It’s not easy, making greens

NaBloPoMo 2010When our Thanksgiving hostess originally sent out my cooking assignment, she didn’t notice that one of the recipes had a box of stuffing in it. They’re a mostly gluten-free household, so I set about trying to find a replacement dish. (With prior approval, of course. I’m not about to unilaterally change the Thanksgiving menu.) I was watching the Thanksgiving episode of “Throwdown” while I was doing said thinking about side dishes, and Bobby Flay’s Brussels sprouts with pomegranates caught my eye. I’ve never actually eaten a Brussels sprout, but the dish looked so festive and sounded kind of tasty. So I emailed a link to Chloe and said, “How about this?” She got back to me pretty quickly to say the kids wouldn’t eat them but to make them anyway. Almost immediately afterward, her husband sent another reply saying, pretty simply, No Brussels Sprouts.

So I broke out the Mark Bittman and found a recipe for Rich Spinach Pie, which I turned into a rich spinach casserole. It looks pretty much like creamed spinach, but it doesn’t have any cream cheese in it. Which may or may not be a prerequisite for creamed spinach. I don’t know. I do know that it’s not much fun to pick through and de-stem 2 pounds of spinach. Which is why I encourage the use of child labor.

Spinach Kids

Rich Spinach Casserole
Adapted from “How to Cook Everything.”
2 pounds spinach, trimmed of thick stems and washed well
1 medium onion, chopped
3 eggs, lightly beaten
1/2 cup cream
1 cup grated Parmesan cheese
black pepper
1/2 cup fresh bread crumbs (I’m using a gluten-free bread)
2 tablespoons butter

Heat oven to 375 degrees. Bring a large pot of water to a boil and salt it. Add the spinach and onion and cook for about a minute, until the spinach wilts. Drain thoroughly and cook a bit, then squeeze out as much of the water you can and chop it.

Put the spinach and onion in a bowl with the garlic, cream, eggs and about half the Parmesan. Mix well, then add salt and pepper to taste.

Pour the spinach into a greased casserole dish, then top with more Parmesan and breadcrumbs. Dot with butter. Bake until the mixture is hot and set and the top is brown, about 20 minutes. Serve hot, warm or at room temperature.

The green beans were much less work to process, so I didn’t enlist the children on this one. I parboiled the beans and then shocked them in some ice water, let them dry off and put them in a freezer bag. The bacon is in a separate bag within that bag, and the shallot-cider sauce is in a half-pint jar. I’ll warm it all up and toss it together just before eatin’ time tomorrow.

Green Beans with Shallots, Apple Cider and Bacon
from “Southern Living,” I think
2 quarts water
1 1/2 teaspoons salt, divided
1 1/4 pounds fresh green beans, trimmed
2 slices applewood-smoked bacon
1/2 cup chopped shallots (about 4 medium)
2 cloves garlic, minced
1/2 cup unfiltered apple cider
1/2 cup unsalted chicken stock
1 tablespoon chopped fresh parsley
1/4 teaspoons ground black pepper

In a Dutch oven, combine 2 quarts water and 1 tsp salt; bring to a boil. Add beans; cook 8 minutes or until tender. Drain.

In a large skillet, cook bacon over medium heat until crisp. Using a slotted spoon, remove bacon from pan and drain on paper towels. Reserve 2 tablespoons bacon drippings in skillet. Add shallots and garlic; cook 2 minutes or until tender. Slowly add apple cider and chicken stock. Bring to a boil over medium-high heat. Cook 2 minutes or until mixture has reduced to 2/3 cup. Add beans; cook 3 minutes or until thoroughly heated.

Crumble bacon; sprinkle bacon, remaining 1/2 tsp salt, parsley and black pepper over beans.

A gluten-free and ultra-chocolatey dessert

NaBloPoMo 2010I mentioned yesterday that the price of almond flour had stymied my efforts to make a gluten-free Thanksgiving dessert. As it turns out, I had in my possession a recipe for a flourless chocolate cake that doesn’t require anything but eggs, chocolate and butter. It’s in Cook’s Illustrated’s “The Best Recipe,” which calls for chopped chocolate and tells you to cut the butter into pieces. I’m sure there’s a very good reason for that, but I opted for chocolate chips and I didn’t cut the butter. And it looks like it turned out fine.
Flourless Chocolate Cake

Ultimate Flourless Chocolate Cake
Adapted from “The Best Recipe.”
8 large eggs, cold
16 ounces semisweet chocolate chips
2 sticks unsalted butter

Adjust oven rack to lower-middle position and heat oven to 325 degrees. Line bottom of 8-inch springform pan with parchment and grease pan sides — the greasing is a great task for a 5-year-old helper. Cover pan underneath and along sides with heavy-duty foil and set in a large roasting pan. Bring a kettle of water to boil.

Beat the eggs in the bowl of your trusty KitchenAid mixer with the whisk attachment until volume doubles, about 5 minutes. (This can be done with a handheld mixer, too, but I think it might make your arm fall off.)

Meanwhile, melt chocolate and butter in a double-boiler over simmering water until smooth and very warm, stirring once or twice. (“The Best Recipe” says it should be 115 on an instant-read thermometer, but I didn’t take its temperature.)

Fold a ladle-full of egg foam into the chocolate mixture using a large rubber spatula until only a few streaks of eggs are visible; do that over and over again, adding egg and folding, adding egg and folding, until all of the egg is entirely folded in to the chocolate. The mixture, says “The Best Recipe,” should be “totally homogenous.”

Scrape the batter into the prepared springform pan and smooth the surface with your spatula. Set the roasting pan on the oven rack and carefully pour in enough boiling water to come about halfway up the side of the springfrom pan. Bake until cake has risen slightly and the edges are just beginning to set. (The book says until the cake’s interior comes to 140 degrees; again, I didn’t use a thermometer.) Remove cake pan from water bath and set on a wire rack. Cook to room temperature. Cover and refrigerate overnight or up to 4 days.

About 30 minutes before serving, remove springform sides, invert the cake onto a sheet of waxed paper, peel off parchment paper and turn cake rightside-up onto a serving platter. Decorate with a light sprinkling of powdered sugar or cocoa powder if desired.

It looks like kind of an ordeal to make, doesn’t it? It really isn’t. It takes a small chunk of focused time, but as long as you have the springform ready to go it comes together pretty quickly. Is it worth the little effort it takes to make? I’m thinking so, but I’ll let you know for sure after Thanksgiving.

Let’s hear about your Thanksgiving dessert. What’s your favorite?

This, that and Thanksgiving dinner

NaBloPoMo 2010I finally thought of two great ideas for the family gift exchange. So of course my dad called this morning to say ha-ha, he’d forgotten that they stopped exchanging gifts two or three years ago. Now they gather up the money that would have been spent on gifts and make a donation to something in my aunt’s name. Which is a really lovely idea. However. I think we can all see where my memory issues come from.

Later this week I’ll be making a spinach pie and green beans with a cider reduction sauce. I’ve never made either before, so I hope they’re delicious. I’m supposed to make a dessert, too, but I’m not sure what I’m making yet. We’re having Thanksgiving with my sister-in-law and her family, and three of the six of them are gluten-free. I was going to make a flourless chocolate cake, but it calls for almond flour, and almond flour is 10 gajiggity dollars a bag. (10 gajiggity = roughly $11 = seriously, almond flour? It’s not like I’m buying ground unicorn* horn. I’m just going to take a box of puddin’.)

Menu Plan Monday

Monday: Spaghetti

Tuesday: Baked chicken

Wednesday: Undecided

Thursday: Thanksgiving!!!

Friday: Something made with turkey.

*While we’re talking about unicorns, why do they get all the attention these days? The pegasus might not have a horn, but it can fly.