Friday, August 23, 2013

August Feast

Chorizo and Bean Stew with Polenta
Polenta, chorizo, and something fruity. These were the cards picked for the first feast. Initially, I was like 'okay, polenta and chorizo...both are in the same ethnic family...this will be a cinch'. Little did I know that polenta is THE most hazardous thing to cook. Seriously. I'm not usually clumsy in the kitchen (unlike all other aspects of life), but for some reason I ended the evening with 2 cuts on my fingers (rather, slices), and 3 burns on my arm...from the dangerous polenta. I put about 2 cups of fresh milled polenta into a pot of boiling, salty, well-oiled water and started whisking away. Within about 30 seconds, it bubbles and POPS out in pockets of molten corn meal, flying every which direction, hitting my arm at a scalding temperature. Okay. Panic. The husband was off for a run while I prepared everything, so it was a surprise for him. All I could think was, great, he's gonna come home with polenta on the ceiling and me with 2nd degree burns. I realized as long as you whisk, it won't explode. So I whisked for 2-3 solid minutes (with my poor weak arm-sticks), then poured it all into a pan and set it to bake at 350. WOOSAH. This is when I started breathing again. I was still afraid the polenta wouldn't cook through because I took it off the stove quickly, but in the end, it all came together. So when I first thought about what to make, I thought to do something hearty and warm. I decided to make a stew-like concoction with the chorizo (which was lamb and beef). I stared with an onion-tomato base and broke down the chorizo in the mixture, added S&P, cumin, marjoram, and smoked paprika, then added cannellini beans. I let this all simmer down, and plated it with the stew on top of a mound of polenta. The sauce of the stew really soaked into the polenta, creating a creamy and savory end product.
Apricot Napoleon
For the something fruity, I decided to make a fresh apricot napoleon. This was as simple as it gets. You can literally recreate it by looking at the picture. One trick to keep the pastry from puffing up too much is to weigh it down with aluminum or another cookie sheet in the oven. Make sure to take it off for the last couple minutes to let the pastry brown a bit. I took it off a bit too early so they still ended up puffing a bit. Oh wells! Still tastes great. All in all, even though I felt like a contestant on chopped, we had a lovely dinner and all is good with the world.

What's in it:
-polenta (corn meal), sea salt, olive oil, lamb chorizo, cannellini beans, tomato, onion, cumin, paprika, marjoram, black pepper
-pastry dough, apricot, whipped cream

1 comment:

  1. sooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo good!! took some with me for lunch today. planning on going home and having some more.

    no, we don't have enough to share with... :)

    ReplyDelete