Results tagged “tomato” from Bodacious Girl

My new best friend Alex over at Ile de France Cheese must listen in on me when I talk in my sleep. Because there is nothing in the world I love more then cheese. And my hubby says that I never really talk in my sleep but when I do, I am always talking about food. Eggs and cheese to be specific. Can you say one track mind? Well Alex dropped me a little email, and then he dropped me a little package. A little package that held some of the yummiest goat cheese I have had in a long time.

ile-de-france-goat-cheese-by-bodaciousgirl

That 5th piece you see there WAS a whole round. But photo's or not - there is cheese sitting out that requires eating. Alone it offered a tangy fresh taste, smeared on an ak mak cracker it was even better. I crumbled it on my spinach salad - perfect! I melted it over grilled scallops, stuffed it into chicken breasts and enjoyed the best cucumber and goat cheese sandwich evah.

Then, while watering my veggie and herb garden Monday morning, I found THIS:

fresh-tomato-by-bodaciousgirl

The first tomato of the season.

Perfect. And soon, even more perfect.

First I cut just the top of the tomato off and gutted the poor fella:

seeded-tomato-by-bodaciousgirl

Diced up 2 stalks of asparagus:

asparagus

And cracked an egg into the tomato:

egg-in-tomato-cup-by-bodaciousgirl

Um. Egg shell in focus, tomato, not so much...

Carefully pushed the asparagus pieces into the egg white, not breaking the yolk:

asparagus-and-egg-in-a-tomato-cup

Like my lil tomato holder? It is a sauce cup I swiped from PF Changs. Shh...

Then roasted it in a 400° oven for 10 minutes. The egg was slightly set at this time. Then I topped it with a nice big round of Ile de France goat cheese, and broiled it for 5 minutes more.

egg and asparagus stuffed tomato by bodaciousgirl

Topped it with some cracked pepper and kosher salt and ate it all up before the hubby could wake up and steal it from me. Ha!

It was amazing. The egg cooked just enough for the yolk to ooze out when cut into. The asparagus and the tomato roasted nicely and the browned and melted goat cheese brought the whole thing together.

Perfect.

We have had some cold, dreary weather here in the dessert. It is so welcomed! It washes away all the sandy grit that has an annoying tendency to coat everything. It makes everything so GREEN (a rarity in the desert in Summer...) and it makes me want soup. Some savory and spicy chicken noodle soup. Warms you up and clears your head on cold dreary days. And the best part? It is SO easy. But prep does take all day, or at least overnight.

chickyschnoodle.jpgSpicy Chicky Schnoodle Soup

Ingredients

Broth

1 whole chicken
6 cups of water
2 cups chicken stock
1 onion quartered
2 stalks celery, roughly chopped
small bunch of fresh parsley (5-6 sprigs)
5 cloves garlic, smacked (translation: one hit with the mallet is fine. Don't pulverize them.)
1 T peppercorns

Soup

1 tablespoon butter
2 cloves garlic, diced
3 stalks celery, diced
1 small onion, diced
2 carrots, diced
2 jalapeno pepper, diced finely
2 tomatoes, seeded and diced
1 teaspoon salt (more or less to taste)
fresh ground black pepper to taste
1 1/2 tablespoons fresh parsley, chopped

Al dente ditali noodles (optional)

Rinse chicken and place in large stock pot. Cover with water and broth. Add quartered onion, roughly chopped celery, 5-6 sprigs parsley, 5 smashed garlic cloves and 1 tablespoon peppercorns. Bring to boil, and simmer uncovered for 90 minutes. Liquid will reduce. Remove from heat. Remove chicken from pot and reserve in the refrigerator. Strain solids from broth through a fine mesh sieve. Refrigerate broth till fat solidifies on the top. (WARNING! Do not attempt to freeze to speed up the process. It is ineffective.)

Note: I usually either boil the chicken in the morning and make the soup at dinner. Or I roast the chicken for dinner, and boil down the carcass (Mmm, yummy!) that night for soup tomorrow. It is really about whatever works for your schedule.

Fast forward - broth chilled. You will see a layer of fat has solidified on the top. Remove carefully. You are not removing flavor, just most of the fat.

In large stock pot, could be the same one - I don't know your methods, melt butter, and saute diced onion, celery, carrots and garlic. Add reserved broth, jalapeno peppers, tomatoes and parsley. Then add as much of the chicken (shred or dice first) you would like. Let simmer for about 15 minutes, then taste. Salt and pepper to your liking. Serve with ditali and top with Pecorino Romano cheese, if you like.

Ok, it may seeeeem a lil more complex then easy, but really it's not. And the taste, mmm, is well worth it. bug.gif

LUNAR PHASE