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morceaux

~ pl.: French, for morsels – pl.: short literary works

morceaux

Category Archives: Main Dishes

Savory Apple Bread Pudding

23 Saturday Nov 2013

Posted by Erin in Main Dishes, Recipes

≈ 7 Comments

Tags

Apple, Apple picking, Bake, Bread pudding, savory, Simon Pearce, Stuffing, Thanksgiving

DSCF3093Braeburn, Jonagold, Cameo, Gala, Granny Smith, Pink Lady, Lodi, Jersey Mac, Ambrosia, Fuji – this list goes on.

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Apple picking is one of the joys of autumn that seems to carry me most willingly into the throes of winter.  The idea of curling up with some warm spiced apple cider or starting my day with apple butter on cinnamon bread make the cold ever so slightly more bearable.

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However, the choices of what variety to pick and and what to make can cause a severe case of analysis-paralysis and even some choice words between friends trying to make their way through a pick-your-own farm.

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The DC area has plenty of idyllic farms within a short distance that make a perfect day’s outing with orchards, pumpkin patches, prepared foods like candied apples and kettle korn, and even petting zoos.  A few friends and I recently went to Homestead Farm for a day of apples, pumpkins, gourds, and fun.  If you are looking for an adventure, I also recommend Larriland Farm as a prime spot.

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I was pleasantly surprised by this year’s harvest and the great selection.  After much deliberation, we worked our way through the orchard rows to Stayman, Jonagold, and Cameo.  As you can imagine, more apples had come into my possession than I could possibly eat!

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About a week after staring at the multitude of apples before me, I still couldn’t decide what to make out of them.  I wanted something different. While applesauce is great, cake is lovely, and crisps are delicious, the ideas just weren’t cutting it.  Then, I stumbled upon Simon Pearce’s absolutely outstanding Savory Bread Pudding.  I decided to make my own take on the restaurant’s dish. (Read about my recently meal at the restaurant here.)

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What came out of the oven was a fluffy but moist sweet and savory dish that is perfect for a Thanksgiving spread.  If you are looking for a stuffing alternative, pair this easy dish with turkey and warm cranberry sauce, or better yet, pork chops.  It goes best with a sturdy but not too tannic red wine.  One I highly recommend is Atteca 2011 Garnacha – at $11 a bottle, it is a steal.

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Savory Apple Bread Pudding

1 ½ day old baguettes

4 Stayman Apples (or another variety good for baking)

1 vidalia onion, chopped finely

4 tbsp chives, chopped finely

4 eggs

3 cups whole milk

4 tbsp butter, melted

1 tbsp nutmeg

½ tsp salt

½ tsp pepper

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Preheat oven to 350.

Cut or tear baguette into small 1-inch cubes and spread evenly into a greased 9×13 baking dish.  Set aside.

On low heat, cook onion (finely chopped) until it is clear in color and nearly carmelized. This will take about 30 minutes.

While the onion is cooking, use a food processor to finely chop the apples.

In a large bowl, vigorously whisk the eggs and milk together.  Add the melted butter, nutmeg, salt and pepper and stir.  Then, combine apples, chives, and onions (once cooked and then cooled) to the egg mixture.

Pour the egg mixture evenly over the baguette in the baking dish.  You can choose to do this in layers if desired to spread the onion and apple.

Allow the dish to sit and soak in the egg for at least 20 minutes, or better yet, overnight in the fridge.

Bake for approximately 40 minutes.  Serve immediately or prepare a day or two early.

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Pumpkin, Kale and Mushroom Pasta Salad

21 Saturday Sep 2013

Posted by Erin in Main Dishes, Recipes, Snacks and Apps

≈ 5 Comments

Tags

autumn, fall, Kale, mushroom, nutmeg, orecchiette, Pasta, pasta salad, Pine nut, pumpkin, shallot

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Washington, DC has enjoyed the most mild and beautiful seasons in recent memory.  In a city we so fondly call “Swamptown,” we’ve left extreme humidity and waltzed through September tousled in mid-70s breezes and a low golden sun.  Its hard to believe that the time has come for pumpkins, squash and sweet potatoes.

To try to talk myself into autumn excitement, I played around with a few flavors of fall and came up with this unique pumpkin pasta salad, complimented by kale, cremini mushrooms, and toasted pine nuts.  It can be served warm or chilled.

Ingredients:

Sauce
2 tbsp butter
2 tbsp flour
1 cup milk
1 cup pumpkin puree
1 tsp nutmeg
½ tsp cinnamon
½ tsp salt
1 tsp ground pepper
dash of cayenne pepper if desired

Salad
3 cups orecchiette pasta, cooked
1 cup cremini or baby bella mushrooms, quartered
1 shallot, chopped finely
½ cup shredded kale
2 tbsp pine nuts, toasted

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Make a roux with the butter and flour.  Slowly add the milk while continuing to whisk.  Add in pumpkin puree, nutmeg, cinnamon, salt, and pepper.  Simmer over low heat for at least 15 minutes.

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Warm a medium-sized pan to high heat.  Add mushrooms to the pan without oil and allow them to cook.  Avoid turning too much so that mushrooms maintain a good shape and do not turn mushy.

Remove mushrooms and set aside.  In the same pan, sauté shallots.  Add shredded kale and cook down until the kale is a rich green color.

Pour warm sauce over cooked pasta.  The pasta will absorb the sauce best if the pasta is just out of the pot after boiling.   Add mushrooms, kale, shallots, and toasted pine nuts.

Refrigerate for 2 hours before serving or serve warm.  Pairs well with roasted chicken or pork chops and a cabernet franc.

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Mushroom Duxelles Tart

08 Sunday Sep 2013

Posted by Erin in Main Dishes, Recipes

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

chicken, comfort food, delaware, Dough, folded tart, mushroom, mushroom duxelles, poached, rosemary, shallot, tart, white wine, wilmington

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Comfort food means something different to everyone.  To me, I think of my mom’s pasta, my grandmother’s shrimp scampi, and my uncle’s pies.  But I also recall all of the restaurants I used to frequent in my hometown of Wilmington, Delaware.

To this day, I swear the best pizza I’ve had comes from Pizza by Elizabeth’s – venue of memories for post-sports game meals, girl’s night out with my best friends, family dinners, and even my first date.  One of the best things about their menu is the “build-your-own” that provides a multitude of sauce options.  My favorite has always been the Mushroom Duxelles.

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In search of a little comfort food this week, I tried my hand at a free-form folded tart that deconstructs the flavors of Pizza by Elizabeth’s Mushroom Duxelles Sauce: mushroom, white wine, shallot, and garlic.  This tart is great for sharing.  Don’t let it fool you – aside from the long list of ingredients, its fairly simple.

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Since tarts are a go-to of mine, I keep frozen dough on hand.  I realize this isn’t the norm, so for some good recipes, I recommend Julia Child’s or the Joy of Cooking’s recipes for pastry dough.  The ingredient list is simple: butter, flour, salt, and cold water.  If you want to play around, add some herbs – like rosemary – to your dough.  Here’s a great article that gives some more hints from Julia. 

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Sauce

Because I’m adding a lot more flavor from other ingredients like whole shallots and chicken, this sauce is meant to be a good base.

3 tbsp butter
4 cloves garlic, minced
1 ½ cups minced mushrooms
¼ tsp salt
¼ tsp pepper
½ cup white wine
½ tsp balsamic vinegar
1 tsp Worchestershire sauce

In a medium saucepan over medium heat, melt the butter.  Add the garlic and saute for a few minutes.  Add the minced mushrooms and stir gently under the mushrooms are cooked and most of the liquid has evaporated.  Add remaining ingredients and allow most of the wine to evaporate until you have a thick sauce.  Stir occasionally.  Set aside.

Tart

1 cup white wine
1 chicken breast, sliced thinly in half
3 shallots, peeled and halved
3 tbsp fresh rosemary
4 tbsp shredded gruyere, more if desired 

Preheat the oven to 350 degrees Fahrenheit.

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In a shallow pan, poach chicken breast in white wine. If you’ve never poached chicken before, its much easier than it sounds.  Pour the white wine into the pan.  You may need more than the recipe calls for depending on the size of the pan.  You simply need to ensure that the chicken is covered ever so slightly when submerged.  Heat the wine slowly until bubbles begin to form but do not break the surface of the wine.  At that point, place the chicken gently in the pan.  Let it cook until finished – about 8 minutes.

Once you’ve cooked the chicken, remove it from the wine and shred the chicken into small pieces.  Set aside until you are ready to assemble the tart.

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Roll dough out on a well-floured flat surface.  Spread mushroom sauce generously, leaving an inch of exposed dough around the edges.

Sprinkle shredded chicken on top of the dough and top with gruyere and rosemary.   Then, fold the exposed edges of the dough over on itself to “close” the tart.

Finally, place the halved shallots on the tart after spreading them open.  If you prefer a more caramelized flavor, cook them briefly open half down in a pan over low heat.

Bake in the oven for about 25 minutes or until the dough is golden.

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Eggs en cocotte: Bleu cheese and bacon

08 Thursday Aug 2013

Posted by Erin in Main Dishes, Recipes

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

Bacon, Bleu, Blue cheese, breakfast, brunch, Cheese, egg cups, Eggs, Ramekin, shallots

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It’s a dreary Saturday morning and you’d do anything to stay under your quilt, read a book, and doze back to your dreamland.  Mine is usually filled with chocolate chip banana pancakes and hot cocoa, but for some reason, I got the itch for bacon and bleu cheese.  And we all know, when you want bacon, there’s no remedy.

My neighbors and I have a weekend brunch ritual that takes us to St. Arnold’s – a fantastic Belgian mussel joint in DC.  It has become our Central Perk, our MacLaren’s, our Cheers.  We always sit down with Annette, your classic diner-esque waitress with a tough exterior we’ve come to adore, and throw a few jokes around with Bruce who runs the place.  What’s not to look forward to?  But this weekend, between our sleepiness and overzealous indulgence in a West Wing Marathon, we just couldn’t make the trek.  Instead, we pulled some random ingredients out of the fridge and I put my hands to work on some oeufs en cocotte.

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If you have spent much time on pinterest, you surely aren’t new to egg cups.  You can use a muffin tin or any other small oven-proof container.  Since one egg really isn’t un oeuf, I chose to use ramekins and fill mine with two eggs each.

For each ramekin, you’ll need:

2 large eggs

1 tbsp shallot, finely chopped

2 strips of bacon

2 tsp bleu cheese, crumbled

Salt and pepper to taste

Preheat oven to 350 degrees F.

Cook bacon and remove from the pan just before it gets crispy.  Chop into ¼ inch square pieces. Set aside.

Caramelize the chopped shallots in a pan on low heat.  If you can easily remove most of the grease, use the same skillet you did for the bacon so that the shallots absorb the flavor.

Use butter or canola oil to grease the ramekins.  Put the shallots and part of the bacon in the ramekin.  Crack an egg into the ramekin, then layer in a bit more of the bacon and about half of the bleu cheese.  Crack the second egg into the ramekin and top with the remaining bleu cheese and bacon.  Finish with salt and a heavy handed amount of pepper.

Place uncovered in the oven and cook for approximately 14 minutes.  The eggs will be shiny on top, likely appearing unfinished.  Trust me, they are.  Remove, let cool for just a few minutes and enjoy!

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Cabernet Delmonico Steak

06 Thursday Jun 2013

Posted by Erin in Main Dishes, Recipes

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

beef, cabernet, marinade, marinate, poached egg, red wine, steak

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Nothing says spring in DC more than cherry blossoms and the reopening of neighborhood farmer’s markets.  This past weekend, I ventured to Dupont Circle on Sunday morning to scope out the season’s best produce and cobble together a home-cooked dinner for one to enjoy with my favorite bottle of red.  After putzing through the market trying nearly every cheese, meat, and apple sample I set my eyes on, I settled on a beautiful local, grass-fed Delmonico Steak and managed to pick up some Vivaldi potatoes which much to my surprise were a buttery and delicate stand-in for fingerling potatoes in my side salad topped with a poached egg.

Cabernet Marinade (for two steaks, multiply as needed)

1/2 cup Cabernet Sauvignon
2 tbsp olive oil
4 medium-sized cloves garlic
1 tsp ground herbes de provence
1 tsp rosemary
1 tsp mustard
1/8 tsp oregano
1/8 tsp ground black pepper
1/8 tsp sea salt

Whisk the Cabernet, olive oil, garlic and mustard together until it holds.  Add seasonings and stir.

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Marinate the steak for at least 2 hours or up to 12.

The trick to a juicy and tender steak is searing both sides for about 30-60 seconds at an extremely high temperature, then finishing it off in the oven. Times will vary depending on the cut. Serve with a side salad of Spring Mix or Frisee with a champagne or shallot vinaigrette and a poached egg topped with fresh ground pepper.

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