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Engaging stories of love, joy, comfort and friendship with proven scrumptious, healthy recipes, we celebrate LOVE as the secret ingredient for wonderful food!

Chicory salad with walnuts and parmesan

October 11, 2013 by Mary Frances 32 Comments

A head of the most beautiful chicory.

Chicory. I grew up with the smell of baked root chicory brewing with coffee that my father got from his Southern business colleagues. It’s a New Orleans favorite and he traveled there often. My mother and father just loved it and I remember that very distinctive smell. I think it made Mom and Dad feel special and exotic. No one in our St. Louis suburb of Webster Groves had ever heard of it in those days. So just recently, on this past Father’s day, my son made a warm wilted green salad of chicory to go with his Beef Wellington he made for my husband. It was a riff on a recipe from Tyler Florence. Tyler wants you to use Swiss chard, radicchio or escarole. I liked my son’s choice of chicory much better. I loved that salad so much that I have tinkered with it and made this chicory salad with walnuts and parmesan mine.

Chicory is a bitter green but with the dressing of warm honey and balsamic vinegar, it combats the sharpness and just makes the whole thing interesting and a bit addictive. Then adding the chopped toasted walnuts along with a bite here and there with a sliver of Parmigiano Reggiano, and well, I think you have a little bit of heaven in your mouth.

At our upstate farmer’s market last week, they had the biggest, most beautiful head of chicory. I was smitten and grabbed it up and starting excitedly telling the farmer about my recipe and what I was going to do with it. Suddenly, I noticed that everyone around was listening and taking notes. The farmer was so happy to hear my recipe as he said that most folks just don’t know what to do with chicory. Poor misunderstood thing, it needs some new positioning as a favorite wilted salad green, as it is mine. Try this and you’ll fall in LOVE too!Chicory in a bowl with shallots.

WILTED CHICORY SALAD WITH WALNUTS AND PARMESAN – serves 3 – 4

1/8 cup honey
1/4 cup balsamic vinegar
1/2 cup of toasted walnuts, coarsely chopped
1 medium or ½ large head of chicory, washed, spun dry and cut into 1½” pieces
1 shallot, very thinly sliced
½  tbs. grainy mustard
½  cup extra-virgin olive oil
Parmesan cheese shavings, for garnish

Preheat oven to 375 degrees. Place walnuts in a baking dish and toast for 7 – 8 minutes. When you can just begin to smell them, remove from the oven and let cool on a cutting board. Coarsely chop and set aside.

Cook honey and balsamic together over medium-high heat in a small saute pan, about 5 minutes, stirring constantly with a whisk. Do not let it boil. Pile chopped chicory and sliced shallots in a large salad bowl.  Whisk the grainy mustard into the balsamic-honey dressing, then whisk in the extra-virgin olive oil. Season the dressing with salt and pepper to taste and pour over greens and shallots. Toss. Toss in toasted chopped walnuts, and garnish with shavings of Parmesan and serve immediately.

Enjoy!
Warm wilted chicory salad with chopped toasted walnuts and parmesan cheese with a honey balsamic dressing.

Now because these greens are so sturdy, the leftovers even held up for the next day. Of course they weren’t as good as when first made but they were still respectable. I do have one sister-in-law who loves a day old salad, all wilted and wet. I guess it’s an acquired taste?

 

 

Filed Under: Dinner, First Course, Lunch, Salads Tagged With: chicory, chicory salads, honey and balsamic vinegar dressing, parmesan slivers, toasted walnuts, warm salads, wilted salads

Roasted Patty Pan Squash with Fennel, Green Peppers and Tomatoes

October 4, 2013 by Mary Frances 22 Comments

Roasted patty pan squash, fennel, green pepper and fresh tomato in a white serving bowl.I made this really simple, unusual, clean and fresh tasting vegetable dish the other night that I wanted to share with you. It’s so simple, it’s stupid. But I thought that sometimes we don’t always think of things when we’re rushing to satisfy hungry stomachs at the end of a very busy day. And I am always looking for new flavor combinations with veggies, just to take them up a notch. Aren’t you? Now this combination of roasted patty pan squash with fennel, green peppers and tomatoes was just fantastic! It was different and just look at how pretty it was! I added the tomatoes at the end for color but of course they added taste too.

The local farmer’s markets are dwindling down with product assortment, but there is still squash and the most robust smelling green peppers and actually, the fennel I got at the grocery store. Try this combo – if all of your ingredients are really fresh, it’s divine!
IMG_8592

ROASTED PATTY PAN SQUASH WITH FENNEL, GREEN PEPPER AND TOMATOES – serves 3 – 4

4 – 5 small patty pan squash- cut in 1” cubes
1/2 of a large fennel bulb, cut in 3/8” strips and then cut strips in half
1 small green pepper, cut in 3/8” strips and then cut strips in half
2 tbs. olive oil
Salt
Pepper
1/2 of a large tomato cut in cubes

Preheat oven to 425 degrees. Combine the squash, fennel and green pepper on a rimmed baking sheet. Drizzle with the olive oil. Salt and pepper to taste. Toss to thoroughly combine and roast for 20 – 30 minutes until squash is just fork tender.

Place in a serving bowl and fold in the tomatoes to warm them up and serve with LOVE.

Enjoy!

Filed Under: Dinner Tagged With: patty pan squash, roasted fennel, roasted green peppers, roasted vegetables, tomatoes folded in, unique roasted vegetable combinations

Lovely Lemon Bars

September 27, 2013 by Mary Frances 25 Comments

Lemon bars on a off white china plate with a fresh strawberry.

Lovely lemon bars you will LOVE!

I adore lemon bars. My mother used to make them for us when we were kids. I loved having them in my lunch bag. I loved the powdered sugar on top and the buttery crust on the bottom. I loved the fact that it was a rectangle. (The graphic designer in me at an early age.) And I loved licking the last bit of powdered sugar off of the Saran wrap.

When we moved into our NYC apartment six years ago, my friend Leslie and her husband Rainer came to visit. Leslie and I went to high school together in Webster Groves, Missouri. And now we both live here. Her last name started with Pa and mine started with Pi so our lockers were right next to one another for our four years at Nerinx Hall. The nuns liked that type of organization.

Leslie brought the cookbook from Tartine, the famous pastry shop in San Francisco, as a housewarming gift. It is a beautiful book filled with the richest recipes for sweet and savory specialties. We’re talking mucho butter. She wrote on the opening page, “…when things get a little crazy living in crowded New York … just remember to enjoy one of the desserts in this book – and you will return to a mellow state as “DESSERTS” is actually “STRESSED” in  reverse!”

Now I really don’t like to cook with a lot of butter. I consider myself a clean and healthy cook, which I really am. (Do I sound like I’m trying to justify myself here? Yes I am!)

But you see, every once in while, you can splurge. And this is a recipe to splurge on. This is a heightened, no, magnified version of my mother’s lemon bars. An adult lemon bar. A sinful lemon bar. These have the richest, buttery crust with the addition of pine nuts for a surprising delightful crunch. The lemon filling is so so lemony. No fooling around here. This is one serious, OMG lemon bar.

Just give these a go. Add your own LOVE and you will have everyone drooling. Truly!
Lemon bars on a off white china plate with a fresh strawberry in an overhead shot.

LEMON BARS ON BROWN BUTTER SHORTBREAD – makes 12 bars – from the Tartine cookbook

CRUST FOR LEMON BARS
½ cup of confectioner’s sugar
1½ cups of all-purpose flour
¾ cup of unsalted butter, at room temperature
½ cup of pine nuts (optional)

FILLING FOR LEMON BARS
½ cup of all-purpose flour
2 1/4 cups of sugar
1 cup + 2 tbs. of lemon juice
Lemon zest, grated from 1 lemon
6 large whole eggs
1 large egg yolk
1 pinch of salt
confectioner’s sugar for topping (optional)

Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Butter a 9-by-13-inch baking pan.

MAKE THE CRUST
Sift the confectioner’s sugar into the bowl of a stand mixer fitted with the paddle attachment. Add the flour and stir to mix. Add the butter, and pine nuts (if using) and beat on low speed. Beat just until a smooth dough forms.

Transfer the dough to the prepared pan and press evenly into the bottom and ½ inch up the sides of the pan. It should be about ¼ inch thick. Even out the crust by using the flat bottom of any type of cup, pressing down firmly. Line the crust with parchment paper and fill with pie weights, dry rice or peas. Bake for 25 – 35 minutes. Make sure the color is a deep golden brown color. Rotate the pan if the crust appears to be baking unevenly.

MAKE THE FILLING
While baking the crust, make the filling. Sift the flour into a mixing bowl. Add the sugar and whisk until blended. Add the lemon juice and zest and stir to dissolve sugar. In a separate mixing bowl, whisk the eggs and egg yolk with the salt. (This breaks down the protein.) Add the eggs to the lemon juice mixture and whisk until well mixed.

When the crust is ready, pull out the oven rack that is holding the baked crust. Remove the weights and put pan back on the oven rack. Pour the filling directly into the hot pan – it is easiest to do so when the pan can slide right back into the oven.

If the crust has come out of the oven and cooled down before you have finished making the filling, put it back in for a few minutes so that it is hot when the custard is poured into it.

Reduce the oven temperature to 300 degrees. Bake for 30 – 40 minutes just until the center of the custard is no longer wobbly.

Let cool completely on a wire rack, then cover and chill well before cutting. Use a sharp knife and cut it into 12 squares. You can serve with confectioner’s sugar dusted on top of the squares. They will keep in an airtight container or well covered in the baking dish in the refrigerator for up to 4 days. I have also wrapped each one individually in plastic wrap and carefully placed 4 of them in a large Ziploc bag and frozen them to serve at a later date. Thaw in the refrigerator and touch up the powdered sugar and serve. No one will know you made them weeks ago.

 

Filed Under: Desserts Tagged With: lemon bars, Nerinx Hall High School, Tartine cookbook, Tartine pastry shop, Webster Groves MO

Hillsdale Art Fest

September 21, 2013 by Mary Frances 22 Comments

Today and tomorrow, I am exhibiting my paintings at the Hillsdale Art Fest in Hillsdale, NY. It is an event sponsored by the Columbia County Council on the Arts. It’s always so much fun to meet other artists and see what they’ve been creating, what they feel they need to express to the world. I have been trying to abstract landscapes. It’s hard. I don’t know why it’s so hard but it is. I feel I am making progress but I am not yet there, to my satisfaction. My medium is acrylic and for sketches I prefer pastels or watercolors.Hillsdale Art Fest - Mary Pisarkiewicz with her paintings.

Our good friends Margaret and Wayne came to visit us at the Art Fest and brought us the news that their dear friend and young colleague, 47 years old, dropped dead of a heart attack on the street outside of his house in Brooklyn, after going for a morning run. He wanted to make sure he was back in time to take his 10-year old daughter to her first day of school.

Shock, grief, disbelief. How could this happen? We knew this young man as well. We were all together in Vancouver at a conference this time last year.

So Margaret said they are coping and one way to cope is to cook a meal and have friends over for dinner. We are those lucky friends and went to their house tonight for dinner. She said she needs to cook to occupy herself, and keep her mind on something else. As Molly O’Neill said at Longhouse, cooking a meal orders her. There is a beginning, a middle and an end.

Cooking and conversations about food are great unifiers. I recently had a lunch scheduled with a woman from a competitive brand design firm. I had the idea that perhaps we could partner on some large government projects. At the last minute, she was called into a meeting so she sent two of her colleagues, whom I had never met, to meet me for lunch. It was an odd set of circumstances but okay, let’s go with the flow. So we all talked about each others’ businesses and types of work and so on. They were both very reserved and naturally cautious about revealing too much about their business. After about 30 minutes of this chit chat, I casually mentioned that I have a food blog and pulled out my LOVE business cards. Well, I want you to know, their facial expressions, posture and attitude changed immediately. They wanted to tell me about their cooking, their kid’s cooking, what was in their pantry and favorite recipes. It was a change so drastic, it was palpable. It was so lovely!

After I returned to the office, I received a call from the woman I was supposed to have lunch with and she was exuberant about how these two ladies came back and couldn’t stop talking about my food blog! I’m telling you, we should all break bread with our challengers and rivals. Everyone has to eat. Food is the great connector and equalizer. Margaret needed to cook for friends to bring some order back into her life. Here’s her beautiful meal from tonight.

Greek casserole pastitsio combines béchamel, pasta, ground lamb, tomato sauce, cheese, cinnamon and nutmeg.

Greek casserole pastitsio combines béchamel, pasta, ground lamb, tomato sauce, cheese, cinnamon and nutmeg. Super homey, yummy and delicious! This is not Margaret’s recipe, but this gives you an idea of this dish.

Hillsdale art fest fennel and beet salad. A delicious beet and fennel salad.

I hope you’re eating great food cooked with LOVE and that this blog helps you do that.

Filed Under: Dinner, Meat, Products for sale Tagged With: bechemel sauce, casserole pastitsio, fennel and beet salad, ground lamb, lamb

Chicken Breasts with Carrots and Leeks

September 18, 2013 by Mary Frances 21 Comments

Pan roasted chicken breasts with carrots and leek, garnished with parsley on a white platter.

This is one of my all time favorite recipes. It is a great go-to weeknight meal as it is quick, easy and delicious. It is even relatively low fat! The chicken always comes out perfectly done, moist and yummy, and it presents itself as much more gourmet than the time it takes to make. You can also vary the vegetables and herbs or add garlic or lemon. It is fancy enough for a company dinner and super easy on you!

Although my photos show 4 breasts, the recipe is for 2. Or make extras for another meal.

CHICKEN BREASTS WITH CARROTS AND LEEKS – serves 2

2 chicken breast halves, bone in, skin on, washed and patted dry
Salt
Pepper
1 tsp. olive oil – yes only 1 tsp. is needed
1 carrot – peeled and sliced into very thin julienned strips
1 leek – white part only, cleaned and sliced into thin julienned strips
6 thyme sprigs
2 tbs. dry white wine or dry vermouth
2 tbs. chicken stock
1 tsp. unsalted butter (optional)
2 tsp. chopped parsley for garnish

Preheat oven to 325 degrees.

Trim any extra fat off from the chicken breasts, discard, and salt and pepper both sides.

Heat oil in a non-stick, oven-proof skillet on medium-high to high heat. Place chicken breasts in, skin side down, and brown for 6 minutes. Turn breasts over and scatter the thyme, carrots and leeks all around and under the chicken. Especially make sure the thyme is under the breasts, otherwise it will just burn in the oven and not impart its flavor. Pour in the white wine and chicken broth and place the skillet in the oven for 18 minutes. Check with an instant read thermometer, it should read 155 – 160 degrees in the thickest part of the breast.

Raw chicken breast with salt and pepper on them.Julienned carrots and leeks with fresh thyme on a cutting board along with a bottle of white wine and mortar and pestle.

Chicken breasts with carrots and leeks in a skillet, roasting in the oven.

When done, remove the breasts to a platter to rest for 5 minutes. Boost the oven up to 425 degrees and put the skillet back in the oven with the vegetables and sauce. Make sure your carrots and leeks are tender. Remove skillet from the oven and swirl in the butter, if you are using. The butter makes the sauce richer, but it is not necessary if you are watching your waistline.

Place the vegetables on top of the chicken and drizzle the sauce over all. Garnish with the chopped parsley. Smile and serve with LOVE! It’s so pretty!

Since this is one of my absolutely favorite, no-fuss, gourmet-looking and gourmet-tasting chicken dinners, I’ve selected it to submit to the Delicious Chicken Recipe Contest at Plated.com.

Filed Under: Dinner, Poultry Tagged With: carrots, chicken breasts, dry white wine, easy weeknight dinner, leeks, pan seared and oven roasted chicken breasts, thyme, vermouth

Best Blueberry Pie!

September 17, 2013 by Mary Frances 20 Comments

Blueberry pie whole pie from Sept 3, 2013We are coming on the end of the season but I think there’s still time for you to try this blueberry pie. You must – this is a real keeper. It is the best blueberry pie recipe I’ve ever come across. I don’t think I’ll ever go back to baking the whole thing completely again. This is all freshness and goodness retained in the berries. Deliciousness to the hilt!!

As you’ve probably figured out by now, I’m not the typical dessert lover. I prefer savory things when given the choice, but I do love fresh fruit pies. I didn’t get a chance to make a peach one this year. Maybe this coming weekend.

In this blueberry pie recipe, you cook only some of the blueberries to make a sort of glaze, to bind all the fresh ones together. When you do this, your fresh berries glisten like jewels. So pretty! One addition I may do next time is to add a little fresh grated nutmeg to the glaze.

I found this method at Food 52 and the recipe is here. It is Rose Levy Beranbaum’s Fresh Blueberry Pie. I also added a cup of blackberries for additional interest. It is not necessary but they did add textural delight – a nice little surprise and burst of flavor in your mouth. I did not make Rose’s crust. I opted to make my own and you can find it on this post. My crust is not buttery as hers is. Hers might be better. You decide. I did use my friend Margaret’s method of making the slurry first. It really does turn out a flakier crust. Thank you Margaret!!

I baked my crust a little too long. As you can see, it is a bit brown, but no matter, it was still so very yummy. Definitely brush the egg white on it to keep it crisp. They say to serve with whipped cream but I prefer a little dab of vanilla ice cream.Best blueberry pie with blackberries, two pieces with vanilla ice cream.

One note of warning, because this is so very fresh and sweet, the fruit flies LOVE it, so eat it fast! Enjoy! And thanks to Rose Levy Beranbaum!

 

Filed Under: Dinner Tagged With: blackberries, blueberry pie, Food 52, fresh blueberry pie with blackberries, uncooked blueberry pie

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Mary Frances

Spread love through cooking.

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