Tag: onions

Anne Quatrano’s Apple-Cranberry Dressing

Adapted from her new cookbook, “Summerland.”

Parchment Baked Fish, Green Beans and Tomatoes

This recipe is adapted from Southern Living.

Autumn Vegetable Soup

The days are still warm but cool nights have me craving soup. This recipe is adapted from one in Fine Cooking magazine.

Homemade Refrigerator Pickles

The contents of a box like this one just beg to be turned into refrigerator pickles. You should have just enough cucumbers for this recipe. You’ll use a pepper or two, and if you’ve still got an onion around (mine are all gone – sadly), then you’ve got most everything you need. This makes a sort of bread-and-butter pickle. Other fresh refrigerator pickles don’t use sugar and add garlic and dill to make a kosher style pickle. There’ll be a million recipes online.

Sweet Pepper Soup

Joe Truex of Watershed demonstrated this recipe Labor Day weekend at the Morningside Farmers market.

Roasted Delicata Squash and Onions

Source: www.eatingwell.com

Baked Tomatoes, Squash and Potatoes

Shared by subscriber Robin Rosen.

Source: marthastewart.com

Cucumber Soup

Yes, Virginia, you can eat cooked cucumbers. (Goodness, am I the only one old enough to get that reference?)
Probably 2 years ago I put out a recipe that called for adding peeled chunks of cucumber to a stir fry. You put them in just at the last minute and cook only until the cucumbers are heated through, stopping before they lose their crunch. Really delicious.

And we’ve a recipe or two for cold cucumber soups, usually yogurt- or buttermilk-based, and with the cucumbers used raw. This recipe for a soup with cooked cucumbers is from Paige Witherington of Serenbe Farms. She adapted it from “Home Made” by Yvette Van Boven.

Bread and Butter Pickled Onions

How did I miss this in the bounty of onion ideas we’ve been sending your way? Hope you still have a few onions to experiment with.

Field Pea Tamales

This is an adaptation of an African street food dish called Abala. In Senegal, the little packets are wrapped in banana leaves. At one time I had a banana tree in my yard, and could harvest my own banana leaves for wrappers. I used them to make a Burmese dish of steamed sweet rice – yum. But I digress. If you don’t have your own banana tree, there are plenty of banana leaves for sale at the DeKalb Farmers Market in both fresh and frozen form, and probably at any store that caters to a Caribbean or African customer base.

Or – make it simple – use corn husks as I suggest here. Those are pretty ubiquitous these days.

Just reading through the recipe will remind you that many cultures have leaf-wrapped dishes with a starch – like field peas or corn masa – surrounding a savory filling. And the relish here? If this were a recipe from Mexico, we’d be calling it pico de gallo.