Gazpacho

This is what dinner looks like when it’s 100 degrees outside, or nearly. This is the third time this month I’ve made gazpacho — really four times, if you count the gazpacho that I made for my class at Central Market in Plano recently.

 

This is my most basic gazpacho recipe, the one I make without looking at a recipe. Like most soups, it’s pretty adaptable. I’ve made this without garlic and onion and used shallots instead if that’s what I have on hand, and if I have none of the above, it’ll work out, too. Tomatoes, cucumber, bell pepper — those you must have. Plus what makes this soup really satisfying is what goes on top. It’s not fun without.

 

You will notice that I have a chopped egg on top of my gazpacho, which I’m only mentioning in case this seems odd to you; if you’ve had gazpacho in Spain, then you already know this is normal, plus it totally works. I usually put diced cucumber on top, too, but I forgot to save some back when I put the cucumber in the blender. Croutons are always a good idea, but I’ve made this plenty of times completely breadless, using only almonds in the soup to give it some body, and then chopping up some on top, too. Crunch is important in soups, hot or cold.

 

I love gazpacho because it cools me down with the first spoonful. I also love it because it’s easy to make and it reminds me of Spain. There is nothing not to love about gazpacho. I have no idea why there’s not gazpacho coming out of the faucets in Texas in the summertime. We need gazpacho.

 

Gazpacho

Makes 4 servings

  • 2 pounds tomatoes
  • ½ red onion
  • 1 clove of garlic
  • 1 cucumber, peeled and seeded (about 1/4 cup chopped reserved for serving)
  • ¼ cup raw almonds, plus more for serving
  • 4 slices stale bread, divided
  • ¼ cup olive oil + 2 tablespoons more for croutons
  • 2 tablespoons red wine vinegar
  • sea salt and pepper
  • 2 eggs

 

Put a large pot of water into boil. Make an X on the bottom of your tomatoes and when the water boils, drop them into the water and set your timer for 30 seconds. Remove the tomatoes, peel off the skin, and put these in the blender. Add the onion, garlic clove, cucumber, almonds, 2 slices of bread, olive oil, red wine vinegar, and salt and pepper to taste. Blend until smooth and creamy. Taste for seasonings. Chill for 3 to 4 hours.

 

Meanwhile, make your hardboiled eggs. Put your eggs in a saucepan, cover them with water, and put the pot onto boil. When it boils, reduce the heat to a simmer and set your timer for 10 minutes. Pour off the water and rinse with cold water. When the eggs cool, you may keep them in the fridge until you’re ready to serve your soup.

 

Preheat the oven to 400°F. Slice the bread into 1/2-inch cubes, toss them with olive oil and a little sea salt and pepper and bake until crisp, about 10 minutes. You can also make these in advance and keep in a plastic bag.

 

Before serving, be sure to taste your soup. The flavors will change slightly in the fridge, so you may need to adjust the seasonings. Pour it into bowls. Chop the eggs and add to the soup, along with some of the chopped cucumber and croutons. Drizzle with olive oil.

 

 

 

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Garbage Day Salad

Do you ever look up at the end of the day on a Sunday and go, where the hell did the weekend go? The last week, the month?

 

That’s how it’s been for me lately, and please note that I AM NOT COMPLAINING I AM SO FILLED WITH GRATITUDE, but merely making an observation, and the point is sometimes you just don’t have time to do anything but make sure you’ve got enough coffee to keep you going. Between the phone calls and the going to the vet and the writing up this and that and trying to not to eat too many carbs (oh who am I kidding?), you look in the fridge and your fingernails are jammed with dirt because you finally got the herbs that you bought two weeks ago into pots and of course your beautiful French spade and other gardening tools are who the hell knows where, so hands, turns out can scoop out dirt just fine. So going even to the grocery store would require an effort that you no longer have.

 

There, in the too-short fridge, where I must bend down to peek in and see what I’ve got, I find not inspiration and beauty, but what’s left of other recipes that I’ve already made, the unwanted bits and last remains that I completely forgot about until I reach this desperate, I do not want to go to the store point in my day, and then I remember, too, that it is GARBAGE DAY. The day to make everything that’s no longer needed go away. A time to clean up, get rid of what I don’t want or can’t eat anymore. So I can reboot, tidy up, out with the old and in with the new, and get ready for another week. Or month. Or something. What day is it again?

 

As it happens, I am in luck, dirty nails and all. I am lucky because I had an impulse to buy endive the other day, and on that same day, I bought hearts of palm. I pulled the endive out of the crisper and determined that it was okay to eat. I had a couple of eggs left in the carton. I had a balsamic vinaigrette already made, and then I knew that I could make a rendition of a salad that I first had in Biarritz many years ago, a chunky, crispy salad monster with no green lettuce at all, but everything else — endive, tomatoes, eggs, hearts of palm, plus a sunset over the mad waves of the Atlantic on top of it all.

 

I chopped up some kalamata olives and threw them in, too, because I always have them on hand and I don’t think there’s much that they don’t go with or improve. I had a tiny and I do mean tiny bit of Gorgonzola left so I put that into the bowl. The eggs took 10 minutes. I decided I would go ahead and heat up a flatbread in the fridge just in case. In case I had no will power, I guess. It half-burned in my hot as a furnace new oven and I ate it, anyway.

 

The best salad, the best anything I’ve made in awhile.

 

It is always like this. Every time I get to this point of complete exhaustion, too tired to make anything or go to the store, I figure out something to make with what I’ve got, even if I don’t have much of anything at all, and it turns out, it always turns out, that I make something that I couldn’t have thought of if I hadn’t gotten to this point.

 

Garbage Day Salad

Serves 1 or 2

 

2 eggs

3 small endive, cut into 1/2-inch slices

a handful cherry tomatoes, chopped

about 8 Kalamata olives, halved

3 hearts of palm, sliced

chopped fresh herbs (I used basil and mint)

bits of leftover cheese (I used Gorgonzola)

Balsamic vinaigrette, recipe follows

 

Put the eggs in a saucepan and cover with water. Put on the stove to boil. When it boils, reduce to a simmer, and set your timer for 10 minutes. Rinse the eggs under cold water. Peel and chop them. Put them in a salad bowl.

Add everything else to the eggs in the bowl. If you’ve got some leftover bread, you can make some croutons and throw them in, or if you’d like to add toasted nuts and seeds, that’ll give you some additional crunch and protein. I was far too lazy at this point, so I didn’t add anything more. I spooned a little Balsamic Vinaigrette on top of it all and tossed. It was fine. It was more than fine. I ate it all.

 

 

Balsamic Vinaigrette

Makes 1 cup

 

¼ cup balsamic vinegar

1 teaspoon Dijon mustard

1 tablespoon chopped shallot

sea salt and pepper

¾ cup olive oil

 

Put the balsamic vinegar, mustard, shallot, and a little sea salt and pepper in a jam jar. Give it a good shake, then let it rest for 15 minutes. Add the olive oil, shake again, and taste. Will keep in the fridge for a week.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Eggplant Caviar

It may seem a little weird to be making eggplant anything in November, but it’s been almost 80 degrees in Dallas lately, and I’m going with the weather instead of what the calendar says, so t-shirts and eggplant dip it is. (Plus I noticed that Yotam Ottolenghi published an eggplant and lentils recipe in his column recently, so if he can tout eggplant when it’s past  season, I figure I can, too.)

 

I’ve been in the throes of coming up with all sorts of appetizer recipes in the last week or two, and just when I think I’m out of ideas, this one came floating back into my brain, which I’d totally forgotten about. Because as much as I love avocados, there’s only so much guac you can eat, and if this crazy warm weather holds, you’re going to need more recipes that are on the light side for the upcoming holiday season, which will include more wines that are chilled than not and a whole lot of Champagne if you’re lucky.

 

This recipe is one that I stole from my own book, and I didn’t change a thing, which is unusual for me. I’m a perpetual recipe tinkerer and normally can’t leave a recipe alone, but with this one, I didn’t see any way to improve upon the original. With chips, thin slices of toasted bread or pita, or slathered on top of a flatbread and turned into a pizza like I did last night, this is an easy add to your holiday repertoire that you can return to year-round.

 

Eggplant Caviar

Makes 2 to 3 cups

 

  • 2 large eggplants, halved
  • ½ cup/4 ounces olive oil, plus a little more for serving
  • sea salt and pepper
  • juice of 2 lemons
  • pinch cayenne
  • 8 basil leaves
  • 12 cherry tomatoes, quartered
  • 1 tablespoon pepitas for serving

 

  1. Preheat the oven to 400°F/200°C and line a cookie sheet with parchment paper. Place the four halves of eggplant on this, fleshy-side up, and with a sharp knife, make a few long slashes into the flesh of each one. Divide the olive oil between the eggplant pieces, brushing it on so it’s evenly distributed. Sprinkle with some salt and pepper and pop into the oven. Bake for 45 minutes to one hour, until the eggplant’s soft and the top has browned. Remove and let this cool.

 

  1. Scoop out the eggplant’s flesh and mix it with a fork with the lemon juice, cayenne, and basil. Taste for seasonings, then gently fold in the cherry tomato quarters. Refrigerate for an hour before serving. Drizzle with olive oil and add pepitas on top.

 

 

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