Spiced Chocolate Shortbread Cookies

Spiced-Chocolate Shortbread Cookies

Remember a couple of days ago, when I said I was going to lay off the baking and hefty eating until I fully recovered from Thanksgiving week eating?  Yeah, about that…

…it didn’t happen.  See, I found myself with an unexpected morning off this week.  And it just happened to be in the middle of a massive snow storm.  And I had to shovel.  That’s hard work, you know.  You’ve really got to keep your strength up if you’re going to be shoveling lots of heavy, wet snow.  So the butter came out to soften and my holiday baking was underway.

I started with these spiced chocolate shortbread fingers.  They are the perfect cookie to bake when you’re snowed in, relying on just a few staple ingredients you can almost always count on having on hand: butter, flour, cocoa, sugar ‘n spice.  The flavor of the shortbread actually intensifies after sitting for a few days, making them an excellent treat for gifting.  Plus, waiting for them to age to perfection buys me some more salad time.  It all makes perfect sense, right?  Right.

[Read more…]

Sausage, Fennel & Gruyère Miniature Egg Stratas

Sausage, Fennel, and Gruyère Mini Egg Stratas Pecan and apple pie aside, if I had to choose just 1 thing to load my plate with on Thanksgiving, it would be the stuffing.  I mean, as a carb-aholic what’s not to love?  And you can have so much fun with it!  Herbs, sausage, nuts, veggies, I can’t wait…

…except this year, I won’t be spending Thanksgiving on American soil.  I doubt I’ll have a traditional Thanksgiving dinner unless I figure out a way to cook turkey and stuffing on a 2 burner cooktop in a teeny studio apartment.  But I couldn’t let a year go by without experiencing the essence of Thanksgiving so I concocted these stuffing-inspired egg strata muffins.  They’re made with sausage, sautéed fennel and onions, Gruyère, and toasted bread, soaked overnight in a rich egg custard.  They walk a thin line between strata, savory bread pudding, and something Matt refers to as “cowboy breakfast” and the rest of us simply call “egg bake”.  And for me, they taste exactly like everything good about the holidays, wrapped up into 1 neat little package.  

So, of course, it tastes good, but here’s the other reason everyone loves strata: it’s assembled the night before you serve it, which means you get to brunch without busting out a mess of bowls and pans first thing in the morning.  And if that’s not good enough, these mini stratas bake in half the time of a big strata.

[Read more…]

Rosemary & Aged Provolone Gougères

GougèresGenerous, caring, and nurturing-that’s me.

There was a very big football game for us folks in the Midwest this Sunday (or so I hear) and I was nice enough to make Matt a basket of warm Gougères to munch with his beer while watching the game.

Dream girlfriend, I know.  Totally selfless.

Reality?  I just want something to eat with my Champagne when I get home from work on New Year’s Eve, so I whipped up a batch of Gougères.  Also, I detest watching football so I thought I’d cook up something blog-worthy so I could type the afternoon away instead of being forced to sit in front of the TV, pretending to care about the most painfully boring sport in existence.

[Read more…]

Candied Kumquat & Mascarpone Tart

Candied Kumquat & Mascarpone Tart with Spiced Chocolate Crust




Candied Kumquats?!?  Thought you were going to do something with all those candied orange peels…

I will, I will, but first let me tell you all about my candied kumquat tart.  What can I say?  I’m a big fan of citrus.  Especially this time of year and especially when it is candied.  Big fan.

Also, I’m a big fan of concocting desserts tailored specifically to my taste buds.  Today we’re looking at a spiced chocolate crust filled with lightly sweetened mascarpone and topped with cinnamon ‘n clove glazed kumquat slices.  This tart has my bases (and dessert biases) covered: just enough chocolate, creamy and decadent without being too rich, and bright with citrus. Added bonus, the kumquats are super shiny and I would bet if you parked this tart near a twinkling Christmas tree, it would positively sparkle.

Candied Kumquat & Mascarpone Tart with Spiced Chocolate Crust

[Read more…]

Pork Roulade with Caramelized Fennel & Onions

This pork roast is so good.  It tastes so familiar, so comforting, so homey.  It tastes like autumn Sundays of my childhood.

So, now what?  Am I about to share my mother’s top-secret, time-honored recipe for pancetta wrapped pork loin roulade with caramelized fennel and onions?

No, I’m not.  No, the only “roulade-ing” I remember my mother doing those days involved corned beef and cream cheese (which is still delicious, but not the point).  In fact, I doubt anything pancetta-wrapped or caramelized fennel-stuffed came out of her kitchen pre-2002.

So why does this pork remind me so strongly of my youth?  It’s like we’ve met before, I just can’t pinpoint where.  Did one of my grandmothers make something like this?  An aunt?  A friend…

It finally dawned on me.

It’s not the finished product- it’s the process of making it that seems so familiar.  It’s spending a Sunday afternoon at home, the smell of onions cooking, padding through the kitchen to give something an occasional stir, wearing your grandma’s old “kiss the cook” apron, the sound of a football game on in the background.  That’s what I remember from my childhood; that’s what I find so comforting and satisfying.

But you didn’t come here for sap.  You came because you’re hungry!  Let’s cook.

Flavor Agents, report for duty.  Red onions, fennel, apples, walnuts.

Let’s take our fennel and onions from crisp and sharp to dark, concentrated, and sweet.

 

 

 

 

Unroll your pork and pound.  Work out those frustrations.  You’d never have this much fun just popping something in the microwave.

 

 

 

 

 

Let’s put it all together now.  Spread on the onions, roll up the pork, wrap with pancetta.  It’s like a pork on pork jelly roll…I wish I looked this good in pink.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Brown on the stove and place over apples, onions, and Brussels sprouts.  Add cider and you’re oven-ready.

 

 

 

 

 

Roast, let rest.  Mash potatoes, open some wine, and call your mom if she’s not across the table from you.


Pork Roulade with Caramelized Fennel & Onions
 
Prep time
Cook time
Total time
 
This pork roast could easily be assembled the day before you plan to serve it. I served it with brussel sprouts, roasted in the same pan and mashed potatoes. It would be delicious served with polenta or squash puree as well.
Author:
Serves: 4-6
Ingredients
  • 2 medium Red Onions, sliced
  • 1 bulb Fennel, sliced
  • ½ c. Walnuts, chopped
  • 2# Pork Loin Roast
  • ¼# Pancetta, thinly sliced
  • Fresh Rosemary
  • Fresh Sage
  • 1 c. Apple Cider
  • 3 Apples, cut into wedges
  • 2 small White Onions, halved
  • Extra Virgin Olive Oil
  • Butter
Instructions
  1. Heat 1 Tbsp. butter and 1 Tbsp. olive oil together over medium-low heat. Add sliced onions and fennel, season with salt and pepper, and caramelize slowly over low heat, about 2 hours, stirring occassionally. Add 1 tsp. chopped rosemary and walnuts towards the end and season as neccesary.
  2. Preheat oven to 400°.
  3. Roll cut pork loin to create a rectangle. Pound to even thickness and sprinkle with salt and pepper.
  4. Spread flattened pork with onion-fennel mixture and roll.
  5. Cover rolled pork loin with slightly overlapping slices of pancetta and secure with cooking twine. Tuck sprigs of sage and rosemary under twine.
  6. Place apple wedges and halved white onions (and brussel sprouts, if desired) in roasting pan.
  7. Heat 1 Tbsp. olive oil in large skillet over medium-high heat and brown pork evenly on all sides, about 10 minutes.
  8. Place browned pork over apples and onions.
  9. Pour apple cider into skillet and bring to boil, scraping up brown bits. Pour in roasting pan.
  10. Roast pork about 1 hour, until internal temperature reaches 140°.
  11. Remove roast, apples, onions, and brussel sprouts from pan and tent under foil for half hour before slicing and serving.
  12. While pork is resting, strain pan juices, skim fat from top, and reduce in small sauce pan. Remove from heat and finish with 1 Tbsp. butter.