Showing posts with label stuffing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label stuffing. Show all posts

Saturday, January 12, 2008

Summer flavors, but it's winter. Oh well, you do what you can.

The Yeti wife was out of town this week which means I usually experiment. I would then normally post results of experiments here. That is the crustimony proceedcake, as my bear friends would say. However, I did not really do any experiments (except for the lamb and beef cheeseburgers, east coast style, but I'll post that some other time). Instead I've opened up the legendary hairy Yeti archives and will share this dish with you. And the snowdogs did get to go somewhere every day this week too, including into the creek at the park even though I told them not to. Silly snowdogs.

I know that this is really a summer dish with the tomatoes and all, but since "bulletproof" tomatoes are available in the market year-round nowadays, this should be possible for people in general to do anytime. The texture of "bulletproof" beefsteak tomatoes are actually well suited for this recipe, but the flavor is lacking as you would expect. I like to use large heirlooms that are often available in late summer. If you want to use vine-ripe or other smaller tomatoes, try using about double the number of tomatoes (8 or so) or you can cut and stuff a bunch of larger cherry tomatoes and substitute feta for the softer chevre goat cheese for appetizers.

Tomatoes stuffed with couscous

4 large tomatoes, preferably nearly ripe, but still with some firmness of body
couscous, about 1/3 cup to 1/2 cup dry instant, or about 1 cup when fully prepared. That would also be about 2/3 cup of Israeli couscous if you wanted to use that. For this I like the texture of the smaller grained couscous.
Some goat cheese, about 4 ounces
Salt and pepper
about 2 tablespoons diced onion
1 clove of garlic, crushed
no more than 1/4 cup of additional herbs and veggies, such as curly parsley, cilantro, dill, diced bell pepper, as desired.

Prepare couscous as you would normally. Mix prepared couscous with the onion, garlic, and optional ingredients and set aside (for at least 20 minutes, this is about as long as it will take you to prepare the tomatoes).

Prepare tomatoes:
Cut off the top of the tomatoes. Taking care not to puncture the sides or bottoms of the tomatoes, remove the core and seeds. I use a melon baller. Season the inside of the tomatoes liberally with salt and pepper and place upside-down (open side down) on a rack above a tray or other container for the tomatoes to drain off excess liquid. You'll want to let the tomatoes drain for at least 15 minutes.

Preheat your oven to 325F.

After tomatoes are drained, stuff each tomato with 1/4 of the prepared couscous mixture. Place 1/4 (about 1 ounce) of goat cheese on top of the tomatoes. Bake for about 15 minutes, then place under a broiler for about 5 minutes or until the goat cheese is melted and slightly browned.

Serves 2 Yetis, or 4 people as a large side dish. This is great with some garlic bread and broiled fish or fresh green beans.

Wednesday, November 7, 2007

Three rice stuffing

This is one of the things I make as a holiday dinner dish. It has lots of good colors, those wonderful autumn and winter cooking aromas, and it tastes really good. You can use either sausage, soy sausage (the kind that comes in tubes, not patties nor link style), or leave that part out and just add an additional pinch of salt, pinch of slightly crushed or bruised fennel seed, and extra pinch of sage or a couple of fresh sage leaves. And this also makes for amazing leftovers.

A total of three cups of cooked rice. I usually use 1 cup cooked brown rice, 1 cup cooked wild rice and 1 cup cooked long grain white rice. You can use any combination you like.
1 large red or yellow bell pepper, medium dice (sometimes I add a jalapeño or other hot pepper for some heat. Yetis may live in the cold, but we like heat in our food!)
½ medium onion, small dice or about 4-5 shallots, small dice
1 clove garlic, minced or ¼ teaspoon garlic powder
2 ribs celery, small dice
1 tablespoon vegetable oil
1 tablespoon dried parsley
pinch dried sage
pinch thyme
pinch rosemary
2-3 fennel seeds
a few pinches of salt and fresh ground pepper to taste
1/2 cup vegetable or poultry stock
chopped toasted walnuts (optional)
1/4 pound of good soy sausage (see note above) or 1/4 pound of good, easily crumbled sausage (optional - I like Lightlife's Gimme Lean soy Sausage Style product or Bob Evans' original flavor or sage roll sausage for this)

Heat a large, heavy bottomed skillet, preferably cast iron, over high heat with the vegetable oil. When the oil is hot, carefully add the soy sausage or traditional sausage in small pieces and stir frequently. If you use soy sausage, you will probably need to add an additional tablespoon of vegetable oil. Cook the sausage product through and then remove the sausage from the pan. Pour out most of the oil from the skillet, keeping about 1 tablespoon in the pan.

Return the pan to the heat, and add the celery, peppers, and onion. Reduce the heat to medium high and sauté the celery, bell pepper and onion until soft and the onion is partially translucent, about 5-10 minutes. Turn heat back up to high, add all spices, herbs, and salt and pepper and any optional ingredients, but not the cooked rice. Stir through on high heat for about 30 seconds. Add the stock and deglaze the pan.

Turn heat down to low or medium. Add cooked rice. Warm through and serve.

Serves 1-2 Yeti or 4-6 people as a side dish.