Category Archives: 50 Recipes

Sicilian Meatloaf and Cubic Meatballs

"Sicilian Meatloaf"

Sicilian Meatloaf

This is a mash-up of a recipe and a concept. The meatloaf recipe came from my friend Nina who morphed her Sicilian mother and grandmother’s recipe for porpetie (Italian meatballs) into an outstanding free form meatloaf. Way back when I was in New York and starting up my career in food styling I knew a photographer, Bernie Handzel, who taught me how to make sure all the sides of a meatball were properly browned by making cubic (cubed) meatballs instead of round ones-brilliant. I’ve brought together Nina’s meatloaf recipe (which I still use as a meatloaf recipe) with Bernie’s cubic meatball concept for a couple of meals that are both delicious and soul satisfying.

"simmering cubic meatballs"

Cubic Meatballs

One thing I find fascinating is that some people prefer one version over another, even though meatballs and meatloaf are made from the same ingredients. My son will only grudgingly eat the meatloaf, but he’ll have several bowls of meatballs. He says it’s the crusty goodness of the meatballs. A neighbor will pass on the meatballs but have several slices of meatloaf. As Louis Armstrong would sing–

You say tomato, and I say tomahto

You like the meatballs, and I like the meatloaf

Tomato, tomahto, meatball, meatloaf

Let’s call the whole thing off!

Whether you try meatloaf or meatballs be aware I’ve also added my two cents of tweaking to this recipe. There’s lots more Italian parsley than originally called for and I mixed up the meats adding veal and pork, though you can always use Nina’s original recipe which called for all ground round. When I don’t have dried breadcrumbs I make my own from bread crusts that I blast in a food processor then season with basil, thyme, garlic powder and a pinch of oregano.

Sicilian Meatloaf & Cubic Meatballs

2/3 cup seasoned bread crumbs (or fresh bread crumbs seasoned)

1/4 cup milk

2 eggs

1 cup grated parmesan cheese

1/4-3/4 cup chopped and loosely packed Italian parsley

4 cloves garlic, minced

1 teaspoon salt

1 teaspoon ground pepper

1 pound ground round (or use three pounds and no veal or pork)

1 pound ground veal

1 pound sweet italian pork sausages (taken out of their casings)

If you are making a meatloaf preheat the oven to 375ºF. If you are making meatballs get out a large cast iron skillet and start gently heating some vegetable oil.

Soften the breadcrumbs with the milk and eggs then add the parmesan cheese, garlic, parsley, salt and pepper, mixing to combine. Add your meats and thoroughly blend together. If you are making a meatloaf shape the mixture into a large oval loaf shape and place on a jelly roll pan. Add 1/4 inch of water and bake 1-1 1/4 hours basting every 15 minutes and refilling water as necessary.

"sicilian meatloaf ready to bake"

Sicilian meatloaf ready to go in the oven

If you’re making cubic meatballs make sure the oil is hot and then form your meatballs into cubes. Fry them until crispy and brown on all sides. Usually by then they are cooked all the way through. To be sure you can taste test one or three or you can plop them into some read sauce to simmer and cook more as you continue making more meatballs.

"cubic meatballs getting all nice and crusty"

The crustification of cubic meatballs

So I’m curious–are you a meatloaf or meatball person?

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Mary B.’s Coffee Cake

"grammy and grampy thompson

Grammy & Grampy Thompson

My cooking memories of Grammy Thompson are fewer than those I have with Grammy Caldwell for the simple reason that we didn’t live as close to her. Though their numbers are less, the recipes I do have from her are nonetheless precious. As far as I (and many of my family) am concerned one of her signature recipes was her coffee cake. My siblings, cousins, and I call it Mary B.’s Coffee Cake for Mary Brock Thompson. Grammy T. and her children called it Phyllis Marrin’s Coffee Cake after the woman in Grammy’s bridge club who originally shared the recipe with her, while my nephews and niece refer to it as Marcy’s Coffee Cake after my Mom, whom they call Marcy (and sometimes Grammy). I guess what you call it is all about the cook you tasted it first from.

"Mary B.'s coffee cake

Mary B.'s Coffee Cake

Regardless of how you refer to this coffee cake it is a staple at our house for Christmas Day. This past Christmas Isabelle became the queen of coffee cake making since the guys and I were all sick with pneumonia. Bella baked us the requisite Christmas morning coffee cake, and then because we gobbled it up so fast she made us another a few days later, and one more for New Year’s. She was on a roll so she also made one for her boyfriend, and took one as a Christmas present to another friend. They do make wonderful gifts for people. My mother made one for my nephew Bennett’s birthday last year and it was such a hit she went on to make one for each of the three grandchildren who live down the street from her (see what I mean about proximity bringing food blessings?) as one of their Christmas presents. Nathan, Bennett, and Avery couldn’t have been happier.

Mary B.’s Coffee Cake

1/4 cup unsalted butter

1/4 cup vegetable shortening (or you can use all butter)

1 cup sugar

2 eggs

1 teaspoon vanilla

1 teaspoon baking soda

1 1/2 teaspoon baking powder

1 1/2 cup flour

1 cup sour cream (you can use low fat or greek yogurt, but not no fat)

2/3 cup cinnamon sugar (3 Tablespoons cinnamon with sugar to make 2/3 cup)

Preheat oven to 350ºF. Grease an 8″ x 8″ pan and set aside. Cream butter, vegetable shortening, and sugar together. Add eggs one at a time, mixing well after each addition, then add the vanilla. Beat in the baking powder, baking soda, and 1/2 cup of flour. Alternate mixing in the sour cream and the rest of the flour, beating well after each addition. Plop slightly more than half the into the prepared pan. Sprinkle on 1/3 cup of the cinnamon sugar then carefully drop the remaining batter evenly across the cinnamon sugar. Don’t try to spread it as it will just roll around in the cinnamon sugar. You’ll have more success if you drop it by spoonfuls then nudge the batter to touch the edges of the pan, where it will stick and stay. Sprinkle remaining cinnamon sugar on top and bake for 55-60 minutes. Cool as long as you can resist the amazing aroma.

If you are giving this as a gift I would suggest lining the pan with foil (leaving some to hang over the edge) so you can simple bake, cool, then lift out and wrap in the foil it was baked in. If you try to shift a cake baked directly in the pan the cinnamon sugar on top will fall off.

"sandwiching cinnamon sugar in batter"

Sandwiching the cinnamon sugar in the middle of the batter

"coffeecake ready to bake"

More cinnamon sugar on top and ready to bake

"coffee cake"

Waiting for it to cool

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Happy New Year!

Wishing you and yours a healthy, happy 2012!

"new year toast"

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A Dog and his Bone

A number of years ago I wrote a small piece for FamilyFun magazine on how to make a dog bone wreath. It was pretty simple – cover a wreath shaped piece of cardboard in foil, tie on dog bones and voila a simple pet present. The photo stylist got a bit wild and ended up adding real greenery to the wreath as well as tying on dog toys which both made it more complicated and more expensive. To me the original idea seemed the easiest and best and the one I go back to again and again.

"Oliver with a bow for Christmas"

Oliver dressed for Christmas

There are four ways to do this project. The first it to buy pre-made dog bones and cover cardboard wreath shapes with foil which you then tie the bones onto. The second and third options are to make your own dog bones, which gives them a home-made appeal, then either tie medium size bones onto the foil covered wreaths or slip larger bones into those tiny stockings you can buy at craft stores around the holidays (I tend to buy as many as I can find after Christmas for the following year when they go on sale in January). The fourth possibility is to decorate a real wreath with dog bones, though that can get pricy and prickly (depending on the evergreens you use).

"dog bone wreath #1"

5 bone wreath

"dog bone stockings"

Big dog bones in stockings

"dog bone wreath #2"

9 bone wreath

For years my kids went for the second and third options. They would mix up homemade dog bones, tie them with saved ribbons from Christmases past onto foil-covered cardboard wreaths or slip the bones into miniature stockings and sell them to our neighbors, almost all of whom either have a dog or two or know someone who owns one. Isabelle and Russell were smart, taking scraps they baked as “samples” to each house so the canine inhabitants could taste test the bones before their owners pulled out their wallets.

"cutting out home-made dog bones"

Cutting out home made dog bones

We make these with bacon fat which we save each time we fry up some bacon. It seems to last indefinitely in the freezer, though if you don’t eat bacon you can always substitute vegetable oil, but I think part of their appeal to canines is the bacon fat. Our family eats nitrate free bacon, which is another selling point to our neighbors who are picky about what their dogs consume, even if their dogs couldn’t care less.

"stored bacon fat"

Stored bacon fat

This year I’m passing on the recipe to my brother’s kids who can carry on the tradition. My two nephews have decided their little six-year-old sister will be their “secret weapon,” the charmer whom no one will be able to say no to. Personally I think she might be the brains behind the whole operation after I overheard her tell her dad, “We need to make sure the Smith’s dog gets one.” My brother hesitated, I’m sure thinking Great-we don’t have a dog and we’ll end up buying the entire inventory when his daughter concluded, “Of course they’ll have to pay for it.”

"ribbons"

Saved ribbons – Grammy Caldwell taught us to never throw anything away if you could use it again

Home-made Beef and Bacon Dog Bones

1 pound whole wheat flour (you can mix in some wheat germ if you want)

2 beef flavored bouillon cubes

1 egg

1 cup cold water

6 Tablespoons bacon fat, melted or vegetable oil

Preheat oven to 350ºF. Mix flour and crumbled beef bouillon with egg and water. Add the bacon fat or vegetable oil and need. Roll out to 1/2″ thickness and cut with dog bone shaped cookie cutters. Place on parchment or foil covered cookie pans and bake 23-30 minutes depending on size. Flip the bones over half way through baking and bake an additional 22-30 minutes. Cool and then use to decorate wreaths or stockings.

"beef and bacon home-made dogbones"

Bacon and beef dog bones ready to bake

Note: These dog bones have no preservatives and so will not last much longer than a few weeks. Our dog Oliver loves these so much he will eat them as quickly as we will give them to him so it has never been a problem for us, but don’t plan on keeping them the same amount of time you’d keep store-bought dog bones.

"Oliver waiting to taste test dog bones"

Oliver waiting to taste test dog bones

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Thankful Pie

It always seemed to me that in America we celebrate Thanksgiving at the wrong time of year. A Thanksgiving meal, for which you have endless gratitude for the abundance of the crops, should be held when the stalls at the farmer’s markets are overflowing with the summer’s harvest. Anyone not thankful for the end of summer bounty is the worst type of curmudgeon and should be shunned by society at large. The trick is that for the calendar shift I envision to happen I’d either need to move to Canada, convert to Judaism or become queen of the world and since I’m pretty sure none of those things will happen soon (though I like the idea of being Queen of the World…) I’ll clam up about the when and concentrate on the what. Simply put what I adore about Thanksgiving is the gathering of family and friends around delicious food.

"Dad carving the turkey"

Dad carving the turkey ca. 1970

I have a fondness for all the foods associated with Thanksgiving from butternut squash to cranberry sauce to pumpkin pie and beyond. I love seeing what other folks make for their family traditions as much as I delight in reading what the food magazines cook up each year for this holiday. I have an affection for long storing root vegetables, hardy above ground foods like brussel sprouts, kale, and leeks, as well as fall squashes of all shapes and colors. Once in a while the tastes of Thanksgiving do show up in months other than November. It was September a number of years ago when my friends Bill and Elaine Streeter told me about this amazing dish they’d eaten at The Old Creamery in Cummington. Bookbinder by trade, Bill comes from a long line of Cummington farmers, many of whom still live near the family homestead. On the drives up Bill and his wife will often stop by The Old Creamery to just to see what temptations are available in the bakery and deli.

"Bill and Elaine Streeter"

Bill and Elaine helping out at their daughter's farmer's market stall.

Referred to by locals as the Creamery it’s the kind of store I wish we had in my town. If you were to mix together a grocery store, bakery, craft gallery, wine store, deli, and local hang-out, then squished them all into a store with a life-size model cow on the roof you’d have something akin to The Old Creamery.

"creamery cow"

The Old Creamery cow last winter.

Located off Route 9 as you drive into the hilltowns the Creamery isn’t near anything unless you live out that way. If you do live in the vicinity of the Creamery its well stocked shelves will save you from having to drive 20+ miles into one of the bigger towns down valley. Need some bulk dried beans? They’ve got them. Motor oil? Check. A dozen organic eggs, head of lettuce, and loaf of bread? It’s there. Local beer, hard cider or valley brewed gin? They’ve got those too. Want to sit and eat a freshly baked apple muffin while you sip some coffee? The Creamery. Like I said, they’ve got just about anything you could need. The only problem is since I don’t live in Cummington, getting there requires a special trip.

"auto supplies at the Cummington Creamery"

Auto suppies

"wines at the Cummington creamery"

Wines

"local pottery at the cummington creamery"

Local pottery

When Bill and Elaine described this vegetable shepherds pie I immediately thought of Thanksgiving. The dish has so many of the flavors I associate with the holiday it seems like a natural to make not only when butternut squashes first hit the farmer’s markets but also as a wonderful addition to a Thanksgiving table or as a great combo of turkey day leftovers. I’ve played around with the recipe tweaking it to fit my family as well as to what I have in my cupboards. The original recipe went something like this–creamed butternut squash, a layer of wild rice, mushrooms, cheese and toasted nuts, all topped off with a mashed potato crust. Since we have dairy and non-dairy folks in our house I’ve made this into a vegan dish by tweaking the mashed potatoes and leaving out the cheese. I don’t always have mushrooms on hand so they’re another thing you’re welcome to experiment with but they didn’t make it into the final version of this recipe. I’ll be interested to hear how you tweak this dish in the comment section.

"mashing butternut squash"

Butternut Squash

"raw wild rice"

Wild Rice

"mashed potatoes"

Potatoes ready to mash

Thankful Pie

A few things to note when making this dish. The first is that I expect everyone to experiment and play with this recipe. Not a vegan then by all means add milk and butter to your mashed potatoes! Love toasted nuts? Add more. Hate them? Leave them out. It really is a flexible recipe that you shouldn’t feel you need to follow too literally. Secondly making this dish from scratch is a bit of a juggle. You need to roast the squash while you simultaneously boil the wild rice and potatoes in separate pots. It’s doable, it just takes a bit of time and coordination. Another thing to be aware of is that if you make the pie up a few days ahead and refrigerate it the brown from the wild rice can sometimes bleed a little into the mashed potatoes. It doesn’t affect the taste but if it offends your visual appetite I suggest squinting at your fork or looking at your dinner companion across the table while you eat. It still tastes delicious!

Layer #1

1 Butternut Squash, split, seeded and roasted till soft

3 – 5 Tablespoons vegan margarine or butter

3 – 6 Tablespoons maple syrup

salt & white pepper

Layer #2

12 – 16 ounces wild rice, cooked

one medium to large onion, finely chopped

3 Tablespoons olive oil

3/4 – 1  1/2 cups pecans or walnuts, roughly chopped

2 – 3 teaspoons thyme

salt & pepper

Layer #3

3 – 4 pounds of potatoes (depending on how deep you want your “crust”) cooked until soft

3 – 6 Tablespoons vegan margarine or butter

leftover water from boiling or milk, enough to make the mashed potatoes creamy

a few pinches of freshly ground nutmeg

salt & white pepper

If you don’t know how to roast a butternut squash read about it here. When the squash is cool enough to handle scoop out the flesh and season with the margarine, maple syrup, salt and white pepper. Mash until smooth and adjust seasonings. I find that a normal squash fills roughly two 9-inch pie plates or one 13 by 9-inch baking dish. Try to use glass or ceramic rather than metal for this dish.

"layer one of thankful pie"

Layer #1 seasoned butternut squash

In a large pot of water boil the wild rice in a generous amount of water. Wild rice is not the same as regular rice where you want to have a specific ratio of rice to water and want all the water absorbed. Instead you want wild rice to swim in the water as it cooks. Usually a 4:1 water rice ration works. It takes about 45-55 minutes for the rice to soften enough to open and start curling backward. You don’t need every grain to do this, but a significant portion should be “popped”. If during the cooking time your water level boils down so not all the rice is covered, simply add a little more water. Drain when done.

While the wild rice is cooking dry roast the pecans until toasted and fragrant, about 5-9 minutes in a cast iron frying pan over medium heat, making sure to stir often so they don’t burn. After the nuts are toasted pour them into a bowl and saute the onions in the olive oil in the same pan (yes, there will be a lot of dishes to wash) until translucent over a medium low heat for 10-15 minutes. Season with thyme, salt and pepper and add them to the nuts. Combine the drained wild rice with the nuts and onions and mix. Layer on top of squash.

"cooked wild rice"

Wild rice ready to become layer #2

Mashed potatoes. I’m hoping I don’t really have to tell you how to make them. Skins on or off, add some roasted garlic if you like, or not. Just don’t use a food processor to mash them as you’ll end up with glue instead of mashed potatoes. Use a potato masher instead. If you’re doing the vegan version you can use some of the water the potatoes cooked in or you can use a little unsweetened soy or rice milk. I prefer the potato water but any of those three will work. If you really need help you can email me at 50recipes at gmail dot com and I’ll try to answer your mashed potato questions.

"thankful pie ready to bake"

Thankful pie ready to bake

If you have made the Thankful Pie from scratch you just need to heat everything up until it’s all hot again and the potatoes are browned slightly on top. If you made a Thanksgiving Pie in advance or are using leftovers you’ll need to bake it for longer as your ingredients will be cold. I usually bake a fresh pie at 350ºF for about 25-35 minutes. A cold pie will need 60-70 minutes or until hot all the way through and browned on top. You can also raise the temperature a bit if you’re in a hurry, just be careful the top doesn’t brown too much before the pie is hot all the way through.

"thankful pie"

Thankful Pie

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