Kale and Bean Soup

A friend made us this soup several years ago, and we have been working to reverse engineer the recipe ever since. It only takes one perishable ingredient (the kale) and everything else can be pantry-stable (frozen celery, carrot and onion mixes, or “mirepoix” are in many stores, and these veggies also keep for awhile). Today I made a big batch. This recipe takes a bit over 2 hours, although any of the simmer steps can go a bit longer. It makes a large amount of nutritious and hearty soup.

This recipe freezes well, but the grains will soak up a lot of the broth, almost creating a risotto-like consistency. When thawing, add at least one cup water for two cups of frozen soup and bring to boil in a pot.

Ingredients

  • Olive oil
  • 1 onion
  • 2 carrots
  • 2 celery stalks
  • 1 can (or 2 cups frozen) chicken stock
  • 1 can light beans (canneloni beans, black-eyed peas, navy beans all work well)
  • 1 cup grains (rice or farro work well. We used Arborio rice today.)
  • 1 (15 oz) can of diced tomatoes
  • 1 bunch chopped kale (we used a 16 oz bag)
  • Salt, pepper, basil, parsley and parmesan cheese can be flavorings

Directions

  1. Heat olive oil on large pot over medium-high heat
  2. Add onion, carrot and celery. Cook 5 minutes until onions soften and become fragrant.
  3. Add beans (we include the juice, unless the can specifies it must be drained), chicken stock and an additional 4-6 cups of water.
  4. Bring to boil, cover and reduce to simmer for an hour.
  5. Add the grains, canned tomatoes (and juices) and some salt and pepper. Give a good stir. Return to a boil, then cover and reduce to simmer for 15-20 minutes.
  6. Raise heat to medium, begin stirring in kale. Stir kale in slowly. It will shrink as it heats up. Add all the kale.
  7. Simmer for another 30 minutes. Season to taste, including salt, pepper, parmesan and other seasonings.

MomMom’s Vegetable Beef

This is a recipe from the Shorebird’s MomMom. This hearty beef soup is loaded with vegetables and is a great recipe for a dreary Sunday afternoon, when you can leave the beef simmering to perfection for hours, and then eat the leftovers for the rest of the week ahead. The below ingredients with a pound of meat make at least 6 hearty servings. It’s a great recipe to add other small amounts of leftover vegetables to so they don’t go to waste. Read more


Eastern Shore Chicken and Dumplings

The Eastern Shore of Maryland is famous for its chickens and famous for its dumplings, which are almost paper thin, wide-cut, and slick. Some grocery stores have something called Anne’s Dumplings, which are close, but not quite the same.

This weekend, we finally had the chance to learn from a master — a friend who grew up making the recipe for his family of 10 on the Shore. As with Indiana’s variation of this dish, the appeal of these recipes in American farm cooking was that you could take a relatively small amount of food and stretch it to serve an entire family.

I believe these are the same dumplings that are in a wide range of classic Shore soups, like peas and dumplings, lima and dumplings or beef and dumplings. Now that we have the dumpling recipe we’re going to see if these perfect those other dishes too. Photos will have to come later, because we’re having trouble uploading them for now. Read more


Recipe Fails: Chicken Teriyaki

This chicken teriyaki recipe in the New York Times looked promising at first, but I should have put more thought into it before trying it. I’d love to have a good technique for chicken teriyaki, but this sure is not it.

I should have known to be skeptical — you’re going to broil a chicken thigh for just three minutes a side and it’s going to cook all the way through? The chicken in the photo of this recipe looks too thick for me to believe it. (One of the commenters said they had to double the time to cook it all the way through.) Do some people really have broilers that put out that much heat?

I wonder if a recipe that says to use a garlic press is a red flag too? I might have to test out this theory.

Finally, one more thing, this recipe makes wayyyy more sauce than you could possibly need. An all around failure.


Indiana Sugar Cream Pie

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A few years ago, before we started the blog, we were having lunch outside of Charleston with a cousin of Shorebird’s who somehow ended up in the Low Country. While discussing the rich variety of southern food, her cousin asked the Goat, “what about Indiana? What food is Indiana known for?”

The Goat mentioned pork tenderloin sandwiches but said he couldn’t really think of anything else. The cousin’s 8th grade daughter, who had been quietly pecking at her phone looked up and said “what about sugar cream pie?” The Goat said “well everybody knows sugar cream pie, right?”

Everyone stared blankly at the Goat.

Growing up in Goat country, a Holiday table would typically have a pumpkin pie, a sugar cream pie, and a pecan pie. The Goat had always assumed that everyone in America did that.

It was an epiphany for Goat, who never really realized that many of the dishes he ate as a child weren’t familiar out on the East Coast. The moment helped inspire this blog to explore the cooking traditions of our respective heritages. So, anyway, how do you make a sugar cream pie?  Read more


Chocolate Peanut Butter Marshmallow Pizza

Goat kids never ate a lot of cake, so for birthdays, goat mom (aka pygmy goat) would often make this incredibly decadent chocolate peanut butter marshmallow pizza instead. It was always a huge hit — it’s better than 99% of all cakes — and I didn’t realize it at the time, but it’s an exceptionally beautiful dessert too. You could probably dress it up with other sorts of candies, but I’ve always enjoyed it the traditional, simple way.

Read more


Cream of Chicken

Shorebird grew up on this dish. The recipe was handed down to us with only the name “cream of chicken” which seems to just be one of the ingredients, rather than the actual name of the dish.

I assume it had a name once, decades ago (perhaps one of our devoted readers even knows it) but that nobody could remember it and just called it “that recipe with cream of chicken” and then it eventually got reduced to just “cream of chicken.” Anyways, it’s delicious and easy. Read more


Oven-Baked Pork Chop

Since we’ve given up fried foods for Lent we needed to find an alternative to our beloved fried pork chop. This oven-baked pork chop is easy and every bit as delicious.

  1. Mix 3 cups cold water 3 teaspoons salt and additional seasonings like pepper or peppercorns, garlic flakes. Stir and submerge pork chops. Brine overnight.
  2. Heat over to 400 with skillet in the oven.
  3. Dry pork chops and rub with olive oil and a bit of salt.
  4. USE HOT PADS and put skillet on medium-high heat. Sear pork chops for 3 minutes. Flip over pork chops with tongs and immediately place in oven.
  5. Roast pork chops 6-7 minutes.


Sweet Potato Sticky Buns (They Have Vegetables in Them So They’re Healthy?)*

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We occasionally make these ridiculously indulgent sticky buns as a Thanksgiving morning treat. If you’re on one of those diets where you have one day a week (or month… or year) where you can eat whatever you want, then you might as well go for broke that day and eat these.  And they have sweet potato so they’re healthy! This one takes a little bit of advance planning — if you’re making it for breakfast you’ll want to do most of the preparation the night before and you’ll want to wake up 45 minutes earlier than everyone else in the house. Read more