Rustic Sweet Onion Tart

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I was a childhood cooking-show junkie. On sick days at home, while other children would spend their days watching music videos on MTV and “You Can’t Do That on Television” on Nickelodeon, I watched PBS. Hours spent watching Jeff Smith, Martin Yan, Justin Wilson and “The Great Chefs” series. “The Great Chefs” series made me want to become a chef; Martin Yan made me want to be an entertainer, and Justin Wilson just reminded me of my family (not at all cajun but they were a bit of a wacky southern group).

I hated most vegetables though, so I would watch the cooks make recipe after recipe looking for something wonderful that was free of onions, tomatoes, celery and peppers. There was a show I cannot remember the name of with a cook whose name and face are a distant memory; I distinctly remember watching him make a chicken fricassee. It looked so good, and I remember thinking that I would eat it, regardless of onions or no onions. Watching him make this dish made me realize that if I wanted to be a professional cook, that I was going to have to eat the things I did not like.

I’ve written before about teaching myself to like vegetables, one vegetable at a time, by learning how to properly prepare each one. To like onions, I started by teaching myself to make good caramelized onions; not just browned onions, but good and properly melty, gooey, sweet and sticky caramelized onions. Once I had that down, I was in love. Onions show up in just about everything of mine. I think my childhood self would H-A-T-E having me as their parent; and I think I would get really annoyed with my childhood self because the little brat wouldn’t eat anything I made for her. While not little kid-friendly, this tart will agree with older kids and pretty much everyone else. Sweet Vidalia onions, which are in season right now, are the onion of choice, but other sweet onions will work as well.

This recipe is all about balancing flavors. The sweet onions are balanced by briny feta, tangy balsamic vinegar, spicy black pepper and herby thyme. The crust is part of the flavor, not just a shell to hold it. It becomes part of the whole picture, so don’t cut corners and use a pre-made crust. The crust can be a little crumbly, but a rustic look works here, so just work with it until you have a roundish shape and it’s okay if it isn’t perfect; because that is perfect. Enjoy!

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Caramelized Onion Tart with Feta and Balsamic
Serves 6

This tart is a fantastic snack, but also makes a wonderful meal when paired with a salad. I love the sheen of the egg wash on the crust, but you could easily leave that out to make this egg free.

1 Recipe Savory Pastry Dough
2 pounds Vidalia Onion (or other sweet onion)
2 tablespoons olive oil
1 teaspoon salt
1 tablespoon fresh thyme, plus another 1/2 teaspoon to garnish
1 tablespoon balsamic vinegar
2 ounces feta cheese, crumbled
1 egg yolk

Peel the onions and slice very thin; I used a food processor. Heat olive oil in a large skillet with a lid over medium-high heat. When the oil starts to shimmer add the onions and salt. Cover the onions and let cook until they release their liquid, about five minutes, stirring occasionally.

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Uncover and reduce heat to medium-low. Cook slowly, stirring frequently until evenly brown and greatly reduced; about another 25 minutes.

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Add the thyme and balsamic vinegar and cook another two minutes to let the thyme release its flavor. Remove from heat and allow to cool.

Preheat oven to 375. Roll out the dough to form a roughly 15 inch circle.

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Transfer the dough to a piece of parchment paper and spread the onion in a 12 inch circle in the middle of the dough. Sprinkle the feta on to the exposed onion filling.

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Turn the edges of the dough over, tucking under any uneven edges to form a 1 1/2 inch edge over the top of the onion filling.

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Brush the edges with a light coating of egg wash. Move the tart to a baking pan and bake for 30 minutes or until the crust is a nice even brown. Remove from oven and allow to cool for five minutes. Serve warm or room temperature.

Sausage and Kale Stuffed Shells with Homemade Italian Sausage

Sausage and Kale stuffed shells
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Sausage and Kale stuffed shells

Comfort food is the heart of my home cooked meals these days. Whether it’s Chicken and Dumplings or Turkey Meatloaf, comfort food makes up the majority of what my family eats on a nightly basis. Probably because by the end of a day of wrangling three kids, I want a little comfort anyway I can get it. But comfort food does not need to be unhealthy food.

When I moved to New England for college two decades ago, I was immediately immersed in a crash course of Italian American food. Stuffed shells, Manicotti, Ricotta in pretty much anything was what I took away from the local restaurants and even the dining halls. It wasn’t until I moved to Boston’s North End that I really started to learn the differences between Italian-American fast food and what it meant to truly identify yourself as an Italian and an American and what role food played in that identification. I learned this through friends who knew a lot about food who were also Italian Americans, by living in a predominately Italian neighborhood where I could walk around and still hear Italian spoken, and by trips to Italy where I learned the differences between Italian and American food.

Italian-American food is not a set-in-stone canon of recipes. Yes, Ricotta is in some of it, but not in all of it. (I also learned that not all Ricotta is grainy and tasteless.) The dishes are comfort food to many, but that does not mean that they cannot be lightened and improved.

This week’s recipe is an example of that. I have had stuffed shells a few times over the years. Sadly, most of the time the dish was very disappointing. The shells tend to be over stuffed with tasteless grainy Ricotta, and the pasta is usually overcooked and blown out, soggy and bloated with sauce. The sauce is usually the only vegetable matter on the plate.

This recipe is not that dish. These shells are filled with a homemade Italian sausage which you can make from any ground meat you wish; I’m a fan of lean ground turkey. You then mix the sausage with kale and cheese and fill the shells with a moderate amount of the filling. The shells are easily frozen and can be pulled out and topped with a fresh, easy to make sauce before baking. I don’t put any cheese on top of the sauce when baking, as it seems pointless since the shells are full of it. When serving I top each portion with a small amount of freshly grated Parmesan and that’s it.

I highly recommend making your own sausage. The idea that sausage is hard to make is a misconception. It couldn’t be easier and the flavor is superior; especially for the lower fat meats like ground chicken or turkey. The vinegar in the sausage recipe really helps bring the flavor to life, and you can make it as spicy as your family wants. Since Italian sausage is not smoked or cured, it’s easy to make, and it does not need to be stuffed into a casing if your using it as a filling or topping.

You certainly don’t need to be Italian-American or Italian or even American to enjoy this dish. It’s comfort food any way you dish it. It tastes good, it makes you feel good and it will make you smile. Enjoy!

Italian Sausage and Kale Stuffed Shells
Serves 8

Quality Ricotta is very important to the success of this recipe. I love Naragansett Creamery’s Ricotta; it’s insanely smooth and very flavorful. If you live outside the region find a local cheese producer that makes it. Good Ricotta is an entirely different product than most of the stuff in the grocery stores.

1 package large shells, about 40
2 teaspoons olive oil
1 onion, finely chopped
3 cloves garlic, minced
1/2 pound Italian sausage (see recipe below)
1/2 bunch kale, rinsed and dried
1 cup whole milk ricotta (8 oz)
1 cup mozzarella, shredded (4 oz)
2 tablespoons Parmesan, finely grated (1 1/2 oz)
1 egg
1/4 cup parsley, finely chopped
2 tablespoons basil, finely chopped
1/2 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper
1/2 teaspoon salt

Sauce:
1 28-oz can crushed tomatoes (Eden Organic does not contain BPA)
1 cup chicken broth
3 tablespoons olive oil
1/2 teaspoon crushed red pepper
1 tablespoon garlic, minced (about five cloves)
1 teaspoon salt
8 large basil leaves, torn into small pieces

Bring a large pot of salted water to a boil and cook the shells according to the directions until al dente, removing 1-2 minutes before the recommended cooking time.

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Heat the olive oil in a large skillet over medium heat. When it starts to shimmer, add the onion and saute until soft but not yet brown, about 8 minutes. Add garlic and continue to cook until the garlic is very fragrant, about a minute. Add the sausage.

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Cook the sausage breaking it into smaller pieces until it is cooked completely through and the pieces are no bigger than a 1/2 inch. Add the chopped kale and cook until the kale is wilted and has released most of its liquid, about another 3 minutes.

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Remove from the heat and allow to cool completely down to room temperature.

While the sausage and kale mixture is cooling combine ricotta, mozzarella, parmesan, parsley, basil, egg, salt and pepper in a large bowl.

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Once the sausage and kale have cooled add it to the mixture and thoroughly combine.

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Using a tablespoon or 1/2 ounce scoop, fill each shell with a rounded tablespoon of filling.

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Place seem down in an oiled baking dish or on a baking sheet for freezing.

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Cooking:

Preheat oven to 400 degrees. Make the sauce by combining the tomatoes, chicken broth, olive oil, crushed red pepper, garlic, salt and basil in a large bowl.

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Line the shells up in a large baking dish and cover with the sauce. If you are baking off only a small portion of the shells, allow 1/2 cup of sauce for each five shells. Cover tightly with aluminum foil and bake for 20 minutes, 30 if frozen. Remove the foil and check to make sure sauce is bubbling and all the shells are hot cooked thoroughly. Serve with a light grating of Parmesan.

 

Italian Sausage

1 pound ground turkey, chicken or pork
2 cloves garlic, minced
1 teaspoon fennel seeds
1/4 teaspoon crushed red pepper flakes
2 teaspoons sugar
2 teaspoons salt
1 teaspoon black pepper
2 teaspoon balsamic vinegar

Combine the red pepper flakes and the fennel in a small pan and toast, shaking constantly until lightly toasted, about 3 minutes.

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Remove from the heat and allow to cool. Combine the ground meat, garlic, sugar, salt, black pepper, fennel and red pepper mixture and vinegar together.

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Use in any recipe that calls for Italian sausage with the casing removed.

 

Baked Corn Dogs and Birthdays

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Time is a strange and wonderful force. What else can turn two tiny bundles unable to do anything but basic body functions into two happy, intelligent, curious individuals capable of more and more every day.

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Desperate newborn cries have turned into the sweetest “Mama” sounds I’ve ever heard. Flailing arms and legs have turned into strong limbs capable of pulling themselves up and almost walking. Yes, 365 days, 8760 hours is a magical amount of time.

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I know it’s a cliché, but I simply cannot believe how fast the year has past. Long gone are the sleepless nights and near constant feeding, diapering and changing. Our days now arrive and end at an almost normal rate, and we have settled into a routine that includes long breaks for me to play with Little Guy (and occasionally sleep). Life is good with one-year-old twins; it is, as they say, a good age.

Their birthday party was certainly a day of celebration. Everyone knows that 1st birthday parties are for the parents, not the babies, and we decided that with twins, we deserved a BIG party. Decorations and ideas were easy because of the easy to use and S-U-P-E-R cute party printables available at Simone Made It. When you buy these printable theme packs available in many different themes, you buy a PDF file that is customizable with your own text. You then print out only what you need instead of buying expensive (and usually wasteful) decorations.

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Since our life is still a little short on time these days, I wanted an easy menu but one that was also tasty and not too unhealthy.

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Recipes for the Salsa Roja and the Firecracker Coleslaw are from this site. Both recipes are favorites, and I find myself making them over and over again. They are always a huge hit when I’m entertaining. The pimento cheese is my father’s recipe; and can be found at the bottom of this post. It’s a mild version of the southern classic and was devoured at an alarming rate!

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The Herbed Potato Salad is a Cooking Light recipe. I made a double recipe and it was more than enough for the twenty adults at the party. It is full of bright herb flavor and tart acidity. I enjoyed the salad more warm than cold, but it was a good healthy mayo-free salad either way. I made it exactly by the recipe except that I doubled it. It holds well for several days so it’s the perfect make-ahead recipe.

We pulled out several pounds of the grass-fed ground beef we purchased and made sliders that were dreamy covered in oozy melted cheese. The sliders were so good, I wanted to go a bit beyond just run of the mill corn dogs. Regular hot dogs are full of nitrates, nitrites, and dubiously sourced meat. Granted that I didn’t look very hard, but I couldn’t find antibiotic free corn dogs anywhere. So, I made my own.

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I’m a fan of Applegate hotdogs. According to my 4-year old, the blue package tastes the best!

I got the idea from The Village Cook to bake the corn dogs in an old-fashioned cast-iron corn stick pan. It was a fantastic pan for baking the dogs and keeping the corn dog-like shape, but the recipe used just a quarter of a hot dog per muffin tin which seemed a little bready to me and it used instant muffin mix instead of a healthier homemade version using whole-grain flours.

This recipe freezes easily. I made the corn dogs for the party a week ahead of time and kept them in the freezer until right before service time. Then I reheated them by placing them on a baking sheet and reheating at 350 degrees for 15 minutes. You can also reheat them quickly in a microwave, but you don’t get the nice crunch you get in the oven. Enjoy!

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Baked Corn Dogs
makes 12 dogs

You can eat these fresh out of the oven, or freeze them and reheat in a 350 degree oven for 15 minutes. I use spelt flour in this recipe because of its soft texture. It does not have a whole wheat flavor or texture. If you want more whole-grain flavor, use whole wheat or even graham flour instead of spelt flour in this recipe. Of course you could always just use white flour too.

1 cup corn meal
1 cup spelt flour (or other whole wheat flour)
1/2 teaspoon salt
1/4 cup sugar
1/2 teaspoon baking soda
1 1/2 teaspoon baking powder
1 1/2 cups buttermilk
2 eggs
1/4 cup vegetable oil
8 hot dogs (your favorite variety)
12 wooden skewers

Place a cast-iron corn stick pan on a baking sheet and put in the oven. Preheat oven with corn stick pan in it to 400 degrees. In a large bowl mix the corn meal, spelt flour, salt, sugar, baking soda and baking powder.

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In another bowl or large measuring cup combine buttermilk, eggs and vegetable oil and mix well. Pour the liquid ingredients into the dry ingredients and mix well. Set aside to rest for several minutes.

Cut 1/3 off of each hot dog. Press a skewer into each of the 2/3-sized hot dogs, then skewer the short pieces of hot dog, using two per skewer to make 12 hot dogs on skewers.

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Remove the corn stick pan on the baking sheet from the oven and thoroughly spray with non-stick cooking spray or brush with oil. One at a time, dip each hot dog into the corn batter covering all of the hot dog with batter.

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Place the hot dog into one of the corn stick slots and repeat with enough of the hot dogs to fill the pan.

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Spoon in additional batter if needed to fill the bottom of each corn stick slot. Bake for 15 minutes. Remove the pan from the oven and turn out onto a baking rack or board to cool. Wipe any residue out of the corn stick pan and re-grease it. Repeat the process with the remaining hot dogs, using any remaining batter to fill any empty slots. Once the corn dogs have cooled, you can trim the edges if needed.

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pimento cheese

Pimento Cheese
Makes about 1 1/2 cups

You can add a pinch of cayenne to this to give it a little (or a lot) of a kick.

12 ounces medium cheddar cheese, shredded
8 ounces cream cheese, softened
1/3 cup mayonnaise
1/2 cup pimentos, chopped

Combine ingredients in the bowl of a mixer. Mix on medium speed until thoroughly combined and softened. Season to taste with cayenne. Serve with bread rounds or butter crackers (like Ritz).

Foxboro Cheese and Sundried Tomato and Spinach Turnovers

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Places like Lawton Family Farm are hard to find these days.

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Sorry for the image quality; I took this on my first trip with my cell phone.

They are even harder to find in the shadow of an NFL stadium. (This is not the best picture. The brown building behind the first row of trees is the farm, and behind that you can see the top deck of Gillette Stadium. It is a lot closer than this picture makes it look, the cows can probably make out the play-by-play).

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It seems impossible that this farm is churning out hormone and antibiotic free raw milk and cheese in a barn that was built in 1832.

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This is the type of place you see driving through the tiny towns of Vermont, not suburban Boston. Their small store sells their own raw milk (by order only), cheese, meats and other Massachusetts products.

I discovered this little gem at local farmers markets. They always bring samples of their Asaigo and Fromage Blanc cheeses for all to taste, and they are good. If you are unfamiliar with Fromage Blanc, like I was, it’s a fresh cheese similar to cream cheese, but with less fat and cholesterol. It’s much more common in Europe and is frequently eaten sweetened for breakfast much in the way we eat yogurt. You can cook with Fromage Blanc too. I think it cooks up a little nicer than cream cheese. These turnovers are the perfect example of how good it is cooked; the cheese flavor is subtle compared to the other flavors, but still distinct.

I’m always annoyed when a food trend fades from style. Usually it’s a food trend because it tastes good (not always). Sun-dried tomatoes were the gem of every foodie’s eye forever it seemed. Now days they are usually only found stuffing bad banquet chicken at your cousin Selma’s wedding. It’s a shame too because they taste good and are a nice way to get your tomato kick in the dead of winter. That’s how I use them here. Mixed with just a touch of basil and a bunch of cheese and spinach, they are almost like an Italian take on spanokopita. The finished product is a turnover that is perfect for any occasion. They freeze very well. I made up several batches when developing this recipe and froze them after I formed the turnover but before baking them. I then bake them frozen and they turn out wonderful. Enjoy!

Oh, and if you are in the Foxboro, MA area and want to stop by Lawtons Family Farm, bring cash and don’t expect much in the way of interaction. You come, you buy, you leave.

Lawtons Family Farm
70 North St., Foxboro, Mass.
Tel. 508-543-6460

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Spinach and Sun-dried Tomato Turnovers
makes about 36 turnovers
1 tablespoon olive oil
1 shallot, minced, about 1/4 cup
4 packed cups baby spinach (about 4 ounces)
1/2 cup basil leaves, finely chopped
1/2 cup sun-dried tomatoes, finely chopped (about 2 1/2 ounces)
1/2 cup Fromage Blanc (or cream cheese) about 4 ounces
1 1/2 oz Asiago (or Parmesan), grated
1/2 teaspoon salt
1/2 teaspoon finely ground black pepper
1 recipe Savory Whole Wheat Pastry Dough (below)

1 egg for egg wash to brush over the top of the turnovers

Heat olive oil in a large skillet over medium heat. Add shallot and cook until translucent, about five minutes.

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Add spinach and basil, and cook until the spinach is thoroughly wilted.

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In a medium bowl combine spinach mixture, sun-dried tomatoes, Fromage Blanc, Asiago, salt and pepper. Taste the filling and adjust seasonings to taste. Let completely cool before filling turnovers.

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Heat oven to 350 degrees. Roll pastry dough out to 1/4″ thickness. To form the turnovers, you can cut circles out of the dough with a 3″ biscuit cutter or you can roll half of the dough into a long rectangle and use a ravioli mold. Spoon 1/2 tablespoon (about 1 1/2 teaspoons) of filling into the center or each turnover.

If you are using the ravioli form, roll out the second half of the dough and place over the top using your fingers or a rolling pin (depending on how to use your ravioli form). If you are using the biscuit cutter, fold the dough over the top of the filling to form a half-moon. Use a fork to crimp the edges.

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Using a biscuit cutter to make the turnovers

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Using a ravioli form to make turnovers
Place the turnovers on a baking sheet. Beat the egg with two tablespoons of water and brush over the top of the turnovers.

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Bake for 15-20 minutes or until the edges of the turnovers are starting to brown. Serve warm.

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Savory Whole Wheat Pastry Dough
1 crust
This tasty crust is easy and does not need to chill before using. Olive oil and lots of pepper is the secret to a nicely flavored dough.

1 cup whole what pastry flour
1 cup all purpose flour
1 tablespoon sugar
1 teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon finely ground black pepper
1/4 teaspoon baking powder
4 tablespoon olive oil
4-6 tablespoons ice water
1 teaspoon apple cider vinegar

In the bowl of a food processor combine flour, sugar, salt, pepper and baking powder.

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Pulse several times to combine. Add olive oil, ice water and vinegar and pulse again until small clumps form, about the size of peas.

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Scrape the dough onto a piece of waxed paper or plastic wrap and form into a solid disc and let sit for at least 15 minutes. Do not refrigerate or the dough will be too hard to work with. If you do make the dough ahead of time, refrigerate it but you will need to let it come up to room temp before working with it.

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