Tangled roots and family secrets. A famous immigrant writer who died under mysterious circumstances. Accordions, polkas and potica. And now a new twist: My Year of Cooking Ethnically.
Thursday, February 28, 2013
Slovenian Dinner Week 47: Stuffed Cabbage Low Carb Makeover: Beef-Cauliflower Filling
Menu
Stuffed Cabbage Makeover: Beef-Cauliflower Filling
Green Salad
Stuffed cabbage was the first dish I tackled, back in January of 2012, when I launched my year of Slovenian cooking. I was happy with the result. The next time, I planned to make the filling more highly seasoned—and to cook the cabbage rolls on a bed of sauerkraut.
Suddenly, it was December. My year of ethnic cooking was in the home stretch, and I still hadn’t gotten around to trying stuffed cabbage again. But now I had another agenda: how to do healthy makeovers.
For a healthy version of stuffed cabbage, I figured on skipping the pork and using just beef. But what to do about the added starch in the filling? I could substitute buckwheat for the rice, as I’d done with my stuffed peppers makeover. But this time I wanted to go even lower carb.
So I did an Internet search and discovered a fascinating alternative to rice: finely diced cauliflower. I found plenty of examples, including two or three recipes for meat fillings with cauliflower instead of the usual rice or bread crumbs. What an intriguing idea! I already knew that pureed cauliflower worked well as a mashed potato substitute, but I'd never come across the idea of using it in place of rice.
The recipes I found used used raw cauliflower, chopped or grated, in the meat filling. I figured I would go one better. I would brown the cauliflower bits with the onions and garlic, to reduce some of the moisture and make it harder and more rice-like.
I made a few other changes in my original stuffed cabbage recipe. To make the filling spicier, I increased the onion, garlic, salt, pepper, and paprika. I decided to skip the fresh mint and the spoonful of crushed tomatoes. As planned, I used sauerkraut instead of cabbage to line the pan. Finally, I decided to make the dish in the oven instead of on top of the stove.
For the result, read on.
Stuffed Cabbage Makeover with Beef-Cauliflower Filling
1 c. onion, chopped
2 cloves garlic, minced
1 T. olive oil
1 c. cauliflower florets, finely chopped
2 t. salt
1 t. pepper
1-1/2 t. paprika
1/2 c. fresh parsley, chopped
1-1/2 lb.ground beef
1 egg, beaten
1 large head green cabbage
sauerkraut
beef broth and crushed tomatoes, mixed, to make about 3 cups of liquid
salt and pepper to taste
For filling: Brown onion and garlic in oil. Add cauliflower florets and brown, then add seasonings, parsley and mix. Let cool. Mix in beef and egg.
For cabbage: Cut out core of cabbage. Cover in hot water and boil for about 5 minutes. Drain and separate leaves.
To make the rolls: Cut out the tough rib of each cabbage leaf. Place a portion of meat on the leaf. Roll up securely, envelope style. Secure with toothpicks.
Put a layer of sauerkraut in the bottom of large greased oven-proof dish. Put cabbage rolls on top, packing tightly. Add liquid, almost to cover. Bake in a 350 degree oven for about 1 hour.
The verdict: Pretty good. The filling was still a little mild. Next time, I will go back to using tomatoes and maybe the mint, as I did originally. And I might add some seasoning to the tomato sauce, too. No, cauliflower does not provide the same firm texture as using rice—or for, that matter, buckwheat groats. But it is a viable alternative when you are cutting carbs.
Who says Slovenian food can't be healthy?
Monday, February 18, 2013
Slovenian Dinner Week 46: Polenta Meatball Makeover
Menu
Meat Polenta II: Polenta Meatballs with Tomato Mushroom Sauce
Whole Wheat Spaghetti
Green Salad
The last Tuesday in November was shaping up to be a busy day. An appointment in the morning, volunteer tutoring in the afternoon. And I was in the final stretch of a month-long writing project.
So I needed to find a dinner entree that was easy and, if possible, make-ahead. Once again, I figured that the best solution was a makeover of a dish I had tried earlier in the year.
Meatballs seemed like the perfect choice.
I had three candidates. The most successful were the caraway meatballs I had made back in June. In July, I had tried an odd one, called uštipci, from The Yugoslav Cookbook, that I didn't feel like repeating. Those solid, fatty squares of uncooked bacon mixed in with the ground beef never did cook properly.
Then there was an intriguing dish called meat polenta, from the Progressive Slovene Women, one of my most trustworthy sources. They were made from a paprika-spiced mixture of beef and cornmeal. Quite a lot of cornmeal: a full cup added to a pound of meat. The finished product turned out dry and granular, because the uncooked cornmeal didn't soften.
Only afterward did it occur to me: Maybe "cornmeal" meant cooked polenta. If I made this dish again, I resolved to try it that way.
So perhaps this was the time.
I did some Internet research to see if I could find any other meatballs made with cooked cornmeal. Mostly, I found Mexican meatballs, with small quantities of dry cornmeal added. So maybe this meat polenta recipe wasn't even Slovenian.
But then I found something: A Slovenian meatball called mavželj. It sounded like one of those traditional novelties that isn’t made much anymore. For good reason, since it starts with a pig's head.
To make mavželj, you start out by boiling the pig’s head and scraping off the meat. A few other organ meats are added, like the brains and lungs. Then the meat is chopped, seasoned, and mixed with polenta. Seasonings can include onion and garlic, salt and pepper, cinnamon and bay leaf, according to the modern Slovenian master chef Janez Bogataj. (His recipe seems to be mostly polenta.) The mixture is shaped into balls and wrapped in pig’s caul, then baked.
So this dish wasn’t the product of some Slovenian American cook’s imagination. It was simplified and sanitized, perhaps, but the chopped meat-polenta combination, heavy on the polenta, seemed to be well grounded in Slovenian tradition.
Well, I wasn't about to go shopping for a pig's head, much less a pig's caul!
I decided to stick closely to my original meat polenta recipe, but with cooked cornmeal, rather than dry. Much as I was tempted to do a meat makeover, this was not the time for more turkey leftovers. I would stick with a beef-pork mix, with a little more onion. The simple tomato sauce had been good the first time, but since we had some fresh mushrooms I decided to add those. And this time I would bake rather than simmer the meatballs.
For the result, read on.
Meat Polenta II: Polenta Meatballs
Meatballs:
1/2 lb. ground beef
1/2 lb. ground pork
1 cup cooked polenta
2 eggs
2 t. salt
1-2 t. pepper
1 t. paprika
4-5 T. minced onion, browned in olive oil
1 clove garlic, minced
Sauce:
26 oz. organic diced tomatoes
1 small onion, browned in olive oil
2 c. sliced fresh mushrooms, white and crimini mixed
1 clove garlic, minced
1 t. paprika
1 t. marjoram
salt and pepper
pinch of sugar
4 T. parsley, chopped
splash of wine or mosto
For sauce: Brown diced onion well in olive oil. Add sliced mushrooms and garlic clove. Add remaining ingredients and simmer for thirty minutes.
For the cooked polenta, prepare according to package directions. I used the quick-cooking variety, which called for 4 tablespoons polenta stirred into 1 cup of boiling salted water, then cooked and stirred for about three minutes until thick. Let cool slightly.
To make the meatballs: Combine cooked, cooled polenta with remaining filling ingredients. Knead until well combined. Form into 12 small balls. Mixture may be loose.
To bake: Put a little sauce in bottom of medium rectangular dish. Place meatballs in dish. Add more sauce. Bake at 375 degrees for about 1 hour.
Serve over spaghetti or noodles. Sprinkle with grated parmesan cheese.
My heart sank when I saw yellow polenta oozing out of the meatballs, after they had been in the oven for awhile. But I poured more sauce on top.
The verdict: Amazingly, it all worked out. The meatballs were tasty, even if the fat and some of the polenta did leach into the sauce. And there were none of those hard cornmeal granules, this time around.
As we were eating, my husband and I got into a long discussion about caul. I had seen photos of caul-wrapped foods in a couple of my European cookbooks. It looks liked a spidery white net. But what was it, exactly?
I thought it was similar to a traditional sausage casing. Part of the intestine. My husband thought it was related to the placenta, a sort of film or veil than can cover a baby mammal at birth. He'd heard about this from watching Jacques Pépin on television.
Turns out out we were both right. Not the most pleasant of dinner conversations!
Still, the dinner was a success.
“There is something about the flavor,” my husband said. “I could smell it when I was up on the roof, cleaning the gutters.” (We'd had heavy rains that night.)
What is that elusive flavor? No cabbage in the dish tonight. Was it simply tomatoes and paprika? Tomatoes without oregano and basil?
Central European umami or Slovenian soul, I guess. Whatever it is, the smell and flavor are unmistakable. I had found it once again.
Sunday, February 17, 2013
Slovenian Dinner Week 45: Minestrone Makeover
Menu
Mineštra II, Minestone Makeover
Salad Nicoise
It was the third Tuesday of November. Two days before Thanksgiving.
Not a week when I could spend a leisurely morning reading cookbooks, come up with a few options, and then stroll to the market to see what looked good.
It had to be relatively easy. Not too heavy. Something that could be made in advance and reheated, or started early and left to simmer. We would be eating early, since our Cajun band had a gig.
I went back to the early months of this cooking project, to find a likely dish that I hadn’t yet made over. There were a few contenders. Maybe a nice soup?
Finally, I had it. Mineštra, Slovenian minestrone. My first version of mineštra, back in June, had been delicious. Another one of those deceptively simple, familiar dishes that packs a lot of flavor. It struck me as particularly appealing. Soothing. My husband had mentioned that he had just bought a can of borlotti beans, too.
That first time, I had used some chicken-apple sausage we had in the fridge. It was a little too sweet. Next time, I resolved to use a more suitable sausage, with Italian or Mediterranean seasonings. Or maybe Polish sausage. Chicken or turkey, if I could find it. And instead of rice, I would try pasta, as some recipes suggested. Whole wheat, or even gluten free, to make it healthier.
And one more plus. We could have leftovers for a light lunch on Thanksgiving, to fill in that awkward need-to-eat-a-little-something gap before the big meal.
I couldn't resist doing a little searching in my cookbook collection. There seemed to be a few minestrone variations: with beans (fižol), like my original version. Without beans, or Primorska style. And eclectic.
Primorska mineštra skips the beans but has some creative vegetable additions (leeks, celery root, kohlrabi, cauliflower), along with bacon. I found virtually identical recipes on the Slovenian government website and in Slovenian Cookery, Slavko Adamlje's 1996 book.
Going beyond Slovenia, I found a couple of interesting versions in Olga Novak-Markovic’s Yugoslav Cookbook (1986.) Istra Minestrone has pork ribs, sweet corn, young tender beans, pasta, and unspecified soup vegetables. The Dubrovnik version has brussels sprouts, courgettes, pork and mutton, potatoes, French beans, and bacon.
I decided to keep it simple, with maybe just a few new vegetable choices, along with pasta and a spicier sausage.
When I went shopping, at eleven in the morning, the pre-holiday shopping frenzy had already begun, with Thanksgiving just two days away. Especially at the butcher shop, where folks were already lined up at the single checkout line.
So I decided to cross the butcher off my list and see what I could find at the cheese shop two doors down, one of my regular haunts, where they had started to carry a nice assortment of sausages. They had nothing in the way of chicken and turkey alternatives. But plenty of pork, which would make a Slovenian smile. I bought a package of lightly smoked savory herb pork sausage. Made right here in Berkeley. No antibiotics, hormones, gluten, MSG, nitrates, nitrites. All-vegetarian feeds. Couldn't go wrong with that.
The parking lot of the big produce market on the corner was like an obstacle course. But I didn’t need much, just a potato and a couple of the vegetable alternatives I wanted to try: a leek and a single, knobby celery root. While I was there, I bought some whole wheat pasta elbows. I was ready to go.
Mineštra II, Minestrone Makeover
2 T. olive oil
1/2 large onion, chopped
1 large leek, sliced
1 large clove garlic,chopped
1/2 head red cabbage, sliced
1 large carrot, sliced
1 medium potato, unpeeled, cubed
1 celery root, peeled and cubed
1/4 c. fresh parsley, minced
1 c. chopped tomatoes with juice
10 oz. smoked pork sausage (4 or 5), sliced
2 quarts water
1 c. peas, frozen or fresh
1/2 c. whole wheat pasta elbows
1 can borlotti beans
2 t. salt or to taste
freshly ground pepper
white wine
more fresh parsley
First prepare the vegetables. To prepare the leek, cut off most of the green end. Cut remaining bulb lengthwise and soak in water. Rinse well to remove grit, then slice thinly and set aside. Chop onion and garlic as usual. Slice the cabbage and carrot. Cube the potato. Peel and cube that knobby celery root. (That was a new experience for me!)
Heat olive oil in large Dutch oven. Add onion and garlic and brown. Add leek and continue to cook. Add cabbage and sausage and brown. Add remaining vegetables (except for beans and peas) and water. Cover and simmer. Taste and adjust seasoning. Toward the end, add pasta and simmer. Add peas. Stir in some white wine and top with more parsley. Serve with grated parmesan cheese.
The soup was simmering, the dishes were washed, and I was giving the counters a final swipe when my husband got home from work.
“That’s definitely the smell of Central Europe," he said approvingly.
He was right.
What is it that creates that smell? It is comforting, slightly musty. Both familiar and exotic. I connect it with paprika. But there was no paprika in this dish. Another part of it, I think, is a sauce that includes tomatoes, but is not tomato-based. Is it a flavor defined by absence? The surprise of tomato, without the near-ubiquitous Italian seasonings that are often the default flavor choice in American cooking? Tomato with parsley? Does it also require cabbage?
The soup simmered for a long time. I finally turned it off, fearing that the canned beans or the pasta might disintegrate.
We served the mineštra with some salad nicoise my husband had made for the previous night’s dinner.
The verdict: It was delicious. Better with the more flavorful sausage—and more of it, too, this time. But we could have managed with less.
I had never cooked with celery root before, although my husband informed me that he had served it grated, as part of his wonderful coleslaw creations. Raw, it had a strong celery flavor. Cooked, the flavor was mild and pleasant. The cubes were hard to distinguish from the potatoes—in fact, it might be a good, lower-carb potato alternative.
I noticed, when I went to take photos, that the soup looked a little monochromatic, compared to the first version. I added more parsley.
It was only the next day that I realize what I had missed: The green peas! So I added them. Better late than never.
Luckily, we still had enough left over to serve as a pre-dinner snack on Thanksgiving Day.
Saturday, February 2, 2013
Slovenian Dinner Week 44: Healthy Sauerkraut with Potatoes and Smoked Turkey Bits
Menu
Sauerkraut with Potatoes and Smoked Turkey Bits
Green Salad
It was the second Tuesday in November. I had a busy day ahead and hadn't given much thought to dinner.
As my husband was heading out the door, he dropped a few hints. We had a nice jar of organic sauerkraut in the fridge. And, since he figured I would be going to the butcher shop, perhaps I could order the turkey for Thanksgiving.
Sauerkraut and turkey. That planted a seed. And it fit right in with a question that had been on my mind, as my year of ethnic cooking was coming to a close.
Is traditional Slovenian cooking healthy?
Yes and no.
No worse, probably, than any other cuisine that evolves in times of scarcity, when people do hard physical work. Especially in northern climates in the past, when people were limited to whatever was in season—or whatever they had managed to preserve.
That is the beauty of sauerkraut, a staple in so many Eastern European cuisines. Served fresh, cabbage is a healthy food. But it is easily preserved through simple fermentation, rather than canning. More and more, we are coming to recognize the health benefits of fermented foods.
But there is no denying it: Many elements of traditional Slovenian cooking make a contemporary health conscious cook cringe. It is heavy on meat, primarily pork. The fats aren’t the healthiest: lard, cracklings, bacon fat, and butter. And so many of the famous delicacies (potica, homemade noodles, struklji, zlikrofi, dumplings) are based on white flour.
But I knew that it was possible to do healthy makeovers. I had been doing it myself. From the beginning of my cooking project, I used olive oil in place of other fats, except for baking. I was pretty sure that contemporary Slovenian cooks were doing the same thing. The Slow Food movement is big there. A recent president was a vegan, for heaven’s sake!
So I started hunting around on the Internet for healthy-looking Slovenian recipes with sauerkraut. I found the perfect example: Potatoes with Sauerkraut and Crunched Smoked Turkey Ham, a modern adaptation of a traditional Slovenian dish.
The recipe was on a blog I had seen once before. Indulging Life is the creation of a Slovenian woman named Mateja, who now lives in the United States. Her blog is stylish, beautifully photographed, and with a fair share of luscious desserts and clever food adaptations. She would have fit right in at the recent FoodBuzz Blogger Conference I attended.
This looked like a simple dish, similar to some I had already made, and with the same sorts of substitutions: turkey and olive oil instead of pork and bacon. It even included garlic, not always a part of traditional Slovenian cooking. I was intrigued by Mateja's suggestion that cooking potatoes in the sauerkraut pickling liquid prevents them from getting mushy. I had never thought about that.
This dish looked simple and tasty. It had an elegant presentation—and it was validating, to have a Slovenian cook doing healthy makeovers while still holding on to her traditions.
I already had a few ideas for a some tweaks I might make: Small, multicolored organic potatoes, with the skins left on. And maybe a few juniper berries and caraway seeds, my usual addition to sauerkraut. I’d learned about this from a recipe on the Slovenian government’s tourist website, so I know it was legit! And probably less oil.
When I went to the butcher shop around the corner, I encountered a problem: No turkey ham, much to my surprise. The man behind the counter suggested smoked turkey breast would work just fine. But I thought it would be better to combine it with turkey bacon, so I bought a few thick slabs of both.
This would be an easy dish to prepare, I thought.
And it was, except for a fight to the death with that jar of sauerkraut! I couldn't seem to open it. Not even with that special rubber gripper, tagged with the logo of a Slovenian fraternal organization that I had picked up at a Pust celebration a few years ago. I tried tapping the lid with a knife. Holding it under running water. Twisting with the help of a rubber band. Nothing worked. I was desperate. Finally, a brainstorm: I used a can opener to punch a hole in the top of the metal lid. There was a whoosh as the seal broke. By then, of course, the potatoes had practically boiled dry, so I had to add more water and start over.
No matter. It all worked out.
Below is my adaptation, roughly double the quantities in the original recipe, which is supposed to serve two. Along with the addition of juniper berries and caraway seeds, I increased the garlic. That part was my husband’s doing. I had asked him to chop up two cloves.
“Oh, these are small,” he said. “I’ll do four or five.”
I couldn’t bring myself to use a half cup of olive oil, so I cut it way back. And I used that turkey breast-plus-bacon combination instead of turkey ham, out of necessity.
Sauerkraut with Potatoes and Smoked Turkey Bits (adapted from Mateja)
1-1/2 lb. assorted fingerling or other small potatoes, unpeeled
1 quart (32 oz) prepared sauerkraut, with liquid
1 t. salt
1 t. black pepper, freshly ground
1 t. juniper berries
1 t. caraway seeds
1 lb. (2+ cups) cubed, smoked turkey breast and turkey bacon (or use turkey ham)
4 small garlic cloves, finely minced
1/4 c. olive oil (note: half what the original recipe called for, so increase if you like)
Wash potatoes well, leaving skins on. Cut larger potatoes in half. Place in large pot, add water to cover, add seasonings, and bring to a boil. Add sauerkraut with liquid, combine, bring to a boil again, then lower heat and simmer uncovered until potatoes are tender. Most of the liquid should have been absorbed or cooked off. Cover and keep warm.
Heat olive oil in large skillet. Add turkey cubes and cook, stirring occasionally, until they are “browned and crunchy," as Mateja says. Add garlic for the last few minutes.
For serving: place a portion of the sauerkraut-potato mixture on each plate, Top with a portion of the turkey cubes with that nice garlicky oil. Enjoy!
The verdict: Very good. It could probably use even more smoked turkey. Or maybe it’s just that I added some of the extra sauerkraut that was left in the jar. I'm glad that I spiced up the sauerkraut.
As for the topping: The original version is probably even tastier, although higher in fat. Next time, I will probably try to use all turkey ham or turkey bacon, and skip the milder turkey breast. If I am feeling Indulgent :-) I might also add more olive oil. Using the full amount will turn the cubes into deep-fried little "crunchies," as Mateja calls them.
All in all, this is an easy, elegant, healthy version of a traditional Slovenian flavor combination.
Friday, January 18, 2013
Kosovo Honey-Tahini Spread: Cinnamon Toast with Attitude
I received a couple of delicious Christmas gifts from Kosovo, where our visiting journalist son now makes his home. They were twin jars from a store called Sacro, the first organic food shop in Pristina, Kosovo's capital. One contained mountain honey, or mjalte bjeshke in Albanian. The other held a concoction I had never heard of: honey-tahini spread.
The honey-tahini combination turns out to be popular in many other places, like Greece, Turkey, and even Israel. It is a familiar flavor, similar to sesame seed halvah. The texture reminds me of the honey butter we used to buy at the grocery store when I was a child in Cleveland. But this exotic delicacy is even more thick and decadent, and with a far more complex flavor than honey butter.
I am sure you could make your own. But it is much better if it comes from the Balkans.
I discovered a wonderful use for this luscious spread one January morning, when I wanted to make cinnamon toast for breakfast. My husband and I always celebrate the anniversary of our first date. This was the morning after.
Cinnamon toast has always been a sentimental favorite. When I was growing up, my mother used to make it for us as a special treat. It was also the first dish I ever prepared for my husband.
We were college students at the time. Our first date had lasted until the wee hours. So I invited him in for some cinnamon toast and perhaps some tea.
Incredibly, this boy from New York had never tasted cinnamon toast.
Cinnamon toast is a simple treat. Nursery food. Nothing more than toasted white bread, buttered, sprinkled with cinnamon-sugar, and then browned under the broiler. It is a good example of what my husband and I came to call "Protestant food." It was our little joke, a tongue-in-cheek commentary on my midwestern family's rather tame foodways. In comparison, the cuisine of his east coast Jewish family seemed positively exotic.
But this morning we had a problem. No butter in the house, since we were in our post-Christmas austerity phase.
So I made do with what was at hand. Healthy, whole grain English muffins. That delectable spread, with tahini instead of butter, and honey in place of sugar. And a final sprinkle of cinnamon, to cut the sweetness.
It was like instant baklava.
Read on.
Kosovo Breakfast Toast (an original)
whole grain English muffins
honey-tahini spread from Kosovo (or make your own)
cinnamon to taste
Split and toast the English muffins. Cover with a good spoonful of honey-tahini spread, either from Kosovo (if you are lucky) or homemade. If that sweet mound is too thick to budge, just put the muffins under the broiler to warm and soften the spread. Then smooth it into an even layer and sprinkle with cinnamon. Put muffins back under the broiler briefly.
Serve with plain Greek yogurt on the side.
Enjoy!
Sunday, January 6, 2013
Slovenian Dinner Week 43: A Meat-and-Potatoes Dinner for Election Day
Menu
Potato Bread
Slovenski Meat Loaf
Brussels Sprouts
Coleslaw
It was the first Tuesday in November. Election Day. Except for a quick walk to our neighborhood polling place, and then a stop at the market, I planned to spend the rest of the day at home. The Presidential election was expected to be close.
It seemed like the perfect time to make a second attempt at my grandmother's homemade white bread.
My first try, earlier in the year, wasn’t bad. But it wasn’t like Grandma’s. The trouble was that no one in the family knew how she made it. Afterward, my mother dropped one of her famous off-hand remarks:
“Well, sometimes my mother used potato water in her bread—”
Potato water. And maybe the potatoes as well? That could be the key.
That might explain why my grandmother’s version was a cut above the usual white bread. Her bread, baked in standard issue bread pans, didn’t look any different. The loaves were always high. Brown and crusty on the outside. Inside, they had a moist but light quality. And maybe a slightly coarse crumb that gave the bread a kind of earthiness.
I couldn’t find a white potato bread in any of my vintage Slovenian American cookbooks. But I did find a recipe on the website of an ethnic radio station in the Cleveland area, in a section called Alice Kuhar’s Recipes.
Alice Kuhar, who must be close to my mother's age, is a well known figure in Cleveland’s Slovenian American community. A radio personality. One of the first female radio engineers in the United States. A recent inductee into Cleveland's Polka Hall of Fame.
Her recipe collection is an eclectic mix, similar to those 1950s cookbooks I have been collecting. Traditional Slovenian dishes are mixed in with other ethnic specialties, along with plain old American fare. So I didn’t know how to classify her Old-Fashioned Potato Bread. The recipe looked like a basic sort of white yeast bread, except for one thing: The liquid was provided by boiled potatoes, mashed into their cooking water, along with buttermilk or sour milk.
The recipe sounded good, but there was nothing to identify it as Slovenian. But then I found a similar recipe in one of my newer sources: The Yugoslav Cookbook, published in Ljubljana in the mid-1980s. That was close enough for me. At the very least, this was the sort of bread that was made in the former Yugoslavia. And more to the point, it was known to the ethnic community in Cleveland. And maybe to my grandmother.
Old Fashioned Potato Bread (Adapted from Alice Kuhar)
1-1/2 c. water
1 medium potato, peeled and cubed
1 c. buttermilk or sour milk
3 T. sugar
2 T. butter
2 t. salt
6 to 6-1/2 c. flour (Note: I used bread flour and ended up using less)
2 packages dry yeast
Peel and cube the potato and cook in boiling water in covered pot until tender, about 12 minutes. (Note: I left the skin on and removed it after boiling.) Without draining, mash the potato pieces in the cooking water. Measure the mixture, adding more water if necessary so that the total amount is 1-3/4 cups.
Put the mashed potato-water mixture back in the pot, along with all the remaining ingredients except for the flour. Combine ingredients until butter is melted. Heat or cool to allow mixture to reach 120-130 degrees. (Note: I just took a guess. I heated the mixture and let it cool until it felt pretty warm but not hot. To be safe: check!)
Combine yeast with 2 cups of the flour in large mixing bowl. When the potato mixture is the proper temperature, add it to the bowl. Beat with electric mixer at low speed for 30 seconds. Scrape bowl to make sure mixture is well combined. Beat at high speed for 3 minutes. Stir in as much of the remaining flour as you can with a large spoon. (For me, that was about 1 more cup.) Then turn the mixture onto floured surface and begin kneading in the rest of the flour.
According to the recipe, you should knead in enough flour to "make a moderately stiff dough that is smooth and elastic," a process that should take 6 to 8 minutes. Form the dough into a ball. Place it in a large oiled bowl, turning over to oil the top. Cover and let sit in a warm place for 45-60 minutes, or until doubled.
Punch dough down. Turn out onto floured surface and knead briefly, then divide in two. Cover and let rest for 10 minutes.
Form into loaves and dip the tops in a bit of flour. Place each one in an oiled 8 x 4 x 2 inch loaf pan. (Note: I used one extra-large pan and one smaller pan.) Cover and let rise again in a warm place until almost doubled.
Bake in 375 degree oven for 35 to 40 minutes, or until done. If loaves begin to get too brown, cover with foil for the last 15 minutes. Remove from pans and let cool on rack.
I had been worried about this bread recipe. Maybe the election day jitters didn’t help.
I always proof the yeast before adding, so it was an act of faith to mix the dry yeast into the flour. I worried that I hadn’t actually checked the temperature before I added the hot potato mixture. What if it was so hot it killed off the yeast?
And then there was that little problem of kneading the dough.
The original recipe suggested that the final kneading would take 6-8 minutes. I expected to use close to 6-1/2 cups of flour. But the dough became stiff well before that. I continued to knead until the dough became sticky, so I added more. I still had about 2 cups flour left, so I continued to knead and incorporate more flour.
The upshot of all this: I kneaded for about 20 minutes and still had a good cup of flour left over. In all, I used about 5 cups of flour. Make of it what you will, but I was worried.
When I finished kneading, I had a firm, springy ball of dough. So maybe I was on the right track. The dough rose nice and high—and fast. So the yeast was obviously healthy. During the second rising, the dough almost—but not quite—overflowed the pans.
In the oven, the loaves rose well. The bread was almost bursting out of the pans. When I tapped on top, they were hard and crisp with a nice hollow sound. They came out of the pan easily. The bottoms seemed a little pale, so I popped them back in, placing them directly on the oven rack, for another 5 minutes to crisp up.
The aroma was heavenly.
I couldn’t wait to cut into one of those crusty loaves at dinner.
To go along with the bread, I wanted to make a simple entree, mostly protein.
I’d had my eye on a curious dish called Slovenski Meat Loaf. It seemed more interesting than the recipes I’d seen in my vintage cookbooks, if a little odd. I had seen it in a few places online. The same name, and virtually the identical recipe, right down to the dried parsley, instant rice, and ketchup or passata.
I first ran across it on a British cooking site called Celt Net, with metric measures, and then on the website of an Internet company in Minnesota’s Iron Range—where my own ancestors first settled. So maybe it was legitimate. Not exactly Old Country, with those convenience foods. But at least Slovenian American.
The original recipe seemed quite large: two pounds of beef plus three different starches, presumably to act as meat extenders. Several veggies. And quite a variety of spices and flavorings. It had an “everything-but-the-kitchen sink” quality to it.
I cut the recipe in half and made just a few changes. Fresh parsley. Regular rice instead of instant. Matzo meal instead of bread crumbs. I did use catsup, since I wasn’t quite sure what passata was, although I assumed it must be a European equivalent of some kind.
(I later discovered that passata is the Italian name for a useful staple I had recently discovered, after it started to turn up in some of the local "natural" markets. It is a strained, fresh-tasting tomato puree, sold in jars or boxes, and good to keep on hand.)
Slovenski Meat Loaf
1 lb. ground beef
1/2 onion, chopped
1/2 green pepper, diced
olive oil
1 clove garlic, minced
1/2 bunch green onions, thinly sliced
1 potato, grated
3 T. raw rice, parboiled
3 T. bread crumbs or matzo meal
1 egg
3/4 t. salt
1/2 t. pepper
I/2 T. smoked paprika
2 T. fresh parsley, minced
1/2 T. prepared mustard (I used Dijon)
3/4 t. worcestershire sauce
1/4 c. catsup or passata
1/4 t. each dried basil, oregano or marjoram, and thyme
Cook onion and green pepper in olive oil in a small skillet until onions are turning brown. Add garlic and cook a few more minutes. Let cool. Add to meat, along with the other ingredients.
Line a large baking pan with foil. Oil the foil. Form the meat into a flat rectangular loaf. Bake at 350 degrees for an hour or so, until done. Let cool before slicing.
The verdict: This was a good, traditional, all-American, ever-so-slightly ethnic dinner.
At our local market that morning, I had spotted a big, beautiful branch of brussels sprouts and couldn't resist bringing it home. I left the preparation to my husband. He chopped off the right number of sprouts and sauteed them in a little olive oil, garlic, salt and pepper. Delicious!
That oddball meat loaf tasted pretty good. It would have been better to pre-cook the rice (or use instant), since the outer bits were crunchy and stuck to the foil. A well-oiled ceramic pan might be a better choice for baking.
As my husband put it, the other dishes were really just support for the potato bread. That was the main event.
I had done an advance tasting of the bread. Since I had some extra dough, I had made myself a little test roll. It was still hot when I tore it open and and inspected it. It had a nice, delicate texture. Then I tasted it. Ahh. This just might be it. Light, slightly sweet. But with more substance than the usual plain old white bread.
At dinner, the loaves of bread had cooled enough to slice easily. The bread still tasted good, although I could see that the texture was a little uneven. I was probably guilty of over-kneading.
I froze the second loaf of bread for my mother. I wasn't quite sure what she would think about it.
I finally asked her, a few days later.
She hesitated. “It was good. But it wasn’t my mother’s.”
So the bread remains a work in progress.
Saturday, January 5, 2013
Happy New Year! Resolutions and Coming Attractions.
Last January, I made a New Year's Resolution for 2012. I would make one Slovenian dinner a week. And I would write about it.
Now it is a year later. I succeeded with the cooking part: I prepared fifty weekly dinners. During those two weeks that we were out of town, we managed to enjoy restaurant meals that featured Central European or Balkan foods.
But I have fallen behind with the writing.
So here is my first New Year's Resolution for 2013: I will spend the next month catching up. No more new Slovenian meals until I have recorded the old ones!
Here is a preview of the recipes I will be posting:
November Dinners:
Week 43 Potato Bread, Slovenski Meat Loaf
Week 44 Sauerkraut with Potatoes and Smoked Turkey Bits
Week 45 Mineštra II, Minestrone Makeover
Week 46 Meat Polenta II: Polenta Meatball Makeover
December Dinners:
Week 47 Stuffed Cabbage Makeover with Beef-Cauliflower Filling
Week 48 Lentil Soup
Week 49 Chicken Ajmoht II and Latkes
Week 50 Christmas Eve and Christmas Day: Zeljanica, Klobase
These recipes are a mix of old and new. More than half were attempts to create healthier or more successful versions of dishes I had made earlier in the year.
I have continued to branch out from the three vintage Slovenian American cookbooks that inspired this adventure. But somehow I keep returning to them.
From my kitchen to yours: Happy 2013 and Dober Tek!
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