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Berkshire Eagle Column: Pasta with Fennel

There’s a sort of template I’ve used more times than I can count when making a vegetable pasta dish. The variations are endless, but generally speaking I rely upon the Sicilian addition of golden raisins and pine nuts to give some unexpected flavors to the recipe. I’m sure I’ve offered some version of this before, and yet here is another!

But my narrative here is one I want to highlight. Tastes can change; not always, but sometimes, an item we once swore off forever, can become a new favorite. Maybe it was poorly prepared, or maybe it was just a piece of meat that wasn’t great or an underripe piece of produce. Whatever the reason, I have now learned to keep tasting and keep trying, and I’ve definitely continued to expand my palate!

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Berkshire Eagle Column: Ramps!

I think last spring I blogged at least three times about ramps! Although now you can find them in specialty stores and farmers’ markets, it’s so much more fun to forage for them yourself if you can find a secret spot for them.

In this week’s Berkshire Eagle column (actually one of two I wrote for this past week!), the grilled ramp hollandaise from one of last year’s posts makes a reprise. I also offered my idea for a risotto to highlight spring produce – peas and asparagus – using chopped ramp stems and bulbs in place of the usual onion or shallot, with the leaves stirred in at the end.

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Berkshire Eagle Column: Salad with Goat Cheese-Stuffed Figs

If you’ve been reading my blog for a while, you may recall that I’ve included several recipes with figs. It’s no surprise, as fresh figs are among my favorite seasonal treats. I very much wish I could grow my own, and perhaps someday I will start that endeavor, but from what I’ve read, our climate in the Berkshires makes that a challenge!

Nonetheless we are lucky that they are available in local markets, and I have tried pretty much every fig recipe I have ever found – and then some! There are plenty of other times that I just improvise and create something off the top of my head, and this recipe below was one of those ideas which became my Berkshire Eagle article this past week.

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My ColumnsElizabeth Baer
Berkshire Eagle Column: Long-Simmered Meat Sauce

I was really hesitant to offer this column (link here) for the March 31 edition of The Berkshire Eagle. We had enjoyed a little taste of spring, and it seemed out of sync to write about anything that would require a long simmer on the stove. And then it snowed on April 1, a pretty lousy April Fool’s Day joke if you ask me. So it turns out this was well-timed!

Of course I know it can snow well into April here in the Berkshires. Last year it was snowing on April 18 and I cooked and posted about French onion soup! The nice thing about the recipe below is that it yields enough sauce that you can use some right away and put the rest in the freezer for a quick and easy meal or two without having to stand at the stove.

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Berkshire Eagle Column: Heirloom Recipes

I hear that these days we needn’t worry about children and grandchildren fighting over the family silver, because no one wants it anymore! But I do worry that with thousands of recipes available at the stroke of a few keys, many family favorites are not getting handed down, and those memories, those heirlooms, are all the more precious because they are intangible. Sure, some of us may have these recipes written down, and I treasure the ones that I have in my grandmother’s handwriting. But it’s more than just the yellowed recipe card that needs to be passed down; it’s also the collective memory of a special dish across generations, and often the features of those recipes carry the echoes of migration and adaptation to new lands, combining beloved traditions with new ingredients.

I hope these treasures from my family inspire you to safeguard some favorites from yours, to pass down to your children and grandchildren.

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My ColumnsElizabeth Baer
Berkshire Eagle Column: Stuffed Shells

As I suggest here, it’s great to have some stuffed shells in the freezer, ready for an easy dinner when you’ve had a busy day. It looks like next week might just be one of those weeks, so I’m glad I still have some of these ready to go! If you want to see the column online click here, or continue reading below.

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Pasta e Fagioli

The bone left from making porchetta had been sitting in the freezer for quite some time – I’m embarrassed to say how long! And with frigid temps and so much time sitting at home, I wanted to use it in a bean soup. My memories turned to the semester I spent in Rome at the Centro (Intercollegiate Center for Classical Studies), and the pasta e fagioli soup they often served for lunch.

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Food MemoriesElizabeth Baer
Berkshire Eagle Column: Valentine’s Day Splurge!

Certainly there’s the daily question of what to make for dinner. And I am sure many people are getting tired of that question, staying home so much because of the pandemic. And then there are all the special occasions and the dilemma of how to make those days feel different when we aren’t going out to restaurants much. My suggestion in The Berkshire Eagle from this past week is a real splurge, something I hope will feel special, osso buco with saffron risotto. And for dessert, I offer something easy, but also a fun thing to share, chocolate fondue! (Here’s the link to the column in The Berkshire Eagle or continue reading below).

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Berkshire Eagle Column: Beef Stroganoff

For my regular column this past week I was looking for something cozy and warming for a cold January night. Beef Stroganoff eats like a stew, but is a much quicker recipe, not needing a long simmer on the stove. I always like to serve it with egg noodles to enjoy all the delicious, creamy sauce!

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My ColumnsElizabeth Baer
Berkshire Eagle Column: Ideas for a Happy New Year

I was asked to write a “centerpiece” column for this past Wednesday in The Berkshire Eagle with ideas to make a New Year’s celebration special, even if we all stayed home.

I decided on a main course and a dessert for New Year’s Eve, and something for brunch on New Year’s Day.

While it’s too late to make these for the turn of the calendar this year, these recipes can make any meal special. A friend of mine even told me how excited she was to make the brunch quiche as a dinner main course with a salad!

Click on this link to the article, or continue reading below!

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My ColumnsElizabeth Baer
Berkshire Eagle Column: Potato + 2 Gratin

For my column this past Wednesday in The Berkshire Eagle, I wrote about an easy gratin that combines potato, butternut squash, and celery root.

Sometimes I really think I should say that I write non-recipes, because almost every time I make a recipe, I try some variation or another, and I like to encourage people to do the same. For this recipe, it need not be these specific vegetables – you could use turnips or rutabagas or fennel, just to name a few possibilities! As long as you follow the general idea, it should turn out great!

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Christmas Day Cooking Project – Pear-Chestnut Ravioli

Holidays are meant to be special, and yet now we have had almost a full year of altered celebrations. I know that Christmas looks a lot different for everyone this year. Even though we don’t celebrate Christmas, I really miss our traditional dinner at a local Chinese restaurant with friends, when we also run into many other Jewish families we know…So, of course, today, on Christmas Day, since we aren’t going out for Chinese, I decided to take on a project in the kitchen.

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Berkshire Eagle Column: Maple-Mustard Chicken with Apples

The first of my regular Berkshire Eagle columns was in the paper this past Wednesday, and, thanks to a college friend who posted it on Facebook, I learned it also was in the Vermont papers that are under the same ownership!

The online version introduces me as the new food columnist, which was pretty cool, and I received much congratulations from friends and family. I’ve even had several people tell me that they already tried the recipe and loved it! It makes me so happy when I hear that people are trying my recipes!

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While Fresh Cranberries Are in Stores...

Just before Thanksgiving, we got into a conversation in one of my classes about food for the big dinner (albeit smaller for many of us this year). I happened to mention my absolute favorite cider gravy (which can be found at the bottom of this blog post), and one of my students asked me for the recipe. I was so happy when his mother sent me an email with pictures of him making it for their Thanksgiving dinner!

After the break he told me that not only did he love the gravy, but he also made the sandwich I described in my first Berkshire Eagle piece (republished at this link), and told me he really liked the addition of stuffing and cranberry. Which led, not surprisingly to a mention of the cranberry chutney I’ve been making for more years than I can count, the recipe for which I have given to so many friends and family. In fact, one of my colleagues texted me a photo the day before Thanksgiving to show me how she’s still making it, year after year!

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My RecipesElizabeth Baer
My New Gig!

A few weeks ago, I got an email, out of the blue, from the features editor at our local paper, The Berkshire Eagle. She had seen “culinursa” when a mutual friend tagged me on an Istagram post and wondered if I would be interested in writing for the food section of the newspaper. I couldn’t say “yes” fast enough! Starting this coming Wednesday I will be the rotation of regular contributors, and I can also pitch ideas for the longer “centerpiece” columns that also appear in the paper.

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Pan-Sautéed Gnocchi with Beets

Also known as “I love beets, one of many in a series!”

Most people either love beets or hate them. When I met my husband he was definitely in the I-hate-beets camp, but now that I’ve made a convert of him, he was sad that there wasn’t enough for seconds when I made this. I’m still hoping that one day – when we can actually see each other once again – I can tempt my friend, Robin, into trying beets one more time, to see if there is some preparation that she might like!

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