Showing posts with label basil. Show all posts
Showing posts with label basil. Show all posts

Sunday, 18 August 2013

Home Grown

Garden Vegetable lasagne



After an amazing two weeks travelling to New York, The Hamptons, Washington and Chicago with Strange Talk, I happily came home to my wonderful fiance Deanna, and a garden full of fresh vegetables. Zucchinis the size of your arms had grown in the backyard along with a variety of grape and heirloom tomatoes. Inspired by this fresh produce, the fact I had been eating boy meals for two weeks straight, a.k.a a ton of meat and beer, I felt like making a vegetarian lasagne sans pasta. 


This recipe was done on the fly, and had spectacular results largely due to how wonderful freshly picked vegetables taste, and the richness of the goats cheese I used. To make this, I got out a Le Creuset small oval baking dish, which fed two, with a lot of left overs. 



1 to 2 Large Zucchini cut into rectangular thin strips to fit the baking dish
1 Eggplant cut into rectangular thin strips
4 Portabello mushrooms quartered, stems removed
1 Large Brown Onion
6 Cloves of Garlic, minced
20 Diced Fresh Grape Tomatoes Yellow and Red
4 Heirloom Tomatoes
1 Fresh Chili, minced
Bunch of Fresh Basil
Bunch of Fresh Oregano
Bunch of Fresh Thyme
Roasted Pine Nuts
Butter
Balsamic Vinegar
Red Wine
Olive Oil
Mozzarella
Goats Cheese 
Parmesan
Panko Bread Crumbs


Dice the onion, add oil, and saute until soft. Add the garlic, and cook for another two minutes. Next, add the diced tomatoes, a splash of balsamic and red wine, chili, and cook on a medium heat until the tomatoes start to break down and form a sauce. At this point I would usually add anchovies or something to give added depth, but upon tasting how fresh the tomatoes were, the sauce was incredible and I didn't want to take away from the freshness of the garden veggies. It makes me think about what real Italian cooking must be. I can imagine growing up on an italian country side and eating meals like this. Enough day dreaming, add in some chopped basil, oregano, season with salt and pepper, and let simmer for another minute. Remove from heat. 




To dehydrate the mushrooms, place them in a dry pan, with plenty of room around each mushroom. Cook on a medium to high heat until water starts to be released. After around 4 minutes when you start to notice the mushrooms sweating, flip them over. Remove and place on a paper towel to pat down. Next, place a knob of butter in the pan, add the mushrooms back in with a couple cloves of bruised garlic, some thyme leaves, salt & pepper, and a squeeze of lemon. Leave to cook on a medium heat for three minutes and refill your wine glass. 



Now it's time to assemble our masterpiece! Create the bottom layer with the sliced zucchini, add a layer of the eggplant next, then pour in the tomato sauce generously. Next, add a layer of sliced mozzarella, crumble on the goats cheese to your liking, add some salt and pepper, pine nuts, then basil and oregano leaves. Lastly, arrange a column of mushrooms down the centre of the oval. Finish with more mozzarella, goats cheese, panko bread crumbs, pine nuts, oregano, basil, and parmesan. 



Place in an oven on 400 Degrees Farrenheit for 25 minutes until golden. Set the table, light the candles, and enjoy! I am still amazed I made something without carbs or meat…








For more ideas on what to make with zucchinis, check out Deanna's blog here.

Thursday, 14 March 2013

LOTSA' PASTA!

Marscapone Spaghetti with Bacon, Chilli, and Basil.






Friends coming to dinner and you're dead broke? Well, this is my $10 Dollar Dazzler meal. Well, $16 dollars actually, but still really cheap... and impressive. The trick is to cook equal parts of he yummy basil, chilli and bacon bits... and a LOT of it. Otherwise, it's pretty much just cheese and pasta. Also, having everything cut symmetrically into similar sized strips for some reason makes this dish more satisfying.


1 Packet of Spaghetti
1 Bunch of Basil cut into horizontal strips
3 Long Red Chillies seeded cut into horizontal strips
1 Tub of Marscapone
Grated Pecorini Cheese
6 Medium Cut lengths of Bacon cut into thin strips
Rock salt
Pepper
Olive Oil

Whilst heating water in a pot for the pasta, start cooking the bacon in a fry pan with some oil. When the bacon has crisped up, lower the heat and throw in the chillies. Cook for a minute, and then put that aside on some absorbent paper towels. Add some salt to the water and throw in the pasta. Keep the lid 90% on to make sure the water is at a strong boil.  

Once the pasta is cooked, drain the water then throw back in the pot. Add in the tub of marscapone cheese and stir around over a low heat. The cheese should start to melt. Now throw in the basil, chilli and bacon mix and season with a lot of salt and pepper. You will have to add quite an obscene amount of salt to get it tasting good since the cheese is very mild and mainly textural. Stir until the cheese is all melted, and you have seasoned to taste. Now serve with some additional fresh basil, chuck on some pecorini cheese, and some freshly cracked pepper. Not good for the waste line, but cheap, yummy and quick!