Monday, October 26, 2009

Minestrone Soup

Photobucket


Once, I looked up what "minestrone" soup meant, since the recipes are so many and varied. It boils down to this: Menstra is Italian for soup and -one is a suffix meaning "the big one". So Minestrone is "the big soup", literally, but colloquially means a (usually) vegetable soup made up of whatever leftover vegetables are in season, plus some sort of pasta or rice. Thus, everyone's is different and so are the recipes. Its great though, because you can tweak it to be precisely to your taste.



My mom got this excellent recipe from Cooks illustrated; when I recreated it, this is how mine ended up:


3 carrots, peeled and chopped
1 sweet onion, peeled and diced
4 small ribs celery, chopped
1 baking potato, chopped
4 cups spinach leaves, sliced into strips
8 cups water
1 cup finely grated parmesean cheese
salt, pepper
28 oz can whole tomatoes, sliced
1 can cannelloni beans (white kidney beans)
whole wheat bowtie pasta


1. Finely chop all the vegetables (except the beans) and add to the soup pot with about 8 cups of water.

2. Cook on medium heat uncovered, stirring occasionally for about 1 hour

3. Add bow tie pasta, cook until al dente (8 minutes)

4. Add beans, heat and stir until temperature is even

5. Serve and enjoy


Photobucket

Baked Apple Crisps

Little says "Hey, autumn!" like the smell of baking apples.

So if you don't have the time and wherewithal for an apple pie, try these baked apple crisps instead!

Photobucket

Mmmmm how yum do these look? They're super easy to make and disappear quite fast. The steps are simple... first, select an apple. I've tried this both with red delicious and teeny tiny gala apples.

Then, slice the apple with a mandolin slicer (Bed Bath and Beyond, guys. Not expensive and comes in handy for lots of kitchen tasks!)

Immediately put the slices in a bowl with water and a splash of lemon juice. The acidity keeps the apple from turning brown. Orange juice works as well, and adds a tangy flavor.

Photobucket

Place the apple slices on a baking sheet lined with parchment paper. Sprinkle with cinnamon sugar, or anything else you might want.

Photobucket


Then bake them at your ovens lowest setting-- mine was 200 degrees-- for 1.5 to 2 hours, or more or less depending on how gooey/crispy you like 'em.

I know thats a LONG time to wait for apple chips but it has the added effect of making your home smell great!

Faux-reos

Photobucket



Okay! So yesterday was a lazy Saturday and I decided to indulge my sweet tooth. There's two recipes I've been wanting to try- one for homemade oreos over at the Smitten Kitchen blog, as well as a "cookies from cake" recipe from allrecipes.com. I decided to combine the two- instead of making the chocolate cookies from scratch, I made them from a box of cake mix. The EASIEST cookies EVER, and they turned out perfectly! I used to be a huuuge oreo fan (I ate them not by the cookie but by the "sleeve") but now, I can't bring myself to eat even one. Something about the trans-fat laden animal lard in the center... throws off my appetite. Well, these are still pretty fatty and sugary but nowhere near as disturbing to think about! So indulge!

Photobucket

What You Need


1 box chocolate cake mix (dark chocolate is preferable)
2 eggs
1/3 cup vegetable or canola oil

8 oz cream cheese
1-2 cups confectioners sugar



The cookies! First, preheat your oven! 325 degrees F. Combine the cake mix, eggs, and oil in a bowl and whip it up! Since the full amount of cake batter is used with fewer eggs and less oil than the actual cake would call for, the batter will be SUPER thick and sticky! Place teaspoon-sized balls of chocolate-y gooey goodness on either a VERY greased baking sheet or parchment paper. Now, unlike regular butter cookies, these will not melt into shape in the oven. Gently flatten the balls with either a greased spoon or wet fingers as they will be sticky! Then bake 10-12 minutes or until slightly firm. They will firm up when they cool off so don't overcook them! Let them cool on a baking rack.

The filling! I was initially going to make a butter icing, but that is so plain and I've done it too much. So I decided to make a cream cheese frosting, it turned out quite nicely! Blend 8 oz of cream cheese with 1-2 cups confectioners sugar, depending on how sweet (or not!) you want them. Then, put a glob in the center of one cookie and press down with another. Voila! Creamy sandwich cookie.

try not to eat them all!

Photobucket