Sunday, August 19, 2018

Millennial keeps Kosher tradiional/modern

  Modern cookbook is all kosher


                             What if your regular fridge-stock “go-to” wasn’t  some carb-filled repeat but eggplant boats? You could creatively fill them with chicken or cheese or tahini on different days and be so much less bored with dinner.
                             What if your favorite weekend breakfast got a cocoa kick by swirling up Marble Cake Pancakes?
                             And maybe you’d feel better about keeping ramen noodles in the house if  you discard the flavor packets they come with and season with your stock to make something like Ramen Shakshuka. This could be your second breakfast fave with marinara sauce, eggs, and sometimes spaghetti squash and that handy eggplant.
                             It’s Chanie Apfelbaum who comes up with these ideas in her beautiful book, “Millennial Kosher: Recipes Reinvented for the Modern Palate.” Maybe you know her from Busy in Brooklyn, a food site/blog that shows this woman “gets it.” The “it” here being delicious real food and an appreciation of respecting recipes, cultures, travel, traditions and family. I ran out of space on my note pad marking tidbits I wanted to share with Culinary Thrill Seeking readers.
                             I love her style, concepts, outlook and passion. I’d love to try her roasted sweet potatoes with gooey pecans, Frangipane Fig Galette and cornbread funnel cakes. These are twists on the foods we already love in the south.
                             To me, the recipe below is a fun twist. To the author, it’s easier than washing sand from basil and accidentally burning expensive pine nuts for traditional pesto. The spinach also keeps the pesto very green if you have leftovers to store in the fridge. I love pesto with everything from pasta and bread to eggs. Here’s one from the book (The SHAAR Press) I’m ready to enjoy:
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                  Spinach Pistachio Pesto
                  3 cups (packed) baby spinach
                  two thirds cup toasted unsalted pistachios
                  1 large or two small cloves garlic
                  2 tablespoons lemon juice, plus more to taste
                  one fourth to one half cup olive oil
                  Salt to taste
                  Pepper to taste
                  One half cup grated Parmesan cheese, optional, for dairy meals
                            In a large food processor, pulse spinach, garlic, pistachios, lemon juice and Parmesan cheese (if using) until finely minced. While the processor is running, slowly drizzle olive oil through the feeding tube until all the ingredients are pureed, scraping down the sides of the bowl as necessary.
                            Season with salt, pepper and additional lemon juice to taste.
                  Darragh Doiron is a Port Arthur area foodie who loves sharing her Cajun culture as much as she enjoys learning about others. Trade stories with her at darraghcastillo@icloud.com

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