Pasta with Sauteed Zucchini

16 07 2009

If you’re part of a farm share, you’ve probably exhausted your supply of zucchini recipes by now. In the past two weeks, I’ve made several loaves of zucchini bread, creamy zucchini soup, zucchini pie and sauteed zucchini with garlic and parsley. Just when I was feeling smug that I’d used up all the cue-ball zucchini, yellow squash and green-skinned zucchini in my fridge, six more arrived in my bag. What’s a cook to do?

Arriving home later than expected and with little time to cook dinner, I opted for Noodles with Sauteed Zucchini. If ever there was a slam dunk meal — both for the kiddos, who love noodles, and for busy cooks — this is it. In the time it takes to boil the water and cook spaghetti you can put the whole thing together. As is the case with many of my recipes, what follows is part technique, part recipe, since the idea is to make use of the produce you have on hand. Adjust portion sizes accordingly.

Incidentally, for health reasons unrelated to anything Atkins, my husband isn’t supposed to eat carbohydrates. Whenever I serve noodles, he throws chicken or sausage (or whatever protein we have on hand) on the grill. Tonight it was chicken, and when it was done I cut some up and added it to my pasta. My four-year-old liked what he saw, but wanted the chicken “next to the noodles, not touching.” Seeing it on his plate underscored just how versatile this recipe really is. You can serve it as a main course, with a green salad and crusty bread. You can toss in some chicken for heartier fare. Or you can serve it alongside the protein of your choice as a side dish. Now that’s a slam dunk.

Pasta with Sauteed Zucchini
Put a large pot of salted water to boil. In a separate saute pan, gently color a few cloves of minced garlic in a hearty pour of olive oil. Take several zucchini (or a mixture of yellow squash and zucchini, for aesthetic purposes), quarter them lengthwise and slice them, and saute until tender. When the water boils, add whole wheat noodles and cook al dente. Drain, reserving some of the cooking water. Add the pasta to the zucchini, then toss with a generous amount of parmesan cheese (a half-cup or more). If the pasta is too thick, thin with a few tablespoons of the cooking water, and season to taste. Serve with additional parmesan and lots of chopped basil.
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The Secret Ingredient

21 01 2009

I’ve interviewed a lot of chefs over the years, and one of my favorite questions is this: What’s your earliest food memory?

Since honesty is the best policy, I’ll start off by saying that mine comes somewhat secondhand, borrowed from a cousin five years my junior. I was eight at the time, spending the summer with my grandparents, when Amy waltzed into the backyard, licking an enormous spoonful of white fluffiness. “Mmm, whipped cream,” I said. “Nope,” she replied, “mayonnaise.”

Lurch. Expecting sweet and getting savory – a huge, grinning mouthful of it – sent my stomach into a free-for-all, the likes of which you normally associate with log rides and roller coasters. Perhaps that’s why I didn’t tell my children about the secret ingredient in the quick bread I made today for their after-school snack. “How about some spice bread?” I asked, knowing they’d easily devour half a loaf. What’s not to love about cinnamon and cloves and ginger? I’m not the betting kind, but I’m pretty sure the response would’ve been less enthusiastic if I’d offered another kind of bread. Say, squash bread.

What is it that makes squash bread sound so, well, yucky? Pumpkin bread is delicious, zucchini bread, too. But squash bread? Not exactly a popular title in most cookbooks. Squash isn’t the problem, at least not in my house, for the kids like it just fine when it’s sautéed with garlic and tossed with parsley. I think it’s that age old problem of expecting one thing and getting another. Like Heinz’s green ketchup, for example. Some leaps are just too big for the eyes – and stomach – to make.

But back to the bread. Like other grated vegetables, squash makes perfect sense because it keeps the batter moist while filling it with added nutrients. Plus squash is readily found this time of year, either at the grocery store (albeit shipped in from somewhere else) or local (if you were part of a CSA last summer and stashed away some of the excess in your freezer). So why not get out the grater and bake some bread? Spice bread, that is.

Click here for the recipe: Spice Bread





Spice Bread

21 01 2009

Put 1 cup wheat flour, 1 cup white flour, ½ to 2/3 cup sugar, 1 ½ tsp baking powder, ½ tsp baking soda, ½ tsp salt, 2 tsp cinnamon, ¼ tsp nutmeg, ½ tsp ginger and ¼ tsp cloves in a large bowl and whisk. In a separate bowl, blend 1 cup packed grated summer squash, ¼ cup olive oil, 1 egg and 1 egg white, 1 tsp vanilla and ¼ cup plain yogurt. Add the wet ingredients to the dry ones, mix until just blended and put in greased loaf pan. Bake at 350 for 50-55 minutes. And don’t tell anyone about the secret ingredient – at least until they’ve agreed to taste it.








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