Fresh Ricotta, butternut squash, baby zucchini in Pasta Shells

For someone who loves food, and enjoys cheese, and pork, and enrichment of flavors often thanks to fat, trying to make a dish that does not contain much fat and is not too cheesy and is vegetarian but tastes good is an interesting challenge in trying to please a fussy vegetarian palate instead of what I would personally pick.

I had a craving for fresh ricotta and decided to make stuffed shells for dinner. In order to make it vegetarian and not “overloaded” with cheese (I love it with multiple kinds of cheese myself) or too rich, I didn’t follow any recipe that called for sausage or egg, and only used the ricotta, which turns out is most of them. So I decided to wing it. To add more flavor rather then just ricotta in shells, I decided to use butternut squash and baby zucchini, heirloom tomatoes, and fresh chopped sage and dill from the herb garden.

Ingredients: (enough for 4 people as a main dish, 6 as a side)

  • 1 gallon of whole milk. It needs to be not be ultra-pasteurized
  • 1 pint of buttermilk
  • 1 box of large shell pasta
  • 2.5 cups of cubed butternut squash
  • 5 baby zucchini, chopped
  • 3 tablespoons of sage, chopped. As an optional step you can brown the sage with butter first for extra flavor
  • One jar of marinara sauce of your choice
  • 2 tablespoons of dill
  • 1 pint of heirloom cherry tomatoes
  • 1/4 cup of Italian seasoned breadcrumbs or parmesan cheese as topping

Directions:

It is important that you don’t use Ultra-Pasteurized milk, because it does not have the important calcium chloride which is needed for coagulation and curds (the pasteurization process removes calcium). Whole milk is better because it will also taste richer, as the flavor of the cheese is related to the amount of butterfat in the milk.

  1. First, I heated up the gallon of whole milk and a pint of buttermilk under medium heat. I kept stirring with a wooden spoon to make sure none burned at the bottom and no skin would form at the top, and would also monitor the temperature once in a while. It only needs to reach 175 degrees Farenheit. As it heats up, you can watch the curdles start to form, and the white curds begin to separate from the yellowish liquid whey.
    Fresh Ricotta, butternut squash, baby zucchini in Pasta Shells Fresh Ricotta, butternut squash, baby zucchini in Pasta Shells
  2. Once it reaches the desired temperature, take it immediately off the heat, and using a slotted spoon, I started moving the curds onto a strainer that had cheesecloth sitting on another pot to drain more whey. This whole first step maybe took 20 minutes, and then let the whey drain for another 15 minutes or so.
  3. As it is draining, at the same time boil another pot of water in which I placed 25 shells, cooked al dente, and then drained them and quickly ran some cold water on them.
    Fresh Ricotta, butternut squash, baby zucchini in Pasta Shells Fresh Ricotta, butternut squash, baby zucchini in Pasta Shells
  4. As I was waiting for the ricotta and whey to drain some more, I steamed some cubed butternut squash (a little more then 2.5 cups probably once cubed) and five baby zucchini, which I then chopped up, along with the sage (maybe 3 tablespoons chopped). Mix these all together. If I had any lemon juice I might have added some in, but unfortunately someone drank it all. Something I thought of afterwards is that I could have browned the sage in a little bit of butter first- I love browned butter sage as it is a little crunchy. I restrained from adding spice this time because I wanted to let the flavors of the vegetables shine.
    Fresh Ricotta, butternut squash, baby zucchini in Pasta Shells
  5. Finally, the assembly time. While pre-heating the oven to 350 F, I first poured some basil marinara (from a jar thanks to Trader Joe’s) onto a 9×13 baking dish. Then, I would basically put a tablespoon of the ricotta/vegetable mixture into each shell, and line them up. The fact that after they were cooked I had immediately ran cold over them and separated each kept every shell intact.
  6. After they were all filled, I topped the whole dish with the remaining sauce. Next, sprinkle the dill (I used about 2 tablespoons), and this is when I added the heirloom tomatoes basically between every shell- the ones I had were all about cherry tomato size.
  7. Sprinkle some Italian seasoned breadcrumbs instead of more cheese (which again, would be my preference- that way it gets all bubbly crunchy with a bit of burnt parmesan cheese), and bake in the oven for about 40 minutes.

Fresh Ricotta, butternut squash, baby zucchini in Pasta ShellsFresh Ricotta, butternut squash, baby zucchini in Pasta Shells  Fresh Ricotta, butternut squash, baby zucchini in Pasta ShellsFresh Ricotta, butternut squash, baby zucchini in Pasta Shells

Seriously, making ricotta is so easy, and you get so much more yield for the same dollar then if you bought a container (maybe 25 oz, instead of the packaged 15 oz). And it tastes so much better, perhaps like me you will be ruined and no longer like what it tastes like coming from a container.

After all this, the fussy vegetarian pulled out nutritional yeast in order to add a bit more nutty cheesy flavor! What a loser.  ^_^ I had to say though, overall the dish ended up tasting pretty good and I didn’t miss the other cheeses or egg that other stuffed shell recipes use, and I think these were better veggies then spinach as stuffing- I prefer spinach in pasta with simpler sauces so you can taste the spinach instead of just the texture which gets overwhelmed by tangy marinara. Also the bursts of flavor and juice from the heirloom tomatoes are always awesome.

And, there is still leftover ricotta so I can use it inside endive leaves, or as topping on slow-roasted roma tomatoes with a bit of olive oil and dot or so of aged balsamic, the next couple days. Great for some cooler temperature snacks as the weather heats up as summer if arriving in Portland this week with a return to 80 degrees (only the 2nd time this year so far), and summer officially starts tomorrow.

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Burnside Brewing’s Cohiba

Burnside Brewing offers an appetizer called a cohiba- Duck Confit, Crispy Crepe, Wrapped in Collard Greens- that has the interesting presentation of being presented to look like a cohiba which is actually a premium "Cuban cigar".

The presentation conceit is fabulous- with a little tube area to hold the cigar in this glass ashtray along with the "ashes". Admittedly, for $6 you are only getting a few bites- though each bite is crispy but moist and a balance of the flavor of the savory duck meat  wonderfully with the collard green. If you're at Burnside Brewing enjoying their beers and eating, you definitely will want to order more- this is basically a  one per person appetizer!

Recently and coincidentally, Eater.com just posted a little photo series of Burnside Brewing's chef Ronnie Vance making a cohiba. Of the breweries in Portland I think Burnside does have some tasty gastropub food that stands out among others who coast on food as a second thought to beer, so kudos to Burnside for its aspirations. Although I was disappointed by the fries and the dessert on my last visit during Zwickelmania earlier this year, the two entrees just blew me away, and this cohiba does too.

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Little Bird Bistro review (including their burger for May’s Burger Month)

Ok, catching up to the last burger I had in May.

I really wanted to like Little Bird Bistro, the newest restaurant by James Beard Foundation’s Rising Star Chef of the Year 2011 chef/owner Gabriel Rucker. The menu sounds promising, and it seems to be geared specifically towards being more accessible then Le Pigeon but with the same affection for spotlighting the savory depths of being a carnivore. The downtown area now has a bistro to compliment its offerings of American and ethnic foods (ethnic greatly bolstered by the various cart pods), so for its great location and namesake, and as it is riding the current trend of French bistro in the restaurant scene (St Jack’s, Brasserie Montmartre reconcept, Cocotte Bar and Bistro, probably more recent other buds I don’t know about), Little Bird will be probably successful.

But for my first visit we walked away with the taste of the bad experience from the service rather than the food. For my other visits, the bartender offered the kind of bar care to mend over the initial roughness in my memory, and the waitress was cordial and attentive enough- but the food didn’t consistently rise to what I had been hoping for. For the price, there are other restaurant choices whose food is just as good or better just north on Burnside… though admittedly just not French (I have not been to Brasserie Montmartre yet). I have to admit their definitely steps it up- and that difference is appreciated and noted- but it just didn’t always come all together for me as a whole experience.

For my first time, our group of 12 couldn’t reserve a table until 8:30 as the restaurant doesn’t want large parties to hold up the tables (you can get a table earlier but you put down a $1000 guarantee deposit, as I understand it from our dinner organizer). We were seated in the upstairs section and then joined by all but one late guest and so we sat, with our menu and little juice-glass size glasses of water… and sat, and sat.

Some of us had put in drink orders within the first 10 minutes of being seated, but we before our drinks arrived it was another 15-20: so 30 minutes after our reservation, the first thing besides water appears. Whenever anyone ordered a drink throughout the meal, it seemed to take an inordinate amount of time- such as ordering it when a course arrives and then the drink not appearing until halfway or more through the dish being eaten. Maybe it’s the fact that our table was upstairs and those narrow slightly steep stairs are a pain to go up and down. I wouldn’t sit up there again, despite the view overlooking the rest of the restaurant and the street.

I had a long time while waiting for my meal to start to look at the restaurant and decide my favorite bird motif in decor was this little red guy on antlers that hang over the opening to the kitchen, which essentially takes up the space next door.

About 40 minutes in, despite the interesting conversation our stomachs were empty and we asked if we could order appetizers at least. We were told that since one of the ten of us were missing (car trouble), we had to wait as they couldn’t put any of our order in until everyone was there in order to time everything correctly, and that appetizers and mains go together, period. All she could do was walk around the table answering questions on the menu- not even to pre-emptively write orders down.

This created a lot of unnecessary drama. I understand the desire to time all the plates, but it was one person, not half the table missing and we even said we were willing to let her dish be off timing if the majority could please please be served. Why the waitress couldn’t take that statement gracefully by saying “hm, let me ask the chef or manager” instead of instantly shooting it down verbally right then or there just aggravated the situation. I thought that maybe I was misreading the whole concept intended with Little Bird Bistro- maybe they are taking it all the way to include a side of just slight disdain because they know more about food then you to go with your polite service and your pleasant but eventually overwhelming heavy dishes to really give you that French experience.

Overall, the lack of smooth communication and the actions they took to serve us gave a very mixed feeling of thoughtfulness and thoughtlessness.

  • She continually filled our little water glasses for us, but it was not until her trip up for taking our order that she thought to bring bread for the table- which was all devoured in 5 minutes since everyone had already been drinking on an empty stomach.
  • When one guest gave feedback to the manager that one of the dishes was salty, she said that the dish was supposed to be salty and that’s the way it was done, so there you go. Meanwhile, another guest who only ate a third of his gnocchi was asked what was wrong with it and if it was anything they could do about it (he had never had gnocchi before) and was apologized to multiple times (we did not ask for anything either time btw).
  • It was very long to be waiting to finally be allowed to order- but the check came quickly and were done individually… with a 20% automatic gratuity (more typically for groups there is automatic 18 with the additional tip write in line).

But onto the food. If it has been incredibly wonderful, maybe we could have still left the table with a good feeling- Screendoor‘s long wait is all forgotten when you first start biting into your food, same with the wait at the Bellagio buffet… Not so much here with Little Bird. It’s not bad, and it’s a definite positive to have this French option in the downtown area and so conveniently located. But it’s also not so overwhelming or consistingly good that your mind can just be swept away by the food and ignore the “by the rule book no exceptions” service or an encounter with some who embodied the slight disdaining but polite French waitstaff stereotype.

My appetizer at of Escargot, garlic cream, lightly fried gougères was my favorite dish of the 3 I had that initial dinner. The sauce was much lighter then what you find in normal butter bathing escargot, but did the job, and a I appreciated this take on escargot in terms of the snail and sauce and gougeres. The dish came with a small topping of salad with vinaigrette to try to counter the richness of the rest of the dish- but it was over the top with vinegar, and it distracted from the otherwise wonderful dish. Also, the thoughtful gesture with serving escargot- that’s always the time to refill the bread basket, so the guest can dip the bread in and wipe up all the delectable sauce from the plate. The gougeres were nice on their own, I wasn’t going to make them sponges and cover up the point of the gougeres which is the cheese inside. This is a good dish if you carefully spread out the acid of the salad, though not necessarily a good value.

Entree at this outing was the famously raved Duck Confit with little potatoes, asparagus, orange glaze. The crackly skin was the best part, the dark meat underneath was a wee bit overdone but not dry (though approaching that state at certain parts) and overall a little salty but not inedibily so- though another person said hers was like licking pockets of salt at times. At least all the meat was able to come off the bone… since they never gave anyone at the table any knives besides the butter ones that were at the original place setting. I wish it had come with more side vegetables to balance the dish. The duck at Burnside Brewing was better in flavor (though not in skin texture) and priced lower, so I didn’t understand the fawning over the duck confits in other reviews, based on this experience. It looked so promising, and so were the first bites, but not after you get under the skin and into the real meat. That seems to be appropriate given how this night’s dining experience went.

My side of Potato, bacon, morbier cheese, didn’t appear at first… just like with two other guests who had ordered sides and had to ask what happened to them. They appeared after we asked- individually, so it entailed three separate trips down the stairs because as soon as one guest mentioned the lack of side, the server was on their way down before checking the whole table so that us other two could mention our needs as well. As a side, it wasn’t bad, but nothing special either. The side dish was priced pretty dear- I think steakhouses are more generous with a side at that price- this is barely enough to share, but so rich you only want to eat so much of it yourself.

I want to believe it was just an unfortunate case of an off-putting experience because of a bad service night (the reviews on yelp also seem to plead this case- at times service is pointed at being inconsistent and timing being off, but others didn’t notice). I would never recommend a group here.

I have been to Little Bistro a few other times thanks to its proximity to my regular bar- all of those visits all were for weekday happy hour time/right at the start of dinner time, and besides one booth visit I also sat at the bar where Tom took care of me and was the attentive barman in terms of service. Each visit he cheerfully described my drink options, letting me know about the Happy Hour prices right away, and put food into the system as soon as he turned away with my order. On both visits, when another group appeared close to end of happy hour/beginning of dinner service, he told them so while presenting them with both menus and asked if they wanted to order off that HH menu really fast. As soon as a drink was poured he offered bread with butter- and even when I refused him at first during one visit as I was waiting to be joined by another, he still asked multiple other times to make sure I wasn’t starving while I enjoyed waiting with two drinks.

I first came back for the roasted marrow bones, which were fun though extremely rich, even for me. They come in an intimidating plate of two giant bones in a size that you would normally see in plastic bag to feed a large dog or maybe the Flintstones. It’s definitely a conversation piece. They come with a little bit of tart bright orange marmalade to counter the heaviness and a few pieces of overly toasted bread carefully allocated on the plate as well (on a later visit I saw they had switched this to mushroom and balsalmic vinegar instead). You use the spoon to pull the fattyness out and plop on the bread (mine was not going to spread), maybe put in a tip of orange marmalade- not too much because it will overwhelm the marrow and you only want the teensiest smidge as it is very strong in flavor profile. I think one bone would have been enough for me- this is a dish to share since it’s so rich. Value-wise for the price, only the “early/late” price of 25% off seemed to make sense to me for what this dish offers. Normally, this is the same price as the Le Pigeon Burger you will see later in the review…

Meanwhile, the salad of “Field Greens, banyuls vinaigrett​e, Le Chevrot” were nothing special, nor were the fennel au gratin or ham sandwich of “Baguette, Jambon de Paris, gruyere, dijon, green” which greasy rather then rich- it was better as a leftover cold the next day. I would prefer a baguette sandwich from Best Baguette over ordering this sandwich again, I suppose I had been hoping for something a bit more like a Croque Monsieur and this was twice as heavy. Everything was decent but not memorable.

The famous Le Pigeon burger was a really decent burger. The burger is named for the original restaurant, “Le Pigeon” which offered limited quantities of this burger (they only serve five a night at the original)- but here at Little Bird it is a normally available menu item. When it arrives at the table, it does look amazing, coming with a knife solidly speared through the middle because honestly, you’re going to need that knife to eat this. The fries stayed crisp but didn’t have much flavor that took it anywhere special, and even were overly salty in one certain corner- that was one of the two detriments of the dish. I really was disappointed by the fries.

The meat patty is a housemade thick and a great combination of juicy Cascade beef without being greasy. I really really liked the treatment of the lettuce into slaw of being cut and dressed because it made sure it was a crispy counterpoint to the richness, even if it made the entire experience extremely messy. The burger is topped with Tillamook aged white cheddar which is needed to stand up beside that beef and slaw. The grilled pickled onion was sweet but in a huge chunk instead of more spread across the entire burger so with one bite I would get no sweetness, and other bites I would get more onion then beef- the other detriment of this dish when I had it- I hope this just was an execution mis-step. The grilled ciabatta bun is solid enough that it holds everything in with its thick crusty outside and doughy inside but is also very filling. I wasn’t surprised to see other burger eaters taking off the top and just eating the insides like a steak with extra toppings- which actually is quite a compliment to their burger.

The favorite dish I had from the menu was the Gnocchi Parisienne with peas, roasted portobello and pistou. The gnocchi were light and pillowy and melted on my mouth while also having a bit of crunch from a slight sear, and the peas and portobello offered good chewy texture and bursts of flavor. A pistou is a simple sauce made of just garlic, fresh basil, and olive oil, and it tasted very fresh and like they were great quality base ingredients.

During my visit at a table for early dinner, the service was blazingly fast- I only ordered a drink and an entree, so pretty straightforward order. The bread with salted butter arrived at the same time of my drink, and I was still on the last piece of bread when the entree appeared only 10 minutes after I ordered it and overall I was in and out within 30 minutes or so. That kitchen’s ability to execute is nimble. But, I never felt rushed during my meal- though I definitely felt their bustling from all on the first floor to serve which is at the expense of helping guests feel relaxed and that little service illusion that they enjoy tending to us as guests and having us experience their restaurant.

The check always comes with a complimentary mini macaroon. Each time I went, the flavors varied- this one was a banana nut one. You would think that this touch at the end of every meal would make me feel pampered and be a gesture of small care. Yet each time the way it was presented, instead of coming from a desire of Little Bird to ensure the meal ended with just a touch of sweetness, it was just a box to be checked off for “mignardise” like part of the formula for fulfilling the concept.

It’s a small restaurant, and when you enter, it seems to bring up a bistro air immediately- loud but cozy, the little decorative touches of a small bird here or there and the shiny tin ceiling, the chalkboard of specials looked beautiful with art carefully drawn on the borders. The atmosphere is charming. The space has been put together well to feel elegant but not stuffy.

Me, I take the word Bistro in the name to mean food probably with too much butter but also a comforting local part of the neighborhood that has some continental classiness going for it to make me feel a bit fancy and I can have escapist fantasies about having once spent a nostalgic semester in a romantic Paris.  Little Bird just isn’t generous enough to fulfill that as every dish is rich but not every dish is comforting or makes you feel cared for. It looks appealing and finds that line between luxury and homey charm, but then isn’t inviting enough to feel casual and local like a neighborhood friend. But it can have its moments if you choose carefully, and don’t come in a large party, and aren’t looking for your bistro to become personal. It definitely offers French food that aspires to be extra decadant, but just not the nourishment I was hoping for.

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Another Hipcooks class: A Romantic Dinner for Two

The description on the Hipcooks website for the class of “A Romantic Dinner for Two” read

“The way to the heart is through the stomach, my friends! Learn delectable, delicious, succulent foods that will knock their socks off (and more!) They knew you were sexy, but did they know you were so talented?”

  • Sexy bruschettas
  • Mouth-watering butternut squash, garlic, sage risotto
  • Exotic wild mushroom risotto
  • Peppery, palate-refreshing salad
  • Ginger-raspberry & Grand Marnier crème brûlée

How could I resist? It was also being taught by Nick, who was the appetizer instructor for my previous Cocktails class at Hipcooks.

What I didn’t know is that as part of the class, we would also be getting a chance to get some knife skills including how to choose a good knife (we used Wüsthof chef knives) and care for it and practiced drawing, slicing, chopping, and chiffonade- a term I had only just learned on Top Chef Masters earlier in the week.

Rather then just making one kind of bruschetta, we learned how to make a bruschetta bar that had a variety of toppings so everyone could make their own kind of crostini with toppings that included homemade goat cheese, homemade mozzarella, olive tapanade, and roasted red peppers.

Besides learning how to infuse the arborio rice with flavors (including celery, onion, garlic, and white wine) we also practiced eyeballing the liquid ratio as we cooked it, and Nick was right on the mark for the amount of time it would take each of our three pots of risotto. Also, we got tips on how to flambe the mushrooms for the mushroom risotto- which we did twice, once with the portobello and cremini mushrooms and also with the oyster mushrooms. Fire! Here are some pictures of progress at the end when it was deemed looking and tasting al dente with the rice so time to add the freshly grated parmesan

We made the butternut squash one in two different batches- one with chicken stock and one with vegetable stock (both stocks were homemade earlier) to taste the difference but with the vegetable stock one we added lemon juice. The vegetable stock with lemon juice was my favorite. We didn’t quite cut the mushrooms small enough for my taste, though others liked that it was chunky so it had a more meaty texture. Overall the salad was a bit too salty for me, though he validated that mixing with your hands (which I also do at home) is the best way to make a salad.


And of course, using fire to caramelize that crunchy top for creme brulee. We made two kinds of creme brulee- one with vanilla and raspberry, and the other with orange ginger and Patron Citronge Orange Liqueur. It was so ridiculously easy to make- I definitely want to get those little torches at Home Depot, which was a great tip from Nick.

As all three of the classes I have taken at Hipcook (I also took a cheesemaking class), it was casual and fun like learning from a good friend with other new friends. We didn’t have to worry about measurements and we did a lot of looking to check in on various stages of making items, and tasting along with our hands on. We did things off the cuff, and we got lots of verbal tips on where to get ingredients, things you can pre-make, how longs things keep, etc. that no recipe can tell you. Thanks for teaching the class how to impress your loved one/one night love (hee). It was as it has always been, fun but educational at Hipcooks.

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Biscuits and Gravy at Kettle Kitchen

I've been a fan of Kettle Kitchen since I first tried their Gorgonzola and Black Pepper biscuit at Bailey's Taproom several months ago. Then, at Eat Mobile 2011, they offered a sample bite of biscuit with their vegetarian gravy- mmmm, rich, moist. I think their biscuits are better then the much admired biscuits of Pine State Biscuit and Screendoor but without the hassle of the lines and wait, and their gravy (either vegetarian or meat) or equal rivals as well. I haven't done a side by side comparison of the 3 meat gravys, but Kettle Kitchen's vegetarian gravy comes up on top of the three

Look at that gravy!

From Summer 2011

So, I was sad to see on their Facebook today that JR and Gina have sold their cart and today was their last day in the pod at SW 9th and Washington downtown (a pretty competitive grouping of carts, most just open for lunch). Just as the weather is finally getting better and becomes more of a dining out atmosphere too.

I stopped in today before work since I had no meetings between my 6:30am and 1pm and upped the ante with a biscuit sandwich of egg, bacon, and cheese on a gorgonzola black pepper biscuit (they also had buttermilk and jalapeno cheddar available) and then smothered in meat gravy. I walked one block to the Max and it was all gobbled down before the Blue Line even got there, it really was that loving to my tastebuds. I was extra pleased when I broke open the yolk in the egg part of the biscuit and it was all gooey perfection.

Kettle Kitchen will still be around to support catering orders. I am already scheming whether I can throw a "Southern" theme party at my house with their biscuits and gravy, fried chicken, sweet tea, country music, and what else…

Good luck to Kettle Kitchen on what they do next- I know they started out in North Killingworth with soups, and then downtown with biscuits, and their following is growing so I know they will find that hit song one day and make it big. Best of luck… and probably still you see you at Bailey's

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