3 FOODS MY MOTHER TAUGHT ME NOT TO COOK AND THE ONE SHE DID

Ciao'd with a black Labrador retriever at my feet. 

Some mothers cook with love, others out of a sense of duty, and still others cook with a shot of both. My mother harbored on the latter shoal. I'm not sure if she simply did not like cooking or because she was busy with a full-time job and four kids, she couldn't or wouldn't prioritize the task. I get it. What mother who also works (and p.s. my mom was getting her masters degree, too) can do it all without the help of a large staff?  We didn't have a large staff. 

Before my mother married my dad, my Italian aunts summoned her to their kitchens. Her mission: hover over their shoulders and learn to cook the dishes my father favored. To what end? They wouldn't bestow their blessings upon the marriage?  She was a good soldier, though. The dishes she learned became bastions of my childhood. Among the highlights, ziti pasta with broccoli and garlic (before the dish claimed a regular spot on restaurant menus). Fritelle, Pugliese for frisbees of fried dough, slicked with pungent goat cheese and tomato sauce and flurried with Parmesan cheese and black pepper. Eggs with peppers and tomatoes served with crusty bread that ferried the mixture to our mouths. 

Today I had a text conversation with my three sisters wherein we cast our votes for our favorite foods from our childhoods. Suffice to say the eggs with peppers and tomatoes, a dish composed of fried green peppers, garlic, tomato sauce, and lightly scrambled eggs, was not a crowd favorite. Not so fast. It was a win for me.  I loved the flavor, the divergent textures, and even though it's not a pretty dish, the colors resonated with their brightness. Scrambled eggs with peppers and tomato is one dish I'm glad my mother taught me how to cook. It's a go-to when I'm tired or desire a comforting bite of nostalgia. 

My mother mastered the aunts' dishes and I learned how to cook them, too, but there are three foods she taught me not to cook. Let's start with pot roast. New Englanders (I am one of them) like to gussy up this dish by anointing it Yankee Pot Roast. My childhood pot roast was a calamity of sallow, stringy boiled beef that borrowed its flavor from soft vegetables, the carrots leading the pack with their cloying sweetness and baby food texture. Gag worthy. 'Nuf said.

Next up: pork chops with applesauce. I know, I know. Cue the Brady Bunch theme. Pork chops pose a challenge for many cooks because they can cook quickly into a scourge of dry chew. The applesauce was the bigger culprit, though. My mom spiked the Mott's with cinnamon and lemon. Kudos to her for (unconsciously) lifting the sweetness with the acid. Still, I was not, and I am not a fan of fruit with pork. 

And coming in third, the slime parading as tapioca. (My throat constricted as I wrote those words.) I've heard this horror of a food depicted as frogspawn. Wish I had coined that one because it is so spot on in so many ways. So, yeah, enjoy your frogspawn, oh I mean, Bubble Tea.  

It may be a coincidence that the foods my mom cooked with mastery were Italian but I don't think so. She learned how to cook them out of love for my dad. These were the dishes that reverberated with flavor, color, and, cheesy as it sounds, love. These are the dishes I cook to this day and every time I do, I think of my mom and dad. And I cook the dishes with love, too. 

My husband and son appreciate my cooking. My son has a particularly sharp palate that (he believes) gives him permission to comment on my cooking to the Nth degree. "Mom, maybe a bit more oregano and a tad less salt to highlight the herbal depth." "The pork chop is perfectly cooked in the center but then drops off to dryness too soon." "This needs more acid." "This needs more salt." On and on it goes in our personal episodes of Chopped. Food Network, you vex me, and at the same time, I am grateful that my son and I have this delicious bond. I am especially thankful that food connects us even during the dour teenage years.  p.s. he can cook, too. 

So here's to you, mom, for walking the kitchen line even when you were dreading it after a long day at work. Here's to you cooking eggs with peppers and tomatoes (and remembering to buy lots of bread) when you'd rather relax with a good book. And here's to the moms who get dinner on the table every night even when they order pizza or bring home Mexican.  I feel you. Let's take a collective mom breath. Food, regardless of its provenance, connects a family, especially when its enjoyed together. Believe me, our kids remember the table talk. 

RECIPE

EGGS WITH PEPPERS AND TOMATOES

This classic Pugliese dish serves deliciously as an appetizer, lunch, or breakfast. My mom made it for a light Sunday dinner after a robust Italian lunch. Use the very best extra virgin olive oil you can find as it adds a lovely dimension to this simple dish. And don't forget the crusty country bread! 

Serves 4

3 large green bell peppers
4 tablespoons extra-virgin olive oil
2 cloves garlic, finely chopped
2 cups tomato sauce
5 large eggs, beaten
1 tablespoon chopped fresh Italian (flat-leaf) parsley
Kosher salt and freshly ground pepper
1/4 cup freshly grated Parmesan cheese
 

Trim and slice the peppers lengthwise into 1-inch strips. In a large skillet, heat the olive oil. When hot, add the peppers and saute until soft and slightly browned, about 5 minutes. Add the garlic and cook until fragrant, 30 seconds. Add the tomato sauce to the skillet, stir to combine and bring the mixture to a boil. Reduce the heat to a simmer.

Add the eggs and gently stir to scramble them into the mixture. Add the parsley, and salt and pepper, to taste. Cook for a minute or two, stirring, and add the grated Parmesan cheese. 

Serve with crusty bread. 

MARCELLA MONDAY: A CHOCOLATE SPUMA DESSERT FOR MOM

Ciao'd with the scent of hyacinths in the air. 

Let's toast to the moms. The moms who cooked dinner every night and shared it around the table. The moms who weren't comfortable in the kitchen but managed to put food on the table anyway. Let's toast Marcella Hazan, a mom herself who, let's face it, cooked us all under the table with dishes she prepared for her husband, Victor, and her son, Giuliano. Iconic dishes like her tomato sauce with onion and butter, roast chicken with lemons, and white bean soup with garlic and parsley. I know, the recipes sound so simple. They are. It's the finesse with the ingredients (always fresh and kept to a minimum) and the clear, straightforward instructions that jolt the recipes to remarkable. 

So it is with this chocolate dessert. It's called spuma which translates loosely to foam. A heavenly concoction of semi-sweet chocolate, eggs, and cream, with a spark of rum and coffee, spuma alights between a thick and rich French mousse and a soft and floaty British fool. The middle is the miracle. As Goldilocks taught us, that means spuma is just right. 

If you are inclined to whip up a dessert for your mom next Sunday, perhaps consider Marcella's Spuma di Cioccolato. It's complex yet familiar, sweet and just a bit bitter, and unabashedly authentic. Just like our moms. 

RECIPE

SPUMA DI CIOCCOLATA | COLD CHOCOLATE FOAM

6 ounces semi-sweet chocolate chips
2 teaspoons granulated sugar
4 large eggs, separated
1/4 cup strong espresso coffee
2 tablespoons dark rum
2/3 cup very cold heavy cream

In a 250 degree oven, melt the chocolate in a small saucepan. Alternately, place the chocolate in a microwave-safe bowl. Heat on medium-high for 1 minute. Remove and stir. Continue heating in 15-second increments until the chocolate completely melts and has a smooth consistency.

In a large bowl, combine the sugar and egg yolks and beat until pale yellow. Stir in the melted chocolate, coffee, and rum. 

In a medium bowl, whip the cream until it is stiff. Fold it into the chocolate-and-egg-yolk mixture.

In a medium bowl, beat the egg whites until they form stiff peaks and then fold into the mixture. When all the ingredients have been gently but well combined by hand, spoon the mixture into goblets, custard cups, or any other suitable and attractive serving container. Refrigerate overnight. (The dessert can be prepared 3 or 4 days ahead of time, but after 24 hours it tends to wrinkle and lose some of its creaminess.) Recipe by Marcella Hazan, The Classic Italian Cookbook,  Ballantine Books, 1973. 

NOTE: Don't exceed the recommended amounts of rum and coffee, or you may find a liquid deposit at the bottom of the dessert.

I WAS OVER KALE UNTIL I MET THIS COCKTAIL

Ciao'd with chips and guac. 

Food trends, especially those that hang on for dear life, give me a food coma. I’m talking to you, kale. You’re like a guest who won’t leave the party even after the dishes have been cleared (loudly) and the bar glasses have been loaded (overtly) into the dishwasher.

Kale has walked the celebrity green carpet since Bon Appétit crowned 2011 the year of kale. Sure, kale had its moment in the sun, most notably in the blockbuster called kale chips. But now, six years later, does anybody else agree that it's overexposed? When the Y in the Yale logo is co-opted for a K = Kale, (you've seen the tees), kale is no longer kool. 

In a spring frenzy at the nursery a month or so ago, I decided to include Lacinato kale in my greens garden. This morning, noticing that the kale was about to bolt because I had ignored it in preference for chard and lettuces, I harvested it. The kale sports pretty, smoky green frilly leaves, I’ll give it that. What I couldn’t give into was another round of kale chips, kale salad, or a kale sauté.  Why not give the bunch to my neighbor or another friend? This was my plan until - wait for it - the notion of a kale cocktail popped into my mind. I know, right? What’s better than getting your super greens with a kick?

So this. A Kale Kooler. It’s fresh and herbaceous with a ginger spark and yes, a vodka halo. Just right for spring!

If you want to pretend your body is a temple regardless of alcohol intake, this is the sip for you.  A caveat though. If you aren’t a fan of herbal, green flavors (think Chartreuse or Cynar, the Italian artichoke digestif), chances are you will grimace and carry on to a vodka tonic. No judgment.  Okay, judgment. Give it a go. Next thing you know, you'll be telling your yoga partner about it during Shavasana. Hey, liquid Namaste!

Okay, spoiler alert. This is a drink for people who like green juices and the flavors therein. This drink's flavor profile skirts herbs and bitters with a subtly sweet ginger kick. I find it fresh, raw, and new. 

Makes 2 cocktails

Ginger Syrup
1/2 cup coarsely chopped fresh ginger
1 cup sugar
1 cup water

Cocktail Base
2 cups tightly packed kale leaves
10 basil leaves
1 cup water
3 limes, juiced
1/4 cup vodka
3 tablespoons ginger syrup 

In a medium saucepan over medium heat, combine the ginger, sugar, and water. Bring to a boil, reduce the heat and simmer, stirring frequently, for 5 minutes. Remove from the heat and chill. 

In a powerful blender (I use Vitamix), combine the kale, basil, and water. Blend until smooth, 2 to 3 minutes. Add the lime juice, vodka, and ginger syrup and pulse a few times to mix. Serve over ice. 

MARCELLA MONDAY: SAUTEED SWISS CHARD SALAD

Ciao'd after packing for a trip back East to visit la famiglia. Cue the mortadella. 

RECIPE

SAUTEED SWISS CHARD SALAD

Today I picked our first "crop" of Swiss chard. The leaves were not only tender they were a lovely, almost translucent green, too. I prefer chard with white stalks and these did not disappoint. They were crunchy and juicy, a harmonious textural counterpoint to the gentle leaves. Marcella Hazan joins me in the Swiss chard love fest. She, like me, celebrates that chard leaves, simply cooked, make a lovely side dish. Marcella calls the dish a salad (not sure why but, okay). Here's her super-duper simple recipe that tastes super, too. Cuz yeah, Marcella.

Serves 4 to 6

2 bunches young Swiss chard or the leaves of 3 large bunches of mature Swiss chard
Kosher salt
Extra-virgin olive oil
1 or more tablespoons fresh lemon juice

If you are using young chard, detach the stems. If you are using mature chard, pull the leaves from the stalks, discarding any wilted or discolored leaves. Wash well and drain. 

Put the chard in a pan with whatever water clings to the leaves. Add 1 teaspoon salt, cover, and cook over medium heat until tender, about 15 to 18 minutes from the time the liquid starts to bubble. 

Drain in a colander and gently press some of the water out the chard with the back of a fork. Place in a salad bowl. 

Serve cool (not refrigerated) or lukewarm, seasoning with salt, oil, and lemon just before ready to serve.  Recipe gently adapted from Marcella Hazan, The Classic Italian Cookbook, Ballantine Books, 1973

A SAVORY FOR YOUR WEEKEND SIP: SERRANO HAM AND CIDER BLUE CHEESE CROSTINI

Ciao'd while watching Mind of a Chef. Watch if you like to cook, party, and laugh. Who doesn't?

When I lived in Madrid, I spent many Sunday evenings in a small bar on the Plaza Mayor that served hard cider and this tapa. Cabrales is a robust blue cheese from northern Spain, and serrano ham is similar to, yet earthier than, Italian prosciutto. Indeed, if you can't find serrano ham, opt for prosciutto. Either way, it fits the dolce vita philosophy perfectamente!

Makes about 30 crostini

1/2 cup (4 ounces) blue cheese, such as Cabrales, Gorgonzola, or Roquefort, at room temperature
1/2 cup (4 ounces) cream cheese, at room temperature
1/4 cup hard apple cider, plus more as needed
1 teaspoon fresh lemon juice
1 sweet baguette
1/3 cup extra-virgin olive oil
15 thin slices (about 6 ounces) serrano ham or prosciutto
Fresh thyme, for garnish

Preheat the broiler. In a small bowl, combine the blue cheese, cream cheese, 1/4 cup hard apple cider, and lemon juice. Using a fork, mix and mash until a spreadable paste forms, adding more cider if necessary. 

Cut the bread into 1/4-inch-thick diagonal slices and arrange on a baking sheet. Lightly brush the toasts with the olive oil. Place under the broiler and toast until golden, turn and toast the other side. 

Spread the cheese mixture on the crostini. Cut each slice of ham in half lengthwise. Roll the slices into spirals and place 1 on each of the crostini. Garnish with a small sprig of thyme. Serve with cold hard apple cider.

MARCELLA MONDAY: GREEN SALAD WITH GORGONZOLA AND WALNUTS

Ciao'd after (organically) spraying my greens garden because somebody (pointing to you, squirrel) is enjoying the kale and chard a bit too much. 

Gorgonzola and walnuts play beautifully in this classic salad that pairs deliciously with a main course of beef. The salad also serves admirably as a light lunch. In either case, don't forgot the crusty bread. Marcella Hazan's touch manifests itself in the perfectly balanced vinaigrette that dresses the salad. 

Serves 6 to 8

1  to 2 heads butter lettuce, about 1 pound
5 tablespoons extra virgin olive oil*
1 tablespoon red wine vinegar
1 shallot, minced
1/2 teaspoon kosher salt
Freshly ground black pepper
1/4 pound Gorgonzola cheese
1/2 cup coarsely chopped walnut
2 tablespoons whole fresh Italian (flat-leaf) parsley leaves

In a small bowl, whisk the olive oil, vinegar, shallot, salt, and a few grindings of pepper. Add half the Gorgonzola, and mash it well with a fork. 

Add half the walnuts, all the lettuce, and toss thoroughly. Taste and correct the seasoning. 

Transfer to a bowl. Top with the remaining half of the Gorgonzola, cut into small pieces, and the rest of the chopped walnuts. Garnish with the parsley.  Recipe adapted from More Classic Italian Cooking, Marcella Hazan, Alfred A. Knopf, 1978.

*Because the Gorgonzola adds a robust richness, you would do well to use a grassy, green olive oil. I am partial to Lucero Taggiasca olive oil.  It's bold but green (think a bit of spice with artichoke aroma) so it can hold its own with the cheese. Note: this special olive oil does not have broad distribution so chances are you will need to order it online. It's worth the effort for its taste and affordability.