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Archive for the ‘lentils’ Category
Thursday, May 12th, 2011
This is basically the springtime version of my fall mushroom salad. Subtract chanterelles, add green garlic. Voila!
Easy: Spinach…wash it, put it on a plate
Lentils…cook them with a clove of garlic and some thyme. Choose your preferred liquid to cook them in, I use chicken stock.
Green garlic dressing…recipe featured here.

To plate…well, spinach, then spoon some lentils on top, then drizzle some dressing on that. You didn’t need me to spell that out did you? Oh, and if you like, crumble bacon on top. To pretty it up, I added some julienned turnips and chive flowers.
Posted in amateur, bacon, dinner, food, lentils, recipe, recipes, seasonal menu, self pleasuring, spinach | No Comments »
Wednesday, July 21st, 2010
I didn’t get a picture of this soup. I was so hungry I forgot!
1/2 a yellow onion, chopped
2 oz diced pancetta
1 small fennel bulb, thinly sliced
Add to pot and saute in olive oil until beginning to brown.
Add:
1/2 cup white wine.
2 small carrots, sliced into half moons
Simmer until carrots are soft and wine is reduced.
Add:
1 1/2 cups summer squash, sliced into half moons. This time I used crookneck squash.
2 cups chicken stock
Simmer until squash is soft. Turn off heat and puree with stick blender or in blender or food processor. Return to the pot (if you didn’t use the stick blender) and add 2 cups french green lentils and 4 cups of chicken stock. Bring to a boil and then reduce heat and simmer until lentils are cooked (about 20 minutes).
Stir in salt and juice of 1-2 lemons. Ladle into bowls and top with a generous pile of chiffonaded basil.
TASTY!
Posted in dinner, food, lentils, recipe, recipes, seasonal menu, self pleasuring | No Comments »
Monday, April 19th, 2010
Manresa
320 Village Lane
Los Gatos, CA 95030
I have been wanting to go to Manresa for ages. It seems like it’s harder to plan to go to a place just 20 minutes away over our lovely mountain highway than all the way up to San Francisco. I finally realized, Hey! there are hotels near Manresa too! Just make a weekend of it!. So we stayed at the Tollhouse Inn, which was lovely and comfortable and I would stay there again (next time we eat at Manresa). Oh, did I just give away the ending? Yes, our meal was incredible. We will go back. And now for why…
We were REALLY early for our reservation. They were lovely enough to let us loiter at a table on the patio with the wine list. I passed the time by twittering our wait…what did we do before smart phones? Actually talk to our companions? ;-) Six o’clock rolled around and we were shown in. I listed off my food aversions to the waiter and we ordered the tasting menu with my caveats written in the waiters notes. I’ve decided to make business cards with a list of my dislikes…like a little medic alert card for my taste buds!

The meal started with Orange in Jasmine jelly. It was really tart, refreshing and, well, a little soapy but that’s just my weirdness with jasmine. I used to LOVE jasmine green tea…I’m talking up until about a month ago! Something changed on my tongue and now it tastes like soap. Blargh. But this was still lovely!

Next amuse bouche was Pear Sorbet with an Avocado puree and “yeast crumble”. This did something amazing to the champagne. The yeast on the dish made the champagne less yeasty…not surprising really but a lovely shift in the mouth. The only thing I would have liked on this one was a few more sprigs of the teeny baby mizuna so I could have one with each bite. It reminded my husband of avocado pie but not me because I’ve never had avocado pie!

One of the things my husband can’t eat is sea urchin (Uni). The reason for that is our 2001 trip to L’Arpege in Paris. Something I left out of the review was that my hubby got a wicked case of food poisoning. We’re guessing either from the egg or the urchin…or maybe even something we ate earlier in the day. Either way, the flavor that stuck with him was urchin and the other dish that stands out from that meal was the other risky one: the egg. When talking about our food aversions, he *almost* told the story but I stopped him, why bring that up, right? Well, here’s why!! The next course was, I kid you not, the “Arpege Egg”. The EXACT same dish Alain Passard has made his signature dish. What the hell!?!? What are the odds??? This one seemed a little more poached. We both recall the egg at L’Arpege being raw but when looking back at my notes, it was poached as well. This one was more poached and tasty but I still couldn’t eat it all, I’m not a fan of runny eggs in general, and especially not when it reminds me such experiences!! Don’t let our bad association ruin your enjoyment of this though, I’m sure everyone else loves this to no end!!
The bread came next. The BREAD! OMG, the seeded wheat bread!! So, I love me my carbs. I really do. I think the bread platter was my downfall for the evening. I ate too much bread even though I kept saying, “No, I don’t want to fill up on bread.”….I filled up on bread! This will be an issue later.
The L’Arpege egg wasn’t a weird enough coincidence, there had to be another. In 2000 we went to Sooke Harbour House on Vancouver Island. We had a dish that was a caprese-like salad made with geoduck. At the time, I’d never heard of such a creature. I haven’t had it since…until this: Geoduck with watercress gelee. Well, it was geoduck. It is very, wharfy…and salty…and it tastes like a beach covered in seaweed. The wine cut through the wharfiness in a lovely way though!

Now, this next dish blew me away: Sacramento Delta asparagus with bonito butter. This is where the wonderful bread was so incredibly perfect with the bonito butter. And I was grateful I had a spoon. Husband asked, as I was slurping up the contents of my bowl, “You do know that’s butter right?” YES! Fantastic bonito-filled butter. Like a rich, salty soup. Later in the evening our neighboring table said, “It’s like a butter latte.”

I was very excited to see the next dish placed in front of me. I’d read about it, I’d seen it on the Food Forward trailer: From the Garden. A beautiful plate of fresh garden goodness. This plate encapsulates my beliefs about cooking, although it is all raw. Sprouts, leaves, purees. So much flavor and every bite is different. And every day it’s different. The more you eat, the more you uncover in the garden on your plate. This dish made me smile.
The abalone came highly recommended. This was my husband’s favorite of the night. I have no idea how they got the abalone this tender. It was served over smoked lentils which made it taste like there was bacon in the dish. It reminded hubby of my chanterelle-lentil-spinach salad which is one of his favorite things I’ve made…ever. We mopped up this plate with more of the wonderful seeded bread (oh, more filling up! Noooo!). My husband couldn’t figure out why this combination tasted like memories of being in Big Sur…it was an Everything Bagel with lox! The combination of the fishiness of the abalone, the seeds of the bread, the salty of the broth–it was a palate-memory awoken!
I have to say here that at this point in the meal, we have had an insane amount of wine. My notes get scribbly and short. The True Cod with peas and something illegible was beautiful and scrumptious. My picture is dark and I can’t read what I wrote! I do remember it fondly though!
So, one thing I now have on my list of “do not eat foods” is organ meat. I did not stipulate that before this meal. I feel awful about this. The course was Veal Sweetbreads. I thought, “I can do this…I can try it.” Then I cut into it and the texture killed it for me, I could not eat that. So sorry David!!! I bet they were the best sweetbreads ever, to quote my retired-surgeon-father-in-law, “They don’t have a strong organ flavor.”
Then lamb showed up. I managed to eat 2 bites, it was phenomenal…and I don’t like lamb! But I was so incredibly full at this point (told you the bread would be a problem!). I tried to eat more! I really did! I couldn’t do it!! I think I have a savory-fullness level I hit and can’t surpass. Luckily the lamb was the last savory course and we just had sweet to go.
Rhubarb and Fennel with Brioche Sorbet. There was something about this that was reminiscent of pineapple upside down cake from childhood. It was a caramelized-cakey-sugary flavor. Excellent.
I wrote down a quote of my own from the evening at this point that sums up my headspace at this point, “I’m having troblems”. Yes, I was trying to say I was having a hard time writing down info about the meal…”troblems.” Yay wine! ;-)

The finale: Yuzu sorbet, chocolate sorbet and candied citrus, including Buddhas hand, which I looked up and it looks like some sort of creature from Star Wars or Star Trek. Crazy fruit! But a lovely candied treat.
As we were stumbling out, praising the meal, the manager asked if we wanted to see the kitchen. This is really something I would love to do again sober! I wanted to have an intelligent conversation with Chef David but was a slurring mess! Drunk on food and wine. An amazing experience all around. I’m already looking in my calendar to find out when we can go back!
Don’t walk..run! And don’t drive! Get a driver, stay at the Tollhouse (6 short blocks away!). But go to Manresa immediately.
Posted in amuse bouche, avocado, chocolate, dinner, flavor, lentils, Michelin star, restaurant, review, table dance, tasting menu | No Comments »
Monday, February 8th, 2010
A few nights ago I made sausage and lentil soup. It was quite yummy, very simple. I had some left over but I had some for lunch the next day and the rest was just sitting in the refrigerator. So last night I dumped the soup into a colander to strain out the liquid and used the lentil-sausage-onion-carrot-garlic mixture that was left as ravioli filling. It worked so well!
I have been keeping wonton wrappers on hand as a quick and easy way to make ravioli. One doesn’t always have time to make pasta dough.
I think this method would work with most any soup (that doesn’t have pasta in it already!).
I topped the raviolis with parsley-marjoram-pecan pesto: 1/2 c. marjoram (or thereabouts, loosely piled) 1/2 c. parsley 1/2 c. pecans (toasted) juice of 1 lemon 1 clove garlic 1 t. salt
Zap in the food processor and add olive oil until it’s the desired consistency.
Quick, easy, yummy, and seemingly fancy!
Posted in lentils, raviolis, recipe, self pleasuring | No Comments »
Tuesday, January 26th, 2010
 I stumbled upon a recipe on Epicurious.com for lentil raviolis. The thought never occurred to me! I didn’t follow the recipe but made up my own.
In a saucepan: 2 shallots, diced 1 clove garlic, diced I added a handful of diced pancetta but this could be left out and be a vegetarian dish.
If you do what I did which is get sidetracked, leave it on high and nearly burn them, you get a nice caramelized flavor!
Deglaze with 1/2 c. white wine
Add 1/2 c. chopped shiitakes Cook until soft.
 Add 1 c. lentils 2 c. stock (I used chicken) Bring to boil, reduce heat, simmer ~25 minutes until lentils are tender
Once cooked, mash up the lentils a bit. I zapped it a few times with my stick blender so some would be mushed but some would be whole.
Chill. Not you, the lentils. Although you *could* chill too…wine is always good while cooking but not too much!
I didn’t have time to make my own pasta so I used the store-bought square wonton wrappers. They’re great in a pinch.
 Brush the wrappers with some egg-white wash, put 1 t. lentil mixture on one wrapper, top with another wrapper and press shut, making sure there’s no air in the ravioli. I have a pasta-cutter-wheel dealy that i use to cut around the edges. It makes them pretty and helps seal them shut. I made 18 ravioli for 3 of us. I have a ton of lentils left over.
Boil for 4 minutes (not at a rapid boil or the raviolis will break open).
I topped with my classic red sauce with some andouille sausage in it (again, sausage optional for the vegetarians!). My son had them with just butter and pepper and gobbled them up.
Posted in lentils, raviolis, recipes, self pleasuring | 1 Comment »
Sunday, January 10th, 2010
 This was not a planned mushroom hunt. I went on a hike with my son’s kindergarten class and stumbled upon a nice little patch of chanterelles. I told the teachers I’d catch up and piled the shroomies into my sweatshirt!

I made the lovely salad I’d made at Thanksgiving and the “To Die For” meal in December. I tossed the chanterelles in olive oil.

Grilled them until nice and brown.
Tossed the salad with shallot vinaigrette. Topped that with green lentils cooked in chicken stock. And the lovely surprise chanterelles on top. Oh, and bacon.
Posted in bacon, chanterelles, dinner, hardcore, lentils, recipe, seasonal menu, self pleasuring | No Comments »
Friday, February 6th, 2009
So, I’d a made my fish and couscous dish enough times now that I felt I needed to move on. I still bought some wonderful, local flounder at the farmers market and like the preparation of it dusted and semolina and pan fried but it needed to be reworked. I was losing interest.
 I picked up some mustard greens, which I don’t usually buy and I’m not sure why. Dinosaur kale is really my favorite so it was my go-to green. I changed it up this week. I started by sautéing some shallots, then adding garlic and the mustard greens. I sprinkled about a tablespoon of red wine vinegar into that and about a cup or pre-cooked lentils (1/2 cup dried; I’d made lentils the night before and had some left over).
While that was cooking down, I chopped up half the cucumber (I took out most of the seeds) and blended it with a cup of plain yogurt and a minced garlic clove, lemon juice, salt, and a dash of cayenne pepper.

I prepared the fish the way I typically do. I dusted it with salt, pepper, and semolina flower and fried in butter.
To plate I put a mound of the mustard-lentil mixture, placed the fish on that, and then poured the raita mixture on top.
It turned out great!
Posted in amateur, flounder, lentils, mustard greens, raita, recipe | No Comments »
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