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Published: November 03, 2009 08:32 pm
Flavors of fall: Entertaining made easy with a simple homespun meal
Lee Svitak Dean
McClatchy-Tribune
Do dinner parties have to be complicated?
No, says this unharried host.
I’d rather have friends and family around the table more often and serve a simple, good meal than spend hours in planning, organizing and executing a masterpiece that I won’t enjoy because I’m too stressed out (not to mention the state I’ve put my family into because I’m so stressed out, and you know exactly what I mean).
Or worse, I don’t invite anyone over because it seems like too much work.
Wait a minute.
Repeat after me: Entertaining isn’t that difficult.
Case in point: today’s menu. The main course is a slow-cooked pork roast braised in Asian spices, with a dark rich gravy that shouts out for mashed potatoes. Make that sour-cream mashed potatoes.
I serve it to company with pride — but I also serve it to the family for Sunday dinner. It’s just plain good, whether or not the “good” dishes are on the table. (And they should be out all the time, but that’s another story.)
I serve it to company because, let’s be frank, how many home cooks prepare roasts these days? This is a welcome novelty at most tables. And even if it weren’t a novelty in and of itself, the spices change this dish sufficiently to make it new.
So how good is it? One newspaper cafeteria prepared the roast as its main entree during a recent birthday celebration. The dish won rave reviews by what can only politely be called a very persnickety crowd. Your guests will be easier to please.
I prefer to make the roast in the slow cooker, the busy person’s favorite kitchen tool. There’s nothing more pleasing than to come home to a kitchen fragrant with dinner almost ready to eat. Entertaining couldn’t be easier. The meat also can be made in the oven or on top of the stove if you’re around to watch it.
This sesame pork recipe has traveled throughout my family faster and with more persistence than a chain letter. My aunt heard the recipe on the radio 40 years ago. She told my mother, who told her daughters, and we’ve been serving it up and passing out recipes ever since.
The ingredients — especially the spices — seem far too abundant, but they are correct. Yes, all the ginger and sesame seeds are necessary for the resulting flavor. For the Svitak-Dean family, these are the flavors of fall.
Dinner on the table, course by course
Every menu needs a starter, and this one begins with tender butterhead lettuce topped with warm mushrooms and Parmesan shavings. When you’re cooking for company, think of little twists on the familiar, such as this. There’s nothing significantly different about this salad, except that the lettuce is topped with something warm, an unexpected treat in cold weather.
Green beans are roasted to perfection while the potatoes cook. Once again, this is a variation on more traditional presentation of green beans, but it doesn’t take any more time. These roasted beans are sure to become a favorite recipe that makes the e-mail rounds.
A hearty gingerbread with a delicate lemon sauce ends this robust meal. Make it ahead and you can whip up a dinner party after a day at the office.
Now that’s my kind of entertaining.
All the recipes are from my Taste cookbook, “Come One, Come All, Easy Entertaining With Seasonal Menus” (Minnesota Historical Society Press, $29.95).
GO TO www.edmondsun.com for fall recipes for butterhead lettuce with fresh mushrooms, sesame pork roast, sour cream mashed potatoes and roasted green beans.
BUTTERHEAD LETTUCE WITH PARMESAN AND FRESH MUSHROOMS
Serves 6.
Note: To shave Parmesan, use a grater with coarse holes to make larger shavings of the cheese. Butterhead lettuce comes in loose heads with floppy leaves; they are the most tender of lettuces. Baby spinach leaves could also be used. From “Come One, Come All/ Easy Entertaining With Seasonal Menus,” by Lee Svitak Dean.
Ingredients:
7 tbsp. olive oil, divided
4 to 6 oz. fresh mushrooms (button, portabello or other), sliced
6 c. butterhead lettuce, such as Boston or Bibb (see Note)
6 tbsp. Parmesan shavings (see Note)
2 tbsp. white wine vinegar
1 tsp. Dijon mustard
1/4 tsp. salt
Freshly cracked pepper (tricolor peppercorns look particularly nice)
Directions:
Heat 1 tablespoon olive oil in a saucepan and add the mushrooms. Cook, stirring occasionally, until the mushrooms are wilted.
Portion lettuce leaves on salad plates. Top with mushroom slices and Parmesan.
To make vinaigrette, whisk together vinegar, mustard, salt, and pepper. Slowly whisk in 6 tablespoons olive oil. Drizzle on salad immediately before serving.
Nutrition information: (per serving) 180 calories, 18 g fat, 240 mg sodium, 2 g carbohydrates, 3 g saturated fat, 105 mg calcium, 4 g protein, 5 mg cholesterol, 1 g dietary fiber.
SESAME PORK ROAST
Serves 6.
Basically a braised piece of meat, this roast is easy to cook whether in a slow cooker, in the oven, or on top of the stove in a Dutch oven. When prepared in the slow cooker, the roast doesn’t need to be marinated in advance because the meat marinates during the lengthy cooking time. But for ease in the morning, it’s helpful to prepare the marinade the night before. From “Come One, Come All.”
Ingredients:
2 tbsp. sesame seeds
3 or 4 green onions, sliced (about \ c.)
1/2 c. ketchup
1/4 c. soy sauce
2 tbsp. ground ginger
2 tbsp. molasses (any type)
2 tsp. salt
1/2 tsp. curry powder
1/2 tsp. black pepper
1 c. water
2 tbsp. wine vinegar
4 pound. pork shoulder roast (with or without bone)
3 tbsp. flour for gravy, if desired
Directions:
Toast sesame seeds in a dry frying pan over low heat until golden and fragrant. Place seeds in a bowl with the green onions, ketchup, soy sauce, ginger, molasses, salt, curry powder, pepper, water and wine vinegar; stir to mix thoroughly. Place meat in a large bowl and pour the marinade over the meat. Marinate, covered, 2 to 3 hours or overnight in the refrigerator.
To prepare in a slow cooker: Place meat and marinade in the slow cooker, cover, and cook on low for 8 to 9 hours or on high for about 3 hours.
To prepare in the oven or on the stovetop: Remove meat from marinade and pat dry. Brown it in a Dutch oven or frying pan. To continue in the oven, place meat and marinade in a covered casserole dish and roast at 300 to 325 degrees for 3 hours. (The roast should be falling apart when it’s done.) To continue on top of the stove, place the meat and marinade in the pot and heat until the marinade is boiling. Reduce to a simmer and cover. Cook, turning meat once or twice, for 3 hours.
Serve meat with pan juices or make gravy.
To make gravy: Pour pan juices into a 2-cup measure. Skim off fat, returning 2 tablespoons of the fat to the pan. If defatted pan juices do not equal 2 cups, add enough water or chicken broth to reach the 2-cup measure.
Whisk 3 tablespoons flour into fat in the pan and cook over medium heat on the stovetop until bubbly, scraping the bottom of the pan to release all the flavor from juices cooked to the pan. Slowly stir in pan juices and cook until gravy thickens, stirring constantly.
Nutrition information: (per serving) 505 calories:
27 g fat, 1,695 mg sodium, 16 g carbohydrates, 9 g saturated fat, 43 mg calcium, 47 g protein, 135 mg cholesterol, 1 g dietary fiber.
SOUR CREAM MASHED POTATOES
Serves 6.
Russet potatoes, also called Idaho potatoes, are best for mashing because of their high starch content. From “Come One, Come All.”
Ingredients:
2 1/2 pounds russet potatoes, peeled and cut into chunks
Salt
1/4 c. milk or cream
2 to 4 tbsp. butter
1/2 c. sour cream
White pepper
Directions:
Place potatoes in a large pot; add 1 tablespoon salt and water to cover potatoes.
Bring to a boil, then lower to a simmer and cook, uncovered, until tender, about 20 minutes, or until a fork can easily pierce the potatoes. Drain.
If you have a potato ricer, run the potatoes through that first (it makes for a lighter mashed potato). In the pot or a large bowl, add milk and butter to the potatoes. Mash by hand or with a hand mixer. Mix in sour cream and season to taste with salt and pepper.
Variation: Add about 8 roasted garlic cloves (about \ cup roasted garlic puree) to the potatoes and sour cream. Or, for a tangier flavor, substitute 4 ounces goat cheese (chevre) instead of the sour cream. Or you could add a little horseradish or chopped fresh sage to the recipe.
Nutrition information: (per serving) 222 calories, 8 g fat, 470 mg sodium, 5 g saturated fat, 35 g carbohydrates, 48 mg calcium, 4 g protein, 21 mg cholesterol, 3 g dietary fiber.
ROASTED GREEN BEANS
Serves 6.
Why is it that the concept of roasted beans sounds so foreign? These are wonderful, inspired by those served at 20.21, Wolfgang Puck’s restaurant at the Walker Art Center in Minneapolis. They remind me of green French fries. The beans can be roasted at whatever temperature your oven is already set, if you are cooking something else at the same time. From “Come One, Come All.”
Ingredients:
1 1/4 pound. fresh green beans, ends trimmed, if desired
Olive oil
Coarse salt
Freshly cracked pepper (tricolor peppercorns look particularly nice)
Directions:
Preheat oven to 350 degrees (see Note).
Toss in olive oil and place in baking dish. Roast in oven for 15 to 20 minutes or so, until the beans are cooked through. They will have shriveled slightly.
Remove from oven and sprinkle with coarse salt and pepper. Serve immediately.
Variation: Add a sprinkling of black sesame seeds, which are available in the spice section of upscale supermarkets. (However, black sesame seeds are not recommended for this meal because white sesame seeds are used in the roasted pork.) Or, roast the beans with { cup raw cashews.
Nutrition information: (per serving) 39 calories, 2 g fat, 5 mg sodium, 0 g saturated fat, 6 g carbohydrates, 31 mg calcium, 2 g protein, 0 mg cholesterol, 3 g dietary fiber.
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