Romesco is a traditional sauce made with almonds and peppers, and it's served in innumerable preparations in Spain. In the springtime, charred onions are dipped into Romesco for a special treat. This playful take on that tradition is the perfect thing to set out at a party with some olives. Everyone will love onions cooked this way. The burnt exterior is pulled away to reveal a soft and sweet, almost candy-like inside that is a great foil for the spicy Romesco spread. We have a sweet memory grilling them on the 4th of July with our friends during this grilled vegetarian paella extravaganza.
Romesco Crostini with Charred Spring Onions
12 to 15 purple or green spring onions
1 medium head garlic
1 medium red pepper
1/3 cup roasted and salted almonds
1/3 cup chopped sun dried tomatoes (softened in warm water)
1/3 cup torn baguette
1 teaspoon red pepper flakes
1 tablespoon olive oil
1 teaspoon sherry vinegar
1/2 teaspoon smoked paprika
12 to15 grilled or toasted thin baguette slices (for serving)
12 to 15 slices of Manchego (for serving)
Preheat outdoor grill to high heat. Place the green onion, garlic, and red pepper on the grill and turn frequently until completely charred on all sides; the amount of time on the grill will vary depending on how hot your grill gets. Place it all into a bowl and cover with foil until it's cool enough to handle. Cut the top off of the bulb of garlic and peel and seed the roasted red pepper.
Into the work bowl of your food processor, squeeze the soft garlic from the head, add the roasted red pepper, almonds, sun dried tomato, bread, red pepper flakes, olive oil, sherry vinegar, and smoked paprika. Run the food processor until a paste forms -- you're looking for a thick and spreadable consistency.
To serve, slather about a teaspoon of Romesco sauce onto a toasted baguette. Top that with a peeled charred onion. Simply squeeze the onion bulb from the root end to reveal a sweet, translucent morsel. Top with a slice of Manchego cheese. (Serves 4 as an appetizer.)
Wednesday, July 31, 2013
Saturday, July 27, 2013
Caramelized Apple Spice Muffins (+ A New Contest!)
(UPDATE, 7.31.2013: Congratulations to commenter #14, Melvin Teal! This RNG site chose you as the winner! Please message us on Facebook with your address or leave a comment on this post-- we moderate comments and will not publish it, of course. Thanks to all who participated -- we're looking forward to the next TCV contest coming up soon!)
Our buddy Chris at Whole Foods in Memphis gave us a box full of different kinds of new Whole Foods brand spice grinders and mixes to try out, and it's been quite entertaining to dream up a few creative ways to use them in some new recipes this week. These muffins feature the Winter Baking spice mix, which includes sugar, cinnamon, lemon zest, orange zest, allspice berries, cloves, vanilla bean, nutmeg, and cinnamon. Contrary as usual, I decided to use this one in the dead of summer -- you know, why not? And wow, we loved the result -- a nice subtle, warm spiced flavor really complements this light apple muffin. We used a combination of caramelized apples, cinnamon apple sauce, and apple butter to get a complex and layered apple flavor going. (Coming up next, we're going to build a savory recipe with two other spice grinders that have us in brainstorming mode today.)
Caramelized Apple Spice Muffins
1 tablespoon olive oil margarine
2 apples (peeled; finely diced or shredded)
1 tablespoon light brown sugar
1/4 teaspoon cinnamon
pinch of sea salt
1/3 cup canola oil
1/2 cup applesauce
2 tablespoons apple butter
1 egg (beaten)
2 teaspoons vanilla
1 cup flour (we used half all-purpose and half whole wheat pastry flour)
1/2 teaspoon baking powder
1/2 teaspoon baking soda
1/2 teaspoon sea salt
1 tablespoon crystallized ginger
15 turns of the Whole Foods Winter Baking spice grinder
1/4 cup walnuts (chopped)
15 turns of the Whole Foods Winter Baking spice grinder
1 tablespoon light brown sugar
a pinch of sea salt
1 tablespoon olive oil margarine
In a medium-sized pot over medium heat, melt the margarine and then add the apples. Stir to combine and then add brown sugar, cinnamon, and salt. Stir occasionally and add a tablespoon of water once or twice if pan gets too dry. Once apples are caramelized after about 15 minutes, remove from heat and set aside.
In a large bowl, whisk together the wet ingredients: oil, applesauce, apple butter, egg, and vanilla. Set aside. In a medium-sized bowl, whisk together the dry ingredients: flour, baking powder, baking soda, and sea salt. Add dry mixture to wet mixture and stir until just combined. Fold in the apples and the crystallized ginger. Using a spring-loaded scoop, scoop a level amount of muffin mixture into pan lined with muffin cups. (Optional step before baking for a crunchy top: mix together the Crunchy Topping ingredients and spoon it on top of each muffin; finish with a 1/2-teaspoon-sized slice of margarine.) Bake for 25 minutes or until tops are golden brown. (Makes 9 muffins.)
NEW CONTEST: Want to try some of the new Whole Foods spice mixes and grinders? You're in luck! We reserved a few for one of you to try in your own kitchen: Citrus, French Soup, Bouquet Garni, and Crystal Pools, a sea salt, lavender, lovage, chamomile, lime leaf, cornflower petal, and tarragon blend. We will mail all 4 out to one winner who lives in the U.S. To be in the running, comment below about how you would use one or more of the spices mentioned in this post, and we'll select (by random number generator on Wednesday evening, 8/1/13) one winner to receive the four products! We moderate comments, so don't be alarmed if yours doesn't show up right away -- it will be posted as soon as we check in.
Friday, July 26, 2013
Vegetarian Squash Ribbon Jambalaya by Chef Ryan Trimm
We love working with Melissa Petersen, the editor and publisher of Edible Memphis. If you are not familiar with the publication, it's a wonderfully informative look at our region including the bounty of artisans, farmers, personalities, and chefs in this area. The magazine focuses on regional and seasonal food, and there is no better time to focus on what's in season than right now.
1 small yellow onion (sliced into half moons)
2 medium yellow squash (thinly sliced on mandolin)
2 medium zucchini (thinly sliced on mandolin)
1 medium carrot (julienne)
1 medium red bell pepper (julienne)
1 medium green bell pepper (julienne)
1 medium tomato (diced)
1 cup English peas (blanched)
1 tablespoon minced garlic
1 tablespoon Cajun Spice (like “Slap Ya Mama”)
½ cup dry white wine
3 cups vegetable stock
1/4 cups chopped parsley
3 cups cooked rice (to serve)
Heat a large pan over high heat until it starts to give off a little smoke. Add the oil, and the onion, squash, zucchini, carrot, red and green bell pepper, tomato, peas, garlic, and Cajun Spice. Cook, stirring often, until vegetables pick up some color, about 6 minutes. Deglaze the pan with white wine and add stock. Add parsley and reduce broth by about 1/2. Serve in a bowl over rice. (Serves 4.)
Below is an excerpted recipe from an article we wrote called "A Great Deal of Middle Ground," which is about three well-known chefs, Ben Smith, Kelly English, and Jennifer Chandler, going meatless for 30 days. Why would they do that, and what challenges did they face? To find out, locate a copy of Edible Memphis at Whole Foods, Booksellers, or one of the many restaurants and stores that keep copies available around town. (See right side of link for list.)
From "A Great Deal of Middle Ground":
From "A Great Deal of Middle Ground":
Summer in the South is all about the bounty of fresh garden vegetables. The farmers markets are full of everything from squash to peppers to eggplant, mushrooms, tomatoes, and so much more. If you decide to try a thirty-day vegetarian challenge, it’s a great time to cook a meal at home; Chef Ryan Trimm of Sweet Grass and Sweet Grass Next Door, who has himself followed a two-week vegetarian challenge, has just the dish for you. Jennifer Chandler had Chef Trimm’s Vegetarian Squash Ribbon Jambalaya one night when she was out to eat with friends at Sweetgrass. Trimm was kind enough to share this simple summer recipe with Edible Memphis.
Vegetarian Squash Ribbon Jambalaya by Chef Ryan Trimm
2 tablespoons canola oil or unsalted butter1 small yellow onion (sliced into half moons)
2 medium yellow squash (thinly sliced on mandolin)
2 medium zucchini (thinly sliced on mandolin)
1 medium carrot (julienne)
1 medium red bell pepper (julienne)
1 medium green bell pepper (julienne)
1 medium tomato (diced)
1 cup English peas (blanched)
1 tablespoon minced garlic
1 tablespoon Cajun Spice (like “Slap Ya Mama”)
½ cup dry white wine
3 cups vegetable stock
1/4 cups chopped parsley
3 cups cooked rice (to serve)
Wednesday, July 24, 2013
Southern Vegetarian Cookbook Event at the Memphis Botanic Garden Farmers Market on Wed., July 24
(Update: We had a great time at the market this afternoon! If you're in Memphis and still would like to snag your own copy of our cookbook, it is available at Booksellers, Trolley Stop Market, and The Cosmic Coconut; out-of-towners, you can find it here online. Thanks so much to everyone who came to see us today -- y'all be sure to keep us posted about what you're cooking! -- Justin and Amy)
Hey, come on and stop by the Memphis Botanic Garden Farmers Market today starting at 2:00 p.m. -- we'll be signing copies of our cookbook, The Southern Vegetarian, and you can pick up all kinds of great stuff there this week!
Tuesday, July 23, 2013
5 Quick Questions with Kevin West, Author of Saving the Season: A Cook's Guide to Home Canning, Pickling, and Preserving
Saving the Season is the kind of cookbook that reminds us of a beautifully written novel or a stellar short story: it drops you into someone else's world for a long, dreamy while and the voice rings real and true throughout. Read it to learn how to preserve all the stuff that's coming in this summer -- the recipes are precise and will make you feel like a pro -- but in your reading, you'll also be able to understand your food and its history so much more.
It's lucky for us that author Kevin West is going to be in Memphis this Thursday evening at Booksellers. Stop by around 6:00 and grab your copy and get it signed or stock up on a few signed copies as holiday gifts for all of the serious home cooks you know. This one is sure to become a classic, y'all.
This week, Kevin was kind enough to answer a few of our burning questions -- and to share his cream-style corn recipe (detailed below), which we know we're going to have to try very, soon.
This week, Kevin was kind enough to answer a few of our burning questions -- and to share his cream-style corn recipe (detailed below), which we know we're going to have to try very, soon.
Kevin West: I can't think of Tennessee without thinking of my grandparents' farm in Blount County: the red clay banks of their long, long gravel driveway; the view of the Great Smoky Mountains from up by the barn; throwing rocks in the pond; the prickly feel of picking okra in the early morning; the taste of sun-warmed tomatoes pulled off the vine; the silly pleasure of eating corn on the cob and picking your teeth at the table even though you know better; the smell of cedar shavings when Papa whittled.
The farm is gone now, but the time I spent there when I was little shaped me to the core. More than any other place, that "rich spot of earth," to use Thomas Jefferson's phrase about his beloved Monticello, is where I come from. That's what I miss most.
2. TCV: What would you suggest that a beginner try to can, preserve, or pickle first?
KW: Start with whatever is coming in from local gardens and farms. At this time of the year, I'd advise folks in this part of the world to think seriously about putting up some peaches in syrup, wild blackberry jam (if it's not already too late), pickled green beans, and canned tomatoes.
3. TCV: Please tell us a little more about the idea of preserving certain things for the occasions and meals you plan to create later on for certain people or events. I loved that part of your book -- that's pretty much what food is all about to us, too: time spent with the people we love.
KW: One of the pleasantest aspects of canning work is that there is time for your mind to wander while your hands are busy. My mind usually wanders in the direction of what I'll be eating next, so standing in the kitchen making preserves is when I plan out future meals. For instance, I like to pickle onions every year in late spring when they are about the size of ping pong balls, and it's sort of a fun thought experiment to dream up a dish to use them in each of the 4 seasons.
As for who gets what jar as a gift -- don't worry. Once your family and friends find out about your preserving habit, they'll let you know about their favorite jams, pickles or relishes--hint, hint.
4. TCV: Simplest recipe (Southern-themed or otherwise) that you love and crave and make all the time and want to share?
KW: This time of the year, I cannot get enough cream-style corn. The way I make it is to cut the corn off the cob and very gently stew it with some butter until it's warmed through and bubbly. Then I stir in some caramelized shallots and a handful of basil (especially that purple opal basil) cut into a fine chiffonade. A double serving of this corn with a sliced tomato and a few grilled zucchini drizzled with olive oil makes as fine a summer meal as I could want. Even if you don't have shallots or basil, corn cooked this way is still wonderful in its unadorned state.
5. TCV: We have an abundance of tomatoes right now -- there are about 50 of them just washed and waiting on the kitchen countertop right now and more to come. What do you think we should do with them?
KW: It depends a bit on the type of tomato. It they are the plum-type, then I'd suggest putting them up as crushed tomatoes -- the standard, old-fashioned "canned tomato" approach. if they are bigger, juicier beefsteak or heirloom tomatoes, I'd turn them into a sauce and reduce the sauce a bit before canning.
But whatever you do, be sure to set aside a few of the biggest, prettiest tomatoes for a tomato sandwich!
(TCV: We'll take that advice for sure! Here are our simple tomato sliders, which may morph into big old lunch sandwiches tomorrow.)
Monday, July 22, 2013
Peach Salsa
Peach Salsa
2 teaspoons olive oil
1 shallot (minced)
2 ears corn (kernels cut from cob)
1 pinch ancho chile powder
2 teaspoons mezcal or tequila
2 medium peaches
2 teaspoons cane sugar
juice from one lime
1 tomato (diced)
1 avocado (diced)
1/4 cup queso fresco (diced)
fresh cilantro (chopped; optional)
sea salt and cracked black pepper (to taste)
In a medium skillet over medium heat addd the olive oil and shallot and cook until almost translucent. Add corn and stir; cook for 5 more minutes and stir occasionally. Add ancho chile powder, salt, and pepper to taste, and deglaze the pan with mezcal or tequila. Set aside. Combine peaches, sugar, and lime juice. Set aside. Add diced tomatoes, avocado, and queso fresco to a bowl along with fresh cilantro, if using. Combine it with peach mixture and corn mixture. Salt and pepper to taste and serve with chips.
Thursday, July 18, 2013
Saving the Season by Kevin West: Author at Booksellers in Memphis on Thurs., July 25!
We LOVE this book! Grab your copy at Booksellers and go see the author at this event
coming up next week.
Monday, July 15, 2013
Cedar Plank Wild Mushrooms + Mustard Vinaigrette
Vegetarians, go ahead and claim some cedar plank space on the grill this summer! Using a few different kinds of wild mushrooms works out really well with this method -- and as a bonus, it will fill the air with the amazing smell of cedar smoke. This struck us as the type of main vegetarian dish that could compete with the usual old proteins in terms of heartiness and flavor, and it would be a super-convincing Meatless Monday idea for anyone who may be reluctant to try something different. Really, who could resist having what looks like a still life of a mini-forest floor for dinner?
We found a couple of big cedar planks at Whole Foods for $8 and also spotted 4 smaller ones for the same price if you wanted to serve this dish as a small appetizer. Oh, and of course we're not at all tired of grilled peaches yet but did find that halving them, drizzling them with olive oil, and putting them on cedar planks, too, was a nice change for dessert.
Cedar Plank Wild Mushrooms + Mustard Vinaigrette
1 16-inch cedar plank (or 2 8-inch)
4 to 5 new potatoes (quartered)
3 to 4 cups of assorted wild mushrooms like chanterelle, hen of the woods, and large morel
1 onion (peeled and cut into half-moons)
Mustard Vinaigrette (recipe follows)
2 to 3 ounces soft goat cheese
fresh dill, parsley, and chives (to garnish)
Soak cedar plank in water for at least one hour. Blanch potatoes in salted water until fork tender but not falling apart.
Preheat your outdoor grill to medium. The temperature gage should be between 350 and 425 degrees.
In a large bowl toss clean mushrooms and sliced onions with the Mustard Vinaigrette. Place the empty cedar plank down onto the grill for 4 minutes to heat one side. Remove plank from the grill and arrange the potatoes on the warmed, marked side of the plank. Top potatoes with onion slices and mushrooms. Return plank to the grill, shut the lid, and allow it to cook for 10 minutes. Next, place chunks of goat cheese around the plank and cook for another 5 minutes. Garnish with dill, parsley, and chives. (This is a perfect dish for sharing; serves 2.)
Mustard Vinaigrette
This is a great all-purpose mustard dressing. Use it on salads or brush it on vegetables before they hit the grill.
2 tablespoons olive oil
1 tablespoon honey
1 tablespoon champagne vinegar
1 tablespoon grainy mustard (like Zatarain's)
Kosher salt and cracked black pepper (to taste)
Place olive oil, honey, vinegar, mustard, salt, and pepper into a 1/2-pint mason jar, screw on the lid, and shake it until dressing is emulsified. Set aside until ready to use.
We found a couple of big cedar planks at Whole Foods for $8 and also spotted 4 smaller ones for the same price if you wanted to serve this dish as a small appetizer. Oh, and of course we're not at all tired of grilled peaches yet but did find that halving them, drizzling them with olive oil, and putting them on cedar planks, too, was a nice change for dessert.
Cedar Plank Wild Mushrooms + Mustard Vinaigrette
1 16-inch cedar plank (or 2 8-inch)
4 to 5 new potatoes (quartered)
3 to 4 cups of assorted wild mushrooms like chanterelle, hen of the woods, and large morel
1 onion (peeled and cut into half-moons)
Mustard Vinaigrette (recipe follows)
2 to 3 ounces soft goat cheese
fresh dill, parsley, and chives (to garnish)
Soak cedar plank in water for at least one hour. Blanch potatoes in salted water until fork tender but not falling apart.
Preheat your outdoor grill to medium. The temperature gage should be between 350 and 425 degrees.
In a large bowl toss clean mushrooms and sliced onions with the Mustard Vinaigrette. Place the empty cedar plank down onto the grill for 4 minutes to heat one side. Remove plank from the grill and arrange the potatoes on the warmed, marked side of the plank. Top potatoes with onion slices and mushrooms. Return plank to the grill, shut the lid, and allow it to cook for 10 minutes. Next, place chunks of goat cheese around the plank and cook for another 5 minutes. Garnish with dill, parsley, and chives. (This is a perfect dish for sharing; serves 2.)
Mustard Vinaigrette
This is a great all-purpose mustard dressing. Use it on salads or brush it on vegetables before they hit the grill.
2 tablespoons olive oil
1 tablespoon honey
1 tablespoon champagne vinegar
1 tablespoon grainy mustard (like Zatarain's)
Kosher salt and cracked black pepper (to taste)
Place olive oil, honey, vinegar, mustard, salt, and pepper into a 1/2-pint mason jar, screw on the lid, and shake it until dressing is emulsified. Set aside until ready to use.
Saturday, July 6, 2013
Vegetarian Paella on the Grill
We have been all about family-style meals lately. We understand that they are, in a way, challenging, in that they're a little different from the norm. You sit down to a meal and there is one big plate of food for each dish. You patiently wait for your turn, and you closely eyeball your tablemates as they scoop a portion onto their plates. It involves a different way of thinking, it's truly sharing a meal, and we love it. The whole idea echoes the sentiment of community, fosters new conversations...and encourages clean plates.
We are so lucky to have so many opportunities to share meals with friends and family this week. In the past 24 hours, we have had a meal of grilled fig salad, truffled corn and shiitake mushrooms with ricotta dumplings, and this summer's omnipresent homemade ice cream sandwiches with people we have known since before we had driver's licenses, shared a giant paella with some of our most trusted friends, and we've squirted pickle relish and yellow mustard on a few veggie dogs and enjoyed some really delicious elote salad at some of our oldest friends' new house in North Mississippi. It's days like this that let us know just how truly blessed we are.
In the flurry of cooking, eating, and celebrating, there was no time to write down a recipe, but we'd like to share the process of making a paella. It's an inexact science that changes with the mood and shifts with the winds. Like a great meal, the cooking of a paella is best when it's shared. So when Michael and Kelly came over for 4th of July lunch, we decided that we would all bring something to throw into the pan. We called it paella by committee.
Michael and Kelly brought risotto rice, green olives, hearts of palm, artichoke hearts, spanish paprika, saffron, kale, green onions, and the large paella pan that was a gift from us for his birthday. Luckily, he also brought the knowledge of how to make a proper paella. We supplied the roasted red peppers, yellow peppers, onions, garlic, tomato paste, white wine, vegetable broth, olive oil, sherry vinegar, fresh herbs from the garden, tomatoes, eggs, and shallots.
First you need to make a sofrito by blending together a tomato, parsley, yellow pepper. paprika, onion, tomato paste, sherry vinegar, salt, pepper and garlic in the food processor until liquidly. Warm the saffron in a quart of stock and a 1/2 cup of wine. Place the paella pan over medium-high heat on your outdoor grill and add a 1/4 cup of olive oil and 4 to 5 good handfuls of rice. Toast until rice is golden brown. Add a few good handfuls of chopped kale and then the sofrito. Cook over medium-high heat until most of the liquid has evaporated, add a cup of stock, and continue to cook. The rice will need 4 to 5 additions of stock before it softens. Make indentions in the rice, crack the raw eggs in, and cook until eggs have set. Top with grilled or sautéed green onions, green olives, artichoke hearts, hearts of palm, and roasted red peppers. Finish with chopped tomato, fresh herbs, shallots, and a sprinkling of sherry vinegar.
The truth is that there is no really wrong way to make paella. It's the kind of thing that should be made out of what is on hand and shared with those you love.
We are so lucky to have so many opportunities to share meals with friends and family this week. In the past 24 hours, we have had a meal of grilled fig salad, truffled corn and shiitake mushrooms with ricotta dumplings, and this summer's omnipresent homemade ice cream sandwiches with people we have known since before we had driver's licenses, shared a giant paella with some of our most trusted friends, and we've squirted pickle relish and yellow mustard on a few veggie dogs and enjoyed some really delicious elote salad at some of our oldest friends' new house in North Mississippi. It's days like this that let us know just how truly blessed we are.
In the flurry of cooking, eating, and celebrating, there was no time to write down a recipe, but we'd like to share the process of making a paella. It's an inexact science that changes with the mood and shifts with the winds. Like a great meal, the cooking of a paella is best when it's shared. So when Michael and Kelly came over for 4th of July lunch, we decided that we would all bring something to throw into the pan. We called it paella by committee.
Michael and Kelly brought risotto rice, green olives, hearts of palm, artichoke hearts, spanish paprika, saffron, kale, green onions, and the large paella pan that was a gift from us for his birthday. Luckily, he also brought the knowledge of how to make a proper paella. We supplied the roasted red peppers, yellow peppers, onions, garlic, tomato paste, white wine, vegetable broth, olive oil, sherry vinegar, fresh herbs from the garden, tomatoes, eggs, and shallots.
First you need to make a sofrito by blending together a tomato, parsley, yellow pepper. paprika, onion, tomato paste, sherry vinegar, salt, pepper and garlic in the food processor until liquidly. Warm the saffron in a quart of stock and a 1/2 cup of wine. Place the paella pan over medium-high heat on your outdoor grill and add a 1/4 cup of olive oil and 4 to 5 good handfuls of rice. Toast until rice is golden brown. Add a few good handfuls of chopped kale and then the sofrito. Cook over medium-high heat until most of the liquid has evaporated, add a cup of stock, and continue to cook. The rice will need 4 to 5 additions of stock before it softens. Make indentions in the rice, crack the raw eggs in, and cook until eggs have set. Top with grilled or sautéed green onions, green olives, artichoke hearts, hearts of palm, and roasted red peppers. Finish with chopped tomato, fresh herbs, shallots, and a sprinkling of sherry vinegar.
The truth is that there is no really wrong way to make paella. It's the kind of thing that should be made out of what is on hand and shared with those you love.
Tuesday, July 2, 2013
Portobello Pastrami + Microwave Sauerkraut & Horseradish Mustard
Chef Jimmy Gentry of Paradox Catering & Consulting sent us a great recipe for Tofu Pastrami Microwave Sauerkraut and Horseradish Mustard that he'd been making for his vegetarian and vegan clients. It looked delicious, so it got us to thinking; if you can pastrami meat and tofu, what else can you pastrami?
Portobello mushrooms immediately came to mind. Their meaty flavor and firm texture make them a shoo-in for this role. We used Chef Gentry's pastrami cure, sauerkraut, and mustard to create one great-tasting pastrami sandwich from portobello mushrooms -- you could surely do the same with tofu or anything else for that matter.
This version is vegan, but if you'd like a little cheese, go ahead and add a few slices of swiss, and while you're at it, a smear of good olive-oil mayo. This is a recipe we bet you'll make again and agin.
Portobello Pastrami
1 tablespoon cracked black pepper
1 teaspoon ground coriander
1 teaspoon smoked paprika
1 teaspoon Kosher salt
1/2 teaspoon granulated garlic
1 tablespoon olive oil
3 to 4 medium portobello mushroom caps
6 to 8 slices marble rye (toasted)
Microwave Sauerkraut (recipe follows)
Horseradish Mustard (recipe follows)
Make the pastrami cure in a medium bowl by mixing the pepper, coriander, paprika, salt, and garlic together. Drizzle the olive oil over the mushroom caps so that they're evenly covered. This will allow the cure to stick to the mushrooms. Liberally coat each mushroom with the cure on both sides and place in a covered container in the fridge for at least two hours or up to 24 hours.
Preheat your outdoor grill to high. Grill mushrooms gill-side-down for 4 minutes, flip, and grill the smooth side for 4 minutes or until nicely marked and the mushroom is soft and pliable. Depending on the thickness of the mushroom, this could take longer. Place mushrooms back in the covered container and back in the fridge to cool.
Slice thin strips on the bias or diagonally to create larger "cold cuts" from the mushroom. Serve on marbled rye with Microwave Sauerkraut and Horseradish Mustard and pickles. (Makes 3 to 4 sandwiches -- depending on how high you stack 'em.)
Microwave Sauerkraut
This is the fastest way to make great-tasting sauerkraut this side of opening a jar lid. Fermenting a big batch on your kitchen counter can take weeks; this takes 4 minutes.
1 medium head purple cabbage (cored, thinly sliced)
1 medium white onion (thinly sliced)
1/2 cup apple cider vinegar
1 tablespoon caraway seeds
1/8 teaspoon cane sugar
1/2 teaspoon Kosher salt
In a large microwave safe bowl, mix the cabbage, onion, vinegar, caraway, sugar, and salt until well incorporated. Cover and microwave on high for 4 to 5 minutes. Let it sit, still covered, until it's cool to the touch and most of the brine has been absorbed. Refrigerate until ready to use. Keep it covered in the fridge for up to a week.
Horseradish Mustard
3 tablespoon dijon mustard
1 tablespoon prepared horseradish
2 tablespoons lager or porter beer
In a small bowl mix the mustard, horseradish, and beer. Set aside until ready to use.
Portobello mushrooms immediately came to mind. Their meaty flavor and firm texture make them a shoo-in for this role. We used Chef Gentry's pastrami cure, sauerkraut, and mustard to create one great-tasting pastrami sandwich from portobello mushrooms -- you could surely do the same with tofu or anything else for that matter.
This version is vegan, but if you'd like a little cheese, go ahead and add a few slices of swiss, and while you're at it, a smear of good olive-oil mayo. This is a recipe we bet you'll make again and agin.
Portobello Pastrami
1 tablespoon cracked black pepper
1 teaspoon ground coriander
1 teaspoon smoked paprika
1 teaspoon Kosher salt
1/2 teaspoon granulated garlic
1 tablespoon olive oil
3 to 4 medium portobello mushroom caps
6 to 8 slices marble rye (toasted)
Microwave Sauerkraut (recipe follows)
Horseradish Mustard (recipe follows)
Make the pastrami cure in a medium bowl by mixing the pepper, coriander, paprika, salt, and garlic together. Drizzle the olive oil over the mushroom caps so that they're evenly covered. This will allow the cure to stick to the mushrooms. Liberally coat each mushroom with the cure on both sides and place in a covered container in the fridge for at least two hours or up to 24 hours.
Preheat your outdoor grill to high. Grill mushrooms gill-side-down for 4 minutes, flip, and grill the smooth side for 4 minutes or until nicely marked and the mushroom is soft and pliable. Depending on the thickness of the mushroom, this could take longer. Place mushrooms back in the covered container and back in the fridge to cool.
Slice thin strips on the bias or diagonally to create larger "cold cuts" from the mushroom. Serve on marbled rye with Microwave Sauerkraut and Horseradish Mustard and pickles. (Makes 3 to 4 sandwiches -- depending on how high you stack 'em.)
Microwave Sauerkraut
This is the fastest way to make great-tasting sauerkraut this side of opening a jar lid. Fermenting a big batch on your kitchen counter can take weeks; this takes 4 minutes.
1 medium head purple cabbage (cored, thinly sliced)
1 medium white onion (thinly sliced)
1/2 cup apple cider vinegar
1 tablespoon caraway seeds
1/8 teaspoon cane sugar
1/2 teaspoon Kosher salt
In a large microwave safe bowl, mix the cabbage, onion, vinegar, caraway, sugar, and salt until well incorporated. Cover and microwave on high for 4 to 5 minutes. Let it sit, still covered, until it's cool to the touch and most of the brine has been absorbed. Refrigerate until ready to use. Keep it covered in the fridge for up to a week.
Horseradish Mustard
3 tablespoon dijon mustard
1 tablespoon prepared horseradish
2 tablespoons lager or porter beer
In a small bowl mix the mustard, horseradish, and beer. Set aside until ready to use.
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