Wednesday, April 22, 2009

A lunch for Ree (and the rest)

Here is my official entry to Pioneer Woman's current contest. The challenge: Design a make-ahead lunch meal for a dozen or so feasting patrons to enjoy. The prize: an object of desire for really anyone with a kitchen and a passion for pastels, a KitchenAid Mixer. YES!

Orzo Pasta Salad
A recipe in our fam. Flavorful, light, and easily consumable for a good 4 days following its preparation.
Ingredients:

  • 3 cups uncooked orzo
  • 10 tbsp olive oil (a little less if you use the oil from the sundried tomatoes)
  • 1/2 cup balsamic vinegar
  • 3/4 cup chopped sundried tomatoes, oil-packed
  • 1/2 cup kalamata olives, pitted and chopped
  • 1 cup chopped basil
  • 1 cup grated parmesan
  • 2 cups chopped raddicio
  • 3 - 4 cloves chopped garlic
  • salt & pepper to taste
  • Handful of fresh herbs, chopped (suggestion: use thyme and rosemary)
  • 1 cup toasted pine nuts


Directions:

  • Cook the orzo according to al dente directions on box.
  • Rinse with cold water in colander to stop cooking, drain, transfer to large bowl.
  • Add olive oil, balsamic, sundried tomatoes and stir until pasta is coated with dressing.
  • Add all other ingredients except pinenuts. Stir well.
  • Add pinenuts just before serving and stir well.

Eggplant Chicken Parmesan
This came from today's post on NPR's Kitchen Window. I'm choosing it as my go-to recipe for the meal because, as a culinary novice and wannabe, I don't have the experience or talent to have ever crafted my own eggplant parm, but if you have, feel free to hone your own! For the recipe noted here, I think it's best to keep it basic and exclude the chicken. Ree, like me, is an eggplant lover so why mask the taste of that delectable, underrepresented vegetable?

Ree's Very Own Baked Fudge
Yum freakin O. And one of her lunching ladies is pregnant. Soooo yeah, it'd probably be a disservice NOT to end the meal with ramkins full of fudge.

And now I'm starving.

Notes:
~I am so envying this meal right now. My meal for the night? Meatloaf. Not that there's anything wrong with that; meatloaf is amazing. And comforting. And I am so ready to be comforted by pounds of beef and onion and ketchup. SO ready!
~I'm also SUCH a blogger novice and wannabe that I am actually pretty impressed with myself for learning and demonstrating (thrice in this post, baby!) how to title links so my posts are not harassed by things resembling http://www.superblognoob.com/09660361454086313&postID=5103917446312989089

Thursday, April 16, 2009

Hi. I'm new here.

I have a problem. I've decided to contribute to and soak up this so-called blogosphere because people are interested and life is interesting and I want to revel in this great world of shared public examination of it all. But the things I find particularly entertaining, those things which I anticipate being the subjects of my writing and reading, are...ridiculously common.

Just look here. Here are some of the things I find stimulating and fabulous:

food

movies

television (both trashy and rich in content)

photography

social commentary

Dilemma ensues.
How will I EVER exhaustively, or even adequately, explore the opinions out there on topics so broad and so standard and so ordinary that their abundance is bursting at the bandwidth seams?
And is it even possible that I am able to offer some unique perspective on these subjects that have already been spun, speckled, and spiffed up by a gaggle of gifted bloggers worldwide?

Or maybe that's just it; that the generality of these topics afford the opportunity to seize a new position from the infinite possible ones.

Well, I guess I'll find out.

And so it goes!