Showing posts with label zucchini. Show all posts
Showing posts with label zucchini. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 17, 2012

Parmesan and Brie Topped Baby Zucchini in a Semolina Crust


Zucchini is caramelized on the stovetop then added to a golden baked semolina crust and topped with Parmesan and Brie for a lovely vegetarian main course, perfect for brunch, lunch or dinner. 

Moving to a new country is all about learning.  Learning the culture, learning the language, trying to find familiar in the unfamiliar and somehow easing into it to create a life where you can be comfortable.  It means readjusting expectations and acknowledging reality, no matter how uncomfortable that may be. 

We always thought we were doing the right thing, this moving around.  First of all, the wide world is where the job was.  Secondly, what an experience for our family, our daughters!  And, I think they both get that.  But what I am not sure they get is that the moves don’t stop when they leave home.  Lately I have been getting a little push back about coming to Cairo to visit.  It seems they are prepared not to like it.  It’s not home.  Yeah, I know that.  And for them it will most likely never be home.  (Heck, I’m still working on that feeling myself!)  I know they objected to every move we made as a family.  I was not prepared for resistance to a move that didn’t technically include their having to adjust to no friends and a new school. 

What I have learned from experience is that the last place is always my favorite because of friends and familiarity and all the little attachments we take for granted when we are there.  It takes a long time for the new place to get like that.   But you have to be willing to give it a chance.  When I had elder daughter, I could never imagine loving another human person as much as I loved her sweet little self.  And then precious younger daughter came along.  And my heart stretched to more love.  I think homes are that way.  You don’t have to love just one.  You can grow to love them all.  But you have to open your mind and heart and risk the hurt of someday leaving, to revel in and relish the place where you are.  So I am working on that.

Yesterday was a holiday in my new home.  I have learned about Sham el-Nessim,  which began as an ancient rite, to celebrate new life and creation.  Nessim means "zephyr," the spring breeze, and sham means "to breathe in."  The date is set to coincide with Easter Monday on the Eastern Orthodox Church calendar, but all Egyptians take part by getting into the great outdoors to picnic on the Nile, in parks or the zoo, and apparently eat salted, fermented fish, while breathing in the Spring air.  While I love a good picnic, this holiday was about faffing about in the kitchen for me, while dear husband got on with his outdoor projects of repairing his dartboard and small barbecue table, which had been damaged in the move.  I did open the windows wide and the zephyr blew through most refreshingly.  And, in honor of Spring, some of my seedlings are sprouting!


Ingredients
For the crust:
1 1/2 cups or 360ml vegetable stock
 3 oz or 85g semolina
3/4 oz 20g Parmesan cheese, finely grated
1 tablespoon fresh thyme leaves (if substituting dried thyme, use half that amount)
1 egg
Olive oil

For the filling:
1 1/2 lbs or 680g baby zucchini (if substituting bigger zucchini, cut out the soft, fluffy inside part where the seeds are)
Sea salt
Black pepper
3/4 oz 20g Parmesan cheese, finely grated
4 1/4 oz or 120g Brie or other soft full fat cheese
1/4 cup or 20g breadcrumbs

Method
Preheat your oven to 350°F or 180°C.

Place the stock in a large saucepan and bring to the boil.  Add the semolina in a steady trickle, stirring continuously.  Keep stirring for three to four minutes until the mixture is thick and fairly solid.  Set aside and leave to cool slightly.





Add the thyme, egg and half of all the Parmesan cheese to the semolina mixture.  This will require a few minutes of turning and pressing with the back of your stirring spoon to incorporate.  Just keep on mixing till it’s smooth again. 

That is a whole egg.  You just can't see the white.



Oil a normal pie plate with a drizzle of olive oil.  Spread your semolina dough on the bottom and up the sides of the pan.  Wet your hands slightly to stop the dough from sticking to you.  Drizzle on a little more olive oil and spread it around gently with a pastry brush.




Pop this in the oven for about 25-30 minutes or until you have some browning around the edges.


Meanwhile, wash your zucchini, cut the tops and tails off and cut them lengthwise into quarters and slice your garlic.





Heat a non-stick skillet up on the stove and when it is roasting hot, dump all the zucchini into the pan.  No oil yet!



Cook on high, stirring or tossing frequently, until the zucchini get lots of nice brown bits all over, which takes about 5-8 minutes.  


Sprinkle with salt and pepper and then add in the garlic.  Turn the heat down to medium.


Give the whole thing a liberal dose of olive oil and toss or stir the zucchini and garlic around in the pan for another minute or two.  Turn the fire off.



Chop your Brie or other melty cheese into little pieces.  Take off the outside rind if you want to.  Mine was hard and dried in a couple of places, so I removed that and left the rest. 




Add the breadcrumbs which will help the Brie pieces stop sticking all together. With your hands, gently mix the Brie with the Parmesan and the breadcrumbs.




When your pie crust is done, take it out of the oven, but leave the oven on.  Tip the zucchini and garlic into the crust and then try to arrange them somewhat neatly. 


Cover the top with your cheese and breadcrumb mixture and pop the pie back in the oven.


Bake for 20-25 minutes or until the cheese is melted and it is lightly browned.


Here’s where my husband wanders in, his projects finished, and says “Whatcha cooking?”  And when I answer "baby zucchini baked with Brie," his eyes light up and I laugh out loud with the man who loves my cooking.  And dotes on his daughters.  I know they will come around to see why visiting Cairo is a good idea.  Because we are here and we are trying to make it a home.  Just doing our best with open hearts. And, at least yesterday, open windows. 


Enjoy!


Tuesday, August 9, 2011

Courgette Polpettes


My new favorite thing is the Jamie Oliver magazine. Okay, not so new since I have been buying it for the last couple of years and have a complete collection from Issue No 1, except for a couple I missed because they just didn’t bring them to Singapore and KL and no one I knew was traveling to the UK.  I say new favorite thing because I just bought Issue No 20 with my iPad as an iPad app. It is wonderful!  I came across this recipe and had to make it with the one large zucchini I got in my last share basket from Central City Co-op.  Courgette is, of course, the British word for zucchini.


Adapted from Jamie magazine

Ingredients
2 tbsp olive oil
250g (8 oz.) courgette/zucchini (I used the one good-sized one you see here on the left)
1 clove garlic
1 egg, lightly beaten
4 heaping tbsp freshly grated Parmesan
3/4 cup of grated mozzarella
1 slice of whole grain bread
1 tbsp chopped parsley
Freshly ground black pepper and sea salt, to taste

METHOD
Preheat the oven to 200ºC (400ºF.)  Peel the zucchini and chop into little bitty squares. 



Heat oil in a large frying pan over a medium-high heat and fry the zucchini for about 10 minutes, until tender and golden. Set aside to cool a little. 




Whizz the egg, bread and garlic around in a food processor, and then combine with all the other ingredients to make a thick, sticky mixture. 

That mush is the egg, bread and garlic.

With the cheese piled on.

Everything mixed together.
Season if you like with black pepper and a little sea salt, remembering that the cheese will add salt, so be careful. If you don’t have a food processor, use breadcrumbs in place of the slice of bread and mince your garlic very finely before mixing the egg and all the other ingredients.

Drizzle a little olive oil in your baking tray.  Spread around with your hands. Do not wash them as the oil will help with the next step. Using a spoon, drop blobs of the mixture onto your pan and, one at a time, roll gently into balls in your oily palms and place them back in the pan. 


Bake for about 15 minutes, until golden. Serve warm with a dipping sauce of spiced yogurt, if desired.



Very tasty!  Enjoy!