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Cheese

From the Garden Summer Sub

July 26, 2017 by biz.w.harris@gmail.com 1 Comment

My mama had about two things that if they were on a menu, she’d order them without even thinking about it. One was a Reuben, and the other was eggplant ANYTHING.

This year, I grew mama some in my garden…but now she’s not here to enjoy it with me. If she were here, I’d make her this sandwich combining eggplant with all the other things growing in abundance this time of year. I’d add in some creamy cheese, lots of basil, and toasted french bread and together we’d get our faces covered in red sauce, cheese, and summertime.

This isn’t totally my recipe… it’s a riff on my very first food blogger crush, Smitten Kitchen’s ratatouille sub..but focuses exclusively on what grows in my vegetable & herb garden and uses different cheese and spices. As it turns out, no matter how much I like an original recipe, I inherited my dad’s inability to follow one to the letter (well, we CAN do it…but we just always seem to want to do it just a little bit differently to see what happens). It drove my Mama crazy.

Anyway, I’ve been making this sandwich every summer for years with multiple variations–usually about July when we find ourselves elbow deep in homegrown eggplant, zucchini, summer squash and tomatoes—I think it tastes like summer on bread.

Got a plethora of summer garden vegetables? Looking to TASTE summertime? Love eggplant like Mama? This is your gooey, summery, fresh supper tonight (and then lunch again tomorrow!) OR a super easy and divine summer meal for when your friends come over and rather than slave in the kitchen getting everything put together you just want to  watch the kids play and drink G&Ts.

 

From the Garden Summer Sub
 
Save Print
Prep time
20 mins
Cook time
1 hour
Total time
1 hour 20 mins
 
Author: Biz Harris
Recipe type: Sandwich
Serves: 4-8
What You Need
  • FOR THE SUB FILLING
  • 1-2 thin Eggplant (I'm growing the Japanese kind) cut into thin rounds and halved if they are large
  • 2-3 Summer Squash, cut into thin rounds and halved if they are large
  • 1-2 Zucchini, cut into thin rounds and halved if they are large
  • 3 small Tomatoes, cut into rounds
  • 3 garlic cloves
  • 2 Tablespoons Olive Oil
  • 5 Basil Leaves, chiffonaded
  • 1 Tablespoon chopped fresh Oregano
  • Salt & Pepper to taste
  • FOR THE SANDWICH
  • Burrata Cheese
  • Basil leaves, chiffonaded
  • Salt, Pepper to taste
  • 1-2 Large French Bread loaves, toasted and halved (or quartered)
What to Do
  1. Preheat your oven to 350 degrees
  2. Cut up the vegetables.
  3. In a baking dish (ideally round), spread the tomato sauce, stir in the minced garlic, 1 tablespoon of the olive oil, a few pinches of salt and red pepper flakes to taste.
  4. Arrange the slices of eggplant, zucchini, yellow squash and tomatoes so that they overlap.
  5. Drizzle the remaining olive oil, another layer of tomato sauce, and basil & oregano.
  6. Bake for 1 hour.
  7. Split the sub rolls and warm up for 5 minutes in the oven or bake according to package directions.
  8. Once the bread is ready, layer the vegetables on top of your rolls, spread the cheese, and sprinkle salt & pepper and basil.
3.5.3226

 

Filed Under: Sandwiches and Salads, summer, Vegetarian Main Dishes Tagged With: basil, Cheese, easy, eggplant, from the garden, herbs, sandwich, squash, summer, Tomatoes

Sweet and Savory Fig Toasts

July 15, 2017 by biz.w.harris@gmail.com Leave a Comment

Fig week 2k17 continues folks!

So I never really understood the “Toast” phenomenon. I mean, WHOLE restaurants dedicated to what is basically an open-faced sandwich?

But you know, I DO get that sometimes two pieces of bread is too much for your sandwich ingredients and other times the food is just too pretty to cover up. My Pregnant lady brunch (prunch?)– which is basically an extra meal between breakfast and lunch since my belly is waaaaaay too big for regular sized meals these days– the other day was both of those things. Pretty AND light. Two pieces of toast would have overwhelmed it all. What I loved about this (beyond how yummy honey, figs, burrata, and a sprinkle of kosher salt was) was that the only real cooking involved was toasting the french bread, so this could be a fancy breakfast, a light lunch, or a killer appetizer.


Sweet and Savory Fig Toasts
 
Save Print
Prep time
5 mins
Total time
5 mins
 
Author: Biz Harris
Recipe type: Appetizer
Serves: 6-10
What You Need
  • ¼ or ½ loaf of French Bread, sliced into rounds
  • 4-8 Figs, sliced in half
  • 1-3 Pouches Burrata cheese, cut open
  • 2-4 basil leaves, Chiffonade (or cut into ribbons)
  • 3 Tablespoons (or more!) Honey
  • Kosher Salt or Sea Salt
What to Do
  1. Toast the French Bread rounds until crispy.
  2. Spread with creamy Burrata cheese.
  3. Top with sliced ripe figs and place on the cheese.
  4. Sprinkle Basil ribbons.
  5. Drizzle honey. Season with kosher salt or sea salt and devour!
3.5.3226

Filed Under: Appetizers, Breakfast and Brunch, summer Tagged With: appetizer, appetizers, breakfast, brunch, Cheese, Figs

burnt fig, burrata, fresh greens salad

July 13, 2017 by biz.w.harris@gmail.com Leave a Comment

Well, y’all, if I could eat this salad every day for lunch, I probably would. It was creamy, and sweet, and tart…. why can’t we eat fresh figs year round? (well, I guess we could but they probably wouldn’t taste the same, right?)

Also, let me be clear, I don’t like to make salads at home. I always want WAY TOO many “toppings” and by the time I’ve cut it all up, or mixed up the dressings or roasted the almonds I’m too tired to eat it. This salad, that I modified from one I read about in Food & Wine though, was easy and SO fine. The freshness of the ingredients matters here, so you don’t need a ton of them to make something that will make you feel like you’re a Roman Goddess laying on a chaise lounge by a fountain eating the finest food.

A note on ingredients: now, I live in South Mississippi…and it’s safe to say that Burrata cheese isn’t really *easy* to find, and when you can find it, it’s kind of on the expensive side. It is Worth the expense? If you love creamy, fresh, mild mozzarella, then um, 100% Yes. However, down here no one seems to want it or want to pay for it, so I’ve noticed that the grocery store that carries it always has to mark it down a few days before its expiration date. Uh, NO PROBLEM for me as it doesn’t last longer than a day in my house anyway. ;)I can’t tell you which grovery store as you might come steal my stash, but safe to say, look for the bargains if $4.00 seems like a little too much to pay for cheese. Also, worst case scenario (which isn’t all that bad) use fresh mozzarella. The flavor is the similar though the texture is real different.


burnt fig, burrata
 
Save Print
Prep time
5 mins
Cook time
3 mins
Total time
8 mins
 
Author: Biz Harris
Recipe type: Salad
Serves: 2
What You Need
  • 3 Cups mixed greens
  • ½ Cup Burrata (or more) broken apart
  • 10 fresh figs, halved
  • ½ Tablespoon butter
  • 3 Tablespoons granulated sugar
  • 3 Tablespoons olive oil
  • 2 Tablespoons fresh lemon juice
  • Kosher Salt and Fresh black pepper
What to Do
  1. Slice the figs and dip the inside into the sugar, covering the flat side.
  2. In a cast iron skillet, melt the butter until it sizzles.
  3. Place the figs cut side down into the butter and cook, without touching, until the sugar is dark brown and starts to smoke a little. The figs will be soft.
  4. While the figs are cooking, place/arrange the greens and burrata on plates.
  5. Mix the lemon juice and olive oil together.
  6. When the figs are ready, put them on top of the greens and drizzle with the olive oil/lemon juice dressing.
  7. Sprinkle with salt and fresh ground pepper to taste.
  8. Eat immediately
3.5.3226

 

Filed Under: Sandwiches and Salads, summer Tagged With: Buratta, Cheese, easy, Figs, Fruit, salad, summer

Tupelo Honey (upside down) Tomato Pie

August 22, 2015 by biz.w.harris@gmail.com Leave a Comment


We’d had a summer vacation planned to Holland and Belgium for several months (one of my bestest college friends was tying the knot!) but some family things got in the way of our trip. Instead, we took our little man to see his grandparents in NC and took a two-night trip to Asheville. We ended up brunching at Asheville’s pretty amazing spot, Tupelo Honey (people say it put Asheville on the southern food map) and I pretty much wanted to inhale everything on the menu. When we got home, I thought I’d try to make one of the things I didn’t get to eat while there…and it was worth it. so worth it, especially with my bumper crop of summer tomatoes. It’s august, which means the tomatoes will be running dry soon, so if I were you I’d make it before it’s too late and you have to wait until NEXT summer….

…

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Filed Under: summer, Vegetarian Main Dishes Tagged With: Cheese, North Carolina, Pie, Tomatoes, Tupelo Honey, vegetables

Genius plan: Sweet potato & Spinach mac & cheese

July 16, 2015 by biz.w.harris@gmail.com Leave a Comment

As the mom of a toddler who hates (HATES! DESPISES! DETESTS!) all green vegetables that aren’t either roasted, pureed, or fried, I’ve had to get creative about how to serve them to my little guy. What he doesn’t hate, though, is cheese. and what does he LOVE? well, mac ‘n cheese, of course. like everyone in all the land. My plan? combine what he hates with what he loves…. *diabolical laugh*

I’ve had some die-hard mac-n-cheese fans turn up their noses when I’ve mentioned adding vegetables to their most favorite food, but (and I can say this from actual experience and from the perspective of someone who REALLY loves Mac’n cheese,) it’s deeeeee-licious. Want to test it out on your own picky eater? (…or yourself. No judgement. I eat this off my little guy’s high chair tray BEFORE he can. it’s that good. I’m not ashamed about it. 😉 Here’s the recipe!

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Filed Under: fall, pasta and grains and legumes, side dish, toddler-friendly Tagged With: Cheese, Pasta, spinach, sweet potato, Toddler

EASY jalepeno poppers.

February 5, 2014 by biz.w.harris@gmail.com Leave a Comment

Tonight’s the SuperBowl, and even though I don’t give two hoots about NFL football, AND I ended up with food posioning, I’m not eating anything tonight, but last week we had a fun party and made these poppers. Perfect for the Super Bowl or really anytime you need an easy, delicious, (did I mention easy?) appetizer! You only need a few ingredients a little prep time and you can make it happen!
 

…

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Filed Under: Appetizers Tagged With: appetizers, bacon, Cheese, jalepeno

Summer Squash Souffle’ from the OK Cafe

July 5, 2013 by biz.w.harris@gmail.com 8 Comments

One of my all time favorite (and diet-busting) things to do with summer squash is to make a souffle’. The OK Cafe in Atlanta (and I’ve learned, so does Connie’s Kitchen in Leland, MS) both make to-die for versions. The first one I ever had was in Atlanta, so I’d searched around for the OK Cafe’s recipe for awhile, and came across the one they actually use every day for their customers. I mean, 66 pounds of squash and 2 quarts of green onions is a little bit more than I usually buy at the farmer’s market, so I (I mean, boone) did a little math and worked out the proportions for our family. I’ve made this so many times now and I’ve tested it out with a little less mayo or a little more cheese and this is the version that tastes THE MOST like what I remember from the ATL. It’s best served with creamed corn, speckled lima beans, fresh tomatoes, or turnip greens… or really, whatever your favorite combination for your vegetable plate!

Summer Squash Souffle’ from the OK Cafe
Serves 4-6

What you need:
2-3 lbs of squash, cut into half rounds about 1/2″ thick
1 1/2 cup of grated cheddar cheese
1 cup hellman’s mayonnaise (y’all  know I don’t mess around with other kinds of mayo. also, the recipe actually calls for 2 cups, but I think this is WAY too much)
1/4 cup green onions
1 stick of butter
salt and pepper
1 egg
1 cup Crushed ritz crackers or bread crumbs for topping

What to do: 
First, steam the squash until it’s soft and then mash with a potato masher so that you don’t have chunks of squash. Cut the onions and made your breadcrumbs or crush the ritz crackers while you wait to maximize your time.

Preheat your oven to 400 degrees. Melt the butter and sautee’ the green onions in the butter until limp. use a fork or whisk to whip up the raw egg. Once the squash is steamed and mashed and has cooled entirely (the fridge speeds up the process!), mix in the onions with the butter, the egg, the mayonnaise, the cheese and then salt and pepper it to taste.

Pour into a 9″x11″ pyrex dish, top with the bread crumbs or ritz crackers, and bake for about 30-45 minutes or until bubbly. Serve it with your favorite other vegetable sides and savor!

I may or may not have eaten this for 3 meals in the span of 5 days… so, so, so good…but better eaten as a special summer treat once or twice a year for staying on my swimsuit diet!

Filed Under: side dish, summer Tagged With: Atlanta, Cheese, OK Cafe, squash, vegetables

pimiento cheeseburger in paradise

August 22, 2012 by biz.w.harris@gmail.com 2 Comments

i did a bad thing, y’all. this summer (if you haven’t been able to tell by the recent recipes) i fell off the weight watchers wagon…not just fell, but plummeted.
 the fact that i cooked this for dinner tonight really says it all: pimiento cheeseburgers. YOLO, right? 😉

by itself, pimiento cheese is a delicious, classic southern staple…boone goes crazy for it and eats it on crackers, on sandwiches, and cheese toast. my grandmother LOVED it..and there are not one, but two different recipes in my favorite southern cookbook, Come On In. i can usually take it or leave it, but when i read about the pimiento cheese hotdog and the pimiento cheese burger in the new Garden&Gun, i started to salivate…weight watchers, what? and trust me, it was worth it.

Spicy Pimiento Cheese (burgers)
recipe adapted from Garden&Gun and Come on In
Serves 4

What you need for the Pimiento Cheese:
2 cups shredded sharp cheddar cheese
1/2 cup pimientos (about one small jar)
3 green onions, chopped
1/2 mayonnaise (again, helmann’s…i know Carolinians use Dukes, but seriously, people..use dukes.)
salt (no more than 1/2 tsp)
black pepper (1 tsp)
cayenne pepper (1/4 tsp)

And the Burger:
1 lb lean ground beef
salt
pepper
garlic powder
red onion
4 sesame buns
ketchup

What to do:
Mix the cheese, pimientos, green onions, mayo, and seasonings together and refrigerate until you’re ready to serve.

 

 
mix the seasonings in with the ground beef and make 4 balls. Flatten the balls into patties, and press your thumb into the center (this helps distribute heat evenly, i guess.) cook the burgers on the grill or in a skillet until medium rare or medium.

Turn on the broiler and spread the pimiento cheese onto the top half of the hamburger buns. Put both sides of the buns into the oven for about 1-3 minutes, or until the cheese is melty. make your burger the way you like it, and enjoy.

 

 

 

Filed Under: Beef and Pork and Game, Sandwiches and Salads, side dish Tagged With: Burgers, Cheese, pimiento, Sandwiches

garlic grits souffle

December 28, 2011 by biz.w.harris@gmail.com 1 Comment

in high school my best friend, megan, and I fell in love with some boys from staten island, ny we met on a school trip to atlanta and were appalled to learn they’d never TRIED grits before. ever. que’ horrible! they made a special trip to ihop to remedy this situation since it was their first time visiting the south, but HATED them. everyone with taste loves grits, right?
it turns out that they thought grits were like cream of wheat, so they put JELLY in them. arg. the romance was doomed from that moment on.

for any of you out there who either have never tried grits OR tried the basic ones multiple times and never liked them because they were bland, or had a weird texture, or used some other crazy reason to dislike them, then try this. now. seriously. generations of mississippi women in my family have relied on this recipe, and it’s currently THE christmas morning brunch staple at my house. 🙂 alas, one of the ingredients is un-findable since kraft stopped making it, but i have it on good authority you can make a decent substitute OR find some other version if you look hard enough. are you ready? because this is heaven…

garlic grits souffle adapted from gourmet of the delta
what you need:
5 c. water, salted
1 c. quick grits
1 roll kraft garlic cheese (if you stockpiled it in your freezer before they stopped making it) if not, use 1/3 package of velveeta cheese product + 2 cups extra sharp cheddar + 1 tsp garlic powder)
1 stick unsalted butter
1 c milk (or, if you’re adventurous, 1 c heavy cream)
1 egg, beaten

what you do:
stir grits into boiling water and cook until done (this is what the recipe book says, but from many, many years of grits making, i’m going to tell you that you should slowly stir in the grits little by little so they don’t clump, then turn the heat waaaayyyy down for 2-3 minutes until the liquid isn’t really visible. this means they’re probably done). Cut the velveeta into pieces and shred the cheddar, then stir into the grits with the garlic powder and butter.

whip the egg and fold it into the grits after they’ve cooled a bit. Move the grits to a buttered casserole dish, and then bake at 350 degrees for 45 minutes.

 
here’s what it looks like when it has finished cooking…all puffy and souffle-like. make sure to eat it IMMEDIATELY if you want everyone to enjoy your excellent souffle handiwork, it falls pretty quickly after taking it out of the oven (typical) so just make note.
i made this on christmas morning for my fam, and TOTALLY forgot to take an after the oven picture. sorry, folks…this image is courtesy of the dallas morning news.

 

however, i didn’t forget to take a photo of us eating it the NEXT night. ta-da! garlic grits, or cheese grits souffle… (shown here with venison and spinach souffle, but it’s also DELICIOUS for brunch with grillades, or as the other half of shrimp and grits).

 

Filed Under: Breakfast and Brunch, pasta and grains and legumes, side dish Tagged With: brunch, Cheese, Grits

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