Friday, August 12, 2011

Best Spaghetti Sauce with Meatballs


This weekend I am going to visit my grandmother. Yes, you read that correctly, my grandmother. I am 48 years old and I am blessed to have one grandparent still living.  She is full of life and an inspiration to us all. One of her favorite meals is spaghetti and meatballs so I am cooking a good pot to take with us.

Several years back, I made sauce with Italian sausage, removed from the casing and browned and chopped up to look like ground beef, and loved the way it flavored the tomato sauce as it cooked.  Then a couple of years back I watched a Jamie Oliver show where he used sausage but pinched an inch or two out of the casing at a time to make meatballs, which he pan-fried before adding them to the sauce. I thought this was brilliant and, for a time, that was the only way I made meatballs as well. Happily, this coincided with our move from KL to Singapore and Cold Storage in Singapore has wonderful, flavorful fresh sausages in a variety of flavors. To cook with Puy lentils, I would buy the small herb and garlic ones. For spaghetti sauce, the spicy Italian.  Lamb with rosemary worked beautifully for a dinner of mashed potatoes and a vegetable of some sort. Quick, easy, delicious.

Now, of course, you know if you’ve been following along lately that since reading Eating Animals, I try not to buy meat from a regular supermarket (at least not here in Houston because alternatives are readily available) because I cannot know its provenance and how the animal was treated. I would prefer to support the family farmers who raise cows and pigs and chicken out in the pasture, eating what animals should eat, by which I don’t mean antibiotics and other unnatural feed.  Unfortunately that means the selection of sausage is not that great.   So, I was back to making meatballs the old-fashioned way, but trying to mimic the flavor of my beloved sauce with Italian sausage.  


Ingredients
3 lbs or 1360g ground pork, preferably pastured pork
1 oz or 30g hot Italian sausage seasonings (I bought mine from a great supply store off of I-45 at Airline but you can get them online at Penzeys or in their store, also near me. I love the Heights in Houston! If you buy Penzeys, you might want to add cayenne or crushed red pepper since theirs isn’t hot.) 
1 large yellow or white onion
4-5 cloves of garlic
One large 28 oz or 794g can whole peeled tomatoes
One large 12 oz or 340g can of tomato paste – not sauce – paste. The really thick stuff.
2 heaping tablespoons of oregano
2 bay leaves
2 tablespoons of sugar




Method
For the meatballs

Preheat your oven to 375°F or 190°C.

Mix half the seasonings into the pork thoroughly. 


Fry up a small piece to taste. 


Add more seasonings, frying a little piece after each addition. Only you know your family’s taste and you don’t want it too spicy or salty.  That said, some of the seasonings will be transferred when the meatballs cook further in the sauce so don’t panic if you find it suddenly spicier or saltier than you think it should be.

Grease a baking tray with olive oil and drop the meat mixture spoonful by spoonful on the tray. 


With your oily hands, roll each piece into a ball and return to the greased tray.  


When all the balls are rolled, pop the tray into the oven for 20-25 minutes.

Tray one

Tray two
Meanwhile, get started on your sauce.  Chop your onion and garlic and sauté them gently with a little olive oil.  


When they are soft and translucent, add the can of tomatoes (and a can full of water) and the can of paste (and a can of water.)  Add oregano, bay leaves and sugar and bring to a boil.  Turn down to simmer and cover. (Yes, my meatballs are already in for this photo. Truth is, I forgot the oregano and bay leaves and had only added the sugar.  It doesn't really matter if you put them in before or after the meatballs but I thought the instructions should reflect how I MEANT to do it.)



When the meatballs are browned, add them to the sauce pot, making sure to scrape any sticky meaty goodness out of the pan and add it to the pot as well. (Add a little water to the pan if you have to.) Stir gently and cover the pot again. 





Simmer for as long as you can before serving over pasta boiled according to package suggestions. The finished sauce you see here is a little thicker than I would usually serve it but since I am transporting it across state lines, I let it cook down and will add some more water as I reheat it.



All my life, my grandmother has cooked for the family and, like most folks from New Iberia, LA, everything she makes is made with love and spice. She doesn’t cook as much as she used to, although she’ll still fry chicken when begged. (I have watched her and written down her every move but I will be darned if I can replicate her chicken. Hers is still the best!) Every summer I am grateful that Gram is still around and grateful that she can still enjoy some good home cooking.  Preparing one of her favorite meals has given me great joy and it will be even more joyful when we can sit together to share it.  (I’ll add photos after the meal.)

The finished bowl
After note:  The spaghetti and meatballs were a hit!  I could not get a good photo of Gram, despite younger daughter and I both trying with two different cameras.  She does not pose and when we asked her to smile, it reminded us of the Friends where Chandler and Monica were taking engagement photos. Here are a couple anyway.







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!

Sunday, August 7, 2011

Venison sausage!

Good friends have you over for dinner. Better friends invite you to stay all night and serve you breakfast as well. The very best friends send you home with venison sausage and chili meat from the deer they personally hunted.  



The other night, we were discussing my attempt to eat ethically raised animals who were allowed to forage and act like animals and I was telling Greg and Carol about the farmers’ markets in Houston where you can buy such pastured animals.  And Greg said, “Deer!”  And he is absolutely right. You can’t get further from factory farming than hunting for your own wild meat.   The deer was processed by some local folks in Katy, who turn it into a variety of cuts, including sausage.  I think they are culinary geniuses.

Tonight I am simply pan-frying one package of four wonderful links of smoked venison sausage. I have been cutting off small pieces for tasting and it is delicious! Smokey and spicy and full of flavor!


I will have mine with leftover mashed potatoes.  Cecilie has chosen Buitoni Light Four Cheese Ravioli to accompany hers. We will both enjoy a fresh cucumber salad, made from the cucumbers I got in my most recent Share basket from Central City Coop.  Twenty-three dollars (if you pay online with Paypal) will get you this from nearby Gundermann Farm.


Grace Lutheran church at 2515 Waugh Street




Cucumber Salad

Simplest recipe ever.  Peel the cucumber if the skin is a bit thick, otherwise, just give it a scrub. Cut the cucumber in half lengthwise and scrap the seeds out with a teaspoon. Cut each half in half again lengthwise. Then cut the long pieces into moon shapes about 1/4 inch thick. Sprinkle with sea salt, freshly ground black pepper, white balsamic vinegar and good extra virgin olive oil.  Give it a stir and eat!



Thanks again to the Nutters!  I will think fond thoughts of you all with every delectable bite.