Cooking for One: Potatoes Two Ways

The mighty potato.

It is starchy.

It is filling.

It can be sweet.

It can be saucy.

But it is always delicious.

I've been working on ways to create multiple sauces or preparations starting from a basic ingredient. The idea is to create the basic ingredient once, in bulk and then add different sauces, etc. throughout the week so that you don't get bored with the same leftovers over and over.

This is part of my exploration into Cooking for One (see

here

for my first installation). Once I have enough of these recipes worked out, I'll post a succinct compendium (that there is a $20 word), but for now, I'll link them all through the individual posts. Of course, they'll all be tagged Cooking for One, so if one needs to find them quickly, this key phrase can be put in my handy search box on the right hand side of this site.

But I digress.

Potatoes seem like a great base for many things. I've got two variations here: a light potato salad (light because there's not too much mayonnaise involved) and a pan fried potato with bacon. Both are great, and are based on a large pot of boiled potatoes. Stored in an airtight container, once they've been fully drained and cooled, the potatoes I made kept for a week.

All you need to do is boil up the potatoes and then create sauce variations when you are ready to serve them. Easy as pie.

Boiled Potatoes

serves plenty, portion out to one-person servings as you see fit

Ingredients:

  • 1 to 2 lbs Yellow New Potatoes
  • Salt to taste

Method:

  • Fill a large non-reactive pan (I had to use it sometime...) with water, leaving enough room for the potatoes to fit comfortably, while being covered by the water.
  • Chop each potato into 6 to 8 even pieces.
  • Boil potatoes for about 15 to 20 minutes, or until you can put a fork through them, and the skin has turned translucent.
  • Drain potatoes, let cool and portion

Potato Salad

Ingredients:

  • 1 portion Boiled Potatoes (see above for recipe)
  • 1/4 cup Red Wine Vinegar
  • 1/4 cup Mayonnaise
  • 2 Tbsps Mustard (I used Sweet/Hot)
  • 1 Spring fresh Tarragon (you can use 1/4 tsp dried instead)
  • Salt and Black Pepper to taste

Method:

  • Mix the vinegar, mayonnaise and mustard together. It should be thin enough to pour once it's all mixed up.
  • In a small bowl, pour the dressing over the potatoes.
  • Using a fork, coat the potatoes with the dressing, pressing down with the fork to roughly break up the potatoes.
  • Finish with a sprinkling of tarragon, salt and black pepper.

Bacon Fried Potatoes

Ingredients:

  • 3/4 pound bacon, cooked and broken up into small pieces
  • 1 portion Boiled Potatoes (see above)
  • Olive Oil for cooking

Method:

  • Turn the oven on to broil.
  • Heat a large non-reactive pan over high heat.
  • When it's hot, coat the bottom of the pan with olive oil. If you have bacon grease on hand, you can use a little of that here, too.
  • Add bacon pieces, cooking for 3 minutes.
  • Put potatoes in with the bacon, stirring to coat them with oil.
  • Cook for 10 minutes.
  • Move the pan to the broiler.
  • Cook for 5 minutes, then stir the potatoes, getting all the crunchy bits from the bottom of the pant scraped up.
  • Put the pan back in the broiler for another 5 minutes.
  • Remove and serve!

Bacon....

Hello.
How are you all today?
I am fine, thanks.
Actually, I am better than fine.
Want to know why?

I'll tell you why.
Bacon.
I love bacon.
And, I believe it loves me back.
You know how I know this?
Because it makes me happy.
The salt.
The fat.
The crispness.
That, my friends, is true love.
xo

The Comforts of Home

OK, I have sent Ms. Iz back to school already, and am now posting my summer vacation musings. So very sorry for the long absence, but I am back, so please enjoy!! "It's Summer Vacation!!!!"

You get to say this just after the last bell of the last day of school rings. And, I prefer to scream if at the top of my lungs, in public, to the dismay of my daughter, Iz. But, it starts off the summer with a bang.

Just after school ends, it is likely you will find me and Iz on an early morning flight to NY for an extended stay. This year, it has been two weeks long. With the number of cousins, aunts, uncles and the famous Gran Fran and Joe to visit, we can use as much time as possible here.

Oh, and let's not forget about the meals. I believe I ate enough over the last two weeks to comfortably miss a month's worth of food. Not only did Gran Fran and Joe outdo themselves with copious amounts of food and drink on offer at any time of the day or night, but my siblings did as well.

Each house offered up it's own special dish, each excellent in it's own way. So, my friends, here is an ode to my many family members and friends who made with the love and the food while we were in NYC and gave us a trip to remember.

The highlight at Gran Fran's house was the Linguini with Clam Sauce. I have made this countless times, but it never, ever, turns out like Gran Fran's. She manages to get the sweetness of the clams tBoldo come through alongside a little bit of spice and tangy flavor of the Anise flavored liquor. I recall this being a favorite birthday meal while growing up, and such a comfort food to me. Delicious!!

That's not to say that Joe didn't also deliver the goods. Take, for exmple, his Tuna or Egg Salad, and you will never need to buy pre-made again. I recall eating either of these after school on Peperidge Farms White Sandwich Bread. There is a kick from the cayenne that is offset by the mellowness of the celery. I have yet to find a better or equal salad of this nature. But, these days I tend to eat it over salad greens (I have already discussed the carb intake, in direct relation to keeping my girlish figure at my age...need I say more?).

Bacon, which always factors heavily into my vacation breakfast rotation was another standout on this trip home. Iz, who should just be rena,ed "Little Miss. Bacon", was in Pig Heaven (yes, pun intended, thank you very much). Gran Fran offered up bacon everyday, which Miss Iz gladly accepted.

Not only was our bacon always cooked perfectly, but it was also cooked with no mess and no fuss. The secret?? Cook it in the oven at a fairly high heat for a bit longer than it would take on the stovetop. I have tried his new-fangeled idea, and oh the joys of bacon -tastic flavor without the slippery floor/stovetop/walls to deal with.

It's a dawning of a new bacon era around my house!

Last, but most certainly not least, The Roast Beef. Joe mqde this for us one evening, under the tutelage of Gran Fran (via phone from her office), though I believe he can make this one without the phone calls. Talk about juicy, flavorful meat. Oy! It was just divine. I donùt have much more to say on this, except that you must make it, and come to the table with an empty stomach so you can be sure to eat as much as possible. And, I would say some nice horshradish mayo would be the only addition I would make to Joe's recipe.

I could go on and on here, but that might tap me of recipes for posts to come (OK, thqt is highly unlikely), but this is enough to give you the flavor of our summer vacation.

You can never get enough of your old-time childhood favorites, and with Gran Fran and Joe around, I will never have to!

Tuna Salad or Egg Salad a la Joe:

  • Celery, two stalks, cut into small pieces
  • Scallion, two, cut into small pieces
  • 12 oz can of Tuna, washed and drained or 8 boiled Eggs
  • 2 Tbsps Mayonnaise
  • Salt
  • Pepper
  • Cayenne Pepper

Combine Tuna with Celery and Scallions, mash it with a fork, add salt, pepper, cayenne. Mix in about two tablespoons of mayo, and then determine how much more you need as you mix.

For Egg Salad Variation:

  1. Put the 8 eggs into cold water, bring to a boil, then set the timer for five minutes.
  2. When that time is up, turn off the heat, leave the pot where it is and set timer for 10 minutes. Then run the eggs under cold water for several minutes.
  3. Slice them (I use an egg slicer), add them to the celery and scallions, mash them with a potato masher, add the seasoning, and slowly mix in mayo until you're satisfied.

Roast Beef a la Joe:

serves 4 to 6 people

  • 3.5 pounds of eye round beef
  • Kosher or Coarse Salt
  • Freshly Ground Black Pepper
Method:
  1. Dry the eye-round with paper-towels.
  2. Slather with salt and pepper.
  3. Cook on a rack to allow drippings for gravy.
  4. Although recipes call for 20 minutes a pound, I cook it not for 1:10, but for 1:35.

Amazing Bacon Cooked in the Oven:

serves 4 as a side dish

1 Lb Bacon (best quality that you can find)

  1. Preheat oven to 400 degrees F.
  2. Spread bacon out on a rack set in a sheet pan with sides.
  3. Bake for 20 minutes or so.

Linguine with Clam Sauce

serves 4 people

  • 1 pound thin linguine
  • 2 1/2 pounds baby clams
  • 1/2 cup olive oil
  • 4 tablespoons anisette
  • 1/4 cup dry vermouth or other dry white wine
  • 3 cloves garlic, quartered
  • Salt, pepper, red pepper flakes
  • 1/4 cup finely minced parsley

1. Set pasta water up to boil. Sprinkle with not too much salt; clams are salty. 2. Clean clams thoroughly under cold running water; scrub with brush 3. Warm the olive oil gently with the garlic, until garlic turns golden 4. Over medium heat, carefully add liquors 5. When alcohol evaporates, add clams and turn heat high and put a lid on pan. 6.Clams should cook in less than 5 minutes. 7. Add pasta and a dollop of pasta water. Stir over medium heat to combine. Add parsely; serve.