Green
Tomato Sauce
Makes
4 servings
Since I always make this at the end of the growing season when I'm in "use it or lose it" mode, the recipe is subject to being greatly expanded. It's versatile enough to be a pasta or pizza sauce as well as a soup (see below.)
½
c. extra virgin olive oil
2
large garlic cloves, minced
¼
t. hot red pepper flakes
salt
and pepper to taste
Combine
all ingredients in a stockpot and cook down until the tomatoes are
soft. Transfer to a blender and blender until smooth. This will be
a very smooth, silky sauce that is good over pasta, in lasagna, or
turned into a soup. It freezes well.
Curried Green Tomato Soup
Makes 4-6 servings
2 T. grapeseed oil or other high-heat
cooking oil
2 large carrots, peeled and medium
diced
½ yellow onion, diced
2 stalks celery, diced
1 qt. green tomato sauce (see recipe
above)
1-2 c. vegetable stock, depending on
desired thickness
1 T. red curry paste, diluted in 1 T.
water
salt and pepper to taste
Whole milk yogurt for garnish
Heat
oil in a small hot stockpot. Sauté carrots, onions, and celery
until slightly soft, about 5 min. Add green tomato sauce and
vegetable stock and cook until vegetables are completely soft, about
10 min. Puree in a blender or food processor. Add additional stock
if desired. Add the curry paste and additional seasoning as needed.
Serve with yogurt garnish.
I also pulled all of my large (read: spicy) arugula (for pesto), more baby hakurei turnips (for pickling), and even my brocoli stalks and remaining leaves. I used the latter a la Tamar Adler and cooked them in a large pot of highly salted water. Since some of the stalks were truly woody, I then did my best to scoop/cut out the softened core and compost the remains. With these broccoli bits, of which there were a lot, I made a pesto from a loose recipe I created.
Broccoli Pesto
Broccoli leaves and stems, cooked until tender
Lemon zest or preserved lemons
Garlic cloves
Toasted almonds or pinenuts
Parmesan cheese
Olive oil
Combine all ingredients except olive oil in a a food processor and pulse until well chopped. Drizzle olive oil down the feed tube and process until combined. Enjoy immediately, refrigerate with an additional layer of olive on top, or freeze is small portions to eat throughout the winter.
I used this pesto as a spread for some quesadillas along with mashed pinto beans, sauteed ancho peppers from our garden, frozen local corn, and Muenster cheese (or whatever cheese you like). With gluten-free brown rice tortillas they were darn good.
I've gotten more guts lately for D.I.Y. projects including a recent haircut for our daughter. Since school started she's wanted nothing to do with any clips, pigtails, headbands, or anything else we've tried to keep the scraggly hair out of her face. I've always loved this page boy/wedge/pixie cut, but didn't dare cut her locks until now when I took the aforementioned as a sign. When I was in junior high, my mom and I had a short-lived though successful dog grooming business. I crowdsourced a bit to see how many people thought that qualified me to chop off my kid's hair. Although the clippers and a buzz to poochie's back are probably much less detailed than this sculpted cut, I think I did okay (though we do have an appointment tomorrow for my hairdresser to "clean up" the back a tiny bit.) The main thing is that V loves it. And so do mom and dad!
Before |
The perfect chair for the occasion |
After |
Not bad, though this photo does a little justice to the choppity chopped parts on the bottom |
We're ramping up for Halloween of course so we took V to the Pumpkin Pavilion at one of our neighborhood parks on Friday night. The beauty of these masses of glowing pumpkins never ceases to amaze me.
Community efforts |
Creative folks we have in this neighborhood |
Just do it! |
Otherwise, things are quieting down on the homestead. We are feeling a definite shift into the colder months. I've spent a good amount of time in the last few days quietly pondering, listening, and discussing certain life issues. Heading out this morning for coffee with a friend with whom I haven't spent enough time lately. Hoping to continue the dialogue and work through my thoughts of how to make this world a better place, even if it starts with small, quiet steps.
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