I had a boatload of green tomatoes at the end of the garden season this past fall. In the past I've done a variety of things with green tomatoes...pickles (meh), relish (meh), cake (yum but...) ...these just aren't dishes that move real well at my house.
The house favorite remains fried green tomatoes. You can slice, dredge and freeze green tomatoes for quick cooking later. But at the time of our last garden harvest, I was 38 weeks pregnant and had ankles with the same diameter as my neck so I just didn't feel like doing it. I now have gallons of naked frozen green tomatoes that I still don't feel like dredging!
Some interwebs surfing turned up a suggestion to use green tomatoes in soup. This is my all-green-tomato version of what I found. It is going on our menu until our green tomatoes are used up, and into next year once our garden starts producing tomatoes.
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Showing posts with label corn. Show all posts
Showing posts with label corn. Show all posts
Sunday, January 20, 2013
Green Tomato and Corn Soup
Labels:
beurre maniƩ,
broth,
corn,
cumin,
fast,
green tomatoes,
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Monday, March 5, 2012
Tuna Bean Salad
I don't like canned tuna. It's one of those foods, like "potted meat" and pickled eggs, that just creep me out. I do, however, LOVE a few recipes that use canned tuna. This is one of them.
It's a shop-ahead recipe at heart...a can of corn, a can of beans, 2 cans of tuna, salad dressing and some cheese. All live happily in the pantry or freezer for several months. Fresh onions/scallions are optional if you're planning this as a "rescue" meal (you know those nights, when all other plans have fallen through and you just need *something* for dinner without going to the store or carrying in). It's also a great meal to plan on nights when you don't know for sure that dinner at home will happen...if it doesn't, your ingredients will keep and not go to waste.
It's also a make-ahead recipe...in fact, it tastes better after blending overnight (and therefore is delicious as leftovers). If you want to serve it immediately, you can do that too, and it takes about 5 minutes to put together. This is also pretty inexpensive at less than $1 per serving for the filling when I buy the ingredients at normal grocery store prices and even cheaper when you strike good sales on canned goods or cheese.
I usually serve it as a sandwich, but you could also use it as a stuffed veggie filling...whole tomatoes, cucumber "boats", well-steamed eggplant halves, boiled whole onions or lightly steamed zucchini halves. Hollow out the veggies (after cooking, if they need cooked) with a spoon and fill with the salad. If you are low-carbing, you could substitute 1/2 cup of edamame (frozen, for shop-ahead planning) for the can of corn. And thanks to the increasing availability of low-sodium or no-salt-added products, a meal made of canned goods doesn't need to carry a huge sodium tab.
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It's a shop-ahead recipe at heart...a can of corn, a can of beans, 2 cans of tuna, salad dressing and some cheese. All live happily in the pantry or freezer for several months. Fresh onions/scallions are optional if you're planning this as a "rescue" meal (you know those nights, when all other plans have fallen through and you just need *something* for dinner without going to the store or carrying in). It's also a great meal to plan on nights when you don't know for sure that dinner at home will happen...if it doesn't, your ingredients will keep and not go to waste.
I usually serve it as a sandwich, but you could also use it as a stuffed veggie filling...whole tomatoes, cucumber "boats", well-steamed eggplant halves, boiled whole onions or lightly steamed zucchini halves. Hollow out the veggies (after cooking, if they need cooked) with a spoon and fill with the salad. If you are low-carbing, you could substitute 1/2 cup of edamame (frozen, for shop-ahead planning) for the can of corn. And thanks to the increasing availability of low-sodium or no-salt-added products, a meal made of canned goods doesn't need to carry a huge sodium tab.
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corn,
edamame,
fast,
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salad dressing,
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tuna,
what do i do with
Wednesday, August 10, 2011
Blue Ribbon, baby

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Tuesday, June 14, 2011
Easy-easier-easiest: Corn

To help cut kernels off a cob, invert a small bowl inside a larger one. In a perfect world, both bowls have flattened bottoms for minimal slippage. Hold your cob on the smaller bowl and cut the kernels off with a knife...the knife edge shouldn't bang on the outer bowl and the kernels will fall right into the larger bowl instead of scattering all over your kitchen counter.
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