Apricot and Pecan Scones

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It’s true that I am not much of a morning person.  Every now and then, however, I find myself wide awake at the ass-crack-of-dawn. As a long-term insomniac, it’s rare that I find myself asleep before 1 AM… but on some occasions, despite this, I am very awake at 4 or 5 AM.  What does a person do that early, having slept only for a couple hours?

I’d tell you the answer. Keep in mind, this likely isn’t the answer for sane, non-insomniacs… In the wee hours where sun hasn’t broken yet, when everything is quiet and you can’t fall back asleep, obviously you reach for your iPhone and google some shit. Preferably breakfast ideas, although you know you aren’t really going to get out of bed to do any cooking. Not for another 5 hours, minimum.

Alas, that is where the following recipe came from. A lot of google-idea-storming, based on knowing I had a bunch of fresh apricots nearing their expiration. These scones are soft, tender, moist enough to balance the crumb.

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Apricot and Pecan Scones

Yields 8-10 scones.

Ingredients:
3 cups all-purpose flour
2 1/2 teaspoons baking powder
1/2 teaspoon baking soda
1/4 teaspoon fresh ground nutmeg
1/4 teaspoon ground cinnamon
1/2 teaspoon salt
1/4 cup light brown sugar, packed
1 1/2 sticks cold butter, cut into bite-size cubes
1 egg, lightly beaten
3/4 cup cold buttermilk
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
6-7 fresh apricots, pits removed then cut into bite size pieces
1/2 cup toasted pecan pieces

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Directions:
Preheat your oven to 400 degrees F. Line a baking sheet or two with parchment paper and set it aside.

In a large bowl, combine the flour, baking powder, baking soda, nutmeg, cinnamon, salt and brown sugar, mixing until well combined.

Cut in the cold butter, using your fingers or a pastry cutter, until mixture resembles a coarse meal. In another bowl, combine the egg, buttermilk and vanilla. Add the milk mixture to flour mixture all at once, stirring until you form a ball of soft dough. Fold in the apricots and pecans.

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Turn the dough out onto a floured board and knead it 10-15 times. Work the dough into a round that is about 1-inch thick. Cut the dough into 8-10 pizza-style triangles. Place each triangle on the prepared baking sheet(s), keeping them about 2 inches apart. Bake for 15-20 minutes or until the scones are golden brown on top. Cool for a few minutes, then eat while warm for best flavor.

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Meatless Monday: Mushroom Pizza with Homemade Pesto and a No-Knead Crust

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I posted a version of this pizza a couple months ago, but wanted to give it a revamping. Half the time when I make this pizza, I cannot decide what it is that works so well. Is the magic all about the sauce? The way the mushrooms don’t get overcooked, maintaining some texture? The crispness of the crust? I still don’t know. Perhaps it’s the combination of all these things that works so well.

Homemade pesto, especially this time of year, is delicious and simple to make. I’ve made various versions through the years, substituting different kinds of nuts, different oils, more, less, or no cheese, extra garlic, lemon juice, lime juice… I have hand chopped ingredients, relied on my food processor… Most recently however, I have found a love for the ease of making pesto in a blender. It takes all of 3-4 minutes, start to finish. While I almost always think about how any traditional pesto maker would likely slap me for the machine handling of all these ingredients, I do appreciate the ease.

This is probably the most requested pizza in our house on pizza night, by the kids and adults alike.  I encourage you to make the pesto rather than buy a store-version, as the flavor is uncomparable and adds much to this otherwise very simple pizza!

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Pesto Mushroom Pizza

Yields One 13×18-inch Pizza

Ingredients:

For the pesto:
6 tablespoons good quality olive oil
2 cups very packed fresh basil
1/2 cup raw pine nuts
1 lemon, juiced
3 cloves garlic
1/4 cup grated parmesan cheese
1/2 teaspoon salt
1/2 teaspoon ground pepper

For the pizza:
2 cups plus 2 tablespoons all-purpose flour
1 1/4 teaspoons active dry yeast
1/4 teaspoon salt
1/4 teaspoon sugar
3/4 cup warm water
olive oil for pan

1/2 pound crimini mushrooms, sliced into pieces about 1/8-inch thick
8 ounces part-skim mozzarella, shredded
1 ounce crumbled feta cheese

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Directions:

Make the dough: Stir together the flour, yeast, salt and sugar in bowl. Add the water, then use a spoon or your hands to mix everything together until blended into a ball of dough (this should take no more than a few minutes).

Cover the dough and let it rise at room temperature for about 2 hours. It may be slightly less than doubled in size.

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Make the pesto: In a blender, add (in order) of the ingredients for the pesto, beginning with the oil. Blend until smooth, scraping down the sides of the blender as needed.

Pizza time: Preheat your oven to 500° F. Dump the dough onto a lightly floured surface. Generously oil a 13×18 inch rimmed baking sheet with a good quality olive oil. Gently place a ball of dough on the pan, stretching and pressing it out toward the edges. If it springs back wait five minutes and then continue. The dough is very thin. If it tears, simply pinch it back together.

Spread the pesto evenly over the dough, making sure to get it all the way to the outside edges as well. Place the mushrooms over the pesto, trying not to overlap them if you can. Sprinkle on the shredded mozzarella and then the feta. Bake for 18-20 minutes until the edges are slightly charred. Cut the pizza into squares and serve.

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Day to Day Life: Week Thirty-Two

A look at the last week:

Our garden is apparently quite happy… it’s dumping out a supply of veggies daily.
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Soyrizo fried rice for brunch one morning.
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One of my pet peeves: packing the wrong shoes to put on after working out + showering at the gym. Hellooo so many stripes…
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Went to listen to my husband read a short story he had published recently and perform a newly written song as part of a local literary event.
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We waited really patiently for this mango to ripen just right… so worth the wait.
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Zucchini “noodles” aren’t new, but I had never made them before. While the flavor of this “pasta” was impeccable, the consistency didn’t work for me. Things got soupy. I haven’t given up yet…
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Family scrabble night with Nana. Silas and I were a team (and whopped everyone, hah… P.S. I inherited competitiveness from all sides…). YOU tell me what “girltax” is other than a term that comes from your creative writing teacher husband. And ahem pardon the term slut that a certain 9-year-old was eager to play.
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This is how we hang out.
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Hi, bird! We let our crippled pigeon fly around the house throughout the day. She likes to fly into whatever room I am in… sometimes that is more hazardous than other times. Today she has landed on my head twice and needed a quick mid-air detour from the kitchen twice.
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What do these spices…
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And these ingredients have in common?
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Homemade Ethiopian food one night.
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When you walk to the grocery store early in the morning, you see a number of things… Like deer grazing in a neighbor’s yard…
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And weird objects in a “FREE” box.
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More goodies from another day in the garden.
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Those eggplants inspired an eggplant parmesan pizza.
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And the abundance of pesto is always a good excuse for this pesto mushroom pie.
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Sunnies.
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Side salads for three.
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Late summer Ashland evenings…
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My pole bean plants have been climbing straight into the sky and I’ve yet to harvest a single bean!
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A small abundance of apricots that were leaning towards being too ripe meant apricot + pecan scones this morning.
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Hope you’ve had a good week!

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Saturday Sites: Week Thirty-Two

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  1. Note to self: please make this ice cream IMMEDIATELY.

  2. While I still have a never-had-a-baby-body, everything else on this list has felt relevant for the last 7 1/2 years.

  3. Well… pretty much.

  4. For you mamas of boys

  5. Blueberries are one of my favorite things, fresh or frozen… Here are some good reasons to enjoy them if you need convincing!

  6. Perhaps you’d like to enjoy them in bagel form?! I certainly would.

  7. Growing up in Hawaii, this list isn’t foreign sounding to me. Having lived through Hurricane Iniki, I understand even more so. As two hurricanes approach(ed) the islands this week, Honolulu Magazine released this list of “everything you need to buy to survive Hurricane Iselle” and I had to giggle a little, despite my understanding…

  8. I enjoyed this read and understand these feelings!

  9. HELL YEAH for this salmon banh mi! I would like this immediately, please and thank you.

  10. Pretty sure I needed to read this, this week.

  11. This one, too.

  12. If someone would come over and make this for me, I would love them forever.

  13. Bwahahaha… 2 cups flour! Stir! Don’t speak! Unfortunately, when I’ve “slaved all day,” this isn’t what happened.

  14. While I don’t think boys or sons should be left out of this discussion, I do think this is a beautiful article.

  15. YES to this.

  16. When we visited my father in law and his wife in South Carolina a few years ago, one of my favorite moments was being up at the crack of dawn with my husband before the kids got up, snagging two single-man kayaks and paddling around the lake.

  17. This is my preferred kind of cookie, I think.

  18. Although summer doesn’t exactly scream “SOUP!” at me, this roasted sweet corn and tomato soup most certainly does!

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Buttermilk Pancakes

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My mom has always been the queen of pancake making.  Even when I really didn’t like pancakes, her particular fluffy, perfectly golden cakes were the exception I would make (hesitantly, but still…).  It’s no wonder pancakes were amongst one of the first things I learned how to cook.  These days, my go-to recipe is still the same one I used when I was 9 years old.  The same one I quickly scribbled down over and over again on scrap pieces of paper, for years, as Mom answered my endless annoying questions of, “How much of what do I put in here?!  Am I supposed to stir this? How do I know it’s ready? Can I flip it yet?”

Another thing my mom has always had a deep, abiding love of are really cheesy horror and thriller movies.  Growing up, late at night she would manage to find these terrifying Japanese horror movies that I would beg her to let me stay up and watch with her.  I don’t remember any of the movies, but I do remember closing one eye at  time, then both eyes, scared shitless by some weird creatures or ghosts I KNEW would come back to haunt my dreams later.

Do you know what goes well with cheesy, terrifying, subtitled horror movies on late night TV?  Late night pancakes.  They are the same as morning pancakes, but sometimes filled with more chocolate chips, and certainly eaten like desserts or late night snacks.  I liked when I was in charge of the late night pancakes. One for mom and one for me!  While this recipe makes more than two pancakes, feel free to eat them at anytime through the day. Add chocolate chips if you’re feeling adventurous.  Watch ridiculous scary movies while you shove them in your mouth. Mostly just enjoy them, though!

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Buttermilk Pancakes

Serves 3-4 folks.

Ingredients:

1 1/4 cups all-purpose flour
3 tablespoons sugar
1 1/2 teaspoons baking powder
1/2 teaspoon salt
1/4 cup melted butter, cooled to room temperature
1 1/4 cups buttermilk
1 egg
1/2 teaspoon vanilla extract
oil/cooking spray
maple syrup for serving

Directions:

In a bowl, combine the flour, sugar, baking powder, and salt. Whisk together well.

In another bowl or simply a large measuring cup, whisk together the melted butter, buttermilk, egg and vanilla until well combined.

Stir the wet ingredients into the dry ones, just until the dry ingredients are evenly coated. Heat a griddle or large pan over medium-high heat until a few drops of water flicked onto the surface skitter across it.

Pour spoonfuls of about 1/4-cup of batter, per pancake, spacing them out enough to spread a bit. Cook until bubbles form on top and the batter sets (about 2 minutes). Flip the pancake and cook until golden brown on the other side (about 2 more minutes).

If you’re going to serve the pancakes all at once, turn the oven to 200 degrees F. Keep the cooked pancakes in there, in a covered dish or pan until ready to serve. Serve with the maple syrup.

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Meatless Monday: Veggie Yakiudon

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Although we eat a lot of Mexican food around here, there are some things I enjoy much more…  Noodles, for instance, are at the top of the list. It almost doesn’t matter the type or the particular cuisine. Maybe it’s just the high desire for carbs and the insatiable desire my half-Japanese self finds to eat my meals with chopsticks. Can’t eat a burrito with chopsticks, now can we?!

Growing up in Hawaii, so many of my meals growing up were a conglomeration of multiple cultures. There are Hawaiian dishes mixed with Chinese, Japanese, Filipino, American, Thai influences.  Even as a kid, noodles were instant comfort food for me. One of the first things I learned how to cook was saimin (ramen… straight out of the package, little spice packet included).

These noodles aren’t traditional in most senses, but they’re good and filling, sweet and savory. It’s important not to overcook your vegetables, so they maintain some texture and slight crunch in the final pasta. While I used round udon noodles, you can use what’s available to you — whether that’s flat, wide, or thin udon, or thick round noodles. I encourage you to add a bit of spicy red chili sauce to your bowl if you enjoy the heat at all — it balances well with the sweetness of these noodles.

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Veggie Yakiudon

Serves 8-10.

Ingredients:
8 tablespoons shoyu
8 tablespoons mirin
3/4 cup hoisin sauce
1/4 cup rice vinegar
1/4 cup vegetarian worcestershire sauce
6 cloves garlic, minced finely
4 teaspoons fresh ginger, minced finely
2 8-ounce packages round udon noodles
4 tablespoons toasted sesame oil
1 onion, halved then cut into half-moons about 1/4″ thick
1 package Quorn Brand Chik’n Tenders
1 large orange bell pepper, diced into bite sized pieces
15-20 snow peas, ends trimmed
1 small head of broccoli, cut into bite sized florets
1 large stalk celery, diced
1 cup bean sprouts
1 cup shiitake mushrooms, sliced into strips
salt and pepper
4-6 stalks green onion, diced

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Directions:
In a bowl, whisk together the shoyu, mirin, hoisin, rice vinegar, worcestershire, minced garlic, and minced ginger. Set aside until needed.

Cook the noodles according to the package directions, then run under cold water to stop the cooking. Set aside in a colander to drain until needed. Make sure the noodles are dry before adding them to the wok later, which will help them to brown up instead of steam, keeping them from getting overly mushy.

In a large wok, heat the sesame oil over medium-high heat. Add the onions, tossing in the oil until tender. Add the Quorn tenders, also tossing in the oil. Cook until lightly golden brown. Add in the bell pepper, snow peas, broccoli, celery, bean sprouts and shiitake mushrooms. Use two spoons or spatulas to toss the vegetables in the wok until they just start to soften up. Remove the vegetables from the wok and set aside.

Add half of the sauce to the wok. Over medium-high heat, add the noodles and quickly toss them in the sauce with the two spoons or spatulas you used with the vegetables. Add the veggies back to the noodles, tossing them into the mixture. Add the remaining sauce, along with a bit of salt and pepper. Toss a few more times, then remove from heat. Sprinkle the diced green onion on top and serve immediately. I like adding a bit of sriracha into my own bowl!

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Day to Day Life: Week Thirty-One

Here’s a little peek at the last week:

With a series of lightning and thunderstorms that hit around here this week, the skies have been lit up, smokey, magical and hauntingly beautiful.
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My new favorite Party Party iPhone app does fun business…
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Buttermilk ‘cakes as per request from a certain little boy.
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These skies…
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Basil out of the garden.
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Certainly means pesto, please…
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The most incredible sunsets have been showing up in all this haze.
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An egg sammich on homemade bread I made for tortas the night before.
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Little bird baby has turned into full blown adult-sized pigeon. S/he is discovering its adult voice this week… which has been hilarious and lovely. It is a cross between guttural-cooing and baby cheeping.
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Baked BBQ tofu experiment + creamy mashed ‘taters + little corns + buttermilk cornbread.
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I discovered a new brewery I like… This beer was tasty!
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Can’t get enough…
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Little pleasures include perfectly ripe avocados!
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Wet burritos! With homemade enchilada sauce and a creamy chipotle crema!
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I planted a couple double-decker echinacea plants this year. They’re pleasantly freaky in their double-decker-ness!
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A full house in the oven…
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Blood sun UFO.
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Yakisoba noodles comin’ ‘atcha next week.
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Last one…
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Saturday Sites: Week Thirty-One

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  1. It was fun to have a recipe included in this list of 25 bowls of ramen. There are definitely some bowls here I want to try, too!

  2. This video of a man’s animation of his wife’s drunkenly-told joke made me laugh.

  3. I’d like this drink, please. Kthxbai!

  4. This list of airplane passengers analyzed based on their pants… Bwahaha.

  5. I liked this list of world cuisines recreated based on three spices. Pardon the non-English site, but the chart is fully comprehensible…

  6. Watermelon tea? Sounds good to me.

  7. This video is quirky… I enjoy quirky. And by quirky I mean really, kind of weird.

  8. Here are five secrets to happiness

  9. I don’t get pissed off really easily (generally speaking). So as a person from Hawaii, this list of “How to Piss Off Someone From Hawaii” really is just chock full of things I’ve always found humorous and somewhat ridiculous.

  10. I always wonder if all of these are real and not in fact photoshopped…

  11. Hmmm… homemade tater tots? Sounds good to me!

  12. There’s an honesty in this article that I can relate to, and enjoyed reading.

  13. A lovely TED episode worth watching.

  14. I’ve been a night owl my whole life… is this why!? ;)

  15. This… I love this.

  16. I’d like to make, but mostly eat, this cake, please.

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Tomato and Herb Pizza

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Sometimes it seems unfortunate to me, that during this time of year, when the produce is at its peak, plentiful in the garden or markets, and completely versatile as far as what’s available, there are many summer days where the last thing I want to do is cook anything. Or turn on any heat in the house. Or think about how cooking means a buttload of dishes that will stretch from one side of the kitchen to the other, begging to be washed afterwards.

But then there are other days where the vastness of what’s fresh and available to me is a complete inspiration. I planted fewer tomatoes this year than I have for the last couple years, but included various types I’ve never grown before. All that we’ve had ripen so far are golden grape tomatoes, which have been sweet, pretty to look at, and perfect for snacking on straight out of the garden. There are lots of cherry tomatoes available, too, just not out of my backyard. I love the bold colors of the different tomato strains and when I picked up a pint of miscellaneous cherry tomatoes, a pizza that featured their pop of color immediately seemed to grab my attention.

I decided to forego any other sauce, with the intention of relying on the cherry tomatoes bursting in the oven, creating a sort of sauce of their own. This pizza is very simplistic, but the focus is on the fresh ingredients. You could serve this as a dinner pizza, or even as an appetizer, or accompaniment to some pasta.

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Cherry Tomato and Herb Pizza

Makes one 13×18-inch pizza.

Ingredients:

For the dough:
2 cups plus 2 tablespoons all-purpose flour
1 1/4 teaspoons active dry yeast
1/4 teaspoon salt
1/4 teaspoon sugar
3/4 cup warm water
olive oil for pan

For the pizza:
1 pint cherry tomatoes, halved
6 cloves garlic, chopped finely
1/2 cup chopped fresh herbs of your liking (I used basil, oregano, parsley, thyme and tarragon)
1 8-ounce ball of fresh mozzarella
1/3 cup grated parmesan cheese
salt and pepper

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Directions:

Prepare the dough: Stir together the flour, yeast, salt and sugar in bowl. Add the water, then use a spoon or your hands to mix everything together until blended into a ball of dough (this should take no more than a few minutes).

Cover the dough and let it rise at room temperature for about 2 hours. It may be slightly less than doubled in size.

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Pizza time!: Preheat your oven to 500° F. Dump the dough onto a lightly floured surface. Generously oil a 13×18 inch rimmed baking sheet with a good quality olive oil. Gently place a ball of dough on the pan, stretching and pressing it out toward the edges. If it springs back wait five minutes and then continue. The dough is very thin. If it tears, simply pinch it back together.

Arrange the halved tomatoes evenly on the dough, cut side up or down doesn’t matter. Sprinkle on the chopped garlic and herbs. Break the mozzarella up into small chunks and place those evenly over the pizza, too. Sprinkle on the parmesan and a slightly generous amount of salt and pepper.

Bake for 18-20 minutes until the edges are slightly charred. Cut the pizza into squares and serve.

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Meatless Monday: Spinach, Artichoke and Mushroom Ravioli

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Recently, I asked Vincent what he wanted for dinner? “Ummm… ravioli?” If there’s one thing I love about this kid (sure, there are many things, but we’ll just chat about this one right now), it’s his unfailing ability to ask me to make things I have both never made before, and certainly don’t really know how to make. Take ravioli, for instance.

I am sure that when the request came, he was imagining prepackaged frozen ravioli, but in my let’s-overcomplicate-brain, I had to think of homemade versions. Seeing as I have never made pasta before, I decided to research a little and quickly came up with homemade recipes that used wonton wrappers as the “pasta” and was intrigued.

So that’s the route I took with the following recipe. I didn’t trim these ravioli at all and consequently they were a bit large in size (nothing wrong with that, especially when feeding a bunch of boys).

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Spinach, Artichoke and Mushroom Ravioli

Makes about 25 large raviolis.

Ingredients:

For the filling:
2 tablespoons olive oil
1 shallot, minced
2 cups diced (small) crimini mushrooms
one 8.5 ounce can quartered artichoke hearts, chopped
2 cups fresh spinach, chopped
15 ounces part-skim ricotta cheese
1/2 cup grated parmesan cheese
3 cloves garlic, minced
1 egg
3/4 teaspoon salt
1/2 teaspoon fresh ground pepper
1 teaspoon granulated garlic
1/2 cup fresh basil, chopped
generous pinch of fresh ground nutmeg

For the ravioli:
one 12-ounce package small wonton wraps (I used these)
water
you preferred sauce for serving

Directions:

Heat the oil over medium-high heat in a saucepan. Add the minced shallot, stirring around in the oil for a minute. Add the diced mushrooms and cook for 2-3 minutes, until tender. Place the mixture in a small bowl until needed.

In the same pan you just cooked the mushrooms, add the chopped spinach. Cook until the spinach wilts (3-4 minutes).

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In a large bowl, combine the ricotta, parmesan, minced garlic, egg, salt, pepper, granulated garlic, fresh basil and nutmeg. Stir until combined then fold in the mushrooms,  spinach and chopped artichokes.

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Lightly flour a working surface. To make the ravioli, take a single wonton skin and place a scant rounded tablespoon of filling in the middle. Use a pastry brush to brush water along a 1/2-inch strip along all four sides of the wrapper. Place a second wrapper on top, working from the middle first. Carefully press out air bubbles as you carefully press the top wrapper around the base of the filling, then work your way out to the edges, lining the corners up and pressing lightly to seal. Place the ravioli on a baking sheet lined with parchment paper, keeping the ravioli in a single layer. Set aside and repeat with remaining filling and wonton wrappers. If you want to make these ahead of time, simply place the baking sheet in your freezer until you’re ready to cook them.

Set a large pot of water to boiling. Generously salt the water. Once the water is boiling, drop the ravioli in, three or four at a time. Cook for 3 minutes, until the ravioli floats to the top of the pot, then remove with a slotted spoon.

I like to serve the cooked ravioli with warm, slightly spicy marinara and parmesan cheese. You can use whatever sauce you prefer.

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