chicken sausage

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Polenta

Remember that heavenly polenta dinner that I attended in the North End last year? It was on an incredibly cold night, and warm welcomes and hot boards of polenta, along with lots of laughs, good friends by my side, and restaurant family stories made it simply magical.

Polenta is the perfect comfort food, a canvas for all sorts of flavors and ingredients, and my only wish that night was that I could make polenta as creamy and lump-free as the polenta at Lucia.

Well, it’s not quite the same, but I have found a way to make polenta that we love right at home. The secret is Pastene instant polenta. Instant polenta? I kind of assumed it would be lumpy and not great just due to its instant nature. I couldn’t have been more wrong; with boiling water it cooks in minutes and barely requires stirring. It’s the easiest way to start a comforting dinner on a busy weeknight or a slow-cooked sauce and polenta on a Sunday afternoon.

polenta

We’ve been eating a lot of polenta, and it’s been fun to experiment with the toppings. One Sunday night, I made a turkey meat sauce, health factor amped up with red lentils, made creamy with coconut cream and spicy with hot paprika. The coconut cream might sound a bit weird, but it just worked. It’s definitely a new favorite Trader Joe’s product.

lentils.

Another favorite polenta dinner included a spicy chicken sausage and peppers sauce made with caramelized onions, sweet and hot peppers, arrabiata sauce, and some corn thrown in, because while we did a great job snack shopping before Nemo, we kind of forgot groceries for the week. As a result, we’re cleaning out the cupboards and freezer. It’s been kind of fun using things up and getting creative, but I definitely look forward to a fully-stocked fridge and a meal plan again.

sausage and peppers

There doesn’t seem to be an end to dreary weather in sight, so I think polenta is here to stay. I’d like to make a creamy mushroom sauce soon, maybe with some tofu snuck in to add nutrition and protein.

Are you a polenta fan? Any suggestions for what fun toppings to add?

Tags: chicken sausage, coconut milk, Food, healthy, lentils, peppers, polenta, recipe, turkey, versatile meals

The Wine & Food Affair cookbook, in just a couple of months, has provided me with a ton of cooking inspiration. I love sitting in bed and paging through it’s colorful recipes and wine pairings  (tell me you do this too. . . ). Maybe it’s because so many of the wineries in the book evoke vacation memories of places I would rather be. Maybe it’s that I love a good food and wine pairing, or, even better, love wine IN food and pairing that food with wine. Whatever the attraction, this cookbook keeps coming out, and it was a rustic cassoulet recipe that inspired me this week. As always, I made adjustments based on what we had in the house. We missed our weekly grocery shopping trip this week, and since we are going away soon are trying not to stock up on too much.

white beans

I started my cassoulet by soaking a 16 ounce bag of Great Northern beans overnight. I had them on the stove, with a lid on, which is how I always soak beans. UNTIL this Monday. Toward the end of my work day I walked into the kitchen to make a cup of tea. . . and a mouse ran across the room. Mice and rats are my major, major, major phobia, and I have been afraid to leave any food anywhere since. I actually didn’t even want to cook at all. We had the cleaners come in, set traps, got those ultra-sonic plug in things. You would think the two cats would have done something! Anyway, I had a terrible fear that somehow I would find a mouse in the beans a la Anne of Green Gables and the plum pudding sauce, but these beans were fine. I just won’t be leaving them out to soak ever again.

onions and garlic

When it was time to get cooking, I put on some Harry Connick Jr. Christmas music and got the beans boiling on the back burner while I crushed a couple of cloves of garlic and roughly chopped a yellow onion. I also roughly chopped three slices of regular old breakfast bacon. I would have preferred to use Irish bacon, but again, using up food in the house was a priority.

bacon

I added the bacon and onion to some olive oil and got it all sizzling, then lowered the heat and added the garlic a few minutes later. To that I added about three cups of chopped carrots and a package of chicken apple sausage. I am loving chicken sausage these days; it’s so delicious and such an easy way to add protein to a dish.

cassoulet

I spooned in several cups of beans and then poured in two cups of chicken stock and one cup of Amista Zinfandel. The rest of the Zinfandel? You guessed it, the perfect wine pairing for the cassoulet.

image

Before I put the lid to the French oven on, I added a sprinkle of thyme and some ground black pepper, lowered the heat to almost nothing, and let it go for about 45 minutes. Yes, this is one of the huge perks of working from home. I was able to get this started and then go back to work, something I definitely will never take for granted.

thyme

We didn’t end up eating for several hours, so the cassoulet had a ton of time to come together, the flavors of all of the ingredients really all working well. This dish tasted like a cozy winter night; the addition of a slightly jammy, slightly spicy Zinfandel on the side and a dessert of brown butter cookies rounding out the perfect evening. It helped take the edge off of the early darkness!

cassoulet

I love one pot dishes like this cassoulet. They feel so stick-to-your-ribs but also kind of healthy. I’ll be making this one again, that’s for sure.

In the meantime, I am walking around my house with a running dust buster and making as much noise as possible to keep our mouse at bay. And not sleeping at all. Small animals (including squirrels) terrify me. Do you have a major phobia?

Tags: chicken sausage, dinner, Food, recipe, wine, winter cooking

One

sweet potato gnocchi

 

Two

chicken sausage

Three

purple cabbage

Dinner is served!

gnocchi with chicken sausage and cabbage

Trader Joe’s sweet potato gnocchi, Johnsonville smoked apple chicken sausage, and an entire head of purple cabbage, chopped. All sautéed in olive oil, ready to eat in under 15 minutes.

That’s my kind of meal this week.

What easy, semi-homemade masterpieces have you been whipping up?

Tags: cabbage, chicken sausage, dinner, easy recipe, Food, gnocchi, quick meals, quick recipes, recipe

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