GAMBERETTI CON RUCOLA E POMODORI

Nope, this recipe didn’t come from an Italian cookbook.  I hope Martha Stewart won’t mind that I took some liberties with the title for her creation,   but it just sounds too lovely in the language of Dante: “… Gamberetti… Rucola… Pomodori,”  …just beautiful!

This year I insist on “quick and easy dinners,” because life is awfully busy for us here in LA.  It’s now our final month at UCLA, so this type of recipe is a life-saver.  Cook some pasta (we used cappellini, that’s ready in five minutes),  grab some lettuce for a simple salad, and all of a sudden you’ll have a meal from a trattoria by the Mediterranean Sea.

SAUTEED SHRIMP WITH ARUGULA AND TOMATOES
(adapted from Martha Stewart’s Everyday Food, June 2010)

1 Tbs olive oil
1 cup cherry tomatoes
1 garlic clove, lightly smashed
1 pound large shrimp
4 cups baby arugula leaves
salt and pepper
juice of half a lemon

Heat the olive oil in a large skillet, add the garlic and sautee for a couple of minutes in gentle heat, until it gets fragrant and starts to develop some color.  Remove the garlic and discard it.  Add the tomatoes, season with a little salt and pepper, increase the heat, and cook, stirring often, until they blister and release some liquid.

Add the shrimp and cook until opaque, not more than 4 minutes. Add the arugula leaves, a little more salt, and toss until wilted.  Squeeze the lemon juice over the pan, and toss to combine.   Adjust seasoning, and serve over pasta or white rice.

ENJOY!

to print the recipe, click here

Comments:  My preference for arugula or spinach is always changing.  Sometimes I settle on spinach, for its mellowness and delicate taste.   Then, my mood switches and I grab bag after bag of arugula at the store and bring it home.  Its leaves are sturdier, it wilts with dignity.  😉 And the peppery bite, no spinach can match it.  As you might guess, I’m going through the arugula phase right now.

ONE YEAR AGO:  Grissini

Add to FacebookAdd to DiggAdd to Del.icio.usAdd to StumbleuponAdd to RedditAdd to BlinklistAdd to TwitterAdd to TechnoratiAdd to Yahoo BuzzAdd to Newsvine

POPEYE-PLEASIN’ SALAD

Watching Popeye wolf down can after can of spinach wasn’t enough to tickle my taste buds for it.  Picky eater that I was when I first tried it, only in my early twenties,  it required a few encounters to  appreciate it.   I suppose that one might say that spinach is an acquired taste:  we now consume a couple of bags of baby spinach per week, and maybe more.   In this salad it’s the leading man, with just two supporting actors: slivered almonds and shaved parmiggiano cheese. I adapted the recipe from one I found in Everyday Food, that lovely Martha Stewart publication that’s always peeking at me in grocery stores, next to the cashier.    😉

SPINACH SALAD WITH ALMONDS AND PARMIGGIANO
(adapted from Everyday Food,  June 2010)
receita em portugues na pagina seguinte

1/3 cup slivered almonds
3 Tbs olive oil
2 tsp fresh lemon juice
2 tsp balsamic vinegar
salt and freshly ground pepper
1 bunch baby spinach
1/3 cup shaved parmiggiano-reggiano cheese

Toast the almonds in a 350 F oven or on a dry, non-stick skillet, until fragrant and light brown. Do not let them burn.  In a large bowl, combine almonds, oil, lemon juice and balsamic vinegar; season with salt and pepper.

Add the spinach  and half the cheese, toss well to coat them with the dressing. Add the remaining of the cheese on top, and serve immediately.

ENJOY!

to print the recipe, click here

Comments:  Spinach is the basis of this salad, but the almonds take the flavor to another level, from good to great.  It’s all about how you toast them:   if they’re just dark enough  you’ll get an intense, popcorny flavor, without  bitterness.   This time I hit the jackpot, and I hope that you do too!

We enjoyed it with salmon but it will complement many other dishes:  roasted chicken, grilled pork, a juicy T-bone steak, or even a panini.  The original recipe used arugula instead of spinach, so keep that in mind as an alternative.

ONE YEAR AGO: Watermelon Granita

Add to FacebookAdd to DiggAdd to Del.icio.usAdd to StumbleuponAdd to RedditAdd to BlinklistAdd to TwitterAdd to TechnoratiAdd to Yahoo BuzzAdd to Newsvine

Continue reading