Sunday, March 28, 2010

Ginger soup

Last night we had what may be (I hope) one of the last cold nights, until next winter. We celebrated it with soup. This time the recipe came from a Martha magazine. It is super easy. All you do is simmer some ginger and scallions in chicken broth (or in our case, not-chicken broth), and put in whatever you want. We used carrots, mushrooms and pad thai noodles. We topped it with some more scallion and Sriracha and it was really good. This is going to become a new staple, no matter if it is cold out or not!

Birthday cake, test 2


A girl at work gave me the incredible idea of making cupcakes instead of a real cake. I decided to try it out for test number two. I took the recipe for a maple cake (from 'Bon Appetit' of course) and made cupcakes out of it. I just randomly picked a time to start testing to see if they were cooked through. I think it worked well and I decided that this would be the winner for the party, but K is giving this recipe a thumbs down. The only thing he doesn't like is the frosting though, because it is cream cheese based, and he hates that. Now I don't know what to do. My options are to make these and another kind of cupcakes so people can choose, just make another kind altogether and ditch these maple ones, but I think K may be the only person on the planet to hate cream cheese frosting..... hmm.... to be continued, I guess.

The great ricotta experiment


At lunchtime the other day, I was looking through the fridge for something to eat. I didn't find any sort of complete meal, just bits. I decided to try something inventive. I had half a tub of leftover ricotta, some plain cooked noodles, part of an onion and part of a can of tomato sauce that we use as pizza sauce. I sauteed the onion and some garlic in oil, added a few spoonfuls of ricotta, mixed in the noodles and cooked it together for a couple of minutes. It kind of looked odd, so I decided to put in the tomato sauce too. The result wasn't the greatest thing I've ever made, but it was pretty good. And better than just wasting the rest of the ricotta. I don't know what else to use it for besides lasagna type of meals.

Birthday cake, test 1

In a little over a week from now, my baby will have his first birthday... yikes! So, as you would expect, I am baking the cake instead of buying one. Since I didn't really start baking until about a year and a half ago, and I haven't ever made an actual cake, I decided I need to do some testing before the big event. This is test one. I didn't have very high hopes for it, but decided to try it just in case. It is a vegan chocolate and orange cake. Recipe out of 'Bon Appetit', again. I got a subscription for Christmas and am putting it to good use!

I didn't quite know how a n eggless cake would be, or how it could even be done, but surprisingly, there weren't that many unusual ingredients in it. In fact, I pretty much had everything I needed, except for the vegan "butter".

The cake looked really good, all frosted and everything.
After conducting a scientific taste test, K and I decided it wasn't bad. He liked it better than I did, but really, my main complaint has because I am not a big fan of chocolate and orange. Why didn't I leave the orange out seeing as I knew this ahead of time? Don't ask me! Anyway, the cake was kinda crumbly, but moister than we expected. And the frosting was a nice consistency, and kind of hardened up, which we both liked. This cake isn't going to be the birthday winner, but it was a fun test.

Eggs in Purgatory

This might be the strangest recipe I have ever made. I found it in an issue of 'Bon Appetit' magazine. It was one of those things where we decided that even though the end product seemed weird, we liked all of the individual ingredients, so we went for it.

First, you saute some potatoes, onions and garlic in oil. Then you add a bunch of artichoke hearts and a can of tomatoes. You cook it for awhile till the potatoes are pretty much done. Then you put the whole mixture in a casserole dish, make some dents in the top with a spoon, and crack and egg into each one of the dents! Crazy, right? Next you sprinkle the top with parmesan and put it in the oven till the eggs are cooked.

It's not the prettiest dish, but it tasted better than it looks. And better than it sounds, for that matter. I don't think this is a dish that will make it into our regular rotation, but for every once in a while, it was good.