Recipe Testing. Copy Editing. All Things Food. (& Latin Tutoring, too!)

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All Things Food

 
Sourdough Crackers (Cotswold & Other Variations)

My good friend, Rafi, of Hilltown Hot Pies, spends his days working with sourdough, and his nights dreaming about it. Although I think he’s a master pizzaiolo, with sourdough – which is what he likes to use for his crusts – Rafi says, one is always learning.

Last summer, with a portable propane-fired pizza oven, Rafi ran a pizza pop-up at the Dream Away Lodge in Becket, MA. We spent many warm evenings at the picnic tables out back, under the stars, filling ourselves with way too much pizza because we couldn’t choose from Rafi’s creative toppings, fresh from local farms and producers in the area.

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It’s a Soup Day

It’s April 18. And it’s snowing.

I know this is not outside the realm of possibility for the Berkshires. I clearly remember an April 18 snowstorm years ago when my kids were young, there was no school, and a friend who still had to go to work dropped her kids off with me. But this year the lingering winter feels different, more oppressive. Tomorrow promises to be warmer, but today called for soup.

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Penne alla Vodka

About a gazillion years ago, I spent the fall semester of my senior year in Rome. I studied at the Intercollegiate Center for Classical Studies, at Via Algardi 19, on the Gianicolo, Bus 75 from the center of the city. Known as the Centro, this phenomenal program allows students to spend a semester studying the ancient city both in the classroom and in the field, so to speak. In addition to seeing what seemed like every single ruin in the city proper (although it probably wasn’t), we had field trips to sites outside the city, including a two-week excursion to Sicily and southern Italy.

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My RecipesElizabeth Baer
Embellishing Frozen Vegetables #2

I think many of us have bought frozen vegetables of kinds and in amounts that we normally wouldn’t, just to make sure we will always have some vegetables in the house, and, with that thought in mind, the other day I shared my grandmother’s recipe for frozen peas. Today, I’ve got some ideas about how to dress up frozen corn.

The real seasonal treat, of course, is fresh-picked corn on the cob, steamed or boiled. But in the middle of winter frozen corn can give you a little taste of summer, and yet I found plain frozen corn a bit lacking. Thinking about how corn has a wonderful natural sweetness and works well with butter, I improvised and discovered how much better it is when you sauté the kernels in butter, rather than just putting butter on top of steamed corn.

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Advance Copy Is Here!!!

The are not enough words to say how excited I am!! Elisa Spungen Bildner and Robert Bildner dropped off an advance copy of The Berkshires Farm Table Cookbook this afternoon!!

It looks so beautiful, and even though I had seen the galleys when we had many conversations about the recipes and the food photographs, it’s so much more thrilling to see it bound as a book! (Check out the companion website, https://berkshiresandbeyond.com/ where you can find links to pre-order from Amazon, Indie Bound, or Barnes & Noble.)

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Leek Tarts with Chèvre

Today I wrote another post as a guest blogger for www.berkshiresandbeyond.com, the companion website for The Berkshires Farm Table Cookbook which is due to come out on May 19, 2020. (Link to the specific post here.) This is the cookbook for which I did extensive recipe-testing and copyediting, reading each recipe at least three times, and testing well over ⅔ of the recipes in the book. I hope you’ll consider pre-ordering this book! It’s a great celebration of the farms and farmers of the Berkshires, with wonderful recipes that will give you great ideas about using the bounty of the land.

There’s a great recipe in the book for Leek Tarts with Chèvre, and a couple of weeks ago I made them for a Zoom cocktail party. But I didn’t have any leeks, and these days, I didn’t want to make any unnecessary trips to the store. So I came up with a great variation that uses maple bacon onion jam that I wrote about in this post.

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What Am I, Chopped Liver?!

I never quite understood that saying. Said with the correct Yiddish inflection, it means something like, “Why don’t you think I’m worthy of more attention?” meaning that chopped liver would get less attention than other items on the table. But I love chopped liver! In fact, I’ve always liked liver. When I was a baby, my mother tells me, she would go to the meat counter at the small Gristedes that was around the corner from the entrance to our building, and buy one fresh chicken liver at a time, which she would feed to me with the tiniest portion of instant mashed potatoes and my grandmother’s homemade applesauce. But I know not everyone likes liver, so I hope you will indulge me this post.

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My RecipesElizabeth Baer
Nena’s Peas with Mushroom & Water Chestnuts

Pearl was my mother’s mother, whom we grandchildren called Nena (something the eldest cousin came up with, I suppose) and she was a phenomenal cook. I still have a tiny little notepad holding some of her recipes, with some random slips of paper tucked inside scribbled with more recipes, most with the sort of skeletal instructions for someone who is so skilled she doesn’t need to be told what to do. In fact, these recipes are not even her favorites, the ones she made for us over and over, for which she needed nothing written down.

One time, some years ago, my mother was watching me prepare vegetables for some recipe or another – I have no recollection what. She said I reminded her of Nena, they way I was paying attention to each piece before cutting it, noticing and removing any damaged areas. To me, that was such a treasured compliment – to see a reflection of Nena, such a wonderful cook in what I was doing, and to recognize my appreciation for my produce, just like Nena.

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Home Fries – Cheater’s Version

On the one hand it’s a bit disingenuous to suggest a recipe is easy – by calling it a cheater’s version – when you have to start cooking the night before. But it really is easy!

If you have the oven on for something else, toss in a couple of medium potatoes to bake. When they’re about three-quarters of the way done, take them out, let them cool, and put them in the fridge overnight. That way you won’t be starting with raw potatoes when you want to cook home fries for breakfast or brunch the next morning.

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Roast Sausages

I broke down yesterday and used the penultimate package from the freezer of Fike’s maple-brown sugar sausage. And we ate those sausages with both joy and sorrow – joy because they were so good, and sorrow because we only have one package left.

For the past few summers when we’ve rented “our” cabin on a quiet lake in Maine, we’ve been able to get all our meat at Fike’s Custom Cutting, a small butcher shop on a quiet country road in Readfield. Brandon always had such outstanding meat – steaks, burger meat, chops – and out of all the sausages he made, the maple-brown sugar sausage quickly became our favorite. Every summer we would bring home several packages to ration over the winter. These sausages have a deep, complex flavor from the maple and brown sugar, and a nice hint of spicy heat that complements the sweetness.

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Easiest Potato Gratin

A gratin of creamy, cheesy potato slices, baked in the oven until bubbling and brown on the edges, has always been a family favorite. And despite what you might think, it’s really easy, and even easier if you have a food processor. This recipe can certainly qualify as pantry cooking, since potatoes store well, as do hard cheeses. We always keep several 8 ounce bricks of Cabot Seriously Sharp Cheddar in the fridge. While heavy cream doesn’t last forever, it can be frozen. When I don’t use an entire container of heavy cream, I freeze the rest in small containers, measured out and labeled. Although defrosted cream isn’t good for whipped cream, for something like this it works fine.

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Rack of Lamb

Yesterday was our anniversary! We got married two years ago with family and friends in attendance, after we had been together for 18 years. So, of course we wanted to do something special, and when I checked our freezer spreadsheet, I was thrilled to see we had a rack of lamb!

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Penne with Yellow Tomato Sauce

I must start off with an apology, because you probably won’t be able to make this exact recipe unless you have some yellow tomato purée in the freezer. But it was so delicious! Back in the summer when we couldn’t eat the tomatoes from our garden fast enough, I put three containers of yellow tomato purée in the freezer, and decided to use one for dinner last night. I also had a package of mixed loose sausage – mostly sweet with some hot – that must have been left over from some recipe a while ago.

Even though you probably can’t make this exact recipe, what I do want you to take away from this is some inspiration and confidence to improvise with what you have on hand.

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Mango Colada

For the school where I teach, today was our first official day to re-engage with our students. The way our administration set up the schedule, I only had two Google Meet sessions today, for which I only used about 30 minutes each (out of 45 minutes allotted – we are not required to keep the students online the whole time). In addition, I reformatted an assignment into a Google Form for each class. That’s all I did for work today, and I’m exhausted!

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By Request: Zucchini Bread

The text from my son, Wilson, buzzed on my wrist, “Have you posted zucchini bread yet?”

So of course that’s now a post! My kids know they can always get my attention with questions about cooking or photos of their own creations!

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Ribollita

On the same Italy trip when Hank asked me to learn to make Ragù al Cinghiale (click for the link to that post), my son, Daniel, fell in love with ribollita and wanted to make it at home. Ribollita is one of the famous Tuscan peasant soups that was originally a way for people to use stale bread. (Pappa al Pomodoro is a similarly-inspired Tuscan soup which is tomato-based.)

In an authentic version of ribollita, one of the key ingredients is cavolo nero, also called lacinato kale. Back when Daniel first decided he wanted to make it at home, this green leafy vegetable was not easy to find here. After a bit of research and trial & error, we figured out an easy, delicious version using frozen spinach and canned beans (instead of dried). Though now I see cavolo nero in the stores, this version is a perfect “pantry” recipe.

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Tartes Tatin with Roasted Beets

Today I wrote as a guest blogger for www.berkshiresandbeyond.com, the companion website for The Berkshires Farm Table Cookbook which is due to come out on May 19, 2020. This is the cookbook for which I did extensive recipe-testing and copyediting, reading each recipe at least three times, and testing well over ⅔ of the recipes in the book, as well as a number of additional recipes that didn’t make it into the book.

One of those recipes was for Tartes Tatin with Roasted Beets. Although the caramel can be a bit tricky, this recipe is a winner! Elisa Spungen Bildner and Robert Bildner, the authors, asked if I would write a post for this dish since I tested it more than once! You can find the link for my guest post here, and on that page you can also find a link to pre-order this phenomenal cookbook that celebrates the farmers, chefs, and food of the Berkshires.

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Big W’s Roadside BBQ

I know it seems like this is not the time to be writing about a restaurant, but bear with me here. If you follow my story here about Big W’s Roadside BBQ (link here), it will all come around to what’s important right now.

When we looked in the fridge yesterday morning, I saw we had half a container of cottage cheese we needed to freeze or to use in mac & cheese. (Click here for my easy mac & cheese recipe.) I had mentioned that Big W’s was doing curbside pick-up, and Hank suggested we take a drive down to for some barbecue to go with mac & cheese for dinner.

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Pasta all’Amatriciana

I got an email today asking for easy recipes from someone who doesn’t particularly like to cook. I had been thinking about doing a post on amatriciana, and it’s pretty easy, so I decided to do it for today!

A caveat: There is great controversy about the “correct” way to make amatriciana. I love this article from the NYTimes about it.

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