Loaves & Dishes
By Jennie Geisler Erie Times-News staff blogger
Follow Jennie Geisler's kitchen adventures on her Loaves & Dishes blog.   Read more about this blog.
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Posts tagged ‘tomatoes’
Posted: August 7th, 2012

Thanks, Martha Stewart. Now I'm hungry.

Roasted tomatoes in any form are welcome in my gullet anytime.
Add goat cheese, sour cream and mustard, and I start start gazing off into space, distracted and oblivious.
I suppose there are some who would say I’m like that all the time, but they’d be wrong. It’s more like half the time: the half that I spend looking at delicious-looking recipes like this one.
Tomatoes are starting to come on in my garden. I’ve gotten about six smallish ones, and there are dozens and dozens of green ones.
I’ll be out of town for a week here pretty soon, and I’m worried I’ll miss a huge chunk of the harvest. Whatever I get, though, will find its way onto the puff pastry in this recipe. A combined spread of sour cream and dijon mustard, as well as goat cheese and herbs all promise layers and layers of flavor.
Last summer, I wrote about TOMATO COBBLER and it was my favorite Loaves & Dishes recipe of the year.
TOMATO AND GOAT CHEESE TART promises to be just as good.

Posted in: Uncategorized
Posted: June 5th, 2012

I should be rolling in these come August. At least that's my vision

Howdy, folks. Coming at you from beautiful Conneaut, Ohio, where I’m basking in the sun (gardening) and drinking my fill (gatorade).
How’s this for crazy: I planted 28 tomato plants. Mmmm hmmm.
OMG, you might say, WHY? Well, that’s what I’m saying. My mom and mother in law both gave me some, and couldn’t turn them down. When I was ready to put them in, I counted them for the first time. I felt my eyes get wide, but then I shrugged. You know? Tomatoes are the only reason I plant a garden anyway. I put in some other stuff: peas, peppers, carrots, lettuce and spinach more or less out of a sense of duty. Some onions and garlic are already growing. But I decided to be honest with myself. Last year I planted two rows of yellow and green beans and froze billions. Most of them are still in the freezer. Turns out I don’t really like beans. I’m kind of halfsies on potatoes, too. No beets this year. I like them, but not enough to give up precious tomato space.
In the end, I could have planted a whole other garden with all the stuff the moms gave me, but I knew I couldn’t handle it.
I figure I’m growing as a gardener (har har) because I know when to say when.
Right. Well, except for the 28 tomato plants.
I knew I’d be beyond hungry come dinner time, and I wasn’t going to want to go anywhere so I threw these in the fridge in the morning and cooked them up about 7 p.m. I was beyond thrilled to find that we were out of propane, and reveled in hauling the dagnabbed things back into the kitchen to cook under the broiler. Sigh.
They were good anyway.
Here’s how you’re supposed to make it:

GRILLED INDONESIAN CHICKEN
3/4 cup unsweetened coconut milk
1 onion, quartered
1/4 cup fish sauce
2 tablespoons finely chopped lemongrass (I used the pureed stuff Wegmans sells in a tube.)
2 tablespoons dark soy sauce
1 tablespoon packed brown sugar
1 tablespoon ground coriander
1 tablespoon ground cumin
3 cloves garlic, coarsely chopped
2 1/2 teaspoon tamarind paste (I couldn’t find this. See note for the substitute I found online)
1 serrano chili, seeded and coarsely chopped
1/2 inch fresh ginger, peeled and coarsely chopped
1 teaspoon ground cinnamon
1/2 teaspoon ground turmeric
1/4 teaspoon ground nutmeg
8 boneless chicken breasts (I used boneless skinless.)
salt and pepper to taste

1. Place the first 15 ingredients into a food processor. Pulse until smooth.
2. Combine 3/4 of the marinade with the chicken in a (enormous) zip top bag (or use a big old mixing bowl) Marinate several hours or overnight.
3. Set up the grill for indirect cooking at roughly 350 degrees.
4. Remove the chicken from the bag, salt and pepper and place on the well-oiled grill over the heated side. Sear the chicken by placing it skin-side down (unless you’re using skinless). Cook about 6 minutes, turning once.
5. Move the chicken to the cooler side of the grill and grill 20 to 25 minutes, brushing with remaining paste mixture and turning ojnce, or until the chicken is well-marked and the juices run clear.
– adapted from "Born to Grill," by Rob Rainford
Note: Substitute for tamarind paste: 1 tablespoon dates, 1 tablespoon prunes and 1 tablespoon dried apricots, all chopped. Cover with boiling water and let sit for 15 minutes. Add a tablespoon of fresh lemon juice and puree. That’ll make about 1/3 cup.

Posted in: Uncategorized

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