This is one of my favorite recipes and I didn't even steal it from someone else's blog!
Last year Ben and I were part of a food co-op supporting local farming through our church. It was a CSA: Community Supported Agriculture, which is a fantastic way to buy fresh produce. The small farms have supporters (eaters :) ) and we, the eaters, have fresh, affordable products without the middlemen. Check out this site for more info, CSA.
Every Sunday we would get a bag full of whatever was harvested on Saturday (still with roots and dirt attached-yum!) It would then be up to us to determine what recipe to use to cook up all of our freshly plucked produce. Sometimes, the recipe hunting was easy, choosing a salad for our arugula, strawberries, and goat cheese. However, sometimes the bag would be filled with leeks, fennel, kale: all sorts of things I had never eaten, let alone prepared! But our farmers were helpful: sending out tasty recipes and links. That's how I discovered leek soup on epiciurious.com.
And before we proceed with the recipe, if you have reservations about using butter, real butter, then perhaps this is not the post for you. :)
And if you click on the link above, you will see that I am omitting the cream portion of the soup. It takes extra time to whip the cream and then let it sit for 2 hours and it's also extra calories that I don't think really add a substantial amount of flavor to the dish so I leave it out...and I do know that it sounds crazy to care about calories in cream when I use over a stick of butter for this recipe but there it is!
Ingredients
-Serves 8
-8 tablespoons (1 stick) unsalted butter (this is more than epicurious calls for)
-2 pounds crimini-baby bella mushrooms cut into 1/4-inch-thick slices (10 1/2 cups)(though I use whatever mushrooms are on sale at the farmers market, probably baby button and the soup always turns out great)
-3 large leeks, white and pale green parts only (the dark green parts are bitter), cut into 1/4-inch dices or rings (2 1/2 cups)
-6 tablespoons all-purpose flour
-6 cups low-sodium chicken broth
-1 teaspoon fresh thyme
-1 1/2 teaspoons salt
-3/4 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper
Preparation
The cleaning of both mushrooms and leeks requires a little more than just rinsing. Mushrooms are always recommended to be gently washed, sometimes only wiped down with a damp paper towel, having not undergone any running water. (Some people recommend not washing them at all but my husband is an epidemiologist and I am a nurse practitioner who actually treated someone today for a parasitic infection so I always wash.) I rinse all of my mushrooms (for this recipe) under the tap, using my fingers to scrub off the visible dirt (which is always a lot when I shop at the farmers market) and then lay them out on a towel, patting them dry before slicing them. This is where husbands come in handy: they can pat dry and chop will you rinse to decrease the opportunity for the mushrooms to sit in water.
As for the leeks: dirt collects all throughout their stalks, not just at the bottoms. So even after rinsing and slicing the leeks a lot of gritty dirt remains. The best (and least tedious) manner for cleaning the leeks is to fill a large bowl with water, pour all the leeks into the bowl (they will mostly float), and stir vigorously with your fingers to let the dirt settle to the bottom. Then skim the top of the water, removing all of the leeks and placing them in a colander to drain.
Cooking
Heat 2 T. of butter in a 4-quart stock pot over moderately high heat until hot but not smoking. Add 1/2 of mushrooms to pot, stirring occasionally, until lightly browned. I usually add another T. of butter during the stirring. Then add 2 more T. of butter before adding the last 1/2 of mushrooms, again stirring occasionally (dropping in another T. of butter) until all mushrooms are lightly browned.
Heat remaining 2 tablespoons butter in same stock pot over moderately high heat. Add leeks and cover, stirring often, until soft (about 5 minutes). Then add back cooked mushrooms, sprinkle on the flour and stir until flour is evenly combined. Then add stock, thyme, S & P. Bring to a boil while stirring often and then reduce heat to low, set lid ajar, and simmer for 20 minutes.
Serve immediately. (Though I think the leftovers are even better!)
Wednesday, March 31, 2010
Wednesday, March 24, 2010
When the cat is away...
Ben went out of town this last weekend for a bachelor party which left Chelsea and I at home to rule the roost for several days since she was visiting for a school internship. We haven't had any good girl time in a while so you might imagine that in HOTlanta we would have painted the town red together, one of us married, the other engaged, without our men in tow :) And we did just that: jump starting our wild weekend with walking to the local pizza place coming home at 7:30, getting into our pajamas, eating low fat ice cream, and making "healthy" granola and writing a blog (see previous blog).
The sisters: Carissa, Chelsea, & Carly
But lest I should disappoint you with our weekend festivities: read about our Saturday. Bridal shop at 10:00 for Chelsea's final fitting (it was the most beautiful gown I have ever seen but no pictures...must be a surprise for the groom...p.s. if you are looking for a wedding dress in Atlanta check out Bridal Coture by Ruby V) then on to the mall to find bridesmaids dresses, shower gifts and general perusing. The shop's we perused in: Urban Outfitters (looking for ideas on how to make stuff ourselves), Banana Republic, J. Crew, Macy's, Crate and Barrel, Anthropologie (at this point I was looking for a band-aid because my knee was bleeding), Victoria's Secret, Ann Taylor Loft, Benetton, Williams Sonoma, and The Limited. We only purchased items in Crate and Barrel (which I am returning), Williams Sonoma, and the Limited where we found the bridesmaids dresses...SO pretty! While we were carefully making decisions about the dresses we got a bite to eat at the Chick-Fil-A: grilled chicken sandwich, fruit and coke zero X 2. Clearly, we are sisters.
Then onto home improvement and gift making: Homegoods (my new favorite store that I didn't buy anything at), Hancock Fabrics, Michaels, Home Depot, Hobby Lobby, Walmart (which I feel ambivalently about), World Market, Bed Bath and Beyond, and back to Walmart (which I was feeling less ambivalently about at this point), Target, another BB&B, and Lowes. We only purchased at Hobby Lobby, World Market, Walmart (twice-sort of guiltily), and Lowes. Then back to the apartment with Greek food to go. We then spent the evening crafting, making wedding gifts, trying on dresses and watching How to Lose a Guy in 10 days with occasional flips to March Madness Basketball (which, by the way, I am currently in 1st place with my bracket :)
The craziest thing I did all weekend was take out a credit card at The Limited to get a good discount on the dresses (which after googling ways to improve your credit I realized this actually was a little bit of a crazy idea after all). And I ended up spending less than $50 on everything I purchased.
Wish Chelsea were around for more whirlwind weekends in the ATL! Holla!
The sisters: Carissa, Chelsea, & Carly
But lest I should disappoint you with our weekend festivities: read about our Saturday. Bridal shop at 10:00 for Chelsea's final fitting (it was the most beautiful gown I have ever seen but no pictures...must be a surprise for the groom...p.s. if you are looking for a wedding dress in Atlanta check out Bridal Coture by Ruby V) then on to the mall to find bridesmaids dresses, shower gifts and general perusing. The shop's we perused in: Urban Outfitters (looking for ideas on how to make stuff ourselves), Banana Republic, J. Crew, Macy's, Crate and Barrel, Anthropologie (at this point I was looking for a band-aid because my knee was bleeding), Victoria's Secret, Ann Taylor Loft, Benetton, Williams Sonoma, and The Limited. We only purchased items in Crate and Barrel (which I am returning), Williams Sonoma, and the Limited where we found the bridesmaids dresses...SO pretty! While we were carefully making decisions about the dresses we got a bite to eat at the Chick-Fil-A: grilled chicken sandwich, fruit and coke zero X 2. Clearly, we are sisters.
Then onto home improvement and gift making: Homegoods (my new favorite store that I didn't buy anything at), Hancock Fabrics, Michaels, Home Depot, Hobby Lobby, Walmart (which I feel ambivalently about), World Market, Bed Bath and Beyond, and back to Walmart (which I was feeling less ambivalently about at this point), Target, another BB&B, and Lowes. We only purchased at Hobby Lobby, World Market, Walmart (twice-sort of guiltily), and Lowes. Then back to the apartment with Greek food to go. We then spent the evening crafting, making wedding gifts, trying on dresses and watching How to Lose a Guy in 10 days with occasional flips to March Madness Basketball (which, by the way, I am currently in 1st place with my bracket :)
The craziest thing I did all weekend was take out a credit card at The Limited to get a good discount on the dresses (which after googling ways to improve your credit I realized this actually was a little bit of a crazy idea after all). And I ended up spending less than $50 on everything I purchased.
Wish Chelsea were around for more whirlwind weekends in the ATL! Holla!
Friday, March 19, 2010
Granola!
My friend, LeAna, who blogs here is one of the most creative people I know. She also really likes healthy food and even healthier versions of granola :) She posted this recipe on her blog. I was wanting to make it for forever and then my sister, Chelsea, made it and said that it was fabulous and so I am making it right now! I didn't change the recipe at all or write it down for you in a wittier fashion. I am simply transcribing her recipe and using a really old digital camera to take pictures that aren't half as good as hers. :)
If you are still reading, the recipe is so good and "healthier" because it isn't made with oil like every other granola recipe and is therefore lower in calories. This recipe makes a lot so I halved it for our family of two.
Ingredients:
1 1/2 cups dark brown sugar
1/2 cup water
8 cups old-fashioned rolled oats
2 cups slivered almonds
cinnamon
1/2 cup milled flax seed
2 teaspoons vanilla extract
2 teaspoons almond extract
1 teaspoon salt
Pre-heat oven to 300 degrees
Melt water and brown sugar in microwave for 3 minutes or until all the sugar is dissolved.
In a large bowl combine oats, almonds, cinnamon and flax seed.
Stir extracts and salt into dissolved sugar mixture. Pour into oats mixture and stir in until oats are coated. Spread out onto two greased cookie sheets.
Bake for 20 minutes, remove from oven and stir granola around. Return to oven for another 20 minutes and then remove and let cool on cookie sheet where granola will continue to harden up. LeAna says burnt edges around the granola will ruin the whole batch so watch carefully at the end.
Enjoy!
If you are still reading, the recipe is so good and "healthier" because it isn't made with oil like every other granola recipe and is therefore lower in calories. This recipe makes a lot so I halved it for our family of two.
Ingredients:
1 1/2 cups dark brown sugar
1/2 cup water
8 cups old-fashioned rolled oats
2 cups slivered almonds
cinnamon
1/2 cup milled flax seed
2 teaspoons vanilla extract
2 teaspoons almond extract
1 teaspoon salt
Pre-heat oven to 300 degrees
Melt water and brown sugar in microwave for 3 minutes or until all the sugar is dissolved.
In a large bowl combine oats, almonds, cinnamon and flax seed.
Stir extracts and salt into dissolved sugar mixture. Pour into oats mixture and stir in until oats are coated. Spread out onto two greased cookie sheets.
Bake for 20 minutes, remove from oven and stir granola around. Return to oven for another 20 minutes and then remove and let cool on cookie sheet where granola will continue to harden up. LeAna says burnt edges around the granola will ruin the whole batch so watch carefully at the end.
Enjoy!
Sunday, March 7, 2010
Drapes!
I just finished up my first major project involving my sewing machine! Benny bought me this sewing machine as his wedding present from him to me. He didn't purchase it until we had already been married for six months and I didn't open the box for another three. It took about three hours to figure out how to thread the bobbin and then I didn't use the machine for another two months or so (and had to relearn how to thread the bobbin). Whew!
So to date (nearly a year since I opened my sewing machine box) I have hemmed our shower curtains and made two napkins. Napkins! I was beginning to despair...my dreams of getting discovered as 'middle' fashion designer were starting to seem grandiose...and then...drapes! I made drapes!
Ben's grandmother passed away early this year. She was a phenomenal seamstress. So when we were sorting out her apartment we discovered her old sewing box filled with a hundred or so different colors and types of thread, sewing tools and fabric...beautiful fabric. Her son, Walt, had brought her back bolts of fabric during the war and it was all fabulous. And it was generously pushed into my arms. The fabric I chose to use for our drapes was a teal silk.
And then, because we are renting, and because the fabric is so beautiful, I didn't want to cut and hem the fabric to the appropriate length. So borrowing an idea from bustling a wedding dress, I bustled the ends of the fabric to preserve the length in case of future longer drapery needs.
So, cheers to my first success (completion) and to many more projects to come!
And thanks to Benny for being such a good sport (helping me with the curtain rod) on a Saturday morning. :)
So to date (nearly a year since I opened my sewing machine box) I have hemmed our shower curtains and made two napkins. Napkins! I was beginning to despair...my dreams of getting discovered as 'middle' fashion designer were starting to seem grandiose...and then...drapes! I made drapes!
Ben's grandmother passed away early this year. She was a phenomenal seamstress. So when we were sorting out her apartment we discovered her old sewing box filled with a hundred or so different colors and types of thread, sewing tools and fabric...beautiful fabric. Her son, Walt, had brought her back bolts of fabric during the war and it was all fabulous. And it was generously pushed into my arms. The fabric I chose to use for our drapes was a teal silk.
And then, because we are renting, and because the fabric is so beautiful, I didn't want to cut and hem the fabric to the appropriate length. So borrowing an idea from bustling a wedding dress, I bustled the ends of the fabric to preserve the length in case of future longer drapery needs.
So, cheers to my first success (completion) and to many more projects to come!
And thanks to Benny for being such a good sport (helping me with the curtain rod) on a Saturday morning. :)
Wednesday, March 3, 2010
My first real post
So...I really wanted my first REAL post to be about something creative/crafty/culinary that I had done. That way (because I had mentioned in first post how I am not particularly creative/crafty/culinary) you would all think, "Wow, not only is she actually really talented, she's modest too." But, alas, the first post isn't even about me! It's about Benny and what a fantastic chef he is. He made lamb curry...from scratch...from an actual Indian recipe...on a Tuesday. And all I did was make the rice...in the rice maker. Included in the recipe were ingredients such as cardamon pods (which I had never heard of before but is in the ginger family). And it was fabulous!
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