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String Beans a Popping!
Well, the Blue Lake beans have ripened. Maybe I let them go a bit too long, but here they are, in all their green glory, demanding that I cook them.
I thought that dry-sauteeing was just the thing, but a quick Internet search yielded the bad news: Dry Sauteeing is really Deep-Frying followed by an additional sautee with just a bit of oil.
So, a-roasting I will go! As soon as I get up I will turn on the oven and roast up them beans!
The Blintz, the Bletel, and Geopolitics
A blintz is a crepe, called a bletel (Yiddish for leaf or page) that is wrapped securely around a filling which is usually cheese. The rest depends on what part of Eastern Europe your parents came from. My mother’s parents came from Russia, where fillings were a little sweet and bletlech were thick and chewy, and you ate blintzes with powdered sugar.
My father’s parents, on the other hand, came from Hungary, where fillings were sweeter and bletlech were thin and tender. So my mother made blintzes with bletlech that were thin enough to read through (just the headlines) and filling that was just a little sweet. I make thin bletlech, too, and get my recipes from the Internet.
Blintz Filling:
1/2 lb Farmer’s or Hoop Cheese
4 oz cream cheese (if you want)
4 TB maple syrup or honey
Juice of 1/2 lemon
1 egg yolk
Mix well in small bowl. Set aside until bletlech are done.
Bletlech:
4 eggs
1/2 cup water
1/2 cup milk
1 cup flour
1/4 cup sugar
pinch salt
1 TB oil
Mix well in the bowl of a stand mixer. Let stand for a few minutes so bubbles pop. Pour batter into smaller measuring cup. Thin batter in the cup until it is the consistency of heavy cream. The thicker the batter, the thicker the bletlech. (and the inverse)
Lightly oil and heat a 7-inch nonstick pan. Because you will be continually wiping and oiling the pan, fold up a paper towel and dip one corner in oil and keep on a small dish near the stove.
When pan is hot, pour batter onto pan, swirl around, and pour out any batter that has not made a cooked layer back into cup.. Steam will rise off bletel. When top appears dry, loosen edge of bletel with thin spatula, or, if you are lucky, you can shake bletel loose and turn onto plate, bumpy side up. Wipe pan with oily paper towel. Repeat until batter is used up. Burned or torn bletlech are great for snacking.
When all the batter is used up, turn off stove, put pan aside, get the bowl of filling and bring out a cookie sheet lined with freezer paper to freeze the blintzes on. Form blintzes by putting a heaping teaspoonful of filling near the bottom of the bletel, about 2 inches from lower edge where you should have a bulge from where you poured the batter out. Fold lower edge of bletel up to cover filling, and fold both sides in to enclose filling, and roll up blintz to complete. Put on cookie sheet seam side down. Repeat till all filling is used up. Then put cookie sheet in freezer overnight and in the morning you can put the individually frozen blintzes in ziploc bags.
If you don’t freeze blintzes right away, you will probably eat a few of the blintzes raw.
To cook, fry blintzes in oil or butter till filling is heated through and outsides are golden and crisp. Or put raw blintzes in a souffle.
Tagged bletlech, blintzes, farmer cheese
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Blintz Souffle
The blintz souffle, a concoction where a sweet, rich, egg and sour cream batter is poured over a dozen cheese blintzes and baked to a golden puffiness, has been called “gilding the lily,” by my friend Jess. This is understandable. Cheese blintzes are not a diet food, and a surrounding layer of sugar, eggs, and sour cream make them even less so. But the blintz souffle is portable, impressive, and the only way I know to make 12 blintzes serve 12-15 people. If you buy the frozen blintzes in a box at the store (which is actually cheaper than making your own) it is even a quick dish to put together. Leave an hour for baking. Adding mandarin orange sections puts jewels on the gilded lily.
This recipe came to me from Sheryl Klein, who got it from Robyn Stanton, and I added the mandarin orange sections. This makes a lasagna pan and an 8×8 square pan of blintzes, and you need 18 blintzes in all.
Preheat oven to 350 degrees.
Grease a lasagna pan. Arrange 12 defrosted blintzes (your own or store-bought) in it. Grease an 8×8 square pan. Arrange 6 blintzes in that.
In the container of a blender, combine:
3/4 cup butter, melted
4 eggs
3/4 cup sugar
pinch salt
1 tablespoon vanilla extract
1 oz. orange juice concentrate
16 oz. sour cream
and whirl in blender until frothy.
and whirl in blender until frothy.
Around edges of blintzes in lasagna pan, arrange:
3 cans of mandarin orange sections, drained, juice discarded.
and pour 1/2 to 2/3 of the batter around the oranges and blintzes in the lasagna pan.
Pour the remaining batter over the 6 blintzes in the smaller pan. Forget about the mandarin oranges, you’ve worked enough for one day.
Bake the souffles in the oven for 40 minutes or until puffy and golden. These freeze very well, with wax paper over the tops of the souffles and wrapped in foil, but allow 45 minutes for re-heating.
Tagged blintzes, buffets, mandarin oranges, Shavuot, souffles
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Passover Apple Cake
I’ve been making this cake for a long time. My guests first reaction was “It is good enough to make during the year.” I never do make it during the year, though. Some things need to be saved for Passover. Then my guests, who are almost all the same from year to year, started asking me weeks in advance of Pesach whether I’d be making the apple cake for the Seder. I took the hint, and now I make it every year.
This year I made some refinements to the recipe that turned out especially well, and another guest begged me for the recipe, so she could bake it for her fiance. Well. Here it is. The cake has a batter that goes under and around the apples and a streusel topping that goes over the apples. It gets its lightness from beaten eggs, so don’t rush the mixing process, and use a stand mixer for best results. The original recipe is from “The Complete Passover Cookbook” by Frances R. AvRutick, Jonathan David publishers, copyright 1981.
Cake:
3 eggs
3/4 cup sugar
1/3 cup oil
3/4 cup cake meal
Zest of one Meyer lemon-if you don’t have a Meyer lemon, skip the zest
5 apples, peeled, cored and sliced–Granny Smith is best, tossed with lemon juice to keep from browning.
Topping-here is an approximate recipe. I sort of worked by feel, rubbing the margarine, brown sugar, and matza meal together by hand. The topping should have the texture of coarse corn meal. If it is too dry, well, add a bit of margarine.
Rub together in small bowl, then set aside:
1/4 cup (1/2 stick) margarine
1/2 cup matza meal
1/2 cup brown sugar
In a medium-size mixing bowl,beat the eggs with the sugar and oil until the mixture is light. Add the cake meal and mix well. I use a stand mixer.
Pour half the mixture into a lightly greased 8 or 9-inch square baking pan. Distribute half of the apples over the batter. Pour the remaining batter over the apples and cover with the remaining apples. Combine the topping ingredients in a small bowl; sprinkle over the apples. Bake in a preheated 350 degree oven for approximately 1 1/2 hours. Serves 8 or 9.
Double the recipe and you will have a 9×13 inch cake. I always do. The cake freezes well, and is lovely reheated and served warm.
Tagged apple cake, Passover cake, streusel
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Turkey Meatloafie Recipe Revealed!
Here is the recipe for my wildly popular individual meat loaves, from last year’s Seder menu. John is John Cronin, who is my neice’s fiance, a great chef, and a neat freak. That’s why he needed all the paper towels. Niomy is a woman who helped me serve that year.
Meatball Ingredients:
3 large onions
1 envelope Onion Soup Mix
3 cups water
1/2 cup farfel and 1/2 cup matza meal
4 egg whites
4 lbs. ground turkey
Tomato Glaze Ingredients:
1 medium can tomato Paste
1/4 cup brown sugar (?)
2 tsps. Dry Mustard Powder
Some water, maybe, to thin just enough to spread.
Start with 3 large onions. John cut them up into fine
dice and sauteed them until limp, then golden. He did
them in two batches. Put into large bowl.
While John is doing that,
Boil 3 cups of water, add one envelope Mishpaha onion
soup mix.
Add one-halp cup matza farfel and one half cup matza
meal into soup mix, combine well and let cool while
John is still chopping and sauteeing.
When onions are done, add cooled farfel and matzo meal
to bowl with onions, and also 4 pounds of ground
turkey, and half a carton of egg whites. Let John
combine. Give him free access to paper towels.
Form into ‘meat loafies,’ about 1/4 pound each, and
put onto disposable baking pans, 5 to a pan. There
were 15 loafies last night. Observe that loafies are
not smooth like matza balls, they are kind of rough in
texture. Worry briefly about that, then ignore it.
Make glaze: In small mixing bowl, combine 1 medium can
tomato paste, not the little can but the next size up,
1/4 cup (maybe) brown sugar, about 2 tsp (or 1?) dry
mustard. Adjust to taste. Spread with spatula on
meat loafies.
Cover pans with foil, and refrigerate for 3 hours
until 1.5 hours until serving time.
Bake in 350 oven.
Keep loosely covered. and juices will run into baking
pans. Place loafies on serving platter and strain
juice gravy boats(Niomy did that). Wonder where your
wonderful Pesach gravy boats with the fat straining
spouts have gotten to, and resolve to do Internet
search to replace them.
Love,
Preeva
Eating at a Shiva
One thing about being in Brooklyn, you can great Kosher take-out. Really the food I’ve been fed at the shiva for Edie Zaetz has been first-rate. Delicious, kosher or not
What to Serve with Latkes Redux
Tomorrow I make latkes again. This time, I will make baked chicken to go with it, and steam some broccoli, and make leafy veggie stew without artichokes, because my son does not like artichokes, and see how that turns out. I’ll make a salad, too.