Greek Pasta Salad

Here’s the salad Kelly made, taken from the Moosewood cookbook “Moosewood Cooks at Home.”

We thought this was really good and will make it again.

Ingrediants:

  • 1/2 pound pasta shells
    (we used some curly shells, but anything will do)
  • 1/4 cup olive oil
  • 1 medium eggplant, cut into 1 inch cubes (we skipped the eggplant!)
  • 1/2 teaspoon salt
  • 2 garlic cloves, minced or pressed
  • juice of 1 lemon
  • 2 tablespoons water
  • 1 green or red bell pepper, diced
  • 5 artichoke hearts, drained and quartered (14 oz can)
  • 1 cucumber, peeled, seeded, and diced
  • 2 tomatoes, diced
  • 1 celerey stalk, sliced
  • 2 scallions, chopped
  • 2 tablespoons chopped fressh dill (2 teaspoons dried) – I think we cut this in 1/2 as it seemed like a lot
  • 1 tablespoon chopped fresh oregano (1 teaspoon dried)
  • salt and ground black pepper to taste
  • 1 cup grated or crumbled feta cheese
  • greek olives

Bring a large covered pot of water to a rapid boil. Cook the psata shells, uncovered, until al dente, and then drain. Rinse them under cold water until cool, and drain again.

Heat the oil in a large saucepan and add the eggplant. Cover and cook for 3 minutes on medium heat. Stir in the salt, garlic, lemon juice, and water. Cover and simmer for 6 to 8 minutes, until the egg-plant is almost tender. Add the diced red bell peppers, and if you are using dried herbs, add the dill and oregano. Simmer a few minutes more, until peppers are cooked but still have some crunch.

While the eggplant and peppers are cooking, place the artichoke hearts, cucumbers, tomatoes, celerey, scallions, fresh dill, and fresh oregano in a large salad bowl. Add the cooked eggplan and peppers. Stir in the pasta and toss well. Add salt and pepper and mroe lemon juice or olive oil to taste.

Note: This salad can be refridgerated to serve later, but the pasta may absorb the flavors and need an additional dash of lemon jioce and olive oil just before serving.

Falafel and Cucumber Sauce

Here’s one of the dishes Kelly and I made. We modified the cucumber sauce by using this recipe and the one from our Greek Night in our Florida cooking club a few years ago. I found this on the web at allrecipes.com.

This was really good and we will definitely make it again.

INGREDIENTS:

* 1 (15 ounce) can chickpeas (garbanzo beans), drained
* 1 onion, chopped
* 1/2 cup fresh parsley
* 2 cloves garlic, chopped
* 1 egg
* 2 teaspoons ground cumin
* 1 teaspoon ground coriander
* 1 teaspoon salt
* 1 dash pepper
* 1 pinch cayenne pepper
* 1 teaspoon lemon juice
* 1 teaspoon baking powder
* 1 tablespoon olive oil
* 1 cup dry bread crumbs
* oil for frying
*
* 1 (6 ounce) container plain yogurt
* 1/2 cucumber – peeled, seeded, and finely chopped
* 1 teaspoon dried dill weed
* salt and pepper to taste
* 1 tablespoon mayonnaise

DIRECTIONS:

1. In a large bowl mash chickpeas until thick and pasty; don’t use a blender, as the consistency will be too thin. In a blender, process onion, parsley and garlic until smooth. Stir into mashed chickpeas.
2. In a small bowl combine egg, cumin, coriander, salt, pepper, cayenne, lemon juice and baking powder. Stir into chickpea mixture along with olive oil. Slowly add bread crumbs until mixture is not sticky but will hold together; add more or less bread crumbs, as needed. Form 8 balls and then flatten into patties.
3. Heat 1 inch of oil in a large skillet over medium-high heat. Fry patties in hot oil until brown on both sides.
4. In a small bowl combine yogurt, cucumber, dill, salt, pepper and mayonnaise. Chill for at least 30 minutes.

Greek Night

Our cooking club met for Greek Night, and we all shared some wonderful food a good conversation. M. showed off his memory skills by reciting, from memory, the 1st Chapter from Ray Bradbury’s Dandelion Wine. He does such a fantastic job with these “readings.”

I’ll be putting in the recipes on-line as they come in.

“Fantastic” French Toast

I found this recipe in a Readers Digest while waiting in a waiting room to see a doctor, and thought I’d try it out. I thought it was ok, but Kelly really liked it. I need a 9×9 pan as the 13×9 one I used meant that the egg mixture was too shallow, so the top of the bread dried out a bit.


Banana French Toast

Preparation time: 10 minutes. Baking time: 50 minutes

8 slices Sun-Maid Raisin Bread
2 medium bananas, cut in 1/4-inch slices
1 cup milk
4 ounces cream cheese, softened
3 eggs
1/3 cup sugar
3 tablespoons flour
2 teaspoons vanilla
powdered sugar ( optional)

HEAT oven to 350°F.
PLACE four slices of raisin bread in a single layer in a buttered 9-inch
square baking dish. Top with bananas and four slices of raisin bread.
BLEND milk, cream cheese, eggs, sugar, flour and vanilla in a blender
or food processor until smooth. Pour over raisin bread. Let stand 5 minutes
or refrigerate overnight.
BAKE 40-45 minutes (50-55 minutes if refrigerated) until set and top is toasted.
Let stand 10 minutes.
CUT French toast into diagonal halves and remove with spatula.
Dust servings with powdered sugar if desired.
Makes 8 servings.

Indian Night Cooking Club

We had our Indian Night on September 17th at Tamera and Vernon’s house. I had posted the recipes a few days ago but never wrote an introduction post, so here it is. And yes I know it is now December, almost 3 months after Indian Night. It took a while to get all the recipes together, and then it took a few days for me to decide if I wanted to expand my knee blog to include everything. WordPress certainly makes it easier to publish certain things though I’m not sure of the format yet. Maybe I should have more pages instead of categories…

Anyway, the attendees were Marty and Connie, Robert and Rae, Patti and John, Tamera and Vernon, and Kelly and me. We had a great time and there was, as always, way to much food. But it was all fantastic and most of the recipes follow.

Vegetarian Sheppards Pie

>
> There are many versions to making this and what I did was a combo of several. Here is what I did…
>
> Boil and mash white potatoe. I normally don’t peel them but wasn’t sure how that would go over for you and thought peelings might be hard for Carl in ours so I did this time. I put a little basil in it. You can do garlic as well if you want as well. I also used soy milk as that is what we have here but cow’s milk is fine, too. Instant potato can be used, though I have never used instant potatoes so I don’t know how it would be.
>
> I sauteed one or two onions.
>
> Once the onions are soft add the following:
> • One or two cans of Kidney Beans (I didn’t have quite enough to do two 9 x 13’s so I threw in a can of garbanzo beans)
> • 14 1/2 oz can of whole tomatoes, drained and cut up (I didn’t have enough of this either so I used some diced and some petite diced tomatoes which I would probably always do and not bother trying to cut up whole tomatoes)
> • Any veggies you want. You can do fresh or frozen, though frozen is obviously going to go quicker. I used a carrots, corn and peas mix I think, then added green beans. In the past I’ve also added fresh zuccini and summer squash. It’s whatever you like.
> • 8 oz can of tomato sauce (again, I found I was out of this so when I rinsed a can out I threw in a little of the watered down tomatoe from rinsing – maybe 1/2 a can or so.
> • 1 t. worcestershire sauce
> • 1/2 teaspoon sugar
> Heat all this to bubbly and frozen veggies thawed.
>
> Transfer to baking dish (the above is based on a smaller dish than I used so you may want to double some of the tomatoe, worcestershire and sugar).
>
> Drop mashed potatoes in mounds on veggie mix. Sprinkle with cheese (I used cheddar – medium)
>
> Bake uncovered in a 375 oven for 25 to 30 mins, or until heated through and cheese begins to brown (if it does!).
>
> As you can see, I don’t rigidly go by any recipe!! 🙂 Having done both frozen and fresh veggies I can say frozen is sooooooo much easier – no cutting, much shorter sauteeing time, etc…
>
> Enjoy!
>
>
> Kelly Butler wrote:
>> This dish is delicious!! Please share the recipe with us when you have
>> a chance. What a perfect meal for this time of year too! Thank you so
>> much!!
>>
>> Kelly 🙂
>>
>> P.S. I realized that I still owe you some veggie dish recipes. Maybe
>> sometime soon you can just come over and we’ll look through some recipe
>> cards and exchange ideas.
>>
>

unknown recipe from indian night

I’m finally typing this up! I can’t remember what this was called. The printout isn’t titled. Marty/Connie, can you refresh my memory?

??
Resource: Unknown

Ingredients:
1 medium-sized eggplant
3 medium onions, chopped
3 medium tomatoes, chopped
1/2 tsp garlic
minced pieces of ginger
1 chili jalapeno
1/2 tsp amchur
1 tsp coriander powder
1/2 tsp garam masala
3 tbsp vegetable oil
1-1/2 tsp salt

Put the eggplant as is into the oven at 350 degrees until it’s done. (The eggplant is ready when the skin is all wrinkled and water seeps out of it.)
Scrape out any burnt skin, mash softened eggplant till soft, then keep aside.
Put oil in a skillet and heat till its just short of smoking. Add the onions to the oil and cook until they become translucent.
Add the salt, amchur, coriander powder, garlic, ginger, tomatoes and chili. Stir fry for 2-3 minutes.
Add mashed eggplant, stir, add 1/4 cup water.
Stir, cook covered until oil separates.
Pour into serving bowl, garnish with chopped coriander.

Samosas

Indian Samosas (Stuffed Savory Deep-Fried Pastry Cones), Makes 24
Resource: “Madhur Jaffrey’s World-of-the-East Vegetarian Cooking”

Pastry:
1-1/2 cups unbleached all-purpose white flour
1/4 tsp salt
4 tbsp soft, unsalted butter

Stuffing:
4 medium-sized potatoes, boiled unpeeled and cooled
4 tbsp vegetable oil
1 medium-sized onion, peeled and minced
1 cup shelled fresh or defrosted frozen peas
1 tbsp peeled and grated fresh ginger
1 fresh hot green chili, minced
3 tbsp finely minced Chinese parsley
1-1/2 tsp salt
1 tsp ground coriander
1 tsp garam masala
1 tsp ground roasted cumin seeds
1/4 tsp cayenne pepper
2 tbsp lemon juice or 1 tbsp lemon juice and 1 tbsp amchoor
1 tsp anardana (dried pomegranate seeds)

Oil for frying
Extra flour for dusting

Sift the flour and salt into a bowl. Add the softened butter and rub it in with your hands so that the flour resembles fine bread crumbs. Add warm water, a tablespoon at a time, and begin to gather the flour into a ball. You will need 5 tablespoons of water. Form a ball and begin to knead it. Knead well for about 10-15 minutes or until dough is very soft and pliable. (If you have a food processor, put the steel blade in place and empty the sifted flour and salt into a container. Add the softened butter and turn on the machine. When you have a bread-crumb consistency, begin to add about 5 tablespoons of water slowly through the funnel. Stop when the dough forms a ball. Take out the ball and knead it for 5-10 minutes or until it is very soft and pliable.) Wrap the dough in plastic wrap and let it sit for an hour in the refrigerator. The dough can be made a day in advance and refrigerated.

Make the stuffing. Peel the potatoes and dice them into roughly 1/4-inch pieces. Heat the 4 tablespoons oil in a 10-12″ skillet over a medium flame. Put in the onion, stirring and frying until it turns a light-brown color. Add the peas, the ginger, green chili, Chinese parsley, and 3 tablespoons of water. Cover, lower heat and simmer very gently until peas are cooked. Stir every now and then and add additional water, a tablespoon at a time, if the skillet seems dried out. Now put in the diced potatoes, salt, coriander, garam masala, roasted ground cumin, cayenne pepper, lemon juice (or lemon juice and amchoor), and anardana. Keep heat on low and mix the spices with the potatoes. Continue cooking gently, stirring frequently, for 3-4 minutes. Check salt and lemon juice. Turn off heat and leave potato mixture to cool.

Take the dough out of the refrigerator and knead again. Divide dough into 12 equal balls. Keep balls covered with plastic wrap.

Place a small bowl of water on your work surface. Lightly flour on a pastry board.
1. Flatten one of the dough balls on it and roll it out into a round about 6″ in diameter.
2. Now cut the round in half with a sharp knife.
3. Pick up one half and form a cone, making a 1/4″ overlapping seam.
4. Using a little water, from the nearby bowl to create the seam.
5. Fill the cone with a heaping tablespoon of the stuffing. Close the top of the cone by sticking the open edges of the triangle together, again with the help of a little water. This seam should also be 1/4″ wide.
6. Press the top seam again and, if possible, “flute” it with your fingers. Put the samosa on a platter in a cool spot. Make all 24 samosas this way.

Heat oil for deep frying (about 2-1/2″ deep) in a wok or other wide utensil over medium-low flame. When the oil is hot, drop in the samosas, as many as will lie in a single layer. Fry them slowly until they are golden brown, turning them over when one side seems done. When the second side of the samosas has turned a golden color, remove them from the oil with a slotted spoon and place them on a paper-towel-lined platter. Do all samosas this way.

Samosas may be served at room temperature or they may be served warm. Samosas may be made ahead of time (up to a day), refrigerated neatly in flat plastic containers, and then reheated in a 350 degree oven. If you wish to freeze samosas, fry them partially, drain them, and freeze them in a single layer in flat plastic containers. When you wish to eat them, defrost and fry them a second time.

Generally, samosas are served with a tart, spicy chutney like Tamarind-Mint Chutney (see below).

Tamarind-Mint Chutney (fairly typical sweet-and-sour for dipping samosas), Makes 1 cup
Resource: “Madhur Jaffrey’s World-of-the-East Vegetarian Cooking”

1 heaping tbsp chopped fresh Chinese parsley
1 heaping tbsp chopped mint
2 tbsp chopped gur (jaggery) or dark brown sugar
A 3/4″ cube of fresh ginger, peeled and chopped
1/4 tsp pounded or ground kala namak (black salt)
2/3 cup tamarind paste
1/8 tsp freshly ground black pepper
1/8-1/4 tsp cayenne pepper
1 tsp ground, roasted cumin seeds

Put the Chinese parsley, mint, gur, ginger, kala namak and 4 tablespoons of water into the container of an electric blender or food processor. Blend until you have a smooth paste. Mix contents of the blender with the tamarind paste (use a nonmetallic or stainless-steel bowl). Add all the remaining ingredients. Mix well and keep covered in the refrigerator until ready to use.

Naan

Naan, 14 pieces
Resource: Unknown

Ingredients:
1/4 oz. active dry yeast
4 tbsp white sugar
1 cup warm water
1 beaten egg
3 tbsp milk
2 tsp salt
4-1/2 cup bread flour
1/4 cup melted butter

Preparation:
In a large bowl, dissolve yeast in warm water. Proof until frothy. Stir in sugar, milk, egg, salt, and enough flour to make soft dough. Knead for 6-8 minutes on a lightly floured surface, or until smooth. Place dough in well oiled bowl, cover with damp cloth, and set aside to rise. Let it rise until dough has doubled in volume.
Pinch off small amounts of dough into 12-14 pieces. Roll into balls and allow to rise again.
While the dough is rising, preheat grill to high.
At grill side, roll one ball of dough into a thin circle. Lightly oil grill. Place dough on grill and cook for 2-3 minutes, or until puffy and lightly browned. Brush uncooked side with butter, and turn over. Brush cooked side with butter, and cook until done, another 2-4 minutes. Remove from grill and continue cooking until all naan has been prepared.

Vegetable Jalfrazi

Vegetable Jalfrazi, 4-5 servings
Resource: Unknown

Ingredients:
1 large onion
2 green peppers
2 large tomatoes
1/2 lb. broccoli
1/2 lb. cauliflower
4 tbsp margarine
1 tsp red chili powder
1/2 tsp turmeric
1 ginger
3 cloves garlic
2 tbsp white vinegar
2 tbsp tomato puree
1-1/2 tsp salt

Preparation:
Chop onion, cut green peppers, tomatoes, broccoli, and cauliflower into 1″ cubes.
Melt margarine and saute onion.
Add all remaining vegetables and stir-fry for about 5 minutes over medium heat.
Add the spices and vinegar.
Stir in the tomato puree, and simmer for about 5 minutes. Season to taste with salt and fresh-ground pepper.