeled
• 2 pounds lean pork, cut in cubes
• salt
• pepper
• 1 bottle dark beer
• 12 ounces orange juice
• 1 pound tomatillos, quartered
• 1 pound Roma tomatoes, peeled and chopped
• 1 large onions, coarsely chopped
• 1 bunch cilantro, chopped
• 2 jalapeño peppers, chopped
• 1 14-ounce can black beans
• juice of 1 lime
• 1 cup sour cream

Heat oil in a large casserole. Add garlic cloves. Add pork, in batches so as not to crowd, and brown on all sides. Remove pork as the pieces get brown on all sides. Remove pork as the pieces get brown and add salt and pepper.

Meanwhile, put beer and orange juice in another pot. Add tomatillos and tomatoes, bring to a boil, lower heat, and cook about 20 minutes, or until tomatillos are soft. Set aside.

When all pork is browned, pour off all but about a tablespoon of the oil in the pan. Add coarsely chopped onions and cook about 8 minutes, or until soft. Stir, scraping up bits of meat. Add chopped cilantro and pepper and salt to taste.

Put pork back into pan. Add tomatillo mixture and chopped jalapeños. Bring to a boil, lower heat, cover partially and cook about 2 hours.

Taste for seasoning. Add black bean and cook 10 minutes more.

Stir lime juice into sour cream.

Serve with rice and with sour cream-lime juice mixture on the side as a topping.

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