This is post number six as I continue to quarantine. I’ve lost tract of exactly when I last went to the grocery–not for at least three weeks. In an effort to avoid going unnecessarily, I’ve come up with all sorts of creative cooking by looking to see what I can find in the pantry and refrigerator and inventing recipes, using what I already have. Here are three of my inventions.
When I was in Italy last November, I ate pasta with lemon creme sauce in two different restaurants in two different cities. I have managed to duplicate it using bucatini from Italy, lemons, and heavy cream. For two servings, cook about 1/2 pound of pasta. While pasta is cooking, use a potato peeler to peel of strips of rind from one lemon. Chop these strips into smaller pieces. Cut the lemon into quarters. When pasta is al dente, drain. Turn down the heat and melt 1/4 stick butter in the pan, add drained pasta and lemon rind. Take the lemon quarters and squeeze the juice into the pasta, add cream to taste–do not add too much. If you do not have cream–this time I had none in the refrigerator, do not worry. It is yummy without it.
I was out of most salad ingredients so the above salad is chopped cilantro topped with feta cheese, various kinds of olives, and olive oil.
While scrounging around in the freezer compartment, I found half pound of hamburger. I defrosted that and found a can of kidney beans in the pantry. I sautéed the lean hamburger in olive oil, then added the kidney beans. I did not have any tomatoes or tomato sauce so I dumped in a little organic ketchup. After stirring this together, I added berbere, a complex and a little hot spice from Ethiopia. I served this on top of basmati rice from Pakistan–I buy this in ten pound bags at an international grocery.
The salad ingredients were a gift from a friend who had to harvest all his arugula and lettuce because of freezing weather. While both of us were outside, he handed me a bagful of these goodies. I added some red cabbage I already had. Finally, I grated asiago cheese all over the top of everything. Cheese is a favorite food so I always have lots on hand.
The other food I always keep in the freezer is fish, usually salmon and cod loins. For this recipe, I defrosted the salmon and marinated it in teriyaki sauce and chopped up some onions and crystallized ginger. I sautéed the onions in olive oil, then added the salmon and crystallized ginger. When the salmon was almost done, I added some chopped, frozen, poblano peppers (when I knew this stay-at-home order was likely, I bought a lot of poblano peppers and froze them) and arugula. I served the finished dish over basmati rice.
Sometime in the next month or so–no definite date yet–my memoir/cookbook will come out, “You’re Gonna Eat That!? Adventures with Food, Family, and Friends.” It is filled with recipes using ingredients and methods I have learned in travels and growing up with my mom. Many of the recipes are vegetarian and could be vegan with minor adjustments.