mushrooms

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Every day, I open up my laptop and I read some truly amazing blogs. I read the blogs that I read because I like the writer’s voice, I like the innovative spirit behind the blog, I trust that blogger’s recommendations because they are tried and true. Most recently, though I tend to make up a lot of recipes myself, I have been garnering meal-inspiration from bloggers. Last week, I made Michelle’s nut encrusted chicken (twice!), and I have been making mental notes of other blog recipes like crazy. On Saturday night, after a day on snowshoes, it was Elina who provided the inspiration. After reading about her Filipino Adobo Chicken, I could not get the photos of the flavorful brown sauce out of my head.

I am vowing to eat more meat between now and the Napa Marathon. It might not agree with everyone, but I feel like I need the added protein, and I am finding that organic, humanely-raised meat makes me feel more energetic.

We normally only eat chicken breast, unless I make a whole chicken, which apparently my husband doesn’t love because of all of the dark meat. Something about making a whole chicken just feels right in the wintertime though, so you will likely see at least once more before spring graces our doorsteps.

I followed Elina’s lead with the chicken and used drumsticks for a change. I also pulled out some organic apple cider vinegar, soy sauce, garlic, jalapenos, and bay leaves.

Chicken with Soy and Vinegar Sauce

After doing my best to skin the chicken (and some skin fell on my bare foot, EW!), I whipped up a marinade using the above ingredients. I really eyeballed it but made sure I used a lot of garlic and several sliced jalapeno peppers, seeds and all.

jalapenos

Once the garlic and jalapenos were chopped, I added the chicken, then poured in the liquid ingredients, using tongs to toss the chicken and to coat it nicely with the sauce. I set this aside for about an hour before putting it on the stove to cook for 45 minutes.

Chicken in Soy and Vinegar Sauce

As Elina’s posts mentioned, the meat fell off of the bone. Every time I opened my trusty Le Creuset pot the tangy smell that escaped was amazing. By the time the chicken was done, we were dying to eat.

Chicken in Soy and Vinegar Sauce

As we had a late lunch, a spinach salad with nuts, cheese, and fruit, I kept it simple and sautéed some mushrooms that I bought, already cut and cleaned, at Trader Joe’s. They cooked for awhile in a pat of butter, then I added them to the chicken and sauce. mushrooms

The combinations of flavors was intense and delicious! The meat was so rich, and the sauce had us using our hands, spoons, mushrooms, whatever we could to mop it all up. As a lover of vinegar, I was thrilled with the way this dosh brought a burst of flavor with each bite. I will definitely be making it again and again. Thank you, Elina, for the inspiration!

I feel like paying extra for mushrooms that are cleaned and chopped is totally worth it because I HATE getting the dirt off of mushrooms. I just don’t seem to get it all, and it disgusts me.

What convenience do you feel it is worth it to pay extra for? Grated carrots? Pom arils already removed from the pomegranate? Tell me I am not the only one!

Tags: bloggers, chicken, Food, jalapenos, mushrooms, recipe, soy sauce, vinegar

It might just be the perfect Thanksgiving side dish. Easy, flavorful, vegetarian, and versatile, polenta dishes are the perfect creative outlet for the home cook. Saturday afternoon we went on a huge shopping spree for fresh groceries; previous weekends away in San Francisco and Portland meant we had very little food in the house. I had a week of cooking and blogging all planned out.

When my sister called Saturday night to let us know our nephew would be coming sooner rather than later, my first thought was to pack my suitcase and to get ready for a drive to New Jersey. My second thought at 10:00 at night? Make polenta.

I knew that once I got to NJ there would not be much time for blogging or cooking, so I went to work on one of the dishes I had planned for the week. I started with local mushrooms from Siena Farms, cleaned, chopped, and set aside.

mushrooms

mushrooms

I also chopped a whole shallot from Siena Farms. I added the shallot to a tablespoon of Kerrygold butter and started to cook the shallot on low.

shallot

After a few minutes, I added the mushroom and a bit more butter.

image

While the mushrooms and shallot sizzled gently on the side, I added 6 cups of boiling water from my electric tea kettle (a wedding gift and one of the BEST inventions ever!) to my Le Creuset French Oven. We use the electric kettle for everything from making tea to boiling pasta water. It is much quicker than boiling it on the stove.

cornmeal

Making sure the water was at a rolling boil, I added a cup and a quarter cornmeal, a generous shake of sea salt, and a pat of Kerrygold and stirred, stirred, stirred with my whisk. The cornmeal grew in volume very quickly. I lowered the heat and let it bubble away for about 10 minutes.

image

I forgot to take photos of the rest. Embarrassed smile By the time the dish was finished, it was after 11:00, and I was both nervous for my sister and exhausted.

As the mushrooms and shallots were cooking, I added about 3/4 cup of   Venge Late Harvest Zinfandel.

Venge Late Harvest Zinfandel

Note: I did NOT add in any of the Whisker Lickins behind the bottle Winking smile 

This Venge dessert wine added the perfect amount of sweetness to the mushrooms and onions, and once these ingredients were combined, I stirred them into the cornmeal and added another 1/4 cup of the wine, stirring everything until creamy. I was loosely trying to recreate some of the flavors from the Americano mushroom soup from Foodbuzz Festival, and while the polenta was of course different, it definitely had similar flavors.

I only got to eat a few bites before packing the polenta up for my husband for the week, but it was the perfect comfort food. I would eat it by itself for a meal, but I can also see it going great with a pork roast or turkey.

And since everything but the cornmeal was local, I am including this as one of the recipes I am making for Chef Robin White’s Fresh and Local Thanksgiving Challenge. I am working on a few more for Thanksgiving as well as a couple of holiday recipes for a Kitchen Play assignment. I can’t wait to get back to Boston and into my kitchen for some hands-on research!

Are you cooking Thanksgiving dinner or any part of it this year?

Tags: cooking with wine, holiday side dish, holidays, mushrooms, polenta, recipe, Vegetarian, wine, Zinfandel

Once I made chicken stock, I started trying to think of ideas, other than chicken soup, to make it into a quick after work meal. Over the weekend, as I eyed up the contents of our refrigerator and longed to open up the Lucini Grand Riserva balsamic vinegar I received this summer, I decided on a rich mushroom and onion soup with a chicken stock base. After arriving home last night feeling a touch of a cold coming on, I was glad to have the pot ready and waiting in the refrigerator.

To make the soup, I started with 2 large yellow onions, cut into rings.

chopped onions

Then I cleaned and chopped baby bella and white mushrooms. I was hoping for something more interesting, like shitakes, but alas my Shaw’s does not carry them.

mushrooms

 

chopped mushrooms

I got the mushrooms and onions started in a mix of white truffle and olive oils, and once they were sizzling and starting to cook down, I added a couple pats of Kerrygold butter in for that buttery flavor.

On a side note, I learned from Mireille Guiliano in French Women Don’t Get Fat the joys of mushrooms and onions cooked with butter with a slice of bread and a glass of Champagne. It’s a pairing that is deserving of the word epic, try it. 🙂

Once the mushrooms and onions were soft and caramelized, I deglazed the bottom of the pan with the balsamic vinegar, then poured in my homemade chicken stock.  After adding fresh thyme, pepper and (not enough) salt, I let the soup simmer on low for a few hours. At the very end, I added in a few cups of spinach I had frozen fresh, and then let it cool before packing it up.

mushroom onion soup

The soup made a warm and comforting dinner after a long day, served with some 12 grain bread and goat cheese, but it could have used some more flavor. I think adding some more balsamic and herbs would have been helpful, as well as some garlic. My dream for this soup was to serve it over buttery mashed potatoes, but I was too tired to make those. I will be doing that with the leftovers 🙂

Thanks to everyone who came out to the Red White Boston event at Sonsie last night! There will be more Red White Boston events coming up, so I hope to meet more of you in the future! And don’t forget to enter the                              Bauer Howl-o-ween Bash giveaway!

Tags: mushrooms, onions, recipe, soup

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