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aah, summer veggies. one of the best ways to use up all of my csa veggies (besides stir frying) is a giant batch of pasta. you can throw in almost anything, cook it down, serve with cheese, and it's sure to be a hit. also an easy way to feed a crowd. also much more fun if you take a walk around the market to select your veggies. be sure to supplement your walk with a market snack.
summer market pasta
serves 4 (we eat a lot) - 1 lb brown rice pasta
- 3 shallots, chopped
- 2 squash (green and yellow), sliced
- 2 cobs worth of kernels of corn
- 1 large tomato, chopped
- 3 chicken sausage, sliced into pieces
- white wine
- parmesean cheese
- pesto
- salt and pepper
- arugula
- make the pasta
- while the pasta is cooking, start making the "sauce:" add olive oil, 1/2 the garlic and 1/2 the shallots to a large pan. sautee squash until it's almost cooked through and slightly golden. add corn and tomatoes. cook until tomatoes have softened. simmer for a few minutes. remove and place into bowl.
- add more olive oil, remaining garlic and shallots to pan, once the shallots and garlic have softened, add the sausage and cook until cooked through and golden brown. remove and add to veggies.
- deglaze pan with white wine: pour a small amount of white wine into the pan and use a wooden spoon to scrape all of the bits from the bottom. continue to stir and keep heating until it reduces and slightly thickens. add to bowl.
- stir in a few handfuls of arugula and stir to wilt. when the pasta is ready, add it to the bowl along with some pesto and parmesean cheese. if neccessary, sautee additional shallots and deglaze with more wine.

a triple roomie bday called for a special treat. especially one appropriate to eat after a late night of drunken debauchery. i bring you the chocolate pancake cake! this, my friends, is a yummy labor of love. and perfect for a bday brunch.
chocolate pancake cake - 2 cups of pancake mix (i used gluten-free)
- other pancake mix ingredients (whatever is required by your preferred kind)
- cocoa powder
- cream cheese frosting (recipe below)
- strawberries, chopped
- prepare the pancake mix according to the directions, with the following adaptations: add a couple of tablespoons of cocoa powder to the dry ingredients and add extra milk so that you get a runny batter, closer to that of crepes.
- pick a large pan to make your pancakes in. add a few tablespoons of batter, and swirl batter around to thinly coat pan. make sure to let the batter spread the width of the pan, so that your pancakes will turn out uniform in size.
- very flat, smooth pancakes (more like crepes). you may have to give a test run.
- once you have a giant pile of cooked pancakes, assembly starts.
- put one pancake on a plate, spread on some frosting, add berries. repeat. again and again and again and again.
truthfully, there was already a bunch of cream cheese frosting in my fridge (yes, that's really what living in my apartment is like), so i just used that, and thinned it down with some soy milk so that it would spread easier and drip down the sides of the pancakes. but for those whose apartments aren't stocked with all sorts of baking supplies, martha stewart's cream cheese frosting recipe is below.
cream cheese frosting
courtesy of marthastewart.com - 4 tablespoons room-temperature unsalted butter
- 4 ounces room-temperature bar cream cheese
- 2 cups confectioners' sugar
- 1/2 tspn vanilla extract
- milk (or soy milk)
- beat butter and cream cheese until smooth.
- add confectioners' sugar and vanilla and beat until light and fluffy.
- add milk to thin down frosting to desired texture (runny enough to spread down the side of the pancakes).

here is your reason to keep overripe bananas in the freezer at all times. (seriously, when your bananas cross through the yellow phase, throw them in the freezer. they can be defrosted to bake or smoothie-fy at any time). another birthday, an internet search and the realization that i had bananas and walnuts at home lent to this SCRUMPTIOUS baked good. well, that and the need to find something that would be relative easy to lug to jerz. and since technically it's a coffee cake, i'm going to label it brunch.
Banana Coffee Cake with Chocolate Chip Streusel(adapted from bon appetit) - 1 cup semisweet chocolate chips
- 1/2 cup golden brown sugar
- 1/2 cup chopped walnuts
- 1 tablespoon ground cinnamon
- 1 1/2 cups flour (i used spelt)
- 3/4 teaspoon baking soda
- 3/4 teaspoon baking powder
- 1/4 teaspoon salt
- 3/4 cup sugar
- 1/2 stick butter
- 4 tablespoons unsweetened applesauce
- 1 egg
- 1 1/3 cups mashed bananas, about 3 bananas (i only had 2 so i threw in an extra egg and some extra applesauce)
- 3 tablespoons buttermilk (i made my own with soy milk and a dash of lemon juice-let it sit for a few minutes before you use it)
- preheat oven to 350 degrees F, butter and flour an 8x8x2 inch baking pan.
- stir chocolate chips, brown sugar, walnuts and cinnamon together; set streusel aside.
- sift flour, baking soda, baking powder and salt into a bowl.
- in a separate bowl (that's right, this is your third separate bowl now) beat sugar, butter and egg in a large bowl until fluffy. beat in mashed bananas and buttermilk.
- add dry ingredients and mix well.
- spread half of batter (about 2 cups) in prepared baking pan. sprinkle with half of streusel. repeat with remaining batter and streusel. bake until tester inserted into center comes out clean, about 45 minutes.
3 cheers for summer and summer salads! hooray for the return of csa and having things in my fridge to throw together! and thanks to roommates who supply the missing ingredients! (in this case, half a tomato traded for a lime)
i had basil and peaches. i wanted lunch. although i had thoughts of a fresh tomato and basil salad, i wasn't quite prepared. instead i threw together a few things that i did have. the result was splendiferous, not too sweet but absolutely crisp and refreshing--perfect for a nice 90 degree day in my sweaty kitchen.
summer peach salad
serves 2 - 1 small peach (on the crunchier side seemed to be good here)
- 1/2 tomato
- smal handful of fresh basil
- 1/4 cup chopped red onion
- splash of champagne vinegar (i think any vinegar would do)
- salt
- pepper
- stir ingredients together. season with vinegar, salt and pepper to taste.
i would argue that there aren't many better ways to start a morning than waffles with frozen yogurt and peaches. especially farm fresh peaches. and so, with a little help from some friends (bittman and how to cook everything included), i whipped up a batch of waffles and threw on the best things i could find in my fridge/freezer.
it was a joint effort and i can't take credit for the whole idea but i do maintain that if it weren't for my awesomely stocked kitchen (aka endless supply of froyo and stone fruit), this meal never would have come to fruition.
summer WAFFLES! (adapted from mark bittman's everyday buttermilk waffles) makes 4-6 servings - 2 cups flour (spelt here)
- 1/2 tspn salt
- 2 tblspn sugar
- 3 tspns baking powder
- 1 1/2 cups milk (i used soy)
- 2 eggs
- 4 tablespoons butter melted and cooled
- 1/2 tspn vanilla extract
- if you're being proper, you might mix all of the dry ingredients together, than all of the wet separately, and combine the two. i tend to mix all of the dry and then just throw the rest right on top and whisk until everything is just combined.
- heat up your waffle maker, give it a little lubrication and let it rip.
- top your golden waffles with frozen yogurt, sliced peaches and just a bit of maple syrup.
i couldn't walk by green tomatoes at the market without taking them home. and of course, the first thing i think of when i see them is fried green tomatoes! hence the necessary call to friend number 2 to consult about how a real southern would handle them. and then i threw all of her instructions out the window. dredge and then batter. buttermilk. bacon grease. nah, maybe not, and nope. i went with the approach that if you fry anything in cornmeal, it will automatically taste good. and i think i did just fine. granted, my version used a little sprinkling of spelt flour (any sort of flour would have done), a dip in egg (i was so excited that i forgot about the milk), and a pressing into a seasoned bowl of cornmeal. then i fried in olive oil until they were golden brown on both sides and served with garlic scape pesto.
garlic scape "pesto"
- garlic scapes
- olive oil
- parmesean cheese
- pine nuts, almonds, or walnuts (optional)
- this is one of those taste as you go and adjust things...i started with 3 garlic scapes, a generous drizzle of olive oil and about a tablespoon of parm. then blend, chop, or scrape together until somewhat combined. you may need to add additional oil to make the pesto smoother. add salt and pepper and taste again.
fried green tomatoes (non-southern style)
- green tomatoes, sliced about 1/2 inch thick
- flour (optional; use spelt or a gluten-free blend)
- cornmeal
- egg
- milk (optional)
- sprinkle tomatoes with a little flour
- dip in egg bath (just eggs or eggs and milk) then coat with cornmeal
- heat oil in skillet over medium high heat. once the oil is hot, fry on both sides until golden brown
- top with pesto

there's nothing like spending a week and a half without being able to cook that will inspire me to get back in the kitchen. a trip to the farmer's market for the first csa pickup of the season certainly also helps. as does being resolved to hang out at home on a saturday afternoon to watch some world cup soccer...
so, to whet my appetite for a day of cooking and futbol watching, I decided to start with some french toast. the catch was that i decided whatever i cooked needed to include at least one piece of csa bounty. for the french toast? raspberry syrup, of course!

french toast with raspberry syrup
serves 1
- 2 slices of your preferred bread (or more if it's small!)
- 1 egg
- some milk (or soymilk)
- dash of vanilla
- dash of cinnamon
- 1/2-1 cup raspberries
- 2 tablespoons sugar
- dash lemon juice
- about 1/2 cup water
- combine egg and some milk to create a slightly thick mixture. add vanilla and cinnamon, stir. dip bread in egg mixture and allow to soak.
- meanwhile, combine water and sugar in a saucepan. cook over medium heat, stirring occasionally, until the sugar has dissolved and the mixture thickens slightly.
- stir in the raspberries, and stir occasionally (the more you stir, the more the berries will break down). bring to a boil and continue cooking until mixture thickens slightly more about 5-10 minutes. add lemon juice towards the end of the cooking time and stir.
- cook toast in a buttered pan over medium high heat until golden brown on both sides.
- top with syrup!