Aioli

August 16, 2011
The French for garlic is ail, and this week’s recipe if for aioli, a thick emulsion of garlic, oil, and (usually) egg from the Mediterranean. Nowadays you see the name used for all sorts of flavored mayonnaises – wasabi aioli, pomegranate aioli, that sort of thing -- but if it’s not thick as butter and redolent of garlic, it’s just not aioli. 

Aioli

2-5 peeled cloves of garlic, depending on size, pungency, and how much you like garlic
sea-salt, pepper
1 tsp. fine white breadcrumbs (made from several day-old bread)
1 very fresh egg yolk
1 cup oil (1/2 cup mild oil such as grapeseed, canola, safflower, plus 1/2 cup good olive oil)
1-2 tsp. lemon juice

Use a pestle and mortar to bash garlic with a large pinch of salt and breadcrumbs. Once you’ve mashed garlic to a sticky paste, scrape it into a non-reactive bowl and add egg yolk.  Blend well with an electric hand-held whisk. Measure the two oils into separate small jugs or squeezy bottles. Start dripping in the milder oil, very slowly, beating well to incorporate each addition completely before adding any more.  When the aioli thickens—once it’s “taken”-- you can start trickling in oil in a little stream, beating all the while. When the aioli gets thick as butter, loosen it with a little lemon juice or water. Continue beating in oil, finishing with olive oil, until the aioli is extremely thick and glossy. (If your aioli ever fails to thicken, or “ breaks,” not to worry. Pour it into a jug. Put a fresh egg yolk in a bowl, and gradually whisk in the broken aioli, a bit at a time, as if making mayonnaise. You could do this in a food processor, if you prefer.) Check aioli for seasoning, adjusting salt, pepper, lemon juice to your liking.  Store covered in the fridge until serving time.

Aioli often accompanies poached salt cod, or other fish, and chicken. It’s delicious slathered on grilled bread with Mediterranean fish soups and stews. It’s great with vegetables such as cooked beans, small carrots and potatoes, and raw vegetables such as fennel and radish. You can use it in sandwiches. Some people just spread aioli on bread like butter, or eat it by the spoonful. They will remain nameless.

Note: the Silva family has chicks for sale at their farm – please inquire at their market stand.
 

Farmers’ Market Guacamole

August 8, 2011
Here’s a twist on guacamole that adds colorful summer vegetables from the market. Call it guacamole loco.

Farmers’ Market Guacamole

1 small ear of fresh corn, husk and silk removed
olive oil
large pinch each cumin seeds and dried oregano
1 peeled, very fresh garlic clove
salt, ¼ tsp. red chili flakes
2 ripe avocados, halved, pits removed
¼  cup finely diced onion (preferably red)
¼ cup each seeded, finely diced tomato and green bell pepper
squeeze of lime juice
1 Tbs. chopped fresh cilantro
warm ...
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Salmon sandwich with cucumber and quick-pickled onion

August 3, 2011
Tina Fey (as Liz Lemon) once said on 30 Roc: “ I believe that all anyone really wants in this life is to sit in peace and eat a sandwich.”  We are looking forward to sitting on a bench by the Peace Rock in Peg Noonan on Thursday and eating a sandwich made with market ingredients. Maybe a tomato-mozarella-basil sandwich, or an egg-salad sandwich with pea tendrils or arugula. Or maybe, if we fancy something a little fancier, this sandwich made with hickory-smoked salmon from Dave’s Cape C...
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Blueberry Balsamic Sauce

July 27, 2011
Green Briar makes a classic all-natural blueberry jam. Our recipe this week also hews to the blueberry theme.

Blueberry Balsamic Sauce

2 cups fresh blueberries, rinsed, stems removed
2 tsp. butter
1 Tbs. balsamic vinegar
1 Tbs. hot water
scant ½ cup sugar
salt
1 strip of lemon rind  (yellow part only) spiked with a clove
To thicken: 2 tsp. cornstarch mixed with 1Tbs. cold water

Find a small baking that will hold the blueberries in more or less one layer. Heat oven to 350 F and warm the dish. Add butt...
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Corn and Tomato Salsa

July 20, 2011
It’s summer, and busy. This quick recipe takes advantage of high-summer corn.

Corn and Tomato Salsa

2 large ears of shucked corn
1 tsp. corn or other vegetable oil
1/8 tsp. cumin seeds, toasted
1 medium to large tomato, seeded and diced
1 large scallion, sliced
1 jalapeno chili, de-seeded and finely chopped
¼ tsp. finely chopped garlic
2 Tbs. chopped cilantro
1 Tbs. honey
2 Tbs. lime
salt
to finish: trickle of good olive oil

Soak shucked corn in salt water for half an hour. Brush with oil, rotate ...
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Zucchini Fritters

July 13, 2011
Squashes of all sorts are settling in for the summer. Yellow squash, zucchini, eye-popping patty pans. Here is our market manager’s recipe for zucchini fritters, which you will surely make over and over again in the months to come.

Zucchini fritters
3 cups coarsely grated zucchini (delete, just for reference: 2 small to medium zukes, ¾ to 1 lb, approx 350 g)
salt, pepper
1 egg, separated
1/3 cup finely sliced scallion
1/3 cup crumbled feta
¼ cup flour
1 Tbs. each oil and butter for cooking

Mix gra...
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Three Pea Salad (with peanuts)

July 7, 2011
Right now your favorite market has an abundance of peas, so here’s a recipe for peas in all their seasonal variety. The dressing is very light but packs a big flavor punch, with a nod to South-East Asia. This is for 2, double up for 4 servings.
 
Three pea salad (with peanuts)
2 packed cup pea greens, also called pea shoots or tendrils
1 cup sugar snaps, trimmed
½ cup shelled English peas
1 Tbs. finely chopped fresh mint
1Tbs. crushed dry-roasted peanuts
 
For the dressing:
1Tbs. seasoned rice vineg...
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Strawberry Sandwich

June 29, 2011
With strawberry season coming to an end, here’s a way to make the most of a handful of berries. Have you ever eaten a strawberry sandwich?  Children can make these sandwiches with a bit of adult help, and you will feel like a child again when you bite into one. It’s like eating the freshest strawberry jam sandwich in the world. Have napkins at hand.

Strawberry sandwich

2 slices of generously buttered bread
Sliced local strawberries
2 Tbs. or so sugar

Use sweet or very lightly salted butter ...
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Scape Butter

June 21, 2011
Now is also the season for garlic scapes. If you see a jar or basket of green curly things at the market, you are looking at scapes. (Peachtree Circle Farm has also been known to braid them.) Scapes are the “flowering” stalks of hard-neck garlic. Farmers cut the scapes from their garlic plants so the plants don’t divert energy into reproducing. This produces a fatter underground bulb to harvest later in the summer. And it gives us a fleeting seasonal treat in June – a taste of garlic ...
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Grilled Lettuce

June 14, 2011
This has been a terrific season for lettuces, in case you haven’t noticed. So here’s an idea for all those luscious lettuces we’re seeing: Grilled lettuce. It’s amazing what a little smoky char and heat can do for lettuce’s familiar flavor. Almost any kind of lettuce seems to work, as long as heads are full and tight, and there’s enough stem to keep leaves attached and stop heads falling apart. You can use a medium-hot barbecue, a pre-heated stove-top grill-pan, or even on a hot l...
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