culinary flights of fancy

Home Cooking Adventures in Berkeley Heights


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Gazpacho and the Bounties of Summer Vegetables in New Jersey

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Gazpacho screams summer time. Made with the freshest vegetables available during the peak of Summer, this chilled soup packs a flavorful punch and is very, very healthy. There are really no rules with Gazpacho. You can keep it chunky or puree it until silky smooth. I think the key to success with this dish is to use the very freshest ingredients you can as this is a raw vegetable soup. For me, that means going to the farmer’s market and buying the best looking vegetables you can and going from there. I used a number of vegetables from the Summit Farmer’s market and didn’t cook a thing. I seeded the vegetables so that the texture would be very smooth. However, if you don’t want to worry about that, it’s perfectly fine. Simply keep it chunky. I used homemade vegetable broth and I think that’s probably the best way to go but you can certainly buy broth. I flavored this soup with tarragon, sherry vinegar, and olive oil and gave it a bit of heat with red pepper flakes. Any herb will be great here though. You can also use whatever vinegar you’d prefer or have on hand. If you don’t want to use vinegar, add some acidity by squeezing citrus into the soup at the last minute. So, let your taste buds and your imagination run wild. You can’t go wrong with this during the peak of Summer vegetables.

Ingredients:

2 Cups vegetable broth, cooled

2 Ears corn

1 Large sweet onion such as Spanish or Walla Walla

1 Large red bell pepper

5 Fresh Jersey tomatoes, seeded

3 Green Jersey tomatoes, seeded

1 Golden Squash

1 Green Squash

1 Cucumber, seeded

4 Cloves fresh garlic

1 T dried tarragon, crushed

1 Shallot, finely chopped

3-4 Tablespoons Sherry vinegar, plus more for drizzling

¼ Cup olive oil, plus more for drizzling

Coarse Sea Salt and red pepper flake to taste

Instructions:

  • Remove corn kernels from the cob. Slice onion thinly. Chop bell pepper into small pieces. Seed and chop both red and green tomatoes. Coarsely chop the golden and green squash (reserving about a half an inch of each for garnish). Seed and chop the cucumber.
  • Add vegetables and the garlic cloves into blender along with around 1 Cup of broth. Blend until smooth. Depending on the size of your blender, you may have to do this in batches. Continue blending until all vegetables are processed.
  • Add coarse sea salt, red pepper flake, olive oil, crushed and dried tarragon, and sherry vinegar. Blend again until everything becomes smooth. If you need to add additional broth, add as needed until you achieve a thick, soup-like consistency. The soup should also thicken as it chills.
  • Chill in the refrigerator for at least 4 hours. Chilling it overnight would be even better.

To serve: Finely chop shallot. Finely chop a bit of the reserved golden and green squash. Place gazpacho in bowl and add shallot, and the two squashes as garnish. Drizzle a bit of olive oil and sherry vinegar over the top. Season with a touch of coarse sea salt. Serve while cold or cool.

 

 


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Jersey Corn and Coconut Pudding

Have a lot of corn at this point in your life?  Me too.  Just Farmed has supplied a ton of it to us the last couple of weeks and from what I understand we have more coming!  So, I was looking for something to do with it and ran across this recipe.  I gave my wife a number of options as to how we would use the corn and she requested that I make this.  So, I made it last weekend and it turned out great.  Both the corn and the coconut flavors came through.  Scented with a bit of cinnamon on top, it turned out to be a great dessert, though a bit sweet for my taste overall. I followed the recipe verbatim…something I almost NEVER do.   It didn’t take very long to make and it certainly isn’t a complicated recipe to follow or execute.  Anyway, if you try it, I hope you enjoy it!

Corn and Coconut Pudding:

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White Bean and Fennel Sofrito Stuffed Piqillo Peppers with Tomato and Garlic Bread

This is the newest recipe that will appear in the Alternative Press tomorrow.  Enjoy!

White bean and fennel sofrito stuffed piquillo peppers with Spanish tomato and garlic bread, Serrano ham, and dried hot Chorizo

White bean and fennel sofrito stuffed piquillo peppers with Spanish tomato and garlic bread, Serrano ham, and dried hot Chorizo

With summer produce season in full swing and farmer’s markets around the area full of new and interesting choices each week, you may be wondering what to do with all the vegetables that you’ve purchased. This recipe packs a large number of summer vegetables into one recipe. It can be served as an appetizer (Tapas) or as a main dish coupled with a salad.

Sofrito is a Spanish base sauce of sorts and is used in many, many dishes in Spain. Generically, it consists of a few basic ingredients: garlic, onion, peppers, tomatoes, and olive oil. It is usually seasoned simply with salt, pepper, and Spanish paprika (Pimenton). This recipe includes all of that plus some fennel, crushed white beans, and parsley. The sofrito is then stuffed inside a mild, Spanish pepper, called a piquillo pepper. Feel free to substitute a roasted red pepper if you can’t find the piquillo peppers. The beauty of a sofrito is that you can add or subtract any number of ingredients to suit your taste and what sort of vegetables you have on hand. As long as you have garlic, peppers, onion, and olive oil, you can play around with the amounts and types of ingredients you use. The amount of sofrito this makes will be way more than what is required for simply stuffing the peppers. That said, it can be frozen and used in another dish at a later time. I also, from time to time, serve this sofrito with a bit more beans and make a dip out of it and serve it with crusty bread and vegetables. You could also flavor rice with it…really imagination is your only limit here!

The tomato and garlic bread is also a typical Spanish preparation. Although similar to bruschetta, this bread has a soft pink/red color and, though toasted, the texture combines a softer top with a crunchier bottom portion. This coupled with Serrano ham (similar in taste and texture to prosciutto) and some Spanish chorizo, you have a wonderful Tapas/starter Spanish-inspired dish. Add a salad to it and enjoy it as a main course. The stuffed peppers are completely vegetarian and you can certainly keep it that way by simply skipping the Serrano ham and chorizo sausage.

I hope you enjoy this dish inspired by Spain and I also hope you enjoy all the wonderful vegetable offerings available to us right now here in New Jersey.  Recipe follows after the jump: Continue reading