Showing posts with label onion. Show all posts
Showing posts with label onion. Show all posts

Wednesday, 2 April 2014

Prepping for a long week

There are exam weeks, as I approach the end of second year, where I just don't want to spend time cooking. I stay at the library for long hours, and if I can make it through dinner I feel that much more productive. I try to anticipate these weeks by freezing meal-sized leftovers of soups or chili, but that's not always possible. And I refuse to eat in the hospital cafeteria because each meal there--while pretty decent--is more expensive, less flavorful, higher in salt, and includes fewer vegetables than what I would cook at home. Not to sound like a total snob.

On Sunday afternoon while home doing laundry and studying, I opted to roast a fennel and onion: flavorful, versatile, good to have on hand for the week, made my house smell good. Monday night before bed I popped half a cup of white beans into my pressure cooker, and for last night's library dinner I ended up with a tossed stew of white beans, fennel, and onion. It was homey, comforting, and healthy towards the end of a long day. For tonight I'll stir the rest of the fennel and onion into tomato sauce and serve it over penne. Pretty nice for such quick meals. Of course, the atmosphere contributes a lot.

Minimalist fennel, onion, and white beans:

  • 1 fennel bulb
  • 1 onion
  • 1 cup white beans
  • olive oil, salt and pepper

Wash the fennel bulb and slice it crosswise (on the horizontal if you have it standing up) into rings, removing the thick core at the base and discarding the celery-like stalks at the top. Peel and slice the onion. Toss together in a roasting pan with olive oil, salt, and pepper and roast at 400 degrees for about 20 minutes, until caramelized. Toss every 10 minutes, checking to keep from burning.

Toss with white beans and adjust seasonings. Or: enjoy as a base for chicken or fish, toss into tomato sauce, etc.





Tuesday, 21 January 2014

Healthy fried rice

I am not one of those people who can walk in the door and instantly get back to work. Rather than pretending, I've started relaxing for a few minutes when I get home instead of opening my laptop. Lying down, reading my book--or tonight, chopping vegetables. Since receiving a second lesson from my friend Xin, I decided to try fried rice again. I noticed that last time I started by frying the rice first, which I don't think makes sense.

This version of fried rice is heavy on the vegetables, with stir-fry "stuff" dominating over the rice. Plenty of brown rice though, still, to lend a heartiness to this dish on a cold day like today. This is also a good dish for when you're raiding the pantry, in those busy weeks just before an exam (I usually have carrots, celery, and onions in the fridge).

Brown rice vegetable fried rice (~2 servings):

  • 1 carrot, peeled and sliced into matchsticks
  • 1 celery stalk, sliced crosswise on a diagonal
  • 1 onion, sliced
  • 4-6 mushrooms, sliced
  • handful of spinach
  • 1" piece of ginger, washed with the skin on, finely chopped
  • 3 cloves of garlic, peeled and finely chopped
  • 1 scallion, chopped
  • 1 egg
  • tofu, in 1-cm cubes
  • 1 cup brown rice, cooked
  • canola oil
  • soy sauce
  • rice wine vinegar
  • white pepper

In a wok or large frying pan, scramble the egg in about 1 tsp of oil. Set aside. Add more oil to the pan and then the garlic, ginger, and onion; after a minute or two (when fragrant and just gaining color), add the tofu and rest of the vegetables (add the vegetables in the order in which you want them to cook, saving those barely-cooked vegetables for last). After another few minutes, when the vegetables are just softer but not mushy (add spoonfuls of water as needed to keep from burning), add your rice and the scrambled egg. Continue frying until parts of the rice and tofu crisp up a bit, seasoning with soy sauce, rice wine vinegar, and white pepper to your taste. Garnish with scallion before serving.

I feel better. 


Thursday, 1 August 2013

Happy Swiss Independence Day!

Today I studied pharmacology (think Geneva-based pharmaceutical industry), ran some hills with the housemate, and finished the day off with a homemade potato-and-green-onion soup (using CSA ingredients! the most flavorful potatoes of recent memory) topped off with Gruyere cheese and black pepper, followed by cherries for dessert.


Potato leek soup (vaguely following what I remember from a Julia Child recipe):
  • 5 small potatoes
  • 1 leek or 2 green onions
  • water or chicken stock
  • sour cream, regular cream, whole milk, or Greek yogurt
  • salt and pepper

Peel the potatoes; chop both leeks and potatoes into large pieces. Boil in just enough water or stock to cover the vegetables until potatoes are soft enough to mash with a fork. Puree using an immersion blender or food processor. Add cream, salt, and pepper to taste. Not exactly a summer dish, but do I have any say over when my CSA delivers me potatoes? At least it has been threatening rain all day.