One of my roommates’ favorite dinners to make is gnocchi – which I think is pretty impressive for a girl who, before last September, had never cooked or done her own laundry in her life. Why she decided to tackle gnocchi is beyond me, but I’m glad she did, because it always tastes delicious. The only thing we ever dispute about it is how to pronounce its name – another of my roommates is very Italian, so it is her unrelenting wish to have us call it nyAH kee. (And we do, sometimes. We also call it NO chee, NO kee, knocky, and so forth. We’re consistent like that.)
Anyway. I’d always wanted to try making it, since it seemed so simple (but good). So the last time I went home, I did. We had some extra, fresh basil lying around from a previous meal, so I did a little Googling, and came up with this (please ignore the dodgy basil on top; it was all that was left):
Sage Leaf Sweet
Tuesday, July 19, 2011
Sunday, July 3, 2011
An Overdue Post: Pistachio-Cranberry Pesto Ravioli
I originally wrote this about three weeks ago, and must apologize for my tardiness in getting it up:
Let me tell you a few stories about the times I’ve made pasta from scratch.
The first time was at the beginning of last July. That summer, I had made a deal with my mother: it was okay if I didn’t get a job if I cooked at least five days a week, and kept the house in a reasonable amount of order. That summer was my time for learning: I taught myself to follow new recipes, learned new cooking techniques, and generally found out how to operate in our kitchen. New, challenging things excited me.
One day, I decided to make Italian Sausage Soup with Tortellini. I told my mother the dinner plans, but not the rest of the secret: we were out of tortellini. She didn’t guess, and after having a friend over for a few hours, I gleefully got to work.
The thing about our kitchen at the time was that even though it was well-stocked with a treasure trove of gadgets, it lacked one crucial item: a rolling pin. We’d had a wooden one years ago, but it had either disappeared or been irreparably broken – either that, or sacrificed to the gods of clay and play dough.
When making pasta, it’s absolutely necessary to have a rolling-pin-type instrument if you don’t have a pasta machine (and sometimes, even if you do). But I like to think of myself as a resourceful creature, so I used what we had: a tall, purple, plastic drinking cup.
Perhaps the tortellini turned out a bit too thick, but they suited the soup well, with a chicken, Parmesan, and mushroom filling, and they were awfully cute.
The second time I made pasta from scratch was sometime last autumn. I’d been in my college apartment for a few months, and had been trying to make something special every time it was my turn to cook. Let me tell you, Sweet Potato Ravioli with Pecans and Brown Butter Herb Sauce is no exception.
Thankfully, we had a rolling pin, although not much of a surface to do the rolling on, considering our apartment kitchen has tile countertops. (My mother’s kitchen is the same, but there’s also a big wooden cutting board that rolls out like a drawer, and is removable, should you so desire it to be so.) There was instead a large, plastic cutting board that we had theretofore used for drying dishes when our dish drainer overflowed.
Let me tell you, even with a real rolling pin, this ravioli-making was nearly an all-day endeavor – or maybe, an all-night one. I had to make it in two batches, because otherwise, I wouldn’t have been able to eat. (Thank goodness one or two of my roommates were coming home late.) I can also tell you that it was absolutely delicious. We treated ourselves to fresh sage, and I fell in love. If you’ve ever wondered about the silly name of this blog, well, there’s a hint. We ate some of the leftover filling with a spoon. I didn’t take any pictures because it had long-since gotten dark, and I was too tired to move.
The third time I made pasta, it was for Thanksgiving. My stepmother had heard about my recent interest in cooking, and was looking to have me help out with the feast. She was looking to put a new spin on the old traditions, and I thought my sweet potato ravioli was a perfect fit for the theme.
Just a little bit before that, my mother, having heard about my latest pasta-making endeavors, promised me a pasta machine. She said she had one, but when we dug it out of the laundry room cupboards, we discovered it was for clay only. (Who ever heard of such a thing? Haven’t you always wanted to eat clay-studded linguini?) Not to be discouraged, we headed out to Bed, Bath & Beyond, and found a nice pasta machine on sale.
Nice, but a little bulky and heavy when it’s crammed into your suitcase, and you’ve got to take said suitcase on Amtrak for a three-hour ride (with holdups) on what the conductor has announced is the busiest day of the year, so please put your luggage on your lap to make room for the other passengers, thank you very much. (Thankfully, most people cleared out early on – my stop was the second-to-last – and I could put my suitcase on the floor.)
But that was just the beginning, of course. First, I didn’t let the dough rest in the refrigerator, so it looked nasty and discolored, and didn’t behave right. Fortunately, I did end up putting it in, and it turned out fine.
Then, the pasta machine is supposed to clamp down on the counter, so you can turn the dough through it more easily. The trouble was that my stepmother has really nice counters, so we could not attach the clamp to them. One of us then had the brilliant idea to have my father physically hold down the pasta machine while my stepmother or I fed the dough through. So there we were, three of us huddled round the dumb thing, trying to figure it out. We’d try to feed the dough through, and my father could barely keep the machine against the counter, because the dough was so thick and tough (as it’s supposed to be, thus the inclusion of a clamp). When we did get enough dough through, it would bunch on the sides and tear in the middle, so that we had to keep feeding it through on the same setting, to much of the same result each time.
In the end, we just gave up on the pasta machine, and my father found a rolling pin.
We meticulously stuffed our raviolis, lovingly pressing fork tines around the square edges, and marveling at the little guys as they bounced around in boiling water on the stove.
But when we excitedly picked them up with our forks and took a bite, we learned that we hadn’t gotten the dough thin enough, and it seemed like our raviolis were more dough than filling. There were bits of dough left on all plates.
It’s said that the third time’s the charm, but I don’t believe it. I think it’s the fourth time. Because the fourth time I made pasta from scratch, it couldn’t have been more perfect.
It was the beginning of finals week. We were supposed to go to the grocery store, but hadn’t been able to get organized enough to do it. We had also decided that there would be no scheduled cooking for that week, because everyone would be stressed and under too much pressure.
Personally, I’m a procrastinator, so I never have much to do during finals week until the end. I also get stressed out easily, but I find cooking and baking relieves that stress. Also, a fair amount of food during finals week is pretty necessary to have around.
Only, we didn’t. I was horrified at the thought of no dinners for four days. So I decided to get resourceful for most of them. I scoured the cupboards. I scoured them so hard that my brother’s graduation present was a dozen shortbread cookies – they require no eggs, no milk; just flour, cornstarch, butter, and sugar.
One night, I stumbled across a recipe for pistachio pesto. I looked in the cupboards. We had a half a Safeway bag of pistachios, and a half a Costco bag of Craisins. And I had an idea. I made sure everyone (or almost everyone) would be home for dinner that night. Then I fished out the pasta machine and the food processor using my chair-slash-stool, made the dough, and set to work on the filling.
When it came time to use the pasta machine, I got nervous. Unlike my stepmother’s counters, ours are not something we can or should display proudly when we have company. Therefore, I thought, it would be no problem to use the clamp on them. Guess again. The clamp was too small, the counter too thick. I glanced around frantically, and eventually, my eyes settled on the dining room table. It would have to do.
I cleared it of my roommates’ study materials, wiped it down, dried it off, and sprinkled a corner of it with flour (I put an empty garbage bag beneath the table, to catch said flour later). Then, I carefully attached the clamp. I was afraid, because the table, while good, isn’t necessarily the sturdiest thing – or at least, I didn’t expect it to be with a pasta machine attached to it. I remembered my father pressing down with all his might to keep that machine down, and imagining all that pressure applied to our poor table. Frankly, I was expecting the table to break. Or at least protest enough that I would have to get out that stupid rolling pin. If I already wouldn’t have to, because of the stupid pasta machine.
But then, a miracle happened. You know how, sometimes, you struggle with something, give up, and then come back a few days, weeks, months, years, etc., later, after your brain has had time to work through the problem, and it’s like there was never a problem to begin with? That was my miracle. I guess the pieces of pasta we’d been trying to feed through the machine were too big, because I divided the dough into smaller pieces, flattened a little with my hands, and then fed them through, one at a time, on the thickest setting. After maybe one time of struggling, they all went through, as near-perfect as possible.
With the tingly feeling of Luck’s presence at my side, I decided to be daring. I’d switch it to the thinnest setting, just to see if it would work.
It did. My beautiful, glorious pasta machine spat out paper-thin sheets of pasta into my waiting hands.
This fourth time was no less work than the other three. I was sweating profusely, and my arms ached from all the times I had to turn that crank. And I swear, it took me an hour to fill all those little circles – I used a medium-sized biscuit-cutter this time, inspired by the wonton wrappers most recipes tell you to use. There were a lot of them, after all, since I’d pressed the dough so thin. I did them batches like I’d done before, so that I could eat. The reason the raviolis in the photos are so thin and ugly is because they’re from the second batch, when I’d started to run out of filling (but not dough). I should’ve grabbed some from the first batch, but they were eaten up almost as soon as I could put them on the table.
I was worried that they’d be too thin, since I’d used the lowest setting on the dough. Turns out, it was just right. Even the raviolis that weren’t filled as full as they could be, because they were out of the second batch, weren’t doughy at all.
Pasta-making is not easy. It gets easier the more times you do it, but it will always be labor-intensive and exhausting. I had gotten about four hours of sleep the night before, because I couldn’t fall asleep till late, and had to wake up at six in order to get to my eight AM, Saturday final. From start to finish, the ravioli-making took me about three hours, not including the hour or so the dough had to rest. What I do remember is that afterward, I hobbled upstairs, and took a nap until eleven that night. I woke up long enough to brush my teeth, wash my face, and change into pajamas, and then I went back to sleep. Including the nap, I slept for fourteen hours. I can guarantee you that even if I had gotten a full night’s sleep the night before, I’d still have slept at least twelve.
If you’re going to make pasta for your main dish like this, or for any dish, you need to be prepared for it. Well. You can never really be prepared, especially if it’s your first time making it. But you have to know that it’s going to take a while, and that it’s going to take work. You also have to know that you will never feel prouder than when you see that little ravioli, or little tortellini, or little whatever, staring up at you from the counter, because you know you’ve put everything you have into it – your love, your curses, your labor. Even if they don’t turn out as beautiful as you hoped, or as tasty as you dreamed, your efforts have still physically manifested themselves in your kitchen. You’ve made something that most people will buy in a store. You’ve experienced something that most people won’t. It’s like a little secret you keep tucked inside your chest, a ray of sunshine that warms your heart and makes you smile. You’ve made this thing. Now eat it, share it, love it.
Let me tell you a few stories about the times I’ve made pasta from scratch.
The first time was at the beginning of last July. That summer, I had made a deal with my mother: it was okay if I didn’t get a job if I cooked at least five days a week, and kept the house in a reasonable amount of order. That summer was my time for learning: I taught myself to follow new recipes, learned new cooking techniques, and generally found out how to operate in our kitchen. New, challenging things excited me.
One day, I decided to make Italian Sausage Soup with Tortellini. I told my mother the dinner plans, but not the rest of the secret: we were out of tortellini. She didn’t guess, and after having a friend over for a few hours, I gleefully got to work.
The thing about our kitchen at the time was that even though it was well-stocked with a treasure trove of gadgets, it lacked one crucial item: a rolling pin. We’d had a wooden one years ago, but it had either disappeared or been irreparably broken – either that, or sacrificed to the gods of clay and play dough.
When making pasta, it’s absolutely necessary to have a rolling-pin-type instrument if you don’t have a pasta machine (and sometimes, even if you do). But I like to think of myself as a resourceful creature, so I used what we had: a tall, purple, plastic drinking cup.
Perhaps the tortellini turned out a bit too thick, but they suited the soup well, with a chicken, Parmesan, and mushroom filling, and they were awfully cute.
The second time I made pasta from scratch was sometime last autumn. I’d been in my college apartment for a few months, and had been trying to make something special every time it was my turn to cook. Let me tell you, Sweet Potato Ravioli with Pecans and Brown Butter Herb Sauce is no exception.
Thankfully, we had a rolling pin, although not much of a surface to do the rolling on, considering our apartment kitchen has tile countertops. (My mother’s kitchen is the same, but there’s also a big wooden cutting board that rolls out like a drawer, and is removable, should you so desire it to be so.) There was instead a large, plastic cutting board that we had theretofore used for drying dishes when our dish drainer overflowed.
Let me tell you, even with a real rolling pin, this ravioli-making was nearly an all-day endeavor – or maybe, an all-night one. I had to make it in two batches, because otherwise, I wouldn’t have been able to eat. (Thank goodness one or two of my roommates were coming home late.) I can also tell you that it was absolutely delicious. We treated ourselves to fresh sage, and I fell in love. If you’ve ever wondered about the silly name of this blog, well, there’s a hint. We ate some of the leftover filling with a spoon. I didn’t take any pictures because it had long-since gotten dark, and I was too tired to move.
The third time I made pasta, it was for Thanksgiving. My stepmother had heard about my recent interest in cooking, and was looking to have me help out with the feast. She was looking to put a new spin on the old traditions, and I thought my sweet potato ravioli was a perfect fit for the theme.
Just a little bit before that, my mother, having heard about my latest pasta-making endeavors, promised me a pasta machine. She said she had one, but when we dug it out of the laundry room cupboards, we discovered it was for clay only. (Who ever heard of such a thing? Haven’t you always wanted to eat clay-studded linguini?) Not to be discouraged, we headed out to Bed, Bath & Beyond, and found a nice pasta machine on sale.
Nice, but a little bulky and heavy when it’s crammed into your suitcase, and you’ve got to take said suitcase on Amtrak for a three-hour ride (with holdups) on what the conductor has announced is the busiest day of the year, so please put your luggage on your lap to make room for the other passengers, thank you very much. (Thankfully, most people cleared out early on – my stop was the second-to-last – and I could put my suitcase on the floor.)
But that was just the beginning, of course. First, I didn’t let the dough rest in the refrigerator, so it looked nasty and discolored, and didn’t behave right. Fortunately, I did end up putting it in, and it turned out fine.
Then, the pasta machine is supposed to clamp down on the counter, so you can turn the dough through it more easily. The trouble was that my stepmother has really nice counters, so we could not attach the clamp to them. One of us then had the brilliant idea to have my father physically hold down the pasta machine while my stepmother or I fed the dough through. So there we were, three of us huddled round the dumb thing, trying to figure it out. We’d try to feed the dough through, and my father could barely keep the machine against the counter, because the dough was so thick and tough (as it’s supposed to be, thus the inclusion of a clamp). When we did get enough dough through, it would bunch on the sides and tear in the middle, so that we had to keep feeding it through on the same setting, to much of the same result each time.
In the end, we just gave up on the pasta machine, and my father found a rolling pin.
We meticulously stuffed our raviolis, lovingly pressing fork tines around the square edges, and marveling at the little guys as they bounced around in boiling water on the stove.
But when we excitedly picked them up with our forks and took a bite, we learned that we hadn’t gotten the dough thin enough, and it seemed like our raviolis were more dough than filling. There were bits of dough left on all plates.
It’s said that the third time’s the charm, but I don’t believe it. I think it’s the fourth time. Because the fourth time I made pasta from scratch, it couldn’t have been more perfect.
It was the beginning of finals week. We were supposed to go to the grocery store, but hadn’t been able to get organized enough to do it. We had also decided that there would be no scheduled cooking for that week, because everyone would be stressed and under too much pressure.
Personally, I’m a procrastinator, so I never have much to do during finals week until the end. I also get stressed out easily, but I find cooking and baking relieves that stress. Also, a fair amount of food during finals week is pretty necessary to have around.
Only, we didn’t. I was horrified at the thought of no dinners for four days. So I decided to get resourceful for most of them. I scoured the cupboards. I scoured them so hard that my brother’s graduation present was a dozen shortbread cookies – they require no eggs, no milk; just flour, cornstarch, butter, and sugar.
One night, I stumbled across a recipe for pistachio pesto. I looked in the cupboards. We had a half a Safeway bag of pistachios, and a half a Costco bag of Craisins. And I had an idea. I made sure everyone (or almost everyone) would be home for dinner that night. Then I fished out the pasta machine and the food processor using my chair-slash-stool, made the dough, and set to work on the filling.
When it came time to use the pasta machine, I got nervous. Unlike my stepmother’s counters, ours are not something we can or should display proudly when we have company. Therefore, I thought, it would be no problem to use the clamp on them. Guess again. The clamp was too small, the counter too thick. I glanced around frantically, and eventually, my eyes settled on the dining room table. It would have to do.
I cleared it of my roommates’ study materials, wiped it down, dried it off, and sprinkled a corner of it with flour (I put an empty garbage bag beneath the table, to catch said flour later). Then, I carefully attached the clamp. I was afraid, because the table, while good, isn’t necessarily the sturdiest thing – or at least, I didn’t expect it to be with a pasta machine attached to it. I remembered my father pressing down with all his might to keep that machine down, and imagining all that pressure applied to our poor table. Frankly, I was expecting the table to break. Or at least protest enough that I would have to get out that stupid rolling pin. If I already wouldn’t have to, because of the stupid pasta machine.
But then, a miracle happened. You know how, sometimes, you struggle with something, give up, and then come back a few days, weeks, months, years, etc., later, after your brain has had time to work through the problem, and it’s like there was never a problem to begin with? That was my miracle. I guess the pieces of pasta we’d been trying to feed through the machine were too big, because I divided the dough into smaller pieces, flattened a little with my hands, and then fed them through, one at a time, on the thickest setting. After maybe one time of struggling, they all went through, as near-perfect as possible.
With the tingly feeling of Luck’s presence at my side, I decided to be daring. I’d switch it to the thinnest setting, just to see if it would work.
It did. My beautiful, glorious pasta machine spat out paper-thin sheets of pasta into my waiting hands.
This fourth time was no less work than the other three. I was sweating profusely, and my arms ached from all the times I had to turn that crank. And I swear, it took me an hour to fill all those little circles – I used a medium-sized biscuit-cutter this time, inspired by the wonton wrappers most recipes tell you to use. There were a lot of them, after all, since I’d pressed the dough so thin. I did them batches like I’d done before, so that I could eat. The reason the raviolis in the photos are so thin and ugly is because they’re from the second batch, when I’d started to run out of filling (but not dough). I should’ve grabbed some from the first batch, but they were eaten up almost as soon as I could put them on the table.
I was worried that they’d be too thin, since I’d used the lowest setting on the dough. Turns out, it was just right. Even the raviolis that weren’t filled as full as they could be, because they were out of the second batch, weren’t doughy at all.
Pasta-making is not easy. It gets easier the more times you do it, but it will always be labor-intensive and exhausting. I had gotten about four hours of sleep the night before, because I couldn’t fall asleep till late, and had to wake up at six in order to get to my eight AM, Saturday final. From start to finish, the ravioli-making took me about three hours, not including the hour or so the dough had to rest. What I do remember is that afterward, I hobbled upstairs, and took a nap until eleven that night. I woke up long enough to brush my teeth, wash my face, and change into pajamas, and then I went back to sleep. Including the nap, I slept for fourteen hours. I can guarantee you that even if I had gotten a full night’s sleep the night before, I’d still have slept at least twelve.
If you’re going to make pasta for your main dish like this, or for any dish, you need to be prepared for it. Well. You can never really be prepared, especially if it’s your first time making it. But you have to know that it’s going to take a while, and that it’s going to take work. You also have to know that you will never feel prouder than when you see that little ravioli, or little tortellini, or little whatever, staring up at you from the counter, because you know you’ve put everything you have into it – your love, your curses, your labor. Even if they don’t turn out as beautiful as you hoped, or as tasty as you dreamed, your efforts have still physically manifested themselves in your kitchen. You’ve made something that most people will buy in a store. You’ve experienced something that most people won’t. It’s like a little secret you keep tucked inside your chest, a ray of sunshine that warms your heart and makes you smile. You’ve made this thing. Now eat it, share it, love it.
Labels:
cranberries,
dinner,
pasta,
ravioli,
savory,
vegetarian
Saturday, May 14, 2011
Edamame Soup
As much as my roommates and I are cornbread people, we are perhaps equally soup people. Out of the five days we cooked this week, no less than three of us made soup. It is May. Yes, it's been cooling down on the weekends (enough that weather.com issued a SEVERE WEATHER ALERT for my area; I thought we were going to have freak tornadoes or something, but it turns out the temperature's just going to be in the fifties/sixties during the day and maybe in the low-ish forties at night; so I guess we'd all better hole up in our basements and prepare for the apocalypse, jeez). But not necessarily during the week, where it's been in the high seventies most of the time, if not higher. In a normal, non-soup-fanatical household, we probably wouldn't be eating soup three times in one mid-May week. But we are determined to eat as much soup as we can before the mere thought of doing so in the summer heat burns us up from the inside out.
We've even been scarfing down the leftovers. Maybe we have issues, but I'm okay with that, as long as we get to keep eating soup.
This edamame soup was my contribution this week. Somewhere between potato leek soup and cream of zucchini soup, it was surprisingly scrumptious, and very high in protein – because, if you didn't know, edamame beans are soybeans! I topped my soup with a slurry of extra virgin olive oil and sesame oil, and a pinch of caramelized onions.
We've even been scarfing down the leftovers. Maybe we have issues, but I'm okay with that, as long as we get to keep eating soup.
This edamame soup was my contribution this week. Somewhere between potato leek soup and cream of zucchini soup, it was surprisingly scrumptious, and very high in protein – because, if you didn't know, edamame beans are soybeans! I topped my soup with a slurry of extra virgin olive oil and sesame oil, and a pinch of caramelized onions.
Tuesday, May 10, 2011
Corn Cheese Chowder
I know it's May, but we're supposed to get rain this weekend, so hopefully soup isn't entirely inappropriate. Because this soup is one of my favorite soups, and is the reason why I always keep at least one can of creamed corn in my cupboards at all times, just in case. This is the soup that I will whip up as a lazy Saturday night dinner, or an I'm-so-hungry-I'm-losing-brainpower lunch after class.
Now, I'm used to making it with American cheese, but American cheese freaks some people out, so feel free to substitute some freshly-grated cheddar.
If you use cornstarch instead of flour, this should be gluten-free.
Now, I'm used to making it with American cheese, but American cheese freaks some people out, so feel free to substitute some freshly-grated cheddar.
If you use cornstarch instead of flour, this should be gluten-free.
Orzo & Broccoli Pesto Salad
This is another vegetarian meal from last month, one that is actually surprisingly filling. Although we ate it in April, the pesto/salad would be a nice thing to make when it's unbearably hot out in the summer, if you don't want to have to fiddle with the oven, or spend too much time over the stove. Making any kind of pesto is always messy business, but you can always leave the cleanup for a little later, after you've sat down to enjoy the nice, cool meal you've created.
I served the pesto/salad with freshly-baked Lemon Poppy Seed Bread, using the same recipe as these muffins from February, but in loaf form.
(And yes, I am well aware of the fact that I need new pretty plates.)
I served the pesto/salad with freshly-baked Lemon Poppy Seed Bread, using the same recipe as these muffins from February, but in loaf form.
(And yes, I am well aware of the fact that I need new pretty plates.)
Orange Mascarpone Tart
I learned something when I made this tart a month ago: I am not a cheesemaker.
The original recipe tells you how to make your own mascarpone cheese, which of course I was eager to try, if only because I needed heavy whipping cream for another recipe and could therefore kill two birds with one stone. I don't think my cheese turned out quite right, and I didn't enjoy attempting to make it as much as I thought I would (I got too impatient waiting for the temperature to rise). Maybe someday I will attempt to make cheese again in the future when I am more prepared, but that future is not now.
Still, I'm glad I tried it. And the tart still came out well, in spite of any cheese difficulties. It was even better that we had all the other ingredients on hand.
Oh. And I am in love with my tart pan and its removable bottom. It was $6.95 total, as I was doing a free trial of Amazon Prime at the time, and somehow finagled free shipping and no tax out of that. It was well worth it!
The original recipe tells you how to make your own mascarpone cheese, which of course I was eager to try, if only because I needed heavy whipping cream for another recipe and could therefore kill two birds with one stone. I don't think my cheese turned out quite right, and I didn't enjoy attempting to make it as much as I thought I would (I got too impatient waiting for the temperature to rise). Maybe someday I will attempt to make cheese again in the future when I am more prepared, but that future is not now.
Still, I'm glad I tried it. And the tart still came out well, in spite of any cheese difficulties. It was even better that we had all the other ingredients on hand.
Oh. And I am in love with my tart pan and its removable bottom. It was $6.95 total, as I was doing a free trial of Amazon Prime at the time, and somehow finagled free shipping and no tax out of that. It was well worth it!
Orange Cranberry Scones
I am down to a small handful of cereal (plus crumbs), and one packet of dinosaur egg oatmeal (to be saved for emergencies, or cold weather). The yogurt is gone. I had pancakes, toast, and scrambled eggs at various points over the weekend. Needless to say, the breakfast options for this morning were very few, indeed. So I was quite lucky to run across a recipe for scones before my hunger zapped my capacity for all rational thought. (Sneaking crumbles of dough as I made the scones also helped stave off said hunger.)
Admittedly, that first recipe, that brilliant beacon of an idea to the half-starved (or thereabouts) called for unholy amounts of butter. You know how I am about butter. Yet Fate would not allow me to despair! It just so happened that, while checking my favorite food blogs, I saw a link that took me to another link that took me... to scones. Scones with not 1/3 cup of butter... but three little tablespoons. I rejoiced! (Or mostly, my stomach growled in approval.)
I was a little bit skeptical about using a mix of whole wheat and white flour, just because whole wheat sometimes makes things... not as delicious (compare a partially whole wheat flour pizza crust to an all-white flour crust, for instance). But I trusted my recipe in the end, and got ten beautiful scones because of it – scones you wouldn't have any idea were lightened up, because they tasted so good.
Plus, I got to drink the leftover, fresh-squeezed orange juice, which is always my favorite part. And, now I have something to eat tomorrow morning before my eight AM discussion section.
Admittedly, that first recipe, that brilliant beacon of an idea to the half-starved (or thereabouts) called for unholy amounts of butter. You know how I am about butter. Yet Fate would not allow me to despair! It just so happened that, while checking my favorite food blogs, I saw a link that took me to another link that took me... to scones. Scones with not 1/3 cup of butter... but three little tablespoons. I rejoiced! (Or mostly, my stomach growled in approval.)
I was a little bit skeptical about using a mix of whole wheat and white flour, just because whole wheat sometimes makes things... not as delicious (compare a partially whole wheat flour pizza crust to an all-white flour crust, for instance). But I trusted my recipe in the end, and got ten beautiful scones because of it – scones you wouldn't have any idea were lightened up, because they tasted so good.
Plus, I got to drink the leftover, fresh-squeezed orange juice, which is always my favorite part. And, now I have something to eat tomorrow morning before my eight AM discussion section.
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