Archive for the ‘proscuitto’ Category

No Reason, Just a Fantastic Meal…with salt

Sunday, November 7th, 2010

Some friends came over for dinner last night and I decided I would go all out and make a multi-course extravaganza. We’ve been touting the excellence of Mark Bitterman’s new book, Salted: A Manifesto on the World’s Most Essential Mineral, with Recipes, to anyone who will listen so I made sure to highlight salts in the meal.

Nibbly Bits To get people started, just a little plate of nibblies: prosciutto, olives, Mt. Tam triple cream brie from Cowgirl Creamery and some walnut levain.

Then we got serious. My ever popular and damn good Ahi Tartare that I have made countless times at this point. It never fails to impress those who have never had it though. I think I finally figured out the right balance of shallots, herbs, lemon, salt. I’m happy with this nearly every time now. I used Shinkai Deep Sea Salt in the tartare and topped this with Turkish Black Pyramid salt.
Butter lettuce, fennel, apple and pomegranate salad
Thanks to the huge number of pomegranates I got from my dad, I came up with this salad: Butter lettuce with shaved fennel and apples (from our tree) and pomegranate seeds. I made a dressing with just minced shallot, salt, champagne vinaigrette and olive oil. I let the shallots soak in the vinegar and salt for at least an hour or maybe two so they were soft and the flavor permeated through. I topped the salad with a sprinkle of Murray River Salt. Simple and delicious.
Squash Soup
I got a huge squash from my CSA this week so into the oven it went for squash soup based on this recipe. The only difference was the squash type and I used leeks in addition to onion. The squash, according to my CSA newsletter was a Orange “sunshine” Kabocha. It was a “thicker” squash when pureed into the soup. I think it has a bit less water in it that a butternut which produced a thick, creamy soup. I fried up some king trumpet mushrooms in butter and topped the soup with those for a roasty, nutty addition. This one I topped with some Big Sur Fleur de Sel that we picked up somewhere locally. Any semi-coarse sea salt would work well, I just wanted something that wouldn’t just dissolve in the soup but give a little crunch every few bites.

Apple Crisp
Nevermind the main protein course. I had an epic fail with my meat thermometer and over cooked the beef. It was still edible, but very much well done and not how I like my cow. So disappointing. But we had already had so much food it really wasn’t a complete disaster.

Instead we moved on to the dessert which is the spawn of too many apples on our tree and me not liking to really bake. Simple apple crisp with, guess what, POMEGRANATE! I made the syrup last week and have it in a squeeze bottle in the fridge for just such occasions. To make the crisp, just slice apples up, put them in a baking pan and top them with a mixture of:
3/4 cup flour
1/4 cup brown sugar
1/4 cup white sugar
1/2 teaspoon ground cinnamon
1/2 teaspoon salt
8 tablespoons cold butter, cut into pieces
1/4 cup chopped pecans
Apple Crisp with pomegranate syrup, pomegranates and vanilla ice cream
Bake at 350° for 1 hour. Serve warm (I baked it ahead and put it back in the oven for 15 minutes before serving it). Top with some pomegranate seeds, a generous drizzle of pomegranate syrup and your favorite vanilla ice cream.

It was a stellar evening, much good wine was also consumed of course. Champagne with the tartare and salad. Burgundy with the soup. Solera with the apple crisp. A happy night was had by all.

Pasta with Spring Onions, Napa Cabbage and Prosciutto

Wednesday, March 31st, 2010

Pasta with Spring Onions, Napa Cabbage and Prosciutto
I needed to cook as much produce as I could for dinner. I’m picking up my first CSA box today and it’s going to fill my fridge. I had a huge bag of spring onions from my dad’s garden and a head of napa cabbage that were taking up the most space. Pasta time!!

2 cups chopped spring onions
1/2 head of napa cabbage
2 garlic cloves
1 c. white wine
1 package of prosciutto cut into 1″ slices
1 lb shell pasta
1/2 c. toasted pine nuts

I chopped the spring onions into 1/2 inch chunks (just the tender white parts…i cut down a little too far into the green and got some tough pieces). Put those in a large pan with some olive oil and salt. Cook for what seems like forever. When they look soft, add the wine and cook that until the wine is almost gone. Add the garlic and cabbage. It will be a huge pile, but will quickly reduce. Once the cabbage is soft, fold in the prosciutto.

Toss the cabbage-onion mixture into the cooked pasta. Top with the toasted pine nuts.

This turned out to be far tastier than I imagined. It was just a clear-out-the-fridge meal for me but the result was really, really good. We had a 2004 Ridge Syrah with it that was great!

Prosciutto-wrapped Salmon with "Beurre Rouge"

Monday, November 23rd, 2009


We had three bottles of Syrah to drink: ’03 Cornas from France, ’00 Hardy’s from Australia, and ’02 Ridge from here in the Santa Cruz Mountains. I wanted to make a special dinner for our cousin’s birthday, but we don’t really eat much meat so I had to find something involving fish that would go with Syrah. I think this worked!

This recipe is for 6 servings.

1/4-1/2 cup chopped shallots
1 head frisée, roughly chopped
1/2 c. chicken stock

Sauté the shallots in olive oil until soft. Add the chicken stock and reduce by half. Add the frisée, and briefly toss to coat with the shallots and olive oil. Remove it from the heat and put a lid on it to keep it warm and wilt the frisée. Set aside.

1 cup red wine (I used Syrah to match what we’d be drinking with the meal)
1/4 cup chopped shallots
1 stick butter

Sauté shallots in olive oil until soft. Add red wine and bring to boil. Boil until it’s reduced to a syrupy sauce. Turn off heat and whisk in 1/2-3/4 of a stick of butter, one pat at a time.

2 1/2 pounds center cut salmon, cut into six pieces
12 slices prosciutto
1/4 cup minced parsley
1/4 cup minced thyme

Mix the parsley and thyme together. Press the herb mixture into the salmon fillets. Wrap two pieces of prosciutto around each of the herbed salmon fillets.

Heat a large skillet on medium-high heat. My 12 inch copper pan was big enough to do three salmon fillets at a time. Place salmon fillets in the pan with a little olive oil and cook about three minutes on each side.

To plate, put one tablespoon of red wine sauce on the plate. Top with the wilted endive and shallots. Place the fish on top of that. Squeeze a little lemon juice on the fish. Garnish with something pretty and green, I used micro arugula.

Voilà… delicious!! It was so good in fact, I forgot to take a picture before I dug in! Oops!!