Archive for April, 2009

Ode to My Slow Cooker – Meatball Stew with Root Vegetables

Tuesday, April 14th, 2009

I got a slow cooker when I got married, but in one year’s time, I only used it once – disastrously. I tried it once when I was home all day to see how it cooked. I attempted to make rice pudding, but I had put in too much rice and too much milk and it overflowed. I had to dump it out into a big pot halfway through.

But somehow, I gathered up the courage to try it again – and in the past month, I’ve used it six times. Hence, I make this proclamation in front of the whole world – I love my slow cooker (and no, Ameir doesn’t consider it cheating, because he gets food out of the deal). I love the taste and texture of the food it produces. I love not having to cook when I get home after long days. I love the smell of deliciousness that greets me when I get home. *dreamy sigh*

I’m highly inspired by Stephanie of A Year of Crockpotting, who used her slow cooker every day for a year. As I make stuff, I’ll link to things that are inspired by her recipes.

This meatball stew was inspired by Stephanie’s adaptation of Simply RecipesAlbondigas recipe (meatball soup).

I made some meatballs, seared, and froze them for future use. I used the same basic recipe as I use for spaghetti and meatballs, but I added pureed chipotle-in-adobo to the mix. Just because I had some. I wanted to do frozen meatballs because I thought they’d cook much quicker than root vegetables, so I thought adding them to the slow cooker still frozen would give me more time. It came out to 12 meatballs, so I put half of them in here and saved half for something else later.

Basic slow cooker safety and operation:
– Do not put cold food in a hot cooker.
– Do not put hot food in a cold cooker (put it on warm while you’re preparing).
– High cooking is usually 3 -4 hours. Low cooking is usually 6-9 hours.
– Put vegetables in the first layer, meat on the second (veggies take longer to cook).
– The slow cooker doesn’t lose moisture, so when it’s done cooking, you’ll have either the same amount of liquid you put in, or even more b/c of condensation.

Click for the recipe! (more…)

Shrimp pasta, revamped

Wednesday, April 8th, 2009

At the end of the year International Law Journal banquet, the Editorial Staff treated us all to a dinner at Southern Rail Restaurant in Carboro. It was, to say the least, pretty phenomenal. There was a simple salad with a roasted garlic vinaigrette. Dessert was a coffee pot-au-creme with vanilla bean and nutmeg whipped cream. But dinner…oh…dinner was amazing. It was a linguini in a spicy tomato cream sauce with artichoke hearts and tomatoes, topped with a perfectly cooked salmon that had some kind of sweet crust to it. I don’t now how they did it, but it was just perfect.

To mirror that, I revamped my usual shrimp, spinach, tomato sauce pasta to try to capture the spicy-sweet aspect of Southern Rail’s salmon pasta. I didn’t know how to sweeten the shrimp, so I just caramelized the onions and garlic. Delicious!

Recipe after the link (more…)

My Naana and Naani!

Wednesday, April 1st, 2009

My dad scanned and sent me pictures of my mom’s parents – My Naana Jaan (Grandfather) and Naani Jaan (Grandmother)! The swing that Naani Jaan is sitting on is the one in the beautiful garden at their house in Sheikhupura.

My Naana Jaan (son of Khan Bahadur Ahmed Khan) was named Nazir Ahmed Khan. These are pictures of them right after their wedding. I have really great memories of them, though they both died when I was young (May Allah bless them with Jannah, InshAllah). My Naana Jaan was always really happy – he loved to smile. He also sneezed really, really loud! I’m laughing just thinking about it.

My Naani Jaan was Akhtar-un-Nisa Begum (isnt’ she beautiful?! My Mama looks just like her). Naano Jaan was really creative. She used to keep jar and bottle caps for me and then trace around them to make pictures of dolls that I could color in. I still think of her when I’ve got stubs of soap left over – she used to soften them and push them together into a layered rainbow soap. It was always fun showering with the rainbow soap!

I especially remember one day when I was complaining that I was bored. Naano Jaan listened to me complain for a while, and then took me outside by the hand and sat me down on a charpai (woven bed). She gave me a *huge* bowl of carrots, peas, and a safe knife. She taught me how to pop the peas out of their pods and peel and slice the carrots – and then left me to it all afternoon. It probably took me three times as long as it would have taken her, but she let me do it anyway!

May they rest in Jannah InshAllah!

Design by Ameir Al-Zoubi
 
A Cup Of Tea is powered by WordPress