Author: Suzanne Welander

Linda Gable’s Chocolate Roots Cake

Linda Gable created this recipe as a way to make a delicious treat a little more healthy. She roasts a variety of vegetables – beets, rutabagas, sweet potatoes and turnips for example – and then peels and purees them. She says she always begins with a red beet and then adds whatever she has on hand. “If you have more puree than you need, it can be frozen for future use. Have fun experimenting with different vegetables. This cake also freezes well so sometimes I bake a few at a time and keep them on hand.”

Goat Cheese, Radish and Kale Spread

This easy spread, created by event planner and caterer Lisa Rochon, won an honorable mention at Peachtree Road Farmers Market’s 2010 “Market Mash-Up” vendor recipe contest. Her mash-up involved using goat cheese, garlic, herbs, kale and radishes from different farmers at the market. The recipe works as a dip, a simple appetizer or first course served with sliced bread or as the base for a fabulous sandwich.

Layered Vegetable Torte

This one takes its inspiration from the New York Times. It will use the eggplant, squash, peppers, tomato, onion and garlic. There are a million vegetable torte ideas out there. I like this one right now because it calls for grilling the vegetables. That’s a way to keep the heat out of the kitchen as much as possible. And adds another layer of flavors to the dish.

fennel

Fennel Gratin

Rinse the fennel and cut it into bite size pieces. You can use all of it up to and including the fronds, if you wish. Arrange the chopped fennel in a baking dish and then cover with cream. Sprinkle with Parmesan and salt and pepper. Cover the dish and bake 1 hour or until fennel…
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Honey Mustard Slaw

In a small bowl, stir together the mustard, honey, vinegar and oil. Add hot sauce and taste for seasoning. Set aside. Put the chopped cabbage in a large bowl and toss with the dressing. Refrigerate it at least an hour before serving.

Onion Potato Frittata

In a large ovenproof skillet, warm 1 tablespoon olive oil and then add the onions. Cook until they turn translucent, then add the garlic and potatoes and continue to cook until everything is tender. Season to taste. Remove the potatoes and onions from the skillet and set aside. Preheat the oven to 350 degrees. In…
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Dandelion Salad with Goat Cheese

Dandelion leaves are definitely on the bitter side. Many put dandelions into their salads and I’ve found many recipes for braised dandelions and dandelions as ingredients in frittatas and quiche. What I’m going to do with my dandelions is chop them up and saute in olive oil with a little garlic. Then stir in some of that local cheese that’s multiplying in my refrigerator and turn it into a filling for little filo triangles. It will give me something like individual spanakopitas, but with a little more bite than the traditional spinach filling.

German Apple Pancake for the day after Thanksgiving

Friday morning you need sustenance. And not just leftover turkey sandwiches. How about a hot, fragrant breakfast for those houseguests?

Sweet Potato Souffle with Pecan Coconut Crumble

What’s a Southern Thanksgiving without Sweet Potato Souffle?

This recipe published in Atlanta magazine and here’s Susan Puckett’s write-up:

“Tony Morrow, chef/owner of College Park’s Pecan restaurant and Tony Morrow’s Real Pit BBQ, owes his appreciation for good food to his mother, Dr. Joyce Irons. A voracious cook ever since she was a small child, she helped her grandmother bake cakes and strip collard leaves from their stems on the family farm near Decatur, Alabama. A practicing psychotherapist, Irons’s idea of “winding down” is freezing a bushel of white corn or boning a whole turkey and rolling it up with spices like a jellyroll.
Every holiday, Morrow gathers with thirty or so family members at his mother and stepfather’s house for a massive feast that includes turkey and cornbread stuffing with giblet gravy, baked ham, chitterlings, collards (from the farm the family still owns in Alabama), macaroni and cheese, cranberry sauce and Irons’s signature sweet potato souffle—a creamy, nutmeg-spiced casserole thickly blanketed with a candy-sweet topping of coconut and pecans. The sweet potato dish, Morrow says, is a longtime favorite: ‘I could add a scoop of my mother’s homemade vanilla ice cream, and I’d have my dinner and dessert without even getting up from my seat.’ ”

Sweet Cornbread for Thanksgiving

This makes excellent cornbread to cube up for dressing. Just bake it tonight, or early tomorrow, let it cool and then cut into cubes. You can toast the cubes in the oven to dry them out a little so they’re maintain their integrity in your dressing. Or if you prefer the cornbread to break down and meld with the other ingredients, then just use it right out of the oven. It’s really, really sweet though. That works great if you’re making a sausage dressing with lots of savory ingredients, but feel free to cut down on the sugar if you like.

Of course, you could just serve it as cornbread. What an idea!