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Cocktail

The Flannel Shirt

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The Flannel Shirt

one and a half slices cocktail recipe scotch whisky fall

Hot take (updated): You can make this drink with scotch (The Original), bourbon (The Commoner), or cognac (The Après). It’s good all three ways. The cognac version may just be my new fav – perfect for Christmas and after Thanksgiving dinner.

This is Fall epitomized in cocktail form. From scotch whiskey to allspice dram, you could not possibly get cozier. All the other flavors cut the scotch quite nicely so this isn’t a punch-in-the-stomach cocktail. And it was the Allstar at our Inaugural Saturday Supper last weekend. Many thanks to a good friend who rocked the cocktail bar, as always. This gives #fallvibes and really brings the season. Happy Spooky Month!

🎃🦇👻

what you need

1 1/2 oz Scotch of choice

1 1/2 oz Apple Cider

1/2 oz Averna Amaro

1/4 oz Lemon Juice

1 teaspoon Simple Syrup (or a demerara sugar cube)

1 healthy teaspoon Allspice Dram

2 dashes Angostura Bitters

how to make it

Place all ingredients in a cocktail shaker and shake vigorously with ice. 

(if using a sugar cube, you will need to muddle this so it mixes with the other ingredients)

Strain over a large ice cube and garnish with an orange peel. #fallvibes

Categories
Cocktail

Butterbeer (iced)

one and a half slices local simple recipes food

Chilled, Foamy Butterbeer

one and a half slices harry potter recipe butterbeer hogwarts winter grog

Whether you like your butterbeer hot, iced, boozy, or clean, I’ve finally got the recipe for you. Personally, I see no way to drink it other than hot and boozy.

#youreawizardharry

🪄

what you need

1 bottle of cream soda [My brand of choice is Virgil’s Vanilla Cream]

2 oz butterscotch liquor chilled [My brand of choice is Dr. McGillicuddy’s which is, admittedly, quite difficult to find but quite worth the effort of finding it]

*note the use of “liquor” over “schnapps”

1/3 cup whipping cream

1 tablespoon sugar

a dash of cinnamon

freshly ground nutmeg for topping

1/2 tablespoon lemon zest

(optional) 2 oz cognac (or dark rum in a pinch)

how to make it

(makes 2 servings)

Whip the cream with the sugar into soft peaks. Just before it comes together, add the cinnamon to incorporate. A very soft whip works best as it allows the cream to infuse the cocktail more readily.

Add the cognac, lemon zest, and butterscotch liquor to a cocktail shaker with ample ice and shake vigorously.

Strain the mixture into two tall, preferably frosted glasses. Add a few ice cubes and pour the cream soda on top. 

Top with two dollops of the softly whipped cream and grate some fresh nutmeg lightly on top. 

Enjoy immediately, preferably while watching Harry Potter or playing Hogwarts Legacy.  

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Categories
Cocktail

Ginger Peach Smash

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Ginger Peach Smash

one and a half slices recipe peach summer fall cocktail vibe

Okay, one more to round out summer. A simple segue from summer to fall with some #datenightvibes and fresh peaches. What could be better than a tart, tangy, spicy fresh cocktail to welcome the fall leaves? This is the perfect start to Summer Sausage Orzo or perhaps a heartier Pork and Apples as a main. 

what you need

1oz brown sugar or peach simple syrup

*the peach simple syrup can be made as in the Burnt Peach Old Fashioned recipe. Otherwise, simple syrup is equal parts water and sugar (1 cup) simmered stovetop for ~20 minutes until the water reduces by half.

several chunks of fresh, ripe peach (or the leftover peach chunks from making the simple syrup)

3oz bourbon of choice

4 large mint leaves

Ginger Beer (I use Maine Root – it is pretty spicy)

how to make it

Gently muddle the peach chunks, simple syrup, and mint together in a cocktail shaker. 

Add some ice and the bourbon, and shake well. 

Strain into a rocks glass over one large ice cube and top with your desired amount of ginger beer. 

Add a peach slice or a sprig of fresh mint for garnish.  

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Peach Cobbler

Cobbler is one of those things you can make on any weeknight with any fruit in about 20 minutes (plus 1 hour of cooking time). Top it with some vanilla bean gelato and serve it

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one and a half slices summer and fall peaches simple dessert recipe

Crisped Peaches

Quite possibly the easiest, most summery, and healthiest dessert! If you just don’t have the energy for my easy stone fruit skillet cobbler but still need something sweet to make after a summery date night

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Cashew Chicken Noodle

This is a great sweet and spicy weeknight meal, made in one pot with interesting fruity flavors and cashews! Pair with your favorite rice noodle (I like vermicelli) and sprinkle with Thai basil for full

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Peach Caprese

This is a continuation of my summer eats glorified snack dinners (see Watermelon Feta Salad). For when the summer months take hold, the cicadas ring true, and the humidity is as thick and sticky as

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skillet berry fruit cobbler easy oneandahalfslices

Flaky Cobbler

We find ourselves mid-way through summer with a plethora of beautiful fruits like blueberries, blackberries, peaches, and plums. The stone fruits – peaches, nectarines, apricots, and plums – are delicate fruits with high water content

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Categories
Cocktail

Butterbeer (hot)

one and a half slices local simple recipes food

Frothy, Hot Butterbeer

Whether you like your butterbeer hot, iced, boozy, or clean, I’ve finally got the recipe for you. Personally, I see no way to drink it other than hot and boozy.

#youreawizardharry

🪄

what you need

1 bottle of cream soda [My brand of choice is Virgil’s Vanilla Cream]

2 oz butterscotch liquor at room temperature [My brand of choice is Dr. McGillicuddy’s which is, admittedly, quite difficult to find but quite worth the effort of finding it]

*note the use of “liquor” over “schnapps”

1/3 cup whipping cream

1 tablespoon sugar

a dash of cinnamon

freshly ground nutmeg for topping

1/2 tablespoon lemon zest

(optional) 2 oz cognac (or dark rum in a pinch)

how to make it

(makes 2 servings)

Whip the cream with the sugar into soft peaks. Just before it comes together, add the cinnamon to incorporate. A very soft whip works best as it allows the cream to infuse the cocktail more readily.

In a small saucepan, heat the cognac and butterscotch liquor over high heat until very hot (but not boiling). Once steaming, add the bottle of cream soda along with the lemon zest. You want to leave the mixture on high heat for no more than 1 minute before killing the heat and letting the residual heat from the pot heat the liquid. 

Once warm, strain through a mesh strainer into two small mugs. Top with two dollops of the softly whipped cream and grate some fresh nutmeg lightly on top. 

Enjoy immediately, preferably while watching Harry Potter or playing Hogwarts Legacy.  

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Categories
Omni

Butternut Pasta

one and a half slices local simple recipes food

Butternut & Sausage Pasta

one and a half slices butternut squash fall pasta recipe healthy agriculture

this one was quick and dirty (and, yes, internet-inspired). but! I had a brilliant and enthusiastic ginger accomplice. and she was determined to put this butternut squash to creative use (not pictured: the illustrious butternut squash in its original form). we chopped and roasted, sauteed and blended, and created this hearty, super sweet Fall fav. cheers, you guys. we have officially entered spooky season.

🦇💀🎃

what you need

1 small-medium sized butternut squash, chopped into ~2 inch squares

1 onion, quartered

3 cloves of garlic, peeled

3 tablespoons olive oil

1 tablespoon dried rosemary

salt, to taste

1/4 cup water

1 pound loose, mild sausage (Whole Foods’ bulk sage sausage is a great choice)

1/2-1 pound pasta noodles of choice (we used tagliatelle for lacking farfalle, paccheri, or campanelle, all of which would have likely been better) 

8-10 fresh sage leaves 

2 tablespoons salted butter 

1 pinch ground nutmeg

1/2 cup heavy cream or half and half 

1/2-3/4 cup parmesan cheese

how to make it

Method: stovetop

Utensil: blender

Preheat oven to 400. Place butternut squash squares, onion, and garlic on a baking sheet, drizzle with olive oil, sprinkle with rosemary, and roast until cooked through, ~15 minutes. 

While the veg is roasting, roll the loose sausage into small, hastily-formed meatballs, and brown them in a saucepan until cooked through. Remove and set aside on a plate.

Cook the pasta until al dente.

Transfer the roasted veg to a blender with about 1/2 cup of water and some salt. Blend thoroughly, adding water until very smooth. 

To the original sausage saucepan, add 2 tablespoons of butter and fry the fresh sage leaves over medium heat for ~1-2 minutes. Add the blended veg to the saucepan and stir until combined and bubbling. Add the sausage. Then add the cream. Stir and heat completely (the mixture will be very thick and will pop all over the place if you do not heat it slowly). Add the pasta along with several tablespoons of pasta water to make the sauce silky. Add in some grated parmesan cheese an give it all a good mix.

Plate and serve immediately with additional parmesan on top and a sage leaf, for dramatic effect. 

get your #fallvibes
Categories
Experiences

Turkey Vibes and a Computer Build

OneandahalfSlices food blog recipes One and a half Slices Virginia eat local

Turkey Vibes and a Computer Build

Thanksgiving 2023

I feel like I owe you guys a bit of a life update.

It’s been a minute. But rest assured, I’ve been in the kitchen. Not so much in create mode but in sustain mode. I’ve been cooking old recipes using the alembic of holiday tradition. I’ve been making beans and rice on repeat. I snagged a local  Whiffletree Farm turkey that slayed on Thanksgiving day.  

We held our second Saturday Supper in October with some very choice houseguests. It was Momofuku themed and the star of the show was crisped porkback (so… bacon. shocker). My good friend made us a special playlist. We went apple picking. I became completely obsessed with a Greek skin glow tonic made from a whole lemon. And I still have the world’s most adorable black cat who has thoroughly enjoyed being the star of Spooky season.

Skin Glow Tonic Recipe

In a blender, place the following: 1 whole lemon, ends cut off and cut into quarters. 2 tablespoons high quality olive oil. 16oz filtered water. 2 tablespoons fresh raw honey. 1 cup ice cubes. Blend on high until smooth. It should turn pale yellow and frothy as the olive oil is emulsified. Strain into a glass and drink first thing in the morning. 

And then came the Turkey. A few days before Thanksgiving, we embarked on a most celebrated life event: a new computer build. With a hand-me-down GPU, a brand new Corsair case, and plenty of Razer swag, we set to work late one evening. It was a smooth build. No RAM failures or boot issues. That moment when you press the POWER button after a late night build, all the LEDs sparkle, and you see the BIOS menu… it is as if a hundred conversations simultaneously arrive at the same pause. deep breath … sigh of relief. 

For the time, for the season, for the depth of character and depth of connection, for the seamless computer build, and for the best turkey I’ve ever eaten in my life (and the first turkey I’ve ever cooked), all I’ve got is GRATITUDE.

So much so that we wrote it on the window.

And finally… we decorated a Christmas tree with ornaments that thoroughly represent the year. Guys, I’ve eaten SO MUCH POPCORN. I know I’ve been remiss in posting recipes after concluding The Protein Trio. And for that, I apologize. I’ve been writing, traveling, and generally enjoying the season. Wishing you all a restful, healthy holiday season sprinkled with #equalpartsdisciplineandindulgence.

– Mel

Categories
Cocktail

Spiced Sangria

OneandahalfSlices food blog recipes One and a half Slices Virginia eat local

Spiced Sangria

So… I’m starting to think Sangria is better in the fall. Yes, it’s known for being the perfect summertime cocktail, enjoyed on a warm, sunny beach somewhere in Southern Spain. It’s appealing. But it’s now been two years in a row, right around the beginning of fall, where I’ve had the craving for a Spiced Sangria… something with hints of cinnamon and clove.

Last fall, we experimented with the Autumn Sangria – featuring thyme, cardamom, and believe it or not, beetroot. It was phenomenal. This year, we paused the beets and highlighted star anise, cinnamon, cloves, and pears. The result? Non-sangria drinking converts. In other words, it was a massive success. The pitcher was gone in minutes and I immediately regretted not making more.

Surprisingly, Sangria creates the perfect canvas for a fall cocktail. Its summer value is still very much appreciated, but if you ask me, it should be enjoyed year round. See for yourself.

Pro tip: While high-quality wine will definitely take your Sangria to the next level, rest assure and know that you can pick a bottle based on a cool, millennial-crafted logo and still get an incredible drink (we thank the sugar). Pinot Noir is a great choice.

what you need

Recipe makes 1 pitcher.

For the sangria:

2 bottles red wine

1 cup cognac 

1 cup spiced simple syrup

1/2 – 3/4 cup orange or blood orange juice, freshly squeezed

1 cinnamon stick

1 apple, sliced

1 orange, sliced

For the Spiced Simple Syrup…

2 cups water

2 cups sugar

1 whole pear, cut into chunks

10 whole cloves

3 star anise

3 cardamom pods

1 cinnamon stick

how to make it

[the night before] Mix the water and the sugar in a pot and set it to simmer stovetop on medium heat. Add the pear and all the spices (you are welcome to toast and/or crack the cardamom pods beforehand if you wish). Simmer for ~15-20 minutes or until liquid becomes golden and begins to thicken slightly. Remove from heat, allow to cool for 10 minutes, then strain the liquid into a glass jar. 

Pro tip: the pear chunks make a great addition alongside an orange slice to an Old Fashioned – actually, this syrup goes very well as a sugar cube substitute in an Old Fashioned… 

[the day of] Empty both bottles of red wine into the pitcher. Add the cognac, simple syrup, and orange juice, stirring generously. Add the cinnamon stick, apple slices, and orange slices, stir once more, and let stand for 3-4 hours before your guests arrive. 

[garnish] When you are ready to serve, all you need to do is pour and garnish with an apple slice, an orange slice, or whatever strikes your fancy.

Enjoy like it’s July on the Costa Brava! 

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Categories
Cocktail

Burnt Peach Old Fashioned

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Burnt Peach Old Fashioned

Tired of the simple Old Fashioned, don’t have the blow torch to make a Smoked Old Fashioned, but not quite yet ready for a Bourbon and Blood? Let’s add some summer peaches… The burnt peach Old Fashioned is the perfect Summer/Fall segue. You can use your grill… or not. And it pairs perfectly with summer Mains like Summer Sausage Orzo. This is by far my favorite Old Fashioned.

what you need

1/2 oz peach simple syrup

2 oz bourbon of choice

1 orange slice

2 small chunks of cooked peach (or really ripe fresh peach)

2 dashes cardamom bitters 

2 dashes Angostura bitters

1 large ice cube

For the peach simple syrup:

1 whole peach, cut into 1″ chunks

1 cup sugar

1 cup water

how to make it

First make the peach simple syrup. Combine the water, sugar, and chunked peach in a pot with a dash of cinnamon and bring to a boil over medium heat. Reduce heat and simmer for 20-30 minutes, until the liquid reduces a bit, turns darker brown, and viscosity increases slightly. Using a slotted spoon, remove the peach chunks and set aside for use in your cocktail. Remove the syrup from heat, allow to cool, place in glass jar, and store in the fridge for up to several weeks. 

Now, make your cocktail. Combine the bitters, orange slice, peach chunks, and peach simple syrup in a cocktail mix. Muddle. Add the bourbon and crushed ice. Stir until chilled. Strain into a glass over a large ice cube. Garnish with fresh peach slices and a cocktail cherry. 

If you really want to get fancy, you have two options: 1) Smoke this thing, or 2) garnish it with grilled peaches (whoa. flavor). 

Other Interesting Cocktails
Categories
Omni

Hungarian Goulash

OneandahalfSlices food blog recipes One and a half Slices Virginia eat local

Hungarian Goulash and #localmeat

one and a half slices hungarian goulash recipe authentic

Okay, there’s a lot going on here. 

Let me start with a quick recap. In bulleted form because, trust me, you do not have time for my Fall.

  • ✌🏼 I spent a chaotically incredible summer country hopping in the Balkans ending my solo sojourn in Budapest with strong ambitions to learn how to make authentic Hungarian goulash. The trip itself was transformative and catalyzed the #measurelesslivemore mentality, launching Merigold Analytics in earnest, and what is already an equally epic Winter season. 
  • 👻 In early October, a super tragic Old Fashioned-related accident put me in the ER for some variation on the theme of hand reconstruction and I have been one handed ever since. Cooking has been limited, writing has been impossible, and I credit every post developed this fall to really good friends who came over and did most of the chopping.
  • 🥩 What better place to source beautiful, local meat for goulash experimentation than Whiffletree Farm in Warrenton, VA? Let me tell you about them.

As it turns out, Whiffletree Farm and OneandahalfSlices have a lot of shared food philosophy. That philosophy is rooted in local and sustainable agricultural and farming practice, home cooking (meatballs!), and a preference to stay out of grocery stores and away from processed foods. There are several fad diets floating around (think Whole 30 and Paleo) and when I hear them described, I always think: Isn’t that just eating real food?

Michael Pollan kept it simple.

“Eat food, not too much, mostly plants.”

Dan Barber took us a step further and connected food, nutrition, health, and the world of the chef back to the soil.

“When you are chasing after the best flavor, you are chasing after the best ingredients and when you are chasing after the best ingredients, you are in search of great farming.”

Both quotes appear on the OneandahalfSlices homepage and both are also resonant with Whiffletree Farm’s philosophy for raising local, grass fed beef, pork, and poultry.

When Jesse Straight, owner and lead farmer at Whiffletree, first introduced me to The Weston Foundation, the name was new to me but the practices and principles were not. Eat whole grains. Eat fresh produce. Eat locally sourced, pasture raised meat. Natural fat and fermentation are good for you. Make things like salad dressing, sauces, and stock instead of buying them (they aren’t difficult). 

But I don’t get it. Why are processed foods so bad for you? Why shouldn’t we eat refined food items?

Let me tell you a short story. It’s about flour. 

Recipe Interlude

what you need

1 2-3 pound Whiffletree Farm chuck roast, cubed, salted, and browned

1 yellow onion, sliced and lightly caramelized

2 bell peppers, finely diced

3 cloves fresh garlic, finely minced

3 oz tomato paste

2-3 small potatoes and/or carrots, cut into hefty chunks

1 tablespoon cumin

2 tablespoons authentic Hungarian paprika

1 cup red wine

2 cups beef stock

2 cups water

2 bay leaves

Greek yogurt and fresh parsley for garnish

how to make it

In a Dutch oven over medium heat stovetop, brown the cubed chuck roast for approximately 6-8 minutes. Remove the meat from the pot and set aside. Now add the sliced onion and caramelize, which takes approximately 20 minutes. 

Once the onion is caramelized, add the diced bell peppers and minced garlic, tomato paste, cumin, and paprika, and stir until combined and fragrant. Deglaze the bottom of the pot with one cup of red wine scraping any burnt bits up off the bottom.

Add the meat back in along with the bay leaves, the beef stock, the water, and an optional dash of Worcestershire sauce if you feel so inclined. Cover and simmer for 60 minutes. 

Add the potatoes and carrots, and simmer and additional 45 minutes. Serve hot with a dollop of Greek yogurt and a few sprigs of parsley. 

I will not attempt to nail the dates or the history because the details escape me, but the gist of flour goes something like this. We take a whole grain harvested from a field and we mill it into flour. We put that flour in bags and within weeks or sometimes months it is crawling with bugs (think 1920s). So the ingenious world of American food capitalism comes up with a way to make the flour last longer and keep the bugs out. (World War II had a lot to do with this). We decide to mill the grain finer and eliminate the hull, the bran, and the germ, leaving only the starchy endosperm, which we then bleach. This is what makes flour white. 

See, the thing is, the reason bugs got into the flour in the first place is because the whole grain wheat was alive. This is what makes it healthy for us to consume. We are living organisms that are meant to consume other living organisms — plants and, yes, sometimes animals. Think back to second grade biology class and the lesson on the food chain.

We, as organisms in an ecosystem, are meant to eat living things, not dead things. We are not mushrooms. Does this clarify the difference between a Dorito and a blueberry? I think it does.

🍄

The fact that we would bleach our flour or introduce pesticides into our soil to kill everything living within it is the most counterintuitive process I can think of when it comes to nutrition. But you see how we got here… Wanting, and to some degree needing, to make food last longer so it can be shipped worldwide and sit on shelves for longer periods of time. This facilitates one-stop-shop grocery stores where people can do all of their shopping at once, especially in rural areas (and, artificially sustaining and promoting overpopulation – but that’s a separate topic). (By the way, I’m not making this up — read Hippie Food: How Back-to-the-Landers, Longhairs, and Revolutionaries Changed the Way We Eat if you want a more eloquent and comprehensive explanation).

Now here’s the kicker. What are we going to do with bleached flour and pesticide-ridden (dead) soil? Well, there are no nutrients left in the flour and nothing will grow in the soil, so, naturally, we are going to enrich or fortify them. We are going to enrich soil with fertilizer (Michael Pollan covers this in Chapter 4 about the potato in The Botany of Desire: A Plant’s-Eye View of the World). And we are going to enrich the flour with synthetic vitamins and minerals that are introduced to replicate the natural vitamins and minerals we eliminated in the first place when we removed the hull, the bran, and the germ. 

This is why doctors and dieticians advocate eating whole grains like barley, steel-cut oats, bulgur wheat, and rye. What is meant by whole grains is consuming the actual whole grain — all the parts. It is healthy because those other parts contain more than just empty starch — they contain protein, vitamins, minerals, and dietary fiber. This is also why the sprouted-grain-and-legume movement is a thing.

Now, what does this have to do with goulash meat and Whiffletree Farm? This is the food philosophy to which local farmers like Jesse Straight subscribe and why I elect to support these local farms in the recipes presented here on OneandahalfSlices. In many ways, their efforts are better for our bodies, better for our communities, and better for our world. Eating healthily is not a challenge and it is not an exercise in restriction and self control. It is, however, a conscious choice to go against what the majority of other people are doing — and in this case, what the majority of other people are eating. Drive the extra mile to Whiffletree Farm in Warrenton. They have a farm store, local neighborhood delivery, and they sell Thanksgiving turkeys every year.

But most importantly, they understand the implications of the story I just told you and the fundamental principles outlined in the Weston Foundation and among other chefs, authors, agriculturalists, and conservationists that understand the magnitude of the mistakes we have collectively made regarding the global food system and our general population. (If you are looking for a more esoteric and philosophical interpretation of this topic, invest the 300 pages in Ishmael). 

#sorrynotsorry for the unrequited philosophy

Happy Cooking!

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mushroom stew lentil OneandahalfSlices One and a Half Slices weeknight recipe easy

Mushroom Lentil Stew

This stew has all the body and personality of a meat-based stew conceived of French lentils, soy sauce, white wine, hearty greens, and an unabashed serving of mixed mushrooms. (and yes, I sprinkled some Parmesan cheese on top for good measure) It is beautiful, hefty, hearty, vegan, locally-sourced, healthy, easy, and autumnal! WELCOME TO FALL! 🍂🍁🍄

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Viking Lentil Stew

If there is crisp in the air, you want this. You want two bowls of this. And you want it with parmesan cheese on top. It is the most flavor-rich, complex soup I have probably ever tasted. It leaves you full, warm, and longing to make another pot. The secret is in the quality of the sausage.

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Vegetable Stew and Simple Croutons

I was today-years-old when I discovered croutons. Obviously, I’ve had a crouton before but I’ve certainly never made one or put them in anything. Well that’s all about to change. Before any of you get intimidated and think that a garnishment like a crouton is far too fancy for you to whip up on a weekday soup night, let me explain exactly how unfussy and zero frills this whole crouton business is. Aside from fantasizing about all the fall of soups in which these croutons are to find themselves in short order, this winter root vegetable stew is precisely the thing your overflowing CSA bag calls for. When you’ve got too many turnips, carrots, potatoes, and a sack full of random winter greens, this is the soup you make. And don’t scrimp on the croutons.

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Dahl (Indian Lentil Stew)

Dahl is an understatement of a dish. Pitch “lentils and spinach cooked until mushy” to most people and you’re unlikely to garner much enthusiasm. But this dish… this dish… is a healthy, satisfying, vegan, weeknight game changer. It is rich and hearty, and I am pretty sure you could top crispy, sea-salted naan with Pennzoil and I’d eat it. The curry spices are not as prominent as in most Indian dishes so the flavors are subtle and the lemon keeps it fresh.

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pot roast recipe one and a half slices whisky pairing

Pot Roast

This is the main course for the Whiskey Pairing Dinner and, my, what a deep, flavorful pot roast this is! Let me start by saying that I sourced a 4.6 pound chuck roast from the Spring House Farm Store to feed the four of us and had no regrets. A simple pot roast is easy enough to pull off especially if you have a slow cooker, but this really takes the flavor profile up a notch to make this velvety, sinful, fall-off-your-fork roast with plenty of fall veggies.

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Veggie

Vegetable Tian

This dish is one of those you love to make simply because everyone goes crazy over how beautiful it is. Perfect for potlucks, Friendsgivings, and the like, this can also just majorly dress up a weeknight dinner table. You could actually make it an entire meal by adding some cooked loose sausage to the bottom along with the onion, but I’ll leave that variation up to you.

Vegetable Tian is another name for the dish we all may know as Ratatouille. You’ve seen the Disney movie with the adorable little mouse chef. Traditional ratatouille has everything from tomatoes to eggplant and, like most exquisite French cooking, is a peasant dish. It is typically made by dicing and sautéing the vegetables — super simple — served over rice or polenta. Ever since I saw the Disney movie, of course, I wanted to learn how to make the neat little vegetable stacks. But in the interim, this rendition will suffice. You can make it in a square or a round pan though, of course, I am going to recommend cast iron.

Pro tip: try to slice everything evenly. A mandoline helps… but I don’t have one. Also…when selecting your vegetables, try to pick vegetables that look more or less the same size and shape. This will help you in the stacking process.

 

🐭

🍅🥔🍆

 

🍅🥔🍆

🐭

what you need

1-2 small zucchini

1-2 medium yellow squash

2-3 roma tomatoes

3-4 small white or red potatoes

1 yellow onion, coarsely diced

2 cloves garlic, minced

1 cup parmesan cheese

thyme, salt, and black pepper for garnish

olive oil

how to make it

Preheat oven to 350 and then set to diligent work washing and slicing your vegetables. I hate to tell you this but the more thinly you slice them, the better this dish will look. Once you’ve got all your veggies sliced, drizzle some olive oil in the bottom of a cast iron skillet and sauté your onion and garlic for just a few minutes until they soften.

Remove from the heat and spread the onions out so they cover the bottom of the skillet. Then set to work alternating your vegetables in a spiral pattern or however you see fit. Once complete, drizzle with olive oil; garnish generously with thyme, salt, and pepper; and top with about 1/4 of the parmesan cheese. 

Bake the Tian for one hour. At the one hour mark, remove from the oven and add the remaining 3/4 cup of parmesan cheese. Return to the oven for just a few minutes or put it under the broiler for a minute to crisp it up. Let stand 10 minutes and serve.

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Butterbeer (iced)

Whether you like your butterbeer hot, iced, boozy, or clean, I’ve finally got the recipe for you. #youreawizardharry 🪄

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One and a half Slices chocolate cake recipe Chocolat movie

French ‘Chocolat’ Cake

You guys know I’ll take pie over cake any day, but if I’m going to indulge in cake, it can’t be the big, billowy, blustery American cake layered with frosting and unnecessary sweetness. Over and over again I gravitate towards French cakes because they are just more delicate, using minimal flour, relying instead of almond meal, and frequently topped with cream instead of icing. This one is on par with my little lemon cake but it’s chocolate… with just a few tablespoons of almond meal, it has a dense but delicate consistency. You could whip it up in under an hour for a last minute dessert and it’s beautiful with a coffee or a bourbon. #minimalistcooking

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french chocolate cake recipe one and a half slices

Simple Chocolate Cake

Now is the moment where we ask ourselves if we really needed another chocolate cake recipe. The answer (much like chocolate chip cookies) is always yes. Specifically, we can put this one in the category of #minimalistbaking and #frenchsimplicity. I’ll say this: there is a reason French cooking is king in the world of the culinary, and it has absolutely nothing to do with the decadence of the pastries or the massive amounts of butter and everything to do with its simplicity. The Five Mother Sauces, the peasant food-turned-elegant. Anyway, this cake is slightly denser than the French ‘Chocolat’ Cake as it is truly flourless. Enjoy!

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