Thursday, August 13, 2009

Gazpacho

Ingredients:
- ~7 tomatoes
- 1 purple onion
- 1 red bell pepper (I used orange)
- 1 hot pepper, seeds removed
- 2 cucumbers, peeled
- 4 cloves of garlic
- Fresh basil
- Fresh parsley
- 1/3 C red wine vinegar
- 1/3 C EVOO, the best you can get
- Juice of one lime (you can substitute a lemon or storebought lemon juice if necessary, but I love the lime)
- fresh ground pepper
- ~1 T kosher salt
- ~2 t cumin (optional)

Directions:

I had a lot of tomatoes to use up (doesn't everyone right now?), and a friend on facebook posted about gazpacho, which reminded me how we had liked it when my husband made it last year, and so I made some. Last summer when the hubs made it, I wasn't even home, so this totally counts for being my first time making it. I didn't get his help at all, and did it all by myself! The only thing he did was toast some bread, which is the totally perfect and necessary complement to gazpacho - really good, crusty bread.

First I read over some recipes online.

Then I bought a few necessary ingredients that I didn't have on hand (orange bell pepper (to add color other than red), purple onion, parsley). Then I got to work.

This recipe requires no cooking, but it's still a pretty hefty workload. I decided to be a bit lazy and use my mini-food processor attachment to my stick blender so that I didn't have to worry about finely chopping anything. It worked out very well; in fact, when he had his first bite, my hubby commented that the texture was wonderful, right after he said how delicious and perfect it was.

So basically I just roughly chunked stuff up and popped it into the processor in manageable batches. For the less juicy stuff, I added a tablespoon or two of the red wine vinegar or EVOO to keep things moving in the blender. And to imitate the other recipes' advice to only blend part of the resulting mix, I tried to leave some batches of each veggie a little chunkier while making sure other batches were fairly smooth. I even put the basil and parsley in a batch with the garlic and some EVOO, so there was really as little chopping as I could wrangle.

I dumped everything into a big glass bowl that I have a lid for, and once it was all in there I added a generous amount of salt (because tomatoes love salt!), some freshly ground cumin (the hubby's fav spice, and I think it is indispensable here), and many grinds of the pepper mill. If you don't love cumin enough to grind it fresh like we do, you might even want to add extra, because it is seriously the perfect je ne sais quoi that takes this over the top.

Since there's no other fat in the whole thing, I didn't feel remotely guilty about the 1/3 cup of EVOO. It gives just enough richness to make this very veggie cold soup taste like a meal and not just like watery salsa. Grab a few slices of your favorite crusty bread and dig in!

One recipe mentioned avocado, and while I didn't want to experiment that much with my first try, I love avocado, so I bought one and included it sliced up with the bread as part of the side dish. The bites where I put a piece of avocado onto the bread and ate it all at once with the soup? Transcendent. This was one seriously delicious dinner. I never once thought to myself "it's weird to be eating completely raw, room temperature food for dinner."

Since all the recipes say to let it sit overnight in the fridge, or at least for an hour, I was expecting it to be even better today for lunch, and it was! So don't hesitate to make enough to last for a few days. You won't regret it, and your overflowing supply of tomatoes will thank you!

Was the recipe easy to follow? Yes, especially since there were no cooking times or temperatures to worry about!
Did it taste good? Um, yes.
Would you make it again? Yup!

Friday, August 7, 2009

Chicken Parmesan with Fresh Tomato Sauce



I had a lot of tomatoes from my CSA and friends' gardens, so I knew it was time to try making my own tomato sauce for the first time.

I decided to not use a recipe at all, and just put a few ingredients that I knew would work together and see how it turned out. It worked pretty well!

Ingredients:
- Tomatoes. I had what amounted to about 2.5 quarts, I think. Various types.
- 1 onion
- Garlic. I used 5 or 6 cloves.
- 1 6 oz can Contadina Tomato Paste (only brand I know that has no ingredients other than TOMATOES)
- Extra Virgin Olive Oil
- Fresh Basil
- Salt
- Pepper
- 2 boneless chicken breast halves
- flour
- breadcrumbs
- milk (I used skim, and it worked just fine!)
- Freshly-grated parmesan cheese

Here's what I did:

Chopped up all the tomatoes as small as I could. I kept all seeds and skin, and only discarded the stems, bad spots, and a couple of under-ripe bits if they were too hard.

Heat a few Tablespoons of EVOO in the bottom of a wide sauce pan or skilled (I used my chef's pan). Add all the tomatoes, juice and all. Add lots of salt and plenty of pepper, to taste.

Once the tomatoes have started to head up, add the tomato paste and stir to dissolve it.

While that bubbles, chop up the onion and garlic. Heat up a little more EVOO in a skillet (you can use the same skillet for the chicken in a few minutes). Sautee the onions & garlic separately until they're fully cooked and slightly browned, then dump them into the bigger pot with the tomatoes.

This is probably a good time to pre-heat your oven to 375 degrees.

While the onions & garlic are cooking and the tomatoes continue to simmer, prepare the chicken:
Rinse & dry each piece. Pound them a little so they're a bit thinner - mine weren't too thin, just about 1/2 or 3/4" - it doesn't matter, I just wanted to flatten them out a bit.

Use two salad plates and cover each with a few heaping Tablespoons of flour and breadcrumbs, respectively. Add some salt and pepper to each plate (unless your breadcrumbs already have salt!). Put some milk in a shallow bowl.

Dip each piece of meat into the flour (flip it to cover all surfaces), then into the milk quickly, then in the breadcrumbs (again turning to coat fully). This should give you a thin but complete layer of breading.

Once the onions & garlic are done cooking and have been added to the tomatoes, put a little more EVOO into the now-empty skillet, heat it, and add the chicken breasts. Cook for a few minutes on each side until they're nicely browned, crispy, and cooked through. Set aside until the sauce is ready.

The sauce is ready whenever you think it's ready: I just cooked it until it was a bit thicker and reduced, pleasantly chunky but still with plenty of liquid, and obviously very cooked because the tomatoes were all mushy and it looked like, well, tomato sauce! At this point I tossed a bunch of fresh basil into the pot (stack a bunch of basil leaves, roll them up, and slice thinnly), tasted it, and added a bit more salt and pepper.

Once the sauce is ready to go, spread a generous layer of sauce in the bottom of a glass baking dish (I used a small dish since I only had 2 pieces of chicken).

Grate some fresh parmesan onto both chicken breasts and place that side down in the sauce in the baking dish. Generously grate more parmesan over the chicken, put a little dollop of sauce on top of each piece, and pop it in the oven, uncovered, for 15-20 minutes or until cheese is all melted and sauce is bubbley.

Scoop onto dinner plates, including all the sauce in the baking dish, add some crusty bread, and enjoy!

I made way more sauce than I used for the actual Chicken Parmesan. I've never made either fresh tomato sauce OR Chicken Parmesan before, so it was a fun evening!
The rest of the sauce is in my fridge, in one container for me and another container to go to someone who gave me some of the tomatoes.

Was the recipe easy to follow? I wish I had thought through the steps in a little bit more detail before I dove in, but it all worked out in the end, so yeah.
Did it taste good? Extra-delicious because I knew all the tomatoes were grown within 30 miles of my house using no chemicals at all! The EVOO probably didn't hurt either.
Would you make it again? Definitely. I anticipate getting tons more tomatoes over the next month, so the sauce will probably become a frequent task. I plan to put it over pasta, other meats, and hopefully a homemade pizza in the near future! We eat a lot of chicken, though, so this will very likely be repeated in the near future. Other than chopping up all the tomatoes, this was really quite easy to make.

I was thinking a bell pepper wouldn't be amiss in the sauce, and some white wine would be another great addition - next time I'm planning to use the wine to deglaze the pan after cooking the onions, garlic, and chicken. Adding all that crispy goodness with the wine to the sauce would take the flavor to a whole new level!

It's a good thing there's sauce leftover to look forward to for dinner this weekend.