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Dinner - The Polyphonic Food Blog


JPW

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Apparently not me. Two Dogfish beers (the 120 Minute IPA & Golden Shower) and a couple non-descript cups of macro-brew from a pitcher downtown were only slightly balanced with a big bowl of fried dough with tomato dipping sauce. :)

Tonight's menu is roasted lamb loin, smashed red potatoes, fresh zucchini or a spinach salad. Sans alcohol.

It's strawberries and a green salad for me, accompanied by several tall, cold glasses of water. And an Alka Seltzer.

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gnocchi tossed with halved yellow cherry tomatoes, picholines, capers, mozzarella, diced garlic and shallots, basil, olive oil, sea salt and a few drops of balsamic vinegar

actually, these were orecchiette, pasta shaped like gnocchi. this is no way to treat a real gnocchi.

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Pork chops, sauteed and finished in the oven, pan sauce of white wine, dijon mustard, a little cream, tarragon, chervil, and some minced cornichons. Baguette. Green salad.

Later, vanilla ice cream with creme caramel au beurre sale, from Joel Durand's shop. I carried two jars of it back from France. From the website:

the raw sugar browned, shimmers until it meets the cream and salted butter. For us it embraces the lavander, bewitches the lemon, trains the chestnut, seduces the liquorice and carries the mint along on its mad ride.
I like the bit about seducing the liquorice. :)
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Last night

Vegetarian dinner for four adults and two toddlers cooked in someone else's kitchen:

Broiled squash blossoms with baby fruit still attached, stuffed with herbed Pipe Dream goat cheese

Pea shoots with crimini mushrooms, red wine vinegar, evoo, truffle salt, and topped with piave

Sauteed squash and zuchinni with herbs

Purple heirloom roma tomatoes sauteed with garlic and basil over perciatelli topped with piave

Roasted garlic and mozerrellla Pao de Queijos

Dogs Head Pale Ale

Special Reserve Root Beer

We were supposed to have broiled blueberries for dessert but the almost four year old found them first :)

Tonight:

Cold roasted golden roma tomato soup (that was supposed to be for last night too but I forgot to bring it)

Roasted cherry tomato salad with three types of basil

Strawberry, black pepper and champagne Papa Rums from ShoeBox

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Broiled squash blossoms with baby fruit still attached, stuffed with herbed Pipe Dream goat cheese
OK. I have certainly heard of fried squash blossoms (and even attempted that myself a couple of years ago), but never broiled. Is there a trick to this?
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It seems a lot of us are eating vegetarian meals with all of our green market bounty lately...

Panzanella-- with stale baguettes, tomatoes, cukes, fennel, Vidalia onion, roasted garlic, roasted red pepper, avocado, olives, Pecorino Toscano, basil, EVOO, red wine and balsamic vinegars, OJ and peel.

2005 Chateau Lascaux Rose

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Last nite:

Grilled pattypan squashes with a little olive oil and soy sauce

Roasted baby potatoes with soy/red wine marinated shiitake mushrooms

Heirloom tomato, sliced, with salt and pepper

Grilled ribeye steaks served with

a green "sauce" made with chopped chives, crushed garlic, parsley, lemon juice, lemon zest, olive oil, and toasted pistachios (This was a new concoction made by husband and it was awesome!)

2004 Ravenswood Zinfandel

Tonite: Leftovers!

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eggplant tomato gratin a la richard olney, with saffron custard and saffron rice

domaine ehrhart pinot gris im berg 2004

cold water

i am still making my way through deborah madison's supper book, and there is some serious cholesterol in this recipe, but it is at least grass-fed if not raw. purple and white (my high school colors) asian eggplant from the farmers market, after a week wrapped in the vegetable bin, were still far superior to anything you can find at the grocery store. i sampled a raw piece for bitterness and there wasn't any, just good flavor, so didn't need to salt them.

the recipe isn't fast, so i would take care of the first part ahead of time: preparing a tomato sauce, which starts off sauteeing diced onion and celery. a whole peeled carrot, removed at the end, is added to balance things out. tomatoes, i used yellow, are simmered for a good hour or more with a bay leaf and basil is added at the end. this is a bit more elaborate than it needs to be. for all-purpose sauce, i always have some alice waters tomato confit in the freezer: peeled tomatoes on a bed of basil doused with olive oil and salted, baked in a pyrex bowl or casserole in a 350-degree oven for an hour and a half or so, until the tomatoes are caramelized. you can try many variations of this, throwing in garlic, scallions, using purple basil, etc.

the gratin layers tomato sauce and sliced eggplant. the saffron custard uses eggs, riccota, milk, parmesan and mozarella, and is baked on top.

saffron rice starts out with sauteed butter and onion, a small bay leaf and one-third cup of dry white wine are added. long-grained rice makes it lighter.

for the rest of the week, it will probably be too hot to stay in the kitchen the amount of time it takes to make this. tonight it will be a salad nicoise, which will only require a relatively small expenditure of heat to steam some small potatoes and green beans.

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Last night's dinner was a pair of improvisational Korean-ish beef sandwiches -- shredded beef reheated with soy sauce, lime juice, sesame oil, garlic, and ginger. Served on a roll with red peppers and red onions, plus some cucumbers I quick-pickled in palm vinegar, brown sugar, and fresh mint. Good stuff.

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Last night I made the recipe in Wednesday's WaPo Food Section: the shrimp with the commercial "Simmer Sauce." I took one for the team. Don't bother, unless you like really bland pseudo-Indian food.
What brand was the sauce? I've tried a few, and "bland" seems to apply to all of them.
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What brand was the sauce? I've tried a few, and "bland" seems to apply to all of them.
It was the "Ethnic Gormet" Bombay Curry Simmer Sauce, which was the one recommended. The Yes! Gourmet store down the street carries the whole variety. Safeway has shrimp on sale this week, so what could go wrong? :) It was fast, however, but couldn't hold a candle to the Ma-Po Tofu Craig made the night before. Now THAT was something exciting. (recipe on epicurios).
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Last night I made the recipe in Wednesday's WaPo Food Section: the shrimp with the commercial "Simmer Sauce." I took one for the team. Don't bother, unless you like really bland pseudo-Indian food.

I've been using Patak's Rogan Jhosh and Korma sauces for many years, to make an easy meal, and I've always found them to be very tasty. The Korma is mild, with coconut milk in it--I usually make vegetable Korma for my veggie-teen daughter, with chickpeas, potato, winter squash or carrots, green beans, mushrooms, peas, whatever combo I've got, or divide the pot, and put some chicken in for us. The Rogan Jhosh is quite spicy--I often make meatballs with ground turkey and poach them in the sauce. Of course, there are other quick and easy dishes to enhance the meal-- basmati rice, dal Makhani from Tasty Bite, raita, and a spicy fresh chutney with coriander and chiles, and Patak's eggplant pickle, which is plenty spicy. For a "semi-homemade" supper, it has always made my family happy. I haven't tried other brands, except Trader Joe's, which is eh, I stick with Patak's. Their Vindaloo is even spicier than Rogan Jhosh.

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Tonight:

Capellini with scallops, sweet corn, sungold tomatoes and basil. Sauced with white wine, butter, olive oil, lemon zest, S & P.

Green salad.

Halved apricots filled with mascarpone flavored with lemon zest.

Last night:

Grilled hot dogs. I tried the Coleman natural casing hot dogs, not bad. Nice garlicky flavor and snap.

Classic potato salad, with egg.

Sliced tomatoes.

I love summer.

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Dinner last night:

Panko-crusted pan-fried catfish sandwiches w/remoulade

Steamed baby artichokes

Fruit salad

Lunch today:

Gazpacho

Leftover fruit salad (we make the never-ending bowl of fruit salad - just keep cutting up and adding more...)

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toasted whole wheat pita stuffed with salmon, avocado, tomato and watercress

torbeck 2004 cuvee juveniles

i sauteed the salmon briefly with shallots in olive oil and bacon fat, the latter something totally new for me, inspired by nina planck's views on fat and someone in the kitchen making blt's the week before. bacon fat is a miracle gro for flavor, providing a nice boost. i added the salmon directly from the pan to the vegetables, dressed with pulverized garlic, vinegar and oil, which breaks the avocado down some and wilts the watercress.

the wine is somewhat provocative, a bit exotic, i guess because of the matard. it is 60% grenache and 20% shiraz. it took a while to open up, the body at first is silky smooth, almost cloying, and from there it's all layers of ripe, ripe fruit, with a slightly mad center. this is first-class communion wine or a charms lollipop for adults, take your pick, and it makes a strong impression, like it or not. (on sale, on tuesday at least, at whole foods on p street for $17.99, marked down from $26.99. however, watch the cash register when you check out because the sales price may not ring up. it didn't for me, which provided the opportunity for a five-minute chat with the wine department leader, who said that the team has been encountering problems with the wine prices, and tuna, but got tired of listening to my ranting fairly quickly and abruptly turned her back and walked out the store. i had been at least expecting to be refunded the difference. i went through my entire spiel about the store's pricing woes -- you can read it here, somewhere under stores -- with a second leader, who also didn't at first get the point that i wanted to be refunded at least the difference, and she promised that the discrepancy would be fixed as soon as i left the store. based on my experience, i would doubt it. based on the fact that nobody even bothered to look at my receipt or ask me what wine i was talking about, i also doubt it. but miracles do happen.)

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Parmesan rind enjoyed with a glass of Laphroaig scotch (my favorite combination).

Portabello duxelles in my "special" red wine sauce over saffronated* biscuits with grated parmesan.

2003 Chateau Picau-Perna Saint-Emilion. Wonderful velvety bordeaux that went great with my special sauce (as well as playing a central role in the sauce itself).

*PLEASE let this be the first time anyone has every described something as "saffronated."

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How does that work? Chew on it? Suck on it? Use it in place of ice cubes? :)
:lol:

No, don't be disgusting :)

You just... eat it. Like you would a bite of parmesan. It's waxy and flavorful and goes great with the scotch. You just sip the scotch after eating. Like you would sip a fine burgundy after taking a bite of steak. It's my ultimate relaxational comfort food.

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Wood-grilled Coho salmon filets.

Tomatoes and basil from the garden.

Skillet cornbread (stone-ground cornmeal from Old Mill--and, if you will forgive a spouse's pride, my wife won a blue ribbon at the Maryland State Fair for her cornbread lo those many years ago.)

Fresh peaches.

2005 Kim Crawford sauvignon blanc.

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Chuck roast from whole foods, trimmed of a little fat then ground (+ kosher salt and pepper) and formed into a hamburger patty. Grilled over hardwood charcoal to medium rare, on a toasted bun with mayo on the bottom and homemade mustard on top.

Sometimes, simple = good.

Strike that. Most of the time, simple = good.

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:)

No, don't be disgusting :lol:

You just... eat it. Like you would a bite of parmesan. It's waxy and flavorful and goes great with the scotch. You just sip the scotch after eating. Like you would sip a fine burgundy after taking a bite of steak. It's my ultimate relaxational comfort food.

i would have to start sipping on my scotch for some time before i found myself chewing on parmesan rind. you can boil it, though, and it is okay if you eat it while it is still soft, although it starts hardening the minute it gets out of the pot.

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Blue ribbon cornbread? Please do tell us more about that!
She grew up on a farm in Harford County, and learned the basics from her family and the nice ladies at the 4-H club. She uses only stone-ground corn meal, which has wonderful taste and texture, and a very heavy, hot cast iron skillet that's pre-buttered. If you'd like, I'll gladly forward the recipe, although I believe that it's quite basic. Please note, too, that she won another blue ribbon for biscuits but, alas, I could not convince her to make both yesterday evening.
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So, I've got these lamb rib chops........

Plenty of dry herbs and spices. Some fresh mint, parsley, cilantro, basil.

Some onions, shallots, garlic. Some dried fruit. Some fresh berries. Some watermelon.

Some stock and/or wine that can be reduced.

What am I missing and how should I make my dinner? :)

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So, I've got these lamb rib chops........

Plenty of dry herbs and spices. Some fresh mint, parsley, cilantro, basil.

Some onions, shallots, garlic. Some dried fruit. Some fresh berries. Some watermelon.

Some stock and/or wine that can be reduced.

What am I missing and how should I make my dinner? :)

Goat cheese for your raviolis.
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So, I've got these lamb rib chops........

Plenty of dry herbs and spices. Some fresh mint, parsley, cilantro, basil.

Some onions, shallots, garlic. Some dried fruit. Some fresh berries. Some watermelon.

Some stock and/or wine that can be reduced.

What am I missing and how should I make my dinner? :)

I like fruit with pork and duck--not so much with lamb. Save the fruit for dessert. Or serve a first course of watermelon and feta cheese, drizzled with balsamic vinegar. Marinate your rib chops witn some olive oil, garlic, fresh mint and parsley. Charcoal grill them medium rare. Sauce not necessary. Oh, here's a thought, make cous-cous or a pilaf as a side with sauteed shallots and a little bit of diced up dried fruit poached in stock as the liquid, sprinkled with some toasted pine nuts or almonds and chopped fresh herbs on top. Have broiled fresh berries with creme fraiche or mascarpone as dessert.

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Blue ribbon cornbread? Please do tell us more about that!
Here is the cornbread receipe:

2 Cups cornmeal (stone ground)

1 tablespoon baking powder

1/2 teaspoon baking soda

3/4 teaspoon salt

2 eggs

1/4 cup melted butter

1 and 1/4 cup milk

mix dry ingredients.

mix eggs, milk and melt butter

mix together

heat cast iron skillet with 1 tablespoon butter

when hot, add batter

bake at 425 for 20 -25 minutes

ENJOY

(I type faster than my hubby)

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I like fruit with pork and duck--not so much with lamb. Save the fruit for dessert. Or serve a first course of watermelon and feta cheese, drizzled with balsamic vinegar. Marinate your rib chops witn some olive oil, garlic, fresh mint and parsley. Charcoal grill them medium rare. Sauce not necessary. Oh, here's a thought, make cous-cous or a pilaf as a side with sauteed shallots and a little bit of diced up dried fruit poached in stock as the liquid, sprinkled with some toasted pine nuts or almonds and chopped fresh herbs on top. Have broiled fresh berries with creme fraiche or mascarpone as dessert.

No charcoal here, so the iron on the stovetop had to do it. Couscous salad went well too. (Decided to reduce some red wine also!) Came out really good. But, yes, charcoal would have made a big difference for the better.

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-Garlic ghee* grilled lobster tails

-Balsamic grilled asparagus

-Grilled lemonated biscuits

The grill just does such a great job on the lobster. I finally perfected my method of doing biscuits on the grill (meaning I don't have to fire up the oven AND the grill when I want both). As an added bonus, they captured a lot of the aroma of the lobster.

*Get it? Garlic-ghee? Garlicky? Ah, forget it. :)

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Miscellaneous what-I-can-find-in-the-pantry-and-fridge meal--I have a summer cold and don't feel much like spending a lot of time cooking...

Feta and watermelon

Roasted, herb-brined chicken

Roasted crimini mushrooms

Marinated white bean salad

Olives

Heirloom tomato wedges with olive oil, basil and sea salt

Fresh mozzarella from Blue Ridge Dairy

Charcuterie plate with La Quercia prosciutto and D'Artagnan chorizo

Charcoal-grilled red pepper

Breadline baguette

2006 Avondale Rose´

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I supplemented a Costco roast chicken with Zora's roasted fig, fennel and onion dish. This time, I used fresh lemon juice and zest per her instructions and they really cut through and complimented the richness. That roast chicken is a wonder at $4.99. The skin could be crispier but the meat is incredibly moist and I've got a ton of leftovers. The figs came from Costco also, and are pretty good!

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