I Am Slowly Going Crazy, 123456 Switch! (Slow-Cooker Bolognese)

Slow-Cooker Bolognese

If the first week is any indication, 2013 will be the year of the slow-cooker.

Yes, I just got a slow-cooker for Xmas. I have used it nearly every day since I’ve been home (and, when you take leftovers into consideration, have likely eaten slowly cooked food every single day).

It’s a totally different way of cooking, and not quite in the way I expected. I’m going to have to get used to my new little friend, and figure out the quirks.

I haven’t quite figured out how to cook dried beans in the slow-cooker. I’ve tried a few times, and only once have the beans come out perfectly tender. Some reading has led me to believe that it might be the inclusion of something acidic (in this case, tomatoes) that prevents the beans from softening properly. I’m going to test this theory, and see what happens.

I’ve come to appreciate flipping my day, getting all of the dinner prep and cleanup out of the way early, so we can just enjoy dinner at dinnertime. This is a luxury that comes with vacation (or weekend), so I’ll see whether I can translate it to the weekday.

Expect more slow-cooker recipes from me in 2013! I’ll be sure to let you know about my failures, and what I did to make it work in the end.

Slow-Cooker Bolognese

My first slow-cooker recipe is not really a work day dish, as it takes quite a bit of prep and makes a lot of dishes. I’ve never made a bolognese sauce before – in fact, I don’t remember ever buying ground beef before – and thought it would be a nice warming dish on a cold day. Enjoy!

Slow-Cooker Bolognese Sauce

Source: this recipe, adapted for the slow-cooker.

4-6 servings

Ingredients:

  • 2 Tablespoons extra-virgin olive oil
  • 1 1/2 cups finely chopped onion
  • 1 cup finely chopped celery stalks
  • 1 cup finely chopped, peeled carrot
  • 3 oz. thinly sliced pancetta, finely chopped (full disclosure: I used regular strip bacon here)
  • 1 – 2 lbs. lean ground beef
  • Kosher salt and freshly ground black pepper
  • 1/2 cup dry red wine
  • 1 cup whole milk
  • 5 Tablespoons tomato paste
  • 2 cups beef or chicken stock, divided
  • 250g tagliatelle or fettuccine
  • grated Parmigiano-Reggiano (for serving)

Preparation:

  1. Heat the olive oil in a heavy pot over medium-high heat. Add the onion, celery, and carrot and cook until the onion is translucent and all the vegetables have softened.
  2. Add the pancetta, and sauté for a few minutes to release some of the fat into the onion mixture.
  3. Add the beef, breaking it apart with your spoon and cooking until it is just browned. Season with salt, and pepper.
  4. Add the wine to deglaze the pan, scraping up the bits that are stuck to the pan and mixing them in. Stir in the milk and simmer until the milk has reduced completely and very little liquid remains, about 10 minutes.
  5. Stir in the tomato paste, and allow to cook for a few more minutes.
  6. Transfer the mixture to the slow cooker. Add the cup of canned tomatoes and 2 cups of the stock. Cover and cook on HIGH for 6 hours or LOW for 8 hours.
  7. In the last half hour of cooking, remove the lid to allow any excess liquid to evaporate and reduce the sauce to a thick gravy consistency.
  8. Gently toss sauce with al dente cooked pasta, top with parmesan and serve. I also added peperoncini flakes – and it was great!

Fettuccine with Brussels Sprouts, Cranberries, and Caramelized Onions

Brussels Sprouts Pasta

I used to hate Brussels sprouts. Nothing against the Belgians, but I always found these little cabbages to be mushy and bitter. Then I met J, and realized I had better find a way to like them.
Continue reading Fettuccine with Brussels Sprouts, Cranberries, and Caramelized Onions

Daring Steph’s Noodly Hands

Handmade Egg Fettuccine - final dish

A while back, I was asked to host the July challenge for the Daring Kitchen. It was hard to decide what kind of challenge to propose to the group, but in the end I chose something that has been a favourite of mine for my whole life – noodles.

I have always been a bit of a noodle fiend, growing up with Italian and German noodles and venturing into other cultures’ versions of “noodle” as an adult. The challenge I proposed was to make noodles from scratch – without the use of motorized equipment –  and pair with an appropriate accompaniment (sauce, or whatever would go best). As an added bonus, I challenged the group to look into their own cultural backgrounds for recipes that were “noodly” (being VERY loose with the term).

Here is one of the recipes I offered… Egg Fettuccine with Aglio, Olio, Peperoncino e Basilico.

Continue reading Daring Steph’s Noodly Hands

Great Northern Ramp Pasta

Great Northern Ramp Pasta

Good day, eh, and welcome to the Great White North. I’m Bob, and this is my brother Doug.

Our topic today, is, like, Great Northern beans and some great wild leeks, or ramps.

Don’t be a total hoser and take off without reading the rest of the post! (I promise I’ll stop it now…)
Continue reading Great Northern Ramp Pasta

Macaroni Phoney

Macaroni & Cheese Fail

Baloney!

This is another word that rhymes with macaroni, and expresses my disappointment with my first attempt at homemade macaroni and cheese.

I kinda thought this would be an easy one. I mean, who can’t make macaroni and cheese? If you can make it with bizarre ingredients from a box, you should be able to make it amazing from scratch. That wasn’t quite what happened.

Continue reading Macaroni Phoney

Pasta with Smoked Sausage, Fennel and Arugula

Pasta with Smoked Sausage, Fennel and Arugula

This dish was inspired by the combination of fennel and smokey, spicy sausage.

There’s something about the sweet licorice taste of the fennel, mixed with the salty, spicy, smokey, greasiness of the sausage.

Maybe I should have left out the greasiness part.

Continue reading Pasta with Smoked Sausage, Fennel and Arugula

Red Fife Pasta with Shrimp and Wine Sauce

Red Fife Pasta, with Shrimp and Wine Sauce
Nice shrimps!

I love it when you find a new ingredient, and it inspires the whole meal. That happened this past weekend, after buying some Red Fife pasta at the St. Lawrence market.

The funny thing is that I wasn’t the one inspired – it was J who started searching for the perfect recipe!

Continue reading Red Fife Pasta with Shrimp and Wine Sauce

Family Spätzle

Spätzle, with butter and bread crumbs

I carefully reviewed the instructions…

“…stir until fairly smooth – consistency similar to puppy poop…”

Puppy poop? Sadly, I tried to envision what that could mean, having never closely examined it before. I asked J if puppy poop was like how people refer to baby poop.

This was going to be an interesting recipe.

I grew up eating spätzle, prepared by my Oma and Opa and by my dad. I never really thought about it, I knew it was a German dish and just accepted that it was what it was. It wasn’t until I started thinking about recipes that I thought to look up spätzle, and I found that there are many regional variations on the dish. The way my family makes it seems to be the less popular version, but it always reminds me of my childhood.

Every time I’ve gotten spätzle at a restaurant, it looked very different to the version I was used to. It was more of a squiggly chubby noodle shape, instead of the near-dumpling shape I always enjoyed. This page on the German Food Guide offers some insight to the dish, some of the different ways people shape it, some different recipes, and other neat facts about how it’s made. There’s even a way to make it with beer! (I might need to try that next)

We usually had it topped with a simple butter and breadcrumb sauce, but my dad would sometimes experiment with other kinds of sauces or other ingredients in the batter. I vaguely remember having carrot spätzle at least once…

Spätzle batter
Spätzle batter - checking consistency

Back to the puppy poop (just when you got it out of your head)… I wanted to post a family recipe, rather than finding inspiration on other sites or in cookbooks. I emailed my dad for the recipe, knowing that he didn’t have it written down. He wrote it the way he thinks, and as I read it I could picture him mixing together the ingredients the way he’s done since I was a kid. And I laughed out loud at the comparison of the batter consistency to puppy poop.

It was perfect.

Spätzle, inside
This style of Spätzle can be pretty dense inside, almost like a dumpling.

Recipe after the jump!

I may have ruined the effect by putting some structure to it, but I thought it might be easier to follow with some measurements and instructions.

Continue reading Family Spätzle