Blueberry pie

It’s a blueberry explosion!

Ooey, gooey goodness.

That’s exactly what happened to the bottom of my oven — a blueberry explosion. I failed to set this pie on a baking sheet, and two days later the stench of burnt, boiled-over blueberry filling still singes my nostrils when the oven’s on. Looks like a fun day of oven cleaning (in 95-degree heat) is in my future.

It’s totally worth it, however, because the pie is delicious. In fact, this whole experience is a little bit of yin and yang.

The crust (adapted from a recipe here) was quite difficult to roll out and transfer, but the end result is sweet, flaky and not soggy.

The filling (recipe here) took about one minute to throw together and is perfect just the way it is.

Pie dough

(Makes 4 crusts)

4 cups all purpose flour

1 cup shortening

3/4 cup cold butter, diced

4 tbsp. sugar

1 tsp. cinnamon

2 tsp. salt

1 egg

1/2 cup water

For blind baking:

Aluminum foil

Butter

Dry beans or rice

For egg wash:

1 egg, beaten with splash of water

Add first six ingredients to food processor. Pulse until coarse crumbs form. Beat egg and water in separate bowl. With food processor on, drizzle in wet mixture. Dough will become extremely thick and sticky. (Mine didn’t form a ball.)

Dump dough onto large sheet of plastic wrap. Wrap and form into disk. Refrigerate 30 minutes.

While dough chills, preheat oven to 350.

Remove dough and cut into quarters. Lightly form quarters into disks. Freeze two disks for later use. Roll out first disk slightly larger than pie plate (a healthy amount of bench flour needed here). Transfer to pie plate (good luck).

Grease one side of aluminum foil with butter. Place greased side down onto dough in pie plate and fill with beans or rice. Bake 5 minutes. Then, lift foil and beans from plate and use a fork to poke holes in the bottom of the dough. Bake another 5 minutes.

While crust bakes, roll out second disk to same size. Use a ruler to cut dough into six or seven equally sized strips.

Remove pie plate from oven and turn heat up to 425. While blind-baked crust cools a bit, make the pie filling (recipe here.)

Pour blueberry filling into pie plate. Gently weave dough strips to form lattice crust atop filling. Brush lattice copiously with egg wash.

PLACE PIE PLATE ON BAKING SHEET, then bake 50 minutes. I covered my whole pie with aluminum foil after 20 minutes, as the crusts were sufficiently brown.

Remove pie from oven and cool at least 2 hours. (Bonus: Refrigerate overnight — it’s even better the next day!)

*Optional: Whip 1/2 cup heavy cream with 1 tsp. sugar. Serve atop pie.

Stuffed crepes with blueberry-peach sauce

This weekend is the North Carolina Blueberry Festival in Burgaw. I didn’t make it, but I celebrated with this dish. It took about 1 1/2 hours from start to finish, but if you have the time on a weekend, it’s totally worth it.

Beautiful color, right from nature.

Crepe recipe can be found at CIA Culinary Intelligence. (I also adapted the rest of that recipe to what I had on hand)

Stuffed crepes with blueberry-peach sauce

1. Make the crepe batter.

2. While batter refrigerates for 1/2 hour, make the stuffing.

3. While the stuffed crepes are baking, make the fruit sauce.

Ricotta stuffing

(Makes enough for 6 crepes)

1 cup ricotta cheese

Juice from 1/2 lemon

1/4 tsp. vanilla

2 tbsp. sugar

Mix all ingredients thoroughly. Refrigerate until ready to use.

When crepes are cooked, preheat oven to 400. Brush baking dish with melted butter. Place heaping spoonful of ricotta in the center of each crepe. Fold in sides, and roll. Place stuffed crepes seam-side down in baking dish. Drizzle crepes with melted butter. Bake 10 minutes.

Blueberry-peach sauce

(Makes enough to cover 6 crepes)

1/2 cup blueberries

1 small peach, diced (about 1/2 cup)

Scant 1/4 cup sugar

Juice from lemon wedge (about 1 tsp.)

1 tsp. butter

1 tsp. flour

Combine blueberries, peaches, sugar and lemon juice in saucepan. Cook over medium heat until blueberries give up juice and sauce turns purple. In another pan over medium heat, melt butter and add in flour. Stir to make a roux. Cook about 30 seconds, then pour in fruit sauce. Sauce should thicken to syrupy consistency. Simmer on low until ready to use.

Once crepes are baked, drizzle with fruit sauce. Enjoy!

Tomato mania

They’re heeeeere!

Vine-ripened.

My tomatoes are now ripening in droves. They’re absolutely delicious. They’re best sliced, plain — without salt, even.

None of that yucky white stuff in the center, like store-bought tomatoes.

This guy, above, went onto a pizza. As far as I’m concerned, the Caprese salad/Margherita pizza is the most perfect flavor combination in the world. Luckily, my basil is growing like weeds.

Delizioso!

I’m not sure a recipe is necessary, but here goes:

Margherita pizza

Pizza dough

Olive oil

Mozzarella, sliced or shredded

1 large tomato, sliced

Kalamata olives (optional, and not traditional, but I like them)

Salt, pepper

10-12 basil leaves

Preheat oven to 500 degrees with pizza stone inside. Roll out pizza dough on sheet of parchment paper. Brush with olive oil.

Top dough with mozzarella, sliced tomatoes and olives (if using). Drizzle olive oil over top of tomatoes and sprinkle with salt and pepper.

Put pizza, parchment paper and all, onto preheated pizza stone. Bake 8-10 minutes.

Remove pizza from oven and set on cooling rack. Top with basil leaves immediately.

Let rest for 5-10 minutes and slice.

Spicy chicken sandwich

When I moved from an area with mere mall food court stores to an area with standalone stores (gotta love the South), my Chick-fil-A fandom turned to love.

Last night I became a “Spicy VIP” and tried their new spicy chicken sandwich.

It looks the same.

It tastes a lot like my beloved No. 1 on a wheat bun (pickles required, with a dollop of Polynesian and light mayo), just spicier. Well done, Chick-fil-A.

Have you beaten my college favorite, the Wendy’s spicy chicken? That’s yet to be seen; the good folks at Chick-fil-A have given me time to figure it out, with 3 ‘free spicy chicken’ coupons.

Moules Provencal

Looks delicious, doesn’t it?

Mussels with white wine, tomatoes, garlic, onions and herbs over linguine.

It wasn’t. It was gross.

When I saw mussels on sale at Harris Teeter last week, I jumped at the chance to recreate one of the best dishes I’ve ever eaten, at 39 Rue de Jean in Charleston, S.C.

Their version had Pernod, fennel sliced and cooked like pasta, tomatoes and lots of garlic. I couldn’t stop eating it. I thought, surely if mine is half as good, it will still be worth it.

But I forgot the cardinal rule of cooking with shellfish: they’re best when they’re extremely fresh.

The “sale” at Harris Teeter should’ve been the first warning sign — they were trying to get rid of old inventory. Once I got the mussels home and was prepping them for dinner, I noticed the date on the bag said they’d been harvested nearly 2 weeks earlier (second warning sign). But the onions, garlic and tomatoes were already sauteeing on the stovetop, so I forged ahead.

The mussels were fishy tasting (that’s the worst!) and not nearly as brown or soft as Rue de Jean’s.

Oh well. I ate the leftover linguine (sans mussels) for lunch at work. At least *that* tasted good.

Nutella gelato

This stuff is like crack!

Let’s face it — anything made with Nutella is delicious. And Giada deLaurentiis’ recipe did not disappoint.

The Nutella dissolves in the warm custard.

If you are a chocolate lover, you must make this. It’s the best chocolate ice cream I’ve ever had (and yes, I said ice cream, not gelato — more on that below.)

Time to eat.

See how it looks soft and a little grainy? The texture was that of soft-serve; it was lighter and less creamy than the gelato I had in Italy. But no worries — it won’t go to waste. 🙂

Red Cake

What is Red Cake? Apparently it’s the West Virginia version of red velvet.

Red Cake

To be exact, it’s hubby’s grandmother’s recipe.

Since 2007, his birthday cake had been my modified version of Paula Deen’s Grandmother Paula’s Red Velvet Cake.

But now that I’m officially part of the family, I got THE recipe. The one he grew up eating on birthdays.

He says I’m not allowed to share it here (and considering we’ve only been married 7 months, I don’t want to be excommunicated from the family quite yet).

I’ll give you a hint what makes it different: No cream cheese icing. WHAT?! Sacrilege, you say? So did I. But it’s not bad. Let’s just say the butter content makes Paula Deen look like Jillian Michaels.

The icing layers are thicker than the cake layers. Bee-yoo-ti-ful!

All in all, I’d say it was a success. Happy birthday, hubby!

Roasted dinner

Claire Robinson and her 5 Ingredient Fix ain’t got nothin’ on me! (Especially since she doesn’t count salt and pepper as ingredients.) This meal feels like a holiday dinner, and it is so simple — turn on oven. Roast food.

Roasted chicken, sweet potato and asparagus

For the chicken

6-8 pound whole chicken (not a fryer)

Herb bundle

Prep and truss chicken. Salt and pepper interior and exterior. Put herb bundle in cavity. Roast at 450 for 55 minutes.

For the sweet potatoes

2 sweet potatoes

Butter

Cinnamon

Wash potatoes and poke holes in them with fork. Roast same time/temperature as chicken. Serve with butter, cinnamon and pepper.

For the asparagus

1/2 bundle (about 20) asparagus spears

Olive oil

Grated Parmesan cheese

Snap off ends and wash asparagus spears. Toss with olive oil, salt, pepper and Parmesan. Roast at 450 for 10-12 minutes.

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Recipe key | Bold ingredient = Produce Box itemAsterisk ingredient* = Leftover item

BONUS #1: After dinner, pick your chicken and refrigerate leftovers. I get 3-4 meals out of one chicken.

BONUS #2: Don’t throw out your chicken carcass! Use it to make stock.
Cover it with water in a pot and throw in some celery, carrots, onion, garlic cloves, salt, peppercorns and herbs. Bring to a boil, then reduce heat. Let simmer uncovered until liquid reduces and reaches desired color. Strain and put in fridge. Once stock is chilled, skim the fat off top. Strain again before use.

Baked & Banana Cupcakes

Banana Cupcakes with Peanut Butter Frosting. Photo courtesy of Bon Appetit

My obsession with Baked began when Bon Appetit featured their updated diner desserts in May 2009.

I made their Peanut Butter Banana Cream Pie, Caramel-Apple Tartlets with Cinnamon-Rum Ice Cream and Brownie-Bottom Lemon Cheesecake over the course of several months.

I spent nearly an hour one night flipping through their beautiful cookbook, Baked: New Frontiers in Baking, at Barnes & Noble.

Earlier this month, I visited Baked Charleston during a trip to the Holy City.

So, imagine my delight when I found out that Bon Appetit’s April 2010 issue featured “The Great American Cake,” by the owners of Baked.

Last night, with a near-rotten banana on hand, I had to make the Banana Cupcakes. I don’t usually deviate when baking, but since it was a spur-of the moment thing, I made a few adaptations: Cutting the recipe in half; using 1 egg instead of 1 egg and 1 egg yolk; using plain yogurt in place of sour cream; instead of peanut butter frosting, topping them with peanut butter chips.

They were still delicious! In fact, I would venture to say all the Baked recipes I’ve made at home tasted better than the items I tasted from their actual bakery. Still, I wouldn’t pass up the chance to visit next time I’m in New York or Charleston, S.C.