NFCA GREAT Kitchens Gluten-Free Dinner at Imperial

Disclosure: This meal was complimentary, but I will always provide my honest opinion and assessment of all products and experiences I may be given. The views and opinions expressed in this blog are entirely my own.

I was very fortunate a few days ago to be invited to attend a five-course gluten-free chef’s table dinner with Chef Jehangir Mehta and Portland’s Chef Vitaly Paley of Paley’s Place, Imperial, and Portland Penny Diner. Both have been on Food Network: Chef Mehta may be recognizable from being runner up on Next Iron Chef and competing on Iron Chef America (Battle Coconut), and Chef Paley also has done battle on Iron Chef America (Battle Radish. BTW if you come here, make yourself order the Radish Walks Into A Bar cocktail with radish gastrique, it is stunning and super delicious).

Chef Jehangir Mehta Portland’s Chef Vitaly Paley of Paley's Place, Imperial, and Portland Penny Diner

The event was part of the GREAT Kitchens Gluten-Free Chef’s Table Tour (#gfchefstable), sponsored by the National Foundation for Celiac Awareness (NFCA). After kicking off in New York City last week, the second stop on the 10-city national educational tour was our very own Portland for a few days! Earlier that day Chef Mehta hosted a meal with Chef Naomi Pomeroy at Beast, and marathon-ed on to join with Paley at  Imperial, and then the next day he worked with Portland State University to speak to students and work with dining staff.

Chef Jehangir Mehta, NFCA chef ambassador: “We hope to educate chefs across the country about the need for gluten-free menu items and open up a new culinary world for those who must avoid gluten.”

The goal of the gfchefstable is to educate restaurants and schools on how to provide safe gluten-free dining experiences. The tour also include Chefs Mehta partnering with local chefs to demonstrate gluten-free restaurant dining experiences.  Of course the initiative also raises awareness for celiac disease, which affect an estimated three million Americans or 1% of the general population – and that’s not counting other gluten-related disorders even if you do not have celiac disease (an estimated 18 million or 6% of the population). 30 percent of Americans are avoiding or eliminating gluten from their diet because of gluten sensitivity.

National Foundation for Celiac Awareness, NFCA

About Gluten-Free

Gluten can be found in wheat, rye, barley, and triticale (a hybrid of wheat and rye) and oats (because of how they are processed). Avoiding gluten can be more difficult than just avoiding foods with flour- baked goods, anything with dough like bread, pasta, pizza, and beer being the most obvious. For instance gluten can also show up in processed food, varying from sauces (soy sauce, ketchup, salad dressing for example) and seasonings to candy! So asking about specific ingredients and handling is important for a gluten-free diet, which can be hard because those working in the service industry may not know all details if not all everything is made from scratch themselves, and/or there might be mistakes in cross-contamination (like using the same cutting board as gluten products).

I am not a gluten-free diner, but I am certainly aware of limiting my intake- I don’t usually have much gluten (I don’t eat many baked goods- things like bread, pasta, and pizza I might have every few weeks. My carb vice is rice.). Because of how often it is in food though, I would be kidding myself if I didn’t admit I am probably having some every day. Most noticeably for me, though I have not had it officially tested, the affect I see is from drinking beer, which I do a couple times a week. I have noticed in the past few years how it has nothing to do with the alcohol but it gives me consistent digestive issues and I get quickly fatigued if I have more than 1.5 pints (yet, give me a half bottle of wine and I’m fine!), so I might have a sort of gluten sensitivity. I’m very fortunate that it seems I can have some gluten and not notice much, with one possible exception.

But there’s no official definition for gluten sensitivity, or diagnosis – there is a blood test for celiac disease though it still remains undiagnosed for many people!

I certainly sympathize with the cause, and support the NFCA campaign. Going to a gluten-free diet is very difficult- there isn’t much labeling on processed foods or in restaurant menus, and cross-contamination is a common mistake. For someone with celiac disease, the consequences can be disastrous- even a small amount can affect them for more than a month, and not be out of their system for half a year. It’s serious stuff- some people need to avoid gluten as seriously as those with nut or dairy allergies since it can lead to infertility, reduced bone density aka getting osteoporosis and broken bones, neurological disorders, and some cancers. Yet there is not a lot of awareness because the effects build, rather than the immediate reaction you visibly see to allergies, even though the person can feel quite sick from the gluten.

One new learning I walked away with is that the NFCA has Gluten-Free Resource Education and Awareness training available via GREAT Kitchens, and has recently added online training modules for food service professionals. If they complete all the courses they get a special sticker to place in the restaurant so you know they have gone through training on gluten-free food preparation and cross-contamination avoidance. It also puts them as a listed resource here if you are gluten-free and traveling/looking for a safe gluten-free eating place. Sadly, you can see that this is a program that is not being taken advantage of, which is how you encounter common problems such as contamination where a gluten free bread is created, but then cut with the same knife as other breads! So thank goodness for this Table Tour! During the Gluten-Free dinner at Imperial, Chef Paley, whose wife is gluten-free, pledged that he and his staff are going to take this training!

Gluten Free Resource Education and Awareness Training via GREAT Kitchens Program of NFCA

Gluten-Free Dinner at Imperial Recap

But now let’s look at the food right? What a fabulous meal this Gluten-Free Dinner at Imperial was, and it’s all gluten free, all these courses, all! And I love that Imperial has lighting so you can enjoy the colors and presentation of the food! I was at a table full of other PDX bloggers, and it was fun as we all pulled out and snapped photos with every single dish!

First, we kicked off with a cocktail called the Rickshaw. It included a special Paley’s sorghum whiskey with bonal quinquina, cocchi americano rose, and hibiscus rose bitters. The sorghum whiskey was a very special bottle for Vitaly Paley that was distilled from Bob’s Red Mill sorghum and prepared at the gluten free brewery facility Harvester Brewery (I love their chestnut gluten free beer) and then fermented, distilled and bottled by Clear Creek Distilling. Essentially, this sorghum whiskey is an American version of Baijiu, which is a Chinese alcohol. Go teamwork! Unfortunately, this is his last bottle because it was a one time thing… unless we create demand for them to make more!

NFCA GREAT Kitchens Gluten-Free Dinner at Imperial. We started with a cocktail called the Rickshaw. It included a special Paley's sorghum whiskey with bonal quinquina, cocchi americano rose, and hibiscus rose bitters NFCA GREAT Kitchens Gluten-Free Dinner at Imperial. Inspired by Vitaly Paley and distilled from Bob's Red Mill sorghum and prepared at the gluten free brewery facility Harvester Brewery (I love their chestnut gluten free beer) and then fermented, distilled and bottled by Clear Creek Distilling. Go teamwork!

Then, we shared several appetizers

  • Spiced Popped Sorghum- fun little bites like popcorn, but more flavorful and healthier!
  • Shrimp and Chickpea Pancake
  • Curried Squash and Goat Cheese Fritters with a green goddess sauce. This was my favorite of the three- so often at a restaurant the batter for fried foods is not going to be gluten-free, but this was so delicious! I may have had 3.

"NFCA NFCA GREAT Kitchens Gluten-Free Dinner at Imperial. Shrimp and Chickpea Pancake NFCA GREAT Kitchens Gluten-Free Dinner at Imperial. Shrimp and Chickpea Pancake  NFCA GREAT Kitchens Gluten-Free Dinner at Imperial. Shrimp and Chickpea Pancake NFCA GREAT Kitchens Gluten-Free Dinner at Imperial. Curried Squash and Goat Cheese Fritters with a green goddess sauce NFCA GREAT Kitchens Gluten-Free Dinner at Imperial. Curried Squash and Goat Cheese Fritters with a green goddess sauce

For the First Course, we enjoyed a refreshing delicate Oregon Albacore Tuna Sashimi with orange yogurt and tapioca scales and chips. The tapioca was cooked down with chili and cumin, and the two presentations of soft “eggs” and crispy scales gave us great textures of the soft melt in your mouth sashimi contrasting the crunch. This was paired with a crisp white wine, which I took a photo of the bottle but apparently the cameraphone was still “processing” even after the snap so all I have is a motion blur! I am trying to find out what it was. And what poor design is that to have the camera not have taken the photo but giving all other feedback like it has except for a processing text and a progress bar… GRR. The wine was delicious.

Helioterra Mourvedre 2011 from Columbia Valley Washington NFCA GREAT Kitchens Gluten-Free Dinner at Imperial. For the First Course, we enjoyed a refreshing delicate Oregon Albacore Tuna Sashimi with orange yogurt and tapioca scales and chips.

Next, the Entree Course was a Slow Roasted Breast of Veal with beef fat roasted sweet potatoes, bordelaise, smoked marrow butter, and grilled frisee, paired with a Helioterra Mourvedre 2011 from Columbia Valley Washington.

Helioterra Mourvedre 2011 from Columbia Valley Washington NFCA GREAT Kitchens Gluten-Free Dinner at Imperial. Entree Course was a Slow Roasted Breast of Veal with beef fat roasted sweet potatoes, bordelaise, smoked marrow butter, and grilled frisee, paired with a Helioterra Mourvedre 2011 from Columbia Valley Washington  NFCA GREAT Kitchens Gluten-Free Dinner at Imperial. Entree Course was a Slow Roasted Breast of Veal with beef fat roasted sweet potatoes, bordelaise, smoked marrow butter, and grilled frisee, paired with a Helioterra Mourvedre 2011 from Columbia Valley Washington NFCA GREAT Kitchens Gluten-Free Dinner at Imperial. Entree Course was a Slow Roasted Breast of Veal with beef fat roasted sweet potatoes, bordelaise, smoked marrow butter, and grilled frisee, paired with a Helioterra Mourvedre 2011 from Columbia Valley Washington NFCA GREAT Kitchens Gluten-Free Dinner at Imperial. Entree Course was a Slow Roasted Breast of Veal with beef fat roasted sweet potatoes, bordelaise, smoked marrow butter, and grilled frisee, paired with a Helioterra Mourvedre 2011 from Columbia Valley Washington

The Dessert Course was spectacular. It included this Milk Chocolate Icebox Cake with roasted banana, walnuts and toasted meringue, as well as macaroons plus little mini date and almond cakes. That Icebox cake was marvelous, and undeniable proof that you can have delicious and gluten-free food, even in commonly conceived courses like dessert which have traditionally been an area generalized that gluten-free versions are like rocks.

NFCA GREAT Kitchens Gluten-Free Dinner at Imperial. Milk Chocolate Icebox Cake with roasted banana, walnuts and toasted meringue NFCA GREAT Kitchens Gluten-Free Dinner at Imperial. Milk Chocolate Icebox Cake with roasted banana, walnuts and toasted meringue NFCA GREAT Kitchens Gluten-Free Dinner at Imperial, macaroons plus little mini date and almond cakes NFCA GREAT Kitchens Gluten-Free Dinner at Imperial, macaroons NFCA GREAT Kitchens Gluten-Free Dinner at Imperial, little mini date and almond cakes

The Fall tour continues with them in Seattle until Nov 1 (today), then off Nov 11-12 in San Francisco, and Nov 13-14 in LA, and more dates to come for the other cities!

To find out more:

  • National Foundation for Celiac Awareness (NFCA) for a celiac symptoms checklist as well as  helpful tools, guides and lists to help you live gluten-free or learn to be more aware of your gluten intake. The NFCA is a 501(c)(3) non-profit organization that drives diagnoses of celiac disease and other gluten-related disorders and improves quality of life for those on a lifelong gluten-free diet.  NFCA owns and operates GREAT Kitchens, a web-based gluten-free training program for foodservice professionals.
  • Jehangier Mehta and his restaurants in New York, Graffiti Food Wine Bar and Mehtaphor
  • Vitaly Paley and his restaurants Paley’s Place, Imperial, and Portland Penny Diner
  • Follow NFCA’s Gluten-Free Chef’s Table Tour and join the gluten-free conversation on Twitter through @CeliacAwareness and @jehangir_mehta or by tweeting #GFChefsTable or #GREATKitchens.

I should also plug in that this weekend, on November 2, if you want to find out more there is a  Healthy Living and Gluten Free Expo at the Salem Conference Center in downtown Salem that includes 9 expert speakers and over 50 vendors. You may also want to join the local Facebook group, Gluten Intolerance Group. There is also coming up on Nov 11-17 an online free Gluten Summit.

Chef Mehta and me at the NFCA GREAT Kitchens Gluten-Free Dinner at Imperial!
Disclosure: This meal was complimentary, but I will always provide my honest opinion and assessment of all products and experiences I may be given. The views and opinions expressed in this blog are entirely my own.

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Book Club Review: Apron Anxiety Book Review, and Buckeye Balls

Last month, I joined a new online book club, called the Kitchen Reader. There is a new book selected for every month, each book is related to food, and members write a review on their blog during the last week of that month. For October, the book club selected reading was Apron Anxiety by Alyssa Shelasky, based on her life/blog of the same name. So here is my Apron Anxiety Book Review!

My Summary: Apron Anxiety is the memoir of a young, pretty, popular and privileged “it” city girl Alyssa Shelasky and her complicated love affair a celebrity chef that introduces her to the kitchen and food appreciation. Expect the tone to be chick lit, with a wry New York humor to it. Essentially, the book is about her being able to find some center through food that grounds her previously flighty social life and her self-identity as she documents her time back and forth in New York City, Washington DC, and LA. She does “dish” a lot- lots of name dropping in all three cities of celebrities, and although she is vague on who her love, “Chef” is, you can google and find the answer pretty easily though I don’t think knowing his name is essential to the story. But, I know you will totally look it up.

My Humble Opinion: If you are hoping for a lot of stories about how she conquers the kitchen, you won’t see them here- not the way you are told tales by Julie & Julia–My Year of Cooking Dangerously by Julie Powell. Alyssa only shares a few- though the few stories she does share (mac and cheese, banana bread loaves, and cherry pie) are great. I and probably everyone has major oops like that in a dish which still end up being served and eaten hoping no one will notice the screw-ups.

Overall, I thought it was an interesting take on the opposite side of what was Cooking for Mr. Latte by Amanda Hesser where she was the foodie trying to educate her man, but this time Alyssa is the one who knows nothing about food. Both books pair sharing recipes with personal stories of how that recipe fit in with her life.

As you would expect, all three of these books (Julie and Alyssa’s books both come from their blogs, Amanda’s from her column) are self-indulgent, and there were times I had to put each of them down to give myself a break from being irritated. This was particularly the case with Alyssa.

There are a lot more details about to be revealed about what happens through the book below the picture- I think most of the point of the book is not what happens, but the journey so I’m going to go into specifics. But in case you don’t want to know… stop now!

Alyssa Shelasky

You have to get through the first few chapters, before cooking gets into the tale, to get to the good part of the story. Apron Anxiety first few chapters were especially hard to get through (I did resort to skimming, and maybe put it down a couple times distracted or annoyed). For page and pages, she talks about essentially and incessantly being a popular fun girl in high school and all the partying she does in her 20s as a gossip and celebrity writer, being paid to essentially live it up on the edge of celebrity world and write about it.

That is, until she gets whisked away to Greece after 3 months of dating Chef and drops her life to follow him. Then for the next 9 months makes no friends and doesn’t work. She writes in these chapters essentially of shutting that social life/career down to be celebrity-supported eye candy that waits for him to get home in order to make sandwiches or cereal- she doesn’t even clean because they have a weekly housekeeper.

It’s amazing in that it seems she is able to paid/supported to be living it up not through any moment of hard work (just existing and dealing with the world already seems to be hard work for her), but mostly courtesy seemingly of her looks, the luck of being well-connected with influential people, wit and charm. Fortunately, these latter two characteristics spills over into the voice in her writing. Reading the book’s first few chapters you may want to skip it, but at least skim it – it does help establish a baseline of how crazy she was and how low she goes before food and cooking saves her.

Apron Anxiety at least has the bonus that  Alyssa can write well, turning phrases such as “As I cope with the collapse of us, Zagat is my Zoloft” which keeps you reading for how she might describe something dramatically next. She also has a knack for writing honestly and openly like a girl friend in your early-mid 20s talking all night at a sleepover after you’ve opened your third bottle of wine and are getting into the “confessional/emotional truths” part of the late night. Example: her admitting that rather than dining out a lot because she loves exploring, she is using lists of Best Bloody Mary or Favorite Fish Taco “as arrows, as I have no idea what else to do with myself, or where I belong”.

Come on, I know you know what part of the night I am talking about. This whole book is basically Alyssa and you having that part of the night- with only Alyssa doing the talking.

Alyssa Shelasky, Apron Anxiety blog header

She does a pretty good job of capturing the ups of the relationship with chef (that she dubs “relationchef”) which they just watch reality shows and toasted cheese sandwiches when he is around, and the disappointment and hurt of being second after his push for his career and fame because most of the time, he is not around. I think every woman can relate to at one point, putting herself second to a man, and defining herself by trying to live in his world- it’s an easy mistake of youth that in using society as a mirror, when that first intense love comes along he becomes the entire mirror.

The kitchen and food are what pull Alyssa up finally from her way too dependent life she was existing in for almost a 9 months since moving to DC. Great… but seriously, it took her the amount of time that other women might have a baby to figure out she needed to do something with herself instead of waiting for him to come home from work.

She talks about how she is lonely in DC, but you are told early on about all the people she knows that she leaves behind when she moves, but yet are told not much at the same time. We are mostly told rather than shown friends and family. Their personality is summarized by her in a few sentences, and then it boils down to what they are doing for/to her. I think that is probably understandable in a blog entry, but in a book, her feeling abandoned is an important theme of the story. Yet being told about her amazingly awesome her close friends are for a page or two and then they disappear so long I started forgetting/mixing them up until they appear again to help her out. It is a fracture in the narrative.

At the same time, she is quickly judgmental, dismissing her neighbors when she moves to a new city as too ordinary and all possible friends in DC as profoundly conservative or crazy (she does eventually take back the neighbors judgement, calling it one of the dumbest moves of her life).

For me, that makes it difficult to build a lot of empathy for her as I was reading the book as it presents her as a character who seems so self-centered as she wrings her hands about how she’s frustrated and sad and alone, but then her friends seem to do her giant, selfless favors and provide access to elite connections and opportunities. She even describes herself at one point as “I am the stray who C Street has taken in”, and when hearing a real tragic situation, feels ashamed for “whining about my utterly pathetic bubblegum BS” but then returns to it a few pages later. I kept wondering how long this quarter life crisis was going to go on- and she was having it in her late 20s/early 30s.

It wasn’t until I thought about how I just read Quiet: The Power of Introverts in a World That Can’t Stop Talking that I began thinking of her in another perspective- someone who keeps really going to the extreme ends of the scale of an extrovert needing the energy of others to feed from- which certainly seems to explain why she fades so much in being alone and is not very introspective. Yet, she seems to also have an awkwardness like an introvert where she just wants to stay inside from the world. Making that connection helped me see this book at an interesting level.

The only way she seems to be able to give to others is through food, once she begins- which is already 1/3 of the book in. In Alyssa’s case, you follow along to see how cooking and food becomes an outlet for her to take the edge off, and is way for her to provide for those she cares about. She doesn’t spend much time talking about the flavors of food as much as the process  and care of cooking, and the enjoyment she sees when her friends are taken care of by the food. Food tells a story, or evokes emotions for her. Because of this, even when she is alone, she can find energy through food. This seems to be the prime intent of the book, and a fine subject to explore. The way she writes it though, there’s just a lot more of her than writing about food.

Apron Anxiety book cover

She is a maddening mess of totally un-relatable and relatable.

In visiting a lot of dodgy dive-y cheap hole in the walls, she  writes “Our bills are always under thirty bucks; I am always too scared to use the bathroom””, but also admits that he opens her eyes to secret gems.

After ducking out of a NY food industry party and changing out of her Louboutins, she walks through the streets of the Village “looking for fresh air and maybe a falafel”.

For the first time she attempts a home-cooked meal, she writes a list in a fuchsia Sharpie, spends $200 and takes multiple selfies to text to Chef, and describes the drive with feeling “pretty cool pretending to be a home cook, with my important grocery list and Made In Brooklyn bag. The car windows are down, the National is playing, and my long, layered hair is pinned up just right. I look good in foodie.”

I can’t help but sometimes roll my eyes as she writes that her wishlist changed from Lanvin flats ($500-$900) to pizza stones and spoontulas or mentions she is walking into an event where her first Herve Leger bandage dress. But then I’m lured back into continuing to read as I laugh at how goofy and self depreciating she can be as she admits into walking into a glass door, undershooting the distance between a car and a wall, or thinking about Madonna as she targets her upper arm muscles while whisking. She also talks about cheese many times.

Basically, how much you will enjoy of this book depends on your ability to enjoy the obnoxious but also fun, emotional somewhat drunk evening with Alyssa.

Food Focus: Very few of the recipes are original- they include a few from her family (a simple “The Pasta”, Banana Bread, 3 ingredient salad dressing, 3 ingredient cocktail among a few)  and , and then really common ones like the Neiman and Marcus Chocolate Chip Cookies, and excerpted from others repertoire, like Sarabeth’s tomato soup, a turkey BLT from Gwyneth Paltrow’s My Father’s Daughter cookbook, Nigella’s Fusilli with Toasted Pine Nuts and Feta from Nigella Lawson’s book Nigella Kitchen, etc. I mean one of the recipes is for making cheese toast or making homemade pizza- with pizza dough and tomato sauce from a pizzeria or store-bought. It’s clear her roots as a home cook – and which is refreshing for a book of someone writing about food to not have been culinary trained and schooled in Europe.

One of the recipes is for “Herb-Crusted Chicken for Hungry and Important People”, and she calls it her signature chicken dish.  I scaled the recipe down from the original 6 servings to 2, and made this my test of her taste, because who doesn’t love toasted cheese on bread, duh. You can find the recipe here on Elle’s site. I plan to make that sometime in the future.

Along with name dropping of all the amazing restaurant industry people who give her tips (including tweeting with Gael Greene on what to cook!), she also shares a home cook family recipe for Buckeye Balls. I decided to make these as well because they seem to represent her life, a wild juxtaposition of the glamorous with the simple living. And this is probably what you would be doing while draining the bottles of wine and listening to her tell you these tales from her book. I brought these to work for Halloween and they were gone in 10 minutes!

Buckeye Balls

Makes about 60 Buckeye Balls
Buckeye Balls - peanut butter, vanilla, sugar, then dipped in chocolate
Ingredients:

  • 1 1/2 cups creamy peanut butter (this is the whole 18 ounce jar)
  • 8 tablespoons unsalted butter, at room temperature (so yeah, a stick of butter. It gets to room temp faster if you slice it up)
  • 1/2 teaspoon vanilla extract
  • 3 cups confectioners’ sugar
  • 4 cups good quality semisweet chocolate chips (2 12 ounce bags)
  • 2 teaspoons vegetable shortening or vegetable oil

Directions:

  1. In  a large bowl (or the bowl of an electric mixer with a paddle attachment), combine the peanut butter, butter, and vanilla extract. Gradually add the powdered sugar until it is well incorporated. It should be a smooth firm dough. If you don’t have an electric mixer you can supposedly mix this with your hand but yeah, I used the electric mixer or who knows how much peanut butter I would have eaten!
  2. Line a baking sheet with waxed paper. Using your of course clean washed hands, roll the mixture into round balls using 1.5 teaspoons of dough (about the size of strawberries) and place them on the baking sheet. Stick a toothpick to be used as a handle for dipping later in the top of each of the balls, and then place the whole baking sheet in the freezer for about 30 minutes at least.
    Buckeye Balls - going into the freezer to harden after I put in the toothpicks Buckeye Balls - going into the freezer to harden after I put in the toothpicks Buckeye Balls - going into the freezer to harden after I put in the toothpicks
  3. When the balls are firm, it is dipping time. First, the dip. She talks about using a double boiler, which I don’t have. She also mentions filling a small saucepan with water and bring to a boil. Reduce it to a simmer and set a heatproof bowl that fits over the pot. Another way is to use a microwave at 50% power at 30 seconds until melty, and then rewarming at 15 seconds or so. I like to use a small ovenware dish at 250 degree F which is deep so I only need to do a cup of chocolate chips at a time with 1/2 teaspoon veg oil for smoothing. Whatever way the point is to melt the chocolate chips and vegetable shortening/oil, stirring frequently until smooth (you might not tell how melty it is unless you stir because the chips keep their shape until stirring).
    Melted Chocolate for dipping
  4. Holding each peanut butter mix ball by the toothpick, dip into the melted chocolate, leaving a little bit of peanut butter showing at the top of each ball. Place the finished buckeye back on the baking sheet with the wax paper still underneath to catch dripping chocolate to cool and remove the toothpick and smooth over the holes by using the toothpick to refill/roll it. Refrigerate everything for at least 2 hours to set before serving.
    Buckeye Balls - going into the freezer in order to set after being dipped in chocolate and the toothpick removed and hole smoothed over

Buckeye Balls - peanut butter, vanilla, sugar, then dipped in chocolate Buckeye Balls - peanut butter, vanilla, sugar, then dipped in chocolate

Coming up for my reading for this book club in November: Best Food Writing 2013, edited by Holly Hughes. If you are interested in joining the book club, check out the Kitchen Reader.

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Butternut Squash Lasagna Recipe in Béchamel sauce

This recipe is my take on the butternut squash lasagna recipe by Giada de Laurentiis. The fact she includes amaretti cookies has always been very curious to me, so this has been bookmarked for a while. Now that the Indian Summer is over and it is cool and the leaves browning from their previous glorious colors of red, orange, and yellow and falling, this comfort dish moved up to the top of my list. It seemed appropriately perfect for a Sunday night dinner at my house as we were making plans for Thanksgiving. This dish yields about 8 servings.

Speaking of Thanksgiving, this will be the first of a series of posts of recipes I am going to cover on dishes to consider for Thanksgiving! They will all be vegetarian, so you might consider it for a side dish or if you have a vegetarian at your table like I do, be a way to provide something more hearty than the usual sides of rolls, cranberry sauce, mashed potatoes, and green beans. Check out my Recipes Index page for other dishes that I have covered in the past.

Giada's vegetarian Thanksgiving side recipe for Butternut Squash Lasagna in Béchamel sauce Giada's vegetarian Thanksgiving side recipe for Butternut Squash Lasagna in Béchamel sauce

The original recipe calls for basil, but I love the taste of sage for fall, not to mention when I buy a bunch of fresh sage, I love just crisping them up in a brown butter sauce for a simple weekday dinner. So I switched out the basil for sage.

Also, the original recipe also instructs you to take a 2 pound butternut squash, peeled, seeded, and cut into 1 inch cubes which are then tossed in oil on a skillet then boiled/steamed until the squash is tender. The whole end result is to make a squash purée though, and I just didn’t want so spend all that to clean and cut. So I just cut it in half and roasted it in the oven until it was soft and I could scoop it into the food processor. If you wanted more of a shortcut you could probably start out with frozen squash.

Giada's vegetarian Thanksgiving side recipe for Butternut Squash Lasagna in Béchamel sauce Giada's vegetarian Thanksgiving side recipe for Butternut Squash Lasagna in Béchamel sauce

In retrospect, although the recipe calls for no boil lasagna noodles, at least with the way mine turned out they were not the texture I was looking for- they were still firm and very doughy. If I make this again in the future I would take the time to use regular lasagna noodles and boil them before the layering step.

To lower the fat, you could do a mix of skim or fat free milk instead of whole milk, but I think having some portion of creaminess is nice for the sauce, not sure you would get that with a 100% substitution. Giada calls for whole-milk mozzarella cheese, but I used Tillamook Part Skim shredded mozzarella, and you could do a variation of using skim ricotta, or Gruyere or whatever cheese you’d like. For gluten or paleo diets I’ve heard of using zucchini instead of the lasagna noodles, and you could even use scrambled eggs instead of the cheese, and she suggests spinach lasagna sheets!

The amaretti cookies add a hint of nuttiness and crunch to the butternut squash- amaretti cookies are almond paste cookies, so you could switch it out for just using nuts instead if you can’t find the cookies. Honestly, I think I would add more cookies!

Giada's vegetarian Thanksgiving side recipe for Butternut Squash Lasagna in Béchamel sauce Giada's vegetarian Thanksgiving side recipe for Butternut Squash Lasagna in Béchamel sauce

Ingredients
  • 1 tablespoon olive oil
  • 1 (~2-pound) butternut squash
  • Salt and freshly ground black pepper
  • 3 amaretti cookies, crumbled
  • 1/4 cup butter
  • 1/4 cup all-purpose flour
  • 3 1/2 cups whole milk
  • 1/2 teaspoon of nutmeg
  • 3/4 cup lightly packed fresh sage leaves
  • 12 no-boil lasagna noodles
  • 2 1/2 cups (10 ounces) shredded whole-milk mozzarella cheese
  • 1/3 cup grated Parmesan
Instructions
  1. First, making the squash purée. Preheat the oven to 400 degrees F. Trim the stem part at the top and button, then cut the squash in half lengthwise. If you have a hard time cutting it, peel some of the skin. Scoop out the strings and seeds until the skin is clean and smooth. You can roast the seeds if you want, but you don’t need them for this lasagna. Rub each half of the squash flesh with 1/2 tablespoon of olive oil,. On a pan lined with foil, place each half flesh side down for about 45 min or so, until the flesh is soft, so that you will be able to scoop them into the processor. Cool slightly and then transfer the squash to a food processor, since of course you don’t want to process hot food in there! Add the amaretti cookies and blend until smooth. Season the squash puree, to taste, with more salt and pepper. Set aside.
    Giada's vegetarian Thanksgiving side recipe for Butternut Squash Lasagna in Béchamel sauce Giada's vegetarian Thanksgiving side recipe for Butternut Squash Lasagna in Béchamel sauce
  2. While the squash is roasting, this can be béchamel sauce making time. Melt the butter in a heavy medium-size saucepan over medium heat. Add the flour and whisk for 1 minute. Gradually whisk in the milk. Bring to a boil over medium-high heat. Reduce the heat to medium and simmer until the sauce thickens slightly, whisking often, about 5 minutes. Whisk in the nutmeg. Cool slightly for at least 5 minutes.  As usual when blending hot liquids, when you transfer the liquid to the blender or food processor make sure you fill it no more than halfway (the food processor may have a marked liquid line). If you are using a blender, release one corner of the lid to prevent the vacuum effect that creates heat explosions! I didn’t have this problem because around this time I was processing the squash with the cookies, which gave time for the sauce to cool down some before getting to this part. Anyway, put half the roux in your blender, add the sage and blend until smooth. Return the now half a batch of sage sauce to the rest of the sauce in the pan and stir to blend. Season the sauce with salt and pepper to taste.
  3. Position the rack in the center of the oven and set the oven to 375 degrees F.
  4. Lightly grease a 13 by 9 by 2-inch glass baking dish. Spread about a cup of the sauce over the dish, and arrange 3 lasagna noodles on the bottom. Spread about 1/3 cup of the squash puree over the noodles. Sprinkle with 1/2 cup of mozzarella cheese. Drizzle 1/2 cup of sauce over the noodles. Repeat layering 3 more times.
    Giada's vegetarian Thanksgiving side recipe for Butternut Squash Lasagna in Béchamel sauce Giada's vegetarian Thanksgiving side recipe for Butternut Squash Lasagna in Béchamel sauce Giada's vegetarian Thanksgiving side recipe for Butternut Squash Lasagna in Béchamel sauce Giada's vegetarian Thanksgiving side recipe for Butternut Squash Lasagna in Béchamel sauce Giada's vegetarian Thanksgiving side recipe for Butternut Squash Lasagna in Béchamel sauce Giada's vegetarian Thanksgiving side recipe for Butternut Squash Lasagna in Béchamel sauce
  5. Top with the rest of the sauce, and then tightly cover the baking dish with foil and bake the lasagna for 40 minutes. Sprinkle the remaining mozzarella and Parmesan cheeses over the lasagna. Continue baking uncovered until the sauce bubbles and the top is golden, 15 minutes longer. Let the lasagna stand for 15 minutes before serving.

This dish looks gorgeous with the colors- and I cursed that all I have is my point and shoot camera and the dark late October lighting because I don’t think these pics do it justice. I think it’s time to commit to making a light box/light tent with cardboard  and some white plates at least!

Every week until Thanksgiving I plan to post a recipe for a vegetarian dish that can served, so stay tuned! Have you ever had butternut squash lasagana? Did you have it with white sauce or marinara? And what do you think of the addition of amaretti cookies?
Giada's vegetarian Thanksgiving side recipe for Butternut Squash Lasagna in Béchamel sauce Giada's vegetarian Thanksgiving side recipe for Butternut Squash Lasagna in Béchamel sauce

Summary of the Vegetarian Thanksgiving Sides Series 2013:

Thanks for reading!

 

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Autumn Dinner at Serratto

Disclosure: This meal was complimentary, but I will always provide my honest opinion and assessment of all products and experiences I may be given. The views and opinions expressed in this blog are entirely my own.

I felt honored to be invited to attend a blogger dinner earlier this week at Serratto.   Executive Chef Tony Meyers prepared a sampling of fall dishes, and we were able to taste some of the wines from the restaurant’s monthly rotating wine flight. Julie Bond, who with her husband are the restaurant owners, was also present and told us how she fell in love with this space and potential 9 years ago. Since owning Serratto, they’ve expanded the menu from traditional Italian to also incorporate traditions from French and Mediterranean cuisines while also sourcing to support local, from the meats from Nicky USA to talking about the exact terroir of the wines from the specific vineyards in Italy and Spain.

In fact, if you visit you may see the snail on their windows and other decorative elements. The snail represents the Slow Food movement, so its presence is emphasizing the Serratto viewpoint of traditional (taking cues from classic old world European family and warmth) and then melding that with regional sustainable ingredients.

Outside of Serratto restaurant.  the snail represents the Slow Food movement, so its presence is emphasizing the Serratto viewpoint of traditional (taking cues from classic old world European family and warmth) melded with regional sustainable ingredient Outside of Serratto restaurant.  the snail represents the Slow Food movement, so its presence is emphasizing the Serratto viewpoint of traditional (taking cues from classic old world European family and warmth) melded with regional sustainable ingredient

I was excited to hear about the Serratto new fall seasonal dishes such as Kale Salad and the Forest Mushroom Ravioli.  Also, on Mondays and Tuesdays, Serratto now is offering a new prix fixe dinner – 3 courses for $25, such as

  1. Baby spinach salad with gorgonzola, spiced pistachio, warm bacon vinaigrette;
  2. Braised Tails & Trotters pork shank ravioli with Caramelized onion, Grana Padano, baby arugula, stone-ground mustard cream sauce;
  3. Dessert of housemade gelato or sorbetto with marcona almond-white chocolate cookie.

The courses come with suggested wine pairings as well.

As part of this Bloggers Dinner, I was able to check out the new seasonal Kale Salad, as well as try out that prix fixe menu entree option of the Brasied Pork Shank Ravioli!

Here’s the recap of the whole menu for the evening. I should note that even before this Blogger’s Dinner, I have been a fan of Serratto. I have visited many times because I think they have a great happy hour, great housemade pastas, and a really excellent wine selection. The Blogger’s Dinner was offering me an opportunity to sample more small tastes of a variety of dishes that would have taken me many visits in order to write this much of a review. Actually, since every time I come here I always end up with wine and pasta, this was great in forcing me to try to explore the menu more so that I can confidently say that you will have a good time at Serratto, even without wine. But why wouldn’t you have wine?
Serratto Bloggers Dinner Serratto Bloggers Dinner

Serratto is located on NW 21st and Kearney, in the trendy but artsy Nob Hill neighborhood. The atmosphere is a perfect combination of being chic so that you could have a dinner out with friends or a date night, but not so hip that you don’t also see corporate dinners of a table suits, or a family and locals also dining alongside you. You can make reservations with them on OpenTable, but I have also walked in and been fine as well.

They have a large space in which they can easily adjust tabletops either in the scene-y front (great people watching as folks make their way on the sidewalks from the streetcar down to 21st/are on their way back from their fun time) or the more classic yet cozy back nooks. Towards the back there is one raised area with two private dining rooms- all meaning they can accommodate dinner parties of more than 4 easily, not always easy to find at restaurants in Portland. They do classy holiday parties, but at the same time, this same space, as Julie told us, also was open during December 2008 snowstorm that shut down businesses because since everyone is nearby (she lives in the neighborhood as well), and they decided to be open to just be a place to go for the neighborhood. Elegant, but yet very place next door approachable somehow too!

Serratto Blogger Dinner 

– Prosecco Ruffino Extra Dry NV
There really is something to starting out with a glass of bubbly. It lifts your spirits and brightens your mood. There is no reason to save it only for special occasions- in fact, maybe the fact you had a crappy day is exactly the reason to break out sparkling.
Serratto Bloggers Dinner, starting with bubbles is always a happy place: Ruffino Extra Dry Prosecco NV

Pinot Blanc/Gris/Riesling ’11 from Brooks “Amycas” Willamette Valley
Ahi Tuna Tartare “Nicoise” chopped egg, capers, olives, housemade potato chips, tarragon aioli
Kale Salad with pine nuts, honey crisp apple, sour cherries, Grana Padano, apple cider vinaigrette

I loved the simple clean flavors that showed off the quality ingredients in the Ahi Tuna Tartare, and that Kale Salad totally embodied the flavors and feeling of autumn. I probably would have skimmed right over them normally in reading the menu towards the more hearty and comforting pastas, but I won’t make that mistake in the future.
Serratto Bloggers Dinner, Pinot Glanc/Gris/Riesling '11 from Brooks Amycas Willamette Valley Serratto Bloggers Dinner, Ahi Tuna Tartare 'Nicoise' chopped egg, capers, olives, housemade potato chips, tarragon aioli Serratto Bloggers Dinner, Kale Salad with pine nuts, honey crisp apple, sour cherries, Grana Padano, apple cider vinaigrette paired with Pinot Glanc/Gris/Riesling '11 from Brooks Amycas Willamette Valley

Seared Sea Scallop roasted butternut squash, brussels sprouts, braised cabbage, apple butter, walnuts
This was soooo good, I would have licked the plate if I wasn’t with company.
Serratto Bloggers Dinner, Seared Sea Scallop roasted butternut squash, brussels sprouts, braised cabbage, apple butter, walnuts Serratto Bloggers Dinner, Seared Sea Scallop roasted butternut squash, brussels sprouts, braised cabbage, apple butter, walnuts

Margherita Pizza with fresh mozzarella, tomato, garlic and basil
Pizza Del Giorno with asparagus, bacon, artichoke hearts, arugula, mozzarella, marinara
Boneyard Pale Session Lager, Bone Light
Painted Hills Burger with brioche, bacon, white cheddar, aioli, bbq sauce, crispy onions + pommes frites

Can’t go wrong with the beer with citrus, grapefruit, and lemon flavors paired with tastes of the two pizzas and a burger! That burger was so juicy, and apparently is a popular dish for when there are catered events at Serrato… and is also on their happy hour menu.
Boneyard Pale Session Lager, Bone Light Serratto Bloggers Dinner, Pizza Del Giorno with asparagus, bacon, artichoke hearts, arugula, mozzarella, marinara Serratto Bloggers Dinner, Margherita Pizza with fresh mozzarella, tomato, garlic and basil + Pizza Del Giorno with asparagus, bacon, artichoke hearts, arugula, mozzarella, marinara Serratto Bloggers Dinner, Painted Hills Burger with brioche, bacon, white cheddar, aioli, bbq sauce, crispy onions, and pommes frites

Wine Flight (their September flight)

  • Mandrarossa “Bonera” Sicilia ’09  Nero ‘D’avola/Cab/Cab Franc
  • Els Guiamets “Isis” Montsant ’06  Carignan/Grenache/Syrah
  • Fidélitas “M100” Columbia Valley ’11  Cabernet/Merlot/Malbec

Braised Tails & Trotters Pork Shank Ravioli caramelized onion, baby arugula, stone-ground mustard cream sauce
Muscovy Duck Confit with black lentils, parsnip cream, pancetta, juniper demi-glace
Loved the use of the stone ground mustard cream sauce with the arugula. Meanwhile, I thought the Fidélitas “M100” Columbia Valley ’11  Cabernet/Merlot/Malbec paired incredibly well with the duck dish. Also, bacon straw.
alt= Serratto Bloggers Dinner, Muscovy Duck Confit with black lentils, parsnip cream, pancetta, juniper demi-glace Serratto Bloggers Dinner, Muscovy Duck Confit with black lentils, parsnip cream, pancetta, juniper demi-glace

Apple Turnover served warm with cinnamon gelato, amaretto caramel
We also got a special drink to keep us warm on the way home and as a nod to the other owner, Alex Bond- a Spokane Speedball with espresso and Baileys. It was like being sent home with a hug.
Serratto Bloggers Dinner, Dessert of Apple Turnover served warm with cinnamon gelato, amaretto caramel Serratto Bloggers Dinner, Spokane Speedball with espresso and Baileys warmed on the wand!

They are changing out the wine flight for November to highlight Beaujolais, since it’s such a great wine for Thanksgiving. I feel like I must do some research into this wine flight, don’t you?

Check out some the other bloggers at this dinner, and/or check the twitter feed of @SerrattoPDX or the Serratto Facebook page, or the Instagram of Executive Chef Tony Meyers where he sometimes shows some serious food photos!

Disclosure: This meal was complimentary, but I will always provide my honest opinion and assessment of all products and experiences I may be given. The views and opinions expressed in this blog are entirely my own.

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Fri Bake Sale + Sat Zombie Brunch at the Original Dinerant

Did you know that every year, The Original Dinerant hosts a Zombie Brunch? This year, that brunch falls this coming Sunday, October 27th from 7:30am-3pm! The staff will be all dressed up as zombies but seemingly moving at normal service speed (check some of the photos here from 2012 on the FB page), you can dress up too if you’d like. Eating wise, some options to consider include

  • Bloody Marys (DUH of course). Besides Original’s original bloody mary, did you know that they also have a Smoked Tomato Bloody Mary with smoked tomato and smoked sea salt, and a Beef Jerky Bloody Mary with with house-nitro-infused beef jerky vodka?
  • REDRUM Cakes, apparently Red Velvet Pancakes topped with Bananas Foster.
  • If you’re feeling a wee devilish, ask for their Frittata Diablo—an eggy, spicy chorizo-roasted pepper-melted mozzarella dish. Other brunch options from their regular brunch menu include Elvis Sighting (french toast, bacon, banana mousse, peanut butter sauce), Creme Brulee French Toast, Cornmeal Bacon Waffle with bacon lardons, seasonal syrup, oregon honey butter, and you can add Put a Fried Bird On It aka add on a buttermilk fried chicken breast to any of their pancake/toast/waffle menu options! My weakness are eggs benedict options, and they have a Dungeness Crab Benedict, but also an intriguing Cobb Omelet.
  • The Face Eater, their version of The Zombie cocktail.

Yes, the Face Eater. And they shared the recipe!

Ingredients

  • 3/4 ounces White Rum
  • 3/4 ounces Malibu Rum
  • 1/2  ounces Clear Creek Pear Brandy
  • 1/2 ounces Indio Spirits Marionberry Vodka
  • Cranberry Juice
  • Amareno cherries, speared for a bloody visual effect
  • salt to rim

TOMORROW,  The Original is hosting a Fall Bake Sale that is all treats, no tricks, from 11am-2pm featuring delicious house-made treats, including Gluten-free and Vegan! The Fall Bake Sale is cash only and all proceeds – that’s right, every single dollar- will benefit Cascade Aids Project, the  oldest and largest community-based provider of HIV services, housing, education and advocacy in Oregon and Southwest Washington. The Cascade AIDS Project helps people put their lives back together; to secure housing, find essential medical care and deal with the countless issues that make the difference between giving up or getting up and going on. A very worthy cause. And, come on. Bake Sale!!!

I work in Beaverton so won’t be able to make the bake sale… but if I was going to the brunch with you, what would you order?

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