roasted chicken

I love roasting a chicken.  You get the wonderful roasted chicken, of course, but then there’s everything that comes afterwards: chicken sandwiches, chicken stock, and so on.  A rancher at the local farmers’ market started bringing in chickens.  We pick up one once a month or so.  They’re expensive ($6.50 per pound), but so flavorful.

My method for roasting chicken is adapted from The Cook’s Companion by Stephanie Alexander, which is the bible for Australian cooking.

Ingredients

  • 1 whole chicken, 3-5 pounds
  • 1 lemon, halved
  • 4-5 garlic cloves
  • 1 tsp sea salt
  • 1 tsp freshly-ground black pepper
  • 1 sprig rosemary (optional)
  • 2 tbsp butter
  • 2 tsp dried rosemary, or a poultry rub (I’m currently using one that I picked up from Dean & Deluca)
  • 1/4 cup olive oil

Directions

Preheat oven to 450°F.  Rub chicken inside and out with the lemon halves.  Crush the garlic with the back of a knife, roll in the salt and pepper.  Insert everything but the dried herbs and the olive oil into the cavity of the chicken.  Sprinkle the dried herbs all over the chicken, and then rub the olive oil into the skin of the chicken.

Place the chicken on its side in a baking dish.  Put the baking dish in the center of your oven for 25 minutes.  Turn the chicken onto its other side, then put it back into the oven for another 25 minutes.  Finally, turn the chicken so that it is breast-side up, and bake for a final 25 minutes until golden brown.

Notes

The original recipe has you roasting your vegetables with the chicken, which is fine if that’s what you’re looking for.  I tend to roast mine separately, since the chicken can be rather juicy, and I don’t want the vegetables to taste like the chicken.  If you roast brussels sprouts with this, put the sprouts into the oven with the chicken after the first turn.  If you roast cauliflower with this, put the cauliflower into the oven with the chicken after the second turn.

The sprig of rosemary can be replaced by any number of things.  I somehow killed the rosemary plant that lived on my balcony and haven’t replaced it, so I tend to use whatever I’ve got around (or leave it out entirely).  If I have some fresh parsley or chives in the fridge that aren’t going to be used elsewhere, they’ll go into the chicken.  Half an onion always works, too.

banana bread

Ingredients

  • 1 cup plus 2 tbsp all-purpose flour
  • 2 tsp baking powder
  • 1/2 tsp baking soda
  • 1/2 tsp salt
  • 1/2 cup unsalted butter, melted
  • 1/2 cup sugar
  • 2 eggs
  • 4 over-ripe bananas, mashed
  • 1 tsp vanilla extract

Directions

Preheat oven to 325°F.

In a medium bowl, whisk together the dry ingredients.  In a large bowl, mix the melted butter and sugar until just blended.  Beat in the eggs one at a time.  Stir in the mashed bananas and the vanilla extract.  Add the flour mixture in two additions.

Butter a loaf pan, and pour the banana bread dough into it.  Bake for 60-75 minutes.  Let cool in the loaf pan.

Notes

If you were to measure a favorite recipe by how frequently it’s made, then this recipe is probably the top of our list.  We always have a bunch of bananas in the house, since my standard breakfast is a latte and a banana.  But we often don’t eat all of the bananas before they get too ripe.  So the leftover bananas go into a quart-sized freezer bag.  A quart-sized freezer bag holds 4 bananas perfectly, and thus it’s perfect for this recipe.  I peel the bananas, since I only ever use frozen bananas for banana bread; you can leave the peel on if you’re going to use your frozen bananas for smoothies or other purposes.  On the day that I bake the banana bread, I pull the bananas out of the freezer and let defrost for a half-hour or so, and then squish them around in their bag a bit.

The original recipe is based on the one found in Nigella Lawson‘s How To Be a Domestic Goddess.  The only changes that I make is that I don’t bother with the golden raisins or the walnuts.  I like my banana bread plain.

I tried a recipe for banana banana bread from the New York Times, and it’s not half as good as this banana bread.

Szechuan green beans

Ingredients

  • 2 tbsp peanut oil, divided
  • 1 pound green beans (or Chinese longbeans, if you can find them), trimmed into 2- or 3-inch lengths
  • 4-5 cloves garlic, minced
  • 4 green onions, white and light green parts only, thinly sliced (save the green parts and chop them for garnish, if desired)
  • 4-5 white mushrooms, diced
  • 5 tbsp garlic-chili paste
  • 5 tbsp low-sodium soy sauce
  • Szechuan pepper, freshly ground (optional)

Directions

Put a wok on a high flame, and add one 1 tbsp peanut oil.  Add green beans, and stir fry for 8-10 minutes, until green beans are starting to brown and are crisp-tender.  Remove green beans from wok and set aside.

Add 1 tbsp peanut oil to the wok.  Add in the garlic and onions, and stir-fry for a few seconds until aromatic.  Add in the mushrooms and stir-fry for 1-2 minutes, until mushrooms have released some of their liquid.  Add in the garlic-chili paste and soy sauce and stir-fry for a minute.  Add the green beans back to the wok, and stir through until thoroughly coated in the sauce.

Serve with steamed rice, and optionally garnish with scallions and Szechuan pepper.

Notes

Chinese long beans are the green bean called for in this dish, but I don’t limit myself to those beans.  The second any variety of green bean shows up at the farmers’ market, I make this.  Thinner fillet-style green bean varieties work best in place of the Chinese long beans, although fatter ones are fine.  They’ll take longer to cook, and you might need a bit more oil to help them along.

This is another easy weeknight dinner.  Like the black bean beef that I have listed elsewhere, I start off by rinsing the rice and getting it started in the rice cooker.  While it’s cooking, I prep the rest of the ingredients, and then start the stir-frying.  It usually ends up that the rice finishes when the beans are about half-done, which is close enough to perfect that I’m happy with it.  All told, it takes about an hour to complete.

We have this as a vegan main course, so it’s usually a generous main dish for two, with enough left over for a lunch or two later in the week.

market trip, dinner plan 6/10-6/16

Summer is in full swing, and thus the farmers’ market is bursting at the seams with lovely produce.  I restrained myself by only getting the following:

  • Onions (red, green, yellow)
  • green peppers
  • basil
  • baby bok choy
  • green beans
  • a mixed bag of summer squash
  • tomatoes
  • cherry tomatoes
  • button mushrooms
  • white nectarines
  • pluots

Michael and I have been two very busy engineers lately, between product releases and his mum visiting, so we haven’t been cooking at home as much lately (and I’ve been very bad about updating this with what we are actually cooking).  Summer’s here, and our releases are over for now, and we have no houseguests planned for awhile, so we can actually cook again.  I’m looking forward to it.

  • Sunday: beef fajitas, guacamole, tortilla chips
  • Monday: I’ll be on a business trip, so Michael’s on his own
  • Tuesday: spicy green beans, steamed rice
  • Wednesday: five-spice chicken, steamed bok choy, steamed rice
  • Thursday: dinner with friends
  • Friday: summer squash gratin
  • Saturday: dinner out, since we’ve got tickets to American Idiot

All of the meals are pretty quick to put together, which is good given how busy this week is.

black bean beef

ingredients for black bean beefBlack bean beef is one of our regular dinners.  Most of the ingredients are ones that we get at the farmers’ market.  It’s flexible, a great way to use whatever vegetables are on hand.  It freezes well, so I make enough to have a couple of lunches later.

I know that the ingredients list looks long.  I’ve broken it into sections for ease of putting it together.  It’s really pretty quick.

Ingredients

Beef and marinade

  • 1 pound beef roast, sliced into thin strips
  • 2 tbsp beef broth
  • 2 tbsp low-sodium soy sauce
  • 1 tsp cornstarch

Sauce

  • 1/2 cup beef broth
  • 2 tbsp soy sauce
  • 2 tbsp black bean paste
  • 1 tbsp garlic-chili paste (optional)
  • 1 tsp cornstarch

Vegetables

  • 1 large onion, cut into 1″ chunks
  • 2 carrots, thinly sliced
  • 2 bell peppers, cut into 1″ chunks

Aromatics for stir-frying

  • 3 tbsp peanut oil, divided
  • 4 cloves garlic, chopped
  • 1 bunch green onions, white parts only, sliced thinly (save the green parts and chop them for garnish, if desired)
  • 8 oz white mushrooms, sliced

Directions

First, make the marinade.  In a small bowl, combine the beef and marinade ingredients, adding the cornstarch last.  Let marinate for 20 minutes.

Then, make the sauce.  In a small bowl, combine the broth, soy sauce, black bean paste, and optional garlic-chili paste.  Set it aside.

Next, stir-fry the vegetables.  Pour 2 tbsp of peanut oil into the wok.  Add the onion, bell peppers, and carrots.  Stir-fry 2-3 minutes, until crisp-tender.  Remove the vegetables from the wok and set aside.

black bean beef, in the wokStir-fry the beef.  Pour 1 tbsp of peanut oil into the wok.  When hot, add the garlic and green onions, and stir-fry 30 seconds until fragrant.  Add the beef and stir-fry until mostly cooked, about 4-5 minutes.  Add the mushrooms and cook for another 1-2 minutes, until the beef is fully cooked.  Create a space in the middle of the wok and add the sauce, then stir together.  Bring the sauce to a boil, then add the reserved vegetables.  Mix well and remove from heat.

Serve with steamed rice, and garnish with scallions (if desired).

Notes

This comes together pretty quickly.  My steps, in order:

  1. Start the rice cooking in the rice cooker.
  2. Slice the beef, put it in a bowl, pour over the marinade ingredients, stir it together, toss it in the fridge.
  3. Make the sauce, set it aside.
  4. Chop the veggies, set them aside.
  5. Check on the rice.  My rice cooker gives me a time-remaining indication about 10 minutes before it’s done.  Usually, by the time I’ve gotten to this point, the rice is close to done.  If not, then I’ve got a few extra minutes to do something else.  This is also the point that I make sure that we’re actually ready for dinner (that is, is everyone home?).  Since the actual cooking time is so short, and since the rice can stay happily in its rice cooker after it’s done for hours and hours, and since the beef can continue marinating, it’s not a problem if I’m ahead of the game.
  6. Cook the veggies, then cook the beef and mushrooms, and finally stir it all together.

black bean beefLiving in Silicon Valley means that it’s pretty easy to get Asian ingredients.  Black bean paste and chili-garlic paste (sometimes called sambol olek, but it’s got other names too) are available at Whole Foods.

My wok came from the Wok Shop in San Francisco, and it’s so immensely useful.  You can do this in a large skillet, but it takes longer and doesn’t quite taste the same.

I love my rice cooker more than anything.  I’m generally not a fan of special-purpose kitchen appliances, but this is awesome: rinse the rice, put it in the rice-cooker’s bowl, add the water, and hit start.  Nothing more is necessary, and you get absolutely perfect rice every time.  It will keep the rice perfectly steamed if you accidentally start your rice too early, and it’s got a timer too in case you want to set it up to cook in advance.

market trip, dinner plan 1/15-1/20

Today is sunny but windy.  The market was busy, although everyone was complaining about the cold.  Someone from the market was going around and asking all of the vendors to tie down their stalls.

fruits and vegetables from the farmers' market, 2012-01-15

This week, I picked up the following:

  • onions
  • green onions
  • carrots
  • potatoes
  • mushrooms
  • red peppers
  • cauliflower
  • Asian pears
  • satsumas
  • chicken
  • sirloin tip

This, combined with the contents of the fridge, should turn into:

  • Sunday: black bean beef, steamed rice
  • Monday: roasted chicken, roasted potatoes and brussels sprouts, spicy cauliflower
  • Tuesday: dinner out with friends
  • Wednesday: lavash, hummus, chicken, vegetables
  • Thursday: date night
  • Friday:  pasta, tomato sauce

dinner plan, 1/9-1/13

Last week got away from me.  Michael and I were lucky enough to get the flu just in time for the holidays, and it hasn’t fully let go yet.  Thus, last week’s meal plan didn’t entirely stick.  We did make the black bean beef, but the roasted vegetables and the frittata were scuttled.  A last-minute addition was a pot roast, brought about by a sale at Whole Foods.

The plan is the plan until it’s not the plan anymore.  And it doesn’t keep us from drawing up new plans.  We didn’t go to the farmers’ market this weekend, partially ennui from the last bits of the flu and partially because we didn’t have a pressing need for anything.  So let’s see what we can put together out of what’s in the fridge and pantry …

  • Monday: barbecue beef sandwiches, oven fries, corn
  • Tuesday: yoga night, and HOA meeting too
  • Wednesday: spicy roasted cauliflower; roasted potatoes, onions, and carrots; hummus; bolani
  • Thursday: leftovers
  • Friday: pasta, tomato sauce with mushrooms and leeks

a trip to the market

For the most part, my husband Michael and I do our grocery shopping at the Mountain View Farmers’ Market.  It’s open year-round.  Our home is just a couple of blocks away, so we’re there almost every Sunday morning.

Today is New Year’s Day, which meant that the market was open but not all of the usual vendors were there.  Also, Michael and I are just getting over the flu, so I didn’t want to be too ambitious with our dinner plans for the week.

purchases from the Mountain View farmers' market (2012-01-01)This week, we bought:

  • Fuji apples
  • leeks
  • potatoes
  • cauliflower
  • red and yellow peppers
  • sirloin tip
  • spinach bolani

Everything but the beef and the bolani is organic, since it’s so easy to get organic vegetables directly from the farmers.

As for what we’ll do with this (in combination with what’s currently in the fridge):

  • Sunday: leftover ham, carrots, perhaps something like this savory mushroom bread pudding if I’m feeling up for it
  • Monday: black bean beef, steamed rice
  • Tuesday: yoga night, so probably leftovers
  • Wednesday: spicy roasted cauliflower; roasted carrots, onions, and potatoes; hummus; bolani
  • Thursday: dinner with friends
  • Friday: frittata with whatever veg are still left in the house