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Farro Risotto with Fava Beans ©dinaavila

Lemon Souffle ©dinaavila

All images © Dina Avila 2013

DinaFlourish (1)22

Just a quick couple of recipes for you today taking advantage of the abundance of spring veggies we have in the markets this season. The risotto, although time-consuming, will knock your socks off. Feel free to make it with traditional arborio rice. Especially if you want a dish that’s lighter for warmer weather. I was more in the mood for a healthy, stick to your gut kind of a dish and this risotto surely delivers. We were full after half a bowl. One thing I forgot to pick up for this dish was creme fraiche. If you plan on making this recipe then I suggest picking some up and adding either a couple of spoonfuls at the end of cooking, or a dollop with each bowl. Save some for the souffles, too, as I think it would be an excellent addition to the dessert….and a great way to mask the fact that the souffles have sunken :)

Cheers!

spoonhome

Spring Farro Risotto

Inspired from Bon Appetit

Ingredients:

2 cups shelled fresh fava beans

8-10 cups chicken broth (preferably homemade)

2 tablespoons butter, divided

1/4 pound crimini mushrooms, halved or quartered depending on size

2 tablespoons olive oil

2 large leeks, white and pale green parts, halved, rinsed well and sliced

1 fennel bulb, cored and sliced

4 garlic cloves, finely chopped

2 cups farro, rinsed and soaked in cool water for a minimum of 30 minutes

1 cup dry white wine

2 large handfuls arugula, torn

1 1/2 cups grated pecorino romano, plus more for shaving

1/4 chopped chives, plus more for serving

Salt and freshly ground pepper to taste

Method:

Bring a large saucepan of salted water to a boil and add shelled fava beans.

Let cook for 1-2 minutes, drain and place beans in an ice bath until cool.

Place cooled beans in a small bowl and set aside.

Pour chicken broth into a saucepan and bring to a simmer.

Reduce heat to low and cover to keep warm.

Melt 1 tablespoon of your butter in a large dutch oven or other heavy pot.

Add mushrooms a cook, stirring often, for about 5 minutes until tender.

Spoon cooked mushrooms into the bowl with the fava beans.

Warm oil and remaining tablespoon of butter in same pot and add leeks, fennel and garlic.

Stir frequently for about 4 minutes until the veggies soften.

Add the drained farro and stir to coat for about 2 minutes.

Add the wine and cook, stirring occasionally, until evaporated. About 4 minutes.

Add 1 cup of the broth and cook stirring frequently until the broth is almost absorbed.

Add remaining broth, one cup at a time allowing the broth to be absorbed before adding more.

Cook in this manner for about 50 minutes, until all broth is absorbed and the farro is tender yet chewy.

Add more or less broth as needed.

Stir in arugula, pecorino, chives, favas and mushrooms and let cook, stirring, until arugula is wilted and the cheese is melted. About 2 minutes.

Spoon risotto into warmed bowls, sprinkle with chopped chives and shavings of pecorino.

spoonhome

Sunken Lemon Souffles

Adapted from Food 52

Ingredients:

2 tablespoons cold butter, cubed

1 cup sugar

4 tablespoons whole wheat flour

Zest and juice from one lemon

1 1/2 cups hemp milk

3 eggs, separated

Pinch of sea salt

Method:

Warm your oven to 350

In a large bowl bring the sugar and flour and salt together and with the butter and press with your fingers until crumbly.

Stir in the lemon juice and zest.

In a separate bowl, beat the egg yolks.

Stir the milk into the yolks and fold into the flour mixture.

In a smaller bowl, beat the egg whites until stiff peaks form. Fold into the batter.

Ladle the batter into ramekins or jam jars.

Add hot water to a pan about 1-2 inches deep.

Place jars and ramekins into the pan and place in the warmed oven.

Cook for about 45 minutes, rotating the pan halfway through cooking, until the tops of the souffles are golden brown.

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©dinaavila (1 of 1)-4

DinaFlourish (1)22

Boy, did this daylight savings throw me off. A touch of insomnia and, I’m embarrassed to admit, an oven left on all night led to a restless (and very warm) sleep and more than a little sleep-in. I won’t tell you what time we woke up this morning, but suffice to say, I feel rested as a result. I wish we could put this daylight savings thing to a vote because I am sure most of the country would want to turn it off for good. On the plus side, a late morning blog shoot brings you this incredible bread pudding.

After scouring the internet for a bread pudding recipe that didn’t involve seemingly pounds of sugar, I turned to one of my favorite cookbooks, Good to the Grain, by Kim Boyce. I’m not sure why I didn’t turn to her book first. I mean, as we know, I always do. Alas, lesson learned and I present you with a bread pudding that Adam and I nibbled on in the wee hours of the night last night. Technically midnight…but for all intents and purposes 1AM. Way past my bedtime….but it was worth it :)

Cheers!

spoonhome

Orange and Rye Bread Pudding

Inspired by Good to the Grain by Kim Boyce

I forgot to pick up whole milk, which the recipe calls for, so I used a
rice/quinoa milk I had on hand. It worked great, but
I’ve listed the whole milk as I think it would have lended a richer custard.

Ingredients:

One loaf day-old rye bread, cubed into one pieces

5 eggs

3 cups whole milk

1/4 cups buttermilk or heavy cream

Zest and juice from two oranges

3/4 cup sugar

1 teaspoon nutmeg

3/4 teaspoon sea salt

1/4 dried cherries

2 tablespoons cold Irish butter, cubed

~

Spread the bread cubes on a baking sheet and place in oven.

Turn oven to 350 and let the cubes gently toast until mostly toasted. About 12 minutes. Remove from oven and let cool completely.

In a large bowl, whisk the eggs, milk and buttermilk until well combined. Strain into a large bowl.

Stir the orange juice and zest, sugar, nutmeg, sea salt, cherries and 1 tablespoon of the butter into the custard.

Stir the cooled bread into the custard and let soak for about 10 minutes.

Butter a dutch oven or a 10 inch baking dish that’s fairly deep and pour the bread and custard into it.

Dot the second tablespoon of cold butter on top of the pudding.

Place the dutch oven into the oven and bake at 350 for an hour and a half.

Check on it at an hour and if it looks like the bread is starting to burn a little, place a sheet of foil on top of it for the final half hour.

Serve warm or at room temperature.

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Hi folks! Recipe following soon, but just a quick informal birthday cupcake post for ya! Nope, these are not Red Velvet proper as I don’t do artificial food coloring (yes, I know I’m a food snob and no I’ve never had red velvet cake as a result), instead these are vibrantly colored by roasted beets! That’s right, BEETS!

Anyways, happy Sunday to you all and more soon!

Cheers!

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OK. Maybe I should use the word “rustic”? I don’t know why, but pie crusts are my handicap. Perhaps I’m impatient or perhaps I simple need to do more push-ups. I don’t know, but I really need to trouble shoot why my pie crusts always are an uphill battle. The dough resist coming together, it sticks to my rolling pin, it cracks and breaks, it’s as if it hates me. The funny thing is that I actually love making pies. Rolling out dough, despite (or because of?) the struggle, is a fairly meditative process for me and I find myself in a place of zen where it’s just me and the dough. All of my energy is focused in one place and I am very present and very much in the moment.

This apple galette is the bees knees. Ignoring the above issues, it is so incredibly simple to make. I found this recipe on the Food and Wine website where they borrowed it from the great Jacques Pépin. I did tweak it a tiny bit  and mixed whole wheat flour with the all-purpose. Perhaps that was my downfall. Who knows? Regardless, if you have an abundance of apples this season, you will love this galette.

As long as your dough doesn’t put up a fight.

Cheers!

Apple Galette

Adapted from Food and Wine/ Jacques Pépin

Ingredients:

For the dough:

3/4 cup all-purpose flour
3/4 cup whole wheat flour
1/4 teaspoon sea salt
1 stick plus two tablespoons unsalted butter, cold and cut into small chunks
1/3 cup ice water

For the filling:

3-4 apples such as Golden Delicious
2 tablespoons rapadura, or cane sugar
1/2 teaspoon cinnamon
1 tablespoon raw honey, warmed slightly
1 tablespoon unsalted butter, cut into small chunks

~

In a food processor, add all of the dough ingredients except the ice water and process for about 5 seconds.

Sprinkle with ice water and process for about 10 seconds, until the pastry starts to come together.

Scrape the pastry onto a work suface and press it together into a disk.

Place dough on a plate, wrap with plastic and refrigerate until chilled.

Core your apples and slice into 1/4 inch slices.

Heat your oven to 400 degrees.

Remove dough from fridge and place on a lightly dusted work surface.

Roll out the dough until it’s about 12 inches in diameter and transfer to a parchment lined baking sheet.

Spread a layer of apples on the dough leaving an inch or so around the sides.

Drizzle with slightly warmed honey.

Place the rest of the apples on the dough and dust with sugar and cinnamon. Dot with butter.

Fold edges up over the apples creating a border.

Bake in the oven for one hour rotating half way through.

Place pan on a cooling rack and serve galette warm or at room temperature.

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Cardamom Butter Milk Pie

Cardamom Butter Milk Pie

This pie is ugly. It’s also kind of a pain in the ass and takes much longer to make than you would anticipate. But is it delicious? Oh my, yes.

About a week ago, I suddenly had the urge to make pie. Just came over me like a wave. Felt the need to bust out my rolling-pin and work a chunk of dough into a disk. And boy did this dough require some work. See, first you freeze 14 tablespoons of butter, along with flour and sugar and salt, in a plastic baggie over night. Then you break it all apart in your food processor, form the dough into a disk, and refrigerate it for an hour or overnight. Then you roll that bad boy (14 tablespoons of very cold butter, mind you) out. If you’re short, with high counters, and not a lot of upper body strength? It’s a challenge. But man, is it worth it. Flakey, buttery crust. Bright lemony and cardomom infused curd. Definitely consider having a glass of port with this dessert. You won’t be sorry.

Cheers!

Cardamom Buttermilk Pie

We have Saveur.com to thank for this incredibly unique recipe.
I altered theirs a bit based on some of the comments with the recipe on their site. I doubled
the cardamom and decreased the lemon just a hair.
I also used greek yogurt instead of the listed sour cream because I have an
aversion to sour cream. Think it’s pretty gross. But that’s just me.

~

Ingredients:

1 1⁄2 cups plus 3 tbsp. flour
1 tbsp. plus 1 cup sugar
1⁄2 tsp. fine salt
14 tbsp. butter (10 tbsp. cold,
4 tbsp. melted and cooled slightly)
2 tsp. white distilled vinegar
2 tsp. ground cardamom
3 egg yolks
1 cup Greek whole milk yogurt
2 cups buttermilk
Finely grated zest of 1 lemon
1/2-1 tbsp. fresh lemon juice

~

Combine 1 1⁄2 cups flour, 1 tbsp. sugar, 1⁄4 tsp. salt, and cold butter in a plastic ziplock baggie and freeze overnight.

Add vinegar and 1⁄2 cup ice water in a bowl.

Turn the freezer bag’s contents out into a food processor and pulse until chunks of the butter are about the size of chickpeas.

Add vinegar mixture to flour mixture and pulse once or twice to bring things together.

Form the dough into a disk, wrap in plastic wrap, and refrigerate for at least 1 hour or overnight.

On a well-floured surface, roll dough out to a circle. About 13 inches in diameter.

Fit into a 9-10 inch pie pan. Cut away the extra dough, leaving a 1 1⁄2 inch border.

Tuck the overhanging dough underneath itself to form a thick edge.

Pinch the edge to create a wavy pattern.

Cover and chill for 1 hour.

Warm your oven to 400°.

Prick bottom of dough with a fork then line with foil and fill with dried beans or pie weights.

Bake the pie shell for 10 minutes.

Remove the beans and foil and bake for another 10 minutes. You want the crust to be a golden brown.

Remove pie from oven and let cool on a rack.

In the meantime, whisk together remaining flour and salt with the melted butter, cardamom, egg yolks, and Greek yogurt.

Beat in remaining sugar, buttermilk, zest, and lemon juice.

Pour into your cooled pie shell and place it in the oven.

Lower the heat to 325° and bake until the outer edges of the curd is set, but the center is still a bit wiggly. About 1 hour.

Let your pie cool completely on a rack and refrigerate.

Serve the pie cool with juicy glasses of port.

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I hadn’t planned on making these cookies for a blog post, but they turned out so good that I felt it would only be fair to share. Adam and I are going to a Spanish themed dinner tonight at our Chef/Geologist friend’s house and these not too sweet cookies seemed like an appropriate offering. They are surprisingly simple and quick to make, and if you didn’t know any better, you’d think there was a stick of butter in each morsel.

© Dina Avila
These pictures are shot more informally than usual. My kitchen is my studio and I usually lay everything out with deliberation and intent with my camera secured to my tripod. Today, I just popped on a fast lens and shot free hand with the cookies resting in their traveling receptacle. Quick and easy just like these cookies.

Cheers!

Olive Oil Saffron Cookies

I gleaned this recipe from Mark Bittman’s blog. I only tweaked it a little bit by adding a hair more salt than the pinch he recommended and by replacing the orange zest and Grand Mariner with lemon zest and whiskey.

What you’ll need~

A small pinch of saffron threads

2 cups all-purpose flour

1/4 teaspoon baking powder

1/4 teaspoon salt

3/4 cup sugar

1/2 olive oil

2 eggs

Zest from one lemon

2 tablespoons whiskey

Lavender sugar and or coarse sea salt for dusting, optional

Preheat your oven to 350.

Add one tablespoon of boiling water to a pinch of saffron in a medium bowl. Swirl the water in bowl around and let sit for about a minute.

Stir the flour, baking soda and salt in a large bowl.

Using a stand or a hand mixer, add the sugar and olive oil to the saffron and beat until light. About 1-2 minutes.

Add the eggs and beat until the mixture gets creamy and fluffy.

Beat in the lemon zest and the whiskey.

Stir in the wet mix to the dry mix.

Drop spoonfuls (about two teaspoons) of the dough onto a parchment lined baking sheet.

Bake for 12 minutes, turning the pan halfway through, until the bottoms of the cookies are golden.

Dust with lavender sugar and or coarse sea salt.

© Dina Avila

© Dina Avila

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© Dina Avila PhotographyI am nibbling on this as I write. Slightly warmed slathered in cultured butter, a cup of tea by my side.

Although, this Buckle would be perfect dipped in hot coffee. Or perhaps with a generous dollop of crème fraiche. How about baked with fresh ginger. Or maybe cardamom? Oh, for dessert with a giant scoop of Salt and Straw‘s Double Fold Singing Dog Vanilla ice cream. Or their Sea Salt Caramel Ribbon? Ah, yes.

See where I’m going with this? We have Kim Boyce to thank for this one. Huckle Buckle made with fresh blueberries from, you guessed it, Good to the Grain. I just can’t get enough of that book. If any of you have a favorite baking cookbook please share! Especially if they incorporate whole grains and dark meaty flours like Kim does.

If you make this Buckle I’d love to hear what variations you’ve come up with.

Cheers!

PS Thanks to Adam’s mom Kathy for the blueberries! Sending a bit of the Buckle with Adam for you to try :)

Blueberry Buckle

Courtesy of Good to the Grain by Kim Boyce

I’ve listed Kim’s recipe exactly, but I did vary it just a hair by using sheep’s milk yogurt and also by reducing the sugars just a bit. Also, my brown sugar was hard as a rock so I used Muscavado sugar as a substitute.

What you’ll need~

Streusel Topping

1/2 cup whole-grain pastry flour

1/2 cup spelt flour

3 tablespoons sugar

1 tablespoon dark brown sugar

1/2 teaspoon baking powder

1/2 teaspoon ground cinnamon

1/4 teaspoon kosher salt

3 tablespoons cold unsalted butter

1 egg

Dry Mix

1 1/4 cups spelt flour

1 cup whole grain pastry flour

1/2 cup dark brown sugar

1/2 cup sugar

1 tablespoon baking powder

© Dina Avila Photography

1 teaspoon cinnamon

1 teaspoon kosher salt

1 stick unsalted butter, softened

Wet Mix

3/4 cup whole milk

1/2 cup plain yogurt

4 egg yolks

2 teaspoons vanilla extract

2 cups or so blueberries

~

Preheat your oven to 350 and butter a baking dish.© Dina Avila Photography

For the Streusel

Sift flours, sugars, baking powder, cinnamon, and salt into a large bowl.

Cut the 3 tablespoons of cold butter in 1/4” chunks and add them to the mix.

Press and rub the mix with your hands breaking the butter in to small bits.

Continue until the mix is like cornmeal. Do this quickly.

Whisk the egg and scrape it into the streusel mix.

Again, use your hands to mix the dough together.

For the Batter

Sift all of the Dry Mix ingredients into a large bowl.

Add the softened butter and using a hand or a stand mixer, blend on medium speed until combined.

In a separate bowl, whisk the milk, egg yolks and vanilla until well blended.

Pour the milk mixture in with the dry ingredients and blend on low speed until the batter is smooth and creamy.

~

Pour half of the batter in to your buttered baking dish.

Pour a layer of berries onto the batter.

Scrape the rest of the batter onto the berries and spread evenly.

Sprinkle the rest of the berries on top of the batter and top with the streusel mix.

Depending on the depth of your dish, baking can take anywhere from 55 – 70 minutes. I checked on it every 5 minutes for the last 15 minutes by inserting a skewer in the middle. When it comes out clean, your cake is done.

Let the Buckle cool in the pan before serving.

© Dina Avila Photography

© Dina Avila Photography

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