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Turkey and Swiss Chard Terrine

Monday, January 19th, 2009

Ground turkey, prunes, Swiss chard, and fresh herbs come together in a haute twist on meatloaf.

Turkey and Swiss Chard Terrine

Adapted from Clotilde’s Pork and Swiss Chard Terrine (via Big City, Little Kitchen)

What I Changed (Reflected Below) and Why: I substituted ground turkey because I had trouble finding ground pork and used 20oz instead of 14oz because that’s how much came in 1one package; I used whole wheat flour instead of white flour for nutrition; I left out the bread crumbs because I didn’t have any stale bread; I used chicken stock instead of milk because I didn’t have any milk; I doubled the amount of Swiss chard because it’s so nutritious and tasty I couldn’t help it

20 prunes (9 ounces), pitted
Butter, for greasing
4 eggs
1/2 c chicken stock (or milk)
1 1/4 c whole wheat flour
20 ounces lean ground turkey
One small yellow onion, finely chopped
1/2 tsp salt
1/4 tsp ground pepper
6 large leaves Swiss chard, stalks removed and finely chopped
1/3 cup fresh flat-leaf parsley, roughly chopped
1/4 cup fresh tarragon, roughly chopped
6 leaves fresh sage, roughly chopped

1. Place prunes in bowl and pour over boiling water to cover; set aside and let them rehydrate.

2. Preheat oven to 350F and grease a four-cup loaf pan.

3. In a large bowl, whisk together eggs and stock; sift in flour and whisk to combine.  Add meat, onion, salt, and pepper, and mix with hand or wooden spoon until well-combined.  Fold in chard, parsley, tarragon and sage.

4. Drain the prunes and pat dry.  Pack one third of the meat mixture into the bottom of the loaf pan, and arrange half of the prunes over it.  Spread another third of the meat mixture into the pan, layer it with the remaining prunes, and add the rest of the meat, using a spatula to flatten the top.  Cover with foil and bake for one hour (after one hour, an instant-red thermometer inserted into the terrine’s center should read 160F); remove foil, switch oven to broiler setting, and broil for 5 to 8 minutes, until the top is golden-brown.

4. Let terrine cool for at least 15 minutes, then unmold and slice.  Serve slices with crusty bread and a green salad.

Sweet Potato Stacks on The Kitchn

Sunday, January 11th, 2009

One of the fun parts of blogging keeping a journalistic website (I’m still not so fond of that b-word) is having your work featured on well-known sites.

On Thursday, Apartment Therapy’s cooking site, The Kitchn, featured my photo of Sweet Potato Stacks along with a link to my recipe.  Thanks, Faith.

With several months of winter still ahead of us in New York, warm and roasted dishes like sweet potatoes are a good dish to pull from the archives.

Sweet Potato Stacks: Tri-color, garlic, fried sage

Monday, November 17th, 2008

Gourmet Thanksgiving in Advance (described here) Recipe #4

Quite possibly the best sweet potato recipe ever.

Tri-Color Garlic Sweet Potato Stacks

Adapted from Gourmet Magazine’s Roasted Sweet-Potato Rounds with Garlic Oil and Fried Sage

What I changed and why: Didn’t puree garlic with oil because I didn’t want the mess; Used pre-chopped jarred garlic because I’m lazy; Used three kinds of sweet potatoes because they all looked so good in the store (the flavors melded beautifully, and the various colors looked pretty); Didn’t peel the sweet potatoes out of laziness and for added nutrition; Made the olive oil extra virgin since its flavor is paramount in the final dish; Increased cooking time since tenderness is important; Changed presentation to stacks just for fun.

1 Tbsp chopped raw garlic
1/4 cup extra virgin olive oil
3 large sweet potatoes: one garnet, one jewel, one Japanese (about 2 1/2 lb), washed and sliced into 1/2-inch-thick rounds
1/3 cup extra virgin olive oil
24 fresh sage leaves

1. Preheat oven 450°F with rack in upper third. Toss garlic with olive oil and mix thoroughly with sweet potatoes in large bowl. Spread in 1 layer in a 15-by 10-inch shallow baking pan.

2. Bake until soft, about 30 minutes.

    3. Meanwhile, heat oil in a small heavy skillet over medium-high heat until it shimmers, then fry sage leaves in 2 batches, stirring, until crisp, 30 seconds to 1 minute per batch. Transfer with a slotted spoon to paper towels to drain.

    4. To serve, stack sweet potato slices, alternating colors. Place sage leaves on top.