Category Archives: Recipes

A Smoldering Debate

Celebrity sighting today at the Lunch Encounter – Mr. Fixit! His Honor Wit-and-Wisdom had a few minutes and a few ripe tidbits of sandwich sagacity to share.

The putative debate over gas grilling vs. charcoal reminds me of a politician’s straw man argument.

Such as, “There are those in our country who would shred the U.S. Constitution and use it for cat litter!”

There actually probably aren’t many sane people who would do that, unless they were really in a pinch. And it’s hard to believe anybody really believes that food tastes better cooked on a gas grill than over real fire.

People use gas for convenience – it’s easy and fast. It also seems wasteful to light a grill full of charcoal if you only want to cook a couple of pieces of chicken or a few hamburgers.

So plan ahead already. Fire up the grill on a weekend when you’re not in a rush, cook some meat or fish for dinner, and then grill some things to eat later in the week. 

That includes vegetables. While meat undoubtedly tastes best right off the grill, peppers and zucchini and eggplant might actually benefit from a few days in the fridge. 

I especially like to grill eggplant. Peel it and slice it lengthwise and soak the slices in olive oil and garlic while the coals are getting ready. Grill on both sides until it’s golden brown. A day or two later, you can dice it up along with a good tomato and some fresh mozzarella. Add more olive oil, salt and pepper.

The eggplant is creamy and smoky and satisfying, and it makes a perfect summer meal. 

But you’re probably asking yourself, what does this have to do with sandwiches?

Well, you don’t have to smoosh it over a slice of good bread to eat it. But you’d be crazy not to. 

Kind of like those cat litter people. 

FullSizeRender

Make Me a Sandwich! Introducing the Strong Arm

Sunday sandwich. Calling this the Strong Arm cause it will carry you through a long day’s labor or leisure.

Strong Arm

IMG_0034What you will need:
2 slices good toast, something brown and seedy is good
Peanut butter, I chose chunky
2 slices cooked bacon
1/2 ripe avocado, sliced
Thin slices red onion
Thin slices cucumber (I didn’t have any and missed it.)

What to do:
Spread peanut butter on both slices of toast. Top one with bacon, avocado, onion and cucumber. Top with second slice of peanut-butter-covered toast. Press together and eat.

IMG_0038
Photos by Lisa Cherkasky

Corn Toastie Poastie

Screen Shot 2015-03-23 at 6.37.23 PMLast week Suits-Herself Cindy and I went to hear Tim Kreider read at Upshur Street Books. We’re both fans and were really excited to see him – so excited in fact that we were very early,  had time to kill at the adjacent bar and, in a frenzy of enthusiasm, practically knocked Mr. Kreider off his barstool.

My entree into the labyrinth of his mind was through the essay, The Feast of Pain, which I have excerpted here.

LAST week my friend Mishka and I, wistful about a popular sedative of the 1970s that neither of us even got the opportunity to resist the temptation to take, went to search for “Do they still make ’ludes” on the Internet. Before we could finish typing the words “do they” the search engine autofilled “still make quaaludes.”

Sadly, I’ve been advised that this is most likely an artificially inflated search result. But it occurred to me to see what else might be autofilled, as a sort of unscientific poll or cross-sectional sample of my fellow human beings’ furtive curiosity and desires. I typed in “Why am I” and got: so tired/always cold/so ugly? “Why does”: salt melt ice/my vagina itch/it snow? “Where is”: my refund/Sochi/Chuck Norris? “Why can’t”: we be friends/I own a Canadian/I cry? I felt fondly toward all depraved humanity.

According to the calendar, our long, dark winter is over. Yet those five months without light or exercise, hunching our shoulders in pain whenever we stepped outside, bingeing on Netflix, Jiffy Pop and booze, have left us all at the ends of our respective ropes. (Why does it snow?) Now, by the end of it, I find myself inappropriately cheered by glimpses of my fellow human beings’ despair.

Do they still make corn toasties?

The days are longer now and a little warmer, but not really warm enough. Should you need a nourishing and HOT sandwich to start yet another icy and blustery March morning, this one is good. I especially like it when the egg yolk runs down my arm.

Egg and Greens Sandwich
Makes 1 sandwich

1 corn toaster cake*, split and toasted
1 egg
Olive oil for frying, about 1 tablespoon
Salt and pepper, to taste
Large handful of cleaned, chopped kale, spinach, chard or other green of choice
Sriracha sauce, to taste
1 slice cheese – Swiss, Fontina or other cheese of choice

fried egg in skillet

Skim the bottom of a good skillet with olive oil and fry your egg to the doneness you like. I made mine sunny side up.

This is a super nice skillet made by Borough Furnace up in Syracuse.

FullSizeRender-2

Salt and pepper the egg, then slide it onto one half of the corn toaster cake.

EGG, CHARD AND SWISS BREAKFAST SANDWICH - Process 2

Add a little more oil to the pan, add the greens and wilt them over medium heat, stirring them as they cook. Season your greens with sriracha and then scoop them up into a heap.

Lay the cheese slice over the greens, turn off the heat and cover the pan. Let the cheese melt.


IMG_3803

When the cheese is oozy slide the greens and cheese onto the other toaster cake half. Eat your sandwich right away – open-face or closed.

*Thomas makes  Toast-R-Cakes and they are tasty.

Screen Shot 2015-03-23 at 6.41.17 PM

You Say Sandwich and I Say…Sandwich

Screen Shot 2015-03-03 at 8.13.42 AM

This is how they do it at the Times (above).

Mid-blizzard, juke box lights glowing warmly, the door to the Lunch Encounter swung open and in stepped Barbara Stratton, in a hat, stomping snow off her boots. Barbara’s got a sandwich groove on at Cafe Clementine and she stopped in to spread the good word.

“Porketta,” she whispered. “And gowda.” Screen Shot 2015-03-03 at 8.15.20 AM

“Really,” thought I. We love em both but know them in culinary pig Latin apparently. Gooooda. And porchetta, emphasis on the CH.

Screen Shot 2015-03-06 at 9.54.50 AM

If it roasts slow and low, as her porchetta does, we want in, so  I peppered Ms Stratton with questions. Details. I need the details. Must. Reproduce.

Barbara elaborated, “The sandwich idea was given to me by the butcher at Cronigs. He told me he has eaten it several times in Philly and in his opinion it beats the cheesesteak hands down. I made a few sandwiches with the left over porchetta. They were good but I think they were raised to total EAT ME status by the long hot. I was poking around looking for the sandwich on Philadelphia food sites when I discovered the pepper. It is delicious and easy because you don’t peel or de-seed and it adds a little heat which lands with a yeah!! on the tongue.”

I think she skipped a few steps. My tongue watered, my brain rained pork fat and I was cornfused.

“So, um, what’s on it?” I wondered with deep desire. And what’s it on, I pondered, dreaming of New York breads. There is always always some spectacular and new New York bread source, doncha know. Outloud I said, “Porchetta, long hot and…?”IMG_1638

“The long hot gets its stem removed. Then toss in olive oil and salt and roast until blistered.”

Gotcha.

“We blanch the broccoli rabe, stir fry in oil with garlic and cool. The broccoli rabe needs to be covering most of the pork in a thin layer because you want a yummy taste of everything in each bite.”

IMG_1636

Aha. Will do.

Grandaisy Bakery is in my neighborhood- or just use something that has a nice platform and will toast up crispy.”Screen Shot 2015-03-03 at 8.46.34 AM

“We reheat in a hot oven until the cheese melts-about 7 minutes. Also leave the lid off of the sandwich so it has a chance to toast.”

IMG_1637Nice platform, lid off, done.

And the meat, the meat, the meat, who is the mistress of the meat? Melissa Clark, mebbe?

“Yes,” she confirmed, “I used the “Melissa Clark recipe from the Times. The epiphany struck me after I spent 40 minutes scoring the fat on the one I made on the Vineyard. USE A SERRATED KNIFE! It works like a charm and is no big deal. Just make sure that the fat is cold.”

“I’m gonna set a day aside and dedicate myself to this affair,” sez I grandly.

“Alas,” Ms Stratton warns me, “the porchetta is a two day affair, what with the time to marinate and all—you could make/assemble all of the components on day one, then roast the pork and assemble the sandwich on day two. Also, don’t use a really aged gouda-too overpowering. Just a middle aged and a thin slice-the poke is the thang. ( I did ramp up the crushed red peppers and garlic in Ms. M’s recipe.)”

 So, to recap. One two three GO!

Bottom of ciabatta brushed with oil and a long hot, pork, broccoli rabe, aged gouda, top of ciabatta.

“Happy eatin!” sez B.
One teensy dete stickin’ in my craw. Did she say provolone or gouda??
And have I mentioned that Barbara is the best cook I know? She is a cook among cooks and we are talking peaks.
 
 

Climate Collision Salad Sandwich

A little something sunny to get you through the dark days. The solstice is next week and ,yes, we will make it through December
Image
2 silky mangoes, peeled, sliced off pit and cubed
1 Granny Smith apple, pitted and chopped
1 avocado, pit removed, peeled and cubed
1 tablespoon extra-virgin olive oil
Juice of 2 juicy limes
Salt and freshly ground pepper to taste

Toss all together. Spoon into flatbread.

photo

Happily Another Year – We’re Still Here!

This post ran Thanksgiving 2012. We are reprising it here at The Lunch Encounter in 2013 in celebration of a year for which to be thankful indeed. 

Watershed moment at The Lunch Encounter. A recipe.

Do we need any more recipes? No we do not. That said, I’m feeling strong about posting this one.

Last Thanksgiving I was thinking about the ubiquitous turkey-cranberry sauce-stuffing sandwich and had an aha moment.

Do you like that stuffing in the sandwich? I do not, although the taste is good. What we need here is my brilliant idea – Stuffing Bread! I’m so excited about this that I can’t shut up. Toss a turkey leg into a crowd and you will hit one of my victims. Poor thing had to listen to me gaggle on and on and on about my brilliant idea.

Last year Thanksgiving and the leftover turkey got away from me. Stuffing bread was back-burnered. This year however – woo hoo – we did it. I’m all puffed up like the Tom himself.

Tell you what, stuffing bread is brilliant. I think so anyhow. Here’s how to make it yourself.

Stuffing Bread

Makes 2 9×5-inch loaves

2 cups finely diced celery, about 4 ribs
2 cups finely diced yellow onion, about 1 large
3 tablespoons unsalted butter

(This picture is only enough for one loaf. You will need double of everything for the full recipe.)

Put the butter, onion and celery into a medium sauté pan and set over low heat. Stir to coat the vegetables evenly with butter, then let cook slowly until very soft, about 10 minutes. A little browning is okay, but watch that they don’t get dark.

1 quart unsalted turkey or chicken stock, 1/4 cup set aside

Add the stock to the vegetables, turn the heat to high and bring the stock to a boil. Let boil until the liquid has reduced to what looks like 2 cups. It need not be exact, but it must be 2 cups or less, not more. Remove from heat and pour into a liquid (glass pitcher style) measuring cup. Add cold water to make 2 cups, if needed. Let the mixture cool until it is tepid.

2 tablespoons minced fresh parsley
1 tablespoon minced fresh sage
1 tablespoon minced fresh thyme

Add the herbs to the stock mixture.

1 package active dry yeast (I like Hodgson Mill Fast Rise)
1 teaspoon sugar

Put the reserved 1/4 cup stock into a small bowl, add the yeast and sugar and stir until the yeast is completely wet. Set aside for 5 minutes.

5 cups all-purpose white flour
1 cup whole wheat flour

Put 4 cups white flour, 1 cup whole wheat flour, the stock mixture and the yeast mixture into the bowl of the standing mixer. Using the hook attachment, blend until a  dough begins to form. Add the remaining cup of flour and let it spin for a minute or so. The dough should be soft and not sticky.

This can all be done by hand, too, of course.

Water, as needed

If it is dry, add more water a couple tablespoons at a time.

1 tablespoon salt
Freshly ground pepper, black or white

As the dough is mixing, add salt and a generous grinding of pepper.

Knead the dough, by machine or by hand on a lightly floured surface, until it is smooth and elastic, adjusting with flour or water if necessary.

Butter a bowl, put the dough in it, cover with a tea towel and set in a warm place to rise for about an hour. It should double in size.

When it is twice its original size, punch the dough down. If you have time, cover it again and let it rise a second time. If not, turn it out onto a lightly floured surface and shape it into two loaves, pinching any seams together tightly.

Grease two 9×5-inch loaf pans and set the dough in them, seam side down. Cover with the tea towel and let the dough rise again until it is almost double.

Preheat the oven to 450 degrees F.

Bake the loaves in the center of the oven for 10 minutes. Reduce oven temperature to 350 degrees F and bake for about 30 more minutes. The bread should be nicely browned and sound hollow when you tap on the top.

 Let cool on a rack. Turn out and let cool completely before slicing.

Really tasty toast, too!

There. Hap hap happy. We dignified that bird.

 

At Risk of Being a Food52 Groupie

Screen Shot 2013-06-20 at 11.00.02 AMScreen Shot 2013-06-20 at 11.00.09 AMScreen Shot 2013-06-20 at 11.00.20 AM

See more about the Food52 Brooklyn potluck here.

Not to put too fine a cynical point on it, but do ya think they are having as much fun as they say they are having, or are they mythologizing like most of the rest of us? Nothing wrong with memoryphotoshopping to keep one happy. Highly recommended by yours truly.

Thanks to the Sublime Miss M for alerting me to the fabulousness of Food52 Does Brooklyn.

Shameless Self Promotion Number 050413

Screen Shot 2013-05-03 at 8.32.50 AM

The newest issue of Kernels is on  the stands now and includes a couple recipes from me. Both are delicious and doable, if I do say so myself.

Around this joint we eat lots of bread.  My son is still a no-condiment man so his panini will be pressed plain. (How he can choke down such a dry sandwich I will never know.)

Shameless Self Promotion Number “I’ll Take the 2.2 Pounder”

Screen Shot 2013-04-10 at 11.46.29 AM
Screen Shot 2013-04-10 at 11.31.54 AM

Nutella is the Audrey Hepburn of clients – classy in any context, smooth but not unctuous, European and effortlessly chic, sweet with depth. Color me swirly-happy to be a Nutella stylist-of-choice for now.
Screen Shot 2013-04-10 at 11.22.48 AM

Screen Shot 2013-04-10 at 11.33.55 AM

Matzo IS Bread, Ya Noodnik!

Hey, I’m posting a recipe. For Passover. Or another time.

Second Helpings, Please! was given to me by a super lovely client. He had talked about it – cause this book is beloved in Canada and was written by the mother of a longtime family friend of his in Montreal.  I had shown enthusiasm, he generously sent me a copy, I felt obliged to cook from it. Obliged in a good way. Do not need nor want anymore cookbooks staring me down to COOK FROM THEM. So I did.

Checked the index for sandwiches and there it was, Baked Matzo Sandwiches. Have you heard of that? I had not. Bingo! Exciting. Thank you, Eric, for giving me a reason to cook something new.

I had fun in the kitchen with this unusual – to me anyway – sandwich. I cooked. From a book. With embellishments. The original recipe calls for matzo, ground meat and onions. Plus salt and pepper and a couple other incidentals. So there was lots of room to improvise and I did. With lamb, pinenuts, escarole, garlic and… I thought of yellow raisins and will add them next time.

This sandwich was pretty good. Actually, I loved it. The matzo gets crispy, but is soft on the inside, and the flavors were so nice together, as were the textures. While cooking from this book the web that connects me to the world before us, behind us and within us filled my mind and heart.

Screen Shot 2013-02-18 at 11.27.35 AM Second Helpings, Please!

IMG_5626 Toasted Matzo Sandwich of Lamb, Escarole and Pinenuts

1 matzo, broken in half

1 egg, beaten
2 tablespoons extra-virgin olive oil, divided
4 ounces ground lamb, veal, turkey, chicken or combination
1/4 medium onion, finely chopped
1 clove garlic, finely chopped
1 1/2 cups chopped escarole leaves, coarsely chopped
1 tablespoon toasted pinenuts

Salt and freshly ground black pepper, to taste

A nice option: The addition of some yellow raisins. I did not add them, but will next time. Also, the escarole could be replaced with spinach, arugula or watercress.   IMG_5628 First get out all the ingredients. IMG_5627 Put the matzo in an 8×8-inch dish and cover it with water. Let it sit. IMG_5629 Chop the onion, garlic and escarole. Turn the matzo dish sideways over the sink and gently press out the water with your hand. Try to keep the matzo intact. Pour the beaten egg over the matzo and season it with salt and pepper. IMG_5630 Put about 1 tablespoon olive oil in a small, non-stick saute pan and set over medium-high heat to warm. Add the lamb and brown it nicely, stirring with a wooden spoon to break it into little pieces. Spoon the lamb out into a bowl, turn the heat down to low and add the onions.

Let the onions cook slowly until they are soft and sweet, about 5 minutes. Stir them often, let them brown, but not burn.

Add the garlic and cook for a minute or two, until the garlic softens. Add the escarole, turn up the heat to medium high and stir until the escarole is wilted.

Remove from heat, stir in the lamb and pinenuts. Taste and then season with salt and pepper if you feel it is needed.

IMG_5631 Preheat the oven to 400 degrees F. Coat a large, non-stick, oven-proof (no plastic handles) saute pan with a thin layer of olive oil and set it over medium heat.

With a thin, flat, metal spatula lift one piece of matzo out of the egg carefully. Try not to break the matzo too much (it will be kind of a mess but that’s okay) and put it in the saute pan. If the matzo is broken just spread it into a nice flat rectangle as best you can. IMG_5632Spoon the filling onto the matzo and spread it around gently.  Lift the second piece of matzo out of the egg with the metal spatula and lay it over the sandwich filling. If it is in pieces, just patch it together and proceed. Not to worry.

Let the sandwich crisp up on the stove for about 4 minutes, then move it to the oven for 10 minutes. Use the spatula to turn your sandwich over and put it back in the oven for about 10 more minutes until it is brown and firm and crisp.

Slide the sandwich onto a board, use a serrated knife to cut it in half and eat it up. IMG_5634 IMG_5635 - Version 2 I ate (most of the sandwich) with a fork and knife, although it could be picked up easily. Fork and knife saved the laundress a bit of napkin washing. Sunny weekend lunch with panache.