Adventures in the Kitchen with Michelle, Spicy Pasta Sauce

Summer means tomatoes, and even though summers gone. Here, in FL we grow tomatoes – beautiful Ruskin reds that are fantastic. Problem is, you can’t buy them in a grocery store. Yes, that’s right. We have, available for purchase, pre-packaged Tennessee, or Canadian, or Mexican tomatoes. Really? Or the ones that look good, but have whitish flesh that tastes slightly better than cardboard. Then there are the plum tomatoes, that used to be the best tasting, until the stores found out we liked them and started selling them nearly green. That’s ok, I know where those yummy tomatoes went – the farmers market. Oh, yeah. I can’t resist a $3.00 basket of the lovelies. And yes, at times even they’re from somewhere else. Usually they’re the ones with a blemish or two, and that need to be eaten now,…that’s good because I want to eat them,…NOW.

So, I found myself with an overload of that summer goodness…I can’t eat them all in salads! I do love a tomato sandwich, I will confess. I also remember a sauce that my favorite Italian restaurant used to make. It was a spicy marinara, that I’d ask for a little extra and take home. It was so good – Fresh tasting. I’d chill it and use it as a salad dressing. Well, that restaurant was sold and the new owners promptly ran it into the ground. *sigh* But wait – I have plenty of ‘matoes to do it myself. Although, sauce (aka; Sundaygravy) takes days to makes, doesn’t it? After spotting a recipe on the Food & Wine site, by Grace Parisi (why doesn’t she have her own cookbook!?), I knew it could be done – and soooo easy ! 

Come on – I’ll show you.

Spicy Pasta Sauce Step 1

Step 1:

Gather up those tomatoes, about 2 #.

1/2 cup Sweet Onion, sliced thin (Vidailia’s are good, but I had a sweet red one)

3 Tbl Good Olive Oil

2 Garlic cloves, large ones, sliced thin

1/2 tsp Crushed Red Pepper

Salt to taste

1 Tbl Fresh Basil, minced

Spicy Pasta Sauce Step 2

Step 2:

Peel the tomatoes. Yes, peel them – there’s trick to this. Very old, and very simple. Since I have newbie cooks reading, I’ll show you…

Get some water boiling. Cut an X at the bottom of each tomato.

Spicy Pasta Sauce, STep 3

Step 3:

Get the fruit (yes, tomatoes are a fruit) into the boiling water. Get another bowl of water set out with ice in it (an ice water bath). 

Spicy Pasta Sauce Step 4

Step 4:

After about 30 seconds – a minute, scoop them out of the boiling cauldron and get them into the ice water bath. This stops the cooking process and loosens the skin. 

Yes, you can save the boiling water for the pasta to follow. (waste not!)

Spicy Pasta Sauce, Step 5

Step 5:

Now, slip the tomatoes out of their jackets and cut them into quarters. Using another bowl, and the strainer, push out the seeds into the strainer and coarsely chop the flesh.

Spicy Pasta Sauce, Step 5a

Step 5a:

Use a spoon to push all the juice through the stainer and toss those seeds.

Step 6

Step 6:

Slice those onions and mince that garlic. For my newbie cooks, note how far back on the knife this garlic is. Garlic is tiny and so strong it’s always cut up small. You’ll have more control, and be in need of less band-aids, if you choke up on the knife and use the hilt (handle) area.

Spicy Pasta Sauce, STep 7

Step 7:

Saute the onions, crushed red pepper flakes a bit then add the garlic. OMG – can you smell that?!

 

Step 8:

Toss in the tomatoes and simmer for maybe 20 minutes, add the salt to taste (keep it light). Add the basil last to keep it fresh. That’s about all the time needed to make the pasta and a salad…get going…I’m hungry!

Spicy Pasta Sauce, Finale

Finale:

That’s it ! This really only took me about a half hour (without stopping to take pics!). This may seem like a pain with the peeling of the tomatoes and everything, but once you taste it – you’ll never forget the flavor. So simple – like summer should be.

Add a little grilled turkey sausage on the side and it’s a healthy dinner for everyone.

Finale 2

After spending years of opening jars for pasta night, this is a whole other animal ! 

Dressing

 

But wait – remember how I said I’d use the restaurant marinara sauce as a salad dressing? Oh, yeah…

After using it as a pizza sauce – which was awesome ! – the leftovers were run thru the Magic Bullet and bottled.

dressing

It’s a summer treasure. I’ll reserve the store bought jars for winter and await another round of hot weather happiness. 

Enjoy!

Michelle @ badzoot.com

Adventures with Michelle, Healthy Mixers

OK, I confess,….I have been busy. And for some reason, it seems, everything takes longer this year. I had my sister visit while she was ‘between residences’. It was supposed to only be a week or 2 tops. OK,…2 months later, we were all going nuts. Not that she’s not a good house guest, because she really is. It’s just, well, you know. Just this week, I had the car in for service. A recall on an airbag assembly, no big deal ? – no. They gave me my usual service loaner and sent me on my way,…2 days later. Of course by then I didn’t want to give it back. It was kinda nice,…see. 
 
Q50
 
Since I had the fancy schmancy car, I was still milling around the bay area. While out in Tampa-land, I stopped by The Fresh Market for a very particular purchase. We only have one in our area and it’s in Carrollwood, if I’m even close I make sure to beat a path to it’s door. I love that place. A small, up- scale, grocery store. I can’t call it a supermarket – it’s like a convenience store for rich people!  Valrhona chocolate? Yes. Super beautiful, mostly organic, produce….yesssss. Don’t get me started on the meat department ! W O W ! OK, I digress. I went there because I got word that Coca-Cola had a new version that they were testing. Some time ago they got wind that Americans drink too damn much of the stuff and they’re literally killing their market. Time to change things up a bit, but maybe not nationwide just yet. Since they’re based out of Atlanta, the natural choice is to use us Southerners as guinea pigs, to do that they chose The Fresh Market to distribute this new concoction.  Coke ‘Life’ is just like regular Coke, only sweetened with a combination of regular sugar cane and stevia. Hmmm, just enough to shave the calorie count down a bit and still taste like, well, like Coke. I had to try it. Besides, that new car smell was making me giddy.
 

Healthy Mixers:

 

Coke Life

 
bottles
 
This tastes a lot like if you mixed regular Coke and a little Diet Coke, only without the aftertaste. I tried it warm for the full effect – it has a slightly molasses flavor – which lends itself really well to a nice spiced rum. A shot of Mount Gay, if you please !
 
coke life
 
Looks like Coke, fizzes like Coke – I like it. Of course, I’m a sucker for those cute little bottles! I’m honestly just glad they’re trying new options, because sugar and stevia make my list…Splenda, and Nutrasweet,…not so much.
 

Fever-Tree

 
Fevertree
While we’re on the subject of health mixers, I picked up a pack to replenish my stash of another little treat. Fever Tree Tonic. it’s naturally lower in calorie and tastes GREAT! I mean, really, if you’re going to the expense of Grey Goose Vodka, or a Hendricks Gin then please use a mixers that does it proud. You’ve already decided not to do it ‘half-assed’, then use a mixer that’s befitting. This tonic is from the UK – the land of the perfect gin and tonic and is really worth the price. So good, I’d drink it alone. (without vodka,…not without friends, naturally!)
 
I of course, will never get malaria, with the amount of quinine I’ve consumed over the years !
 
So, I’m back ….
 
Michelle @ badzoot.com

Adventures in the Kitchen with Michelle, Roly Poly Zucchinis

It’s summer and that means a couple of things. One of which is that the Farmers Market is filled with summer veggies,…and school’s out*. I confess to being a sucker for odd veggies – golden beets, giant lemons, and these ‘roly-poly zucchini’s’. A little bit bigger than a baseball, they were just so cute, I had to have them! But what do you do with them? It seems that many people slice them like eggplants and fry them. No, frying, thank you. Next is stuffing. Oh, yes I can do that! I love stuffed peppers, and these would work sort of the same way. Better yet, I had some leftover rice dish from a day or two ago that was awesome (http://www.pbs.org/food/kitchen-vignettes/tunisian-spinach-rice). You could use whatever you have, leftover fried rice from Chinese take-out, a rice pilaf from a couple of days ago, maybe a stuffing tidbit you could add some more diced and sautéed veggies to to make it go further. Mac n’ Cheese, ramen noodles,….Any way you do it, they’re fun and a cutesy single–serving veggie goodness bomb!
 
Adventures in the Kitchen with Michelle, Roly Poly Zucchinis
 
 

Roly Poly Zucchini’s (aka – Stuffed Zombie Heads*) 

 

Step 1:

 Roly Poly Zucchinis
Get those little zukes out and wash ‘em up. Preheat that oven to 350deg.
 

Step 2:

Adventures in the Kitchen with Michelle, Roly Poly Zucchinis

Decide what you’re going to fill them with. Get an 8”x 8” dish and put a little olive oil in the bottom. Find your mellon baller (or a round spoon) and a paring knife.
 

Step 3:

Adventures in the Kitchen with Michelle, Roly Poly Zucchinis
Cut off the tops as if you were carving a pumpkin – they are cousins you know. Using the melon baller, scoop out the seedy innards ,…eewwwww! But leave the flesh – it’s yummy.
 
*This is about the part where my son, who’s been off from school and spending his rain-days binge watching The Walking Dead, comes in and says “Hey, they look like little zombie heads…” – “…braaaaains….crrr..crrrr!” So we all had a good laugh and, yup, it looked like a shrunken zombie head when I was done – LOL
 

Step 4:

Adventures in the Kitchen with Michelle, Roly Poly Zucchinis

Fill them with you delicious mix and top off with a little parm cheese, just to be showy! If you aren’t feeling all vegetarian, those Chicken Meatballs from Murrays are a perfect fit too. Find them in the fresh Organic chicken section – perfect if you’re feeling both healthy and lazy (no, that’s not an odd combo here). Pre-made and delicious for the lazy me, lower fat, GMO free Chicken for Ms.WannaBeHealthy.
 

Step 5:

Adventures in the Kitchen with Michelle, Roly Poly ZucchinisSet them in the baking dish. You can put their lids back on (cause they’re cute), but put a bit of oil on them to keep the cheese from sticking.
 

Step 6:

Adventures in the Kitchen with Michelle, Roly Poly Zucchinis
 
Get those bad boys into the hot box for about 30 –45 min., depending on what you filled them with. These zukes have a slightly tougher skin so they stand up to being filled, but not like a hard squash so you can eat the whole thing.
 

Finale:

Everybody got a ‘serving’ (zombie head! – LOL) and it made a vegetarian side dish for some summer burgers that was fun for all. Even my meatarians were impressed !
 
Roly Poly Zucchinis
Yum!
   
 
Michelle Beal