Vegetarian Black Bean Chili and Chili-Lime Corn on the Cob (with Bernard)

I have a confession to make.  I’ve been keeping something from you.  I haven’t told you about Bernard.  Bernard has been living with me for a few months now.  He is exceedingly attractive, but is also highly adaptable and a very hard worker.  He must be tenderly cared for, but is able to withstand very heavy duty.  We’ve enjoyed each others’ company immensely.  We’ve been doing lots of cooking together.  Hubby has learned to tolerate Bernard, but he’s not as enamored with him as I am.  I, for instance, am the only person allowed to “bathe” Bernard.  Bernard and I met at a charming little shop called Sur la Table.  A customer-service glitch caused me to be offered a one-time 25% off discount, which enabled Bernard to be able to come home with me.  We have joyfully welcomed him into our home and are eager to tackle many future projects with him.

So, after I brought Bernard home, the first thing that we tackled together was this Black Bean Chili.  This was one of my mother’s recipes and I have NO IDEA where it came from, so please forgive my potential plagiarism.

Vegetarian Black Bean Chili

2 cups black beans, soaked in water overnight and then drained

1 bay leaf

4 teaspoons cumin seeds

4 teaspoons paprika

4 teaspoons dried oregano

1/2 teaspoon cayenne pepper

2 or 2 teaspoons chili powder (I add more!)

3 Tbsp canola oil

3 medium-sized white onions, diced

1/2 teaspoon salt

4 garlic cloves, chopped or pressed

1 Tbsp vinegar (balsamic is great, but plain white will do)

1 1/2 pounds ripe or canned tomatoes, drained and chopped (save the juice)

4 Tbsp chopped fresh cilantro

1 or 2 teaspoons chopped chipotle chili

Cover beans with fresh water in a very large pot and bring to a boil with the bay leaf.  Lower heat and simmer.  Heat a medium-sized heavy skillet.  Add cumin seeds and saute until toasted.  Add oregano, stirring frequently.  Remove from heat, then add paprika and cayenne.  Stir, remove from pan and grind to a coarse powder in a (spice-dedicated) spice or coffee mill (or with a mortar and pestle.)  Heat oil in a large skillet and saute the onions until softened and translucent  Add the garlic, salt, ground herbs and spices and chili powder and cook for 5 minutes.  Add the tomatoes, juice and 1 teaspoon of the chipotle.  Simmer for 15 minutes.  Add the mixture to the beans and add water, if necessary, to cover beans with liquid by one inch.  Cook until beans have softened to your desired consistency (about one hour?)  Stir in more chipotle (if desired,) vinegar and cilantro.  Serve topped with cheese or sour cream and more chopped cilantro.

Chili-Lime Corn on the Cob recipe here.

Bonus chipotle tip:

Every recipe I’ve ever had that has called for chipotles has called for one or maybe two, yet there are probably a dozen of them in the average can (plus all of that wonderful adobo sauce!)  How to solve this issue?  After you open a can, pull the remaining chipotles out of the can gently with a fork and place them an inch or two apart on a wax paper-lined baking sheet and freeze them.  I dollop the remaining sauce from the can onto the top of each chipotle before freezing, too, so each one will have plenty of that saucy goodness on it.  When the chipotles have frozen solid (overnight?,) gently peel them off the waxed paper and place them in a ziploc bag and freeze them until needed.  You can more easily pull them out, on at a time, in the future that way.

Steak au Poivre with Frites and Sauteed Spinach

Recipe here.

Hubby and I had a very unusual week a few weeks ago when both kids were at different sleep-away camps at the same time, so we had the house to ourselves for a whole week.  I decided that we needed to have something that we normally wouldn’t eat when the kids were around.  I’d had my eye on this recipe for a while, so it seemed to fit the bill.  It was quite tasty, although VERY peppery and spicy.

We made the leftovers (steak, potatoes AND spinach, with the remaining pepper cream sauce) into a frittata the next morning for breakfast.  OUTSTANDING.

Grilled Salmon with Black Beans and Piment d’Espelette Mayonnaise and Spring Vegetable Quinoa Pilaf

Salmon with beans recipe here.  Pilaf recipe here.

This was VERY tasty.  The hardest and most time-consuming part was all of the chopping (and beet-cooking) that was required for the pilaf, but it was well worth the effort.

Vegetarian Girl just skipped the salmon and made a healthy meal out of the quinoa (prepared with veggie stock instead of chicken broth) and beans.

If you’re not planning to make sandwiches from the leftover salmon, then I would prepare half the amount of salmon and the mayo mixture.

Jerk-Rubbed Catfish with Spicy Cilantro Slaw

Recipe (from March 2010 Cooking Light) here.

This was quick, fast, easy and tasty.  I use my own Jerk Seasoning blend (well, Jeff Blank’s, really.)  I served this with some black beans on the side.  For Vegetarian Girl, we rubbed a thin slice of firm tofu with the same seasoning and grilled it, which she said was quite tasty.

Giada’s Roman-style Chicken and Smoked Mozzarella and Sun-Dried Tomato Cigars

Yum yum yum.  Chicken recipe here.  Salad/Cigar recipe here.

I adapted the chicken recipe quite a bit, because it was a last-minute decision to make it and I didn’t have the exact right ingredients on hand, but the basic gist was still the same…browned, then simmered with tomatoes and peppers.  Caramelized/roasted cauliflower on the side.

The salad and cigars were fantastic.  The smokey, gooey cheese (a bit hard to find, but worth effort) and the sweet, chewy tomatoes were delicious together.  The salad (with cigars) is hearty enough to be a main dish, but since we were using it as a side, I only put half a cigar on each portion.  Also, for the dressing, I didn’t want to open a bottle of champagne just to make it, so I made a vinaigrette with champagne vinegar, instead.  Delicious.

Roasted Vegetable Couscous with Chickpeas and Onion-Pine Nut Topping

From January 2009 Cooking Light.  Recipe here.

Another Girl-friendly vegetarian meal.  I clipped this one out of Cooking Light magazine about a year ago and the kids plucked it from my recipes files at last week’s “family meeting/menu planning session.”  I was worried that they were just tired and eager to get the meeting over with and weren’t being too careful about their choices.  I was worried that I would spend an hour cooking it and they wouldn’t like it.  Hubby doesn’t like raisins.  Boy isn’t wild about large amounts of onins and Girl isn’t a fan of too-exotic spices.  But…my fears were unfounded.  They all liked this and it also proved to be much quicker and easier than the recipe, at first glance, would seem.  After cooking this, I read some of the reviews of the recipe on Cooking Light’s website (Duh!  I should be doing that FIRST, right?) and I agree with most of what’s written there, namely:

Don’t skip the onion topping.  In fact, consider making extra.  It adds a TON of flavor.

Add a bit more ras el hanout spice to the veggies before roasting. (FYI – if you have a hard time finding Ras el Hanout, try CostPlus World Market.  It is possible to make your own, but most recipes call for some pretty exotic ingredients that you’re not likely to use for anything else…best, in my opinion, to buy it, if possible.)

I highly recommend this recipe and I suspect that it’s one that will hold its own as leftovers (probably will even freeze well, although I’m going to test that theory, as I made a larger-than-called-for batch and we have quite a bit left over.)

Hubby and I will be happily devouring some of the leftovers for lunch tomorrow.

Coriander-Crusted Pork Tenderloin, Sweet and Spicy Roasted Vegetables, Brown Rice with Walnuts and Golden Raisins

Coriander-Crusted Pork Tenderloin recipe link

Sweet and Spicy Roasted Vegetables recipe link

Brown Rice with Walnuts and Golden Raisins recipe link

Wow!  This whole menu is from Dec’09/Jan’10 Fine Cooking magazine and it was OUTSTANDING.  The kids loved the veggies and rice and the pork was really amazing.  It was definitely the standout of the meal.  The crust on the outside was a TINY bit too spicy for Boy, but he just cut the edges off and ate the “middle.”  Hubby and I loved the crusty edges.  Yum.

Fine Cooking’s website can be a bit persnickety, as it is a mostly-subscription site, but try these links and see what happens.  If all else fails, you can try googling the recipe name and see if someone else (who is less afraid of copyright attorneys than I am) has typed in it.

Oh, also?  This meal was really quick, easy and well thought-out.  The fact that the veggies and pork cook at the same temp was really helpful.  It’s a very simply executed meal, in terms of juggling all three dishes easily at the same time.

(Vegetarian Girl just ate the rice and veggies.)

Middle Eastern-Style Flank Steak and Orecchiette with Brussels Sprouts, Gorgonzola, and Brown-Butter Pecans

This dinner tasted a lot better than my stinky photo makes it look.  I overcooked the steak a little bit and I undercooked the brussels sprouts a little bit, but both dishes tasted WONDERFUL.  The pasta was very rich and cheesy and creamy and the steak had just enough spice on it.  Girl, of course, only ate the pasta, and the meat was a tiny bit too spicy for Boy, but he still ate it enthusiastically.  The leftovers would be great tucked into a pita with some tzatziki and lettuce.

I highly recommend d’Arenberg Stump Jump Shiraz with this.  There’s a straight shiraz and there’s a shiraz-mourvedre-grenache blend.  They’re both good, but the straight shiraz is better and the 2008 is better than the 2007, but even the 2007 blend is still pretty good.

These recipes are, again, from Fine Cooking’s website, but I’m including the links…just in case.

Orecchiette recipe here.

Flank steak recipe here.

Curried Chickpea and Summer Vegetable Stew with Quick Tandoori Chicken Thighs

Absolutely wonderful.  We all loved this.  Girl had her stew, obviously, sans chicken.

Flavorful and spicy, but not too hot.  Savory and tangy.  The chicken was moist and meaty. Not too difficult or time-consuming.

Fine Cooking’s website is subscription-only, but I’ve included the recipe links, anyway, because sometimes they will let you look at certain recipes for free or they’ll let you look at two or three before they shut you out and ask you to sign up for a membership.  Good luck; I hope you can see them!  In general, I don’t like paying extra for the website membership if I already subscribe to the magazine, but for Fine Cooking, it’s worth it.

Stew recipe here and chicken recipe here.