culinary flights of fancy

Home Cooking Adventures in Berkeley Heights


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Pan Seared Veal Chop with Fresh Fava Beans and Peas

Veal chop, glazed with a veal stock and white wine reduction, served with a variety of simply prepared spring vegetables.

Veal chop, glazed with a veal stock and white wine reduction, served with a variety of simply prepared spring vegetables.

Cooked and raw vegetables mingle together to create different textures and flavors.

Cooked and raw vegetables mingle together to create different textures and flavors.

Happy spring!  We are finally having a seasonally appropriate week here in Jerz and I am more than happy about it.  I also received the first tomatoes of the new season yesterday.  They are local farm greenhouse tomatoes but they look and smell as they should and they are making me excited about all the produce coming in the near future!

I made this dish for a special occasion to celebrate a milestone with my wife and I wanted to make something that celebrated the season as well.  Veal is almost a perfect meat to go with spring vegetables as the milder flavor doesn’t overpower the more delicate flavors of the spring vegetables.  Here, fresh fava beans and peas take center stage.  The softer textures of those lightly blanched vegetables are balanced out with carrots and green onions that are just cooked through and thinly sliced raw radish adds color and a touch of spiciness.  The whole thing is brought together with just a touch of veal stock and white wine reduction drizzled over the top of the veal chop, creating an almost glaze like glisten and sheen that provides additional depths of flavor with a touch of acidity.

Both fava beans and peas are available right now fresh in the produce section of most grocery stores.  However, if you can’t find them, both can be found in the frozen food section as well.  Simply unthaw them and add them at the end…no need to cook them as they are blanched and then frozen.  So, as long as they are thawed, just toss them in the pan at the end to warm them through for a few seconds.

I found the microgreens used as a garnish at Wegman’s market.  If you can’t find them at your store, chopped Italian parsley would work well too.

The veal chop pictured is pretty large and can easily feed two.  If you have your butcher cut them thick, plan on one chop per two people or adjust as needed.  Recipe and another picture follows after the jump… Continue reading


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Classic Corned Beef Reuben

Classic Corned Beef Reuben with seeded rye bread, Thousand Island dressing, sauerkraut, and gruyere cheese.

Classic Corned Beef Reuben with seeded rye bread, Thousand Island dressing, sauerkraut, and Gruyere cheese.

Reuben.2 (2)

Well as I indicated in my last post, I have this last little recipe to use up the rest of the corned beef from last week.  This can be as simple or as complex as you’d care to make it.  The Reuben is one of Tara’s favorite sandwiches so I decided to go all out.  I made a loaf of seeded rye, made Thousand Island dressing using homemade mayonnaise and homemade spicy ketchup with harissa, homemade sauerkraut, and we used gruyere cheese.  If you want to go to some or all of those lengths to tackle this classic sandwich, I can assure you that it definitely tasted great.  The good news is that you don’t really have to in order to produce a good quality Reuben using your own corned beef.  Recipes for homemade ketchup are readily available on-line and each one has slight differences in flavor, heat, and sweetness.  So, look around and see if you can find one that suits your taste.  The sauerkraut that I made came from the Kitchn.com and involved only cabbage, salt, and time…super easy and super good, though your arms will get a workout when you massage the water out of the cabbage for 10-15 minutes.  Otherwise, that’s all it takes.

If you don’t want to make your own bread (something I find really rewarding), try to find the best quality seeded rye that you can.  Even if you don’t feel like making your own mayonnaise or ketchup for the Thousand Island dressing, it definitely is worth it to make your own using good quality store bought versions.  As I said, this can be as simple or as complicated as you wish to make it!  And with this, we conclude the corned beef recipes until next year around St. Patrick’s Day 2016!  Recipe follows after the jump… Continue reading