This salad reminds me (Amelia) of a disagreement I had last year with a friend. We had just entered French class, and were desperately tucking in the last corners of our conversation before the bell rang. At least, I felt desperate, because my friend had told me something I hear all too often: she doesn’t like salad. I was aghast and pushed her to tell me why.
Read MoreA Simple, Perfect Roast
Recently we’ve taken to having a roast on the first Sunday of each month, when we’re all extra hungry for dinner and ready for something soothing, warm, and filling. This recipe hails from our friends the Gublers when they were living in a predominantly Jewish neighborhood and learned they could get brisket on sale on Saturdays. They started making a weekly roast with the meat. We’ve changed the recipe a bit and changed the preparation from oven to slow cooker, but we’ll ever be grateful to the Gublers and their neighbors for the original inspiration of slow-simmered roast with carrots and onions.
This is a very good roast. The carrots are a favorite of mine (Amelia); they get soft and succulent from the dripping meaty juices. In combination with the warm meat, it’s to die for. We love serving this with a slice of good bread to soak up the juices.
A Perfect, Simple Roast
2 medium to large onions, quartered
10 long carrots, cut into thick coins or diagonals (around 1 1/2 pounds, although the amount isn’t important. You could also use baby carrots for ease, they’re just a little less attractive imo)
Chunk of butter*
2–4 pounds rump roast or brisket, depending on your needs
Salt (around two teaspoons, but a bit more if the roast is over two pounds)
1 cup red wine*
2 tablespoons tomato paste (3 if the roast is over 3 pounds)
4 cloves garlic, smashed and peeled but left whole
pepper
Place onions into the slow cooker, followed by most of the carrots.
Heat a large sauté pan (large enough to hold the roast) on the stove over medium-high heat. Melt butter on the hot pan, then add the meat to brown for a few minutes on its side. Brown another side or two, in the same manner. Salt it generously on different sides as it cook. Then move the roast into the slow cooker, setting it on top of the carrots and onions.
Pour wine into the hot sauté pan to deglaze, stirring up any meat bits left from the roast. Then add the tomato paste and let it melt in the hot wine. Pour the liquid over the roast, toss in the garlic cloves, then cook on low for 8 hours or high for 1 1/2 and low for 5-6.
Although we usually eat this with a slice of good bread, as mentioned above, it’s also very good over egg noodles. Sometimes we slice it, as in the photos here, but other times we pull it apart with forks into large chunks.
*As for the butter, one of the best cooks I know, a tall robust, and elegant woman with black hair and bright blue eyes from Azerbaijan, taught me that red meat always tastes better cooked with butter than with oil. I don’t cook a lot of red meat, and when I do the dish doesn’t always accommodate her advice. But it does here and I wanted to pass it along.
*We know very little about alcohol, so at the liquor store we ask an employee for help, explaining we need a red wine for cooking a roast in the range of 7 or 8 dollars. Please don’t use cooking wine—it will taste terrible. We’ve wondered about making this with grape or cranberry juice—let us know if you try.
The Best Banana Bread
I’ve (Amelia) loved banana bread my whole life. I remember being eleven and eating almost an entire loaf, my mom being shocked, and me feeling like I could still go for more. Given a proper incentive, I’m sure I could still pull it off today. Our banana bread is the best of its kind. Whenever I stray and try a new recipe it’s not the same.
Why is it the best? A combination of butter and coconut oil gives this sweetbread the perfect flavor profile, so it’s moist, sweet, and perfectly balanced. Feel free to skip the chocolate, but also please don’t. And, if you’re feeling like a real treat, we highly recommend banana bread sundaes.
Banana Bread
Makes 2 loaves
2 eggs
5 bananas
1/2 cup butter
1/2 cup coconut oil or shortening
2 cups sugar
4 cups flour
2 teaspoons soda
2 teaspoons salt
1 cup chocolate chips or diced dried apricots, or a combination of both (all optional)
Slice the butter cube in half and put half in each of the two bread pans. Place in the oven for the butter to melt while you heat the oven to 325°. This will not only grease the pan, but also brown the butter a bit, for a little extra wonderful flavor.
Whisk together the flour, soda, and salt. Peel and smash the bananas with a potato masher.
Beat together the butter, coconut oil or shortening, and sugar for a minute or two until fluffy and thoroughly mixed. Add the eggs one at a time, mixing thoroughly after each. Stir in the banana, then stir in the dry ingredients, but only until some white streaks still remain. Add the chocolate chips or apricots, if desired, and finish stirring so that the batter has a uniform texture.
Divide the batter between two pans smoothing the tops a bit, and bake for 65 to 70 minutes. Let sit for 10 minutes, then remove from pans to finish cooling on a cooling rack.
We love to eat this simply sliced, or sliced and toasted, or with ice cream and hot fudge sauce, like a brownie sundae with a twist.
Oatmeal Souffle
What has emerged is incredibly delicious. I’ve (Amelia) eaten copious amounts in one day of this food and not regretted a thing.
Read MoreSouthwestern Layered Bean Dip
This is the ultimate bean dip. It has cheese, salsa, avocado, olives, beans, sour cream —everything you could ever want in a bean dip. After spreading thin layer on top of thin layer on top of thin layer, we scoop it up with tortilla chips. We make it to celebrate the birth of every New Year and it’s always just as good as we remember. I (Amelia) even have it for breakfast, though I admit that’s just me.
This recipe is the brainchild of my lovely grandmother, Kathleen Stewart, who knows her way around dips. Grandma was the inspiration for this lemon bundt cake, and we owe her many a tradition, culinary or not. It’s been hard having to socially distance from her, but eating this dip and thinking of her brought her a little closer.
2020 might be gone, but the problems we encountered then have not vanished. We still need to socially distance, take care of our planet, and work to build a more equal society. So, as we enter into this new year, I suggest doing so with some beans in the belly.
Southwestern Layered Bean Dip
Layer in this order (we use an 18-inch round platter, and smooth smooth each layer with a spatula):
1 15-ounce can Refried beans (Taco Bell Brand)
1 16-ounce Pace Picante Sauce
1 Avocado, cut into ¼” chunks
Tomato or red pepper, cut into 1/4-inch chunks
5 -ounce can diced, mild green chilis
1 1/2 cups sour cream
1/2 package of McCormick or 2 tablespoons Penzeys taco seasoning
small can chopped olives
2 to 3 green onions, sliced
3/4 cup grated cheese
Also be good with lime juice squeezed over the top, optional
1 to 2 packages of your favorite tortilla chips (we love Juanitas brand), for serving.
Apple Oven Pancake
If I (Amelia) may synesthesia-ize my adjectives, then I would call the flavor of this pancake golden. The crisp top tastes bronzen with flavor and butter (bronzen is not a word, but that’s how it tastes); the sweet/tart apples are meltingly tender; the inside soft and plush.
Read MoreHomemade Yogurt
This yogurt is very creamy and fresh, with what I (Amelia) find to be the perfect level of tang. I love it so much more than store bought yogurt - and now that we’re all trapped inside, there’s time to make it.
Read MoreCelery Salad with Almonds and Dates
I (Amelia) just can’t get over this salad. Despite everything I thought I knew about celery and its tastelessness, this salad is packed with flavor. I could eat bowls of this and nothing else and be happy.
Read MoreWinter Festival Salad
As it turns out, Winter is one of my (Amelia) favorite seasons for produce.
Yes, Winter, not Summer.
The cold season where everything is supposed to be dead. But everything isn’t dead, and I see that now! Cabbage makes crunchy salads, cauliflower has buttery potential, pomegranates are truly edible gemstones, and my heart dances a little whenever I smell the fragrance of quince or taste a sweet persimmon.
Read MoreSourdough Granola Bars
Granola bars used to be my (Amelia’s) all time favorite food, but these days, I find them a little too stale and a little too sweet. I tried to solve this problem with homemade granola bars, but the recipes I’ve tried thus far have either been 1) too sweet, 2) complete structural disasters, or 3), both.
Just after I’d given up hope and wished my granola bar days goodbye, my Gia introduced us to sourdough granola bars. The idea enticed us and we knew we had to try them. To my delight, they were the granola bar I’d been looking for. They have a wonderful flavor and stick together easily. After some tweaking, we had a new favorite granola bar, perfect for after-school snacks.
Yes, you need a sourdough starter. But - the rest of the recipe is very simple, and we know many people have been experimenting with sourdough recently, so if there’s ever a time to use starter without much effort, this is it. Literally just mix everything together and bake it. I promise, you can do it.
Sourdough Granola Bars
1 cup whole pecans, toasted and cooled
2 cups rolled oats
1/4 teaspoon kosher salt
1/3 cup pumpkin seeds/pepitas
1/3 cup dried fruit (we especially like dried figs, cherries, and a few golden raisins)
1/2 cup chocolate chips
1/3 cup maple syrup
1 cup sourdough starter
Take sourdough start out of the fridge and preheat the oven to 350 degrees. Grease an 8 x 8 inch baking dish.
Toast the pecans (we do so at 350 in our toaster oven) in the oven for 7-10 minutes, until their color has deepened and they are fragrant. Set aside to cool.
Put oats, salt, pepitas, dried fruit, and chocolate chips in a medium bowl and stir to combine. Once the pecans have cooled, chop them and add them to the bowl (it’s important to give them time to cool, both to give the oils time to settle and to avoid melting the chocolate chips). Stir in the maple syrup and sourdough starter with a spatula until well combined (you might have to fight with the starter a little bit, but keep stirring and it will work out).
Pour the mixture into the prepared pan and bake at 350 degrees for 20 minutes. Let cool completely in pan (this is important for easy cutting), then transfer the bars to a cutting board and cut into desired sizes.
Chocolate-less: If you prefer a lighter snack, omit the chocolate chips and increase the dried fruit to 1/2 cup.
Millet: Add 1/3 cup millet to the dry ingredients, if you have it on hand.
The Best Apple Cake
When I (Amelia) tried a bite of this cake not less than four days after it came out of the oven, I was shocked and delighted to find that it was still soft, moist, and completely delectable. Sporting a crackling, crisp cinnamon and sugar crown and soft, apple kissed layers hidden beneath, it’s the best apple cake I’ve ever had. Frankly, it’s one of the best CAKES I’ve ever had.
Read MoreAebleskivers
Growing up during the second and third decades of the twentieth century in Richfield, Utah, Belle Fillmore (Kate’s grandma) and Edith Ann Gunn were best friends. Even after Edith’s life turned fancy (she married Sherman Lloyd, who served as president of the Utah State Senate and eight non-consecutive years in the US House of Representatives), they stayed in touch. Edith gave my grandma a recipe for aebleskivers, which we especially enjoy around the New Year.
Read MoreOur Favorite Stuffing
If it weren’t 2020, we’d be gushing over how much we love this stuffing, with it’s crisp exterior, light, moist insides, and perfect balance of flavors: beautiful on its own, wonderful with mashed potatoes, gravy, sweet potatoes, turkey, cranberry sauce—however much you can fit onto that fork. But it is 2020, so instead we’ll include a note about how sober it feels this year, and how this is probably something you can make even when the purse strings are particularly tight .
Read MorePumpkin Waffles
This much is true: food like this speaks a soothing language, and these waffles are scrumptious. (Photo by Aimee Hickman)
Read MoreApplesauce Cake
Applesauce Cake is good for sharing because it travels well, stays fresh for several days, and makes two loaves. Also, the flavor. Each bite subtly conveys apple season and a bit of warmth. The cake tastes like the golden light that illuminates trees and so entrances us in the fall.
Read MoreSalami Pasta
Tired of making dinner, but still hungry? Sick of making a delicious dinner your kids won’t touch, but even sicker of boxed mac n’ cheese? We’ve got just the thing.
Read MoreEASY Broccoli Slaw
I (Amelia) think that my mom’s brilliant idea to dress up an already chopped and prepped bag of veggies is genius. I love salad, but it can be a real hassle— not going to lie. This is a salad for busy nights, when time is limited but you hanker after the freshness of a side salad.
Read MoreOatmeal Pecan Chocolate Chip Cookies
We’ve worked hard on this recipe to make it just right and we want you to enjoy it—win cookie competitions with it—the way Nature intended when it first nudged people to try heating cocoa beans and to leave those cranberries out in the sun. There are just enough dried cranberries for some tart sweetness, toasted pecans for notes of earth and sun, oats for satisfying texture, and chocolate for delectability.
Read MorePear Sauce
I (Kate) started making pear sauce both as a way to use up pears and as food for baby Persephone. Ina Garten bakes her applesauce, so I decided to do the same with pears. Once I started making it, there was no going back.
Read MoreChocolate Pudding Cake - Reinvented
For the chocolate hunger.
Read More