Baked Tomatoes, Squash and Potatoes
Shared by subscriber Robin Rosen.
Source: marthastewart.com
Shared by subscriber Robin Rosen.
Source: marthastewart.com
Teri Watson shares this Southern comfort food recipe, a favorite at her house.
This recipe is from chef-owner Mateo Granados or Mateo’s Cocina Latina in Healdsburg, California. It was published in Sunset magazine last year.
There are a million ways to stuff a tomato. Here’s one more.
Adapted from a recipe in Fine Cooking.
Those gorgeous red peppers put me in the mood for this luscious recipe. It’s adapted from “The Flying Biscuit Café Cookbook.”
Yay – spaghetti squash!
Here’s your plan of attack. Wash it. Cut it in half, scrape out the seeds and strings as you would any squash and cook. Microwave: arrange the halves in a microwave-proof dish and lightly cover with waxed paper and cook at high for about 6 minutes. Test squash – it’s done when squash is softened and flesh can be separated into “noodles” using a fork. Oven: arrange halves on a rimmed baking sheet, cut side down and bake at 375 for 30 to 40 minutes. Same test for doneness. In either case, let squash cool slightly before separating into strands.
Now – use the no-cook pasta sauce above and you have a low-carb dinner, or try something completely different and bake a pie.
This is a recipe I tested for the AJC. It comes from a friend for whom this is an old family favorite.
So many tomatoes! And in their travels from farm to us, a few of them got bruised along the way.
Here’s my general plan of attack for tomatoes. I sort through them and set aside the ones that are perfect and will live to be enjoyed another day.
For the ones with bruises and the occasional very soft spot, I rinse them and then cut out all the bad spots. Chop the remainder with olive oil, garlic and herbs of my choice, and then season with salt and pepper. Now I have a no-cook pasta sauce that can sit in the refrigerator getting better and better for a couple of days. Here’s a more formal recipe.
We were told they were coming, and here they are – delicata squash. Always the first “hard”-shelled squash of the season. Easiest preparation is to wash, cut in half, scoop out the seeds and then bake, cut side down at 350 degrees until tender. Turn them right side up, season with olive oil/herbs/salt/pepper or butter/honey/brown…
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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.