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[personal profile] victorthecook
I've been feeling the lack of vegetables the last little while, so I went a bit wild tonight. First, baked potatoes are easy. Wash 'em, stick 'em in the oven, and wait around an hour. I had cheap n' cheerful Safeway potatoes, and ended up washing them with a kitchen scrubber -- but they got clean.

Then, brussels sprouts. I peel off the outer leaves, trim a bit of the stem, and cut into halves or quarters to get pieces that are similar to one another in size.

Next, I peeled and sliced into thin coins a pound and change of carrots.

First the brussels sprouts: Into my largest frying pan, in one layer, with a couple tablespoons of butter. Cooked 'em for a few minutes on medium-high heat, adding some salt meanwhile. Then I threw in a cup or so of chicken stock, slammed on a lid, and set a timer for ten minutes.

Now the carrots: Into a frying pan with a couple tablespoons of butter, a sliced clove of garlic, and a hefty pinch of saffron. Some salt, a couple minutes of high heat and some shaking, and I added pepper, a half-lemon's worth of zest, and a cupful of water, then slammed the lid on. They steam/braised until they got tender, about six minutes. Then off with the lid, stir around, and boil off the remaining water.

And then the sprouts -- lid off, stir around, and boil off the remaining stock to a light sauce.

And there's dinner: potatoes, carrots, and brussels sprouts. It's better than it sounds.

Date: 2010-11-09 11:50 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] victorthecook.livejournal.com
On Brussels sprouts -- reasonably fresh sprouts cooked lightly with a bit of butter have a very nice, almost nutty flavor. Yes, they are tiny cabbage-ettes, but with a milder flavor. They don't need to be cooked long, since they're very small.

The things I've seen that will ruin them: keeping them way too long (I forgot some for well over a month in the back of the 'fridge... past their prime, to put it lightly), or boiling the hell out of them. If the kitchen smells like a sulfur hot spring, you know something has gone wrong. But they're really not hard to cook -- I've done this under field conditions on vacation without any trouble.

Weather here has been a mix. Chilly until we got the furnace fixed, then most of a week of mid-70-degree days, and now high 50's with periodic rain. So it's been nice to have the stove on, but comfortable outside.

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