De Ma Cuisine

Potatoes Archive

Thursday

15

December 2011

1

COMMENTS

Mashed Potato Soup

Written by , Posted in Cheese, Dinner, Main Dishes, Potatoes, Soups, Vegetables, Vegetarian

Mashed Potato Soup

Author: Rachel Oberg – De Ma Cuisine
Prep time:
Cook time:
Total time:
Serves: 4-6
Ingredients
  • 1 carrot, chopped
  • 1/2 turnip, chopped
  • 1 radish (about 1/4 C), chopped
  • 4 C mashed potatoes
  • 2 cloves garlic, , chopped
  • 3 tiny onions, or 1 med, chopped
  • 1-2 C spinach, chopped
  • 1 sweet potato, chopped
  • 2-4 C stock
  • 2 C milk
  • 1/4 t nutmeg
  • 1/4 t ginger
  • 2 sprigs thyme
  • 1 sprig oregano
  • 2 t chili powder
  • 2 t smoked paprika
  • 1/2 C apple cider vinegar, divided (or 1/4 wine, 1/4 C vinegar)
  • salt
  • pepper
  • 1 C cheese (cheddar and parmesan)
  • 4 T olive oil
Instructions
  1. Heat soup pot, and add oil. Add veggies (all but garlic), salt and pepper. Stir. Cover (so veggies steam a bit) and cook over med heat about 10 minutes (or until veggies are mostly soft), stirring occasionally.
  2. Add garlic and seasonings. Cook 2-3 minutes.
  3. Add wine or vinegar, scraping off any bits that are stuck to the bottom of the pan. 2 minutes.
  4. Add potatoes, milk and stock. Bring to a boil. Add spinach and herbs, cook 3 minutes.
  5. Remove from heat. Carefully puree using an immersion blender (or regular blender, working in batches, with the center part of the lid removed – hold a towel over the opening).
  6. Stir in cheese and remaining vinegar. Taste and add more seasoning if needed.
  7. Serve with crostini or a crusty bread.
Notes

If you don’t have any leftover mashed potatoes, chop up 3-4 potatoes and add with the rest of the veggies!

Of course this would be great with bacon on top too! 🙂

Friday

21

October 2011

2

COMMENTS

For Oma and Her Borscht – Beet and Beef Borscht

Written by , Posted in Beef, Dinner, Gluten Free, Inspired By, Legacy, Lunch, Main Dishes, Meat, One Dish Dinners, Potatoes, Soups, Vegetables

Beef-and-Beet-Borscht1

This post is for my Oma, who will probably never read it, as I’m quite certain that she’s not online.

My Oma is a wonderful cook. She’s one of the best, in my opinion. When we were little and we’d go to visit, she would have Chicken Noodle Soup for those of us who hadn’t yet discovered the wonders of Borscht. I didn’t know what I was missing! Her Borscht is amazing! She has two different kinds: Beef Borscht (I don’t know if that’s the real title, it might also be called Winter Borscht) and Sommer Borscht (pronounced like Zumma). I had the Sommer Borscht recently for the first time and it’s oh so good. She also makes Zwieback (the buns being made by me in the above photo), which I have memories of making with her as a small girl. I’ve made them since, as a grownup, and while they’re not quite the same, they’re pretty good (I have her Zwieback recipe, in her handwriting, so they’re as close as they can get!).

Beets1

Oma’s Borscht is made differently than mine, but they’re the same idea. A meat and potatoes soup that has a dollop of sour cream on top. I make mine with beets (which I’m told she doesn’t) and she makes hers with dill (which I don’t). There may be other variances too, but those are the main ones.

I think Borscht came from a time where people used what they had out of necessity. I used what I had (beets) because I wanted to (and because it’s the only way we like beets in our house). This is how I normally cook, and why most of my recipes are uniquely my own. Some are inspired by a magazine, a blog, a cookbook. Others are concocted by standing in front of the pantry cupboards, or the fridge with the door open (I used to get in trouble for this as a kid) summoning my creative culinary skills to create something delicious. Either way, I’m often inspired to use things that we already have, often that have come in our Abundant Harvest Organics produce box, in a fresh, creative way.

I’ve made Borscht many times before, but until recently, had never written it down. So, here’s my most recent version, probably slightly different from any other, but good none-the-less.

Happy Eating!

Beet and Beef Borscht

Prep Time: 15 minutes

Cook Time: 2 hours, 17 minutes

Yield: 4

Beet and Beef Borscht

Ingredients

  • 2 T olive oil
  • 1/2 - 1 lb. (stewing) beef*
  • 4 carrots, chopped
  • 4 celery stalks, chopped
  • 4 lg. or 8 sm. radishes, chopped (opt.)
  • 3 med. - lg. potatoes, chopped
  • 1 onion, chopped
  • 8 sm. beets, peeled and chopped
  • 1 clove garlic, diced
  • 1 T (or more) red wine vinegar
  • 1 C crushed tomatoes
  • 2 - 4 C water
  • 4 C beef (or chicken, or vegetable) stock*
  • to taste salt
  • to taste pepper
  • 1 C cabbage, chopped
  • Greek yogurt (for topping)

Instructions

  1. Heat soup pot. Add olive oil, then beef. Cook beef 3 - 5 minutes.
  2. Add carrots through beets, cook for about 8 to 10 minutes. Add the garlic, cook 1 minute. Add the vinegar, to deglaze the pan, cook about 1 minute more.
  3. Add tomatoes, water, stock. salt, and pepper, and bring to a boil. Reduce to a simmer and cook 1-2 hours, adding the cabbage in the last 30 minutes or so. Taste and adjust seasoning if desired.
  4. Serve topped with yogurt.

Notes

*To make it vegetarian, omit beef, and use vegetable stock.

http://www.de-ma-cuisine.com/for-oma-and-her-borscht/

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. 🙂

Sunday

9

October 2011

3

COMMENTS

Shepherd’s Pie

Written by , Posted in Beef, Cheese, Main Dishes, Meat, Potatoes, Vegetables

Fall is a time for hot meals, comfort foods, hearty dishes… it’s an excuse to not just have salad for dinner. And to not have to turn on the AC if we want to eat soup (of course we’ve never done that…). Shepherd’s Pie is one of those meals. We love it, and I want to share it.

Add it to your fall menu!

Happy Eating!

Shepherd’s Pie 

 
Author: Rachel Oberg – De Ma Cuisine
Prep time:
Cook time:
Total time:
Serves: 2-4
A hearty comfort food, perfect for fall and winter.
Ingredients
  • 2 cloves garlic, chopped
  • 1/2 lb. ground beef (or chicken, turkey, or pork)
  • 1 C leeks (or onion, I had leeks when I made this the first time), chopped
  • 1 C spinach (or kale), chopped
  • 1 carrot, chopped or grated
  • 1 C broccoli, chopped
  • 1/2 C frozen peas
  • 1-2 C mashed potatoes (can use leftovers)
  • 1 C cooked polenta (opt. or use an extra cup mashed potatoes – I had leftover polenta I wanted to use up)
  • 1 t chili powder
  • 1 t cumin
  • 1/2 t all spice
  • salt
  • pepper
  • 1 T balsamic vinegar
  • 1 T cornstarch
  • 1/4 C water
  • 1-2 T olive oil
  • 1/2 C sharp white cheddar cheese, grated
Instructions
  1. Pre-heat oven to 350 F. (If potatoes aren’t cooked yet, wash, cube and cook. Then mash with some milk, salt and olive oil.) Cook beef. Drain and set aside. Add olive oil, leeks/onions, garlic, broccoli, carrots, and seasonings; cook until tender. Add peas, cook 3 minutes or so. Add beef and spinach, cook 3 min, or until spinach is wilted.
  2. Mix cornstarch with water and balsamic vinegar. Pour over beef and veggies.
  3. If using a cast iron skillet, leave meat and veggies in there, spread evenly over the bottom of the pan. If not, transfer to an ovenproof dish. Cover meat and veggies with potatoes. Top with cheese.
  4. Bake until cheese is bubbly and slightly browned, 15 minutes or so.
 
Notes

This is a great way to use up leftover potatoes, polenta, even extra ground beef and veggies from a previous meal.
Leftovers can be frozen and are great re-heated in the toaster oven (or microwave, if you want).
If you don’t have broccoli, use more peas, and vice versa. If you don’t like carrots, or any of the veggies listed, use some that you do like. You could also substitute mashed cauliflower for the mashed potatoes.
Our rating: * * * It was so good we both had seconds!

 

Wednesday

28

September 2011

0

COMMENTS

Tater-Not Casserole

Written by , Posted in Dinner, Meat, Pork, Potatoes, Potlucks, Sides, Vegetables

We went to a wonderful potluck dinner Sunday night. I was introduced to our host’s daughter as “Rachel. She’s a food blogger.” Can I just say how cool that made me feel?!

I wonder, is it just me, or does food taste better at a potluck (especially if there’s fried or BBQ’s chicken)? At our meal, there was: BBQ’d chicken, 2 kinds of sausage, green bean casserole, my newly invented Tater-Not Casserole, and for dessert one of the best fruit crisps I’ve ever had (my husband agreed – he said he hoped I didn’t mind, but he liked it better than mine. I didn’t, because I did too.)

I don’t know if this was wise, but I decided to not try out a new recipe for this event, but to come up with a new dish and serve it to people we hardly knew (and hoped would be invited to hang out with again). I’d written down a few ideas, I’d researched what was in Tater-Tot Casserole, so knew in general the elements I needed (potato, creamy, vegetable, maybe meat), but I hadn’t really planned it out. Dinner was at 5, and at 3:40 I figured I should get started (um, 30 minutes ago, but it was a nice day, so we went for a walk with the dog). Fast forward through all 5 burners on at once, potato on every kitchen surface, piles of cheese, all pans dirty, husband taking photos, husband doing dishes (heart), bechamel not thickening, forgetting about the balsamic, not burning the bacon… to a completed dish, with zero minutes to spare before we had to be out the door.

It had broccoli on the bottom, which was covered with cheese sauce (or bechamel, if you want to pretend you know what you’re talking about like I do), topped with a combination of hash browns and mashed potatoes that had been mixed with the rest of the bechamel, which was topped with bacon, caramelized onions and garlic, that was topped with reduced balsamic vinegar (that thankfully didn’t burn in the frenzy). I had tasted most layers individually, but not the finished product. I just figured that almost anything is better with bacon, so if it was bad, maybe no one would know. Judging from the two scoops that were left in the 9×13 dish, it was surprisingly edible.

This recipe is for Kristy W., who requested my version of Tater-Tot Casserole.

Tater-Not Casserole
 
Recipe Type: Dinner, Side Dish
Author: Rachel Oberg – De Ma Cuisine
Prep time: 20 mins
Cook time: 30 mins
Total time: 50 mins
Serves: 8-10
Kristy asked for my version of a Tater-Tot Casserole. I’ve never made it before, so I did some research and came up with my own version, sans Tater-Tots.
Ingredients
  • 8 medium red potatoes, grated
  • 1 1/2 C mashed potatoes (I used leftovers that I had in the freezer)
  • 4 C broccoli, cut in chunks
  • 2 C sharp cheddar cheese
  • 1/2 C Greek yogurt
  • 2 C 1% milk
  • salt, pepper
  • 1 T chili powder
  • 1 t smoked paprika
  • 1 red onion, diced
  • 2 cloves garlic, diced
  • 1 T agave
  • 2 T flour
  • 1/4 C extra virgin olive oil, plus 2 T
  • 2 strips bacon, chopped
  • 1/4 to 1/2 C balsamic vinegar
Instructions
  1. Grate potatoes. Rinse and wring out water (using a clean tea towel – beware, this will leave potato all over the towel, use something else if you don’t want this to happen!). Heat 1/4 C oil in large pan. Add potato and cook covered, stirring occasionally and scraping crispy bits off the bottom, about 15 minutes. Add mashed potatoes and heat through.
  2. While potatoes cook: Cook bacon. When it’s almost done, add onion and agave. Cook 5 min, then add garlic.
  3. Also while potatoes cook: Steam broccoli (1 C water in bottom of pan, broccoli in steamer basket, cover and cook about 5-10 min – until broccoli is tender).
  4. Another thing to do while potatoes cook: heat 2 T oil, add 2 T flour; whisk and cook 30-60 seconds. Slowly add milk, whisking as you do. Add chili powder, paprika, salt and pepper. Once it’s thickened, add yogurt. Turn off heat and whisk in cheese.
  5. And the last thing to do while the potatoes cook: Bring balsamic vinegar to a boil. Do not let it burn! Just simmer until it’s thickened and syrupy.
  6. Taste the bechamel (cheese sauce) and add salt and pepper to taste if needed.
  7. Assemble: grease a 9×13 pan. Add broccoli and toss with 1 C bechamel, mix the remaining bechamel into potato mixture and spoon over broccoli layer. Top it with onion and bacon mixture and drizzle with balsamic vinegar.
 
Notes

To make this simpler, leftovers can be used: broccoli, hashbrowns, mashed potatoes, even the bechamel can be made ahead of time and reheated. Balsamic can be made in large batches and stored in the fridge. Bacon can be cooked and crumbled and frozen. If you use leftovers, assemble like above and heat in the oven until it reaches at least 160F.
Oh, you could also use Tater-Tots if you wanted to make really simple. 🙂