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Quinoa Tabbouleh

Posted By FreshTartSteph on Oct 21, 2012 at 4:10PM

quinoa tabbouleh gluten-free stephanie meyer fresh tart

While the rest of my garden is toast, the parsley lives on, just begging me to make tabbouleh salad. Except tabbouleh is made with bulgur, which is wheat, which I can't eat. Damn it!

Enter quinoa, the grain that is conveniently a gluten-free seed, hey. I'm not as obsessed with quinoa as some, but in a salad like this, its nutty crunchiness is perfectly tabboulehesque...in fact, you would likely not realize you weren't eating traditional tabbouleh salad if someone (like me) didn't point it out.

And except for all the substitutions I made, because that is one of the best things about tabbouleh - it welcomes just about any vegetable or nut you have knocking around in your kitchen. Zucchini not cucumbers? Fine! Roasted red peppers instead of tomatoes? Lovely! Pistachios in place of pine nuts? Great!

No matter the salad ingredients, I always add lemon zest, toasted cumin and coriander seeds, and toasted sesame oil to to the dressing to really pop the flavor. The recipe below is vegan, but feel free to cook the quinoa in chicken stock, or toss in crumbled feta cheese and/or pieces of tender chicken for further popping.

Or try this, my very favorite way to eat tabbouleh: while it hums alongside hummus (together stuffed into a warm, fresh pita for a flavorful sandwich if you're not gluten-free), this simple trick is even more mind-blowing: smear a generous dollop of Greek yogurt in the bottom of a bowl, sprinkle it lightly with a bit of salt and freshly cracked pepper, then spoon the tabbouleh over the top. As you enjoy your salad, swipe the bottom of the bowl with your spoon (I suggest a spoon, not a fork), so each bite of nutty crunchiness is elevated by a slide of creamy yogurt. I'm pretty sure you'll like it very much.

Quinoa Tabbouleh
Serves 6

1 c. quinoa, rinsed
1 1/4 c. water
1/2 tsp. salt
1 red bell pepper
2 small zucchini, cut into 1/2" dice (about 1 c.)
1/2 - 1 c. chopped fresh flatleaf parsley (to taste)
1/2 c. chopped fresh mint
2 scallions, chopped
1/2 c. chopped (pitted) kalamata olives
1/2 c. chopped toasted pistachios (or pine nuts)

Dressing
1/2 tsp. each cumin & coriander seeds
2 Tbsp. fresh lemon juice
grated zest of one lemon
1/2 c. extra-virgin olive oil
1 tsp. toasted sesame oil
1 clove garlic, minced
1/2 tsp. salt

freshly ground black pepper

Greek yogurt for serving

Add quinoa, salt, and water to a small saucepan and bring to a boil over medium-high heat. Turn heat to low, cover, and simmer quinoa for 10 minutes. Keep covered, remove from heat, and let sit for 5 minutes. Transfer quinoa to a medium bowl to cool, fluffing with a fork a few times as it comes to room temperature.

Meanwhile, over a gas flame or under a broiler, scorch the bell pepper until blackened on all sides. Place in a small paper bag for 20 minutes. When cool, slide charred skin off, remove and discard seeds and stem, and cut flesh into 1/4" dice.

While the quinoa and bell pepper cool, toast the cumin and coriander seeds in a dry skillet over medium-high heat until fragrant (watch carefully so they don't burn). Grind in a coffee grinder or mortar & pestle and add to a small bowl. Whisk in lemon juice, lemon zest, olive oil, sesame oil, garlic, and salt. Set aside.

When quinoa is cool, add the bell pepper, zucchini, parsley, mint, scallions, olives, and pistachios. Whisk dressing and pour over salad, tossing well to combine. Season with freshly ground black pepper (and a bit more salt, if needed). Serve with Greek yogurt. Can be made one day ahead; however, reserve pistachios until just before serving to preserve crunch.

New York Wine & Food Festival #nycwff

Posted By FreshTartSteph on Oct 16, 2012 at 3:14PM

john levy andrew zimmern new york wine & food festival stephanie meyer fresh tart

The email I just sent to my mom:

Hi Mom! Holy Hannah, what a whirlwind weekend! So so so much fun. The Levys say hello. We got to see everyone: Tom, Val, & kids; of course Dot & John; Bartley, Maud & Natalie; Andrew & Rishia; and lots of time with David, Etta, and Stacey. The food truck event on Sunday night was a BLAST. The AZ Canteen truck was a huge hit! So fabulous! Here's a link to the article Joy wrote for City Pages - yes, Joy was there too, got to see her several times! Attached is a pic of David, Etta, Stacey & me.

How are you feeling?

Love you, S

david meyer stacey meyer etta meyer stephanie meyer fresh tart

I realize that I sound about 16 years old in that email but it pretty well captures my enthusiasm for the weekend. CRAZY FLIPPING FUN! The best part was the time spent with friends and family, particularly my brother David and two sisters Stacey and Etta. With Stacey and me living in Minneapolis, and David and Etta living in NYC, the four of us only get together a couple of times per year.

I hated to say good bye.

john levy stephanie meyer fresh tart

John and I are lucky that his parents still live in the city. We always have a lovely place to stay and time to hang out and chat with my in-laws, who rock. That's my father-in-law John making his famous gumbo. He's a fan of a dark chestnut roux (not the darkest dark) and loads of mussels, clams, andouille, langoustines, and shrimp. No oysters. Okra fried a bit crisp before simmering. Heavenly, heavenly stuff.

Maybe some day he'll give me the recipe...?

michael clurman le bibloquet poulet cajun stephanie meyer fresh tart

Friday lunch John and I met his high school friend Michael Clurmen at Le Bilboquet. I can't imagine how I haven't met Michael before, but I'm awfully glad I have now. He's a riot AND he recommended a dish I wouldn't have otherwise ordered: Poulet Cajun, a dish of blackened Cajun chicken with frites. I'm pretty sure I haven't had a blackened Cajun anything since 1989 but oh my goodness...quite possibly my favorite dish of the weekend. What? I know! But it was absolutely delicious, butter tender and spicy (of course), served in a butter sauce, with perfect frites and crisp greens, meant to all be eaten together, on each forkful, for maximum salty-spicy-crusty-crunchy-tender-crispness. I don't know what I'm saying, I'm still confused by the Cajun. All I know was that it was just damn tasty.

(Ah ha! A little search for Le Bilboquet's website, which apparently doesn't exist, revealed that I am not alone in my love for Poulet Cajun...the dish made Eater NY's list of 12 Epic Chicken Dishes to Eat Before You Die. Hey cool. Eleven to go and I can check out.)

After lunch John and I hopped on the subway to visit my baby sister Etta at the Soho office of DuJour Magazine. Etta is the photo editor of this stunning new lifestyle magazine. I am her ridiculously proud sibling. Go Etta!

maud bryt john levy tom levy bartley bryt natalie bryt stephanie meyer fresh tart momofuku ssam

On Friday night, still full from lunch, we feasted a bounty of pork & pickles - I know, you must wonder if I ever tire of pork & pickles, but the answer is most certainly no, never - at Momofuku Ssam Bar with the Levys and our friends the Bryts. Highlights for me were the barbecue pork buns, a giant bowl of pickled vegetables that I pretty much ate by myself, raw oysters, and of course the house specialty: the glistening, fall-apart-tender Bo Ssam pork shoulder roast, served with rice, lettuce, kimchi, and their massively addictive scallion sauce.

john levy central park stephanie meyer fresh tart

Saturday morning John and I took a crispy, sunny walk through Central Park, to walk off about 1/1000th of the previous day's indulgences, just in time to...

le charlot john levy joy summers eric tollefson stephanie meyer fresh tart

...eat more. We met a couple of Levys as well as Joy Summers and Eric Tollefson at Le Charlot, another sweet little bistro, because I needed more frites. I very much enjoyed my crab avocado salad, but their frites couldn't hold a candle to Le Bilboquet's, not that I didn't eat plenty of them anyhow. Still, we had great fun pointing out examples of good and bad plastic surgery and taking enough pictures of each other for my mother-in-law to point out we were being rude.

Sunday morning I lay around reading and it was AMAZING. (I'm just about done with The Snow Child, a terrific read.) I could have felt guilty for not stealing another stroll through Central Park. Or catching a fabulous museum exhibit. Or breakfasting in some sunny, sparkly spot. But I didn't! I shrugged off the pressure to cram in New York experiences and fried up some leftover Bo Ssam, topped it with with a poached egg, sipped some bubbly, and relaxed. So good.

az canteen new york wine & food festival stephanie meyer fresh tart

And then I slowly got myself ready for the big show, the real reason we were in town, to attend the New York Wine & Food Festival's Trucks & Train event, hosted by Andrew Zimmern to raise money for Share Our Strength. Andrew's AZ Canteen food truck was at the event and since my husband John is a partner in the AZ Canteen venture, we were nervous and excited to see New Yorkers' reaction to cabrito butter burgers. The verdict was...they loved them! There were 24 trucks at the event, but the longest lines were at AZ Canteen, and it warmed our Minnesota hearts to hear passersby raving as they stuffed their faces with pretzel-bunned goat.

#nycwff stephanie meyer fresh tart

My sister Stacey's friend Michael got us off to a grand start, snagging Venezuelan plantain sandwiches, Cubano sandwiches, AZ Canteen butter burgers, and arepas before the doors even opened.

john levy andrew zimmern stephanie meyer fresh tart new york wine & food festival

Andrew introduced John and me to Food & Wine Magazine editor-in-chief Dana Cowin, who is as petite and lovely in person as she is in photographs. I'm quite sure I failed at not seeming utterly star struck.

I ate about 20 of these crispy little plantain sandwiches, stuffed with tender chicken. Look for a blog post soon, I can't wait to try my hand at them. Gluten-free goodness, much appreciated.

I am kicking myself that I didn't get a picture of Joy Summers' face when she laid eyes on this bare, bumpy butt parading around the event. This lady damn near stole the show!

joy summers stephanie meyer fresh tart

Joy and I had a blast eating, drinking, and snarking our way through the weekend and event. That girl is 100% smarty pants fun. Love.

john dot levy stephanie meyer fresh tart

My in-laws had a great time at the event, eating and dancing with the best of them.

etta meyer stacey meyer stephanie meyer new york wine & food festival fresh tart

My cool sisters. Apparently we all like Ray Bans. Hey.

andrew zimmern train stephanie meyer fresh tart

That's Andrew, backstage while Train brought down the house.

john levy joy summers eric tollefson stephanie meyer fresh tart new york wine & food festival

John, Joy, Eric, and I said goodnight to Andrew and his wife Rishia and the whole of Team Zimmern and then grabbed a Chinese feast at Chin Chin because we're crazy. Monday morning we all flew home and...

...here we are, digesting, reminiscing, and planning for the next trip. I'm still full and I can't wait!

Doug Flicker's Collard Greens from Come In, We're Closed

Posted By FreshTartSteph on Oct 16, 2012 at 12:24PM

piccolo collards greens doug flicker come in we're closed stephanie meyer fresh tart

I just returned last night from a weekend of eating my way through New York. While we had a killer time eating very special things, I thought on several occasions...I eat better than this in Minneapolis. What?! But yes! I've been thinking this on the last few trips I've taken, especially pork dishes, which I declare: Minneapolis has conquered. If you're a regular at Butcher & the Boar, Corner Table, The Craftsman, Piccolo, Heartland, The Bachelor Farmer, Haute Dish - plus many, many other spots in town (name them below, please) - you are eating better pork than New Yorkers.

Yeah, I just said that.

In fact, the way my week played out last week now seems supernaturally designed to illustrate just this point. I was invited to the staff meal prepared by Doug Flicker of Piccolo Restaurant, to promote his inclusion in a new cookbook, Come In, We're Closed: An Invitation to Staff Meals at the World's Best Restaurants. Co-authors Christine Carroll and Jody Eddy spend two years traveling the world, enjoying staff meals (the meal served to restaurant staff before service) in 25 iconic restaurants. Any jealousy I felt about the authors terrific idea was wiped away by chatting at the dinner with Eddy, who is lovely and a bit in awe herself at what she and Carroll experienced and achieved.

piccolo staff meal doug flicker come in we're closed stephanie meyer fresh tart

Flicker's staff meal was a buffet of rib-stickin' Southern love, with piles of pulled pork, collard greens, red beans & rice, coleslaw, and cornbread. I meant to eat lightly, taste things, then go home to cook dinner for my family. Uh no. I saw the spread, squealed, and proceeded to pile my plate high, trying to take pictures while balancing the bounty, and tucked into some of the best pulled pork this pork lover has ever had. And collard greens! I confess that I also have a soft spot for collard greens, but these were such a treat. Even though the collards recipe is not included in the book, the recipes for Cast-Iron Cornbread with Maple-Bacon Butter, Celery Root and Almond Slaw, Mr. Pickle's Pulled Pork with Johnny Two Socks' BBQ Sauce, and Slow-Cooked Red Beans with Ham Hocks are included. Eddy generously shared the recipe for the collard greens, so armed with this, and the book, I have my next dinner party already planned.

A few days after the Piccolo staff meal, I sat my Minnesota self down at Red Rooster Harlem, the highly-acclaimed fusion-soul food restaurant of Aquavit chef Marcus Samuelsson. Back in the day, when Aquavit still graced Minneapolis, it was one of my favorite restaurants. I was seriously excited to eat my way through the menu at Red Rooster, but our meal was...not good. I'm not the only one who thought so - we were a group of 8 disappointed diners - but I knew that I was very much comparing my meal to the staff meal at Piccolo, wishing I were back enjoying that meal...

piccolo staff meal doug flicker come in we're closed stephanie meyer fresh tart

So hey. I love you NYC, and I'll be back soon to eat and be inspired and come back with a million ideas. In the mean time, I'll be eating just beautifully in Minneapolis, thank you.

Recipe for Linh Ho's Collard Greens, via Chef Doug Flicker of Piccolo Restaurant, at TC Taste/Minnesota Monthly Magazine.

Outstanding in the Field 2012 at Little Foot Farm. And Coffee Custards with Honey & Cinnamon!

Posted By FreshTartSteph on Oct 10, 2012 at 7:46AM

outstanding in the field 2012 little foot farm stephanie meyer fresh tart

Remember August? It sure was pretty...

August 9, in fact, was the Outstanding in the Field farm dinner at Little Foot Farm in Afton, Minnesota. Little Foot raises heritage breed hogs so it's no surprise that this dinner was a celebration of pork, pork, and more pork.

Thanks to chef Mike Phillips of Three Sons Meat, Inc., it was spectacular indeed.

I had the privilege and pleasure of working at the event this year instead of just attending it. I pitched in to help host chefs Mike Phillips and Scott Pampuch make and serve about 50 million pounds of pickles and condiments to enjoy with all of those beautiful courses of pork. 

outstanding in the field 2012 little foot farm stephanie meyer fresh tart

While the guests gathered and enjoyed cocktails in Karen Weiss and Sally Doherty's picture-perfect farm yard...

outstanding in the field 2012 little foot farm stephanie meyer fresh tart

...the hogs got frisky...

outstanding in the field 2012 little foot farm scott pampuch stephanie meyer fresh tart

...and the crew set the signature Outstanding in the Field table.

outstanding in the field 2012 little foot farm mike phillips stephanie meyer fresh tart

Coppa. Glorious.

outstanding in the field 2012 little foot farm stephanie meyer fresh tart

Afternoon showers meant a bit of a rush to set the table...

outstanding in the field 2012 little foot farm stephanie meyer fresh tart

...with pickles! Okra, beets, peppers, cukes, rhubarb, green beans, corn, chanterelles, on and on.

outstanding in the field 2012 little foot farm ben weaver scott pampuch stephanie meyer fresh tart

It takes a village to serve charcuterie to 150 people.

outstanding in the field 2012 little foot farm charcuterie mike phillips stephanie meyer fresh tart

Just...wow.

outstanding in the field 2012 little foot farm kielbasa mike phillips stephanie meyer fresh tart

Kielbasa's on the grill. These beauties were plated with kimchi...

outstanding in the field 2012 little foot farm scott pampuch mike phillips stephanie meyer fresh tart

...as fast as pork-greased lightning by Scott and Mike.

outstanding in the field 2012 little foot farm stephanie meyer fresh tart

The one vegetarian at the dinner ate very, very well. Kimchi and pickled corn with a poached egg? Yes, please!

outstanding in the field 2012 little foot farm mike phillips porchetta stephanie meyer fresh tart

That's Mike, slicing one of the three golden, crackling porchettas, plated and served with sauerkraut.

outstanding in the field 2012 little foot farm emily anderson stephanie meyer fresh tart

Huge thanks to my left and right hand ladies Emily Anderson...

outstanding in the field 2012 little foot farm kathy yerich niki heber stephanie meyer fresh tart

...and Kathy Yerich for working their butts off AND being a total blast. Oh how I love those gals.

outstanding in the field 2012 little foot farm tomato salad stephanie meyer fresh tart

Stunning Laughing Loon Farm and Minnesota Peach Farm tomato salad with grilled kale was a welcome refresher after three courses of pork. Those bowls came back very empty!

outstanding in the field 2012 little foot farm stephanie meyer fresh tart

As the sun set...

outstanding in the field 2012 little foot farm stephanie meyer fresh tart

...little jars of roasted fruit topped with toasted oat crumble, whipped cream, and magical sugar-glazed grapes, prepared by pastry chef Kelsey McCreight, wrapped the meal.

outstanding in the field 2012 little foot farm stephanie meyer fresh tart

Another dreamy farm dinner for the books. Huge thanks to Mike Phillips, Scott Pampuch, and the whole crew for letting me help out. The highlight of my summer, without a doubt, both the event itself and the preparation leading up to it.

See pics from:
Scouting Little Foot Farm with Mike and Scott
Pig butchering/charcuterie making in preparation for the meal
Outstanding in the Field dinner 2011 at River Bend Farm in Delano
Pork Burgers!

When I got home, and unloaded the 50 million pickle jars from my car, I found...a gigantic tub of honey! Farm dinner spoils, nice. In honor of the buckets of delicious coffee that powered the dinner prep and clean-up, I made these coffee, honey, and cinnamon custards. I will not lie...they are divine.

coffee custard stephanie meyer fresh tart

Ode to OITF Coffee Custards with Honey & Cinnamon
Based on a Martha Stewart Living recipe
Serves 4-6

soft butter
1 c. heavy cream
1/2 c. milk
2 Tbsp. instant espresso powder
3 large egg yolks
1 large egg
1/4 c. honey
1/2 tsp. cinnamon
1 tsp. vanilla extract

Preheat oven to 300 degrees. Set out a 9x13 baking pan. Butter 4-6 oz. (or 6-4 oz.) ramekins and arrange them evenly in the 9x13 pan.

In a small saucepan over medium heat, combine cream, milk, and espresso powder and heat until mixture almost simmers. Remove from heat and set aside.

In a medium bowl, whisk together egg yolks, egg, honey, cinnamon, and vanilla. Whisk a bit of the hot cream mixture into the eggs, then whisk in all of the cream mixture until well combined. Ladle into the prepared ramekins. Set the 9x13 pan on rack in preheated oven, then pour hottest tap water into the pan until it comes 3/4 of the way up the sides of the ramekins. Bake until the custards are set and jiggly, about 35 minutes.

Remove from oven and water bath. Cool to room temperature and serve or chill to serve later. To serve, run a knife around the edges of the custard and then flip over onto a serving plate. Give the plate and ramekin together a bit of a shake to loosen and the custards will slide right out.

Pork Burgers

Posted By FreshTartSteph on Oct 9, 2012 at 10:58AM

pork burger little foot farm stephanie meyer fresh tart

Burger maniacs (including myself), I have a proposition for you (us)...pork burgers! Why do we all not eat pork burgers? I'm not suggesting that beef burgers are anything but delectable, but I have been pondering - given the borderline gastronomic insanity over bacon, pork belly, and charcuterie - why the heck isn't a fabulously juicy, porky burger on every menu in this town?

I took my question to Karen Weiss of Little Foot Farm, host of this summer's Outstanding in the Field farm dinner. Weiss and her partner Sally Doherty raise heritage breed hogs on their picture-perfect farm for chefs like Lenny Russo of Heartland Restaurant and Mike Phillips of Three Sons Meat Co., but they also sell their highly-prized pork to the public, including ground Gloucester Old Spot (GOS) pork.

Weiss confessed that she's on a mission to convince Minnesotans that pork burgers deserve a spot on everyone's grill, particularly best-quality pork like she and Doherty raise, the kind that actually tastes like pork.

Pork!

After grilling a few batches myself, I can not agree more. Not that I thought I wouldn't agree - it's no secret that I'm a big, BIG pork fan - but holy cow my friends, the first batch of burgers I pulled off the grill were not savored, they were inhaled. I seasoned them with nothing more than salt and pepper so we could enjoy the clean, rich, pure pork flavor that Little Foot's tender loving care delivers. In a buttered, toasted bun, of course. Gah.

For round two pork play, I added cheddar cheese and tomato jam. Kablam. Future rounds might go breakfast-y with a fried egg and a crumble of bacon to gild the lily. Or Asian-style with scallions, ginger, and a splash of soy sauce. Or bratwurst-esque with caraway cheese and sauerkraut on a pretzel roll. Or even quicky barbecue, with a slathering of sauce topped with slaw before devouring. You get the picture - keep it simple, or go with classic-for-a-reason pork accompaniments. All paths lead to porktastic.

Go!

Tips for perfect, juicy burgers at TC Taste/Minnesota Monthly Magazine.

To purchase Little Foot Farm pork, call 612.207.9771 or email customerservice@littlefootfarm.com.

Roasted Tomato Soup

Posted By FreshTartSteph on Sep 25, 2012 at 4:54PM

roasted tomato soup fresh tart stephanie meyer

Despite our first frost, there are still plenty of tomatoes kicking around! Make a double batch of this easy soup and freeze it for a mid-winter's treat. Or eat it all hot from the pot, which is a good plan too. I make this soup all season long by roasting tomatoes as I pick them, stashing them in the fridge, then at week's end simmering it all into a batch of soup. You could freeze batches of roasted tomatoes as well, see mid-winter's treat mentioned above.

It's always great fun to enjoy tomato soup with a grilled cheese sandwich so if that's what you're in the mood for - back-to-school and chilly nights and such - skip the croutons and cream and grill away with cheese and butter. Slide a slice of tomato or a smear of tomato jam into the middle of the sandwich for a vertically integrated tomato explosion. Killer.

socca stephanie meyer fresh tart

I left the cream in the version pictured, then fried up socca (chickpea flour pancakes) to eat as a warm (gluten-free) flatbread with my soup. Bits of crispy sage, a sprinkle of garlic scape salt, lots of freshly ground black pepper, and an extra drizzle of olive oil made for a fast treat, one of my very favorites.

roasted tomato soup fresh tart stephanie meyer

Recipe for Roasted Tomato Soup at TC Taste/Minnesota Monthly Magazine.

Pear Tart with Almond-Thyme Crust & Honey Whipped Cream (Gluten-Free!)

Posted By FreshTartSteph on Sep 19, 2012 at 5:26AM

pear tart gluten-free stephanie meyer fresh tart

In my world, 'tis the true season of giving right exactly now, when friends share the bounty of their gardens and the lovely jams, syrups, salsas, booze, and pickles made to stretch summer and fall into winter.

garden bounty stephanie meyer fresh tart

My own garden is planted primarily with heirloom tomatoes (thanks to the amazing Heidi Skoog, she of Serious Jam and Bastian Skoog florists), which I've been eating while picking, slicing for BLTs, and roasting for soup. Depending on how many I end up with over the next week or so, I may press my friend Laurie Jesch-Kulseth, who writes the food blog Relishing It, for tips on making salsa. She brought me a jar as a hostess gift awhile back and in the confusion of post-party clutter, I lost track of who it was from. A few days later, when the family popped the jar and dug in, we were all thrilled by the hit of bright summer heat in the middle of winter. In order to properly thank the cook/gift-giver, I had to ask on Twitter who had brought me such a generous homemade treat...Laurie answered that it was She, Giver of Salsa and Smiles.

If you too find yourself buried in tomatoes, be sure check out One Tomato Two Tomato blog, written by forager/pickler/canner extraordinaire Tammy Kimbler. She's even (gorgeously, per Instagram stalking) making tomato wine! Love.

And if you find yourself with a giant box of just-picked pears, like I did courtesy of my friend Scott Pampuch, consider throwing together this tart. I've been meaning to adapt this crust to be gluten-free for awhile and a bounty of firm-juicy pears provided the perfect opportunity. I find that recipes that require very little wheat flour - crepes, popovers, and nut cookies/crackers/tarts - are ideal candidates for tasty gluten-free baking. This crust's flavor and texture is derived primarily from ground almonds (and butter!) and is pressed into the pan (not rolled). Prepared with sorghum flour, the crust turned out as nutty and crisp as your favorite holiday shortbread cookies. (It goes without saying that it's quite lovely prepared with wheat flour as well.)

pear tart almond-thyme crust honey whipped cream stephanie meyer fresh tart

Scott and his family spent a whole day picking pears courtesy of Linda Newman, in Watertown, MN, and another whole day delivering them to lucky friends. I spent very little time throwing this tart together and figure I came out quite nicely as I scarfed down a large, warm piece with honey whipped cream melting into it. (For the record, inspired by my friend Molly McNeil and her Minnesota Peach Farm pears, with input from Tim Niver of The Strip Club Meat and Fish via Twitter - as you can tell, I so love social media for ideas, recipes, and tips - I also soaked a mason jar stuffed with peeled, diced pears in gin for a few days. Pear gin! Hurray!)

Try this crust with your other favorite fresh, juicy fruits as well - think cherries, peaches, apples, plums, figs, or blueberries for year-round tartiness.

Recipe for Pear Tart with Almond-Thyme Crust & Honey Whipped Cream at TC Taste/Minnesota Monthly Magazine.

Hominy with Brown Butter & Crispy Sage

Posted By FreshTartSteph on Sep 11, 2012 at 5:53PM

hominy brown butter sage stephanie meyer fresh tart

If you've only had hominy in pozole or other Mexican-inspired dishes, you're missing out. Hominy is corn that has been dried and then soaked in lime water to soften and puff the kernels. Simmering hominy in broth softens the kernels even further, resulting in dumpling-like little pillows just begging to deliver brown butter to your palate. At least that's how I think of them. They're darned good baked with cheese as well, macaroni-style, or gratineed with cauliflower, which is how chef JD Fratzke serves hominy at The Strip Club Meat & Fish.

All good.

hominy brown butter sage stephanie meyer fresh tart

This dish would be made better with cubes of roasted squash, which I meant to include, but forgot to grab at the market. So add squash! Or halved end-of-season cherry tomatoes, warmed through for a minute in the butter. Toss, toss. I've added a few slices of leftover grilled sausage and been glad, too. It's that kind of dish - fast, cheap, comforting, and highly adaptable.

As a side note, I'd like to advocate for the stand-alone beauty of fried sage. Oh my gosh so delicious. I always fry a few extra leaves to snack on while I make the rest of the dish.

As another side note, brown sage butter is incredible on popcorn!

Recipe for Hominy with Brown Butter & Crispy Sage at TC Taste/Minnesota Monthly Magazine.

Fall Soups: Twin Cities Live

Posted By FreshTartSteph on Sep 8, 2012 at 8:39PM

I had a blast chatting fall soups on Twin Cities Live this week! I specifically talked about Coconut Curry Sweet Corn Soup, but also brought along Pozole (pork braised with chiles and hominy) and a Chicken Vegetable Soup that's pretty much the perfect post-Thanksgiving soup (obviously made with turkey not chicken - please forgive me for mentioning Thanksgiving this early in September...).

It's nice to serve the Pozole with freshly fried tortilla chips. Then again, everything is nice with freshly fried tortilla chips.

pozole stephanie meyer fresh tart

It was fun for me to look back at my Farmily post for the Chicken Vegetable Soup recipe. We've had so many delicious times at my aunt Mary & uncle Bruce's farm!

chicken vegetable soup fresh tart stephanie meyer

Recipes for all three soups at Twin Citites Live.

Andrew Zimmern's Baltimore-Style Crab Cakes

Posted By FreshTartSteph on Aug 28, 2012 at 11:40AM

andrew zimmern baltimore style crab cake stephanie meyer fresh tart

Along with my father-in-law's famously fabulous crab cakes, my other favorite is Andrew Zimmern's version, via our mutual friend Carol Mack. Both recipes have in common a very, very small amount of breading. Crab cakes should be mostly crab! Really, really good lump crab, in fact.

Recipe for Baltimore-Style Crab Cakes at Andrew Zimmern's Kitchen Adventures/Food & Wine Magazine.

Fresh. Tart. Fresh Tart!

stephanie meyer fresh tart

 

I’m Stephanie Meyer. If you're looking for fresh, delicious food to share with those you love - welcome! In addition to the recipes you'll find here, I post Tuesday recipes at TC Taste/Minnesota Monthly magazine with a focus on local, seasonal ingredients. I also cook and take photos for Andrew Zimmern's Kitchen Adventures/Food & Wine magazine, and organize Fortify: A Food Community (formerly Minnesota Food Bloggers). Let’s eat!

 

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