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Creamy Butternut Squash Soup

December 5, 2016

  butternut-squash-soup-final Creamy Butternut Squash Soup
(AKA Sunny Day Soup)

Des Moines has been gray. People didn’t tell me about this. I heard about the cold, but I didn’t know about the gray. I’ve lived in Ireland and this gray doesn’t compare. Then again, I was clouded with Guinness and cheese, so who really knows.

butternut-squash-half

When gray days got me down in the past, I used to watch a clip from a popular 80s show where the kids put on a show for their parents’ anniversary, lip syncing Ray Charles’ “Night Time is the Right Time.” If you’re able to figure out the show, you’ll know why I can’t watch it anymore.

butternut-squash-prep

In fairness, New York got pretty gray at times. I learned some ways to help boost my mood. They’re nothing groundbreaking, but they help me and I hope they help you too:

  • Spend time outside every single day – take your sunglasses off and take in the sunshine, even if it’s behind a cloud – absorb that Vitamin D!
  • Get exercise – I make a point to exercise at least 4 days a week. It’s a non-negotiable for me. It’s so much more to me than keeping fit. I am miserable to be around without getting some sort of physical activity.
  • Meet a friend for coffee – It’s hard for me to be blue around my friends, coffee, and croissants.
  • Get a therapy lamp – Okay, I haven’t tried it myself, but some people love it and I’m thinking about getting one.
  • Talk about it – with a friend, partner, sibling, therapist, or parent. It’s not complaining, it’s just asking for a little support.
  • Cook for someone – cooking for people brings me so much joy.

Now I also have this soup to help with the grayness. When I studied at NGI they had a full day of soup making that was life changing. (Yes, I went that far and I’m not taking it back.) It was called “Creamy Soup Practicum,” and we didn’t use a drop of cream. We used several different methods, such as potato, oats, and butter. I thought the butter version was the best, but you really don’t need it. It certainly adds an element of richness, but it’s still delicious without the butter.

Butternut Squash Cooking

 

Creamy Butternut Squash Soup
(Method adapted from NGI)
Serves: 4

Ingredients:
1 small yellow onion, diced
½ of 1 medium butternut squash, large dice (about 4 cups)
1-2 teaspoons of curry powder (I like Frontier)
½ teaspoon of turmeric
¼-½ teaspoon of cayenne pepper
4 cups of vegetable stock
2 tablespoons of cold butter (optional)
Salt

Directions:

  1. Heat a medium size pot (4 quarts) on a medium flame. Add olive oil to cover the bottom of the pan, add the onion and ¼ teaspoon of salt. Sauté for about 5 minutes, or until translucent, stirring occasionally so they onions don’t stick or brown.
  2. Add the squash, spices, and ¼ teaspoon of salt. Cover the pot with a lid, stirring occasionally, for about 10 minutes, or until the squash is tender.
  3. Add stock, bring to a boil, and then simmer for 20 minutes.
  4. Scoop the soup into a high-speed blender with a ladle (you may need to do this in 2 parts). Blend on high for at least a minute, adding the optional butter while it’s running.
  5. Garnish with spiced chickpeas.

 

Curry Spiced Chickpeas
Ingredients:
1 ½ cups of cooked chickpeas, dried on a paper towel
1 tablespoon of olive oil
½ teaspoon of salt, separated
1 teaspoon of curry powder
½ teaspoon of turmeric

Directions:

  1. Preheat over to 425° and line a baking sheet with parchment paper.
  2. On the baking sheet, toss the chickpeas in the olive oil, spices, and ¼ teaspoon of salt.
  3. Bake for 5 minutes, give the pan a shake and bake for another 5 minutes. Add ¼ teaspoon of salt, allow to cool.

butternut-squash-soup

Question: What are some ways you combat winter grayness?

 

Dinner Recipes Vegetarian

Grilled Pizza

October 10, 2016

Grilled Pizza
AKA – Confessions of a Pizza Snob

Grilled Pizza - Mozzarella, Tomatoes, Balsamic

Don’t put away that grill quite yet. I realize I’m really pushing the “summer isn’t over” thing, but trust me here. People grill well into the chilly months, right? So I’m hoping that some of you will still be able to test this one out. Feel free to put on your Uggs for this post.

My husband says I’m a snob about very few things. At the top of that list is water, followed by hot, hot, strong coffee. I’m adding pizza to my Snob List. But if you take all three things I’m a snob about, it all comes back to the water. Water is the key to good pizza and the best water is from New York. Have you heard about the guy in Florida who ships in his water from New York for his pizzeria?

This isn’t quite a recipe, but I wanted to share a family tradition. Every summer we have a pizza night. There is quite a bit of planning that goes into it and a lot of wine drinking that happens. We make about 6 pizzas and have some standards, but try to make a new one every year.

Grilled Pizza - Prep

Pizza is a big deal in our family. Since moving, I’ve realized how spoiled I have been with good pizza. Of course New York is known for its pizza, but Connecticut isn’t far behind. Pizza should have a thin crust, no doughy spots, a healthy amount of sauce, and don’t go over board with the cheese. So basically just come to Des Moines, get a pizza, and do the opposite. (I’m going to get in trouble for that last sentence.)

Good pizza should make you feel like this:Grilled Pizza - CK

Some of our favorites:

  • Margherita
  • Fontina, parmesan, sautéed asparagus, arugula tossed in olive oil
  • Ricotta, pistachios, honey
  • Red sauce, sautéed green pepper, caramelized onion
  • Fresh mozzarella, cherry tomatoes, reduced balsamic
  • Nutella with fresh berries

Grilled Pizza - Ricotta, Pistachio, Honey

Some of my favorite pizza in New York:

  • Brado
  • Luzzo’s
  • Zaaz – Though they’re always changing names… they might be Holy Moly now
  • Dollar Slice – It’s good, I swear! Especially at 12am 😉 Jon’s favorite is on 46th and Lex
  • Pala – Great gluten free crust

Grilled Pizza

Jon usually mans the grill, so I asked him to explain how he does it:

The extremely manly answer is place an oiled crust on the grill for “about half a beer.” (Cue eye roll from MB.)
The reality is that it depends on how hot the grill is – you want it 500 degrees, but most grills leak heat and don’t get past 450, and definitely don’t keep that temperature with the lid going up and down.  Even more accurate would be “about half of a beer at the speed you drank them when you were 22.” (Cue another eye roll from MB.)
I’d say 3-4 minutes for each side, but mostly I cook until I get solid grill marks and the crust is stiff, not floppy.  Also – as the crust cooks it will get bubbles, don’t open the grill specifically to pop them, but when it is open, you should pop them with a quick poke from any grill tool.

Here’s what I interpreted…

Directions:

  1. Heat the grill to about 500°
  2. Roll out dough between two floured pieces of parchment paper.
  3. Keep rolling, it needs to be thinner than that. (The pizza in these photos was a little too thick)
  4. Take one piece of parchment paper off. Using a pastry brush, spread about 1 tablespoon of olive oil on the crust.
  5. Place the oil side down onto the grill while quickly removing the parchment paper. Leave this side on the grill for about 3-4 minutes and close the cover.
  6. While the bottom is cooking, lift the cover and carefully oil the topside with another tablespoon of olive oil. Pop any bubbles with a grill tool.
  7. Flip the pizza, and grill for another 3-4 minutes.
  8. Dress your pizza with your choice of toppings and grill for another 2-3 minutes, or until cheese has melted.

Question:
What’s your favorite pizza?
What’s on your Snob List?