I have a very long wooden spoon that I only take out when I make this recipe. It’s so long that it gets tucked away sideways in the back of a drawer, and it even is a bit charred near the scoop from all the times I’ve made this dish! But not to worry – I’ve included a non-flambéed version if you don’t really want to see flames leaping up from the pot as you stir the vodka-doused pasta! When I told Hank I want going to use this for a Berkshire Eagle column (link here), he insisted I also make a non-flambéed version. He was right about that, and also was very happy to have penne alla vodka twice as I worked on this piece!
Read MoreThis recipe appeared in the Berkshire Eagle before Passover (hence the flour in the recipe; click here for the link), but I got so wrapped up with Passover prep and enjoying family over the weekend, I totally forget to post it to my blog until this very moment!
It’s still pretty cold here in the Berkshires, but in an effort to feel like it’s spring we have been making asparagus with some frequency – and we always serve it for Passover. But it’s not going to feel like spring for real until I can forage for ramps, which will be soon, I hope!
Read MoreI very clearly remember the marketing slogan “The incredible edible egg!” And it’s true – there are so many things you can do with eggs, and if you can get fresh local eggs, you’re really in for a treat. While I know it’s not always so common to have leftover pasta (and it’s certainly not going to happen when my kids are home for a visit), if you ever can’t quite finish what you’re made for dinner, a pasta frittata makes a wonderful lunch the next day.
Read MoreThis was a fun and different sort of “centerpiece” column! Bears are coming out of hibernation around here, and my family has always had a lifelong love of anything with a bear. Once my father even received a mounted bear head when he left the US Attorney’s office!
Using a few local products that have “bear” as part of the name, I put together this piece. All of these can be made with substitutes if you’re not able to find the specific items mentioned here. And as I say, please do let me know if you find any other “bear” products!
Read MoreAlthough Purim has come and gone this year, these cookies are delicious any time! This column was published earlier than usual online this week – I first saw it Monday morning, whereas my columns usually don’t get posted online until late Tuesday – before the print version appeared on Wednesday. However, waiting three days before reposting here it means that it’s now after the holiday, so you can just be bold and enjoy them anytime, or set yourself a reminder for next year, which begins the evening of March 6th, 2023!
Read MoreI think sometimes I just figure out dinner as I go along. I’m sure I’ve made this before, and most recently I realized it would be a great option for anyone trying to diversify how they make chicken! Although the recipe mentions fennel and figs (optional – they just happened to be in the store), you can try other combinations. Let me know if you happen upon a great combo!
Read MoreWe’re in the winter doldrums. Besides the weather, it feels like we’re hardly doing anything as the gray skies just make me feel unmotivated. To brighten things up, I’ve been trying to enjoy the seasonal citrus we get from warmer parts of the country. Just eating a sweet juicy orange is a treat in itself, and I’ve also been using lemons, oranges, and grapefruit in my cooking. In addition to what’s here, I recently found a recipe for grapefruit and rosemary shortbread, two flavors that are so good together. I’m still thinking about the signature cocktail at Greta and Daniel’s wedding that used both grapefruit and rosemary!
Read MoreOn one occasion when I made this when Wilson was visiting – since I know it is one of his favorites – Hank commented on how good it was and asked why I’d never made it before. And then, the very next day, it popped up in my Facebook memories that I had made one year earlier, again for Wilson, when he was here for a visit! But I suppose this means I should make it more often!
Read MoreThroughout culinary history and across cultures, people have used food as vessels in which to cook or serve other foods. One of my recent ideas used delicata squash to hold creamy orzo with sausage. It would be easy enough to make this vegetarian or vegan, but whatever you do, it is best to use a small pasta shape to get as much as possible into the squash “boats.” Click here for the link to the Berkshire Eagle column, or scroll down.
Read MoreI am always looking for new ways to use the corn that I put in the freezer during the summer. I’ve posted about a variety of possibilities, which include ways to embellish sautéed frozen corn, corn chowder, and corn pudding, just to name a few. This most recent improvisation has already become a favorite in our house. Although we grill throughout the winter, if you don’t, you can just cook the swordfish in whatever way is easiest for you!
Read MoreI am sure it’s no surprise that I love getting edible gifts! And two such gifts this month – pears and cheese –inspired the column that was in the Berkshire Eagle this past week. (Click here for link.) This savory bread pudding was such a success that I’m already thinking of other versions. Of course, I also loved putting some of the cheese I got as a gift on a juicy burger, and cutting it small pieces to put on a salad. With the pears, I also made a pear upside-down cake and a pear yogurt cake with chocolate chunks. For me these are gifts that bring many joys: the joy of cooking something interesting, of enjoying fantastic ingredients, and of sharing what I’ve made with family and friends.
Read MoreWhile my columns in the Berkshire Eagle always appear in the printed edition on a Wednesday, the online version usually goes up the day before, on Tuesday. So I try to remember to take a look online, and today there was a piece listing the 10 most popular recipes that have appeared in the Berkshire Eagle in 2021. I clicked on it and was blown away to find that four of my columns made it into the top 10! Not only that, my columns also held the #1, #2, and #3 spots!
Read MoreAt Guido’s in Pittsfield, this wonderful vegetable is called a Cape Cod white turnip, but I did get some feedback on Twitter that I should have called them Eastham turnips! (Eastham is a town on Cape Cod.) As I write below, I first encountered them as Nantucket turnips. Furthermore, I have seen mention of a similar – or perhaps the same – vegetable called Florida Mountain turnips (there is a Florida, Massachusetts) or Gilfeather turnips (in Vermont, named for a farmer from the early 1900s). Some sources say it is a turnip-rutabaga hybrid, but most people are just happy to enjoy them over their short season.
Read MoreSome years back the first night of Hanukkah was actually on Thanksgiving Day! I’m not sure if that’s the earliest it can be (in the Gregorian calendar) as I don’t know the intricacies of the Hebrew calendar, but this year it’s a pretty close second with the holiday starting the Sunday after Thanksgiving.
No matter when it falls, I always tell people to make a lot of latkes to freeze for later. Even though they are traditional for Hanukkah, they are so good, and I am always happy to have them as a side dish at other times.
Read MoreI am sure it comes as no surprise that I really like Thanksgiving, because it is wonderful to gather with people I love and make a special meal for them. This past week, for a centerpiece column in the Berkshire Eagle, I offered three different ideas for orange side dishes to make sure your menu is colorful!
Read MoreI always like to have a package of puff pastry in the freezer which can quickly and easily provide the base for so many treats, both sweet and savory. Here I decided to use the puff pastry to make turnovers, filled with the flavors of choucroute, and made some modifications for a vegetarian version.
Read MorePasta provides a wonderful palette for so many flavors, but sometimes it’s so easy to get stuck in a tomato-based rut! Italians love pasta with walnuts, and this vegetarian recipe is really quick and easy. I always keep several different kinds of nuts in the freezer, although I do need to make a point of buying ricotta when I want to make this. You can pretty much pull it together in the time it takes to boil the water and cook the pasta. You can find my column from this week here, or scroll down!
Read MoreThere is something so comforting about a bowl of soup. And yet, as a child, I didn’t really like soup. I am not sure why, as my grandmother was a phenomenal cook and she used to make tubs and tubs of soup for us keep in the freezer. I think, perhaps, my mother loved her mother’s soup so much that she wasn’t too upset when I showed little interest!
But my kids started on soup early, as did my niece, which I discovered when she gobbled down a curried cauliflower soup when she was just a toddler!
This past week I wrote about pumpkin soup for my Berkshire Eagle (link here), which is just right for the season.
Read MoreTwo weeks ago, my column for the Berkshire Eagle featured grilled summer vegetables and juicy ripe tomatoes! And now, two weeks later – although some summer vegetables are giving their last gifts of the season – we are moving into fall and looking for cozier, warming recipes. This is one of my favorite stews, and I know we will make it regularly through the fall and winter months.
The Berkshire Eagle column link is here, or scroll down the recipe.
Read MoreSo far, this weekend has truly felt like summer! Although the sun is rising later and setting earlier, today was beautifully warm and sunny, and tomorrow is predicted to be the same! This is one of our favorite ways to enjoy summer produce, especially the juicy tomatoes of late summer and early fall. Grab a few from a local farm, along with some other veggies, and savor the summer for as long as you can!
The Berkshire Eagle column link is here, or scroll down the recipe.
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