Tag Archives: Balsamic

How to Be a Master Salad-Dresser

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Does anybody else out there watch America’s Test Kitchen?  It’s on one of my pbs channels (yes, ONE of them, I get like six, what up with that?) on Saturday and Sunday afternoons, so you may be led to believe that it is totally square to watch.  It doesn’t have any flashy celebrachefs or contests or bizarre ingredient challenges, so don’t think this is a Food Network brainchild.  In fact, it is actually the show counterpart to the fabulous amazing wonderful magazine Cook’s Illustrated.  So they show you the verybestmostperfect way to cook a certain dish and explain all the experiments they went through to find that method.  And there is also always some kind of product lineup review.  Anyways, suffice it to say it is amazing and wonderful and I always learn awesome new tips and tricks.

A few weekends back I watched the show and they made a simple vinaigrette dressing.  Now about two years ago I learned a delicious and easy dressing from my friend’s mom that basically consists of dijon mustard, oil, and vinegar.  She has this great method of just tossing all the ingredients into the salad, eyeballing the amounts.  So sometimes it’s an especially tangy salad, or maybe a bit more spicy, depending on how the ratios end up.  I absolutely love it.

But what I learned that was especially valuable on this particular episode of Teach Me All the Ways to Be a Goddess Cook America’s Test Kitchen was how to make a masterfully emulsified salad dressing.  Now this may not sound important or notable, as it sure didn’t to me, buttttt apparently a well emulsified dressing is actually one of the best ways to get that light and underdressed, yet perfectly coated effect that restaurants always do so well.  Each piece of the salad has all the flavors of the dressing; you don’t end up with one oily bite and then one vinegary bite.  Instead, every bite is perfect.

So what’s the secret?  Don’t shudder… I know you will anyways if you’re an American reader…. it’s mayonnaise.  Yep, apparently the yolk in an egg is a masterful emulsifier (even more than mustard, which is also helpful).  So the egg in mayo is perfect.

I have definitely been raised as a no-mayo girl, so believe me, the idea of regularly ingesting mayonnaise makes me a little sick to my stomach.  However, you will be happy to know that it just takes a little bit to get the dressing to emulsify well.  And I use vegan mayo and it still gets the job done (don’t ask me how…).

SO.  Without further ado, herein lies the secret to perfect dressing every time: a babyspoonful of mayo (vegan or otherwise).  And here are the steps I took most recently:

1. OH NO THE MAYO
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2. More mustard than mayo (these measurements are noooot very exact)
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3. Mmm mmm drown those condiments in balsamic.
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4.  Add the pepper and fancy salt (I will never go back to regular salt when it comes to cooking.  For baking, I’ll use iodized raingirl kind.)
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5. Whip that sucker together
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6.  Add the oil of the gods, the oil of olives
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7.  Whisk again.  They did it in this order on the television show, so I will forever whip everything together before the oil.  I think it makes a difference in the emulsification?
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8.  Dress your salad!  Give it something fancy to wear!
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No, this is not the most beautiful salad ever, I made it in five minutes so don’t judge.  However, it is tangy and well-dressed so it can go out and paint the town red. And there you go.  Thank you America’s Test Kitchen for making me the best salad dresser this side of the Rockies.  Or at least a contender for that title.

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The Fungus Among Us

Fungus

For some reason I’ve had all of these old high school songs stuck in my head.  As in, the ones that I listened to over and over again when I was sixteen.  For instance:

Thirteen- Wilco cover

and

Colorblind- Counting Crows

What’s up with that?  This is not the season for the drama of Adam Duritz and his crazy dreadlocks.  This is summertime and I should be revisiting a totally different genre of song!

For whatever reason my ipod is stuck on rewind, but I can tell you that my kitchen is most certainly not.  Well, not completely.  See, I revisited the old “utilize the rice cooker as much as possible” game, but I’ve stepped it up a notch.  This time I decided to bust out the wonderful portobello (portabella?) mushroom alongside my typical rice fare.  Yes, I am moving into the future.

Garlic

I had a lovely large portobello in my fridge that I snuck away from my parent’s house a few weekends ago.  Luckily it held up pretty well.  But I guess that shouldn’t be surprising, what with it being fungus and all.

Anyways, I know that a lot of times these suckers get used as hamburger replacements for the non-meat-eaters, but since I had no buns and wasn’t really feeling burger-ey, I decided to go another route.  Next time I will do some hamburger experiments, but this time I wanted to try a stuffed portobello.

Portobello

Since I’ve never made one before (see, I told you, moving forward into the future despite my backward-looking music inclinations), I didn’t know that you’re supposed to take out the stem and clean out the cap.  So, I guess you can’t really call it a “stuffed” portobello.  But I liked the addition of the cap, and why waste perfectly good mushroom meat?

This was a completely quick and pretty hands-off recipe, which is always good by my standards.  The rice takes care of itself, the onions and garlic are easy to saute, and the portobello just happily cooks away in the oven.  Gives you lots of time to catch up on other vices (internet? tv? gossiping? listening to embarrassing music?).

Onions

“Stuffed” Portobello Mushroom
Print
Recipe type: Dinner
Author: Ashley @ The Drunk Squash
Prep time: 5 mins
Cook time: 20 mins
Total time: 25 mins
Serves: 1-2
What Do You Need?
  • Portobello
  • Portobello cap
  • olive oil
  • balsamic vinegar
  • salt
  • pepper
  • Rice
  • 1/2 cup rice
  • 1 cup water
  • 2 tsp black pepper
  • 2 tsp salt
  • 2 tsp cayenne pepper
  • 1 medium onion
  • 2 cloves garlic
  • olive oil
Make it Happen
  1. Preheat oven to 375F and then drizzle the portobello cap with olive oil, balsamic, salt, and pepper. Stick it in the oven for about fifteen minutes.
  2. In the meantime, put rice, water, peppers, and salt in the rice cooker. Give it a good mix and then turn the sucker on.
  3. While both the rice and the portobello are cooking you can chop your onion and garlic.
  4. First add the onion to a pan with a drizzle of olive oil until it begins to turn translucent.
  5. When the onions are almost done you can add the garlic.
  6. When the rice is finished, throw it in the pan with the onions and garlic and mix it all up.
  7. Finally, pull the portobello out of the oven and put a few hardy scoops of the rice mixture right on top.

 

Stuffed

And there she is, a recipe for “stuffed” portobellos.  You can always remove the stems and clean out the cap if you want to remove those quotation marks, but I actually liked the extra meatiness.  It makes a really filling, delicious meal.
And now, if you’ll excuse me, I’m off to listen to old embarrassing playlists.

Asparagus Prevails

Asparagus

I got a new CSA box yesterday chock full of kale, chard, salad mix, cilantro, asparagus, oranges, and beans!  It’s always exciting when every second Wednesday rolls around, I feel like it’s Christmas or mail day.  A gift!  For me!  And it’s nice because I prepay every two months, so it’s not like I’m shelling out the money each time I have to pick up a box.  It truly feels like present-unwrapping time.

Anyways, I was happy to get asparagus because I haven’t had those yummy stems in a while.  My love of asparagus does not go back very far.  Up until a few years ago I avoided them at all costs, in fact.  But then, one fine day, I had some grilled asparagus that had been marinated in balsamic and olive oil.  Holy lord, what a revelation!  So now I go back to that simple preparation whenever I get asparagus on my hands.  It’s quick, delicious, and easy-peasy.

Furikake

This time, I wanted some protein, so I cracked an egg over top of everything.  It picked up the balsamic’s bite and ended up being a delicious addition.  An even better addition was using furikake seasoning.  This fabulous mix of seaweed and sesame seeds is a must-have in the kitchen, especially if you’re a rice eater.  I put it in more than just rice, though.  Somehow it makes its way into my soups, burritos, on top of eggs, in sandwiches.  It’s just straight up divine, so head to your grocery store’s “Ethnic Food” section (ridiculous title… but you know what I mean) and check it out.

 

Simple Asparagus and Egg
Ingredients:
- handful of asparagus with bottoms snapped off
-balsamic vinegar
-olive oil
-sea salt
-pepper
-egg
-furikake seasoning (yuuum, if you don’t have this stuff go to your grocery store and get it NOW)

CloseUp

Make it Happen:
1.  Preheat oven to 500F
2.  Place asparagus in a pan or in a quickly-folded tin foil tray.
3.  Pour a dash of balsamic and olive oil over the asparagus.  Then season with salt and pepper.
4.  Place asparagus in oven and let it cook for ten minutes or so, then check to see if you can stick a fork through the thickest stem’s bottom.
5.  When the fork easily slides in, crack an egg over top of the asparagus and close oven back up.  Keep an eye on the egg and when it’s nicely cooked through pull everything out of the oven.
6.  Season with furikake and then DEVOUR

Meal

Anyways, like I said, this is an easy recipe, but I promise that it really delivers the goods.  I added a slice of bread with my Alterna-Pesto slathered on it for good measure.  After meals like this all I can say is thank goodness I finally grew up and started eating my greens, delishhhh.