Archive for the Category » Vegetables «

Finger Food Friday: Grilled Artichokes with Provolone and Sun Dried Tomato Pesto Sauce

Globe artichokes get a lot of table time in the Crescent City thanks to the French settlers who brought them to Louisiana from the Mediterranean back in the 1800s and the Creole-Italians (among many others) who knew how to cook them.  Interestingly, it’s been said that Louisiana was home to the first commercial artichokes fields.  They flourished in and around various parts of South Louisiana including a small patch of land in New Orleans currently known as the Warehouse District.  In the early 1940s, the crop mysteriously disappeared from these parts and today nearly 100% of all the country’s globe [ ... ]

Finger Food Friday: Crabmeat Stuffed Mushrooms with Blender Hollandaise

Mushrooms stuffed with anything are delicious.  Mushrooms stuffed with seafood are divine.  These mushrooms, stuffed with crabmeat and topped with hollandaise, are the bomb!  Because they’re so good, you may want to consider doubling the recipe if you’d like to get through this Finger Food Friday without any complaining.  Just a suggestion.  Another suggestion, or recommendation, is to use crab claw meat in this dish.  The meat from the claw (especially the Louisiana blue crab claw) has a bolder flavor than say choice lump crabmeat.  It can stand up to the spongy nature of the mushrooms.  Its texture is also [ ... ]

Finger Food Friday: Mock Oyster Dip

I’m sharing a bit of food nostalgia with you on this Friday.  It centers on Mock Oyster Dip, a glorious concoction of garlicky, cheesy goodness containing chopped broccoli and mushrooms meant to imitate the flavor and texture of oysters.  Mind you, this is not French-Creole haute cuisine.  It’s comforting New Orleans family finger food made with processed cheese and canned soup.  It’s special because each bite awakens wonderful distant memories and important milestones.  Over countless servings of warm Mock Oyster Dip that my family dished up at birthday parties, graduation parties and holiday dinners, I observed the various ways food [ ... ]

Roasted Brussels Sprouts with Warm Fig Vinaigrette

New Orleanians love fresh vegetables. And thanks to the City’s fertile soil and subtropical climate, there’s a huge variety of beautiful vegetables available year-round. They’re served traditionally as salads and side dishes. But they also make frequent appearances as sassy appetizers and sumputuous meat-and-seafood-stuffed entrees. Some are even cleverly transformed into dreamy desserts. Because they’re so plentiful, home cooks are always looking for new and creative ways to serve them. And it’s always a great accomplishment to prepare an otherwise frowned upon veggie in a can’t-get-enough-of-it way. That’s what happened with me and [ ... ]
Category: Vegetables  Tags:  One Comment

Finger Food Friday: Creole Fried Eggplant

Back when I was sporting my 19-year-old metabolism, fried vegetables were my go-to finger food.  Almost every weekend, I’d prepare a batch of deep fried cauliflower, mushrooms or eggplant.  I’d make them in much the same way I would panee (New Orleans lingo for battered and pan fried) veal or pork chops–soaked in an egg wash, rolled in Italian bread crumbs and submerged in hot oil.  I could easily get an entire week’s worth of vegetable servings in one sitting with those crispy hunks of Deep South love.  Now that I’m a little older and question whether I still have [ ... ]

Jambalaya-Stuffed Bell Peppers with Smoked Sausage Gravy

I’m settling back into the grove after what turned out to be a fantastic weekend in Birmingham attending the Food Blog South 2012 conference. This was my first food blog conference and one that I won’t soon forget. To be surrounded by people who eat, drink and sleep food is a wonderful thing. Their passion is undeniable, their knowledge unsurpassable and their willingness to share incredibly generous. I learned so much and made plenty of new friends. I feel refreshed, re-energized and psyched about the future and what it holds for food bloggers and anyone [ ... ]

Finger Food Friday: Baked Edamame Dumplings

I spent the better part of this week implementing my annual holiday recovery plan. That entailed purging the fridge and pantry of any lingering Christmas goodies, shopping for lots of fresh fruits and veggies and planning lighter, cleaner meals. Don’t ask me why I decided to make the transition back to normal eating this week, considering the weekend is full of family and friend birthdays (including my daughter Chandler’s today and mine on Monday) and major football games! But in any respect, I’m attempting to carry out my ambitious plan through the next few days and beyond [ ... ]

Sun Dried Tomato and Lentil Ragout

Way down yonder in New Orleans, we’re obsessed with beans.  And not just red beans.  We’re crazy about butter beans (large limas), navy beans, pintos, split peas and black-eyes.  Oh, and we also look forward to cooking with Great Northerns, black beans and chickpeas. And I can’t forget fava beans. We like to stash one of those in our coin purse to insure that we’ll never go broke. That’s an American-Creole-Italian thing–although I did discover during my CSA days that favas make a mighty fine dip! Then there are those other less popular types of “legumes” (a word we never [ ... ]
Category: Main Dishes, Side Dishes, Vegetables  Tags:  Comments off

Finger Food Friday: Spinach-Stuffed Artichoke Bottoms with Creole Bechamel

Since today is not only Finger Food Friday but New Year’s Eve Eve, I thought I’d make something that could transition nicely between a casual Happy Hour and a fancy New Year’s Eve bash. These stuffed artichoke bottoms do just that. The filling consists of a humble combination of greens and pork, in this instance spinach and pancetta, that get dressed up with a rich-tasting (I avoid the calorie bomb here by using skim milk) Creole Bechamel thickened with Parmesan cheese. The artichoke bottoms? Yet another fun vehicle to transport all that creamy filling to your [ ... ]

Spinach Madeleine

One of the best way to experience regional home cooking is to prepare recipes from community cookbooks.  These cookbooks represent an organization’s best efforts to support various social causes while preserving local flavors, cultures, traditions, cooking styles and trends.  What’s more, they’re all bound together by strong values and plenty of wisdom.  One of my favorites is the original River Road Recipes by the Junior League of Baton Rouge.  The series (there are now four books and an interactive edition of the first) is a true reflection of generational Creole, Cajun and Deep South cooking from home kitchens all over [ ... ]