recipes.
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Tuesday, March 24, 2020
apple-honey-pecan muffins.
Last night, after shutting down my laptop for the night, I threw on a Spotify playlist and had a one woman dance party while Tyler and Jackson looked on with bemused looks on their face. To be fair, Tyler nodded his head a couple of times. Jackson on the other hand barely looked up even while i was serenading him with Queens "Somebody to Love". This is how we end the work-day.
This social-isolation thing does weird things to people. I feel like my emotions ping pong every which way a thousand times a day. Sometimes I want to scream into the abyss, other times I feel like I could do this for weeks and be OK. Am I slowly going insane or am I slowly adjusting to a new normal? One where pants are optional, make-up is non existent, and homemade lunches are how you find ways to break-up the day? How does your relationship change when the only person you can really interact with is the person you're married to and is sitting 20 feet from you at all times?
Honestly, outside of Tyler's need to snack when I know he isn't really hungry, it's kind of like he isn't really here. I realized the other day that both of us are similar with regards to our work style. When we are in something we are really in something and whatever is happening around us is like the noise coming out of a sound machine - there but we don't really notice it. I find that I can more easily disengage myself when the day is over, he on the other hand needs someone to say close the computer. It's interesting when you realize you know a person so well, but aspects of them you don't know because you've really never been privy to them before.
I think the thing I've learned from all of this is that you have to figure out a way to make some kind of joy each day. For me that joy comes from food and eating and I've been using this time to try all of the recipes I never would have time to try. Things I've had bookmarked for a year are now finally being made. Sunday morning breakfasts that used to be simple meals are now (slightly) over the top - homemade muffins. Fresh granola. Things like that. It's fun to try new things.
I made these muffins this past Sunday. They were a real delight. I especially liked the fact that you could make the batter and apples up to 2 days earlier. On Sunday morning I simply assembled them as instructed and baked them up. We both eat 2 while watching a couple of episodes of Shitt's Creek. It made for a fantastic distraction.
Apple-Honey-Pecan Muffins
Recipe from Ochre Bakery via Bon Appetit
Feel free to sub the pecans for hazlenuts or another favorite nut!
2 medium Pink Lady or Jonagold apples
⅔ cup (75 g) pecans
2 Tbsp. unsalted butter
2 Tbsp. honey
Flaky sea salt
¾ cup (100 g) all-purpose flour
½ cup (60 g) spelt flour or all-purpose flour
1½ tsp. baking powder
¼ tsp. baking soda
½ tsp. kosher salt
2 large eggs, room temperature
¾ cup (150 g) granulated sugar
¾ cup plus 2 Tbsp. extra-virgin olive oil
½ cup buttermilk
Raw sugar or granulated sugar (for sprinkling)
Place a rack in middle of oven; preheat to 350°. Lightly coat flat top of a standard 12-cup muffin pan with nonstick spray (this will prevent muffins from gluing themselves to the pan). Line cups with double layers of muffin liners. Cut apples into quarters; remove cores. Cut each quarter into 4 wedges; set aside.
Pulse pecans in a food processor until you have a fine meal with a bit of texture, like coarse sand. Heat a large skillet over medium-high, then add pecans and toast, stirring, until darkened and very fragrant (it’s okay if they’re even a tiny bit burnt in spots), about 3 minutes. Transfer to a large bowl and let cool slightly.
Wipe out skillet and return to medium-high heat. Melt butter, swirling pan so that it’s evenly coated, until foaming, then add reserved apples. Drizzle with honey and generously sprinkle with sea salt. Cook, tossing often, until apples are tender and deep golden brown and glazed with honey, about 5 minutes. Scrape into a medium bowl and let cool.
Add all-purpose flour, spelt flour, baking powder, baking soda, and kosher salt to nuts; whisk to combine. Beat eggs and granulated sugar in the bowl of a stand mixer fitted with the whisk attachment on high speed until mixture is thick, pale, and tripled in volume, 8–10 minutes.
Combine oil and buttermilk in a measuring glass. With motor running, gradually pour into egg mixture, stopping as soon as incorporated to prevent eggs from deflating. Scrape into bowl with dry ingredients and fold until just combined (be careful not to overmix). Scoop about 2 Tbsp. batter into each muffin cup and place an apple slice on top. Divide remaining batter among muffin cups, filling until just below the top (you may have a spoonful or two of batter left over). Place 1 apple slice on top of each, then spoon any glaze left in the bowl on top. (You’ll have a few leftover apple slices; eat them.) Sprinkle each muffin with some raw sugar and a pinch of sea salt.
Bake muffins until golden brown all over, rotating pan halfway through, 22–28 minutes. Let cool in pan 10 minutes, then transfer to a wire rack and let cool completely.
Do Ahead: Batter can be made 2 days ahead. Cover and chill.
Thursday, March 19, 2020
caramelized shallot pasta.
This morning I woke up in bed next to Tyler with Jackson nestled in between us and I thought that with these two, a cooking imagination that has no barriers, and more then enough food and books and puzzles (+ The Office) it will be possible to survive. That maybe at the end of all of this I'll realize i don't need much.
But I don't think that's the case (though the above things will get me very far in this and in life!).
As humans, we are who we are because of the things around us. They tell a story; they make us feel complete. I'm not dressing how I would for work but I'm still trying to be me. Wearing earrings. Nice sweaters. But with leggings and sparkly socks. I'm trying to still feel like myself every day. I still need things to make me feel like myself.
The thing I really long for is the rituals and collective energy of the people I would encounter and speak with each and every day. My favorite barista at Cafe Grumpy. The kind people at Leo Sourdough that always set aside for me one of there pepita loaves so I can pick them up later in the day. The farmers at Lani's farm who always point me in the direction of what greens are the best that week. In preparation (though if we are being honest I do this even when we aren't in the midst of a pandemic) I stocked up on the things I love. Right now, a room over from where I am sitting, I have a freezer full of pastries and bread and produce that make me me. They are the memories and moments and adventures I've had over the past weeks and months locked away in an ice chest until i need to break out a reminder of what the world is like outside of this new normal. I'm worried about all the people and places I hold a connection with. Where will they be on the other side of this? How can I help them survive? Because without those things, who wants to live here?
As a glass half full kind of person, I'm done my best to seek out the positives that come from this experience. I now get to take multiple walks with Tyler and Jackson each day. I can cook myself lunch! I can read books and do puzzles instead of scrolling through websites when I need a break. I can run! I can labor over cooking projects since I'm here all day (will I finally make croissants??).
At some point it will be summer and I keep telling myself that it will be the sweetest summer ever. But until then, hunker down, cook, draw, move, and dream about life on the other side. Do what you can to help the things and people you love.
Caramelized Shallot Pasta
Recipe via the NYTimes
This sauce is BANANAS good. It keeps in the fridge for over a week. You can make it with pantry staples! I like it on pasta but i really love it tossed with beans on a piece of garlic rubbed bread.
¼ cup olive oil
6 large shallots, very thinly sliced
5 garlic cloves, 4 thinly sliced, 1 finely chopped
Kosher salt and freshly ground black pepper
1 teaspoon red-pepper flakes, plus more to taste
1 (2-ounce) can anchovy fillets (about 12), drained
1 (4.5-ounce) tube or (6-ounce) can of tomato paste (about 1/2 to 3/4 cup)
10 ounces pasta
1 cup parsley, leaves and tender stems, finely chopped
Flaky sea salt
Heat olive oil in a large heavy-bottomed Dutch oven over medium high. Add shallots and thinly sliced garlic, and season with salt and pepper. Cook, stirring occasionally, until the shallots have become totally softened and caramelized with golden-brown fried edges, 15 to 20 minutes.
Add red-pepper flakes and anchovies. (No need to chop the anchovies; they will dissolve on their own.) Stir to melt the anchovies into the shallots, about 2 minutes.
Add tomato paste and season with salt and pepper. Cook, stirring constantly to prevent any scorching, until the tomato paste has started to cook in the oil a bit, caramelizing at the edges and going from bright red to a deeper brick red color, about 2 minutes. Remove from heat and transfer about half the mixture to a resealable container, leaving the rest behind. (These are your leftovers to be used elsewhere: in another batch of pasta or smeared onto roasted vegetables, spooned over fried eggs or spread underneath crispy chicken thighs.)
To serve, cook pasta according to package instructions in a large pot of salted boiling water until very al dente (perhaps more al dente than usual). Transfer to Dutch oven with remaining shallot mixture (or a skillet if you are using the leftover portion) and 1 cup pasta water. Cook over medium-high heat, swirling the skillet to coat each piece of pasta, using a wooden spoon or spatula to scrape up any bits on the bottom, until pasta is thick and sauce has reduced and is sticky, but not saucy, 3 to 5 minutes.
In a small bowl, combine parsley and finely chopped garlic clove, and season with flaky salt and pepper. Divide pasta among bowls, or transfer to one large serving bowl, and top with parsley mixture and a bit more red-pepper flakes, if you like.