Blog Archives
Salad Mania {CtBF}
Now that it’s summer, it’s grilling season at my house. True confessions. I don’t do the grilling myself. Howard is 100% in charge. While he minds the grill, I take responsibility for all accompaniments which is frequently salad. I LOVE making salads – not green salads, but other kinds of salads: vegetables, beans, grains. I enjoy making and eating any and all of these. Certainly I have old favorite recipes, but trying new ones is just as fun.
This week’s recipe for Cook the Book Fridays, Raw Vegetable Slaw, from David Lebovitz’s My Paris Kitchen, provides a template that will get major mileage this summer. It can be made from a single vegetable or a mixture, whatever herbs are fresh, and two choices of garlicky dressings: one creamy and the other a vinaigrette. Almost any crunchy vegetable could be used. The recipe suggests cabbage, radicchio, carrots, broccoli, beets, even apples, cut into matchsticks or sliced thin. Avocado or hard-boiled eggs are also an option.
My CSA share included a bunch of tender kohlrabi, so I showcased them in a kohlrabi-only version of the slaw. The tarragon in my herb garden has been plentiful, so I used that, along with parsley, instead of chives. And I made the vinaigrette variation of the dressing because that matched my mood.
The verdict? Fabulous! It was crisp and refreshing, perfect alongside anything grilled. I’m excited to try this with other vegetables as well as with the creamy garlic dressing.
To see if my “Cook the Book Fridays” friends agreed, check out their posts here. To try it yourself, you can find the recipe on page 96 of David Lebovitz’s My Paris Kitchen.
Chicken Lady Chicken {CtBF}
Roast chicken is always a winner in my book. It’s only downside is that in most recipes the chicken takes over an hour to cook, not quite a weeknight dinner. This week’s recipe for Cook the Book Fridays, Chicken Lady Chicken from David Lebovitz’s My Paris Kitchen, solves that problem. The trick? Spatchcocking!
What’s that? Spatchcocking? you say. It’s simply a whole chicken with the backbone removed and flattened out. Not nearly as complicated as its name. When the chicken is flat, it cooks much faster. Just 45 minutes. The only advanced planning is preparing the marinade and letting it sit for a day or two.
The marinade is quick to mix up. A garlic paste is dissolved into garlic, white wine, soy sauce, olive oil, lemon juice, Sriracha, mustard, and honey in a Ziploc bag. It smells wonderful! Pop the chicken in the bag and rub the marinade all over the bird.
Roasting a flat chicken takes less time than a whole bird. It gets a head start with a stovetop sear to burnish the skin then finishes in a hot oven.
My chicken didn’t come out quite as well I as I hoped, but I blame it on the cook (that’s me) falling down on the job. The first problem was that when I seared the chicken in my new cast-iron grill pan, the skin stuck to the pan and burned. In an essay in My Paris Kitchen, David Lebovitz raves about the skin, but my chicken didn’t have that much left after flipping it over.
My second problem was that I overcooked the chicken. My chicken was a little bigger than the recipe called for and was cold from the fridge when I started cooking it. I roasted it for the 25 minutes called for without checking the temperature at all as I assumed it would take a bit longer. When I did take its temperature when it came out, it was 20+ degrees higher than it needed to be. No wonder it was dry.
The taste of the marinade lives up to its aroma, so I do plan to give this another try, using a regular cast-iron skillet without ridges and testing the chicken’s temperature partway through its time in the oven.
I served the chicken with roasted potato salad and grilled asparagus. Leftovers made a delicious chicken salad too.
To see if my “Cook the Book Fridays” friends had better luck with their chicken, check out their posts here. To try it yourself, you can find the recipe on Serious Eats or on page 173 of David Lebovitz’s My Paris Kitchen.
Since our last post for Cook the Book Fridays, I had the pleasure of sharing dinner with Katie of Prof Who Cooks while she was on the East Coast last week. As with so many Dorista meet-ups, even though it was our first meeting, we met as old friends and talked (and ate) the night away.







