Wednesday, 8 April 2015

Baked Parmesan Asparagus Polenta Sausage Frittata

The best situation for me during frantic springtime is if I could have both a cook and gardener. Since that appealing pair is not to be seen anywhere chez nous, what's the next best thing? A frittata brimming with asparagus fresh from our potager, that's what. Though it needs attention for about twenty minutes during batter preparation, once in the oven, it thrives for a half hour on its own, browning and puffing up itself with such prettiness that after I return from topping up the birdbaths and bringing in the tomato seedlings for the night, I hesitate before eating...for about one second.


Though some regard a frittata as a quiche sans crust, my take is that it more like scrambled eggs without the scrambling. Since a top tip for making truly fantastic scrambled eggs is not to add milk or water, I applied that wisdom to this unscrambled version. The polenta cheerfully amplifies the sunny yellow of the eggs, but more importantly it imparts the most delectable creaminess. What we have here are eggs with a built-in porridge perfumed with asparagus, permeated with succulent sausage, and embellished with Parmesan.


Ingredients
makes 4 ample servings
  • Asparagus, blanched, sliced in 2 inch/5 cm pieces, four fluid oz/120 ml (about 4-5 spears)
  • Sausage, Toulouse or Italian sweet, cooked, blotted, crumbled, 10 fluid oz/300 ml (two 6 inch/15 cm long sausages, any extra can be frozen for the next time!)
  • Polenta, fine, quick-cooking, 2 fluid oz/60 ml
  • Eggs, 6
  • Parmesan, freshly grated, 4 fluid oz/120 ml
  • Salt to taste (I used about 1/2 tsp)
  • Olive oil, 1/2 to 1 tsp, for oiling the baking dish

To keep asparagus fresh for about four days in the fridge, wrap the ends with wet paper toweling and put in a sealed plastic bag.

The last of our oh-so-tasty harvest!

Preheat to 350 degrees F/180 degrees C. Whisk eggs and polenta together for several minutes to get a thick batter.


Add sausage, asparagus, salt, and Parmesan. Stir well.


Pour into a well-oiled baking pan. If desired, some of the asparagus can be re-arranged into a pleasing pattern.


Bake for around twenty-five to thirty minutes until it's nicely browned. Test by pressing the center which should be firm. Slice into portions.


Its fragrant, creamy glory is best when served hot from the oven. When cold, the flavour does stand up, but the texture is heavier. When reheated by steaming, it gets a more bread pudding feel. Additionally, it freezes fairly well.

Porridge for adults!

À la prochaine!

Wednesday, 1 April 2015

Do No Harm, Make Parm Broth!

Parmesan's longevity and versatile deliciousness makes it a classic worth having around. Chez nous, it adorns pizzas, blends into Béchamel sauce as a topping for lasagne, rounds out calzone filling, and parts a perfect richness to roasted broccoli soup. Hence there is a rind bounty. Though some are tossed into minestrone and tomato sauce to augment their robust taste, the rest become covered with fuzzy blue mold necessitating a wasteful visit to the bin. Now I pop each one into a ziploc bag in the freezer till there is enough to make a fabulous broth replete with silky body and fantastic flavour!

Olive oil rising to the top forms a delicious, lacy cloud with the aromatic broth

As there were leftovers from simmered chickens, linguine and capers in the larder, and last but not least, some asparagus fresh from our potager, they all got piled into a bowl of steaming broth.


However, there are various ways for serving this lusty fusion of Parmesan, white wine/sherry vinegar, olive oil, and a bouquet garni. It can form a base for soups, casseroles, and sauces. Different combinations of garnishes include other pasta shapes, roasted veggies like broccoli, white beans, poached egg, seared shrimp, crumbled cooked sausage/ham/bacon, and bread crumbs. The broth itself keeps for several days in the fridge. Though I did not test freezing, I suspect it could be reduced and frozen in ice-cube trays which makes plopping them into soups and sauces a breeze.

It's appropriate to leave a little cheese on the rinds!

If your household doesn't generate heaps of rinds, it may be possible to buy an inexpensive bag of them from a cheesemonger.

Ingredients
makes 2 ample servings, adapted from here. If substituting fresh herbs for the dried, use a bit more. Recipe can be doubled but the cooking time most likely will be longer.
  • Olive oil, 2 T
  • Onion, 1, peeled and quartered
  • Garlic, whole head, unpeeled, halved
  • Thyme, dried, 1 tsp
  • Bay leaf, one large
  • Parsley, dried, 1/4 tsp
  • Peppercorns, black, 1/2 tsp
  • White wine OR 1/2 tsp of sherry vinegar diluted in water, 8 fluid oz/237 ml
  • Water, 34 fluid oz/1 liter
  • Parmesan rinds, 10 dry oz/284 gms
  • Linguine, a bundle about an inch/2.5 cm in diameter
  • Garnish: cooked chicken chunks, asparagus tips, capers
Heat oil in a heavy-bottomed pot, like a dutch oven, over moderately high heat for about a minute, then add the next six ingredients and while stirring, saute until browned, about five minutes.


Carefully pour in the wine or diluted vinegar and simmer for about five minutes or until reduced in half.

This concentrating intensifies the flavour

Toss in the rinds and pour in the water. Stir well and cover with the lid a bit ajar to encourage broth reduction. Simmer for about thirty minutes or until the flavour develops to the point of knocking your socks off. Stir a few times as the rinds tend to stick to the bottom*.


Strain and salt to taste. Cook linguine in the broth then divide evenly in bowls. Using a fork, you can twist the pasta into nests if that is your preference. Garnish with chicken, asparagus tips, and capers. Luscious, I say!


À la prochaine!

*Cleaning tip: that mass of molten rinds will leave strainer and pot somewhat challenging to clean. While the pasta is simmering in the strained broth, I fill up the empty pot/strainer with warm soapy water. I eat. Then I scrape the pot's bottom with a wooden spoon, finish the cleaning with an abrasive sponge and using a veggie brush/toothbrush, clean the strainer. This stuff is so good, it's worth this bother!

Wednesday, 25 March 2015

Asparagus & Bresse Bleu Grilled Sourdough Rye Sandwich

Since asparagus season started, I been known to create a recipe just before falling asleep in case the next day gives us some spears from our patch. Basic grilled cheese is a staple chez nous so before entering dreamland one night, I conjured up an image of tender asparagus and creamy Bresse Bleu encased in buttery, grilled sourdough rye. Served piping hot from the skillet, it is a vrai régal for when I sit down to lunch after a morning potager session.


Bresse Bleu was created in the 1950s as a competitive response to Gorgonzola because that venerable Italian cheese which has been made since the 11th century was becoming popular in France.  Though similar to Brie, not only does Bresse Bleu have delectable blue veins but contains less fat because it is made from skim milk.

This gorgeous, creamy mound contains 15% fat versus 22% of regular Brie

In general follow instructions for my basic grilled cheese which are here. Instead of using grated cheese, place slivers of Bresse Bleu on a slice of bread then top with spears. For thick asparagus, halve them vertically. Cook the spears first by covering them with a small amount of water in a skillet.

Fresh!

There are about two more weeks left for harvesting as our young bed needs limited picking so it can sustain a full harvest next season which will be eight weeks.

Brave, emerging spears

By then there will be rhubarb to harvest!


The double daffodils have taken over from the earlier blooming trumpets.


Species tulips are just beginning to flower.


Since Dirac the kitten loves to hoover our not-always-pristine kitchen floor for scraps, he often licks his nose to extend his culinary pleasure.


À la prochaine!

RELATED LINKS

Bresse Bleu is one of the many cheeses mentioned in Monty Python's famous cheese shop sketch
Best way to store asparagus

Wednesday, 18 March 2015

Asparagus Harvest Begins!

Since I am spending as much time as possible in the garden, our well stocked freezer continues to nourish us. Today its offering is borscht with beef and onion dumplings.

The Polish version of borscht consists of a clear, ruby broth

This outstanding recipe was given to me by The Calm One's mother and can be found hereOur family tradition calls for making large, and I do mean large, dumplings!

That's a sliver of porcini mushroom on the lower left

Harvesting the asparagus was dutifully delayed for the last two seasons, because that time was needed to strengthen the plants which will allow abundant production for up to twenty years. However, the present picking will be limited to four weeks. Next spring it will go on for the full eight. Once simmered tender in a small amount of water in a skillet, the spears are sliced into pieces and added to scrambled eggs and pasta or just eaten by themselves with some help from butter and lemon juice. Their fresh taste is incomparable.


The emergence of the first seedlings is a major, smile-producing event for me. The tomato seeds sowed indoors about a week ago are now on that vigourous path that annual veggies embrace, going from a tiny seed to a plant producing its own seeds for the next generation.


Don't tell the chitted, early-season seed potatoes that their garden bed is not yet prepared!

Coloured sprouts occur in sunlight and are the ones required for producing more potatoes

Dirac the Kitten is eschewing, and therefore also not chewing, his favourite grey fleece blanket in lieu of one more attuned, colour-wise, to spring. 

He looks smashing next to pink and violet!

À la prochaine!

RELATED POSTS

How to plant asparagus

RELATED LINKS

Five ways to cook Asparagus
Wikipedia: It is believed most people produce the odorous compounds after eating asparagus, but only about 22% of the population have the autosomal genes required to smell them.

Wednesday, 11 March 2015

Springing Into Action...

Gorgeous Gaia! I got a load of gardening to do within a relatively small window of opportunity. As I can not be in the garden and the kitchen simultaneously, our pal, the freezer, offered up homemade chicken pot pie which we gladly devoured. My recipe is here.


The first batch of sowing is now in the incubator: four varieties of tomatoes and two of peppers.

Recycled food trays and containers!

Pruning continues at a brisk pace.

The Calm One did some major Box Elder pruning

After pruning the plum and peach tree, both of which I keep to a manageable height of about seven feet, I sprayed a diluted, super-fine horticultural oil to combat the mites that love both trees. A repeat treatment will most likely be needed once the young leaves appear. Windless days are best for such treatment or else you will receive an unwanted facial. Ivy also appreciates a thorough clipping back.

If I can, I leave some berries like those on the lower left for the birds

While trimming the robust aucuba hedge, I found some large, cherry-like berries. Since this species is dioecious, that is, there are separate male and female plants, it's official that both sexes are present in our garden. I had given up hope because there has been no fruiting since our arrival here five years ago.


There are a few bearded irises here and there, a harbinger of the profusion of blue and purple blooms expected at the end of April which is around when Dirac the kitten will be allowed into the garden.


Dirac the kitten to The Calm One:  I did not know we have a gardener!


Dirac: Oh, it is just my other mother, the large, glabrous one, dashing about and wielding her secateurs all over the place. 


À la prochaine!

RELATED POSTS

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Wednesday, 4 March 2015

Early Spring in the Charente!

It's starting. Spring, that is. At least in the southwest of France. The daffodils say so...


As do the sweet violets and their unmistakable fragrance...

Getting close to these beauties is like inhaling spring.

...and the English daisies, including a brave one blooming in a crack halfway down the main paved path...


... not to mention the periwinkle.


With the nursery order newly arrived, my schedule just got very busy!

A few packets. Just a few. Some garlic heads and onion sets too!

The early and late season potato varieties are beginning to chit.

Some of the forty-eight seed potatoes

Dirac the kitten is approaching the age of ten months, and his beauty knows no bounds. Within a month or so, following his vaccinations and being electronically chipped, he will get to know the garden for the first time. We can't wait!


À la prochaine!

Thursday, 26 February 2015

Souped-up Garden is slowly shifting back into gear...

Though The Calm One is almost over the dreadful flu that a couple of weeks ago descended like a stultifying, gloomy cloud upon our once actively functioning household, I am still struggling with sporadic bouts of low-energy and a hacking cough. Homemade food from our freezer has been much appreciated by us, and today it is pizza:


My recipe is here.


Toulouse sausage, mushrooms, tomatoes, mozzarella, and Parmesan, if you please. So good!


My plant nursery order will arrive tomorrow which means I soon will be starting heat-loving seeds in an incubator, that is, various peppers, black-eyed Susan vine, and then later basil, tomatoes, squash, and melons. Outdoor sowing includes parsley, chives, dill, garlic, marjoram, onions, potatoes, peas, carrots, parsnips, lettuce, leeks, spinach, and then later, green beans, broccoli, and Brussels sprouts. Meanwhile, the permanent asparagus and rhubarb plantings need to be kept free of weeds and fertilised, ditto with the strawberry beds which are productive for about four years.

A welcomed sight: first the big pink 'egg' and then the unfurling of rhubarb leaves

Since most of our fruit and landscape trees/bushes are already presenting tight, little buds, we need to get their pruning done within a week. I have duly made the necessary appointment with The Calm One for his valued assistance. This year, the grapevines won't need trimming because the sauvage area reserved for small wildlife in a back corner has become so tall that not much sunlight reaches the nearby vines, significantly stunting their growth. Therefore no grapes for the birds, but there are tons of blackberry brambles festooning the back-to-nature section so it all works out.

Our short winter is coming to a close, but persistent rains are preventing the weeding of and incorporation of compost into, the many beds, each measuring four feet by twelve feet and which at present are muddy. Digging soggy soil is injurious to its structure whose healthy state is paramount for flourishing plants. But gardening is one of my great loves, so it will be a work of joy and any challenge will be taken into stride, frequently with smiles and laughs. It's true that the real focus of gardening is to grow the soil, but I suspect gardening also grows your sense of humour. Then again, life in general provides many opportunities to have various guffaws/giggles at your expense and at many absurdities encountered.

Daffodils!

Since starting our potager about five years ago, I have noted what did and didn't work during the previous season. My present epiphany is that without healthy seedlings, everything else is made harder. The solution is to use very fresh seeds, that is, saving only the excess that does not degrade rapidly even if it means a little more expense, provide adequate light as soon as they emerge, transplant only the strongest and most robust despite the waste, gradually hardening them out in the sunlight/wind, and transferring them to the soil while they still have room to grow in their pots.

Annual vegetables have a strenuous growth cycle beginning with a sprouting seed and culminating in a mature plant setting its own seeds. Hence they do not bear well any obstacle stunting that rapid process which usually lasts under six months. Yes, that means weeding, fertilising, watering, and mulching matters. Note to self: cultivate only the amount I can properly handle.

For those beginners who would like a doable start to growing some edibles, pop a few potted veggie plants into your cart if your supermarket has such a section. For example, if you have a sunny spot on a sill or a small patio/balcony, dwarf cherry tomatoes would appreciate spending time there along with various herbs. Keep them in a place where you will note their existence daily so you won't forget to water them!

Dirac the kitten has been taking it easy also...

Chewing on his favourite blankie

...and taking advantage that in our attempt to hydrate ourselves, there are glasses of water partout.


À la prochaine!

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