Sometimes the things we make come about because of what we happen to have in the house. This came together because we had tomatoes and arugula and shrimp on hand and they were calling out to be combined. I originally made this as a pasta sauce, but by doubling or tripling the shrimp you could could have a quick and tasty shrimp dish.
1 medium tomato
3 slices of roasted tomato
A handful or two of arugula leaves, torn in half
8-10 large cooked shrimp, halved or quartered
1 garlic clove
2 tablespoons of butter
salt and pepper
pasta (optional)
If using, cook the pasta.
Chop everything in advance as it all comes together quickly. Melt butter in a skillet. Add garlic and cook for one minute over medium heat. Don't let it brown. Add chopped tomatoes, chopped roasted tomatoes and arugula. Season generously with salt and pepper. Heat until the tomatoes begin to release their juices. Turn off stove and add cooked shrimp. Toss so the shrimp gets heated and serve, either over pasta or on its own.
Showing posts with label arugula. Show all posts
Showing posts with label arugula. Show all posts
Friday, September 02, 2016
Monday, January 05, 2015
favorite steak salad
This is our favorite steak salad - we eat it nearly once a week.
1 skirt steak
1 teaspoon olive oil
1/4 cup balsamic vinegar
1/4 cup finely chopped shallots
1/2 teaspoon (packed) dark brown sugar
4 cups (lightly packed) arugula
goat cheese
dried cranberries
Sprinkle steak generously with salt and pepper or steak seasoning. Heat oil in cast iron skillet over high heat. Add steak; cook to desired doneness, about 4 minutes per side for medium-rare. Transfer to plate. Add vinegar, shallots, and sugar to skillet; boil until reduced to glaze, stirring constantly, about 1 minute. Divide arugula, goat cheese and cranberries between 2 plates. Slice steak; place atop arugula. Drizzle lightly with glaze.
1 skirt steak
1 teaspoon olive oil
1/4 cup balsamic vinegar
1/4 cup finely chopped shallots
1/2 teaspoon (packed) dark brown sugar
4 cups (lightly packed) arugula
goat cheese
dried cranberries
Sprinkle steak generously with salt and pepper or steak seasoning. Heat oil in cast iron skillet over high heat. Add steak; cook to desired doneness, about 4 minutes per side for medium-rare. Transfer to plate. Add vinegar, shallots, and sugar to skillet; boil until reduced to glaze, stirring constantly, about 1 minute. Divide arugula, goat cheese and cranberries between 2 plates. Slice steak; place atop arugula. Drizzle lightly with glaze.
Adapted from Epicurious.com
Monday, July 07, 2014
mi csa su csa: week 2
The farm freshness continues in week 2 with:
carrots
spinach
scallions
beets
cucumbers
broccoli
zucchini
arugula
Since I didn't get to the arugula last week I thought I'd start there first with a steak salad. Here's the original recipe, though it's just as good when you just pan fry the steak, reduce some balsamic and brown sugar in the pan and sprinkle in whatever cheese you've got. And this was definitely the best arugula I've ever had.
I roasted the broccoli the first night we got it, just to make sure it didn't go bad. Mid-week we defrosted some bone-in pork chops from the farm and used our steak method to cook them: a hot cast-iron pan, oiled with bacon fat and salt and peppered chops, 3 minutes a side and 6 minutes in a 400 degree oven. We then used the cast iron pan to cook down the spinach using the drippings and half a lemon to flavor the spinach. We also reheated the broccoli in the pan as the spinach finished cooking. It was all delicious!
With so much ground beef and ground pork from the farm a meatloaf seemed in order. We used our usual meatloaf recipe, though we exchanged the usual dried italian herbs with fresh parsley, oregano, thyme and basil (the rest is chopped onion, parmesan cheese, ketchup, mustard, tabasco steak sauce, eggs, salt, pepper and garlic powder). We also roasted slices of this week's zucchini and last week's peas with a little olive oil, salt and pepper for half the duration while the meatloaf cooked for 60 minutes at 400 degrees. It was the best meatloaf we've ever made.
For lunch we grilled up some kielbasa and hot dogs along with the scallions, which is my favorite scallion preparation.
We had a ton of leftover meatloaf, so we ate the leftovers with roasted carrots, golden beets and some mushrooms. We topped the mushrooms with salt and pepper, the carrots with thyme and the beets with dill - all very tasty, and a good way to use up nearly all of the rest of the vegetables.
carrots
spinach
scallions
beets
cucumbers
broccoli
zucchini
arugula
Since I didn't get to the arugula last week I thought I'd start there first with a steak salad. Here's the original recipe, though it's just as good when you just pan fry the steak, reduce some balsamic and brown sugar in the pan and sprinkle in whatever cheese you've got. And this was definitely the best arugula I've ever had.
I roasted the broccoli the first night we got it, just to make sure it didn't go bad. Mid-week we defrosted some bone-in pork chops from the farm and used our steak method to cook them: a hot cast-iron pan, oiled with bacon fat and salt and peppered chops, 3 minutes a side and 6 minutes in a 400 degree oven. We then used the cast iron pan to cook down the spinach using the drippings and half a lemon to flavor the spinach. We also reheated the broccoli in the pan as the spinach finished cooking. It was all delicious!
With so much ground beef and ground pork from the farm a meatloaf seemed in order. We used our usual meatloaf recipe, though we exchanged the usual dried italian herbs with fresh parsley, oregano, thyme and basil (the rest is chopped onion, parmesan cheese, ketchup, mustard, tabasco steak sauce, eggs, salt, pepper and garlic powder). We also roasted slices of this week's zucchini and last week's peas with a little olive oil, salt and pepper for half the duration while the meatloaf cooked for 60 minutes at 400 degrees. It was the best meatloaf we've ever made.
For lunch we grilled up some kielbasa and hot dogs along with the scallions, which is my favorite scallion preparation.
We had a ton of leftover meatloaf, so we ate the leftovers with roasted carrots, golden beets and some mushrooms. We topped the mushrooms with salt and pepper, the carrots with thyme and the beets with dill - all very tasty, and a good way to use up nearly all of the rest of the vegetables.
Monday, June 30, 2014
mi csa su csa: week 1
We're doing both a meat CSA and a veggie CSA this year, both for the first time. The meat CSA is year round and we're on month 2, but the veggies just started. Since we're getting vegetables we don't usually eat, I thought I'd keep a record of what we've created with them.
Week 1:
scapes
broccoli
zucchini
turnips
arugula
red leaf lettuce
peas
First up: broccoli, a couple scapes and mushrooms pan fried with leftover chicken and homemade chicken broth.
I ate most of the lettuce simply dressed with a tangerine dressing—though I didn't get through all of it.
The zucchini made up the meat of a delicious Persian Kuku Kadoo recipe from Saveur, which we served with roasted turnips, scapes and carrots we seasoned with fresh dill from our herb garden.
The arugula didn't make it, but the peas look like they'll still be good enough to eat in week 2.
Week 1:
scapes
broccoli
zucchini
turnips
arugula
red leaf lettuce
peas
First up: broccoli, a couple scapes and mushrooms pan fried with leftover chicken and homemade chicken broth.
I ate most of the lettuce simply dressed with a tangerine dressing—though I didn't get through all of it.
The zucchini made up the meat of a delicious Persian Kuku Kadoo recipe from Saveur, which we served with roasted turnips, scapes and carrots we seasoned with fresh dill from our herb garden.
The arugula didn't make it, but the peas look like they'll still be good enough to eat in week 2.
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