Weekend Cooking; New Year's Day Brunch recipe

photo courtesy of whatwhatwhat.com

This is what is cooking at my house right now!

I was a whirlwind yesterday; trying to get everything done.  My goal was  to begin the new year with a clean house and with the help of my new vacuum cleaner I accomplished that.  I made three trips to various grocery stores to pick up items I needed.  After shopping together husband and I made a light lunch for all five of us and then I set to the task of pretty much spending the rest of the day in the kitchen.  I wanted to make the breakfast casserole that my mother-in-law created once before in my kitchen.  My thought was to have something pre-made and extra yummy so I could properly relax today.  After I finished making that I moved on to making dinner; my “family-famous” eggplant lasagna and two loaves of bread.

I got almost everything done on my list yesterday.  I finished my 100 books in time; spending the whole morning immersed in Selznick’s Wonderstruck.  I’m excited because last year I didn’t make it and really it seemed like such an attainable goal.  It’s not unless you really read all the time or count picture books, which I choose not to. I also didn’t get my weekend cooking post completed yesterday like I’d planned but hey, I did what I could and feeding the family is pretty high up on the to-do list.

Here is the breakfast recipe we will be eating in about 30 minutes, if I can get the teenagers up…

Cinnamon Apple Baked French Toast Casserole


1 loaf French or Italian bread
8 farm fresh eggs
1/2 cup sugar, divided
3 1/2 cups milk
1 T. real vanilla
6-8 Apples, peeled, cored and sliced (McIntosh or Cortland, preferred)
3 tsp cinnamon
1 tsp freshly grated nutmeg
2 T. butter
Maple syrup (warmed) for serving

Slice bread into 1 1/2-inch slices.  Place the bread tightly together in a greased 13 x 9-inch glass baking dish. In a bowl beat together the eggs, 1/4 cup sugar, milk and vanilla.  Pour half of egg mixture over bread slices.  Place sliced apples over bread to cover and pour remaining egg mixture over the top.  Mix remaining 1/4 cup sugar with cinnamon and nutmeg and sprinkle over top of dish.  Dot casserole with butter slices.  Cover and refrigerate over night.
In the morning remove foil or pan cover.  Bake at 350* for 1 hour. Place a cookie sheet under glass dish as casserole may overflow a little.  Remove from oven and let stand for 10  minutes before serving.  Cut into big squares and serve with maple syrup.
Yum!

Later today we’re having black-eyed peas, salsa and spinach over brown rice for dinner.  How many others participate in this tradition?
 
This post is connected to Beth Fish Reads Weekend Cooking meme-drop by and check out all the food-related posts gathered there.

Happy New Year.  Happy Reading.

Weekend Cooking; Ribbons of Kale

Last week I wrote about my Farmer’s Market shopping spree and through the week I’ve made a few recipes with my produce.  I discovered two new recipes for kale and I made my children eat beet greens (they didn’t eat a lot but they ate some).  I researched kale and found 9 reasons to eat kale and if you click the link you can read them also.  Loads of fiber, antioxidants and  vitamin K. 

Lentil Soup with Ribbons of Kale
(adapted from Fresh From the Vegetarian Slow Cooker by Robin Robertson)

Slow Cooker size: 4-6 qts
Cook Time: 8 hours
Setting: Low

1 T. olive oil
1 large yellow onion, chopped
1 celery rib, chopped
1 large carrot, chopped
2 garlic cloves, chopped
1 1/4 cups dried brown lentils, picked over and rinsed
6 cups vegetable stock or water
1 T. tamari or other soy sauce
Sprinkles of Sea Salt and freshly ground black pepper
4 to 5 large kale leaves, tough stems removed

1. Heat the oil in a large skillet over medium heat.  Add the onion, celery, carrot and garlic, cover and cook until softened, 8-10 minutes
2. Transfer the cooked vegetables to a 4- to 6- qt slow cooker, add the lentils, stock, and tamari; cover and cook on Low for 8 hours.  (this is where I completely veered off recipe and made the entire thing in the same large saute skillet-apparently I LOVE heating up my kitchen in the heat of the summer)  Season with salt and pepper.
3. Meanwhile, or beforehand, tightly roll the kale leaves up like a cigar and cut them crosswise into thin ribbons.  Cook the kale in a pot of boiling salted water, about 5 minutes, and add to the soup when ready to serve. 
I served ours over brown rice and I didn’t boil the kale down.  I just popped it into the lentil mix about 10 minutes before eating and it wilted enough for us.  It was yummy!

Second kale recipe:

Tuscan Kale with White Beans and Garlic
(The Garden-Fresh Vegetable Cookbook by Andrea Chesman)

1 cup dried cannellini (white kidney) or great Northern beans (I had garbanzos on hand-used them instead)
6 cups water
1 onion, halved (I like onion so I diced it and kept it in the bean mix)
2 sprigs fresh thyme
2 bay leaves
1 1/2 pounds of kale, stems removed and leaves chopped, 16 cups lightly packed)
8 ozs smoked turkey or ham, diced (optional)
Sea Salt and freshly ground black pepper
3 T. olive oil
4 large garlic cloves, very thinly sliced
1/2 tsp crushed red pepper flakes (optional)

1. Saok the beans for at least 8 hours in plenty of water to cover.  Drain the beans.
2. In a large saucepan or Dutch oven, combine the beans with the water, onion, thyme and bay leaves.  Cover and bring to a boil.  Reduce the heat and simmer partially covered, until the beans are tender, approximately 1 1/2 hours.
3. Remove and discard the onion, sprigs of thyme and bay leaves.  At this point beans could be refrigerated for up to 1 day before continuing the recipe.  Bring the beans and their liquid to a boil. Add the kale and the salt and pepper to taste.  Simmer, stirring down the kale every few minutes, until the kale is tender, about 10 minutes.  Stir in the meat, if using. 
4. Meanwhile, heat the oil in a small heavy skillet over very low heat.  Add the garlic and cook until fragrant and soft, stirring occasionally for about 5 minutes.  Do not let garlic brown.  Mash the garlic with a fork.  Add the hot pepper flakes, if using.
5. Pour the hot oil mix over the beans and greens and serve immediately. 

I mentioned that our dinner had kale leaves in it and he said…oh, hmmm, that sounds good-I’ve heard kale is really healthy!  Wow.  Needless to say everyone ate both recipes and I went ahead and bought more kale at the market today.  Also we had some ham from a local farmer so I did cube that up, heated it, and put the bowl on the table for our occasional meat eaters to add to the own plates. 

My own garden has baby eggplants growing, okra (we’ve already eaten 5 pods from our two plants), tomatoes, basil, two kinds of peppers.  This post is linked to Beth Fish Reads Weekend Cooking meme; anyone can play along with a food-related post.  Click her link to see her review of Danyelle Freeman’s new book Try This.