Pizzocheri [ish]

Pizzocheri. “Peets-oh-keri” As you will soon see, this isn’t anywhere near authentic pizzocheri at all. I don’t know what else to call it though. It’s heavily inspired by Mark Bittman’s recipe here, in his NY Times column. Pizzocheri are actually buckwheat noodles and if I had any I would have used them. I would love to use that much butter, but I just can’t make myself do it. And potatoes with noodles is just too much starch for me. I thought sausage would be good in it too. Are you starting to understand the “ish“?

But honestly – you have heard me say this before – it’s your food. Cook it the way you like it. Cook the way you can, given what you have on hand. It’s the cooking that’s the thing. And given that, there are no hard and fast amounts in this recipe. I was cooking along nicely when it occured to me that this is going to be really good and I ought blog it, so I wasn’t measuring anything. These photos have that mellow weekday evening in the kitchen look about them -not great lighting for photographs according to conventional wisdom, but it doesn’t get any more real than this.

So – to get started, brown some spicy Italian sausage – a half pound or so. You can do them whole and slice them later as I did, or remove the casings and crumble as you brown them. Remove from the pan and set aside. In the same pan, heat 3 tablespoons butter and over low heat, saute about a pound and half of chopped cabbage – maybe half of a medium head, along with a good sized onion, cut in strips and a couple of celery stalks, cut in slices. Stirring frequently, cook until the cabbage is really getting limp and add a couple cloves of garlic that have been minced and a few sprigs of thyme [about 1/2 teaspoon dried if that is what you have]. Add sausage back to the pan and cook another 5 minutes. Layer half of the mixture in a greased baking dish.cabbage_sausage2Next, add a layer of whole wheat noodles [buckwheat if you have them of course]- a couple servings worth, cooked according to package directions, but pull them out a minute or two before they are completely done. Top the noodles with a good layer of grated romano or parmesan cheese, and then with the rest of the cabbage. Pour 1/3 of a cup of half and half [or milk] over the layers and press them together with the back of a spoon. Cover and bake for about 10 minutes in a 400ยบ oven.cheese_layerBack in your saute pan, melt a tablespoon or so of butter [this is sounding like a lot of butter I know, but the orginal dish had a cup I think] and stir in 3 slices worth of fresh bread crumbs. To make those, tear the bread in strips and zap in a food processor or what have you [I have a Magic Bullet I keep on the counter for little zapping jobs like this]. Don’t use the packaged bread crumbs – the minute it takes you to make the real deal is more than worth it. Remove the foil and spread the crumbs over the top and return to the oven for about 15 minutes, until the top looks like this – all toasty and browned. bakedThis made about 3 servings since it was all we had for dinner that night. It would go further if you add some sides like a salad or some green beans.platedLet’s take a closer lookcloser_lookYou might want to check out Mark Bittman’s blog on the New York Times website – it is here. His series of recipe videos called “The Minimilist” can also be found on Facebook, by searching his name there. I highly recommend them – no matter what your level of cooking expertise, you will find inspiration in what he does with food.

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Monday Morning Quarterbacking

We aren’t what you would call football fans here at casa dlyn. We don’t hate it though and usually catch a game or two through the season. I vastly prefer baseball and Larry doesn’t care much about sports at all except for the kind where you strap a ton or so of steel about your person and drive it ’round a circle for several hours. But what kind of Americans would we be if we didn’t watch the Superbowl? Besides – there are snacks!
There were two first half highlights. One – we didn’t know there was a new Star Trek movie. This makes us very happy. We like Star Trek. startrThis longest- touchdown-run-in-Superbowl-history was very cool. That “uneccesary roughness” business later in the game? Classless, dude.92Springsteen was ok. The steak sandwiches we had at halftime were really good though.springsteenEarly in the second half, I potted these plants. 3 bargain plants from Lowes in a planter Ellyn gave me for Christmas a couple years ago – I need to garden NOW!plantPeople on our cable system who really cared a lot about the game were probably kinda pissed off – the picture for NBC stations was awful for some reason.scoreHaving no dog in the hunt, we didn’t care who won, but it was a good game. At the end we were thinking that maybe next year, we ought to watch more football.

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Sunday

A pretty winter sunrise for Lauren’s home photo this week. She can’t get online as much where she is now, but she asked me to say hello to everyone. We can reasonably start counting the time in weeks now that there are just 8 of them left.We also lost a friend this week after a long tough battle with cancer. We will miss you Jo – but we will see you again.

Every blessing on your day friends.

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6 months ago – 6 months from now

In backing up files as I switch between two computers because I work for two companies that require different operating systems, I came across some [ok – 500] photos that I took on a particular summer day. I saved them for today because of the equidistant nature of the date. These photos were taken 6 months ago today. 6 months from now, these same plants will look just like this again. If you want to see what it looks like today where I took these, I direct you to my photo a day blog here and the post for January 29th.

I don’t always, but this time I have a distinct memory of taking these exact photos. It was a sublime summer day and spent hours working out there, weeding and deadheading and taking pictures. This daylily is called “Divertisment” and I got it two days before Anna was born when Ellyn and I visited a daylily farm near where they lived at the time in Virginia. They had goats there too.This is one of my favorite garden workhorse plants – a coneflower called “Magnus”. Utterly undemanding with the exception of preferring to be in the sun, it compliments just about everything else in the garden. I got this plant on a yearly expedition with my friends Judy and Karen a couple years ago – we always have a blast.And finally, another daylily, this one called “Mary’s Gold”. I got this one in Virginia too and I can’t recommend it highly enough – it is flawless.Okay – time for another pot of coffee and getting to work. Back to winter too, but they are all out there sleeping, waiting for their time to come around again.
click on photos for larger versions

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Cue “Jaws” music

The telltale first signredsquirreltailGetting his bearingsredsquirrel5Coming a little closerredsquirrel3Ending in the reconnoiter at the kitchen windowredsquirrel4I am starting to worry just a bit

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