Masthead header

We have a lot to do in the garden. There’s plants to be pulled and composted, weeds to pull, the lawn needs to be mowed and trimmed, and the final summer plants need to be harvested. This long, extended summer has gifted us more ripe tomatoes than we would have otherwise had, and even though I harvested all of our basil over Labor Day weekend and made pesto to freeze, the basil plants have burst back to life and we have a lot basil to use. Despite the few more red tomatoes, there are still a lot of green ones that never came around. I’m planning to pickle all those firm, green cherry tomatoes this evening or, more likely, tomorrow since we have been going to bed around 8:30 every night this past week!

cherry tomatoesPIN

We have been so busy that by 8:15 we can barely keep our eyes open. One night we managed to stay up until 9:00 by watching this video of Emma Stone in a lip syncing competition with Jimmy Fallon a few times in a row, but usually we get in bed to read, and after re-reading the same paragraph from the night before we call it quits and turn off the lights. Maybe it’s the change in season and my hibernation instinct is kicking in, or maybe it’s catching up on sleep deprivation from the crazy summer. Either way sleeping from 8:30pm until 6:30am, mostly uninterrupted, is feeling pretty great and well earned.

Sunday was Kyle’s birthday, and his parents were here to visit. Somehow we ended up eating out nearly every day starting Thursday and ending yesterday (although some takeout sounds pretty good for tonight…). At home we are volleying back and forth between fall and summer dishes. One day we’re grilling, the next Kyle is talking about baking bread, the following we are making dishes with fresh herbs from the garden, only to end up making a roast the next night. We kind of let our appetites follow the weather which, as fellow Pacific Northwesters are aware, flips from dark, brooding thunderstorms to clear, sunny skies in no time at all during the fall. It’s usually around two in the afternoon, when the girls are napping, that I make our dinner commitment. Tonight, we’re having Lemon Spaghetti.

LEMON SPAGHETTIPIN

LEMON SPAGHETTIPINLemon Spaghetti was a dish I started making when we lived in Los Angeles. I was in my early twenties and between auditions I nannied. Every Monday morning the mom of the family I nannied for for a year would load up all of the groceries from the refrigerator into paper grocery bags and take them out to their garbage bin, set them in, and then leave for the grocery store where she would purchase all of the groceries for the following week. She threw out everything from the previous week that hadn’t been used – even if it was perfectly perfect.

She would head off to Whole Foods, and as soon as her car was out of sight I would open the garbage bin and pull out the grocery bags full of groceries and rescue what could be used: lemons, bread, fresh herbs in little plastic packages, portobello mushrooms, bell peppers, untouched lettuce and micro greens. I’d transfer all that could be saved to a paper bag and put it in the trunk of my car. I still have no idea why she threw out all that food every Monday, but we were barely making ends meet so we used what we could. I bet the neighbors who spied on me out their windows in Sherman Oaks felt really, really sorry for me. But, we ate a lot of wonderful meals from all of that food.

This family also had nine huge flat screen televisions. The television were peppered throughout their relatively large house: one in the entry way, one in the living room, one in each bedroom upstairs, one in the master bath, one outside on the patio, one down by the pool, one in the office. These television were always on. Always. I learned that if I turned the television off, someone would walk by and turn it back on to The Price is Right, Seinfeld, or some other syndicated sitcom, so I stopped turning them off and started changing the channel to the Food Network. This was back in the days when all that was on the Food Network were cooking shows; no reality shows, no cooking competition, no cupcake battles. It was all of Tyler, Giada, and Ina.

As much as I was baffled by the family’s grocery shopping habits, and as nuts as having all those televisions on made me, I don’t know if I would have been drawn to cooking if I hadn’t spent a whole year working for them. I learned so much about the basics of cooking, chopping, and ingredients from watching the Food Network at their house; and we certainly benefited from all of those tossed groceries. I didn’t have much, if any, control over my acting opportunities so cooking became, and still is, my favorite creative outlet.

I didn’t even cook very much at first, I just found that it was the only channel that didn’t drive me insane 4-6 hours straight, 5 days a week. I wasn’t allowed to take their tot to the park, or leave the house, so during the few hours that I spent watching their baby, I’d listen and watch the Food Network and dream up dishes to make with my fancy, expensive, organic garbage-finds. One of my favorite shows to watch, and to grab recipes from, was Giada de Laurentiis’s Everyday Italian. She usually cooked simple, fresh dishes, that I was able to remember the gist of even if I couldn’t grab a crayon fast enough to write it all down. One Monday evening after returning home from my day job, I pulled lemons and fresh basil from my rescued bag of produce, and made something close to the Everyday Italian version of Lemon Spaghetti.

LEMON SPAGHETTIPINLEMON SPAGHETTIPIN

Lemon Spaghetti became, and remains, a staple in our spring-early fall menus. It is wonderfully flavorful, and incredibly simple to make. It’s something that our whole family loves. Luckily, I don’t have to forage for any of the ingredients in the trash (not that I’d be above it if the circumstances were right). All you need is some spaghetti, lemon, fresh basil, garlic, olive oil, and red pepper flakes! We often serve this alongside a small, bright salad or garlicky roasted chicken. It also makes a great leftover lunch too!

LEMON SPAGHETTIPIN

LEMON SPAGHETTI

Ingredients.
1 lb spaghetti or thin spaghetti
1/2 cup fresh squeezed lemon juice
1/2 cup extra virgin olive oil
1 large garlic clove, very thinly sliced
kosher salt
1/2 teaspoon red pepper flakes
zest of 1 lemon
shaved Parmesan cheese
large handful of basil, thinly sliced or torn

Directions.
Heat 1/4 olive oil in a small saucepan over medium heat. Add the garlic and allow the garlic to cook for only 30 seconds. Remove the pan from the heat and wait an additional 30 seconds before transferring the garlic and oil to a glass dish. Add the other 1/4 cup of olive oil to the garlicky oil, and set aside to cool.

Bring a large pot of salted water to a boil. Cook your spaghetti until al dente. Drain and rinse with cold water until the pasta is cooled. Transfer to a large bowl.

Add 1/2 cup of lemon juice to the dish with the olive oil and season to taste with kosher salt. Toss the dressing in with the pasta and toss to combine. Allow it to sit for about ten or fifteen minutes, tossing a few times, so the pasta absorbs some of the dressing.

Transfer the pasta to a serving dish. Sprinkle with red pepper flakes, lemon zest, plenty of Parmesan, and basil.

Enjoy immediately.

PRINTABLE RECIPE.
LEMON SPAGHETTI

Share to:FacebookTwitterPinterestEmailLink
  • Rebeka - Nanning for rich families is the weirdest. Can you imagine 1. having someone come watch your kids (even though you don’t work – not saying you don’t but that’s usually the case with those families), and 2. throwing away perfectly good food? All of that just seems so wasteful and frivolous in so many ways. I would have taken the garbage food too. Totally without shame. I would have taken the clothes too. Then again, though, I can totally relate to the I have $4 in my bank account for the next 3 days and I need to eat something, soooo… meals. Anyway, this pasta looks fantastic and I can’t wait to try it soon. At least something good came from that experience, right?

    Also, you can pickle green tomatoes? I’ve never heard of that. Are they delicious?ReplyCancel

  • Kacie - Ha. Glad to know I’m not alone. I’m pretty sure I’m the only food blogger ever to blog about eating food out of someone’s trash…

    Yes! You can totally pickle them. I’ve never done it myself… I’ll let you know how it goes!

    xoReplyCancel

  • anja cieri - My new favorite pasta taste :)So easy and nice! ThanksReplyCancel

  • 8 Food Blog Links We Love | Support Paula Deen - […] This lemon spaghetti is a win-win: simple to throw together and big on flavor. (With Love Kacie.) […]ReplyCancel

  • Sara - Love lemon and spaghetti together.ReplyCancel

  • Millie | Add A Little - This pasta looks so simple and tasty – yum!ReplyCancel

  • Katie (The Muffin Myth) - Ahhhhh, I’ve had those jobs before. Probably the craziest was when I worked for a lady who bred Mexican hairless dogs as a personal assistant / dog walker / nanny. Oh the things I’ve seen and done, I tell ya. What insanity! Throwing out all that perfectly good food. I’m glad you rescued it. I love lemon and spaghetti together, this is a great version. I’ve pinned the recipe so I can make it on the coming weekend, we’ve got lots of lemons on hand so this is perfect. Thanks for sharing!ReplyCancel

WHAT A DIFFERENCE…

We are, dare I say, fully recovered from our round of illness(es). What a difference a week makes! Last week I genuinely thought I might not make it through… our neighbor said he thought he might have to come “Old Yeller” me. But, with help from my wonderful husband, some tentative fresh air with friends, and a quiet art project filled week, I slowly started to feel more and more like myself. I’m back in the kitchen cooking up an end-of-summer storm, raiding the garden for the last of the summer harvest, stocking up on chocolate chips for cookies, and planning all kinds of menus for the soon-to-be drizzly, dark evenings.

CUCUMBER, GOAT CHEESE, AND CILANTRO TARTINE WITH LEMON VINIAGRETTEPIN

Lulu is all energy and smiles again too, thank goodness. That poor girl had that terrible cold, a stomach virus, and was cutting five teeth all at once. Most of the teeth are most of the way through so she’s a lot more relaxed, much happier, and she’s got her appetite back. Since she’s a little pip, only weighing in at eighteen pounds, these stomach viruses (we’ve had three in the last six months!) are stressful. She’s also sleeping through the night again after we got off track a couple of months back. Needless to say, she and I are both much more chipper with uninterrupted sleep and full bellies.

CUCUMBER, GOAT CHEESE, AND CILANTRO TARTINE WITH LEMON VINIAGRETTEPIN

Since I spent the weekend before this past one laid up in bed, we spent this entire weekend out doing fun things. On Saturday morning we went for a fantastic little hike with the girls. We slathered on sunscreen and hopped in the car with snacks and water and coffee, and we spent the majority of the day counting caterpillars, throwing rocks into streams, and singing songs from Les Misérables (Gigi is obsessed with the story and music… she’s been introducing me as Jean Valjean to everyone for the past month).

On Sunday I spent the day with my best friend and some of her wonderful friends in Portland. They ran the Race for the Cure 5k, and we went to brunch and ran errands. Normally, going to Target and Ikea on a Sunday would sound pretty intimidating but without kids in tow it was actually pretty easy! While I was gone, Kyle took the girls out hiking again and out for a Daddy/Daughter lunch. It was nice for me to have a little break but I sure would have loved to witness the morning he had with them.

With our busyness this weekend we stuck to simple foods: barbecued chicken, grilled peppers, sautéed spinach, grilled steaks, and soup. During this week and the last I’ve entered back into my tartine habit for lunches. They’re just so easy and filling and versatile! I’m trying to utilizing what vegetables are still growing in the garden. Mostly what we have going strong at the moment are cucumbers, and tomatoes. I can feel the weather is about to make a serious commitment to rain and lower temperatures so I’m making the most out of this last gasp of summer in the garden.

CUCUMBER, GOAT CHEESE, AND CILANTRO TARTINE WITH LEMON VINAIGRETTEPIN

This tartine is a spin on an amazing salad we had once at Cinq Mars in Paris, and that we spent the remainder or our trip trying to duplicate with cucumber, cilantro, and goat cheese we bought at the markets on Rue Cler. This tartine is decidedly summery with it’s crisp cucumber, bold cilantro, and bright lemon vinaigrette, but it would be fantastic any time of year. I’m positive I’ll be making this all autumn long.

CUCUMBER, GOAT CHEESE, AND CILANTRO TARTINE WITH LEMON VINAIGRETTEPIN

CUCUMBER, GOAT CHEESE, AND CILANTRO TARTINE WITH LEMON VINAIGRETTE

Ingredients.
4 slices of French bread, toasted
4oz goat cheese or chèvre
1 cucumber, shaved into thin ribbons
1 handful fresh cilantro, washed and very finely minced
1/2 lemon
, juiced
extra virgin olive oil
freshly ground black pepper
Maldon, or flaky, salt

Directions.
In a small bowl whisk together the juice from one lemon with an equal amount of olive oil. Season to taste with salt and pepper.

In a separate bowl, mix together the goat cheese and cilantro. Smear each toast with lots of the cheese, top with ribbons of cucumber, drizzle with plenty of dressing, and finish with a bit of salt and pepper, and lemon zest.

Serves 2.

PRINTABLE RECIPE.
CUCUMBER, GOAT CHEESE, AND CILANTRO TARTINE WITH LEMON VINAIGRETTE

Share to:FacebookTwitterPinterestEmailLink
  • Rebeka - Ok I have to admit that I LOLd pretty hard at that Old Yeller comment. Inappropriate? Maybe. But it’s 4:23 on a Monday afternoon and I’m tired and it was funny. So, so glad you guys are feeling better!!ReplyCancel

  • stephanie - So delicious…so French…so happy you are feeling better. Thanks for the recipe! XOReplyCancel

I hadn’t intended to take a two week break from posting. But we headed out on a family vacation  at the start of the month which was truly wonderful (I’ll share some photos later this week), but on the tail end of our trip Lulu first came down with a head cold which was quickly passed along to Gigi and me, and then she got a stomach virus which she quickly passed along to me. We are a little worse for wear around here… hanging on my a thread really. Here I’ve been wishing fall to hurry and show up, all the while forgetting that young kids + fall = cold and flu season. I’ve been making my favorite spicy-sweet tea in the hopes of turning the corner on this cold and flu bender we’ve been on.

This tea, a perfect sore throat remedy, was first introduced to me by my sister many years ago and has since become a staple around here when Kyle or I have the sniffles. It’s extremely simple: sour lemon, soothing honey, and fresh, spicy ginger make the base of the tea, and a little pinch of cayenne pepper adds just the right amount of tingly heat. It’s the daytime version of the hot toddy, although a little splash of bourbon or whiskey in this tea is certainly acceptable.

I’m sitting now while the girls are napping, sipping a piping hot mug-full of this cold remedy and hoping that, after a week of being down… and I mean, down… that I’m about to turn the corner on this rotten bug. Hope you all are having a very healthy start to fall.

SORE THROAT REMEDYPIN

SORE THROAT REMEDY

Ingredients.
1/2 lemon, juiced
thin slice of lemon
1 tablespoon honey
1” fresh ginger, peeled and thinly sliced
pinch of cayenne pepper

Directions.
Heat water to a boil. Place the lemon juice, lemon slice, ginger, honey and pinch of cayenne in the bottom of a mug. Fill the mug with boiling water and stir until the honey is dissolved. Let the tea steep and cool for five minutes before sipping.

PRINTABLE RECIPE.
SORE THROAT REMEDY

Share to:FacebookTwitterPinterestEmailLink
  • stephanie - This sounds delightful! Thanks for the recipe! XOReplyCancel

ITALIAN HAND GESTURES…

Yesterday when we were at the park I found a four leaf clover. I usually find a few a year but I’ve found a couple in just the last month. I carefully carried my lucky clover home and, as soon as we walked in the door I led Gigi over to my Grandma’s hutch upon which is perched a few special books: an old copy of Our Hearts Were Young and Gay, and Is Paris Burning? both given to me by Kyle’s Nana, and an old copy of Emma. I picked up Emma and opened the rickety pages to chapter 24. Right between pages 232 and 233 is where I keep my four leaf clovers. I showed Gigi how to press it into place with the others and carefully close the book before sliding it back into pace on top of the hutch.

Opening the book and catching a glimpse of of Austen’s words made me immediately want to pour myself a cup of tea and curl up in the corner of the couch with Emma in hand. I love Jane Austen. After all, one of Gigi’s middle names is Bennet. Every fall I feel drawn towards comfort. I want to re-read favorite books like A Prayer for Owen Meany, Animal Dreams, and Anne of Green Gables. But mostly I want to read Emma, Pride and Prejudice, Persuasion, Northanger Abbey, Mansfield Park and Sense and Sensibility.

I don’t usually do it. I normally let my logic get in the way. As I reach up to the bookshelf to get an old favorite, I see all the books I haven’t read yet; some of which have been patiently waiting their turn for years. I feel sorry for those poor, patient books and feel obligated to choose from the ranks of the unread. But this fall I’m going to just exactly as I please and I’m join got read my comforting Jane Austen novels.

To make up for my familiar-leaning reading choices to come, I am planning to challenge myself in the kitchen. I’m going to crack open new cookbooks, and check out some new ones from the library. Did you know that you can check out cookbooks from the library? At our little one you can so I imagine you could at your libraries as well! While I’m sure I will cook a fair amount of my favorite comfort food, I’ll also be challenging myself with new foods and new variations of favorite dishes.

One of my favorite dishes is panzanella. A panzanella is a classic italian salad that usually includes cubes of day-old bread, roasted bell peppers, tomatoes, red onion, mozzarella, and basil. I love to make it in the summer with this classic approach, but seeing as it’s already feeling like autumn here I wanted to take a fall approach to this dish. I’m sure my recipe will make some Italian Grandmothers click their tongues and make some wonderfully-Italian hand gestures, but we loved it. We’ve made it quite a few times now; twice for lunch and twice for dinner.

PANZANELLA WITH PANCETTA, HARD BOILED EGGS, CHERRY TOMATOES AND FRIED SAGEPINMy fall panzanella boasts quite a range of flavors: sweet cherry tomatoes, salty pancetta, robust hard boiled eggs, and fragrant fried sage leaves. The dressing is made with bright champagne vinegar, mustard, garlic and lots and lots of chives. It’s tart and absorbs into the cubes of bread, breaking up the earthy flavors of the main ingredients. The result is a wonderfully hearty, but not too heavy salad that stands as a main course.

PANZANELLA WITH PANCETTA, HARD BOILED EGGS, CHERRY TOMATOES AND FRIED SAGEPIN

PANZANELLA WITH PANCETTA, HARD BOILED EGGS, CHERRY TOMATOES AND FRIED SAGEPIN

No matter what you’re reading, or what you’re cooking, we wish a you a very happy start to fall. Gigi, Lulu and I made this cooking video of this recipe to share with you!

PANZANELLA WITH PANCETTA, HARD BOILED EGGS, CHERRY TOMATOES AND FRIED SAGE

Ingredients.
1/4 cup extra virgin olive oil
1 lb. rustic white loaf, cut into bite size pieces
10-12 large fresh sage leaves
8 slices pancetta
6 hard boiled eggs, peeled and cut into eighths
1 pint cherry tomatoes, halved
kosher salt
freshly ground black pepper

Chive Champagne Vinaigrette
1/4 cup champagne vinegar
3/4 cup extra virgin olive oil
1 small garlic clove, very finely minced
1 1/2 teaspoon dijon mustard
1/4 cup very finely sliced chives
kosher salt
freshly ground black pepper

Directions.
In a small sauté pan, heat 1/4 cup extra virgin olive oil until shimmering. Gently place in a few leaves at a time and allow to fry for 10-15 seconds. You don’t want them to brown! Remove using tongs and set on a paper towel to drain. Repeat with the remaining leaves. Set the leaves aside and save the oil. (See the video below on how to fry sage leaves.)

Turn your oven on to broil. Carefully toss the bread with the sage-infused oil on a baking sheet. Broil on the middle rack, tossing once or twice, until some of the bread has started to toast and is lightly brown. The goal is to give the bread a bit of color and texture, not to completely toast it. Remove the bread from the oven and transfer it to a large bowl.

Using the same baking sheet, lay the pancetta slices out in a single layer. Place them in the oven, under the broiler, until they are crisp, flipping once. Remove from the oven and transfer to a paper towel to drain.

In a small bowl whisk together the champagne vinegar, garlic, chives, and dijon until combined. Then drizzle the oil in slowly while whisking. Season the dressing to taste with salt and pepper.

Break up the pancetta a little bit as you add it to the bowl with bread, then add in the tomatoes, sage leaves, and eggs. Toss together gently. Plate, drizzle with plenty of dressing, taste for salt and pepper, and serve immediately!

PRINTABLE RECIPE.
PANZANELLA WITH PANCETTA, HARD BOILED EGGS, CHERRY TOMATOES AND FRIED SAGE

Share to:FacebookTwitterPinterestEmailLink
  • Vangie - I love it!ReplyCancel

  • anja_cieri - I love this colorful idea!I have to try this out one day. Great video, you & girls are amazing 🙂ReplyCancel

  • gaby - It’s so funny because just last month I decided that I wanted to re-read the entire Anne of Green Gables series from start to finish, even though I’ve read each one at least 3 times already. I’m currently on the 6th book and I’m loving it! Once I finish I plan to go re-read some Jane Austen.

    Also, I’ve been meaning to make a panzanella salad for so long. Must try your recipe xReplyCancel

    • Kacie - Gaby,
      THAT is funny. I love the Anne books so much. Cheers to Jane Austen! xoxo Happy cooking. 😉ReplyCancel

  • Kaylan - Oh my gosh! Just exploring your site seeing if you had the ramen recipe up and these videos are TOO SWEET! You’re such a great Mom, Kacie. I wish we could cook together 🙂 xoxoReplyCancel

    • Kacie - Kaylan,
      I’m working on the post right now! Should have it up tomorrow, maybe even this evening if I can steal a few minutes to myself. I wish we could cook together too. That sounds pretty wonderful! xReplyCancel

A STATE OF FLUX…

Everything is in transition and I feel like we are being pulled, slowly but surely, in new directions as autumn makes it’s ever-so-slow appearance. Our friend’s who are teachers are heading back to the classroom, kids are getting their chlorine-damaged, summer hair cut and shopping for back to school clothes, and the days are noticeably shorter. We still get to sleep with our window cracked and I can sometimes smell a wood fire smoke from someone’s fireplace nearby. It’s supposed to be in the 90’s today, so fall is clearly in no rush to take it’s place, but it is coming.

My family is in transition too, or our children are anyway. Gigi suddenly looks so tall, and sooner than later she’ll be four! She’s going through a interesting phase right now: testing the boundaries, negotiating a lot, often telling me, “I can do it myself. I’m really big.” Which she is. She gets herself dressed most days and sometimes it’s close to nap time before I realize she’s had her underwear on sideways or backwards or inside out. When I point it out she’ll say, “That’s okay. It’s comfortable. I like it that way.” We started reading a chapter book aloud together and while I read to her she wiggles her head in on my shoulder and sucks on her blankie and the little “click-click-click” of her sucking reminds me that she’s still very little, in spite of her growth spurt and self-awareness.

PANZANELLA WITH PANCETTA, HARD BOILED EGGS, CHERRY TOMATOES AND FRIED SAGEPINLittle Miss Lulu is making her way from babyhood into toddlerhood. She took her first steps and is now cruising somewhat-steadily around the house. She is one opinionated little tot – she has even started picking out what clothes she wants to wear. She will walk to her drawer and throw things out onto the floor until she finds the thing she wants and then she will push it into my hands and grunt, “Ehh ehh ehh!” Needless to say we are working on the sign for “please”. Lulu is adventurous and spirited and so, so funny.

PANZANELLA WITH PANCETTA, HARD BOILED EGGS, CHERRY TOMATOES AND FRIED SAGEPINOur home is also in transition as I continue on my path of simplifying. You should see the pile that is growing in the garage for donating! I can’t be stopped! We now have twelve and a half empty drawers throughout out home! Twelve! I’m just going through and getting rid of things and moving things about and making room. The next phase will be to fill the drawers with the things that survive my sweep. I am chipping away at the project, as you know I’ve been working at it for months! It’s all starting to make a real difference; a difference we can see and feel, and that is really exciting.

Our sweet little garden is in a state of flux as well. We have planted sections of the garden beds with cool weather crops. We’ve planted beets, carrots, raddichio (per Gigi’s request), butternut squash, bok choy, napa cabbage, and more carrots, romaine and butterhead lettuce, and kale. We still have some of our summer crop offering up it’s bounty: we still have loads of kale, pickling cucumbers, summer squash, and cherry tomatoes. If this summer continues it’s slow transition we may actually see some of our Roma tomatoes turn color!

We have so many cherry tomatoes I can’t say I’m disappointed with our tomato plants this year, even though only one out of four seems to have really come through. We have sweet, plump cherry tomatoes ripening daily. Some days I pluck a dozen; last night Kyle harvested close to forty! My favorite thing is to wander out while the girls are napping and find the deepest red ones and pop them in my mouth right there in the garden. Standing in the grass with bare feet, eating sun-warmed tomatoes straight from the vine is my kind of luxury.

PANZANELLA WITH PANCETTA, HARD BOILED EGGS, CHERRY TOMATOES AND FRIED SAGEPINIt is amazing to me that one plant, whether it’s our impressively producing cucumber plants, our silky heads of lettuce, our never-ending kale, or our bright, bursting tomatoes each started with one tiny seed. That one pack of those tiny seeds that costs a couple dollars can feed us so many meals through so many months is astonishing and a little humbling. At this particular time we have so many cucumbers and tomatoes, we also have harvested an impressive number of Torpedo Onions. Torpedo Onions are mild, sweet heirloom onions. I thought I was planting shallots but, no, I was planting giant, beautiful, Torpedo Onions. I’ve been throwing together a very simple salad using the cucumbers, tomatoes and onion. The salad follows along in the Greek tomato-cucumber-onion-feta tradition but I love making a simple, tart vinaigrette and then showering the salad with lots of fresh tarragon (of which we also have plenty)! If you can’t find the Torpedo Onions, which you may stumble across at a farmers’ market, you can use a bit of shallot or any mild, sweet red onion.

PANZANELLA WITH PANCETTA, HARD BOILED EGGS, CHERRY TOMATOES AND FRIED SAGEPINPANZANELLA WITH PANCETTA, HARD BOILED EGGS, CHERRY TOMATOES AND FRIED SAGEPINPANZANELLA WITH PANCETTA, HARD BOILED EGGS, CHERRY TOMATOES AND FRIED SAGEPINThis simple salad is a wonderful lunch, or as a side for anything grilled. It would be great alongside some seasoned and grilled eggplant! We will definitely be planting eggplant next year! But enough about all of that… I’ve got to go water the garden and get ready to make some salsa, pesto, and pickle some jalapeños and Torpedo Onions.

CUCUMBER AND CHERRY TOMATO SALAD WITH RED ONION AND TARRAGON

Ingredients.
3 cups cucumber, chopped (partially or fully peel them if the skin is bitter)
1 pint cherry tomatoes, halved
1/2 cup 
crumbled feta
1 tablespoon fresh tarragon, roughly chopped
1/4 sweet red onion or shallot, finely minced
2 tablespoon fresh lemon juice
1/4 cup extra virgin olive oil
kosher salt
freshly ground black pepper

Directions.
In a medium bowl, toss together the cucumber, tomatoes, feta, onion/shallot and tarragon.

Squeeze the lemon juice into a small bowl, slowly whisk in the olive oil. Season to taste with salt and pepper.

Drizzle plenty of the dressing onto the salad, toss well, and serve!

Serves 2 as a lunch, 4 as a side.

PRINTABLE RECIPE.
CUCUMBER AND CHERRY TOMATO SALAD WITH RED ONION AND TARRAGON

Share to:FacebookTwitterPinterestEmailLink