Food as Language Lesson

July 2nd, 2009

Grilled Cocozella di Napoli Stuffed with Basil, Cheeses and Other Good Things


courgette stuffing

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I was all set to give you a fantastic soup stock recipe, a la Ruhlman and his vexingly mathematical yet maddeningly brilliant book Ratio. Then I looked around and realized: no one’s shooting off fireworks over soup broth. Because that’s not very good for a picnic.  Three days of outdoor cooking lie ahead, and that calls for something a little more flammable, so in a true volte face, and in the spirit of seasonal propriety, let’s catch something on fire instead.

If your garden is like ours right now, then you’re going to have to start burning some zucchini soon just to keep on top of them.  I know, zucchini gets a bad rap and too many weary knock-and-run jokes revolve around the seasonal outbreak, but there are so many things to love about summer squash. Their flavor, their versatility, their hefty dose of vitamin C and their anti-cancer properties, sure.  But to an obsessive lingua-phile like me, it’s their many monikers that’s most enticing.

italian zucch

If you’re British, where the summer squash is the 10th most popular vegetable, it’s courgette. If you’re a Shakespearian Brit, it’s “marrows” (Timon of Athens. Really). Then there’s “gagoots”, which in Italian can mean either “crazy in the head”, or “zucchini”, also a word of Italian origin. Zucchini means “little zuccas”, or little gourds.  And if you’re a taxonomist  it’s Cucurbitaceae. That one tormented me for years.  How do you pronounce a word like that?  “Cucumber” isn’t a word that often comes up in a pre-Vatican II mass, and I never took Latin in school, and everyone I’ve ever asked who did has long forgotten the nuances of the language’s elocution. The cu-cur-bit part was fine, but the last couple of syllables – how many? One? Three? – stumped me. Then, I met Paul’s dog.

Paul is a farmer and one hot July afternoon his dog broke loose at the suburban farm stand where I sometimes buy tomatoes. “Cucurbitaceae,” he yelled after it. “Come back here now or you’re eatin this kale for dinner. Cucurbitaceae!” Bellowed out like so: Koo-ker-bih-TAY-see-ee.  Now that’s a first and middle name rolled into one, and it’s a lot to get out when your canine is bounding toward a woman who is evidently horrified by dogs and would no doubt be dashing away, straight into traffic, if only she could break out of her fear-induced catatonia. But he managed and Kookerbit, as the dog is called when he’s not in trouble, was responsive and mostly obedient and so tragedy was averted all around. The lady bought her watermelon and even smiled wanly. And me? Well, I had added a long-sought prize term to my strange, expanding and largely archaic lexicon.

The Recipe
Here’s another lingual nugget.  Squash, which is native to Central America, had migrated to North America by the time the Pilgrims arrived at Plymouth Rock. The Pilgrims shortened its native name from askootasquash, which meanteaten raw” in Algonquin, to squash. They also promptly started cooking it, and the food was adopted by the Old World soon after.

The squash featured here is an Italian heirloom called Cocozella di Napoli, Though the striking fruit, notable for its fluted ribs and its stripes mottled with creamy flecks, is often eaten young, it’s mild and tender even when allowed to grow to 12 inches. The flavor is distinct, sweet like a cucumber with a hint of pine nut that hits just in the back of the mouth.

cozelle di napoli

I love the beautifully scalloped slices. And look at the water droplets, drawn from inside the fruit, beading on the cut surface of the Cocozella.

moisture in courgette

cozello zucchini half zucchini stuffing mixture half

parmigiano_reggiano

Oh, and before I go on, let’s do the wine. It wouldn’t be a barbecue weekend without some sound advice from Lucy. This week she offers red and white sipping options to go with your grilled gagoots: In the heat of summer, I would likely turn to a lightly oaked Chardonnay for the pairing.  The Chardonnay is light enough not to overpower the delicate squash and is one of the very few whites that will stand up to the Parmigiano-Reggiano and mozzarella.  Even if you are an avowed Chardonnay enemy, you’ll find the buttery taste of the Chard only adds to the creamy/salty/slightly sweet flavors at play in the dish.

For those who would prefer a red wine, a light Montepulciano d’Abruzzo from Italy is an easy pairing.  It’s got all the Italian acidity that works so well with cheese, garlic, and basil yet is light enough to not obliterate veggie dishes.  Although Montepulciano d’Abruzzo is not particularly well known, almost every wine store has one in stock.  Best of all, that sole bottle is usually great because, honestly who other than a wine snob is going to come in and ask for something with that many syllables? As an added bonus, since it flies under the radar, it’s inexpensive to boot.

Grilled Cocozella Squash Stuffed with Basil and Other Stuff
3 whole Cocozella di Napoli squash – or other zucchini – about 8 inches long
2 slices of thick, artisanal bread — sourdough is good
1 garlic scape, or a couple of cloves garlic
A small handful of fresh mozzarella
A generous scoop of freshly ground Parmigiano-Reggiano cheese
Olive oil
Salt and fresh ground black pepper
A bunch of fresh basil, torn into chunks

These measurements aren’t exacting, and they’re not in order either, but you’ll manage.  Leaving the courgettes whole, begin by scooping out the tops and the inner flesh.  You want to hollow them out enough to fill them with good stuff (I’d show you photos of mine but they didn’t turn out so well and, well, my food is tasty but not always graceful). Set the flesh aside.

Chop the squash flesh and place it in a bowl. If you’re using scapes, chop those into small pieces too; if you’re using garlic cloves, you’ll want to mince and sauté them, then add those as well.

I forgot the best part – when I went to pick scapes last week, I also made cheese! My friend Steph is becoming quite the artisanal cheese maker, and she walked me through making 45-minute mozzarella. Mine ended up looking a bit like cream cheese cookies, but hey, I made this and it was good! You probably don’t have homemade mozzarella lying around, so just be sure to use a fresh cheese that’s packed in water. Cut the mozzarella into thin, stringy slices and add to the bowl. Grate the Parmigiano and add that too. Drizzle with olive oil, salt and pepper, and mix to combine.

mozarella ball

Fire up the grill. Brush the bread slices with oil and then sprinkle them with salt. Place them, along with the hollowed out cucurbitaceaea, on the grill. Keep a close eye on the bread as it will toast fast and you don’t want to burn it. When it’s browned and crunchy, work quickly to chop it into crumbs (food processor works well, if you happen to have one plugged in in the backyard…) and then add the breadcrumbs to the cheese mixture. Stir it well. By this point the zucchini should be getting soft and taking on those nice grilling marks. Scoop a generous amount of the stuffing mix into each zucchini, then place them back on the grill and cook a few minutes more, until the cheese is melting beautifully. Remove from the grill and add a generous amount of fresh basil to each one, then slice them in half and serve.

stuffed romesco courgette

And don’t’ worry. We’ll tackle Ruhlman and math in the kitchen next time, so add me to your Google reader or subscribe so you don’t miss it.

Also, if you’re more in the mood for a truly patriotic recipe, take a look at my Red White and Bleu Smoked Apple Salad from last year.

See you soon!

Food as Obsession: The Great Garlic Scape Escapade

June 25th, 2009

Pickled Dilly Garlic Scapes

wine crate of scapes

(Vegetarian, Vegan, Wine Pairing)

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I drove 451 miles and back for garlic scapes. That’s nearly 8 hours each way. Drove on and on, through an otherworld of two-lane landscaped with soybeans and corn fronds wilting in the overbearing humidity, I caught up on The Splendid Table, My Life as a Foodie, and To the Best of Our Knowledge and then, when the podcasts ran out, I indulged in garlic-tinted daydreams. Before you diagnose me, know this: they were heirloom garlic scapes.

Oh, scapes. They’re a racket, really. You see, those scapes have to be cut. Botanically speaking, a scape is a flowering stem that rises from the bulb or root of a plant. Plants have limited energy, so if the garlic scape is removed, then the plant directs everything toward making strong, fat, firm, juicy bulbs — the bread and butter of the garlic farmer. On most large farms, the pesky scapes are cut and discarded. Knowing this full well, I nevertheless squealed and clapped  and handed over my 50-cents-each when I spied the first batch of curling spears balanced in a tin vase at the market. Small-scale farmers are pretty smart.

field of scapes

scapes in field

So when I got the opportunity to go scape hunting on an heirloom garlic farm, I pointed my car north and drove. My friend Steph and I met up and together, protected only by scissors and nudged onward by persistent dreams of subtly nuanced pesto, we systematically liberated that infinitude of a garlic field from its scapes. There were just a handful of varieties that were ready to be snipped – German Extra Hardy, Pskem River, Siberian, Persian Star, Georgian Crystal, and one of the hottest garlics around, Georgian Fire.

I’ll tell you more about each variety over the coming weeks, but for now, know this: each variety is brilliantly distinct, just as the eventual cloves will be. For example, the scapes of the Georgian Crystal are mild and grassy, whereas those of the Georgian Fire are definitely cutting teeth. Each variety has a flavor worthy of celebration, so stay tuned.

Tis scape season, and if you’ve grabbed the scissors and are heading outside too, here are a few things to keep in mind: Scapes should be cut just when they begin to curl, like so:

curling scapes

Cut them too soon and they’ll work up the determination of a GDR biker, continuing to grow and thus effectively leaching everything from the bulb underground and leaving it hollow. Plus you won’t get much for your scape-snipping troubles.  Also keep in mind that size does matter, at least when it comes to flavor. The bigger the scape, the more intense the garlic flavor – and generally the hotter. Even so, scapes are gentle enough to be used fresh in salads and vinaigrettes, or sautéed and eaten like beans. Last bit of advice? Don’t cut scapes when you’ve been driving for 8 hours with barely a bathroom break and just a mozzarella stick for lunch. The aroma is intoxicating and inspires a painful longing in the empty stomach.

scape field vertical scapes in bowl vertical

So. You still think I’m crazy? You should talk to Simon then. He found my obsessive excursion to be amusing, endearing, undeniably odd, yet invariably typical. None of you have any idea how bad it could get though. There are nearly 540 known varieties of garlic in the world.  Six down… .

The Recipe

What does a girl do with 10 pounds of fresh garlic scapes? First, she pickles.  Perhaps you’re not the pickle addict that I am, but try this and I bet you will be. True enough, the first time I was presented with pickled garlic I was hesitant to put a whole clove in my mouth. It was a revelation then when I bit in and found that in the vinegar had mellowed the harsh, hot flavor. Scapes are much softer to begin with,  and pickling enhances their garlic flavor while smoothing any sharp edges.

brown bowl scapes half pickling scapes half

packed scapes(2)

Steph – yes, the same Steph of garlic scape fame – introduced me to this recipe with her (also famous) dilly beans and pickled garlic.  The brine produces crispy, deeply flavored pickles that keep a rich color and firm texture. We’re both putting up our scapes this way, and we’re so confident in the formula that we’ll unequivocally tell you to go ahead and use it too.  But we’ll report back in a few weeks just to confirm.

And the wine. I guess  you’ve noticed. I do seem to enjoy giving Lucy a headache. But this wasn’t as difficult as I expected it might be. When I asked for her sage wine pairing advice for dilly garlic scapes, here’s what she offered: This might not be as unusual as you’d think.  If you are treating it as antipasti, why not pair it with Pinot Bianco or Soave?  Both are crisp Italian whites that can hold their own with all manner of pickled veggies.  (Please, in the name of all that is grapey goodness, don’t substitute Pinot Grigio for the Pinot Bianco.  It’s too light and lemony to do much of anything for the garlic.)  Savingnon Blanc and Gruner Veltliner also hold up well with all manner of truculent veggies.  Avoid Savingnon Blanc from New Zealand in this case.  There might be too much citrus or grass to harmonize with the briney taste.  Finally, should you decide to nestle the garlic in a sandwich, a very dry rose would be refreshing.  My personal favorite this summer is rose of Syrah.  The finish is a bit drier than a rose of Pinot Noir.

Dilly Pickled Garlic Scapes
3 lbs fresh garlic scapes, grassy tops removed
16 heads fresh dill
A sprinkle of dried dill seed
A few garlic cloves if you feel like adding them
1/2 cup canning or pickling salt
4 cups white vinegar (5% acidity)
4 cups water
8 small piquin chiles or other hot, dried smoked peppers (optional)
Whole peppercorns

Makes about 8 pints (I used a combination of pint and half-pint jars)

Wash and dry the scapes. If you’re planning to slice them, now is the time. I couldn’t decide – they looked so pretty wound into coils in the jars, but they take up a lot more space that way. I ended up with a mixture of wound scapes and cut pieces – see photo.

Working with sterilized jars, place 2 dill heads, a sprinkling of dill seed, a few peppercorns, a chile and, if using, the garlic cloves, into each jar. Place the scapes inside the jars, packing them tightly but leaving about ½ inch at the top.

In a large saucepan combine the vinegar, water and pickling salt over medium heat. Stir well to dissolve the salt, and bring to a boil. Pour hot liquid over the scapes, again leaving about ½ inch at the top. Place lids on the canning jars, tighten the bands and then process them in a boiling hot water bath for 7-10 minutes. The water should completely cover the jars, and either during the processing or very soon after, the centers of the jars will pop down, indicating that they are sealed.

*note: it’s important to use sterilized jars for canning. You can find information on how to do this here.

Another note: The top part of scapes tend to be grassy and stringy and not so good for eating. Use this part:

edible scape portion

and discard this part (or use it for a rich, aromatic veggie broth):

scape waste

What good is Georgian Fire? Want to make a really tasty stock with your garlic scape waste? Subscribe now to Becky and the Beanstock and never miss a recipe.

Food as….

June 19th, 2009

Sometimes, I get smart and just quit talking.

sugar snap peas
“Sugar Ann” Sugar Snap Peas from Baker Creek Heirloom Seeds (but more importantly, from our garden!)

Because always, when gratitude and wonder are involved, words fumble and flounder.

heirloom lettuce

cut herbs

peas tall half inchelium red garlic tall half

Things are accelerating in the garden and at the market.

beets and dill

multicolored asparagus

And pesto making and herb preservation in a nimiety of forms is afoot in my kitchen.

almonds

chard tall half pine nuts almonds tall half

parmesan

Just wait until next week….

And really, I’m sorry, but I’m afraid you’ll have to wait till then for a recipe or three. I have piles of parsley, dill and oregano to put up somehow (if anyone has suggestions…!) and then it looks as though I’m off to Iowa for the Great Scape Escape-ade. Of course, this really depends on the garlic — and the garden crew. But more on that when I return.

Happy gardening/eating/cooking/daydreaming about food! May your garden and market be inspiring wonderful things too.

Want to know what I’m going to do with all this stuff? Subscribe now and never miss a post!

Food as Anger Management: Fudgy Black Bean Cookies with Lavender and Lemon

June 16th, 2009

lavender cookies

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The gym where I work out is a dump.

The two treadmills and four elliptical machines, when they work, wobble and squeak. The stair stepper is wedged in the corner, into which (rumor has it) it went flying, passenger still on board, when it shorted out and sparked, long  before I started using the place. No one ever refills the buckets that are meant to dispense sanitizing wipes for cleaning the machinery after each use. Even if they did, those dainty cloths would be useless on the equipment’s foot pedals. These are typically caked in mud, which is how they get left after the “football team” bursts in from the field, lumbers onto the machines, pumps their legs for 12.5 minutes and leaves in a cloud of dust. We do have six TVs –four of them are in color — and the sound system hisses out the news from our local National Public Radio station.  I do like that part.

Because it’s free, that’s why. I use this place because it’s what my employer has to offer.

But it puts me in a bad mood, the dank and out-of-service cave.  Pisses me off  really – can I say that here? I haven’t even told you about the locker rooms. Except for the occasional exerciser that, like me, gets in and out as quickly as possible on her way to the gym, it’s unpopulated.  Though I did once walk in on two bullish power-hitters fighting like junkyard dogs (war does not recognize gender-specific changing room boundaries). For a week now, there have been mop buckets stationed just in case the ceiling starts to fall. Sixty days ago  – I don’t exaggerate – one of the showers began trickling in a steady stream that couldn’t be shut off, 20 gallons easy down the drain daily. I told Building Services, and I told the guy at the front table too. Three times. And still the water leaks.

chocolate

And that door. Since February, one bathroom stall has been locked from the inside even though it’s empty. (Then again, who can say? If someone had died in there, they’d never be found). That peeling-painted metal door jeers at me each time I walk in, a scornful reminder that we are in a recession and facility maintenance, such as they are, has no time for pooling water or peeling paint or the headless shower heads. Occasionally I get way past frustrated. I’m sure that’s why I did what I did.

Maybe it was also because before I ever got to the gym that day the web project I’d been working on crashed, hard, and took my entire morning’s worth of work with it.  Or maybe it’s because the desk-tapping, loud-talking guy who sits next door to me has been using the office as daycare and I’d heard the theme song to Wall-E one too many times that day. Quite possibly it was just that I had a Craving for chocolate, the ferocity of which was rivaled only by my turbulent determination to resist.  We shall never know. All I know is that I walked into the locker room and that bathroom stall’s exposed metal door flashed at me despite the dim light, and dear readers, at last I did something about it.

I  scowled at that door so hard that it made my cheeks hurt, and then I raised my knee in a perfectly practiced box-kick, leaned sideways and brought my foot flat against the side of that insouciant door. As it swung back and forth on its ungreased hinges, hammering the stall wall, I began to laugh, a self-satisfied and unselfconscious thing, completely absent of embarrassment or regret. Then I turned around and saw the startled co-ed, slack-jawed and frozen behind me. She looked at me for a moment longer, and she didn’t laugh. She glanced past me, deep into the barracks and saw that it was empty except for me. She hurried backwards out the door.

All this really was just to say this: next time I’ll just eat the chocolate.

*(Also, I’m turning 40 next month, which freaks me out in more ways than I can say, but one good thing has come of it:  I’ve decided to give myself the gift of a real gym. So I might as well capitalize on the story potential of this one while it lasts).

sucanat lavender

On Eating the Chocolate

Once again, I’ll be an exhibitor at the Seed Saver’s Exchange annual conference this year. Giving out food is the surest way to to talk to everyone – and my plan is to do that  again this year too.  So I’m working on a recipe for heirloom black bean cookies.

With a lot of help from Bakewise and even more from Michael Ruhlman’s Ratio (a brilliant gem which I will be telling you about in a post or two), I hammered out a basic black bean cookie recipe, and then modified it. I’m still working, but this produces a solid, tasty treat, one that I know you could pull over on your kids. Well, except for the grown-up twist added by the lavender and lemon zest.

black beans half tall cookies half

But more on the beans. Why would I do such a thing to a perfectly good cookie? Black beans often have chocolate overtones, and unlike a lot of white beans, black ones lose the beany flavor when they’re cooked, making them fit seamlessly into a dough. Is this a healthy cookie? Well, the fiber and protein might help to balance the butter and sugar a little….

I went with an heirloom black runner called Ayocote Negro, which came from Rancho Gordo. A bit of history: the Ayocote Negro was widely used pre-conquest, but then fell out of favor in Mexico except in Morelos, where they are still cultivated and cooked.  A deep jewel-toned purplish black, the beans are meaty and creamy with hints of chocolate and coffee.

ayocote negro

And the lavender. You think it belongs in soap and in your great aunt’s handkerchief drawer? Maybe, but you can eat it too  – and you should.  The aroma is both delicate and overwhelming, which tells you something: use it sparingly. It’s one of the herbs in traditional herbs de Provence, which is used in  many French savory dishes. But lavender has a real place in baked goods too – the ethereal flavor melds  well with butter, eggs and lemon. Its unique taste is reminiscent of pine and alderwood, tempered by sweetness.

lavender

Wine Pairing:
One last thing: these are sturdy cookies and they deserve to be served with wine. You can imagine, it’s a tough pairing. I checked in with Lucy, and after she finished cursing, here’s what she said: Wow, this is like wine pairing hazing.  Well, I do love a challenge. Since this is a dessert, Banyuls makes sense.  It pairs very well with chocolate and comes from southern France, heaven for lavender lovers.  However, you’dd need to find just the right Banyuls  to make sure the lavender wasn’t overpowered by all of the chocolate affinity.  Or how about Syrah?  A bit unusual, but many Syrahs have the flavor profile of both chocolate AND lavender.  Your typical American Syrah has almost as much alcohol as any dessert wine so it’s fine for an after dinner drink and most people have one on the shelf.  (As opposed to Banyuls which requires a trip to the wine store for all but the greatest of cork dorks.)  If the lemon flavor is strong Vin Santo might also work, but I promise nothing.  I’m a heavy drinker NOT a miracle worker.

But. I can see my word counter ticking ever upward – I’ve gone on way too long, even for me. Shall we just get to the cookies already?

Fudgy Black Bean Cookies with Lavender and Lemon Zest
1 large egg
1 cup Ayocote Negro beans (or other black beans)
8 oz (1 cup) butter
8 oz (1 cup) raw sugar
1 tablespoon boiling water
juice of one lemon, heated
Zest of 2 lemons, plus more for garnish
1 ½ cups flour
½ tsp salt
1 tsp baking powder
2 teaspoons fresh lavender flowers

In a food processor, puree the beans with the egg.

With an electric mixer, in a separate, large bowl, cream the butter and ½ cup of the sugar. Combine the boiling water and the warmed lemon juice and mix in the other ½ cup of raw sugar; stir until the sugar crystals melt, then add this to the butter. Combine , then add the bean/egg mixture and the lemon zest and beat until incorporated.

blue mosaic bowl

In a small bowl, combine the flour, salt, baking powder and lavender. Stir well, then add to the wet ingredients and beat on low until a wet dough has formed. If the dough is too much like batter, add another ½ cup flour (I know, this is blasphemy in baking, but it’s okay, trust me). Mix well, then cover and chill for 45 minutes.

Preheat oven to 360. Drop the dough by spoonfuls onto a parchment-lined baking tray. Bake for 8 minutes, then sprinkle the tops of the slightly flattened cookies with reserved lemon zest and raw sugar. Place back in the oven and continue baking for another 6 minutes, until the cookies are firming but moist. Remove from oven and let them cool. Enjoy – and tell me what you think.

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lavender final