vegetables

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Well, I never found time this weekend to buy a new computer, so please bear with me  if the fonts or spacing on this post is off. I couldn’t use my husband’s computer last night and had to blog in WordPress, uploading each photo individually. Argh.

It was a fun weekend but incredibly hectic, and like any time I travel, the first place I wanted to be when I got home was in the kitchen. Throughout the weekend, after browsing through lots of stew and cassoulet recipes and with the giant pumpkin in my kitchen in mind, I put together a pumpkin and white bean stew that blew both of us away with its warmth, complexity of flavors, and comfort.

 Pumpkin

Carving Pumpkin

The ingredients

1 small pumpkin, chopped, tossed in oil, and roasted at 400 for 25 minutes, then peeled

2 cans white kidney beans

3 large stalks celery, roughly chopped

2 small yellow onions, chopped

3 pieces turkey bacon, chopped

3 cloves garlic, chopped finely

3 cups carrots, chopped

3 cups shitake mushrooms, torn into chunks

1 cup red wine, I used Michel-Schlumberger Petite Verdot

2 cups organic veggie broth

2 sprigs fresh thyme

salt and pepper to taste

stew ingredients

 
chopped celery

stew

 

thyme

 
pumpkin white bean stew

 
This dish was all about layering the flavors, starting with the onions and bacon which I brought to a sizzle with a little bit of olive oil. Once the onions had softened, I added the carrots, celery, garlic, wine, broth, and beans, then stirred everything up, then placed the thyme sprigs on top of the stew, covered the pot, and let it simmer on low while I took a phone call.  About a half hour later, I tore the mushrooms by hand and stirred them into the stew. About 10 minutes later, we were ready to eat. I topped each bowl of stew with a drizzle of white truffle oil, the perfect compliment to the earthiness of the soup. I served the soup with the Michel-Schlumberger Petite Verdot which has some beautiful cherry flavors with its own bit of earthiness that went well both in and with the stew. I may not always have the best sense when it comes to pairing food and wine, but I love the depth that cooking with wine gives food, especially in the fall and winter, and appreciate how food and wine bring one another to a whole new level.

I would most definitely recommend this stew to anyone looking for a substantial, delicious meal for these chilly evenings. Make it vegetarian super easily by leaving the bacon out!

Do you ever cook with wine?

Tags: beans, Food, Petite Verdot, pumpkin, recipe, stew, vegetables, wine

I know, I know. It’s autumn, and I should have moved on to everything pumpkin and squash, but I am loving heirloom tomatoes as long as I can get them! This week I bought quite the local summer veggie haul, and with the weather being in the 80’s, I couldn’t really help but take advantage of it. I am up and running again, building my base for the 2011 Boston Marathon, and I simply needed to make one of my favorite warm-weather dishes, gazpacho.

I started with 3 large heirloom tomatoes, 3 cloves of garlic, a small yellow onion, a yellow pepper, and a cucumber.

gazpacho ingredients

I couldn’t find any ripe peaches, so I cheated and used 2 peaches from a jar of Trader Joe’s peach halves, quite delicious, especially chopped up in oatmeal.

 

Trader Joe's peaches gazpacho ingredients

 

yellow pepper

To make the gazpacho, I chopped all of the above ingredients and tossed them in the food processer with 6 ice cubes, a cup of cold water, 1/4 cup red wine vinegar, and a few dashes of hot sauce.

tomato peach gazpacho

The combination of peaches with the other ingredients is delicious and one I first had at Union a few weeks ago. I am ready for fall, but I will savor as long as I possibly can!

Now for the gripes! One of my favorite blogs is Melissa Nibbles, and I love her “Three Things Thursday” where she has a little venting session on things that are annoying her. While I tend to be a happy and positive person overall, there are certain things that just KILL me, and so I decided to take a page from Melissa’s book (er. . .  blog) and let it all out there. If you haven’t read her blog, definitely do, she is hilarious and delightfully real.

1) People who get on an escalator, stand in the middle, and hold on to both sides. . . then stay there. Why do we even have escalators? I am pretty sure most healthy Americans could stand to walk up or down a flight of stairs once in awhile. I find myself out and about during lunch, in a huge rush, and constantly stuck behind people who don’t get the “stand on the right, walk on the left” system that is a given in Europe. Haven’t we gotten the escalator memo?

2) Littering/not picking up after your dog – I see a LOT of this in my neighborhood and once had a neighbor who shared our backyard and didn’t pick up after her dog. This behavior makes you a gross human being. Period.

3) Adults who ride bikes on the sidewalk – bikes are vehicles, and if you are over the age of 16, you should be in the road, following the rules of the road, not riding up the back of my ankle on Comm Ave.

I love interactive posts. . . so tell us, what are you griping about?

Tags: gazpacho, healthy, recipe, soup, vegetables

Anyone else feel caught between two seasons? Don’t get me wrong, I love this time of year, especially the warm afternoons and chilly, great-for-sleeping weekends, but I find it a tough time to get dressed and a tough time to plan meals.

I always wake up freezing, dress too warmly, and by mid-day am too hot. Or I plan a meal that is perfect for a summery day, only to be eating chilled soup on a dreary evening.

Last night this was not the case. We woke up to the perfect day to sleep in, but alas we had work. I was freezing all day, went to the farmers market in the rain, and had my mind set on an evening with a hot, spicy, veggie curry, Shipyard pumpkin beer, and maybe a little Travel Channel ghost show. 🙂

The market is also trapped between summer and fall, and that is a very good thing.Squash, heirloom tomatoes, and honeycrisp apples in the same place might just be heaven.

autumn squash local shallots

image flowers from Friendship Farm

The colors of the market splashed across Copley Square against the gray, rainy backdrop like an abstract painting. It was quite beautiful and made me feel SO much better than I did inside my office.

honeycrisp apples

I bought a ton, a head of broccoli, some shallots, a bag of apples, a few acorn squashes, an heirloom tomato the size of my head, the sweetest corn I have ever eaten (raw!), and some spicy peppers for my curry.

heirloom tomatoes

heirloom tomato

jalapenos 

acorn squash

We had a very veggie dinner, starting with chopped heirloom tomato with a simple dressing of balsamic vinegar, olive oil, shallots, and black pepper. After eating some of the corn raw, I roasted the rest with olive oil and added a tiny bit of sea salt at the end.

image

The curry contained one whole red onion, roughly chopped, 6 carrots, a head of broccoli, a green bell pepper, acorn squash, and some hot peppers, seeds and all.

To prep the veggies, I simmered the onions on their own in a tiny bit of olive oil so they would soften and sweeten up. While doing this I roasted the acorn squash at 400 for about 20 minutes. Everything else got tossed into the big pot, then covered in a can of coconut milk, a couple spoons of red curry paste, a bit of lemongrass paste, Burmese curry powder, and cayenne pepper.

curry veggies

It was so simple, yet so delicious and comforting. I enjoyed a bowl of curry alongside my summery tomato salad and corn and a Shipyard brew.

I needed a quiet night in. It was a very trying week. Luckily I have a fun weekend trip ahead, heading on a blogger road trip to Vermont to take some baking classes at King Arthur Flour! It should be a very exciting weekend!

And next week is Boston Wine Week and then the Newport Mansions Food and Wine Festival, my favorite event of last year. Too many fun things happening, too little time!

Do you feel like you are still savoring summer, or have you made the leap to fall?

Tags: curry, farmers market, Food, recipe, squash, vegetables, Vegetarian

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