I kind of love Martha Rose Shulman. She does these columns on the New York Times website, where she'll dive into something and give you four or five semi-variants. Recently, she did gratins, Not Your Grandmother’s Gratin:
Potato and Sorrel Gratin
Roasted Squash and Red Onion Gratin
Fennel, Kale and Rice Gratin
Roasted Cauliflower Gratin With Tomatoes and Goat Cheese
Roasted Eggplant and Red Pepper Gratin
After skimming through all of those recipes, it occurred to me that they were all, at core, the same: vegetables and a grain/starch plus eggs, milk, cheese.
So I sautéed an onion, boiled and sliced a few tired potatoes, added a bag of frozen Swiss chard/beet greens (from last summer's CSA), added a cup of cooked wild rice, mixed it all together and dumped it in an oiled baking dish. I then added 3 eggs beaten up with 1/2 cup milk and some salt and pepper, sprinkled some grated cheddar on top and threw it in the oven. And it was good.
In other words, don't be afraid to invent.
You know, sometimes she went off on a tangent and made garbage pail frittata. Which, well, is basically the same as these gratins, no?
ReplyDeleteI did something similar the other night - combined all the leftovers in the fridge. Minestrone, corn, noodles. Mixed it all up and it was good!
ReplyDeleteKind of like what I eat in the winter....called "experimental soup" or "spearmint" for short (by my family members). ;-) Did you know that mustard and butter makes a wonderful soup flavoring?
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