February, my bloggy friends, was a really terrible month in ways large and small around here. I, for one, am glad to see the last of it.

    To celebrate the coming of spring and the end of a stressful winter I have been buying garden seeds, leafing through the endless catalogs showcasing this year's new varieties in annuals (despite my constant intention to use more perennials I am regularly seduced by the flash and color of the here-today-gone-tomorrow) and learning the ins and outs of my brand-new (to me - a virtual friend bought it and never used it and so very generously gifted me) dehydrator. Oh, and Brainiac bought me a meat grinder - yes, it's true. Odd and true, come to think of it, but that's the kind of spur-of-the-moment guy he is and I'm happy to have another toy to entertain me in the kitchen.

    Now, about that cornmeal. Because there's not much I'm willing to buy food-wise if it only has one use (the notable exception to this is my zester which is pretty much only good for zesting but is so spectacularly good at it that I forgive its monotasking nature) I wanted to find more uses for cornmeal besides just making the odd bit of cornbread or muffins. Cornmeal is fairly new to me as an ingredient and pantry-staple so imagine my surprise to find out that it's actually flexible, not to mention useful. Within the space of a few days upon setting out to find more uses for the quite large quantity I purchased for the cornbread I made cornmeal waffles, empanadas, and spoon bread (sort of a cross between a pudding and cornbread). Each was delicious and worth sharing.

    The empanadas in particular are easy and quite tasty. Not only are they good for using up leftovers because they can take up almost any kind of meat, veggies, fruit or cheese (I used thick leftover black bean soup and grated cheddar cheese), but they can be frozen unbaked - making them great for last minute meals and fast-food avoidance. You can make lots of teeny-tiny ones in advance of a party or large ones to serve as an entree with perhaps a green salad. They can be savory or sweet and if you happen to have kids around who like working with play clay, as I do, you can enlist them to help and in no time you'll have a couple dozen ready for baking or freezing.

    To produce a good number of empanadas (how many you make from this recipe will depend upon the size you make them), mix one cup each corn meal and all-purpose flour. Add in 1 teaspoon each of baking powder and salt and blend well. Melt a quarter cup of butter and add to the flour mixture along with a half-cup of water. Mix the dough thoroughly - it should be soft, but not sticky and easily pliable. Add a bit more flour or water as needed, and then knead the dough by hand for two minutes. To make an empanada, pinch off some dough - I used a bit about the size of a golf ball - and press it into your palm so that it's flattened into a disk. Place your filling inside (for this amount of dough, this would be about a tablespoon of filling, but you may need to experiment a bit) and fold the disk over so that a little crescent-shaped "pie" results. Put the empanada down on a prepared cookie sheet and press the seal closed with the tines of a fork. Brush with an egg and water wash. At this point, the empanadas may be frozen on the sheet and moved to a bag when solid, or baked at 375 for about 25 minutes, or until golden and hollow sounding when tapped.

    For fillings, pretty much anything goes. I used leftover black bean soup and grated cheddar cheese, as I said, but you can chop up some cooked steak and mix in some sauteed onions or maybe some mushrooms and thyme would be nice. For sweet empanadas, stewed apples are lovely, as it pumpkin butter (sprinkle a just bit of sugar on top of sweet ones for added crunch and flavor).

    Like so many of the best things to eat, empanadas have cousins from all over the world. Ravioli, pirogies, piroshky, pyrizhky, and any number of dumplings are all evidence of cooks' zeal to package up bits and pieces of things in pastry. Given the general lack of authenticity in my own recipe, but for the cornmeal (for which one may substitute a second cup of flour), what we have here can be called more or less accurately any number of things. No matter what you decide to call yours, enjoy them, for seldom will a recipe allow so much leeway for such a consistently delicious result.

Post Title


Post URL

https://beat-hairstyles.blogspot.com/2007/03/february-my-bloggy-friends-was-really.html


Visit Trend Wallpapers And Desktop Background for Daily Updated Wedding Dresses Collection
    I had plans this morning to come here and share more ideas of what you can do with the cornmeal you undoubtedly ran out and bought so you could make cornbread. Instead, I am typing this from bed where I am also bidding goodbye to the last notions I had that I am not actually sick.

    Another day, then, for the empanadas, cornmeal waffles, polenta, and spoonbread. Today my food concerns are a bit more pedestrian - what to feed the kids when thinking of food at all leads to unwelcome lurching in the mid-section?

    There's always eggs and toast, of course, although I find that cooking eggs while I'm under the weather does nothing at all for improving my physical state. Buttered noodles work well, particularly rotini, the shape of which seems to distract the kids from noticing that I have neglected to add veggies or meat to the bowl (if I'm up to it, a generous sprinkling of grated Parmesan and some cracked black pepper in my bowl are wonderfully self-nurturing).

    If soup is called for, I break out one of my boxes of pre-made broth. I do try to keep homemade on hand, but it's usually frozen so doesn't work well for last-minute needs. You can buy excellent organic veggie and chicken broths at many groceries these days, making them great pantry staples, so don't feel shy about keeping and using them. Heated broth with maybe some diced onion, frozen peas, a bit of kale and some of those teeny-tiny dried ravioli or tortellini make a great, last minute soup that's quick and delicious. You can also use celery, drained and rinsed beans, rice or anything at all that you have lying around and looks good and before you know it soup's on and you're off the hook for another few hours.

    I've also been known to make beer bread, serve it warm and buttered along with applesauce or a clementine or something and call it a day (this approach has the added benefit of resulting in leftover bread, so you can serve it again the next day if events regrettably come to that). Because the bread has all of three ingredients it's crazy fast to make, the only requirement being that you need to remember to get it started a little more than an hour before you want it (maybe an hour and a half before, to include mixing and cooling time).

    No matter what is served and no matter how it is made or procured, don't forget to include the kids in what you are doing and why. As impatient as you may feel and as intolerant of spills and dropsies as you might be (believe me, I have bitten my own tongue so often that it may well be perforated), tolerating kitchen mayhem now could lead to you one day hearing, as I did today, "Mommy, if you need to lie down it's o.k. I will pour Entropy Girl's juice and grind the coffee beans for you. Would you like some cinnamon toast?"

    And with that, I feel better already.

Post Title


Post URL

https://beat-hairstyles.blogspot.com/2007/02/i-had-plans-this-morning-to-come-here.html


Visit Trend Wallpapers And Desktop Background for Daily Updated Wedding Dresses Collection

Popular Posts

My Blog List

Blog Archive