Showing posts with label casserole recipes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label casserole recipes. Show all posts

Sunday, September 22, 2013

Butternut Squash Tian with Herb Topping

Roasted butternut squash and garlicky kale mixed with cheese and eggs are topped with herby breadcrumbs and baked for a great vegetarian main course or side dish I'm calling Butternut Squash Tian.

Food Lust People Love: Roasted butternut squash and garlicky kale mixed with cheese and eggs are topped with herby breadcrumbs and baked for a great vegetarian main course or side dish I'm calling Butternut Squash Tian.

I am always on the lookout for vegetarian recipes that make a great side but are also hearty enough to be eaten as a main dish. This recipe, adapted from Faith Durand’s post on TheKitchn can do both quite admirably. I decided to pretty it up from the usual casserole by baking it in a spring-form pan and serving it in slices. And before a load of angry French folk wielding Opinels arrive to object to my use of the word “tian,” (Bienvenue!) may I just say that I had never heard of the word before I saved the recipe almost a year ago, despite living for three years in France.

After a little research, I do now understand that the tian itself is the vessel AND the vegetable gratin that is cooked in it, so my pan choice probably means that this no longer qualifies as a tian. What can I say? It’s still delicious! And pretty! How many casseroles can say that?

This week on Sunday Supper, we are celebrating the arrival of Fall with comforting dishes using seasonal ingredients. Butternut squash is one of my favorites. And so is kale. Make sure you scroll to the bottom of this recipe to see all the other seasonal dishes on offer.

Ingredients
For the tian:
About 4lb or 1.9kg whole butternut squash
Olive oil for roasting
1/2 cup or 100g short-grain or arborio rice
1 3/4 oz or 50g freshly grated Grana Padano or Parmesan cheese
7 oz or 200g smoked cheese
2 large cloves garlic
5-6 large stems curly kale
3 large eggs
Sea salt and freshly ground black pepper

For the herb topping:
1 cup or 80g dried bread crumbs
1 big handful flat leaf parsley, leaves only
Leaves from 3 to 4 sprigs of thyme and/or rosemary (I used some of each.)
1 3/4 oz or 50g freshly grated Grana Padano or Parmesan cheese
2 tablespoons olive oil

Method
Preheat your oven to 400°F or 200°C and prepare your eventual baking pan or casserole dish by greasing it liberally. If you have an actual earthenware tian , more power to you! (My spring-form pan was 8 in or 20cm in diameter and about 3 in or 7 1/2cm deep.)

Peel the butternut squash, scrape the seeds out, and cut it into chunks.


Pile the squash up in a large roasting pan (not the one you’ve already prepared for baking the finished dish!) and drizzle liberally with olive oil. Toss the squash around a little so that it is well coated with the oil and then spread the chunks out into one layer. Sprinkle with flakey sea salt.


Roast for about one hour in your hot oven or until the butternut squash is fork tender and the edges have gone golden. You'll want to stir it around about half way through.


While the squash is roasting, boil your rice in salted water with a drizzle of olive oil, just as you would pasta. Keep a close eye on it. Since Arborio rice has such a high starch content, it tends to want to boil up and over. When the rice is just cooked - test a grain or two occasionally – drain the water out and set the rice aside to cool.


Grate all of your cheeses and make sure to divide the Grana Padano pile in half, some for the tian, some for the herb topping.


Meanwhile, remove the stems from your kale and chop it into small bits.


Mince your garlic then sauté it in a little olive oil being careful not to let it color. Add in the chopped kale and a sprinkle of sea salt. Cook, covered, until the kale is completely wilted. Set aside to cool.





To make your breadcrumb topping, add all of the dry ingredients to your food processor and process until it is completely uniform.

Add in the two tablespoons of olive oil and process again. Depending on the type of baking dish you use, you may have leftover topping. Store this in a bag in the freezer. It can be used for topping baked fish, much like in this delicious Bill Granger recipe .



When the squash is roasted, remove it from the oven and turn the oven down to 350°F or 180°C. Mash the squash with a potato masher and set it aside to cool slightly.


In a large bowl, whisk your eggs and then add in the butternut squash. Mix well.

Now add in the rest all of your tian ingredients: The wilted, garlicky kale, the cooked rice, all of the smoked cheese and the other half of the Grana Padano cheese that wasn’t used in the topping. Give the whole lot a good couple of grinds of fresh black pepper and then mix well.



Spoon the mixture into your prepared baking pan and smooth it out.

Top liberally with the herby breadcrumbs. As mentioned before, you can bake this in a larger casserole, in which case, you’ll probably use all of the breadcrumbs. For my smaller, deeper pan, I ended up using just about half. Pat the herb topping down so it doesn’t fall off later when serving.


Bake for one-hour, covering the top with foil part way through if the breadcrumb topping is getting too browned. Check that it is cooked through by putting a knife in and leaving it there for about 30 seconds. The knife should be very hot to the touch when it is removed. If you are using a shallower casserole dish, this may not take the full hour.

To remove from the spring-form pan, allow the tian to cool for a few minutes and then run a knife around the sides before releasing the catch.


Run a knife under the tian to loosen it from the base.


Slide to a serving plate, cut into slices and serve warm.

Food Lust People Love: Roasted butternut squash and garlicky kale mixed with cheese and eggs are topped with herby breadcrumbs and baked for a great vegetarian main course or side dish I'm calling Butternut Squash Tian.
Enjoy!


Many thanks to our Sunday Supper host this week, Soni from Soni's Food. We got news just yesterday that her family has suffered a major loss with the unexpected passing of her father. If you are so inclined, please keep them in your prayers.

Amazing Breakfasts, Brunches, and Breads
Outstanding Soups, Starters and Sides
Comforting Main Dishes
Decadent Desserts:
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Food Lust People Love: Roasted butternut squash and garlicky kale mixed with cheese and eggs are topped with herby breadcrumbs and baked for a great vegetarian main course or side dish I'm calling Butternut Squash Tian.

Thursday, August 18, 2011

Neen’s Stuffed Crab

Straight from the pages of The Shadows on the Teche cookbook from New Iberia, Louisiana, Neen's Stuffed Crab is made with fresh picked lump crab meat. It's rich and delicious.
 
Food Lust People Love: Straight from the pages of The Shadows on the Teche cookbook from New Iberia, Louisiana, Neen's Stuffed Crab is made with fresh picked lump crab meat. It's rich and delicious.


From Susie Pharr in the Shadows on the Teche cookbook

This recipe is a tribute to extended family. My Aunt Nonnie, our lovely hostess for the weekend in New Iberia, was blessed with a wonderful sister-in-law named Susie Pharr. Susie’s reputation as a great cook, gracious hostess and generous friend is known far and wide. 

Sadly, we lost Susie to cancer a couple of years back but her legacy of recipes remains because she generously contributed to the Shadows on the Teche cookbook, even as she willingly shared her recipes with friends and family.  This recipe goes back even farther, as it came to her from her husband Mark’s Aunt Neen, who raised him. Passing on recipes is what family is all about.  Cooking together and eating together make that all the more special.  

Neen’s Stuffed Crab
My aunt follows the recipe exactly so she uses margarine but I substitute butter when I make this at home because I never buy margarine. You do you. 

Ingredients
2 medium onions, finely chopped
3 cloves garlic, minced
2 stalks celery, finely chopped
1 medium bell pepper, finely chopped
1/2 pound margarine 
3 stale or day-old hamburger buns
1 cup evaporated milk
2 eggs, beaten
2 pounds crabmeat
1 teaspoon Accent (Monosodium glutamate or MSG)
1/2 cup dried breadcrumbs (I like to use half panko half regular dried)
Butter for topping

Method
Sauté onions, garlic, celery and bell pepper in 1/2 pound margarine until very, very soft.


Crumble hamburger buns and add milk, let soak about one minute.


Add eggs to hamburger buns and milk. 


Add crabmeat to the sautéed seasonings and mix gently.  

Fresh picked, never frozen - it makes all the difference!


Add hamburger bun mixture and heat thoroughly.  


Season to taste.  This filling may be put into crab shells or into a casserole with bread crumbs on top. (Aunt Nonnie also got me to add a few pats of butter.) 

Bread crumbs going on.

My only contribution - the pats of butter.

Bake at 350°F for about 20 minutes.

Food Lust People Love: Straight from the pages of The Shadows on the Teche cookbook from New Iberia, Louisiana, Neen's Stuffed Crab is made with fresh picked lump crab meat. It's rich and delicious.

Enjoy!

Food Lust People Love: Straight from the pages of The Shadows on the Teche cookbook from New Iberia, Louisiana, Neen's Stuffed Crab is made with fresh picked lump crab meat. It's rich and delicious.




Even before the meal itself, the best part of getting together with family is the opportunity to hear the old stories. We laughed until we cried at the foibles of family members as youngsters.  Unfortunately, I cannot share those stories because said relatives are now successful adults and would undoubtedly sue. :)