in the kitchen // kale

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This is not so much a recipe as a revelation. Did you know that kale is delicious? Apparently I missed the memo but recently discovered this fact for myself. Well, to be honest, I had a little help from one of my favorite cookbook authors, Isa Chandra Moskowitz. I started with her recipe “Garlicky Kale with Tahini Dressing” (from Vegan With A Vengeance), and then I adapted it to be easier to prepare…because I am too busy and/or lazy to bother with all the chopping and mincing and whatnot. So, here’s my version, which makes a perfect side dish for two hungry, veggie-loving adults, plus one smallish person:

Ingredients:
olive oil
3 heaping teaspoons minced garlic from a jar*
8 oz. pre-chopped kale (about 1/2 of one of those giant bags)

*If you absolutely must use fresh garlic, I recommend 3-4 cloves, minced.

Instructions:
Heat some olive oil in a large skillet. Add the garlic and sauté on medium heat for about a minute or just until fragrant. Add the kale and turn with tongs until bright green and slightly wilted. You don’t want it to get really wilted like spinach; it should stay a little bit springy. Devour.

This kale is so good that even toddlers will love it!
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in the kitchen // secret pasta sauce

Tomatoes and oregano make it Italian; wine and tarragon make it French. Sour cream makes it Russian; lemon and cinnamon make it Greek. Soy sauce makes it Chinese; garlic makes it good. — Alice May Brock

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Okay, so this recipe is not really a secret, but I’m giving it that title in the tradition of pasta sauces as the culinary equivalent of precious family heirlooms. Because I find that we eat pasta a little more often than we should, I sometimes offset my laziness by making homemade pasta sauce. I started out using a recipe from The Complete Tassajara Cookbook, but I’ve made several adjustments that bypass some of the more laborious steps (such as dicing whole canned tomatoes — why not just buy ones that are already diced?). I’ve also tweaked the seasoning to suit my family’s taste, and you should feel free to do the same with my recipe. The beauty of this type of recipe is that it is so flexible. You could make it with 100% organic ingredients, you could use fresh herbs, you could blend only some of it for a chunkier style sauce. Be creative! Someday I’d love to develop a recipe for a vodka/cream sauce (my husband’s favorite). If I’m successful, I will be sure to post the results.

Ingredients:

1 large onion, diced
Two 15 oz. or one 28 oz. jar of diced tomatoes
4 cloves of garlic
2 teaspoons of Italian seasoning (I use McCormick)
1/2 teaspoon sugar
red pepper, salt, black pepper to taste

Instructions:

You can make this sauce in either a large pot or in a large skillet, it’s up to you. Saute the onion in some olive oil until soft (usually about 5-7 minutes). Add the garlic and saute for an additional minute. Try not to burn the garlic (I always do). Add the tomatoes and their juice, along with all of the spices. Heat for about 10 minutes (covered, so it doesn’t splatter). Let it cool for a minute or two and then blend it. I use an immersion blender because immersion blenders are probably the greatest kitchen appliance of all time. I don’t know how or why anyone would cook without one. However, if you don’t have one, you can certainly blend your sauce in a regular blender.

I like to put my pasta directly into the sauce and stir it all up so that every piece is deliciously coated with tomato-ey goodness. Penne works great for this. You could also just pour it on top. You know what you like best. Mangia mangia!

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