De Ma Cuisine

Legumes Archive

Wednesday

26

October 2011

0

COMMENTS

Hearty, Spicy Lentil Stew

Written by , Posted in Legumes, Lentils, Low Carb, Main Dishes, Pasta, Soups, Vegetables

It’s starting to feel like fall here in LA. The temperature has been consistently in the 70’s to mid 80’s (with the occasional 90+ days). The leaves are starting to change. It’s still dark when I get up in the morning. I really do enjoy and appreciate a lot about where we live. But, probably for as long as we continue to not live there, I will miss the fall weather in Ontario, Canada. I miss the cool crisp air, frost on the ground, being able to see my breath. The red, gold and burnt orange leaves. Raking them into a pile, then jumping in them. And the smell of those leaves. Maybe it’s just the air that smells that way, like, fall. Oh how I miss it. (P.S. Wherever you live, have you ever jumped into a pile of freshly raked leaves? Isn’t it fun?!) Although fall in LA may not be all that I wish it would be, it’s not too bad at all. And it will always be my favorite season.

One of my favorite things about fall is fall foods. Soups, stews, roasts; hearty, comforting meals. Last week, on a cool day, I made some Hearty, Spicy Lentil Stew. The recipe was inspired by one I saw in a recent issue of Food Network Magazine that had pasta, lentils, tomato sauce and I’m not sure what else. Those three ingredients led me to come up with a recipe based on what we had in our kitchen.

Here it is. I hope you make it, and feel cozy and fall-y and full. Enjoy!

Hearty, Spicy Lentil Stew
 
Recipe Type: Stew, Main, Dinner
Author: Rachel Oberg – De Ma Cuisine
Prep time: 15 mins
Cook time: 60 mins
Total time: 1 hour 15 mins
Serves: 4
A hearty fall dish.
Ingredients
  • 1 T olive oil
  • 1 T bacon grease (or olive oil, if you want to make it a bit healthier – it will lose a bit of flavor though)
  • 1 carrot, chopped
  • 1/2 onion, chopped
  • 3 small turnips, chopped
  • 2 cloves garlic, diced
  • 2 t salt
  • 1 t smoked paprika (or 2 if you’re not using bacon grease)
  • pinch ground ginger
  • 1/2 t chili powder
  • 1/2 t pepper
  • 1/2 t red pepper flakes
  • pinch all spice
  • 2 C pan drippings (from a roast chicken)
  • 4-6 C water (only if not using 8 C stock, below)
  • OR 6-8 C chicken (or vegetable) stock
  • 1 C lentils
  • 1 C pureed pumpkin
  • 1 C crushed tomatoes
  • 1 C rotini pasta
  • 1 T red wine vinegar
Instructions
  1. Heat soup pot. Add oil and bacon grease. Add carrot, turnip and onion, cook 3-5 minutes. Add garlic, cook 2 minutes. Add all remaining ingredients except pasta and vinegar.
  2. Bring to a boil, cook 30-60 minutes (or until lentils are soft).
  3. Add pasta. Cook until al dente.
  4. Add vinegar.
  5. Taste and add more seasonings if desired.
 
Notes

Lentils are high in iron and are a good source of protein.
Yummy served with Cream Cheesed Garlic Bread.
This recipe can be vegetarian using vegetable stock, and/or gluten-free using rice pasta (that’s the kind that I used, just because we like it). If you don’t like veggies, they can be pureed and added in (and additional ones can be added too, like spinach, chard, kale, cauliflower, zucchini etc).

Wednesday

19

October 2011

1

COMMENTS

Divine Ham and Bean Soup

Written by , Posted in Legumes, Main Dishes, Meat, Pork, Potatoes, Soups, Vegetables

I’m not really a chef, but I pretend to be. I guess you could also title this post “Getting to Know the Person Who Writes This Blog That You’re Reading Right Now”, but that doesn’t really flow, so I’ll keep it the way it is.

Sometimes I think that it would be fun to share interesting things about myself. I don’t know if anyone else will find them interesting. Maybe my mom and dad will. I hope they’re reading this. Anyhoo, here are some things I thought you might get a kick out of knowing. If you don’t, skip to the bottom. There’s a recipe there for you.

I like to think of myself as a professional blogger. Is that a job?

I started blogging about food after I saw the movie “Julie and Julia” Anyone else? No? Just me? I’m OK with that.

I use the stem of the broccoli too (peeled to remove the tough skin). No wasting food in this house.

I like to drink “chef’s juice” while I cook dinner.

I love vegetables (sorry younger self).

I like things now that I used to hate: mushrooms (cooked only, preferably), olives, wine, soda (not often drunk, but enjoyed when it is).

I use a computer for my work, and I’m pretty good at it (sorry high school self – when you thought you weren’t going to need the internet or to know how to make spreadsheets in Excel, you were wrong).

Salty over sweet any day of the week. A bite of dessert can satisfy, but I can down a bag of Salt and Vinegar chips in a sitting. Easy.

In my opinion, the best smell in the world is garlic, right after it hits the pan.

I love cheese. I don’t care if it’s bad for me. This is one food where I rarely read the label (except to see things like what kind it is, where it’s made and how much it costs).

I love basil. It’s the thing that grows best in my apartment garden. That’s not why I love it. I just do.

I hate it when my food gets cold. It’s so sad.

I’m not the best baker, because the way I cook is more of an art than a science. I don’t at all mean that baking is not an art, friends. I just mean that I use a little bit of this, and a dash of that, I change this for that and that for this. And when I’m done, it’s different than it was gonna be originally. Sometimes this makes baking not turn out for me. For example, I’ve had banana breads that have baked for hours and were still liquid in the middle (you can’t do a straight substitution for sugar with honey, lesson learned). The following was not a disaster in the cooking sense. It was almost a disaster because, well, read and see… (Again, if you’re bored, feel free to skip to the recipe at the waaaay bottom of this post.)

The cupcake saga. I made some delicious cupcakes. I used a recipe from Joy the Baker (she’s pretty much my blogger idol). I did a slightly different version of this recipe (by substituting blackberry jam for the cherries). Try it. You will not be sorry. 

The following recipe has nothing to do with the above. Just a random post. But a little bit of background for it: Husband loves ham. At the grocery store once he asked if I could make a ham and bean soup. There’s nothing that I love more than cooking for him (really!), so of course I had to try. Here’s what I came up with.

Divine Ham and Bean Soup
 
Recipe Type: Soup
Author: Rachel Oberg – De Ma Cuisine
Prep time: 15 mins
Cook time: 6 hours
Total time: 6 hours 15 mins
Serves: 2
A cozy fall or winter meal. A great way to use leftover ham.
Ingredients
  • 1 carrot, diced
  • 1 parsnip, diced
  • 1 C ham, diced (small cubes)
  • 1 potato, diced (small cubes)
  • 1/4 C onion, diced
  • 1 garlic clove, diced
  • 6 C water (give or take)
  • 1/2 to 1 C chicken stock
  • 1 C pan drippings from chicken (or could use gravy, or just more stock)
  • 1/2 lb (about 1 – 2 C) canelini (or other favorite) beans
  • salt (only if necessary – ham is salty) and pepper
  • 1/8 t ginger
  • 1/4 t red pepper flakes (or more, if you like it spicier)
Instructions
  1. Combine beans and water in soup pot. Bring to a boil. Turn the heat off. Cover. Leave 5 hours. [or put all ingredients except potatoes in Crock Pot, cook on high until beans are tender (6-10 hours). Add potatoes in the last hour. (I didn’t do mine this way, so I don’t know for sure on the time. Let me know if you do!)]
  2. Add water, pan drippings and stock to soup pot. Bring to a boil.
  3. In a small pan, sauté onion, carrot, parsnip; 3 minutes; add garlic. When water/stock boils, add potatoes. When veggies are tender, add them to the soup. Add ham.
  4. Reduce to a simmer and cook until potatoes are cooked and beans are tender.
  5. Great served with Gruyère and Apple Toasts.
 
Notes

Our rating: **** and a half!
It might serve more than 2, I didn’t write it down and I can’t remember. 🙂