vegetables

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Before today’s post, a couple of updates:

I have added a professional background page to my About page; check it out if you get a chance.

Today my first guest post on CRAVE Boston was published. It covers one of Boston’s best wine shops, The Wine Bottega, and you can check it out here:

http://thecravecompany.com/boston/2010/08/05/thewinebottegaboston/

 

Recreating my meal at zazu was what I had in mind when I started in on this Israeli couscous creation, and I must admit, I was quite successful. Minus, of course, the beautiful Santa Rosa scenery and TasteLive! friends.

zucchini, onions, tomatoes, couscous

On Saturday night, I opened the windows, put on some Grateful Dead, and got to cooking this delicious dish.

I cut 3 medium sized zucchinis into thin discs, then slowly sautéed them on a very low heat with a sweet farmers’ market onion. 

zucchini

In the meantime, I took an entire box of Israeli couscous and mixed it with a few teaspoons of olive oil, garlic powder, and black pepper and allowed it to start to toast over a low flame. Then I squeezed in the juice of three lemons (would use at least two more next time!) and then added a couple cups of hot water to allow the couscous to cook all the way through.

To the zucchini I added semi-cooked corn and raw heirloom tomatoes, then some olive oil, sea salt, and black pepper.

I squeezed half of a lemon over the cooking veggies, then combined everything and topped it off with a good pour of olive oil.

image

lemony veggie couscous

Such an easy, flavorful, and filling vegetarian recipe. It was no zazu, but it was close and quite delicious. I will keep working on it to see if I can make it more up to zazu standards, but until then, I have a new vegetarian dinner in my repertoire, and you can’t beat that.

Do you have a favorite restaurant meal you have tried to recreate? Where was it from, and how did you do?

Tags: couscous, Food, garlic, heirloom tomatoes, Israeli Couscous, lemon, recipe, tomatoes, vegan recipe, vegetables, vegetarian recipe, zazu, zucchini

I couldn’t resist. I am fully and completely in love with summer. Here is why:

Siena Farms

Siena Farms’ sunflowers filled the Boylston Street side of the market, a tiny bit of Tuscany in Boston.

summer flowers summer flowers

It was so beautiful and colorful it was almost dizzying.

Basil and Sunflowers

challah

Challah bread from Tatte

image

Apples and peaches for pies, crisps, salads, and snacks. The arrival of apples makes me look forward to autumn. 

apples and peaches

Perhaps my favorite part of summer, fresh, local tomatoes. None of those white-fleshed, dry winter tomatoes. I need to learn to do some canning.

tomatoes and basil

My farm basket, ingredients to recreate the couscous dish I had at Zazu in Santa Rosa.

zucchini, onions, tomatoes

The market was full of sweet corn, perfect for making sriracha corn and shrimp salad.

sweet corn

Japanese eggplant, ready for a coconut curry or a nice pasta sauce. . . the colors at the market are nature’s art.

Japanese Eggplant 

Yes, the Copley Farmers’ Market is a great reminder that life is very good when things seem a little too hard. 🙂

How do you snap out of a funk and remember how great life truly is?

Tags: apples, Boston, bread, Challah bread, farm, farmers market, Food, fruit, local produce, peaches, produce, Siena Farms, summer, sunflowers, sweet corn, Tatte, tomatoes, vegetables

Is there anything better? A farmer’s market on a hot day at the height of summer, abundant with nature’s best food, locally baked goods, and the people whose hands are responsible for the labors of love that bring it all to us. I have been missing out on filling my kitchen with farmer’s market finds as I have had a bunch of after work activities = lots of wilted kale and other veggies that did NOT like to go to events. But yesterday I knew I was going straight home, so I stocked up.

Blueberries were everywhere. I planned on cooking with them, maybe a pie or a tart or just a salad, but I ate them.

farmer's market blueberries

blueberries Copley Square Market

I picked up some peaches, not yet ripe, for snacking on later in the weekend. I hope they are the type that make juice dribble down my chin and ruin my clothes like I am 5 years old 🙂

farmer's market peaches

My basket of veggies at Siena Farms included some purple kale, sweet onions, corn, and carrots.

my farmer's market shopping

multi-colored carrots Copley Square Farmer's Market

I didn’t buy any, but this mix of greens and flower petals was too pretty to NOT take a photo of them. 

mixed greens and edible flowers

When I finally got home after a long day, we had a simple dinner of buttered lobster rolls on a farmer’s market baguette, corn with sriracha, and tomato salad, a mix of onions, tomatoes, olive oil, salt, and pepper.

tomato salad

image

Served with a bottle of chilled La Vigne di Alice Brut Rosé, a wine with an intense nose of rose petals and flavors that are sweet and pleasant with lovely bubbles.

The market and dinner with my hubby were definitely the highlights of my Friday which was otherwise painfully boring. Have you ever felt like you have outgrown a job? I think that’s me right now.

What was the highlight of your Friday?

Tags: blueberries, Copley Square Farmer's Market, corn, Farmer's Markets, Food, fruit, lobster rolls, onions, peppers, tomatoes, vegetables, wine

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