9.21.2007
8.29.2007
8.27.2007
8.12.2007
Sauce
Ingredients
Add spices to a couple of tablespoons of oil in a medium-hot pan. Throw in the onions, garlic and bell peppers; cook until soft. Brown the sausage in the same pot until mostly cooked. Add stewed tomatoes, hand-crushed, and tomato paste. Mushrooms go in last. Simmer for about a hundred years, or until you can't stand it any longer (4 hours minimum, 6 or 8 is ideal).
The sauce simmered for about 8 hours and was just phenomenal, but I've honestly never been able to wait that long.
- Two or three links of mild Italian sausage
- Two large cans of stewed tomatoes
- Two small cans of tomato paste
- Two medium-sized onions, chopped
- A couple of cloves of garlic
- A handful of crushed oregano
- A handful of chopped basil (dry will do)
- A handful of chopped rosemary
- Cut up mushrooms, chopped
- One or two bell peppers
Add spices to a couple of tablespoons of oil in a medium-hot pan. Throw in the onions, garlic and bell peppers; cook until soft. Brown the sausage in the same pot until mostly cooked. Add stewed tomatoes, hand-crushed, and tomato paste. Mushrooms go in last. Simmer for about a hundred years, or until you can't stand it any longer (4 hours minimum, 6 or 8 is ideal).
The sauce simmered for about 8 hours and was just phenomenal, but I've honestly never been able to wait that long.
10.29.2006
Zuppa Toscana
Adapted from an Olive Garden recipe, this soup is perfect served on a cold day with a hunk of warm bread.
Ingredients:
Add kale just before serving.
Ingredients:
- 1 lb mild Italian sausage
- 1 medium diced onion
- Couple of cloves of garlic, diced
- Can of chicken stock
- 3 medium potatoes, diced
- 1 c heavy cream
- 1/4 bunch of kale, cut into pieces
- Red pepper flakes
Add kale just before serving.
Fall Football Macho Man Dip
I was a non-believer until I took it to the home of some friends for Thanksgiving... before I knew it, everyone had migrated to the table on which the dip sat. Score!
Ingredients:
Serve warm with tortilla chips for dipping.
Ingredients:
- 1 lb pork breakfast sausage (I like Tennessee Pride)
- 1 block of cream cheese (8 oz)
- 1 can diced tomatoes (original recipe uses Rotel, though I prefer to spice my own)
- Green chiles, fresh or dried, to taste (can use red pepper flakes too)
Serve warm with tortilla chips for dipping.
9.16.2006
Chicken Soup
Chicken soup = self-reliance. The last time I was sick, I whined and whined about how I didn't have anything to eat and I didn't want to go to the store and I was too achy to get dressed and I was huuu-uuungry. I wanted chicken soup.
In the pits of self-pity, with a recipe from who-knows-where, I made chicken soup from scratch using two chicken breasts with thigh meat and skins (obviously, I managed to get to the store). I ate tons, froze the rest, and thought Voila! This is how single people do it. [In fact, I do not believe this is true; I believe that single people merely whine to their friends.]
Chicken soup = Someone Loves Me.
Ingredients:
Add stuff.
In the pits of self-pity, with a recipe from who-knows-where, I made chicken soup from scratch using two chicken breasts with thigh meat and skins (obviously, I managed to get to the store). I ate tons, froze the rest, and thought Voila! This is how single people do it. [In fact, I do not believe this is true; I believe that single people merely whine to their friends.]
Chicken soup = Someone Loves Me.
Ingredients:
- 2 tablespoons olive oil
- 2 split chicken breasts with thigh meat and skin (mine have bones in them, still)
- 1 small onion, diced
- 2 cloves of garlic
- 2 stalks of celery, chopped coarsely
- Couple of carrots, chopped coarsely
- Salt & Pepper
- "Stuff" -- I like tomatoes, squash, and a bit of lime in my soup
Add stuff.
9.11.2006
Linguine w/ Bacon and Peas in Cream Sauce
As innocuous as this first seemed, the more I cooked, the more I thought of Monte's, that perfect little basement Italian ristorante in the Village. This is somewhere between the ham and peas pasta there, and a recipe I adapted from Emeril's.
Ingredients:
Add enough olive oil to cover about a third of the bottom of a medium saucepan over medium heat, then melt a tablespoon of butter. When everything is melted together, cook finely diced onions until they're translucent (a couple of minutes). Add a couple of cloves of garlic, simmer a about a minute. If you're using bacon, cook the bacon seperately until it's almost crispy, then throw in the saucepan. If you're using ham, throw it in now (dice it first, obviously). Add about a quarter glass of wine, and let simmer for about 3 minutes until the alcohol cooks out.
Add pasta to boiling water.
Throw in the cream (about 4 ounces, depending on how heavy you want it to be), peas, salt and pepper. Let cook down to half the volume, until it starts to thicken. Add grated parmesan cheese at the very end, then spoon over pasta.
Next time, I wouldn't add the onions, and I'd suck it up and throw in all the cream. Plus, it'll need a bit of salt at the end, even if you use unsalted butter.
Serves - about 3 people.
Cost: Cream ($3), Peas ($1.50), Wine (depends on how much you drink), Butter ($0.25), Bacon or ham ($2) = ~$7.00
Ingredients:
- Olive oil
- Butter
- Heavy cream
- Onions
- Garlic
- Bacon, ham, proscuitto
- Peas, frozen
- Red pepper flakes (black pepper works too)
Add enough olive oil to cover about a third of the bottom of a medium saucepan over medium heat, then melt a tablespoon of butter. When everything is melted together, cook finely diced onions until they're translucent (a couple of minutes). Add a couple of cloves of garlic, simmer a about a minute. If you're using bacon, cook the bacon seperately until it's almost crispy, then throw in the saucepan. If you're using ham, throw it in now (dice it first, obviously). Add about a quarter glass of wine, and let simmer for about 3 minutes until the alcohol cooks out.
Add pasta to boiling water.
Throw in the cream (about 4 ounces, depending on how heavy you want it to be), peas, salt and pepper. Let cook down to half the volume, until it starts to thicken. Add grated parmesan cheese at the very end, then spoon over pasta.
Next time, I wouldn't add the onions, and I'd suck it up and throw in all the cream. Plus, it'll need a bit of salt at the end, even if you use unsalted butter.
Serves - about 3 people.
Cost: Cream ($3), Peas ($1.50), Wine (depends on how much you drink), Butter ($0.25), Bacon or ham ($2) = ~$7.00
9.10.2006
Linguine w/ White Clam Sauce
The restaurant across the street from my apartment, Quartino's, makes phenomenal linguine with white clam sauce -- sometimes. When it's good, it's just oily enough and you occasionally get a bit of spice in the sliced red peppers they throw in. When it's not, it can be too dry or too soupy, and you don't get the bit of spice or cleanse of parsley.
Ingredients:
A word of caution: the sauce may need salt, but remember that clams are salty, so don't salt until the end.
Cook linguine until al dente. Add cooked linguine and chopped clams to saucepan, cooking until clams are heated through.
Serves: about 2 people (I saved about a bowlful for lunch tomorrow)
Cost: Clams ($2), Linguine ($2), Olive Oil ($1 - I buy the big jug), White Wine (depends on how much you drink while cooking) = ~$5
Ingredients:
- Olive oil
- Garlic cloves - couple
- Clams, minced
- White wine
- Red pepper flakes or sliced cayenne peppers
- Linguine
- Parsley (if you have it)
A word of caution: the sauce may need salt, but remember that clams are salty, so don't salt until the end.
Cook linguine until al dente. Add cooked linguine and chopped clams to saucepan, cooking until clams are heated through.
Serves: about 2 people (I saved about a bowlful for lunch tomorrow)
Cost: Clams ($2), Linguine ($2), Olive Oil ($1 - I buy the big jug), White Wine (depends on how much you drink while cooking) = ~$5
Garlic Tomato Soup w/ Poached Egg
This is my favorite comfort meal, which I'll admit I've never shared with anyone else -- the perfect I'm-home-alone-and-I'll-eat-only-this-if-I-want. I got the idea from an article in the New York Times by Julie Powell, but she didn't use tomatoes and she strained the garlic, leaving only broth. By the way, I also got a rocking recipe for cooking whole okra pods that I'll post in a second.
The combination of the egg in the tomato broth sounded pretty disgusting, but was surprisingly good.
Ingredients:
Bring the soup up to a boil, and drop in an egg or two, waiting 3 - 4 minutes for them to poach. Remove egg into soup bowl, and ladle soup over. Remember, eggs will continue to cook for a minute or two.
Sprinkle with pepper and a bit more salt, or parsley if you have it on hand, and eat.
Serves: Probably 3 or 4 people, a couple of eggs per person. I eat until I'm stuffed, and still have enough broth left for another meal or two. Honestly, I stick the saucepan in the fridge, and just bring it to a boil and drop another egg in the next day.
Cost: Tomatoes ($1), Onion ($.50), Eggs ($.25) = ~$2.00
The combination of the egg in the tomato broth sounded pretty disgusting, but was surprisingly good.
Ingredients:
- Couple of ripe tomatoes, diced
- Quarter of an onion, diced
- Couple of cloves of garlic, smushed
- A bit of oil, any kind
- An egg or two
Bring the soup up to a boil, and drop in an egg or two, waiting 3 - 4 minutes for them to poach. Remove egg into soup bowl, and ladle soup over. Remember, eggs will continue to cook for a minute or two.
Sprinkle with pepper and a bit more salt, or parsley if you have it on hand, and eat.
Serves: Probably 3 or 4 people, a couple of eggs per person. I eat until I'm stuffed, and still have enough broth left for another meal or two. Honestly, I stick the saucepan in the fridge, and just bring it to a boil and drop another egg in the next day.
Cost: Tomatoes ($1), Onion ($.50), Eggs ($.25) = ~$2.00


