Kid-Friendly Spinach Tart

8 05 2010

The preschool that my kids attend is outfitted with a miniature kitchen so they can learn “practical life.” My youngest spends the bulk of her time there, making lemonade and then cleaning her own cup, spooning her own yogurt for snack, and one on spectacular day, grating nutmeg. After all my years in the kitchen, I’d never seen a whole nutmeg until I saw her pick one up and begin to scrape it against the diminutive grater. All winter they’ve been asking to repeat this project at home. This week, I finally let them. I needed nutmeg for a spinach tart. I also needed to occupy them while I got the rest of dinner ready. Grating nutmeg happily solved both.

Parents might wonder about the safety of little hands using a box grater. I know I did. (And obviously trust your instinct with your own children – this is not Fisher Price, and accidents can happen.) I reminded them how to hold the nutmeg so their knuckles wouldn’t accidentally hit, told them to go slowly, and did a quick demo. If my son had been older, he would’ve rolled his eyes. Instead, he said “I knowww, mom. We do this at school,” in a voice much older than his five years. At school, they use a clean (i.e. never-painted-with) paintbrush and sweep the fragrant powder into a thimble-sized bowl. We scooped it into my measuring spoon and dumped it into the bowl, me delighting in the extra flavor the freshly-ground spice would impart, them in the pride at being allowed to help in such a grown-up way.

There are other ways for kids to help with this recipe. Washing spinach is always a favorite. They can crack eggs and measure cottage cheese and stir. After all this helping, they might be so invested in the recipe, they’ll actually eat the tart.

Speaking of which, I make this in spring and early summer with fresh spinach, and substitute beet greens in the fall and winter. This one was made with beet greens from a huge crop of beets I picked at last fall’s CSA harvest festival. I blanched and froze them in 10-ounce packages specifically for this recipe. I opted to use the whole leaf, stem and all, but if you’re serving it to friends or have picky kids, I’d suggest chopping off all but the green leaves. The stems, like the beet to which they used to be attached, turn everything they touch red.

Spinach Tart

1 9-inch pie shell, unbaked (I make one with 100% whole-wheat flour)
10 ounces of chopped cooked spinach or other greens (weight after cooking)
3 eggs, beaten
1 cup cottage cheese
1/2 cup grated parmesan
1/2 cup buttermilk
1/4 tsp salt
1/4 tsp pepper
1/16 tsp grated nutmeg

Preheat oven to 425. Make pie crust using your favorite recipe, prick all over and bake for 12 minutes. Remove and set aside. Turn heat to 375. Cook spinach (or thaw a package of frozen) and press out all the water. Mix eggs, cheeses, buttermilk and spices. Add spinach and mix well. Pour into pie shell and bake 40 minutes or until filling is set.





Lemony Lentil Soup with Greens

28 04 2010

You’ve probably noticed how many recipes this month call for lemons. The reason has less to do with seasonality — Meyer lemons are actually at their peak from November to January — than with flavor profile. Indeed, the word most commonly bandied about by food writers when referring to lemons is “brightness,” which definitely described the sun coming through my windows today.

So it was the lemons in this recipe for Lemony Lentil Soup with Greens that caught my eye. Lentil soup might sound better in late fall or winter, but with the bright (ha, ha) addition of lemon juice and lemon zest, this healthy soup pairs perfectly with spring. It also puts to use all those greens that are popping up right now at the farmers’ market.

If you haven’t cooked much with lentils, you should. They’re high in protein and fiber, and unlike other legumes such as beans, they don’t require pre-soaking. I like to make my own chicken stock, but if you use store-bought chicken or vegetable stock you can have this hearty soup ready for dinner in no time. I started it after I dropped my son off at soccer practice. By the time he walked in the door an hour later it was done and I was building block towers with his little sister.

Click here for the recipe for Lemony Lentil Soup with Greens.





Don’t Miss This Gourmet

14 10 2009

Earlier this week I wrote about how I’ve torn recipes from old issues of Gourmet and put them in a 3-ring binder to make my own cookbook. Here’s another idea.

Anyone interested in eating seasonally — which I presume is mostly anyone reading this blog — should track down and save the entire September 2009 issue of Gourmet, with its special look at “Recipes from A to Z.” Next season when you come home from a farmers’ market full of tomatoes, eggplant and watermelon, you’ll be glad you did. Among the treasures are Ginger Garlic Green Beans, Sauteed Kale with Kohlrabi and Pear Butterscotch Pie.

P.S. How do you feel about Gourmet’s closing? What will you miss about it? And why do you think it went under?








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