Showing posts with label tomatillo. Show all posts
Showing posts with label tomatillo. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 30, 2008

To Market, to Market


Since I've really started making an effort to visit the greenmarket, I've found it easier to stay abreast of what's in season. The supermarket has everything all of the time, so it's difficult to tell unless you go where the farmers are. So far I've done a pretty good job of making it out to the market every other weekend, and boy does the landscape change from one week to the other. While two weekends ago I found a market rich in greens and radishes, this week I found one reflective of what's in season during the middle and end of summer.


Although I'm a foodie, I generally don't consider myself a food snob--high or low brow, if it's good, I'll eat it. I am, however, exceptionally picky when it comes to tomatoes. Very rarely am I satisfied with the ones I find in the supermarket, especially out of season. Those huge beefsteak tomatoes have no flavor, are always mealy, and just seem unnaturally large. I've often found solace in organic vine ripened tomatoes, but they're just not the same out of season. That's why I was so happy to walk through the market last weekend among tables and tables of heirloom tomatoes. I jumped at the chance to buy a few small heirlooms (first picture) along with fresh basil for a delicious caprese salad. Before leaving, I was lucky enough to find a stand with perfect green tomatoes. I haven't had fried green tomatoes in years, so I purchased two big ones to use for an appetizer dish.


Another big difference was the presence of peppers. They've clearly come into season in more ways than one. Forget about crunchy, sweet bell peppers, and consider for a minute all you could do with the variety of chiles available. From your basic jalapeño to serranos and habaneros, every chile under the sun seems to be available by the bushel. Now's the time to make your salsas and chutneys, not to mention delicious green salsa fresca, since tomatillos are in season now, too. I bought some lovely deep green pasillas (which are hot but not scorching) and plan on using them to make a roasted pepper salsa.


I also bought some regular bell peppers to make one of my favorite sandwiches.I still remember when I was a kid, my mom would fry up some green bell peppers (or sometimes they were spicy cubanelles) and serve them on a crunchy piece of baguette dipped in the pepper's juices. We'd serve them with home fries or even french fries, just like the pubs in Spain. I also made an impulse purchase and bought a chile pepper plant. Now, as many people reading this (my office mates included) may know, I have a pretty serious black thumb. I've managed to kill every plant that has come into my possession, the most recent of which was a brutally murdered tomato plant I had decomposing on my desk for months (my thanks to co-worker Lauren for disposing of the remains). But, since I'm always running out to buy jalapeños, I've convinced myself that if I have to rely on this plant for food, there's a good chance it may survive. In the meantime, I hope it enjoys it's time on my living room windowsill overlooking the traffic on 10th Avenue. If this one makes it, I know I'll finally be ready for that cilantro plant.


There is also the occasional ingredient that I have to keep myself from buying because I simply will not eat it. For example, the above pictured carrots were absolutely lovely. They were making their first appearance at the market and I was sure I could experiment with them and their beautiful rainbow colors. While the idea of roasting all those beautifully colored carrots was super appealing, I knew that I would never want to eat them. I don't really care for carrots on their own, I don't love carrot soup, and I have no plans to bake a carrot cake. So, I convinced myself to leave them be, which is more than I can usually do to keep from overbuying at the greenmarket. So that's what is out there now. Get on out to your local greenmarket, support your local farmers, and and buy fresh ingredients. If you do, you'll have less to do in the kitchen, since quality ingredients do most of the work for you.

-Laura

Tuesday, January 29, 2008

Going Green


For my family, the weekend always meant three things:

1. Brunch
2. Exhaustive trips to the Home Depot
3. Salsa

Looking back on my childhood, it has become clear that these three activities have both blessed, and scarred me as a person. I live for brunch, make salsa on an almost weekly basis, and my penchant for decorating not withstanding, hate the Home Depot with a fiery passion. Despite that last pothole in memory lane, I do have fond memories of my weekends as a child. With the exception of a sleepover here or there, most weekends were fairly predictable and family oriented. We'd wake up and head off to brunch, where I'd almost certainly OD on scrambled eggs and chocolate covered strawberries (hey, if you tell me it's all-you-can-eat, you better believe I'm going for the entire tray). Then we'd head over to my personal hell, the Home Depot, for any materials my dad needed to build whatever my mom thought was missing in the house that week.

Afterwards, we'd drive home and my dad would set off for his basement workshop to build the chair/side table/wine rack/cabinet of the week, to the tune of his favorite oldies station. After a couple of hours to himself, my mom would brew a pot of coffee for him, an espresso for her, and they'd chat about whatever it is parents talk about. By the afternoon, I'd tire of hours on the phone with my friends and would grab the blender and whip up a huge bowl of salsa for the three of us. Back then it was your average, everyday, restaurant style red salsa. It wasn't fancy, but it brought us all together as a family and almost erased the memory of 3 hours spent in the wallpaper aisle at the Home Depot. Almost.

All these years later I still make salsa on the weekends, and always have a big bowl waiting in the fridge for when my mom comes to visit. These days, I've taken to making green tomatillo salsa, which is so easy and delicious, it doesn't even require any chopping. You can just toss all of the ingredients into the blender and let the machine do the work for you.
This weekend I whipped up a batch to accompany a delicious dinner of chicken tortilla soup and homemade enchiladas at my friend Gloria's house. It was a great meal, and speaking of enchiladas, this salsa is perfect for enchiladas suizas--just make them the same way you'd make regular enchiladas, but replace the red sauce with this green salsa. Here's the (very) easy recipe:

Tomatillo Salsa (Salsa Verde)

1 large can tomatillos, drained
1 avocado
3 Tbsp fresh cilantro (I just twist off a handful)
3 jalapeños (I remove the ribs and seeds from 2)
1/4 of a large onion
pinch of salt

Combine all ingredients in a blender and blitz until smooth and combined. Taste for salt and serve. Enjoy!

-Laura