Wednesday, June 23, 2010
You can pickle anything
In celebration of Summer Solstice: odd foods. More probiotic slaw, kombucha, sprouts, mustard, garlic aioli (which I finally got to the right consistency after many failed attempts) and two types of pickles. The first was a Japanese style pickle, called Nuka zuke which are pickles made with a rice bran start. The second batch was miso pickles, which involve burying the veggies of your choice in a vat of miso and leaving them for a few weeks (although some recipes call for at least a year) at which point you get these wonderful salty pickles and the liquid that rises to the top is your own homemade tamari. The pickled garlic is amazing! We used red miso but you can use white too, for a slightly different flavor.
Making pickles is a nice way to preserve some of the summer harvest to enjoy later. Good vegetables for pickling include:
carrots, burdock root, asparagus, garlic, shiso leaves, daikon, beets and Japanese cucumbers.
Recipe for a nice summer day in the kitchen: Start early before it gets hot, green tea and melon for breakfast. Field trip to local Asian Grocery where you can find daikon, shiso, kyuri, red and white miso and all sorts of other things that you don't need like White Rabbit sweets, ginger flowers and fresh coconuts..maybe buy some rice balls and seaweed for lunch. In the afternoon you can cut the veggies, listening to something inspiring like Phillip Glass, Santigold, Ira Glass or my new favorite, The Bird and The Bee. Put veggies in the bases of bran, miso, kombucha etc. and then set in jars on the counter to admire your work. More green tea.
Thursday, June 17, 2010
Let's give it up for potatoes
It is finally summer! This spring had lots of cold days and late frosts and we just had a very rare few days of straight rain- but it is hot out there now, people. Time for the pool, watermelon and of course.. potatoes! I know, I know this humble vegetable is evocative of winter stews, hard times and thin ale but the blessed pomme de terre can travel. Tonight I just wanted a simple dinner of greens from the garden and steak frites.
To make frites just cut into wide matchsticks, splash with a little apple cider vinegar, olive oil, salt and pepper and bake at 400 degrees until crispy on the outside, soft on the inside. Here's to you, tubers.
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