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Spring Green Salad Milanese

Spring Greens Salad Milanese 

One of my most favorite restaurants in Madison is Lombardinos.  It takes Italian cooking to a whole new level, and it is easily one of the top restaurants in the city.

The last few times that we’ve gone to Lombardino’s they’ve had items served “Milanese” style.  This seems to signify that there will be a fried egg on the top.

I know what you are thinking - “What?  A fried egg on top of a salad?  Ewww!”  Well, we thought the same thing (minus the Ewww!).

Spring Greens Salad MilaneseTurns out, this is darned good.  So one recent night found me in the kitchen with a bag full of nice, crisp, fresh spring greens from the Farmers Market.  And I thought, “Why not?”.  Preparation was simple.  Take the freshest spring greens you can find, toss with olive oil, a touch of Balsamic Vinegar, Salt, Pepper, add some crisp sliced scallions (bulbs and greens), and then add the Pièce de résistance, an egg, fried in olive oil sunny side up.  Grate some fresh asiago cheese and pepper over the yolk before serving.

Lombardino’s does a similar amazing preparation with asparagus.  Coincidentally, I have some asparagus in the refrigerator as we speak.  Don’t be surprised to see this pop up on the blog soon!

No Comments »Recipes, Spring

Spring Dane County Farmers Market

My cohort in crime at Madison Dining Online and I wander around the Dane County Farmer’s Market early every Saturday.  We have a firm belief - if you don’t go early, don’t bother.  Beyond the experience of the clear, crisp mornings and the newly awakening world, the reality is that the later you go, the more crowded it is going to be.  And it gets very crowded.  Here’s the latest batch of pictures, taken by Victor.

No Comments »Farmers Markets, Spring

Upside Down Tomato Plants (yet again)

Upside Down Tomato Planter

 

Last year I gave into my undeniable impulse on an airplane.  I know most of you are wondering what this has to do with this blog, centered around cooking with fresh, seasonal produce.  I would be too.  But, as I explained last year, I was thumbing through an inflight catalogue on my way to places unremembered, and I came across the perfect solution to my tomato planting problems, the upside down tomato planter!

Ah yes, how people laughed and pointed.  And how envious they were when we ate our first BLT of the season on July 1st.

Our upside down tomato plants were an undeniable success.  But imagine my surprise when this blog began to get hundreds of visitors, attracted by entering the keywords “upside down tomato plants” into Google.  Entertainingly enough, it turns out that this is now the trendy way to plant tomatoes, and even more amusing, it appears that I am the only person on the internet who actually was brave enough to blog that she did it.

Since that time, I’ve seen commercials on television promoting something called the Topsy Turvy Tomato Planter.  I suspect that this new product will work, and it is, on the surface, considerably cheaper than what I bought.  But, my planter is rock-solid and sturdy, it stands up on its own, and it has an area on top to plant other plants too.

My father, always looking for ways to beat the system, decided that all you really need to do if you want to plant tomatoes in this manner is to get some old buckets, cut holes in the bottom, and hang them from ropes.  He’s right too.

Peppers and HerbsThis year I planted a variety of herbs on the top of the planter.  I also planted four pepper plants.  The pepper plants were purchased from a stand at the Dane County Farmers’ Market.  I chose miniature bell peppers, Sweet Italian peppers, and a hungarian style pepper. 

Upside Down TomotoesI decided to take a gamble with the tomatoes that were planted this year.  Most years we go with relatively safe, proven tomato plants from our favorite vendor at the market.  Buying their Early Girls ensures that we will get that coveted first tomato by the first weekend of July.  But this year, I went all Heirloom, choosing the following plants to try out:

  • Stupice:  These Czechoslavakian tomatoes are early, cold resistant tomatoes that grow fruit approximately 2 inches in diameter.
  • Matina:  These heirlooms from Germany are also very hardy and early.  They are medium-sized plants, and they are known to have great flavor.
  • Black Cherry:  I can’t wait to try these tomatoes.  They are a classic cherry tomato, but have black skin, and the flavor of other black heirlooms.
  • Sungold:  I love Sungold tomatoes.  They are also a cherry tomato, with a golden apricot color and deep, sweet flavor.

 And the Shiba Inus, as usual, were out and about as we planted.  Toshiro really didn’t care what we were doing, but Jimbo thought it might be possible that we were planting food for him.  Because, ever the optimist, he’s sure that everything that we do involves food for him.

ToshiYojimbo

PS:  This post was written outside, on the back deck, taking full advantage of the spring weather.

Working Outside

No Comments »Home Grown, Spring

Ode to Ramps

Ramps!

Well, as I am not poetic, this is not really an ode to ramps. I did write a post last season that gushed about the discovery of ramps when we first joined our CSA years ago.

The ramp season is very, very short.  People who don’t get early CSA boxes are out of luck when it comes to ramps, because the season lasts for only two to five weeks each spring, starting in April.  Our CSA, Harmony Valley Farm, has several patches of ramps that grow in their valley.

Ramps are high in Vitamns A and C, and fight inflammation, cardiovascular disease and are thought to provide immunity against colds and flu.  These wild leeks look like scallions and can be used in the way that onions, scallions and garlic are used. 

Ramps do not last long in the refrigerator, and if stored incorrectly, have an even shorter life.  Wrap the ramps in a damp paper towel and place in a plastic bag, or you will end up with a very slimy bulb.

No Comments »Spring

CSA Boxes Start!

box01.jpg

 

The first box of the season arrived on Saturday, of course just in time for me to go out of town the next week.  No matter!  It’s great to have the season kick off. 

The start of the season is always a bit sparse, but I’m not complaining.  The CSA that we belong to is Harmony Vally Farm, and we chose them because their delivery season is longer than most.  This early in the season, we don’t expect to see a large offering full of variety.  But tearing into that first bag of spinach for the season makes up for the lack of robust offerings this early in the year.  And besides.  There were RAMPS!  In the box this week:

  • Ramps
  • Sweet Overwintered Parsnips
  • White Sunchokes/li>
  • Sorrel
  • Horseradish
  • Chives
  • Dogwood

No Comments »CSA Box, Spring

Madison Area Farmers Markets

Yea!  It is that time of year again.  Farmers Market season kicks of this weekend with the opening of the Granddaddy of them all, the Dane County Farmers Market.  And so, as we did last year, we’re going to list the markets we know of, where they they take place, and the day that they are held.

Please, add a comment if we’ve missed a market we should know about.

Madison Markets:

  • Dane County Farmers Market: Saturdays, 6am to 2pm starting April 19th to November 1st located at the Capital Square
  • Dane County Farmers Market: Wednesdays, 8am to 2pm from April 23rd to October 29th,  Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd
  • Eastside:  Tuesdays, 4pm to 7pm starting May 13th through October 14th,  201 South Ingersol
  • Hilldale: Wednesdays and Saturdays, 7am to 1pm, April 26th through November 1st, Hilldale Shopping Center
  • Northside:  Sundays, 8:30am to 12:30pm , May through October, 2817 N. Sherman Ave
  • Southside: Tuesdays, 2pm to 6pm and Saturdays, 9am to 2pm  from April 26th through October, Labor Temple, 1602 S. Park St.
  • Southside: Thursdays, 2pm to 6pm from May 15th through October, Villager Mall, Park Street
  • Westside:  Saturdays, 7am to 1pm running from April 19th through November 8th at Hill Farms

Area Markets:

  • BellevilleSaturdays, 8am to Noon.  Starting May 3rd thru November 1st at Library Park, downtown Belleville
  • Brooklyn: Wednesdays, 3pm to 7pm.  Running from May through October, Rutland Avenue
  • Darlington:  Saturdays, 8am to Noon May through October, Darlington Festival Park
  • Fitchburg Thursdays, 3pm to 6pm, May through October.  E. Cheryl Parkway at the Agora Pavilion
  • McFarland:  Thursdays, 2pm to 6pm, May 1st through October 30th, 5100 Farwell Street
  • Middleton:  Thursdays, 7:30am to 1:30pm from y 8th through October, Greenway Station shopping center
  • Monona: Sundays, 9am to 1pm, May through October at Ahuska Park
  • Mt. Horeb: Thursdays, 3pm to 6:30pm, May 8th through September, Heritage Park
  • Paoli: Saturdays, 8am to Noon, May through October, Paoli Park
  • Stoughton: Fridays, 7am to 1pm, May through October, Stoughton Plaza Shopping Center
  • Sun Prairie:  Saturdays, 7am to Noon, May 2nd through October 31, 300 E. Main
  • Waunakee: Wednesdays, 3pm to 6pm from May through October, Waun-A-Bowl parking lot

Are you like us?  Do you look for a market to go to just about any day of the week?  Here’s the same list by day:

  • Sunday: Northside, Monona
  • Tuesday:  Eastside, South, Oregon
  • Wednesday: Brooklyn, Dane Country Market, Hilldale, Waunakee
  • Thursday: Fitchburg, McFarland, Middleton, Mt. Horeb, Southside
  • Friday: Stoughton
  • Saturday: Belleville, Dane County Market, Hilldale, Southside, Westside, Paoli, Sun Prairie

1 Comment »Farmers Markets

Housekeeping at Cooking Out Of The Box

So, have you ever jumped into the deep end without thinking about how deep the water was, how cold it might be, or even if you know how to swim?

For the last several years I’ve had a vision of where I want to take my various food and cooking related interests.  As I’ve gotten a “great” idea, I’ve jumped into it and made it so.

  • I have Madison Dining Online (MadisonDining.com).  I’ve had that site for 12 years now.  Yes, 12 years.  That’s really old in Internet years.  MDOL gets hundreds of thousands of visitors a year. 
  • I’ve made Cuisine Capers (CuisineCapers.com), a broad culinary blog that has mainly been recipe oriented.  It’s been around for about 5 years and gets almost as much traffic as Madison Dining Online.
  • I’ve made Cooking Out of the Box, this blog, to focus specifically on CSA programs, Farmers Markets, fresh produce and cooking seasonally.  And the reason that I chose to do this on a blog separate from Cuisine Capers is because I am in the midst of a book, and I wanted to keep it separate from my overall blog - I wanted to focus specifically on this subject matter in a dedicated space.

Of course, this tends to make one the victim of their great ideas.  And anyone who tried to follow this blog last year knows that it became just another ghost in the afterlife of the Internet because I basically abandoned it midseason.  That’s because I didn’t have a clear strategy on how all of the different focuses that I envisioned played together.  So I’d become paralyzed with indecision (do I do that HERE, or THERE?).  Cuisine Capers has suffered, and Cooking Out of the Box flatlined completely.  Madison Dining, on the other hand, is thriving and changing, become a much more dynamic, exciting initiative in ways that we did not think it would when we first conceived the notion 12 years ago.

In the past, I was very concerned with hiding the identity behind the sites and blogs. I didn’t want my name splashed around officially with any of them - I wanted to create nice, anonymously driven initiatives.  Additionally, I didn’t want anyone connecting the blogs together.  If you were a MDOL reader, I didn’t want you to know that I was also Cuisine Capers.  If you were a Cuisine Capers fan, I wanted there to be no connection in your mind that I was also MDOL.

Don’t ask me why.  I’m sure it made perfectly good sense to me at the time.

But, as MDOL and Cuisine Capers began to take on lives of their own, inevitably my identity was “outed” in many ways.  Some of my Cuisine Capers works were published in a real book, under my real name.  The local Madison, Wisconsin media began to publish my real name in connection with both Madison Dining Online and Cuisine Capers.  I was really unsettled at first, until the more my real identity began to surface, the more my initiatives started to become more successful and visible.

The brutal winter that we’re just now pulling out of afforded me the opportunity to sit back and think about overall strategy, what I want to really do with these initiatives, and how they need to change so that they all thrive and don’t suffer at the expense of the others.  And somewhere along the line I had an epiphany on how this needs to work.  I’ve been discussing this in depth with my partner on Madison Dining Online and Cuisine Capers.  I’ve been mulling it over at home and bouncing around ideas there.

So I will be slowly but steadily shifting the focus of some of my initiatives in hopefully a seamless way.

  • Madison Dining Online will continue to move ahead, almost organically.  It has begun to take on a life of its own and thrive.  I have ideas on how to help make it even more dynamic.
  • Cooking Out of the Box will become a more focused recipe site, and it will be where I turn to write about cooking with the freshest possible ingredients specifically, and other cooking as well.
  • Cuisine Capers will become more focused on commentary, product reviews and test, book reviews, with lots of recipes thrown in along the way, of course.
  • CulinaryMadison.com will be created to aggregate all three of these entities together - I’m no longer going to try to hide the affiliations.

And I’m not going to go out of my way to hide the identity behind the sites.

Irene Cash
Cooking Out of the Box, Cuisine Capers, Madison Dining Online, Culinary Madison

No Comments »Housekeeping

A Sure Sign of Spring

Robin in SnowNo, it isn’t the sighting of the first Robin that makes me believe that spring is here.  Robins foolishly come back to Wisconsin long before the last snow storm.

Instead, it is news that the Dane County Farmers Market will move from its Winter home at the Convention Center, and return to its rightful home on the capital square.  This pivitol event happens on Saturday, April 19, 2008.  Now, we all know that there will be very little in the way of real, fresh product.  It’s still April in Wisconsin, for Chrimeny Sake.  We may be nuts to live here, but we are not delusional and we can face the truth.

It doesn’t matter though.  We’ll out on our long johns, parkas, mittens and boots, and hike the square cheerfuly, pretending, like the robins, that spring really is here, even if it did snow today. 

No Comments »CSA Box, Farmers Markets, Spring

Finally, Tomato Season

It’s that time of the year - the time we can only dream about in January - Fresh Tomato Season!

 I can never grow tired of tomatoes in season.  There are so many things to do with them that they never grow boring.  I have to admit, merely sliced with salt and pepper never bores me with tomatoes.  Here’s a few things that we’ve done recently… but there will be much more to come!

BLTThe first BLT is always special.  We make our BLTs with a twist, focusing on maximum flavor by adding goat cheese, onions and arugula.  Nothing tastes like summe like this BLT does.

Caprese SaladA nice Caprese Salad just can not be beat.  It’s simple, with only fresh mozzarella cheese, tomatoes, olive oil, balsalmic vinegar, and basil.  Fresh basil from the garden makes it even better.

Grilled PizzaAnd this year we added something new to our repetroire.  Grilled Pizza with olive oil, tomato, prosuitto, mozzarella and basil.  The grill adds a terrific smokiness that you can’t get out of an oven.

No Comments »Summer

Asparagus Season Draws To A Close

I am always excited to see asparagus season arrive in the spring.  Besides radishes, spinach, and greens in general, asparagus is one of the first real signs that winter really might be over with and that spring is truly here.

Having said that, I don’t really regret it when asparagus season starts to ebb away, either.  It is really easy to OD on asparagus when you are desperate for fresh produce in May and early June.  So, here are just a few things that I did with asparagus this year:

Grilled Proscuitto Wrapped AsparagusGrilled Proscuitto Wrapped Asparagus - This is a marvelous way to prepare asparagus.  It creates a smokey, salty, slightly crunchy dish which adds a lot of interest to the vegetable.  It’s a perfect alternative to simply steaming or sauteeing the vegetable.

Grilled Asparagus SaladGrilled Asparagus Salad - This was one of my favorite ways to prepare asparagus this year.  We simply tossed the asparagus with some garlic, olive oil, balsalmic vinegar, salt and pepper.  While the asparagus grilled, baby greens were tossed with chopped kalamata olives, tomatoes, onions, olive oil, more balsalmic vinegar, salt and pepper.  While we again grilled the asparagus to add to the salad, this wasn’t necessary.  It was, however, really convenient.  The grill was already hot and it avoided dirtying another pan to clean up!

I know that in a month or so I’ll miss asparagus.  But for now, I’m ok with zucchini.  Ask me what I think of zucchini in a month though!  ;-)

No Comments »Recipes, Spring

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