Friday, December 31, 2010

The Future Looks Bright

2010 was an excellent year. A transitional year. A happy year. Hope it was equally joyful for you.

The plan for 2011 -- growth! Personal growth. Professional growth (wherever Tapenades may take me). Whatever your plan is for the new year, I hope it's bright and full of great experiences.

Here's to a bright future!


In case you're looking for the perfect sweet bite to complement your bubbly, here's an easy recipe for decadent truffles.

Chocolate Truffles with Fleur de Sel
adapted from Epicurious

12 ounces bittersweet or semisweet chocolate chips, finely chopped, divided
1/3 cup sugar
2 tablespoons water
2/3 cup whipping cream
1/4 teaspoon fleur de sel
2 tablespoons cocoa powder

Place 8 ounces chocolate in metal bowl over saucepan of barely simmering water (do not allow bottom of bowl to touch water); stir until chocolate is smooth. Remove chocolate from over water.

Combine sugar and 2 tablespoons water in small saucepan. Stir over medium heat until sugar dissolves, occasionally brushing sides of pan with wet pastry brush. Increase heat; boil until syrup is deep amber color, brushing down sides and swirling pan occasionally, about 4 minutes. Add cream (mixture will bubble). Stir over very low heat until caramel is smooth. Mix caramel and 1/4 teaspoon fleur de sel into melted chocolate. Chill until truffle filling is firm, at least 3 hours.

Coarsely grind the remaining 4 ounces in a food processor. Combine ground chocolate with cocoa powder. Using 1 tablespoon truffle filling for each truffle*, roll into balls, then roll in cocoa/chocolate chips. Arrange on baking sheet. Chill.

* Notes: If you are finding it difficult to make a ball, dip your tablespoon into a cup of water before you make each ball.

Happy New Year!





 

Sunday, December 5, 2010

Mark Your Calendars!

SATURDAY, DECEMBER 11 -- 6-9PM; BALLARD SECOND SATURDAY ART WALK

My friend Penny and her sister Leah, are the brilliant designers behind Clinks for Drinks, and are the featured artists at Venue for the Art Walk this Saturday. Tapenades will be providing some lovely sweet treats to enjoy during the evening.

Make it a date night! Stop by, have a bite, and check out some great local art!

Hope to see you all there.

Wednesday, December 1, 2010

Breaking the Vegetable Cycle

I didn't realize how "vegetable" focused this blog has become. If you didn't know me, you might think I were a vegetarian without a sweet tooth. Both couldn't be farther from the truth.

I do love vegetables, and enjoy incorporating them in delicious ways into my family's diet. I may LOVE sweets even more.

Tonight we're having family over for the first night of Hanukkah. It's a simple menu with key traditional basics -- roasted chicken and fried potato pancakes (latkes). I don't know about you, but when I eat fried food, I crave sweets even more. I didn't want to dissappoint tonight so to complement the latkes, we're having fudgy, chocolately, walnuty cookies. Somewhat meringue like, with a slight sticky chocolate (loaded with walnuts) inside -- sheer genius by the originator of the recipe, Francois Payard. I added a sprinkling of fleur de sel (the magic touch to any uber-chocolate dessert), but otherwise, I've left the recipe as perfect as it reads.


Fudgy Chocolate Walnut Cookies

2 3/4 cups walnut halves (9 ounces)
3 cups confectioners' sugar
1/2 cup plus 3 tablespoons unsweetened Dutch-process cocoa powder
1/4 teaspoon salt
4 large egg whites, at room temperature
1 tablespoon pure vanilla extract

Preheat the oven to 350°. Position 2 racks in the upper and lower thirds of the oven. Line 2 large rimmed baking sheets with parchment paper.


Spread the walnut halves on a large rimmed baking sheet and toast in the oven for about 9 minutes, until they are golden and fragrant. Let cool slightly, then transfer the walnut halves to a work surface and finely chop them.

In a large bowl, whisk the confectioners' sugar with the cocoa powder and salt. Whisk in the chopped walnuts. Add the egg whites and vanilla extract and beat just until the batter is moistened (be careful not to overbeat or it will stiffen). Spoon the batter onto the baking sheets in 12 evenly spaced mounds.

Bake the cookies for about 20 minutes, until the tops of the cookies are glossy and lightly cracked and feel firm to the touch; shift the pans from front to back and top to bottom halfway through.

Slide the parchment paper (with the cookies) onto 2 wire racks to cool completely before serving.

Tuesday, November 30, 2010

Appetizing Appetizers

Hope you had a fantastic Thanksgiving. We hosted Thanksgiving for the first time! In our new home, celebrating with family and great food....it was nice. Besides the traditional turkey (brined...was amazing!!!), I served creamed spinach, a chorizo and parmesan bread pudding/stuffing, pomegranate and balsamic glazed roasted onions and another not-worthy-to-mention side.

On Saturday, we had a few friends over for some late afternoon small bites and drinks. Preparing a new menu of treats was the last thing I wanted to do. I'm a huge fan of the mantra, "Buy some...prepare some." So, I purchased some cheese and cured meats and pulled out a batch of olive lemon zest shortbread and roasted tomatoes; both that I had made a couple days prior. And the pièce de résistance of the menu -- my pomegranate and balsamic glazed roasted onions from Thanksgiving, served perfectly with tart goat cheese and crostini.

Like most families, we had Thanksgiving leftovers, which I am generally not so fond of. I enjoy food the first time around, but unless it's one of those dishes that improves with time, I pass. These onions didn't necessarily "improve" -- they were fantastic the first time around and continued to be so two days later.

Lucious, buttery Olive Lemon Zest Shortbread

Roasted tomatoes, served in the jar, straight from the fridge

Sweet Roasted Onions!!!

Pomegranate and Balsamic Glazed Roasted Onions

3lbs red onion, peel and quartered (cut thru the core, leaving the core attached)

Glaze
2 tablespoon pomegranate molasses
2 tablespoon balsamic vinegar
1 tablespoon dijon vinegar
1 teaspoon thyme
1/2 cup olive oil
sprinkle of salt

Preheat oven to 400 degrees. Combine the ingredients for the glaze. In a bowl, combine the quartered (or if the onions are large, cut into eighths) onions and half of the glaze. Place onions on a cookie sheet, leaving space between each quarter (if you don't allow for space, the onions will steam and will not achieve the carmelized look/taste you want). Roast for about 20 minutes and flip quarters over. Roast for another 15 minutes or so. The onions should be slightly crispy, shriveled and carmelized.

Prepare the glaze: Simmer the second half of glaze on the stovetop until it achieves a syrup consistency.

Drizzle the glaze over the onions, once plated. Top with pomegranate seeds.

This dish is fantastic as a side dish to any menu. Serve as directed above. If you choose to serve as an appetizer, you can peel the layers of the quartered onions and pile them (very rustic) on a platter. Drizzle with the glaze and top with pomegranate seeds.


Tuesday, November 16, 2010

A Hearty Grain

I don't have much of a tale to share about this salad.

Every bite of it is delicious. And, if it matters at all -- it's extremely healthy. Deep hues of red from slow roasted tomatoes, bright orange roasted squash bites and green spinach leaves comprise a gorgeous fall salad that can be served for lunch or as a dinner side. Wheatberries form the base of this salad, a reddish, brown hearty grain, that when fully cooked, has a slightly chewy bite.

Left: Uncooked soft processed wheatberry
Right: Fully cooked wheatberry

There are several steps to this salad, but once all of the ingredients are prepared (and by the way, each can be prepared over a couple of days), the meal comes together seamlessly.

Warm Wheatberry Salad

2 cups cooked soft processed wheatberry (see below)
1 cup cubed roasted butternut squash (see below)
6-8 slow roasted tomatoes, chopped (see below)
1/4 cup favorite black olive (example: kalamata, oil-cured)
large handful of fresh spinach leaves, chopped
1/2 cup blue cheese crumbles 
1/4-1/3 cup (to taste) red wine vinaigrette (see below)
salt/pepper to desired taste

Combine all ingredients in a oven proof bowl. Right before you want to serve, place in the oven at 250 degrees to warm the salad and slightly wilt the spinach leaves. Sprinkle with salt.


Wheatberries

Place 1.5 cup of wheatberries in 3 cups of boiling salted water. Cook, uncovered, for about 45 minutes, or until they have a soft bite. Drain.

Roasted Butternut Squash

2 pound butternut squash
1 tablespoon olive oil
salt/pepper

Preheat oven to 400 degrees. Cut squash in half vertically. Discard the seeds. Cut into small cubes and place on a cookie sheet. Drizzle cubes with olive oil and sprinkle with salt/pepper. Roast about 25 minutes, or until a knife can slide easily thru the cubes.

Slow Roasted Tomatoes (courtesy of Epicurious)

Red Wine Vinaigrette

1 teaspoon dijon
1/2 teaspoon honey
1 small shallot, minced
1/4 cup red wine vinegar
1/2 cup olive oil
sprinkle of salt

Tuesday, November 9, 2010

A Detoxing Meal

This weekend, my best friend and her husband visited from Connecticut. The weekend was perfect! We laughed. We shopped. We drank ALOT. We ate even more. From the moment they arrived until minutes before they departed -- we ate.

Cambozola cheese and lemon crisps on Thursday evening. Friday morning began with fresh bagels and homemade vegetable cream cheese (a favorite of my friend's husband). Took a few deep breaths before lunchtime and made our way over to what probably is the BEST hamburger I've ever eaten at, Ballard's, Lunchbox Laboratory. I don't often make such strong claims, but ask any hamburger-loving Seattleite and I bet they feel the same. I'm barely finishing my 1/4 pound (perfectly grilled) burger, smothered with carmelized balsamic onions and gorgonzola and complemented by rosemary salted tater tots and I'm thinking "I can not possibly eat another bite of food." Ummmm.....BIG FAT LIE! Because, with dinner came lots of wine, roasted tomatoes with balsamic syrup and goat cheese, a butternut squash and carmelized onion galette, sprinkled with aged blue cheese, roasted garlic hummus and other small bites. The main dish, a fantastic one-pot meal -- Mixed Seafood, Chicken and Sausage Paella. Dessert -- like there was any room for that (but we managed to make room) -- was homemade chocolate peanut butter cups and hazelnut tofee.

We didn't disappoint on Saturday evening either. Dinner at Quinn's on Capitol Hill was, in a word, AMAZING! Delicate french fries, dressed with demi-glace and oozy fontina, salt cod fritters, foie gras, oxtail, escargot, pork ribs, goat, crispy chicken...and the list continues. Oh, and ridiculous amounts of liquor. The end to a perfect evening -- watched one of the most hilarious (high levels of adult comedy) shows currently on the TV roster, "The League." (Discovered last night that the entire first season is On Demand.)

Skip ahead to yesterday (Monday). Friends are back home in Connecticut. And, with a weekend's worth of decadent food and drink behind me, a cleansing, healthy, butternut squash soup seems in order.

Curried Apple Butternut Squash Soup

2 tablespoons olive oil
1 large onion, diced
1 tablespoon mild curry powder
2 pounds butternut squash, roasted (recipe below)
2 cups chicken broth or stock
1 cup apple juice
salt to taste
handful of chopped cilantro

Saute the onions and curry powder in a large pot, until onions are soft and transluscent. Stir occasionally, scraping the bottom of the pot.

With a spoon, scoop out the flesh from the roasted squash and place in pot with sauteed onions. Stir to blend all ingredients. Pour in 1 cup of broth and the apple juice and bring to a boil. Simmer for 20-25 minutes.

Using a food processor or hand blender, puree the soup to the consistency you like. Add the remaining  broth if necessary. Place back on the stove and simmer for a few more minutes. Sprinkle with chopped cilantro.

To make a full meal, I usually cut up chicken sausage and add some grated parmesan, goat or blue cheese to the top. Mmmmmmm.

Roasted Butternut Squash

2 pound butternut squash
1 tablespoon olive oil
salt/pepper

Preheat oven to 400 degrees. Cut squash in half vertically. Drizzle each half with olive oil and sprinkle with salt/pepper. Place cut side down on a baking sheet. Roast about 25 minutes, or until a knife can slide easily thru the flesh of the squash.

I apologize for not sharing a photo. The soup is delicious, but it just doesn't photograph well.

Wednesday, November 3, 2010

Tis the Season to Have Parties!

And what better way to celebrate the holidays and enjoy your friends/family company than to have the food prepared for you!

I'm generally not one to highly promote Tapenades, but from one gracious host to another -- a catered party is a FABULOUS party! One, you don't have to fight the retail traffic for ingredients. Two, clean-up....what clean-up? Most important, three -- you actually can celebrate as any gracious host should celebrate -- with your friends, and not behind the kitchen counter preparing appetizers.

Browse the menus on my site and get inspired!

Friday, October 29, 2010

Tapenades + 425 Magazine = A Delicious Holiday Brunch Menu

It's always great to receive recognition for hard work! And, when that recognition comes in the form of a six-page spread in local, 425 Magazine, it's even better!

Tapenades is featured in the current edition, on newsstands (but not yet online, as of this post time) now! If you're looking to impress your friends with a "slightly" effortless, French holiday brunch menu, flip immediately to page 46 in the magazine for tips and recipes. Want a sneak peak to whet your appetite???

The Menu
* Chocolate Chaud (Hot Cocoa) with Homemade Candy Cane Marshmallows
* Savory Sundried Tomato and Chevre Pan Perdu
* Crispy Sweetened Provencal Bacon
* Warm Spiced Pear Crisp with Granola Topping
* Cafe au Lait 

Bon Appetit!

For only my dearest friends on Facebook:  Feel free to email me with your holiday entertaining questions.

Tuesday, October 26, 2010

Just Broccoli

I would actually argue that broccoli is never "just broccoli." It's a blank canvas. Delicious with Chinese brown sauce and rice. Delectable with roasted garlic and dressed with a heavy hand of Italian red sauce. Fantastic in pasta salads. And for those who have yet to experience "Blasted" Broccoli -- ridiculously addictive with crispy garlic and spicy pepper flakes.

I'm not sure that this recipe has quite reached the Internet culinary cult classic status, like the NY Times Chocolate Chip Cookie recipe, but it's definitely made strides. The Black Bottle in Belltown is supposedly the originator of this recipe. Many thanks to them!

Served as an appetizer with some crusty bread and a chunk of nutty Parmesan - DELICIOUS! Complimented by another culinary cult classic - The Zuni Cafe Roasted Chicken and Bread Salad - DROP DEAD AMAZING! Stabbed with a fork and eaten alone - MOUTH WATERING!

Have I tempted you yet? You must try it!

Blasted Broccoli
adapted from Black Bottle and presented in Bon Appetit

1 1/4 pounds broccoli crowns, cut into florets (about 8 cups)
3 1/2 tablespoons olive oil, divided
2 garlic cloves, minced
Large pinch of dried crushed red pepper
Sqeeze of lemon

Preheat oven to 450°F. Toss broccoli and 3 tablespoons oil in large bowl to coat. Sprinkle with salt and pepper. Transfer to rimmed baking sheet. Roast 15 minutes. Stir remaining 1/2 tablespoon oil, garlic, and red pepper in small bowl. Drizzle garlic mixture over broccoli; toss to coat. Roast until broccoli is beginning to brown, about 8 minutes longer. Season to taste with salt and pepper and squeeze with some lemon. Serve immediately.

Monday, October 18, 2010

My Crush

I have a slight crush on Ina Garten (you know, the Barefoot Contessa). It somewhat verges on obsession. I think I've seen every episode on the Food Network and have most of her cookbooks. In fact, before starting Tapenades, I wanted to open a gourmet-to-go shop (similar to Barefoot Contessa in the Hamptons) and even wrote a letter to Mrs. Garten, asking a few key questions about her experiences. I never received a note back, but I still love her!

I could go on and on about Ina Garten, but rather than doing so, let me just share one of her many gems. There are many recipes that I make once. Some I even make twice. Few make it much past three. Ina Garten's PB&J Bar recipe happens to be in a category of its own -- the "go-to-amazingly-addictively-fantastic-need-a-quick-cookie-bar" category.

If you dare make this, make sure you're wearing expandable pants, because the dough is so DARN delicious and barely makes it out the mixing bowl and into the pan.

Peanut Butter and Jelly Bars
adapted from Ina Garten

1 stick of butter
3/4 cup sugar
1 egg, room temperature
1 teaspoon vanilla
1 cup peanut butter
1 1/2 cups flour
1 teaspoon baking powder
dash of salt
10 ounces favorite jam

Preheat the oven to 350 degrees F.

Grease a 9 by 9 pyrex/cake pan. Grease and flour the pan.

In the bowl of an electric mixer fitted with the paddle attachment, cream the butter and sugar on medium speed until light yellow, about 2 minutes. With the mixer on low speed, add the vanilla, eggs, and peanut butter and mix until all ingredients are combined.

Sift together the flour, baking powder, and salt into a bowl. With the mixer on low speed, slowly add the flour mixture to the peanut butter mixture. Mix just until combined.

Spread 2/3 of the dough into the prepared cake pan and spread over the bottom with a knife or offset spatula. Spread the jam evenly over the dough. Drop small globs of the remaining dough evenly over the jam. Don't worry if all the jam isn't covered; it will spread in the oven. Sprinkle with chopped peanuts and bake for 30 minutes, until golden brown. Cool and cut into squares.

Not that you even need a photo to entice you to make these -- I just took a batch out the oven and they're slightly too hot to cut. Before I take a fork to the entire batch, I'll take a photo and post.

Two bars and a bit later......

Sunday, October 17, 2010

I'm Back -- Tastier than Ever!

In December 2009, we tore down our house and were uprooted to a small condo for 10 months -- during which time, our new home, with a super fantastic kitchen, was being constructed. I mentally took a break from catering and paid focus to the design of our home.

September 24, 2010, the day we moved back into our home, marked a new adventure for my family and subsequently my culinary career. I can no longer complain about working in cramped quarters, or doing the morning kitchen "dance" with my husband as we prepare our children for the day. You know the "moves" I'm referring to -- he sides step to the toaster while barely surviving a near messy disaster as you spin to plate your childrens' breakfast.

So....to those who have supported me the past several years in my culinary endeavors -- THANK YOU! And to those who have yet to experience what Tapenades has to offer -- I look forward to sharing my passion with you! To all of the above -- YOU AIN'T SEE NOTHING YET!