Turkey Tracks: Christmas Day Dinner

Turkey Tracks:  December 29, 2012

Christmas Day Dinner

We’re almost at New Year’s Eve, so I better post about our Christmas dinner feast.  Included are some lovely recipes.

As I write, we’ve got a foot of snow on the ground, which makes me so happy.  I love winter so much up here in Maine.  It’s not just the crisp cold, the brilliant night skies, the full moon that is so bright you can read a book by it, the long nights that lend themselves to quiet reflection and many fun projects, it’s the quiet times one has with friends.  Christmas Day Dinner was one of those times.

Over the years, we’ve had many a holiday dinner with Sarah Rheault and various members of her family and/or with Margaret Rauenhorst and Ronald VanHeeswijk.  We’ve met at any one of our houses, depending upon what is going on at the moment.  This year, the dinner was at our house and Sarah, her son Chrisso (in from Louisiana), and Ronald were present.  ( Margaret is in Minnesota with her mother, who has just been moved to a nursing home.)

Sarah and Chrisso brought the most fabulous hors d’oeuvre (salmon, trout, and a whole brie heated and topped with a cranberry sauce).  And, Chrisso put together a cheese plate to eat after the salad.  Filled with 5 or 6 special cheeses, it was a divine treat over which we lingered for some time.  Sarah made her traditional cranberry pudding with a hard sauce for dessert–which we all love.  And Chrisso brought a chocolate pound cake that he and his fiance Melanie made back in Louisiana.

For the main course, we had a standing rib roast, scalloped potatoes, kale blanched and reheated in brown butter, and “southern” cornbread, made with no flour in a hot cast-iron skillet coated with melted fat–in this case, butter–in a very hot oven.

I wasn’t sure if John’s sister Maryann would be with us, so when Chrisso said he would be coming, I called Curtis Custom Meats and asked it I could switch my grass-fed 3-rib roast to a 4-rib roast–and they were so lovely and said it would be no trouble at all.  When Maryann and I picked it up last Saturday, I could see that it was a HUGE piece of meat.  Here it is, alongside some items like the small bowl and the carrot, so you can see what HUGE looks like:

4-rib standing rib roast

I’ve used a Julia Child recipe for standing rib roasts for a half-dozen years now, and it’s all really simple.  Let the meat sit out at room temperature for AT LEAST two hours (especially for a roast this size); heat the oven to 325 degrees; salt, pepper, herb, etc., the outside; put the bone side down and the fat side up; and cook the meat until a meat thermometer hits 120 degrees ON THE SHORT END OF THE ROAST–at least a rib from the end.  A roast this size takes about 2 to 2 1/2 hours to cook–depending on how cold the inside is when you start.  Let the roast sit on the oven for at least 15-30 minutes to let the juices reassemble themselves.  Put a cover on the roast if you think you need to.  (Julia cooks this roast so that it is done an hour ahead of when you want to eat it–and she sits the pan over a large pot of hot (not boiling, not even simmering) water.  She covers it with the lid of another roasting pan.)

Carving is dead simple–especially if Curtis Custom Means has precut the bones so that they are only attached at the base of the roast and tied all together.  You slice off the bones in an arc–releasing the roll of meat.  Cut the bones into separate pieces so that anyone who wants to chew one can. Then slice the roll of meat as you like it–into slabs or into thin strips.  (I use the leftover bones to make a bone broth the next day.)

Fabulous!

The kale is also dead easy.  Rinse the kale in the sink.  I used FOUR bunches for 5 to 6 people.  Here’s how much I started with:

kale

Put on a big pot of water to boil.  Rinse each kale leaf, rip the green from the stalk, and when the water in your pot boils and you’re all done de-stalking the kale, drop the leaves into the water and let it cook for about 5 minutes–or less if your kale is smaller and more tender.  This blanching makes the kale sweet.  (The chickens get the stalks and delight in eating the bits of green leaf remaining.)  Drain off the kale into a colendar, run cold water over it until you can handle it with your bare hands.  Squeeze out the water, roughly chop the wilted leaves on a chopping board, and put them into a bowl until you are ready to reheat them in a big dollop of butter (at least 1/2 cup) that you have allowed to just get toasty, light brown in a skillet–a step you do at the last minute.

Here’s what the kale looks like wilted.  You can see how much it wilts down:

kale reduced

Scalloped potatoes are also dead easy to cook.  You can put them together and mostly cook them and just reheat them while someone is carving the meat.

Start with boiling potatoes (not russets).  Peel and slice into thin rounds (under 1/4 inches)–putting the slices into a bowl of water so they don’t brown.

sliced potatoes in water

If you’re going to cook ahead, heat the oven to 400 degrees and grease a 2-inch high pan with butter.  (I used a square pan this time.)  You could also run a cut clove of garlic over the pan before buttering if you feel up to it.

Grate some cheese (good swiss or cheddar) and cut a bit of onion into fine dice:

cheese and onion

Drain the potatoes in a colendar and dry them in a towel:

drying potato slices

Assemble the dish.  Put a layer of potatoes on the bottom.  Top with a tiny bit of onion and a handful of cheese.  (You could salt each layer lightly if you like–sometimes I forget and just salt the top–the milk you add washes it all together.)  Top with more potatoes.  If you are cooking ahead, I don’t put cheese on the top.  If you are not, put cheese on top.  Pour at least a cup of milk over the whole dish.  If you heat the milk, the dish will cook faster–say 30 minutes.  If not, it takes longer (45 or so–which is why putting the cheese on the top will get too brown.)  If cooking ahead, cook until most of the milk is absorbed and the potatoes are softening–remove and let sit on the stove or a counter and dot the top with butter and reheat while someone is carving the meat–about 10 minutes.  You’ll know when the dish is cooked–the top will have crispy brown bits and potatoes will be soft and the milk will be gone.

Delicious!!!  Reheats well the next day, too.

Here’s the table ready to go–graced with our old, old (now) tablecloth and the Fosteria red glasses I got for my wedding almost 47 years ago now.  That’s horseradish cream in the bowl in the center–equal parts of sour cream (I used my fermented piima cream) and horseradish.  I also cut this mixture with some fresh raw heavy cream.

Christmas dinner 2012

This Christmas Day Dinner was about food, friends, and not a lot of fancy decorations.  In the background, you can see a tv tray with 3 sprouting amaryllis and some paper white narcissus–which will cheer us in January.  This window is the only window that does not have outside roof overhangs and that gets the weak winter sun.  My sisters will smile as they will recall our mother and her wintering over of plants in glass jars with dangling roots and dingy water–something I always didn’t like to see in the dining room.  But, here they are as we love having their outrageous flowering in the dead of winter.

Sarah is British–and that means she finds us what she calls Christmas “Crackers” for dinner entertainment.  Here are a few left in the original box.

Christmas crackers in box

Here’s one alone:

Christmas crackers

You cross your arms, holding your “cracker” in one hand, and the people on either side of you pull your cracker apart (and it “pops” with a kind of firecracker fire) as you sharply pull one of theirs.  Out fall toys, tiny games, a crown, and some fortunes.

Here we are with our crowns on:

Christmas dinner 2012 at table

One year I got a miniature deck of cards that I carry with me in my purse in case I get stranded at an airport and want to play solitaire or somesuch game.  This year I got a spinning top that spins beautifully.

The fortunes are a lot of fun:

Why do birds fly south in the winter?  Because they can’t afford to take the train.

What did the hat say to the scarf?  You hang around while I go on ahead.

What is grey and has four legs and a trunk?  A mouse going on holiday.

How do you make a band stand?  Hide all the chairs.

The fifth one got lost in the merriment.

THANK YOU SARAH AND CHRISSO.

We had such a nice time, and even though we ate and ate, we had a ton of leftovers.  So, everyone came back the next night to help us remedy the leftover situation.  And, again, we had a lovely evening.

Turkey Tracks: Celeriac Cream Soup

Turkey Tracks:  December 26, 2012

Celeriac Cream Soup

How many of you know what a celeriac root is?

I can guarantee you that I did not before I moved to Maine and joined Hope’s Edge, our Community Shared Agriculture (CSA).

Celeriac roots are a very common root, storage vegetable in Europe.  They can be peeled and grated raw for a salad, grated and sautéed, braised, or cut up and added to a soup or stew.  You can pretty much treat them like a potato or a rutabega, though they are less dense than a potato.  Or, they can be the “star” of their own soup.  They have a mild celery taste and probably have components that are really good for you.  They stored well in my refrigerator–I got them from Hope’s Edge back in October.

Here’s what a celeriac root vegetable looks like.  I put potatoes I needed for the soup in the background so you can see the contrast.  I run my knife down the sides to peel them–turning them over to get what I missed at the bottom when I’ve gone all the way around.  When you cut open a celeriac, the flesh is white and very dense.

celeriac and potatoes

The Farmer John Cookbook had a nice celeriac soup recipe, so I started from there.  It’s pretty much the same method that Julia Child teaches for her leek and potato soup.

Leeks or onions–I used onions as I was out of leeks–sweated out in a bit of butter.

I added carrots, some garlic scapes from the freezer, and some actual garlic.  I didn’t add extra celery as I wanted to see how “celery” the celeriac is.

Be patient with the sweating out–in a heavy pan, like a Creuset.  (If I could have only one pan, it would be a Creuset pot.  The next would be a cast iron skillet.)  Cook slowly over medium heat.  Add sea salt.  Stir to keep anything from burning prematurely.  When you begin to get bits of caramel browning–throw in the stock.  I used my last batch of chicken bone broth–simmered for 2 days in the crock pot and then strained.  I don’t strain off any fat as I’m quite sure now that fat does not make you fat and that we all need good sources of fat to be healthy.

Throw in the cut up celeriac–you need 3 to 4 cups for about 8 cups of broth.  You could have more or less of either.  Throw in, too, two or three peeled potatoes–which will thicken up the soup.

Here’s an interesting addition–about 1/4 to 1/2 cup of almonds–I put a few handfuls in the blender and let it rip until I have a nice powdery nut mix.  The almond will also thicken the soup and will add a delicate flavor.

Grate in some fresh nutmeg.  Taste for salt and add more if needed.

Let it all cook for 25 minutes or until the celeriac is soft.  Here’s what it looked like on the stove–you can see the almond “flour” on the top.

celeraic cream soup in process

Then, turn it off, let it cool a bit, and “boat motor” it with an immersion blender.   When all is smooth, add at least a cup of heavy, preferably raw, cream.  Stir, taste for salt and nutmeg, and serve in a bowl.  You could put a chunk of butter on the top once the soup is in the bowl.  Or, a drizzle of cream or sour cream.  It’s really rich.

Here it is finished:

celeriac cream soup

Celeriac cream soup has a delicate, lovely flavor.  Enjoy!

Turkey Tracks: Roasting and Cooking the Blue Hubbard Squash

Turkey Tracks:  December 14, 2012

Roasting and Cooking the Blue Hubbard Squash

Remember the Blue Hubbard Squash I grew and wrote about back in October?

Well, I roasted it this week.

The temperature had been dropping, and I had the squash stored in the garage so they could keep on “sugaring off.”  Temps were low enough that I was afraid that the garlic and the squashes would freeze in the garage–so everything came inside.

John cut last year’s Blue Hubbard, which I bought for about $8, out in the garage–a place of mystery to me.  This year I was on my own.  And let me tell you, it took the BIG French knife, lots of muscle, and lots of patience.  I could only get the knife into one side at once.  Eventually, I was able to pry it open.

I scooped out the seeds and pulp and took them out to the chickens, who ooed and ahhed.  The smell of the squash was so clean and sweet.  The flesh was bright, intense orange.

Each half took up the whole of one of my big baking pans and both filled the whole of the oven.  It took about 90 minutes to roast them completely.

Blue Hubbard cooked

Here are the halves, flipped over and ready to have the roasted flesh scooped out.

Blue Hubbard cooked 2

This one squash made an enormous amount of cooked filling.  I put serving sizes into plastic bags and froze them–reserving about 4 cups for that night’s dinner–pan fried local ham steak, sauteed baby bok choy (with fresh ginger and our garlic), and the Blue Hubbard squash.  (Fall is the traditional time for “putting up” pork raised over the summer–and a pork ham takes a bit of time to smoke, so big ham slices are now filling the local coops.)

I placed the roasted squash for dinner into a saucepan with a cover–added about 1/4 cup of our local raw butter, a big dollop of our local raw heavy cream, a splash of our local maple syrup, a pinch of sea salt, and about a teaspoon of Penzy’s cinnamon.  I put the mixture on low heat and went back after a bit to stir it all up.  It was smooth and incredibly sweet–I hardly needed the maple syrup in the mixture.

Delicious!

Turkey Tracks: Blog Request: Cream Caramel Cake

Turkey Tracks:  December 14, 2012

BLOG REQUEST:  CREAM CARAMEL CAKE

A blog reader recently asked me to post the recipe for the Cream Caramel Cake I pictured in the January 25th entry, 2011, on making French Onion Soup, which included a picture and a discussion of a Cream Caramel Cake I found in Better Homes and Gardens, December 2005.  The reader tore out the picture and didn’t get the recipe.  I tore out the recipe, but didn’t save the picture.  Nevertheless, I feel sure that the cake recipe below is what this reader is asking me to post.

Caramel cake cut

The cake pictured in the magazine was a secret family recipe, so this recipe probably comes close but isn’t exactly what Pat Shelter is really making.  I didn’t have mocha syrup on hand, so kind of make one up–you can go back to the original entry to see what I did.

This is a BIG cake–3 LAYERS–with 8 CUPS OF POWDERED SUGAR in the frosting.  There’s so much sugar that it makes my teeth hurt just to read the frosting recipe.  The cake itself seems to be assembled in a classic manner.  Do bring your ingredients to room temperature before starting the cake–or the frosting.

Cake ingredients:

1 cup butter

5 eggs separated

1 cup buttermilk

3 cups sifted cake flour

1 tsp. EACH baking powder and baking soda

pinch of salt

2 1/2 cups sugar

5 Tablespoons total:  mocha syrup, coffee liqueur, and Irish cream liqueur–or strongly brewed coffee for all 5 Tablespoons

2 tsps. vanilla extract

1 recipe IRISH CREAM FROSTING  (1 cup butter, softened, with electric mixer on medium to high speed until smooth.  Gradually add 2 cups of powdered sugar, beating well.  Slowly beat in 6 Tablespoons of whatever flavoring from above you have chosen.  Beat in 2 Tablespoons of vanilla.  Gradually add 6 MORE CUPS POWDERED SUGAR, beating until smooth and of spreading consistency.

1.  Allow butter, egg yolks, egg whites, and buttermilk to stand at room temperature for 30 minutes.  Meanwhile grease and flour three 9-inch round cake pans; set aside.  In a bowl stir together flour, baking powder, baking soda, and salt.  Set aside.

2.  In a mixing bowl beat butter with an electric mixer on medium to high speed for 30 seconds.  Beat in sugar until well combined.  Beat in egg yolks one at a time.  (Take time on this step.)  Beat on high speed for 5 minutes.

3.  Alternately add flour mixture and buttermilk to butter mixture, beginning and ending with flour mixture.  Beat on low speed after each addition just until combined.  In a bowl combine the listed flavorings as desired–or use strong coffee–and gently stir into cake.

4.  Thoroughly wash beaters.  In a mixing bowl beat egg whites on medium to high speed until stiff peaks form (tips stand straight).  Fold 1 cup of the beaten egg white mixture into the egg yolk mixture, fold remaining egg whites into egg yolk mixture.

5.  Divide batter among prepared pans.  Bake for 20 to 25 minutes or until tops spring back when touched.  Cool cakes in pans on wire racks for 10 minutes.  Remove cakes from pans; cool thoroughly on racks.  DO NOT FROST UNTIL THE CAKE LAYERS ARE TOTALLY COOL.

6.  To assemble cake, place one cake layer on a serving plate.  Spread top of cake with 3/4 cup of the Irish Cream frosting.  Top with a second cake layer.  Spread top of cake with 3/4 cup frosting.  Top with remaining cake layer.  Spread remaining frosting on top and sides of cake.

Turkey Tracks: Delicious!!! Massaged Kale

Turkey Tracks:  October 30, 2012

Massaged Kale

Well, you are in for a real treat.

Don’t hesitate for a moment to make Georgeanne Davis’s “Massaged Kale” recipe–which appeared in one of our local papers, THE FREE PRESS, last week.  She also included a Chocolate Beet Cake and Squash-Filled Potstickers, so I’m including the whole citation so you can read the column “Home & Garden” for yourselves: http://www.freepressonline.com/main.asp?SectionID=50&SubSectionID=72&ArticleID=22592.

Son Bryan is here visiting–actually he’s trapped here due to the strange storm calledSandy, which has cancelled most flights along the East Coast–so we made Massaged Kale–with lamb loin chops and the roasted veggie dish I love to make when it’s time to pick the green tomatoes.  I wrote about this recipe last year and you can find it under the recipe tab on the right sidebar.  Basically you roast cup up green tomatoes, a deep sweet squash like a Buttercup, some fresh potatoes, some onion–all garnished with fresh rosemary, garlic, salt, and olive oil.  The sour tomatoes work beautifully with the sweetness of the squash, and I look forward to this dish each fall.

John, Bryan, and I all loved the Massaged Kale, and John doesn’t even like kale very much.  The tiny bit we had left over was very good the next night as well–and I shared it between the three of us.

Plus, it’s easy to make.  You just wash the kale (I used enough from the garden to fill a big bowl–Davis recommends two bunches of kale) and tear it into bite-sized pieces–leaving out the stalk and tough stems.  Mix up the following and pour it over the leaves.  Then start to rub the leaves–kneading them–with your hands–until they get shiny/glossy and have reduced by half.  This part only takes a very few minutes–maybe 5 or less.

I think sauteed pine nuts sprinkled over the top would be good, too.  Or, toasted walnuts.  This plain base would also be good for sandwiches or further worked into a pesto, as Davis notes.

1/2 cup grated Parmesan cheese

1/3 cup olive oil

1/4 cup lemon juice–I just used the juice of one lemon

3 large garlic cloves, minced–it might be nice to grind them down to a paste with the blade of your knife and a bit of good Sea Salt

1 Tablespoon soy sauce

1 minced anchovy fillet (I keep a tube of anchovy paste on hand and used that so I didn’t have to open a bottle just for one fillet)

Sea salt and pepper–go slow with added salt as the soy sauce and Parmesan cheese are also salty and I almost got my batch too salty…

ENJOY!!!

Turkey Tracks: Robb Wolf’s Reaction to the Red Meat=Cancer Study

Turkey Tracks:  March 22, 2012

Robb Wolf’s Reaction to the Red Meat=Cancer Study

Son Michael sent me Robb Wolf’s Reaction to the red meat=cancer study recently released by Harvard.

Robb Wolf is a biochemist who decided to blend his knowledge of nutrition with healthy exercise.  I wrote about his book in my last Tipping Points Essay (No. 41) and will use his analysis to discuss the dangers of eating grains and legumes.  That information is in many reputable places now, so I’ll also include some of them.  But Robb does a really good job of simply explaining the issues.

What I like about Robb’s reaction is that he goes to some lengths to explain that it’s NOT ok to use badly crafted scientific studies that support your personal belief system.  He references some bad studies that support low-carb diets to illustrate and calls for a return to using solid science that searches for accuracy and, dare I say it, “truth.”

Here’s Robb’s reaction:

http://www.robbwolf.com/2012/03/14/red-meat-part-healthy-diet/

And, here’s Robb’s book:

Turkey Tracks: Beet Salad

Turkey Tracks:  March 4, 2012

Beet Salad

This picture of a beet salad has been waiting to be discussed since the Christmas holidays when Mike, Tami, and the kiddos were here.

It was too good to just move on and ignore it, so here it is.

It all started when we ha some roasted beets…

Just wash some beets, put them into a covered pan, put the pan into the oven at 350 degrees for about an hour.  Less for small beets; more for larger ones.  A knife will slide right in when they are done.  I also put about a 1/2 cup of water into the pan just to prevent the oozing beet juices from burning.  Let the beets cool.  The skins will slip off easily if you rub the beets with a paper towel.  If the beets are still too warm to handle, stick a fork in each beet, hold it up, and rub the paper towel of the surface while protecting your fingers from the heat.

Lay out a bed of spinach and put the chopped beets (bite sized) over.  We had some of our dried cherry tomatoes, so those went on.  Diced, fresh are also nice.  We had some leftover cooked string beans, so they went on.  Sliced onion.  Red onion would be even nicer, but I’d never make a special trip to the store for one ingredient as I tend to cook with what I have on hand.  Blue cheese crumbled over all.  And the dressing is a very mustardy, sharp, garlicky vinaigrette–lovely with the sweet beets and onion.  Salt and cracked black pepper.

There wasn’t a piece left at the end of the meal.

The picture does not really do this salad justice.  It’s fabulous for a dinner party.

PS:  The tablecloth is a hand-crocheted piece with butterflies in the pattern that I bought at our Coastal Quilters fall auction for, I think, $30!!!!  It has lived on the table since and washes and dries easily.   Thank you, thank you to whomever put this piece into the auction.  It is loved and cherished now.

Turkey Tracks: Maine Sea Salt

Turkey Tracks:  February 24, 2012

Maine Sea Salt

I’ve been emailing with Stephen Cook of Maine Sea Salts, and he assures me that he does not heat his seawater in any way to make his salt.  The white color is because he is solar drying sea water that does not, itself, have coloring ingredients.   He told me that the colors in salt (grey, pink, black) come from the clay deposits where salt is harvested.

The url I saw that shows water being heated in large, wooden half-barrels dates back to the late 1990s.  He no longer uses that method.  He totally uses solar drying methods now.  Stephen is working toward getting that reference and picture removed from the internet.  I had a feeling that “old” internet entries was the problem, so I am happy to report that Maine Sea Salt will have all the many nutrients salt should have.

Go Stephen!

Turkey Tracks: Cheryl Wixson’s Homemade Ketchup

Turkey Tracks:  February 9, 2012

Cheryl Wixson’s Homemade Ketchup

In our Cheryl Wixson’s Kitchen CSA last month, we got some homemade ketchup:

I keep thinking about pouring some into a spoon and just eating it.  Seriously, this ketchup leaps into my mind on a regular basis.  I find myself thinking about what I can cook that I can put it on.

Next year, I’m definitely going to try to make some for our winter eating.  But, I doubt mine will ever be as good as this one is!

Eat your heart out Kelly Enright!

PS:  Cheryl just sent the list of goodies in our February box which I’ll pick up next Tuesday at the Belfast Coop.  I can hardly wait!