When we first moved in together, I burned through my arsenal of recipes,including a dish my mom used to make: Chicken and Rice. |
When Tanya and I first started living together, we were both
excited to show off how well we could cook.
One night she made the most amazing meatloaf I’ve ever had in my
life. Other nights she’d introduce me to
her Sloppy Joes, Beef Stroganoff, chicken pot pie, lasagna, and the list goes
on. For her I made some of my
specialties like grilled pork chops, potato salad, grilled cheese, risotto,
polenta, Caesar salad, and the list goes on.
I think most people have a repertoire of things they make and they run
through that when the question, “What’s for dinner?” comes
up.
When we first became CSA (community supported agriculture)
subscribers to a local farm, Whistling Train Farm, we encountered a
problem. We couldn’t just eat tacos on
Tuesday or whip up a bowl of mashed potatoes when our mood demanded them. We had all this produce we needed to use each
week and sometimes there were things in our weekly basket we had no idea how to
use. Sometimes we just got plain sick of
eating what we were given and had to find creative, new ways to use it. The first winter we were subscribers, we had
beets every single week for 12 weeks straight.
And Tanya HATED beets. She hated
beets though because she remembered the pickled old-people beets of her youth
that came out of a can and ended up on some social gathering next to pickled
herring and bread and butter pickles.
They taste a little different when they are orange heirloom beets,
tossed in a little olive oil and roasted with some grey salt and cracked black
pepper. The point is, if we were going
to do this, we had to be committed and we had to get creative.
We started to examine how to use preexisting recipes and
techniques, tweaking them to use what we had on hand. One example is the often
beloved, technically misunderstood, and not very intimidating once understood,
Sushi Roll. We deconstructed the roll ingredient by ingredient and substituted
what we could to meet our needs. The only thing that we couldn’t get away from
buying in the store was the Japanese sticky rice (one because it is so farkin delicious and two
because I love rice). We did find an organic source, however. I think it’s also
important to remember you don’t have to go all in to make small changes. Replace
one ingredient for something easy. In
this instance, we couldn’t get organic nori, the seaweed paper used to make
sushi rolls, so we substituted it with blanched swiss chard.
Here's a short instructional video about how to roll sushi in general. Keep in mind, we've replaced the nori with blanched chard.
Next I got all the vegetables julienned and roasted off some pork the night before and shredded it. You can use whatever combination of vegetables, fish, or other ingredients you choose. It isn't the ingredients that matter, but the concept that sushi can be adapted to whatever you have and will be a nutritious and filling meal. Unless of course you eat sushi in Mississippi where it's deep friend and sauced with mayonnaise.
Once the fillings were prepped, I got the chard ready by bringing a shallow, wide pot filled halfway with boiling water. Next to it, I had a bowl of ice water to blanch the leaves to stop the cooking process once they came out of the boiling water. You only want to soften the leaves and turn them bright green--cooking too long will compromise the leaf's integrity, making rolling the sushi difficult.
Once they are blanched, cut the tough rib out of the center.
I set all the ingredients aside and got plates ready. I wrapped my sushi mat with plastic wrap to keep the rice from sticking and layered the chard leaves on top of that. Then I added a thin layer of rice, not coming all the way to the edges. To that I added vegetables and the shredded pork in the center. I rolled the sushi and cut it into six pieces with a very sharp knife, being careful not to push on it and saw, but rather slice the roll gently so as not to crush it.
When we set out on this adventure, we didn't always know what to expect. Cooking isn't like baking--it's very forgiving. And even if everything fell apart, we could have just eaten this dinner as a bowl of rice and it still would have been delicious. Don't be afraid to step outside of the box. You never know what is waiting there for you. While we still make Sloppy Joes, cheddar polenta, chicken pot pie and Caesar salad, we make new things too. It turns out, we have some favorites we didn't even know about.
Wow! I loved this blog. You are so talented. Your cooking skills are unbelievable. Looks like August enjoyed her dinner. Hope to try out some of your sushi rolls this summer. Keep on cookin'. Maybe write a cookbook.
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