Showing posts with label living well. Show all posts
Showing posts with label living well. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 24, 2010

Tomato Soup from Provence

For years, I saved every Gourmet and food magazine that came into the house, and there were many.  When we moved, I threw out a large collection, but of course the subscriptions didn't end.  For several years now,  I clip the recipes I might want to try and ditch the rest of the magazine.  Usually I save the Thanksgiving, Christmas and Barbecue issues. 


A couple times a month I actually cook something from these (by now) old clipped recipes.  And sometimes there is a real winner.   We were in New York last week and indulged a bit too much in food and beverages,  and so ye old bathroome scale showed a couple of extra pounds.  We find that eating soup is as good as dieting, so I dug out an untried soup recipe.  Decent tomatoes were on sale, and the rest of the ingredients were cheap.


Like everything in French cooking, there was some pain involved,   peeling, slicing, chopping, sieving, but the basic prep. was simple as I did other stuff in the kitchen during the actual cooking.  Yesterday, we tasted the results, and again this noon.  Ye gods, the soup had improved overnight.  I mean tomato soup.  How could it improve?  Well, it did.



I hope you are shopping supermarket specials.  I save $44.00 on a bill of $103.00 last Friday.  I found the exact recipe at Epicurious.  Don't let the list of ingredients intimidate you  I  used dried (from the garden) basil and had some dry fresh thyme.   A well-stocked spice shelf is a cook's best friend.



Here is the recipe.  If not now, try it when tomatoes are in season and your garden or farmer's market is bursting with them.  Yum! 



Provencal Tomato Soup with Rice 

We ate it with croutons and a salad of avocado, white asparagus, cucumber and romaine. 

Sunday, February 14, 2010

Valentine's Day Blast the Frugal Way

We spent $102.00 at the supermarket on Friday, including $17.00 for two beautiful bouquets of red and white tulips.


Eating out on Valentine's Day is usually a horor show--crowded, with bad service and nervous, overdressed couples.  We find it's much more enjoyable to go out before or after the event, or like yesterday, sit at the bar in Chestnut Hill at Paparzzi, drinking good pino grigio and eating carpaccio and focaccia, and fine Italian soup. 


 

You can see what we ate with our $ 102.00 which includes groceries for the rest of the week, too.  If we had gone out for this meal at a nice restaurant, I calculated we would have spent $175.00 for two with tip, tax, wine and four courses. (A salad of lettuce, artichoke bottoms, cherry tomatoes and cucumber is not shone.  I made everything from scratch, a labor of love, but hey, it's Valentine's day.  The crepes were delicious.  
If you have eggs, milk, flour and fruit you can do scrumptious crepes and cafloutis.  I used an on sale package of frozen stawberries and made a sauce with cornstarch, a little sugar, orange juice, orange liquor and a dash of brandy.  The crepes are filled with cream cheese (on sale) and powdered sugar.  The recipe made 12 crepes, which means we have three luscious deserts for  Saturday, Sunday and Monday.  

The stuffed chicken breasts are from Rachel Ray and there is enough for tonight and extra stuffing for some stuffed shells later in the week.  

The shrimp bisque was made with on-sale shrimp and their shells, and I splurged and bought leeks and a fennel bulb.  Again, enough bisque for three days and was it ever good.  I use cheap white vermouth when a recipe calls for white wine. 

Yes, I spent a good portion of yesterday in the kitchen, but having (delicious) food for 2-3 days is a good tradeoff.  Living cheaply does not mean living poorly.  Give your creativity free rein.  

Happy Valentine's Day and President's Day from The Cheeseparer