Posts tagged ‘recipe’

April 16, 2012

Zucchini Fritters

Without a doubt, Zucchini is my absolute favorite vegetables. I don’t know if it’s because it’s one of the few veggies I can prepare over and over without my husband complaining or if it’s just how I love that it’s so adaptable to nearly any recipe.

 

 

tried to grow zucchini in my garden last year, and only ended up with about 4 actual vegetables. A marked difference, for sure, from what I’ve heard about gardeners ditching their excess zukes on neighbors’ doorsteps when the crop became overwhelming. Though I had planned to try again this year, the Lowes store where I was picking up my plants for the season didn’t have any zucchini, so I branched out to grow Swiss chard and Spinach in its place.

And while I’m all for eating seasonally, I just cannot go all winter without a zucchini. So while I skip over them while they’re spindly and pathetic, I’ve managed to find some decent ones in the stores lately.

Zucchini Fritters
Makes 6 fritters

2 medium-sized zucchini
1 large egg, lightly beaten
1/2 cup all-purpose flour
1 tablespoon Old Bay
1/2 teaspoon baking powder
salt and pepper to taste
Vegetable oil, for frying

Using a box grater, grate the zucchini. Wrap the grated zucchini up in a paper towel and wring the excess water out (there will be a lot of it!)

Put the zucchini in a medium-sized bowl. Add the egg, flour, baking powder, Old Bay, and salt and pepper and combine thoroughly.

Heat the vegetable oil in a large skillet over high heat. Let it get really hot! Make a small patty, just slightly smaller than the palm of your hand, and drop it in the oil. Let it cook for 4-5 minutes (until browned) and then use a spatula to flip. If the fritter is getting brown too quickly, turn down the heat.

Remove the fritters from the oil and lay on a paper towel.

To make a sauce, mix a dollop of sour cream, fresh lemon juice, dried dill, and salt and pepper. Serve with the fritters.

February 27, 2012

Sauteed Cod and Mushrooms in Spicy Tomato Sauce


The layers of components in this seafood dish — first, the homemade sauce, then mushrooms, and then the fish — make it a complex and interesting dinner.


February 23, 2012

Gingery Chicken Stirfry

I adore Asian food, but I always have trouble cooking it at home. Either my husband, always the critic, claims it’s too salty or I find it to be too bland. As in “blah.” As in “blah, why am I bothering to eat this?”

But last night, I got it right.

 

 

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

Join 26 other followers