Shabbat menu
Jan. 25th, 2008 04:15 pmaka, the trying-to-keep-up-with-veggie-infusion edition. Cooking on winter Friday afternoons when it's sunny is amazing, the sunlight coming in the windows at just the right angle and dripping off the food.
There's also much cheese and lox about.
* Mangoes are a tricky fruit for me, I think because I never had one when I was young, so their flavor is complex in a way that I'm not always in the mood for when I want fruit, especially if I'm tired or in need of more comfort food. In chopping up the mangoes, I discovered that slightly underripe mangoes can be fine even in that sort of mood, because the complexities of the ripe fruit have not yet developed. Plus, I always tended to prefer underripe, crunchy fruit as a kid (I never liked truly ripe pears, for instance, once all that lovely crunch is gone. Which is why apples are so excellent :-)
** There were navel and other (presumably Valencia) oranges in this week's box. I cut the huge navel oranges first, and was surprised to find that the flesh was more that of a pink grapefruit, though the navel structure was definitely orange. They were mild in flavor, far milder than I expect from an orange, but chalked that up to the color. Then I started on the other oranges, and they, too, were almost tasteless. I abandoned my original plan to have some cut up fresh ones, and put them all in to roast.
- grape juice, rolls from When Pigs Fly
- sauteed red onions and broccoli
- roasted sweet and white potatoes
- a dish of sauteed onions, garlic, slices of Tofurky Italian 'sausage', crimini mushrooms, already-baked sweet potatoes and butternut squash, white and red chard, a can of pinto beans, black pepper, and hot sauce
- roasted mangoes* and oranges**
There's also much cheese and lox about.
* Mangoes are a tricky fruit for me, I think because I never had one when I was young, so their flavor is complex in a way that I'm not always in the mood for when I want fruit, especially if I'm tired or in need of more comfort food. In chopping up the mangoes, I discovered that slightly underripe mangoes can be fine even in that sort of mood, because the complexities of the ripe fruit have not yet developed. Plus, I always tended to prefer underripe, crunchy fruit as a kid (I never liked truly ripe pears, for instance, once all that lovely crunch is gone. Which is why apples are so excellent :-)
** There were navel and other (presumably Valencia) oranges in this week's box. I cut the huge navel oranges first, and was surprised to find that the flesh was more that of a pink grapefruit, though the navel structure was definitely orange. They were mild in flavor, far milder than I expect from an orange, but chalked that up to the color. Then I started on the other oranges, and they, too, were almost tasteless. I abandoned my original plan to have some cut up fresh ones, and put them all in to roast.
no subject
Date: 2008-01-26 12:59 am (UTC)There are two competing schools of how to eat a mango. You can make two cuts parellel to the pit and then the two "fatty" sides with a spoon, peel the skin from the pit and eat the flesh with your teeth. OR, you can make a circular cut around the middle of the pit along the width of the mango. Twist the mango and scoop out the flesh with a spoon. Then twist the pit and eat the other half. Then the pit.
I prefer the first method. Especially if you slice up the flesh into cubes and add a little rum. It is divine!
no subject
Date: 2008-01-26 11:40 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-01-26 11:55 pm (UTC)That is so lovely.
I had broccoli too, with olive oil, garlic, and lemon.
I had a mango rice once that was nice.
Shavua tov.
no subject
Date: 2008-01-27 12:30 am (UTC)And I do like mangoes, don't get me wrong, it's just that for some reason I like them a lot more sometimes than other times.
(I have heard that the proper way to eat a mango involves a knife and a bathtub...)
no subject
Date: 2008-01-27 12:31 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-01-27 12:32 am (UTC)Mango rice sounds quite nice, though likely better with fully ripe mangoes :-)
Shavua tov.