Warming up to winter cooking: six stew recipes

Cardamom Beef Stew with Roasted Root Vegetables

IF THERE’S ANY BRIGHT SIDE TO WINTER COMING, it’s that it signals time for making stews again. Slow cooking, flavors blending, earthy fragrances filling the kitchen. Here are six recipes to get us all back in the game. Continue reading “Warming up to winter cooking: six stew recipes”

A French classic, made weeknight quick: Chicken with Mustard Cream Sauce

A quick sauce of cream (or half & half), Dijon mustard, shallots and tarragon transform sautéed chicken thighs. Recipe below.

Chicken in Mustard Cream Sauce
Chicken with Mustard Cream Sauce

CHICKEN ISN’T EXACTLY TOP OF MIND AROUND THANKSGIVING. But it’s often top of mind with us. It’s versatile, relatively inexpensive and healthier than red meat (which is also often top of mind with me, if we’re being honest). So as you deal with turkey prep—or turkey leftovers, depending on when you’re reading this—please indulge our chicken explorations here. Continue reading “A French classic, made weeknight quick: Chicken with Mustard Cream Sauce”

Haiti by way of Montreal: Rum Sour

A French not-so-simple syrup, made with vanilla bean, star anise, cinnamon stick, fresh ginger and raisins, adds a lovely complexity to this Haitian rum sour. Recipes for the syrup and the cocktail below.

Rum Sour
Rum Sour, made with sirop d’épices

BINGEWATCHING HAS BECOME THE NATIONAL PASTIME, as we all hunker down, just trying to get through everything. This cocktail is a direct result of our bingeing. No, not that kind. We’ve been bingeing on Somebody Feed Phil. Continue reading “Haiti by way of Montreal: Rum Sour”

Add versatile Sweet Potato Gnocchi to your Thanksgiving menu

Sweet potatoes give traditional potato gnocchi a naturally sweet twist. Here, they’re served with a kasha and shallot sauce. Two recipes below.

Sweet Potato Gnocchi
Sweet Potato Gnocchi

HERE COMES THANKSGIVING, AND THIS YEAR WE DON’T KNOW QUITE HOW THINGS WILL GO. Maybe, if everything goes well, the swabs the caution the distancing the results, we’ll have visitors, family! a full house, and a dinner table surrounded by loving faces. Or maybe it will be just us, for a while longer, with messages coming via email and text and a quiet, more reflective time, and brave personal portions, and the festivities conducted via cheerful Zooms. A lot of us, that is, still don’t know if we will be many or few, and the likeliest outcome will be: few. Continue reading “Add versatile Sweet Potato Gnocchi to your Thanksgiving menu”

Perfectly imperfect: Apple and Dried Apricot Galette

The rustic shape of this delicious galette made with apples, dried apricots and thyme is one of its charms. Recipe below.

Apple and Dried Apricot Galette
Apple and Dried Apricot Galette

TERRY AND I HAVE A FONDNESS FOR IMPERFECT THINGS. Our favorite piece of furniture is an old farmhouse cupboard we got at some flea market years ago, with chipped gray paint, slightly wavy glass in the doors, little drawer pulls that are not quite tight and stubbornly refuse to ever be tightened, and feet that speak of years of hard work and being banged and knocked into in some hard-working kitchen. It leans back ever so slightly—the place where we keep it, in the tiny hallway leading to our kitchen, allows it to rest its top against the wall. It’s tragic and odd and we love it. Continue reading “Perfectly imperfect: Apple and Dried Apricot Galette”

The comfort of simple: Apricot Balsamic Pork Chops

Apricot jam, balsamic vinegar, garlic and thyme flavor these delicious weeknight-quick pork chops. Recipe below.

Apricot Balsamic Pork Chops
Apricot Balsamic Pork Chops

WHEN I WAS GROWING UP, EATING IN RESTAURANTS was something my family almost never did. Every evening when dinner showed up on the table, it was because my mom or my grandma had cooked it, usually after working a full day. I didn’t really think about it as a kid—it’s just what happened. But I’ve been thinking about it a lot lately as eating in restaurants is something most of us are rarely doing right now, if at all. Continue reading “The comfort of simple: Apricot Balsamic Pork Chops”

Korean comfort with variations: Kimchi Fried Rice with (or without) Scallops

Kimchi Fried Rice, a lively, tangy, slightly spicy traditional Korean dish, is topped here with scallops. Recipe and variations below.

Kimchi Fried Rice with Scallops
Kimchi Fried Rice with Scallops

TO MANY KOREANS, KIMCHI FRIED RICE IS PURE COMFORT FOOD. Usually topped with a sunny side up fried egg, Kimchi Bokkeumbap (its name in Korean) is a traditional dish—which means it comes with many, many variations. Including adding seafood, which we discovered when we were looking for something new to do with scallops. Continue reading “Korean comfort with variations: Kimchi Fried Rice with (or without) Scallops”

Inspirations from Detroit and Mexico: Beet Elote Salad

Based on two words from a restaurant menu and Mexican street food, Beet Elote Salad replaces corn with diced beets. Recipe below.

Beet Elote Salad
Beet Elote Salad

THE OTHER NIGHT I WAS POKING AROUND ON VARIOUS DETROIT WEBSITES and I thought to check out the website of Selden Standard. Several years ago, when we were spending most of our time in Detroit, Selden Standard became a place where I would go when I had a free evening and an appetite for a well-made, kind of rustic, kind of wonderful Midwestern-American dinner. Continue reading “Inspirations from Detroit and Mexico: Beet Elote Salad”

Because sometimes you just need cake: Blueberry Lemon Rosemary Bundt Cake

Fresh fruit, lemon juice and rosemary flavor this homey, comforting bundt cake. Recipe below.

Blueberry Lemon Rosemary Bundt Cake
Blueberry Lemon Rosemary Bundt Cake

EVERYBODY, EVERYBODY LOVES CAKE. When you want to celebrate, when you need to celebrate, when you’re feeling festive or dejected or delighted, the answer is cake. When you need excitement and soothing: cake. When your spirits need lifting: cake. Continue reading “Because sometimes you just need cake: Blueberry Lemon Rosemary Bundt Cake”

Savory with a fresh, light finish: Belgian Chicken with Juniper Berries

Juniper berries and genever (or regular gin) give simple pan-roasted chicken a sharp, clean flavor. Recipe below.

Belgian Chicken with Juniper Berries
Belgian Chicken with Juniper Berries

WE ARE ESPECIALLY MISSING LIBRARIES THESE DAYS, wanting to just go in and browse the shelves and find unexpected treasures. The Chicago public libraries have reopened, but we don’t yet feel safe going in buildings that aren’t our house. The upside, if there is one, is that the library just keeps renewing things we currently have checked out. So we keep getting to enjoy a live Miles Davis double album on vinyl. And a wonderfully comforting Belgian cookbook. Continue reading “Savory with a fresh, light finish: Belgian Chicken with Juniper Berries”