
So in keeping with our recent trend of two-course dinners, I began by turning the rest of the lovely 10-grain mix into supplì (or arancini) with a chunk of mozzarella in the middle and a diluted egg-cormeal crust. I find that they do just fine in about a half inch of oil; it takes a tad more attention to rotating them for even browning, but it uses way less oil than deep frying. So I put them on top of some spinach pesto and got to work on part two: grilled squid salad. Now this is a variation on what I had wanted to make the day I drove all over the place trying to find squid, but it's different because I made the peanut soup part anyway and we ate iterations of that for over a week, and now we have a new raft of leftovers that dictated this particular treatment.
I have found that when it's too cold to contemplate grilling, an iron pan heated to air-curling heat can do a passable job of putting a char on things that like a nice char. Squid is just such a food; you either cook it for 1 minute or several hours. Otherwise it's rubber. So four good-sized squid bodies marinated for a couple of hours in spinach pesto mashed with ume plums and got a righteous sear in the pan. Then I cut them into rings and tossed them with the last of the roasted beet salad from ages ago (that we've been hitting all week) plus a few remaining Kalamata olives, a final hunk of feta, and more spinach pesto. This rich ruby mixture I did serve atop an exciting bunch of greens plucked mere minutes before from the garden: claytonia, mâche, spinach, mustard, mizuna, chard, tatsoi, radish, and arugula.

The little camera had some depth-of-field issues with this one; it was all "Wow, that plate from Turkey is so cool" and I was like "But dude, the food" and it was totally "Whatever about your food- check out that plate!" (The big camera's battery was dead.) We enjoyed the last glass of a 2003 Guigal Crozes-Hermitage from last night- when we had an inexplicably unphotographed porcini powder dusted baked halibut on caramelized leeks and turnips- along with a newly-opened 2003 Jaboulet Vacqueyras. It's always so much more instructive to taste wines together, and when you can get regions or years to match up it's even better.
4 comments:
Bet those greens tasted good - so fresh and welcome after all that snow!
I have the same issues with my camera. Great plate, btw. I can't believe you are still getting snow - I think I'm further north than you, yet I just started my heirloom tomatoes and lettuces last weekend (in a crappy mini-greenhouse, but still).
Wait, how did I miss that you made arancini? Love love love those. I recently used semolina flour instead of cornmeal in a dredge, and it came out excellent. I would like to eat those arancini.
Z: The greens were so welcome, and so good...
H: ...and we just got another 6 inches of snow, so that will be it for a while. You guys on the West coast are lucky with the climate. Rice balls are a regular here, and this grain mix made great ones.
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