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Showing posts with label #Facebook. Show all posts
Showing posts with label #Facebook. Show all posts

Thursday, January 27, 2022

The joy of brown butter sauce

 

Ravioli with brown butter sauce
Salad of sliced pear, radish, and blue cheese
chardonnay
a menu fit for a fine restaurant

In my recent no-holds-barred cleanout of my refrigerator and freezer, I discovered a twelve-pack of frozen wild mushroom/truffle ravioli. No idea when or why I got them, though I think I expected them to be smaller, appetizer size, and they must have been on sale. I have blogged about this before, so if I’m repeating myself, please forgive me.

My dilemma was what do you put on mushroom/truffle pasta. Eating it without any sauce did not appeal. Both marinara and Alfredo would smother the ravioli, I thought. I took the problem to the Facebook page of “Not the New York Times Cooking Community” (it used to the “The New York Times Cooking Community” until the newspaper disowned us). A wide variety of voices contribute ideas, recipes, pictures, equipment recommendations, renovation suggestions. Some of the contributors are way above my grade level, especially in baking, and I suspect some professional chefs lurk. Occasionally someone will get testy, but generally it’s a good-natured group.

And they are willing to answer questions, so I posed my dilemma and was deluged with answers. I bet I got a hundred responses, everything from marinara lightened with cream to pasta water and butter. Cream sauce, either as is or reduced, was mentioned several times. Someone suggested butter and sherry vinegar, someone else, Hollandaise, which I love but think might also have overwhelmed, and someone said pesto. But the one sauce that showed up most often was brown butter with sage.

I knew about brown butter of course, have eaten dishes incorporating it in restaurants, but never worked with it at home. Truth: I was a bit intimidated. But I found a recipe that was specific for ravioli and adapted it, both in amount and ingredients. The recipe called for chopped walnuts, which I thought added the wrong texture (I don’t like to find nuts in my salads either). It also called for a tiny bit of fresh spinach, which I think would have been wonderful for taste and visual appeal, but I didn’t have any and wasn’t going to the store for a quarter pound of spinach. Fresh sage was specified—my neighbor offered hers, but I have rubbed sage in the fridge and thought it would be fine. So I set about my experiment.

Because in the cottage I can’t cook two things at once, I made the sauce first. It takes a long time to brown butter without burning it, slow and easy and lots of stirring. I wasn’t sure what shade brown I was looking for, but I kept stirring until the butter smelled nutty and looked fairly brown. Some time in the stirring I added minced garlic, but I think another time pressed would work better—if I didn’t want tiny pieces of nuts, I didn’t want to chomp down on a mince of garlic either. You want the garlic to turn golden without burning.

I pulled the sauce from the hot plate and made plated salads of sliced pear, fresh radish, and blue cheese, dressed with a light olive oil and lemon vinaigrette and garnished with watercress. And then it was time to cook the ravioli—a new procedure for me. The trick they say is to let them pop to the surface of the water, but they popped so quickly I knew they weren’t done. I guessed at the timing and ended up with them a bit too much on the al dente side.

Showtime: ravioli in soup plates, with the sauce over them. And oops, much later I realized I had forgotten the sage. I still have six ravioli in the freezer, so next time. It was a good learning lesson and a good dinner besides. Here’s what I recommend:

Ravioli with brown butter and sage

Three or four medium size ravioli per person (some will be ambitious and make their own, but in spite of having made pasta years ago, I’m going to buy frozen)

1 clove garlic, pressed

4 or 5 Tbsp. butter (no substitutes)

½ tsp. dried sage or a handful of fresh leaves

¼ lb. fresh spinach (frozen will not work)

Salt and pepper

Parmesan or pecorino

 

For the ravioli: bring a large pot of salted water to a boil. Cook ravioli until tender. If you’re lucky, the package will give you a guide to time. Drain, reserving ¼ cup pasta water.

Put butter in a large skillet and melt over medium-low heat, stirring all the time. The butter will sizzle and them foam—add the pressed garlic at this point and keep stirring until it is a deep, golden-brown. At least five minutes, though it seemed a lot longer. Remove from heat and stir in sage. Add spinach and reserved pasta water and stir. Put cooked ravioli in the skillet. Toss to coat and briefly reheat at a low setting. To serve, sprinkle with grated Parmesan or Pecorino and optional cracked pepper.

A bonus: I had leftover brown butter, so last night I used it to brown ground sirloin for Hamburger Stroganoff. Added a bit of new flavor! I think I’ll find lots of uses for brown butter now and may store some in the freezer.

Sunday, September 8, 2013

Good food on a long weekend

This has been a lazy weekend. I've floated through it with almost an other-worldly feeling--maybe chalk that up to two intense naps, but I've enjoyed it. If anything but sleep has filled my weekend, it's good food.
Friday night for supper I entertained a friend--while Elizabeth fed Jacob scrambled eggs in her apartment, and he was thrilled. I fixed a '60s meal--vichyssoise and Caesar salad. For the vichyssoise I refer you to Peg Cochran's post on Mystery Lovers' Kitchen http://www.mysteryloverskitchen.com/search/label/Vichysoisse, and easy recipe. I thought I'd over-peppered it until I added the cream--and then it needed more pepper and salt both. But so good. For the Caesar salad, I used the recipe in the original Joy of Cooking. That page is splattered almost beyond reading, testimony to the fact that I've used it a lot. But not for a while. It tasted so good, and the leftovers from that meal made a great Saturday lunch. One note: start marinating the oil for your home-made croutons twenty-four hours before serving.
Tonight, it was salmon cakes and roasted cabbage. Elizabeth has taught me a new trick about salmon cakes--or croquettes. Several years ago I gave up trying to make the logs my mom used to make and made patties--so much easier to brown. But I still, per Mom's instructions, used finely ground cracker crumbs as filling and coating. Elizabeth doesn't coat them in anything, and they're much easier to brown and stay together better.

Salmon cakes
Drain one 15 oz. can salmon, discard vertebrae and black skin (nothing bad happens if you don't)
Add two eggs
Chopped scallions, probably two
Dash Worcestershire
A good pinch of dry mustard
Stir together and add enough finely ground saltine crackers to make the mixture hold its shape
Shape into patties and brown in skillet
Serve with lemon

Absolutely one of my favorite foods. Elizabeth wants hers gluten free, so she made them with almond flour. Also great--I've eaten them and can't tell the difference.

Roast cabbage wedge--this recipe has been making the rounds on Facebook, so you may have seen it. Still it was so good, I want to recommend it.

Cut on medium size head of cabbage into four wedges.
Put each wedge on a heavy-duty sheet of foil, large enough to fold around it
Spread butter on each cut side of the cabbage wedge
Sprinkle with salt, pepper, and garlic powder
Drape one half slice of bacon over each wedge
Wrap foil tightly around and bake.
The recipe calls for putting on the grill, but I wasn't about to fire up the grill for two pieces of cabbage (I made these last night). So I put them in a 350 oven for 30 minutes. When I tested them, they were still way too firm. So I let them cook another 30 minutes and cool. Tonight I reheated them, and they were succulent and terrific. Somehow I got a taste of clove--must be something in the cabbage.
We topped the meal off with fresh strawberries. Delightful dinner.
Now I have half a head of cabbage left over. I'll use it plus another head next weekend for vinegar cole slaw for eight or nine people. Jordan, who says she doesn't eat cole slaw, loved it with vinegar last week.