Showing posts with label beets. Show all posts
Showing posts with label beets. Show all posts

Tuesday, December 22, 2015

Beets > Cookies

Every other food blogger in the universe is sharing cookies for the holidays, and I am over here with some beets.

They are really good beets.

They are beets inspired by The Bachelor Farmer in Minneapolis. (Recommend!)

Those beets are described as Sweet and Sour, and are so very wonderfully so. Mine lean toward more of a balsamic marinated. Both are served on a luscious puddle of creme fraiche and herbs.

Given the life or death choice between these beets and a cookie, I am pretty sure that I would go with these beets.

I served them as a side for Thanksgiving, and I plan to include them in at least one Christmas menu, as well.

They are that good.

Really.

Beets > Cookies.



6 medium beets
olive oil
salt and pepper

Dressing:
1/4 cup balsamic vinegar
2 tablespoons olive oil
1/2 teaspoon salt
1/2 teaspoon pepper
1 tablespoon red wine vinegar (optional)

1 (8 oz) tub creme fraiche
2 tablespoons chopped fresh parsley, tarragon, or chervil

Peel beets and cut into bite-sized pieces. Toss with olive oil, salt and pepper. Roast in a covered baking dish at 375F until tender, approximately 1 hour.

Combine dressing ingredients. Toss with roasted beats. Allow to marinate while cooling to room temperature, stirring occassionally.

To serve, stir together creme fraiche and chopped herbs. Spread in a "puddle" on a plate or small platter. Arrange drained beets over cream. (Serves 4 to 6)


Tuesday, March 24, 2015

Losing My Mind

There are days that I think I am undeniably losing my mind.

If I don't add it to a list, I will not make the purchase at the store. If I have to walk into another room or up and down the stairs, I probably won't remember what I wanted to do when I get there. If I start cooking something that needs to simmer, I had better set the timer to check on it later, or it will probably boil dry from neglect. I had to turn the alerts on my washer and dryer back on because even though I seem to constantly be doing laundry, without a reminder, the last load of the day will sit in the machine until it stinks with gross dampness. I probably won't remember your name when I see you; so if I seem stuck up or aloof, I am sorry. In the middle of conversation, a word will leave me completely and totally and I will stammer like an idiot. And, to top it all off, one day not that long ago, I couldn't figure out how to shut off the water in our basement shower. I swear that it took me five minutes of frantically cranking the handles one way or another with the water changing from hot to cold, but never stopping.

The recent push for public awareness of Alzheimer's and other dementia does raise my level of hypochondria. There is a history of some issues on one side of my family, and my husband's family is living with the heartbreaking challenge of a member's diagnosis. I worry that my slips could be some early onset warning signs.

And then, there are times when my forgetfulness is delicious.

While vacationing, one of our lunches was at a bistro with Golden Beet Borscht as the soup of the day. Served with a simple quiche and a fresh tossed salad, that soup was light and delicate, but still flavorful. I knew it was something that I wanted to recreate when I returned home, and after finding a recipe to play with, I began cooking.

I sauteed onions and garlic, added potatoes, beets, cabbage, and zucchini, and simmered all the vegetables in stock. Turmeric boosted the color while dill and lemon brought a brightness. A dollop of sour cream on top was a departure from the bistro's borscht, but was a great contrast for the rich, earthy vegetables. My pot of soup was exquisite, and I proudly thought that I had nailed it.

Then, I looked back at the photos snapped during that trip and see that the bistro's golden beet borscht was creamy. It was still a brothy and light soup, not thick like a chowder, but absolutely creamy. Perhaps instead of that dollop of sour cream on the finished soup, a splash of heavy cream was swirled through the entire pot? It was decidedly not like mine. I had not nailed it.

My soup isn't, after all, a recreation of what we savored on vacation. My memory has, yet again, failed me. However, it failed me in a very delicious way.


(Adapted from Blue Apron)

1-2 tablespoons olive oil
kosher salt
freshly ground black pepper
1 small onion, diced
2 cloves garlic, minced
1 teaspoon turmeric
2 medium golden beets, peeled and cubed
1 pound Yukon Gold potatoes, peeled and cubed
1/4 head of cabbage, thinly sliced
6 cups vegetable stock
1 small zucchini, cubed 
juice of one lemon
1-2 tablespoons fresh dill, chopped (plus more for garnish)
1 1/2 tablespoons honey
4 tablespoons sour cream

Heat olive oil in a large pot.
Add the onion and season with salt and pepper. Cook, stirring often, until softened.
Add the garlic and heat just until fragrant.
Add the turmeric and cook, stirring, until toasted.
Add the beets and, again, season with salt and pepper. (May need to add a little more oil at the point to keep ingredients from burning.)
Cook, covered, but stirring often, until slightly softened.
Remove the lid and add the vegetable stock, potatoes, and cabbage. Bring the soup to a boil, then reduce heat to medium and simmer, stirring occasionally for about 10-15 minutes, until potatoes are tender.
Add the zucchini, lemon juice, dill, and honey and simmer a few minutes more until zucchini is slightly softened.
Remove from heat and serve each bowl topped with a dollop of sour cream and additional dill for garnish. (Serves 4)

Friday, January 18, 2013

Beet Red

My new-to-me car is beet red.

We hadn't planned to buy a new car in January, but fate? (bad) luck? something beyond my control forced our hand.

On December 27, during a routine drive to the next town for groceries, I totaled my car.

The day was gray, snowy, and blowy. As I set out, I briefly thought about how many times I had driven on roads made much worse by icy weather conditions. However as a nod to safety, I did reduce my speed (and was passed by 2 cars) and put my phone on the seat beside. About halfway through the drive, I met a vehicle that was driving down the center of the uncleared road. I pulled over to make room, and my passenger-side wheels dropped off the concrete highway onto the soft shoulder. This jolted me, and as soon as the car passed, I attempted to pull back onto the highway. In my haste, I over-corrected. My tires hit ice and sent me spinning in circles across the road into the opposite ditch.

My tracks in the snow tell us that I was sideways as I started down the very steep embankment and hit the first barbwire fence. That impact straightened my car to head nose down as I vaulted over an abandoned railroad right-of-way and through another woven wire fence. The combination of slippery, fresh, wet snow and my speed continued to propel me down another precipitous slope into a grove of trees on the banks of a narrow creek. The harrowing ride ended with my car buried about 2 car-lengths back into the broken shrubbery of the trees.

I was scared, shaken up, a little bruised by my seat belt, but fine. I totaled my car and wasn't harmed.

It happened so quickly. It almost didn't seem real as I unfastened my seat belt and sorted through the pile of mail and contents of my handbag that had ended up on the passenger seat floor to find my phone. Calls were made to 911 and my husband, assuring both that I was fine, but the car was not. I didn't cry until my husband arrived. Reports were filed. The car was moved and secured. We went on our way.

I am lucky. Fortunate. Blessed by a guardian angel. The accident could have been so much worse. There is no reason at all why my narrow-wheelbase, small SUV didn't roll as I first started the descent into that ditch.

I am taking it all as a sign. A sign to be more careful. A sign to be more aware. A sign to appreciate what I have. A sign to love more. A sign to do and be good. A sign to take care of myself and those I care about. And, of course, as a food blogger, sign to eat more things that I enjoy.

Winter salads might seem bland with unseasonal greens and tomatoes, but they don't have to be. Roasted Beet and Avocado Salad is a perfect way to get some beet red into your January (if you don't happen to buy a new car in that shade). The onion and mustard dressing provides just the right tangy balance to the earthy beets and creamy avocado.  This salad is hearty enough to stand on its own as a main dish lunch or light dinner, and would be a great side with grilled chicken or fish.


(adapted from Food and Wine)

4 medium beets, scrubbed
olive oil
1/2 cup water
kosher salt
fresh ground black pepper
1/2 cup finely chopped sweet onion
2 tablespoons red wine vinegar
2 tablespoons lemon juice
1 teaspoon Dijon mustard
1 teaspoon honey
1/2 cup mild vegetable oil
2 avocados, sliced

Preheat oven to 350F.
In a small baking dish, rub the beets with olive oil.
Season with salt and pepper.
Add the water.
Cover lightly with foil and roast for 2 to 2.5 hours, or until tender.
Allow to cool, then peel the beets and cut into 1/4-inch pieces.
Transfer to large bowl. 
Meanwhile, in a blender, combine the chopped onion with red wine vinegar, lemon juice, mustard and honey.
Season with salt and pepper and blend until smooth.
With the blender running, stream in the vegetable oil and 2 tablespoons of olive oil.
(Salad can be made ahead to this point and refrigerated.)
Add the avocado to the roasted beets. 
Pour the mustard and onion dressing over and toss gently to combine.
Season with salt and pepper to taste. (Serves 6)

Sunday, January 15, 2012

Haters Are Gonna Hate

I wasn't going to blog about this, but here I am. Blogging. Late at night. Words swirling in my mind. Thoughts trying to connect in a sensible order. A story feeling its way out of my head. Here I am, and I hope it is OK.

If you follow this blog at all, you know that I recently did a giveaway with a good friend that I have known since high school (which in total number of years is a lot longer than I care to admit...not that I don't appreciate having this friend in my life for such a long time, but I sometimes feel like I am still in my early 20s and having a friend for 20+ years just seems...well, OLD...yikes). Anyway, this friend and I collaborated, and with our own funds provided a total of $100 worth of Pampered Chef products to 2 lucky, randomly drawn winners. (key words: RANDOMLY DRAWN)

Readers from across the nation commented and entered. Traffic wasn't outrageously out of the ordinary, but people that have been reading this blog came out of the darkness and let us know they were here. Every new Pampered Chef wish list made me smile, and references to the recipes I have shared made me giddy. It was an extremely fun week of reading what you had to say. I liked it.

When the day of the magical drawing arrived, I was busy with life outside of the online world but just as anxious to learn who the winners would be as all of those that had entered the contest. I had considered using an online random number generator to chose the winners. However, as the hours ticked by and I still hadn't had time to research that option, I decided that an old school, name in the hat, or Pampered Chef Batter Bowl, would do. I detailed this process in my blog post announcing the winners. I hoped that everyone would find it fair. But, everyone didn't.

The day after the winners were announced, someone chose to reach out to me with their grievances. It was done anonymously through the contact form here on the blog and with a bogus email. This person was angry. This person felt cheated. This person called me a liar.

It seems that this person also must have local ties to my area. I am not sure how else to explain the so-called "information" they spewed in such ugly terms. You see, both of the winners that I randomly drew--with my eyes closed--from my Pampered Chef Batter Bowl have ties to the specific area where I live. This was the reason for the hate mail. They felt I had rigged the drawing to hand-choose people that I knew.

I didn't. The names drawn were PURELY BY CHANCE. In fact, if the totally honest, cross-my-heart-and-hope-to-die truth be told, when I drew two names that I personally knew, I thought about throwing them back and drawing again. Really. I had hoped this giveaway would give me an opportunity to get to know a broader selection of my readers. I had hoped for a chance to reach out and build new relationships. Drawing names of people new to me fit that sort of PR idea, but that isn't what happened. That wasn't the luck of the random draw. I randomly drew names of people that I knew, and I honestly stuck with those two winners.

And so, I received hate mail. At first, it upset me, but now I am shrugging it off. (Kinda, I guess...if I shrugged it off totally, I wouldn't be blogging about it, huh?) I am going to choose to believe that it wouldn't matter which names jumped into my hand when I did the drawings. Some people are never happy. Haters are gonna hate.

And, as for a recipe to go with this rambling, whining, not-sure-what-the-whole-point-of-this-is tale? How about Beet Marmalade? Beets are a polarizing vegetable. People love them. People hate them. When I found a Beet Marmalade on Pinterest toward the end of summer, I knew that my love for beets demanded that I make it. The earthiness of the beets pairs really well with the citrus and ginger. I like it spread on biscuits or toast, but it could make an interesting appetizer with goat cheese on crackers. I love Beet Marmalade, and it doesn't bother me that the haters are gonna hate.

 Beet Marmalade
(adapted from Lemons and Lavender)

4-6 medium-large red beets
2 cups sugar
2 large lemons
2 tablespoons chopped fresh ginger

Preheat oven to 375 degrees.
Trim the beets leaving about a half inch of stalk intact and remove the thin root end.
Wrap each beet with foil and place on baking sheet in oven for about 45 minutes to an hour. (Beets are done when they yield to pressure.)
Cool and peel. (If you are messy like me, don't wear white. Beets are colorful, to say the least.)
Place the beets in a food processor and pulse until coarsely chopped. (I went for an apple sauce-like consistency.)
Transfer the beets to a heavy saucepan and stir in the sugar.
Cut the lemons, skin and all, into large chunks (remove all seeds) and place in food processor along with the chopped ginger and pulse until finely chopped.
Add the chopped lemon and ginger to the beets and sugar and stir to blend.
Cook over medium-low heat, stirring often, until the marmalade has thickened a little, about 2-5 minutes.
Ladle into hot, sterilized jars leaving 1/4-inch headspace, and seal.
Process in boiling-water bath for 15 minutes.

Saturday, November 20, 2010

Beet It

They Told Him Don't You Ever Come Around Here
Don't Wanna See Your Face, You Better Disappear
The Fire's In Their Eyes And Their Words Are Really Clear
So Beat It, Just Beat It
(Michael Jackson - lyrics "Beat It")

I know someone that probably wishes this song was about beets. She hates this red-fleshed, root vegetable with an intense passion that most reserve for politicians with bad hair. She would love to never see their face, and hopes that they disappear. For her, beets could beat it.

As for me, up until about a year ago, I was indifferent to beets. I had honestly never tried more than just a pickled slice served up as garnish on a restaurant plate. They were foreign to me. It wasn't that I didn't want them to come around. It wasn't that I didn't want to see their face, or for them to disappear. I just didn't know them.

A couple of other friends convinced me to give beets a try, and I am so glad that I did. One of my current favorite sides for meatloaf is Roasted Potatoes and Beets. Conventional methods for roasting beets leave them whole until after cooking, but I peel and cube the beets to roughly the same size as my potatoes. The red beets stain my tender, buttery Yukon Gold potatoes a little pink as I toss them together with the olive oil and seasonings, and both crisp on the outside with an almost caramelized crust. Hubs dips his in the ketchup along side the meatloaf. I like a dollop of sour cream and an extra grind of fresh cracked black pepper. Either way, I don't want beets to beat it. I want Roasted Potatoes and Beets to come around On My Plate.


1 -2 beets, peeled and cut into 1/2" - 3/4" cubes
3-4 potatoes, scrubbed and cut into 1/2" - 3/4" cubes (or an equal amount of baby potatoes halved)
2 tablespoons olive oil
1/2 teaspoon kosher salt
1/2 teaspoon fresh cracked black pepper

Preheat oven to 400 degrees.
Line a sheet pan with foil (for easy clean up).
Toss beets and potatoes with olive oil, salt, and pepper on sheet pan.
Cover with foil and roast for 15-20 minutes.
Remove foil, stir vegetables, and roast for 15 more minutes until crispy on outside and tender on inside. (Serves 2-4)
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