Showing posts with label root vegetables. Show all posts
Showing posts with label root vegetables. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 04, 2011

Beet It!

Very timely, and quite lovely to look at, these eight beet recipes from The Atlantic seem sure to brighten up winter.

Also from The Atlantic, and I hesitate to link to this for the easily influenced to be under the influence, is a(nother) column about the benefits of moderate drinking. Apparently those of who imbibe also earn more. Drinking for dollars, as it were!
Picture from The Atlantic

Saturday, October 31, 2009

Get Comfortable

If ever you wanted to throw the trendy word "seasonal" around and seem like a hip "foodie" (have we reached over-saturation on those two terms, especially the second one? I've gotta think so. It's become kind of cringe-inducing. I'm in the wine business, and it's like when people say to me "Oh, you're in the wine business? You must be a connoisseur." And I'm like "No, I just like to drink."), then you should throw this oh-so-autumnal, super easy, and way too satisfying roast chicken thigh recipe together. This is like wrapping a happy blanket of succulent chicken thighs and steaming hot root vegetables around your body....hmm...maybe that doesn't sound so good...but you get where I'm going. Feel free to sub in any roastable vegetables that suit your fancy....I threw in some brussel sprouts when I made it. We loved it, and it is absolutely dinner party worthy!
For your drinking pleasure you might want to follow my lead and pour a glass or several of the newly released 2008 Cameron Winery "Dundee Hills" Chardonnay. John Paul who is the wine savant at Cameron makes one of the two or three best chards in Oregon, and for my money in the U.S. beautifully pure fruit, a very judicious touch of oak, perfect balance. This worked fantastically with the richness of the chicken anbd roasted vegetables.
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Oven-Roasted Chicken Thighs w/ root vegetables
adapted from epicurious/Bon Appetit

yield: makes 4-6 servings

ingredients:
3 tablespoons olive oil, divided
6 large chicken thighs with skin and bones
1 tablespoon coarse kosher salt
2 teaspoons dried thyme
1 1/2 teaspoons freshly ground black pepper
1/4 teaspoon freshly grated or ground nutmeg
2 parsnips, peeled and cut into large chunks
3 Oriental sweet potatoes, scrubbed, cut into 2-inch-long, 1/2-inch-thick spears
4 medium carrots, peeled, cut into 2-inch-long, 1/2-inch-thick spears
8-10 whole peeled garlic cloves
3 tablespoons chopped fresh chives (optional)

method:
1- Preheat oven to 450°F. Coat large roasting pan with 1 tablespoon oil. Place chicken in roasting. Turn to coat with oil and set skin side up. Mix salt, thyme, 1½ teaspoons pepper, and nutmeg in small bowl. Sprinkle half of mixture over chicken. Roast until chicken starts to brown and some fat has rendered, about 30 minutes.

2- Meanwhile, combine all vegetables and garlic, 2 tablespoons oil, and remaining salt-thyme mixture in large bowl. Transfer thighs to medium bowl; set aside. Transfer potato-carrot mixture to same roasting pan; turn to coat with drippings. Roast until vegetables soften, 20-30 minutes. Place thighs on vegetables; pour accumulated juices from chicken over. Return sheet to oven. Roast until chicken is cooked and vegetables brown, 15 minutes longer. Place vegetables and chicken on platter; top with chives if desired.

note: the vegetables when I made it got quite dark on one side. Not burned, just very dark and caramelized (which we liked). This was a good thing, but keep an eye on them toward the end of the vegetable cooking cycle.- bb

Friday, November 23, 2007

Beet it!

So you thought you got off the hook this holiday season. Your friends are cooking the main dishes in these meat and starch infused food fests known as holiday dinner parties. Of course you're going to ask what you can bring, right? So you'll hear the "Oh, how about a side dish?" response. What could be easier, and maybe even healthy, than a good salad? But come on, these are your friends and families. Don't give them the usual bag of lettuce with some dressing sloshed on top, when with a little more effort you can bring a drop dead beautiful and delicious salad that will have them "oohing" and "aahing" all through the meal.

People, I give you the golden beet. And with this humble, yet beautiful, root vegetable, you can prepare an awesome salad that will raise the (salad) bar for meals to come! My friend DOR showed me this easy to prepare and crazily good dish a few weeks ago, and I took it yesterday for my contribution to my sister and bro-in-law's off the hook Thanksgiving meal. The requisite compliments were heard, accepted, and appreciated. Now it's your turn!
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Roasted Golden Beet & Arugula Salad
serves 8

ingredients
6 golden beets about the size of a tennis ball
Two large handfuls (or one bag) of arugula
1 sweet or red onion
10 or 12 caper berries
Olive oil
Balsamic vinegar
Salt & freshly ground pepper

special tools
A mandoline, unless you're incredibly patient and steady handed enough to thinly slice your beets and onions.

method:
1-Turn oven on bake to 500*. Line a rimmed baking sheet with aprchment paper. Wash beets and dry off excess moisture. Rub lightly with olive oil and sprinkle lightly with sea salt. Arrange on baking sheet and out ion oven for 30-40 minutes. Beets are done when a fork goes in with a bit if resistance.

2-While beets roast, slice onions very thin, about 1/8".

The beets laid out and ready to be finished.


3-When beets are done, remove from oven, let cool, and peel with a paring knife. Slice beets with mandoline about 1/8" thick. Arrange beets on platter and sprinkle lightly with kosher salt. Arrange a couple of large handfuls of arugula on top of beets, leaving edges of beets exposed. Sprinkle onion slices generously on top. Drop the caper berries around the outside of the platter. Drizzle extra virgin olive and balsamic on top to taste. Sprinkle with salt and a few grindings of pepper. Serve immediately.

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I know your next question: "Where can I get me one 'o them fancy slicin' machines?" Being the kitchen gadget whore that I am, I have long had a mandoline on my list. When OXO came out with theirs a few months ago, I was ready to pounce. Luckily I'm a world class procrastinator. My friend David brought his little Zyliss Easy Slice 2 over when he made the above salad. it worked fantastically. For the "serious" home cook, maybe you would want to upgrade to a fancier unit, but for most of us, this does plenty at a great price, around $25-$30. I got mine, and I love it! Very sharp slicing blade, portable, easy to clean, safe. It pretty much has it all!