Another great thing to take on Thanksgiving.
Mix in a Pan:
Any vegetable on hand chopped roughly, such as:
Potatoes
Carrots
Green beans
peeled and quartered shallots
whole unpeeled garlic cloves
pour on some olive oil, salt, pepper and any fresh herbs on hand
roast at 400* for about 20 minutes.
tasha.
Saturday, November 22, 2008
Late Fall Roasted Vegetables
Posted by
Jesus Camp
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4:48 PM
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Ginger Apple Crisp/Galette
The perfect thing to bring on Thanksgiving! (Shout out to KatyJ)
You could easily do this without the galette-- just put the apple mixture topped by the oats mixture in a buttered pan.
First:
Peel, core, and chop 3-4 large to medium apples
Place in a bowl and toss lightly with:
1 T. grated ginger
1 T. chopped crystalized ginger
a large handful of raspberries or cranberries (raw or dried)
a little less than 1/2 C. sugar
a good shake of cinnamon
2 T. Flour
Second:
In another bowl mix with fingers:
1 C. oats
1/2 C. brown sugar
3 T. Flour
1/4 C. butter
a good handful of chopped walnuts or pecans
Now:
Mix with a fork in a bowl:
2.5 C. flour
1t. sugar
1t. salt
1/4 C. water
2/3 C. oil
mix until it comes together as a dough and then roll out a big circle on a piece of foil.
dump the apples in the center and then pull up the edges of the dough around them-- creating a bowl effect. top with oat mixture and slide the whole thing onto a cookie sheet. Bake for about an hour @ 350*
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Jesus Camp
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4:30 PM
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Wednesday, November 19, 2008
Stamppot
.
Let me introduce to you the finest that dutch cuisine has to offer... well traveled as you are, dear reader, you might think of frikadellen, kroketten or - what the heck - hash brownies. But let me tell you, if there is one thing worth recreating it is stamppot: a refined dish made of mashed potatoes and a green vegetable of your choice. traditionally green cabbage. we used spinach.
1/2 kg of potatoes
1 kg of spinach
salt
nutmeg
butter
bouillon
flour
Make mashed potatos: Bring water with potatoes to a boil, peel them, mash them, add some heated milk, butter, salt and a dash of nutmeg. Meanwhile wash the spinach and sautee it briefly. And now... mix it all together. fun!
Traditionally, stamppot is topped off with some gravy and served with rookworst. We used organic bratwurst instead, which was a fine substiute.
To make the "gravy", I simply melted some butter, stirred in flour and bouillon until it had the right consistency.
Great comfort food!
Posted by
Jesus Camp
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10:12 AM
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Labels: comfort, potatoes, spinach, vegetarian
Thursday, November 13, 2008
more on the cold season
ok, true, I am a bit obsessed about this cold I got. but seriously, who wouldn't appreciate advice from mother nature, even if they are not related to eating? They are related to food! yes, you got it. I am talking about inhaling to attack the nasty stuffy nose. Here is how I have defeated any sinus infection et al growing up:
1 onion
1 bag of chamomile tea
2-3 drops of tiger oil (or a tiny bit of tiger balm, if you don't have the oil)
a large pot of boiling water
Basically, you are making a huge pot of onion-chamomile tea with a hint of tiger balm, put a towel over it and your head underneath it and breath for as long as it is hot. My mom made us do this 3 times a day and we all know, we better listen!
Posted by
Jesus Camp
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2:04 AM
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Labels: chamomile, inhale, onion, tiger balm
Tuesday, November 11, 2008
Chicken soup
It has gotten cold here. And with the first fall of the temperatures comes inevitably... a cold. I have been sniffling for a week now and I am planning to get rid of this cold by making the ultimate cure: chicken soup. Ingredients:
- Chicken with bones and skin
- Your greens: parsley, a thick slice of celery root, carrots, parsnip, some leek (you can buy this here already packaged, because people actually still make their own soups)
- Garlic
- 1 yellow onion with skin
- peppercorns
- 1 tomato
- and my personal favourite herb Liebstöckl (I found these translations: Lovage, Love Parsley, Garden lovage, Bladder seed)
Bring the water to a boil with the chicken already in it (otherwise you don't get all the good stuff). Cut your onion in half and roast it on the stove. Keeping its skin will add color.

Once the soup is done, skim some of the fat from the chickenskin off the top. Drain your soup into another bowl and throw in some delicious noodles and the sliced carrot you saved earlier. Boil until tender. Add chicken meat, and finally before serving, add some finely chopped parsley. For an extra health kick you could grate some fresh ginger into your individual soup bowls. Eat it. Feel better.
n*
Posted by
Jesus Camp
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4:58 AM
1 comments
Labels: carrots, celery root, chicken soup, garlic, leek, Liebstöckl, love parsley, noodles, parsley, parsnip, peppercorns, tomato sauce
Monday, November 10, 2008
mini Orange Cakes
This was my first successfully executed dessert in Vienna. I'm pretty darn proud given the measuring restraints and the long hours of figuring out the difference between baking soda and baking powder (in German).
2-3 oranges
12 tbs. brown sugar
6 tbs. melted butter
Preheat oven to 350°F. Line the bottom of 4 - 6 custard cups
with 2 tbs. brown sugar followed by 1 tbs. melted butter.
Zest one of the oranges. Working with 1 orange at a time, and using a sharp knife, cut a slice off both ends of the orange, and then thickly slice off the peel and pith in strips, following the contour of the fruit. Holding the orange in one hand, cut along either side of each section to release it from the membrane, letting the sections drop into a bowl. (This was messy. The sharper the knife, the better)
Combine wet ingredients with electric mixer:
8 Tbs. (1 stick) unsalted butter, at room
temperature
1/2 cup granulated sugar
Grated zest of 1 orange
2 eggs
Beat on medium-high speed until creamy.
Add the eggs one at a time, beating well after each addition.
1 cup all-purpose flour
1 tsp. baking powder
1/2 tsp. baking soda
1/4 tsp. salt
Using a rubber spatula, fold the flour mixture into the butter mixture. Stir in 1/4 cup heavy cream and 1 tsp. vanilla extract cream until thoroughly incorporated. Spoon the batter over the oranges, dividing it evenly among the custard cups.
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Jesus Camp
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11:47 AM
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Sunday, November 2, 2008
Roasted Pumpkin Soup
Soup is comfort, soup is easy and in the season of pumpkins... Pumpkin Soup. (Kürbis) I chose to use a soup-friendly pumpkin here in Vienna known as the Ambercup, but I also like Hokkaido. Ambercups are smallish, orange and have a dry, sweet taste.
Preheat oven to 400° F, and get yourself these things:
1 Pumpkin (~1 lb or medium sized), halfed and seeded
2 Tbsp. Olive Oil
2 Celery Stalks, roughly chopped
2 Carrots, roughly chopped
1 Shallot, roughly chopped
1 Garlic clove, minced
1/2 Tsp. ground Nutmeg
3 - 4 cups Broth
*Heavy cream, Apple cider (optional)
Slice the specimen in half, spoon out the guts and place cut-side-down in a cassarole dish. Fill the dish with about a cup of water so that it does not dry out or burn. Bake at 400° F for around 45 minutes, or until a paring knife glides through the thickest part. Let cool (or treat yourself to a game of hot potato) and scoop the flesh from the outer skin. Set roasted pumpkin aside.In a large pot heat olive oil, and cook shallots for 5 min. Create a hot spot in the pot by pushing the shallots to the side, and add minced garlic. Cook for 1/2 min (do not burn garlic). Add carrots, celery and sauté for 5 min. Add 3 cups of broth, bring to a boil and then reduce heat and simmer until soft. Add pumpkin/salt & pepper/nutmeg. Puree until smooth. Add more broth if soup is too thick.
*You can also add a bit of heavy cream and apple cider for a more sweet and creamy soup.
Garnish with pumpkin seed oil and serve.
Posted by
Jesus Camp
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1:31 AM
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Labels: ambercup, aple cider, carrots, celery, hokkaido, pumpkin, shallots, soup, vegetarian