Friday, June 22, 2012

enough already

Jim came in last night with the day's harvest from the veggie garden. I know this will eventually end, but in the mean time, the zucchini plants are covered in new starts, the tomato plants are loaded with fruit, all undoubtedly plotting to ripen at once, and the peppers are starting to get serious.
one day--yes, one day-- from the garden. That giant in the middle
weighs in at 1.8 pounds, surrounded by 3 more zucchini, three yellow squash, 7 peppers,
an eggplant, and tomatoes

I am going to be forced to toss vegetables on my neighbors' porches and flee. I have found several recipes that I like for the zucchini. One is my take on an Ina Garten gratin recipe that I tweaked a bit, based on reviews. Thank you, Amazon, for the concept of posting customer reviews unvarnished for all the world to see. Ina sautes her zucchini before adding it to the sauce, and several reviewers complained that the zucchini was a bit mushy. That is an easy fix.
 long thin ribbons treated to a salt rub for an hour extracts
a great deal of moisture and improves texture--
just remember to rinse and squeeze dry

The gratin starts with sauteed onion. I had a few shallots, so I used those instead, cooking them until they were just soft.
a tablespoon or so of flour goes in with the onion to cook out
the raw flour taste

to that I added some half and half, some arugula that needed using,
a few grates of nutmeg, and salt and pepper

Ina's version didn't call for arugula, but I needed to use it, and adding a few more veggies never hurt anyone. The uncooked zucchini gets stirred in with everything.
20 minutes in a 375 degree oven will cook the zucchini without 
making it mushy

The topping is fresh bread crumbs and a bit of gruyere cheese, for a crunchy finish. I grind leftover slices of bread into crumbs in the food processor, then freeze them, so I always have some on hand. 
about 2 cups of breadcrumbs and 1 cup of cheese top this off

this was a delicious side for a succulent grilled pork chop

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