Eat Simply, Eat Well

Healthy recipes & tips to help you live the good life. by Ann Plough

Pie for Dinner? Oh yes. Broccoli Leek Savory Pie

February 21, 2013 by aplough

Are you hungry and ready for dinner?

This is the simplest of recipes.  2 vegetables.  Salt & Pepper.  Milk, eggs, cheese.  A simple crust of oatmeal, flour, flax, baking soda, butter, yogurt.  45 minutes start to finish.  And you’ll be smiling for several days.  Yes, you can have pie for dinner and feel good about it.

Ah, pie.  Sometimes I dream of a nice fruity pie, loaded with berries and topped with a reasonable-sized scoop of good quality vanilla ice cream.  Maybe it’s a pie that you, together with two good friends, devour with the help of three forks and then wonder how it happened so fast (Karen, Becky, I’m talking to you!)  Or a lemon meringue pie – with enough tartness to balance out the sweetness of the meringue piled high on top of the bright yellow filling, perfect on its own or with a cup of strong coffee or tea.  Only at Thanksgiving – pumpkin pie, with lightly sweetened, softly whipped cream.  Never pecan.  Rarely chocolate.  Nope, if I’m having a sweet pie, I’m a fruit-pie fan.

But then.  Then there is the savory pie.  What is it about a savory pie?  Sometimes called “quiche” when eggs are involved – does the French term make it feel more exotic?  Or is that the French invented this idea (not so sure about that – you’ll find pies that look like quiches in cuisines throughout Europe, at least.  One thing about those French – they don’t spare the butter.  Or the cream.  Which means that a quiche is often loaded heavily with fat.  “French women don’t get fat”, but it’s not because of the baked goods.  Not that I have anything against fat in moderation.  It’s a great thing and I have no interest in living without it.  However.

Whenever I see a recipe that calls for “2 cups of heavy cream” and I am in the process of making dinner, I’ll admit – I cringe a little and I think my waistline may even start to expand a little right there in anticipation of an overload of calories.

But you know what?  You don’t need cream to make a great quiche, savory pie, whatever.  You don’t even need to load the crust with butter.  Nope.  You can make a few easy adjustments, and come up with a winner every time.  Like this pie.  2 vegetables.  Salt & Pepper.  Milk, not cream.  Eggs, cheese. Oatmeal, flour, flaxseed, baking soda, butter, yes, but then yogurt.  Fast.  Delicious.  Dead easy.  And you won’t need to pull on your sweat pants before or after dinner in order to feel comfortable.

Broccoli Leek Savory Pie

Preheat oven to 200°C/400°F

First make the crust:
1/2 cup / 1 dl oatmeal
1/2 cup / 1 dl flour
2 tablespoons ground flaxseed (optional)
1/2 teaspoon salt
1/2 teaspoon baking soda
4 tablespoons / 60 g butter, melted
1/2 cup greek yogurt or quark (rahka)

Stir the oatmeal, flour, flaxseed, baking soda and salt together with a fork.  Add the melted butter and yogurt and stir until well combined.  Press the mixture into the bottom and up the sides of a 9″pie pan.  Bake for 15 minutes or until puffed and golden brown.

Meanwhile, in a cast iron skillet heat:
2 tablespoons of oil

Add:
1 leek, sliced in half lengthwise and the sliced into half moons
1 head of broccoli, roughly chopped

Cook until the leek and broccoli are tender – about 8 minutes.

While the vegetables cook, make the egg batter:
4 eggs (double yolk if you happen to find them)
2 cups 2% milk / 4 dl kevyt maito
1 cup shredded mild cheese; e.g. Edam or Mozzarella
1 teaspoon salt
1/2 teaspoon pepper

When the crust is ready, pull it from the oven and spread the cooked vegetables evenly across the bottom.  Carefully pour the egg mixture over the top and bake 30-35 minutes until it puffs up nicely in the middle and is golden brown.  Allow the pie to rest on the counter for 10 minutes before serving.  Serve with a green salad on the side.

Serves 6.

Filed Under: Uncategorized

White Vegetable Gratin and a trip to the Local Food Market Halls

February 11, 2013 by aplough

White Vegetable Gratin


I am seeing white everywhere and it isn’t just the snow.

White food gets a bad rap these days, and some of it with good reason:  white sugar, white (refined) flour, white rice…

But I was looking through my fridge and cupboards the other day getting ready to make dinner, and I started pulling things out and laying them on the counter:

Onion – white
Fennel – white except for the green fronds poking out of the top
Chinese Cabbage – white except for a bit of green at the ends
Garlic – white
Mozzarella – white
Edam – white
Celery Root – white
Sourdough bread crumbs – nearly white

Edam, Onion, Mozzarella, Celery Root, Chinese Cabbage, Fennel

I decided to challenge myself to make dinner with all of these white vegetables, loving the idea of taking this Winter color and making it into to a savory dish that counteracts the chill of the weather outside.

And as I chopped and simmered and tasted and stirred, I got to thinking about how my views on food and cooking have changed as I have been living overseas and taking more time than ever before to explore new kinds of raw ingredients.  I have made a conscious effort over the last few years to not only increase the variety of the foods we eat at home, but also to eat more seasonally, buy locally whenever possible.  I believe that buying local food is more important than buying organic food – what’s the point of buying organic Italian strawberries out of season when, if you wait until June, your Finnish market hall sells nice, sweet, juicy berries as well that come from a nice local farm in Nurmijärvi?

Last week I attended a meeting about what to do with the Vanha Kauppahalli in Helsinki.  The doors are closed now for renovation and many of the sellers moved to Hietalahdenhalli to the new market which opened today.  I listened to the shop owners talk about how important the Vanha Kauppahalli is to them and to Helsinki.  I heard them share concerns about how to get more people to visit; how to increase the variety of food offered there so that those of us who live and work in Helsinki can stop by and pick up all of the food we need to cook dinner for our family and friends.  I heard stories of how they wake up a 3:00 AM to get to warehouse where they buy fresh produce, fish, meat, flowers – how they pick out each piece carefully to ensure that they only give their customers the best.  The talked about the relationship they build with each of their customers – especially the regular ones who give them hugs, tell them they are looking a little tired have the slept?

The conversations they have about food, the advice they give, the energy they bring to this city touched me.  They have such passion for what they do.  They aren’t in it for the money – in most cases they don’t make much – they are in it because they want to provide the best possible product and service to the customers they serve.

In many ways these vendors, who rise each morning at the same time the Helsingin Sanomat drops into the mailboxes of the rest of the sleeping populations, are the heart of this city just as market vendors the world over are for the cities they serve.  But with large markets on every corner, it’s more convenient for most of us to pull our cars into the parking lot, fill a cart, pay, slide the bags in the car, and be on our way.  Or exit the metro, grab the groceries from the store run by one of the giant grocery chains just outside its entrance, and head on home.  Convenience is a major factor in our busy lives, as is price.

Last week I did an experiment:  I bought as much food as possible from small shops and the markets.  Undoubtedly, the quality was much higher – and I smiled each time I handed a small bit of cash over the counter and received by ground beef, my cauliflower, the few, carefully selected red onions.  But it also took me all day to gather what I needed.  Several days, actually – I was on public transportation and couldn’t carry everything at once.  I had several other things to do and the shops were in different parts of the city.  There were moments when I thought that I would be done with my shopping already if I’d just gone to the K-Market 700 meters from my front door.  But then I wouldn’t have had the conversation with the local vendor about how to prepare fresh turbot caviar (I decided not to this time) and why vendance caviar is superior to salmon caviar, especially for blini.  I wouldn’t have come eye to eye with a 5kg lahna (bream) as they fish monger began the process of fileting it, and learned that a fish that size is rare – only once or twice per year does a fisherman get lucky enough to pull a big one out of the sea.  I certainly wouldn’t have tasted three different cheeses before settling on one that specifically suited the dish I wanted to make the next day (I would have instead read a few packages and the purchased Edam…again).  And I wouldn’t have found the sumac I needed for making Za’atar (the spice shop in Hakaniemi halli sells it, in case you are looking for it).

But my experience reminded me why it’s difficult for these market vendors to increase their customer base.  First, you often don’t know what they sell until you are in the hall.  Once there, if you don’t go frequently, it can feel overwhelming:  which fish vendor?  Which cheese, which fruit, which meat? (ask them – they are delighted to start a conversation and share what they know). Can I touch it? (it depends – best to ask).  Can I taste it?  (Usually, unless it’s raw fish/meat).  Do you know what to do with all those special ingredients?  (Maybe not, but the seller does, and they are happy to help you open your eyes to a new world of food).

White Vegetable Gratin

More and more, I try to start with raw, whole ingredients and make as much as possible from scratch.  And more and more I try to fit trips to the local market halls into my weekly shopping.  Along the way, I’ve been continuously reminded that eating real, good food is more a matter of planning than anything:  if you want roasted beets or barley or to cook dried beans, you need to start early – in the case of dried beans, the night before.  Or in the case of fresh market fish, you need to schedule a trip to the market or tori  and have a chat with the local fish guy.  It takes time, but it’s oh so worth it.

As for this White Vegetable Gratin – this is one to cook one evening and eat the next day, or to start early on a Saturday and have it ready for a delicious and filling evening meal.  The flavors need time in the oven to meld together, and the vegetables need time to become nice and tender, so don’t rush this dish.

The dish is so complete all by itself, that the only thing I served it with was a glass of sparkling water.

White Vegetable Gratin
Preheat oven to 200°C/400°F

1.  Cook:
In a large frying pan, heat
2 tablespoons olive oil
Add and cook until tender:
1 onion, diced
2 garlic cloves, minced

Add and cook for 10 minutes:
3 cups/ 6 dl shredded Chinese or Savoy cabbage
2 tablespoons Homemade Bouillon + 3 cups / 6 dl water or 3 cups/ 6dl vegetable broth

1/4 cup chopped fresh thyme
1/4 teaspoon nutmeg
salt and pepper to taste 

2:  Prepare:
Meanwhile prepare the following ingredients:
1/2 fennel bulb, sliced thin
1/2 celery root, peeled and cut into thin rounds
1 large mozzarella ball, diced
1 cup shredded Edam

3.  Assembly:
When the cabbage mixture is done cooking, gather all of your ingredients and layer them as follows into a large casserole dish:

1.  Cover the bottom of the casserole dish with celery root rounds.
2.  Arrange 1/2 of the fennel slices over the top.
3.  Sprinkle 1/2 of the mozzarella cubes and 1/3 cup of the Edam cheese over the top.
4.  Spoon 1/2 of the cabbage mixture over the top
5.  Layer 1/2 cup bread crumbs over this.

Repeat one more time to use up the remaining ingredients, except for 1/3 cup Edam.  Pour any remaining juices from the cabbage mixture pan into the casserole dish.  Top with the remaining Edam and the bread crumbs.

Bake in the oven for 60-90 minutes or until the vegetables are very tender when poked with a fork.

Serves 4 as a main dish.

Filed Under: Uncategorized

Spicy Tomato & Meatball Ravioli Soup

February 4, 2013 by aplough

Spicy Tomato Meatball Ravioli Soup

Have you been skiing yet this winter?

Yesterday was gorgeous and sunny, so we finally pulled our skis out of storage, waxed them up, and heading out on the ski trail running just a few meters/feet from our front door for a cross country ski trek.  It was about 3 PM, so the sun was making it’s descent into the western sky, casting a grapefruit colored glow across the trees and, in between shadows, onto the snow-covered trail.  The ski trails are kept extremely well groomed around here – at least twice per week the trail maintenance team runs some sort of grooming machine along the trail to cut the long, deep, continuous lines for the cross country skiers and evens out the wider path for the skate skiers.  
I’ve not quite mastered skate skiing.  Ahem.  Actually, “not quite mastered” is the understatement of the year.  I am terrible at it.  I can never seem to find the rhythm – so while other people zip along as though they are moving on rollerblades with a ski pole in each hand – I find myself with the tips crossed, my legs crossed, my poles cattywumpus, and me in a generally unbalanced and undignified heap. 
Isn’t that beautiful?  Spring is approaching. The colors of the Finnish flag – now you know why!
Instead, I stick to the periteinen hiihto or cross country skiing.  I’ve started to love it.  The first year we bought skis, it was no pretty sight.  Going uphill was a struggle, going downhill was a uncontrolled, prayer-filled, near disaster ride.  But things are better now, and I love getting out into the winter wonderland for the peace, beauty, solitude and exercise.  
For a nice, warm pick-me-up after an invigorating ski session, a spicy soup seems like just thing.  Try this one out.  Everything can be made in advance, and then you can bring the broth to a simmer while you unpack and hang your ski gear and let the ravioli cook while you shower.  Enjoy!
Spicy Tomato Meatball Ravioli Soup

Spicy Tomato & Meatball Ravioli Soup
Pasta
2 cups spelt flour (or durum if you prefer)
2 eggs
Measure flour into a medium-sized bowl.  Make a well in the middle and crack the eggs into it.  Using a fork, stir the egg and flour mixture together until if forms a loose, shaggy mixture.  Turn the contents of the bowl onto a clean countertop and begin kneading the dough.  Continue to knead the dough – feel free to use a little force and be aggressive here!  It’s a great opportunity to relieve a little stress.  Knead the dough until it is a smooth, elastic mass, about 8 minutes.  Wrap the dough in plastic wrap and allow to rest at room temperature for at least 20 minutes.  Don’t be tempted to skip this step – it makes all the difference for a soft, tender noodle.

Meatballs
400g / 1 lb ground beef
1 egg
½ medium onion (1/3 cup)
1 large garlic clove, minced
1.5 teaspoons Italian seasoning
½ teaspoon chili flakes
1 teaspoon salt
¼ teaspoon fresh ground black pepper
½ cup oatmeal
¼ cup chopped fresh or frozen parsley
Heat oven to 200°C/400°F.  Measure the meatballs onto the tray in 1 teaspoon-sized balls.  Bake for 10 – 12 minutes until completely browned through.  Remove from oven and cool completely.
Ravioli Assembly:  
Beat 1 egg in a small bowl. 
Roll the dough out with a pasta machine or a rolling pin as thinly as you can into 3” strips.  Brush the dough with the egg mixture.  Place the meatballs on one half of the pasta strip, 1” apart.  Fold the other half of the noodle over the top of the meatballs, and press with your fingers between each meatball to push the air out.  Press around each meatball to seal the pasta edges together.  Cut to shape with a pastry cutter.  Flour each piece lightly to preventing them sticking to each other.  You can freeze the ravioli at this point if you don’t want to use them right away.
 
Alternatively – if you don’t have the time or desire to make ravioli, you could, at this point, cut the pasta into noodles and proceed with the recipe.
Spicy Tomato Soup Broth:
3 T olive oil
½ onion, diced
2 garlic cloves, diced
¼ cup diced celery or celery root
1 can diced tomatoes
3 cups vegetable broth
2 tablespoons tomato paste
2 bay leaves
6 allspice berries or ½ teaspoon ground allspice
6 whole peppercorns
¼ teaspoon pepper flakes
2 teaspoons Italian seasoning
½ teaspoon salt, or to taste
Heat olive oil in a medium-sized heavy bottom pot.  Add the onion, celery or celery root and garlic and sauté until onion is tender and translucent.  Add all remaining ingredients and bring soup to a boil.  Reduce temperature to low, cover, and allow to simmer for at least 30 minutes.   Can be done up in advance and frozen or refrigerated.
Just before serving the soup, bring the soup to a boil and add the meatball ravioli.  Boil for 5 minutes (8 -10 if frozen).  Remove from heat.  Serve immediately in deep bowls with shredded parmesan cheese and diced scallions/green onions for garnish.
Serves 4.

Filed Under: Uncategorized

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