Monthly Archive for April, 2010

La Esquina de las Flores

La Esquina de las Flores is an all-veg, mostly organic restaurant and grocery that makes all its products. This is the place where I finally found tofu (a very happy day). They make delicious breads and whole-wheat empanadas and have a nice little café and takeout counter with yummy prepared meals. They also have a great selection of dried beans, flours, and of course, oatmeal.

La Esquina was opened by Angela B. Bianculli de Rodriguez (known affectionately as Angelita) 16 years ago, and it is a real vegetarian haven in Buenos Aires. The ladies who work there sport these frilly floral aprons and head scarves and are always so sweet to the hombrecito. And it doesn’t hurt that it’s three blocks from our apartment. Ryan eats lunch here just about every day. High praise indeed.

Vegetable Stock

Vegetable stock is one of those super-easy but essential elements of vegetarian cooking. You can use it as a base for soup, naturally, but it’s also used in risottos, for thinning sauces and lots of other ways. While the canned or boxed varieties are readily available in the US and other spots, for some odd reason, you can’t find it here. Yes, you can find vegetable bouillon cubes chock full of MSG and sodium, but not a decent vegetable broth. So, needless to say, I make this a lot.

And I’d really love to show you glorious photos of chopped vegetables, simmering pots and the like, but Houston, we have a problem. You see, my darling son, who is of the curious ilk, had a better idea. After I’d slaved over a hot stove for the better part of 2 hours*, chopping said vegetables, stirring and skimming said stock, straining and draining and then, finally, cooling the beautiful golden nectar, well…something happened. While I stepped away for the briefest of moments (it’s always those “briefest” of moments, isn’t it?), the hombrecito ever so casually dragged a chair over to the sink (where he spends hours pouring water from cup to cup), climbed up on said chair, discovered my cooled (don’t worry) and gorgeous vegetable stock and proceeded to pour the entire contents down the drain. Oh yes. Gone. All of it. Not even a smidgen left to salvage [cue sounds of quiet sobbing]. All I can say is the kid is lucky he’s cute. And you’ll just have to pretend there are photos.

* OK, most of this is cooking and cooling time, but I’m just being dramatic. As usual.

NOTES:
If I have other veggies lying around starting to look a bit limp and sad, I’ll toss them in the pot. The inner stems of swiss chard or kale are good too. The fluffy fronds from fennel (oh yes, I did just say that) work as well. And if you have a rind of Parmesan sitting in the freezer (I always seem to have, like, 10), toss that in during the simmering part.

Vegetable Stock

2-3 tablespoon olive oil
2 onions, roughly chopped
3 leeks, white and light green parts, cleaned carefully (nothing worse than dirt in your stock) and roughly chopped
2 carrots, unpeeled and chopped into 1″ pieces
3 stalks of celery, chopped into 1″ pieces
1 tomato, seeded and chopped
4 cloves garlic, smashed and roughly chopped
10 sprigs of thyme
10 sage leaves
2 bay leaves
Small handful of black peppercorns
½ cup decent white wine (no 2 Buck Chuck, please)
6-7 cups water

Heat the oil over medium heat. Toss in your onions, leeks, carrots and celery (as you’re chopping them is fine, if like me, you only have one lame-o cutting board). Let that cook for about 5-10 minutes, stirring frequently. Add the tomato, garlic, thyme and sage and cook for another 5 minutes. Add the wine, water, bay leaves and peppercorns and bring to a boil. Lower the heat and simmer, covered, for 30 minutes. Strain. Let cool or use immediately. Will keep in the fridge for a couple days.

Mushroom Stroganoff


Today was a very rainy day, which in the past, would’ve revolved around napping, watching movies and snacking. Now that we have a kid, there’s a lot less lazing about and more “How can we entertain this stir-crazy monster?,” but we still managed to lay around a bit. It was the kind of day that calls out for something warm and creamy, comforting and hearty…a mushroom stroganoff kind of day.

This recipe is based on one from my wonderful mother-in-law (yes, you read that right and yes, I know how lucky I am), who has managed to come up with some great vegetarian recipes for her son, and in turn, me. This is, in fact, Ryan’s favorite dish and when we were first dating, he didn’t want me to make it. My theory is that he was afraid I’d screw it up or something and then he’d have to break up with me. His fears were all for naught, however; I knocked it outta the park (not bragging, it’s just really easy to make), and it’s become a staple in our house. Thanks, Bev!

I think it’s best with egg noodles, but you can also serve it with rice or potatoes, which is the Russian way, apparently. I’m toying with the idea of adding puréed cannellini beans to up the protein content. Alternatively, you may be able to purée silken tofu and add that, but I’m not sure how that will impact the consistency. If someone out there wants to give it a try, please post a comment and let us know how it turns out!

NOTES: The amount of noodles you use depends on whether you’re a sauce-heavy or sauce-light individual; I’m all about the sauce; the ball & chain is the opposite, so we use about a pound and I take more of the yummy good stuff…works out perfectly for us. In BsAs, I use Casan Crem (Light), which is very similar to sour cream.

Mushroom Stroganoff

1 – 1½ pounds egg noodles, with or without yolks

2 tablespoons olive oil
1 large onion, chopped
1 garlic clove, minced
4 cups mushrooms, chopped (I use a mix of baby Bellas, shitake and button mushrooms, but you can use whatever you like)
1 tablespoon fresh thyme, minced
2 tablespoons tomato paste
¼ cup flour
1-¼ cups vegetable stock
2 tablespoons red wine
2 tablespoons Worcestershire sauce
1 tablespoon balsamic vinegar
1 cup light sour cream

Get your big pot of salted (or not) water boiling and toss in the noodles. As long as your ingredients are prepped, it should take you just about the same amount of time to cook the mushroom sauce as it does to cook the noodles, which works out nicely. Timing is everything, people.

Sauté the onion in olive oil over medium heat for 3 minutes or so. (I like to do this in a dutch oven/stockpot type pan, so you can add the noodles to the sauce at the end.) Add the garlic, stir around and then toss in the mushrooms and thyme. Cook until the mushrooms are softened and slightly shrunken (3-5 minutes). Add the tomato paste and gently coat the mushrooms without squishing them up too much, then add the flour and stir that in for a minute.

Slowly stir in your veggie stock and let it meld together with the tomato paste/flour-coated mushrooms and thicken up a bit. Toss in the wine, Worcestershire and balsamic (and if you don’t have one of these things, it’s really not a big deal. The world will keep spinning.) Salt and pepper to taste. Finish up with the sour cream, just incorporating it into the sauce so it’s heated through.

Turn off the heat and add your noodles, gently folding them into the sauce. Sprinkle some chopped ciboulette* if you’ve got them lying around and perhaps a dollop of sour cream on top, and you’re ready to eat!

* CHIVES! I actually couldn’t think of the English word at first. OMG, I am so becoming fluent, it’s like I can’t even THINK in English anymore. Ha. Not really.

French Onion Soup, Part Un


This is a recipe from my oldest sister, Alicia, who is not only a lovely and talented artist and photographer, but am amazing cook. She got this recipe from her seventh grade French teacher, Mme. Denton. It was all very exotic back in the day (a long, long time ago…); you know, there was beer in there! And some kind of cheese and bread *in* the soup! Hey, I was eight. This was earth-shattering stuff.



Nowadays, there’s a lot of talk about cooking onions in the oven rather than on the stovetop (don’t I sound like some kind of old-timer, sitting in a rocking chair on the porch, muttering about “a lot of talk?”). They say it’s easier because you don’t have to stir them, but that’s part of the joy of making this soup, I think. It’s the kind of soup you must tend to, not in a painstaking way, but in a puttering about the kitchen, sipping a glass of wine, nibbling on pieces of baguette and gruyère, occasionally stirring the onions in the pot kind of way. There’s something to be said for soup that’s tended to and nurtured gently on its way. It’s the whole cozy thing, which is one of the reasons I love to cook. Having said that, I do have another French onion soup recipe (coming, coming) that does cook the onions in the oven and it’s rather delicious. But it’s hardly low maintenance. Either way, whether you choose the stovetop or the oven, just please make this soup.


The onions, cooked very slowly in a pool of butter develop a lovely sweet and rich flavor. The beer adds a nice nutty and slightly bitter contrast to the sweetness of the onions. Add the baguette and gruyère and let it get all melty and gooey under the broiler and, well, there’s really nothing quite as satisfying. I like to serve this with a very simply dressed green salad and a robust cabernet sauvignon or malbec.

NOTE:
The original recipe calls for half beef stock and half chicken stock, but I use all vegetable stock, natch. I must confess that in my meat-cooking days, I used to use veal stock, which I got from the chef at the Old Homestead, a venerable steakhouse over on Hudson in the meatpacking district — before there was a meatpacking district, I might add (eek, that makes me really old). One day when I couldn’t find any good stock at Chelsea Market, I wandered in there and the chef actually GAVE me a tub of crazy-rich-almost-to-the-point-of-jelly veal stock. It really was marvelous. But those days are over and it’s quite alright, really. This soup is delicious with whatever stock you use.

Day 2 lazy version: cheese melted/bread on the side

French Onion Soup

1/2 stick (1/4 cup)/57 grams unsalted butter (or if you only have salted, just omit the salt below)
2 pounds (or about 4 medium) onions, peeled, then thinly sliced into rings
3 sprigs fresh thyme (couldn’t find it, so went with a tsp of dried)
3/4 teaspoon salt
1 bottle of a good dark beer (like Brooklyn Brown or one of those kooky mini-keg cans of Guinness)
6 cups vegetable stock
2 bay leaves
1/2 teaspoon black pepper
Baguette, cut into 1/2″ thick slices, on the diagonal
8 ounces Gruyère, grated
2 tablespoons, Parmesan, finely grated

Melt butter in a heavy-bottomed saucepan or Dutch oven over moderate heat. Separate the onion rings with your fingers into the pan, add the thyme and salt and cook uncovered, stirring regularly, for about 45 minutes. You want the onions to get very soft, but not turn brown. Add beer and cook covered for 5 minutes, followed by the stock, bay leaves and pepper. Bring to a boil, then reduce heat and simmer covered for another 30 minutes or so. Test for seasoning (keeping in mind you will add cheese that can be salty).

In the meantime, cut the bread and place on a sheet pan in a preheated oven set at 350ºF/180ºC. Turn once and cook until toasted and dry (about 15 minutes).

To serve the soup, ladle the soup into soup bowls (preferably something like this* — you can also do one giant one like this, but you’ll probably end up fighting over who gets which hunk of cheesy bread), place a slice or two of the dried bread (or croûte, which is the technical, sexier term) on top and cover with a healthy smattering of gruyère and a soupçon (sorry) of the Parmesan.

Stick the bowls under the broiler (or if you have a broiler in your oven, put them in a shallow pan and put that under the broiler) for a minute or two. You want the cheese to melt and start to turn a little brown.

NOTE: Most of us NYers and BsAsers have the teeny broiler thing under the oven, so sometimes a pan and the bowls won’t fit. So just stick the bowls in and be careful when you take them out! If your bowls won’t fit in either, you can do the bread and cheese on a small flat pan and then place them in the bowls after. Not to worry. Cheese melted onto bread any way possible is all that matters.

Bon appétit!

* I have these bowls at home, but as you can see from the photos, I have no proper substitute. Don’t laugh! It’s sad. And in case you’re just joining us, see this post. I’m limited, people. Limited. Sigh.

Zucchini Pie


I’m not exaggerating when I say that we probably eat this dish once a week. It’s one of those really easy, do-it-blindfolded recipes (okay, maybe not the grating part; that would be unwise) that we all love…and there’s just too little of (name that song). You can also throw in whatever veggie you have lying around in addition to the zucchini, like peppers, mushrooms, corn…you get the idea. It’s versatile, folks (I didn’t have any basil, but I did have some pesto on hand, so I tossed that in and it was fab). And oh so very easy.

And the kicker? My kid loves it too. Which, now that I think about it, is probably why we have it once a week. No one likes to have their food rejected…even by a toddler. Even if that’s what they do. Although, not mine. He’s an excellent eater. And yes, I realize I’ve just totally cursed myself by typing that. Thanks.

Zucchini Pie
Adapted from Real Simple

3 cups zucchini, grated
1 medium onion, chopped
1 cup whole wheat flour
1 cup grated provolone cheese (mozzarella or gouda work great too)
3 eggs, beaten (if you want to lower the cholesterol factor, you can use 2 yolks and 3 whites)
1/4 cup vegetable oil
2 tablespoons chopped fresh basil
1 teaspoon baking powder
1/2 teaspoon salt
1/2 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper
4 tablespoons grated Parmesan

Preheat oven to 350°F/180ºC. Combine all the ingredients in a large bowl, reserving 2 tablespoons of the Parmesan. Spoon the mixture into a 8″ round metal pan or a glass pie pan coated with vegetable cooking spray. Sprinkle the rest of the Parmesan on top and bake for 45 to 50 minutes or until golden brown. If the top isn’t browning, pop it under the broil for a minute or two (and DON’T walk away from the stove while you’re doing this!). Make sure you cool it at least 10 minutes before cutting into it or it will fall apart (yes, this little piggy learned that the hard way).