My Favorite Weeknight Dinners by Alison Roman

You worked really hard today. You attended back-to-back meetings, wrote countless emails, and got interrupted more times than you thought you could handle. After you finally make it home from the office (or, if you’re working from home, you finally shut your laptop), you’re in the mood for a tasty dinner. But the last thing you feel like doing is standing by the stove for an hour or more. And you can’t stomach one more frozen meal…

You need a compromise. Something that takes 30 minutes or less and still delivers results. You need to make these fabulous, under 30-minute recipes by Alison Roman…

  • Cold Soba with Cucumbers, Watercress, and Sesame. You probably have most of the ingredients on hand already, since it calls for shelf staples like soy sauce, rice vinegar, and sesame oil. There’s room for creative substitution too. Soba noodles or another kind of spaghetti. Watercress or arugula. Throw in some snow peas or shredded carrots on the side. Serve with fried tofu squares. The list goes on…

  • Vinegared Romaine with Sour Cream, Bacon, and Herbs. I’d eat this for dinner, lunch, and on certain mornings, even breakfast. The world’s your oyster when it comes to variations (sometimes I use cucumbers or cherry tomatoes or goat cheese or crumbled potato chips), but whatever you do, do NOT skip the crispy bacon and herbs. 

  • Tomato-y White Beans with Breadcrumbs and Preserved Lemon. Another quick meal that relies primarily on kitchen staples like beans and tomato paste. If you really want to make this low maintenance, you can skip the breadcrumbs (though that should not be a hasty decision - consider what you’re giving up). I’ve made this dish many times, and sometimes add harissa paste to up the spice levels. I’ve also experimented with goat cheese. 

  • Halibut and Asparagus with Brown Butter Peas. Halibut is not your typical weeknight dinner protein, especially when considering the price. But if you’re one of those special people who don’t mind splurging on your fish, then this recipe will deliver a most satisfying, healthy, and flavorful meal. No need to add anything else to the menu. 

  • Spelt with Crispy Sausage, Flowering Broccoli, and Green Garlic. On nights when I have little energy for cooking, I often find myself cooking up some Italian sausages and combining them with whatever vegetables and grains I have on hand. I consider this Alison’s version of my go-to low-energy dinner.  

  • Black Bass with Salty, Spicy Celery. Again, another slightly expensive fish option, but wow. What a combo. The beauty of the foil packet method makes this meal prep fly by. 

  • Cumin Lamb Chops with Charred Scallions and Peanuts. From start to finish, these lamb chops take no time at all. The most labor intensive task involves crushing cumin seeds. Don’t skip the peanuts. I served this with a kale salad. Sweet potatoes would have been nice, too. 

  • Tiny Creamy Pasta with Black Pepper and Pecorino. aka fancy mac ‘n cheese. It’s not as simple as adding cheese powder to milk, but it’s only 30-minutes of stirring and doesn’t even require boiling water for your noodles! 

Tiny Creamy Pasta with Black Pepper and Pecorino by Alison Roman

I really enjoy tiny kitchen things. Tiny forks for eating grapes, tiny spoons for eating ice cream, tiny knives for cutting fancy cheese, tiny cups for juice, tiny plates for biscuits, and tiny bowls for everything! (I have four of them and affectionately call them my ‘mini bowls’ in a very particular voice intonation). 

So of course I was giddy when I saw a recipe for tiny pasta! Now, GF tiny pasta is hard to find. The best I could do were these tiny pasta shells by Jovial, which let me say, were delicious. I couldn’t tell they were GF - they held their structure, toasted nicely in the pot at the beginning, and their texture was like authentic pasta, no mushiness or mealiness to be found. 

I made this warm, wintery meal for my mother and sister who came to visit me in Chicago. It was a perfect weekend together, full of Christmas-y activities, including wearing matching pajamas. After spending much of the day walking around in the cold, our final evening consisted of this tiny pasta in my apartment with the heater on blast. 

It’s a simple and surprisingly creamy endeavor. In my Dutch oven, I toasted sliced garlic (from two extraordinarily large cloves!). Soon after, the pasta joins and the goal is to toast the shells in the garlicky oil so they develop a slightly nutty flavor. Once I could smell the toasting pasta, I added salt, lots of black pepper, a cup of finely grated Parmesan (this works if you don’t have pecorino) and several cups of water. The water needs to simmer for about 22 minutes, until fully absorbed and reduced to a creamy, cheesy sauce. Alison instructs us to stir frequently, which encourages the pasta to release its starch, thickening up the sauce and turning the water an opaque white. 

I plated (or should I say bowled?) the pasta and topped it with chopped chives and more black pepper. On most days, I would have chosen to add the raw egg yolk like Alison, but on this day, I just wasn’t in the mood. I served the pasta alongside Alison’s Raw Broccoli Salad with Shallots and Peanuts — a vegetable dish that completely surprised me. That one’s coming up next. 

This pasta is like a sophisticated, slightly more complicated mac and cheese, and it still only takes 25 minutes. Let’s just say I won’t be making regular mac and cheese again any time soon.

185 recipes cooked, 40 to go.

Butter Beans, Tangy Mushrooms, Baked Pasta with Artichokes and Cheese, and Margaret

This is a Margaret Winchell Appreciation Post. 

Margaret is one of the dearest friends I have ever known. She’s one of the few people I can talk on the phone with for hours and forget how long it’s been. Her phone calls are like menthol when you have a bad cold. They clear your head, open up your chest, and lead you to hope that you’ll feel better very soon. 

Margaret is brilliant. Not in a tongue and cheek way. She’s actually brilliant, especially when it comes to music, teaching, cooking, baking, musical theater, leadership, and multi-tasking. Her brilliance can sometimes intimidate others when they first meet her. But after spending time with Margaret, you realize she uses her brilliance to draw others in. 

Margaret, as I just mentioned, is a phenomenal, intuition-driven cook, with instincts so sharp, they could pierce a stale loaf of bread like a tip of a Global knife. It’s her passion for food and hospitality that turned me on to cooking as well. We became real friends after college, right at the time that I was learning to cook myself. She showed me the way. She took me under her wing and had me cook alongside her in preparation for our weekly dinners with Amy, and then usually at some point over the weekends, too. We did a lot of cooking together those days. Margaret also introduced me to New York Times Cooking, which revolutionized what I cook. 

Margaret visited me last weekend, along with her grad school pal, Evan. A most delightful duo. I went into my suburban office on Friday for work, and took the 4:57pm train home. I walked through the door to find my dearest friend Margaret already through two of Alison’s recipes, and half way through a third. This spoke volumes to me. I could almost cry. When this project felt close to impossible, far out of reach from my energy coffers, Margaret stood in the gap, and darn well filled it. 

I can claim essentially no credit for cooking these three recipes, and that’s okay. I’ll let my friend serve me in this way. I did, however, eat all three dishes, and talked to Margaret at length about their preparation. So in lieu of describing a cooking process, I’ll offer here just a few thoughts and takeaways about each one: 

Vinegar-Marinated Butter Beans: 

  • Something was UP with these beans. I had on hand a can of Eden Organic Butter Beans that had not expired, and were, you know, supposedly organic. But the best word to describe the final dish is “bitter.” We mused over this conundrum. Vinegar is acidic, but it shouldn’t taste bitter. Garlic can be bitter if you leave the green tips that sometimes sprout out the tops, but Margaret didn’t do this. What we’re left with are the beans. Something must be wrong with the beans. This dish has potential if you don’t have weird beans. It even keeps leftovers for up to two weeks, which I would normally do. But alas, we tossed our bitter beans. 

Tangy-Roasted Mushrooms: 

  • Mushrooms, a good variety of them, are expensive, but worth it, IMO. 

  • Mushrooms don’t shrink much when you roast them. They just get silkier in texture. 

  • Thinly sliced onions add some fun bits of crunch here. 

  • I would serve this at many a gathering. 

Baked Pasta with Artichokes and Too Much Cheese:

  • Alison absolutely nails the flavor here. Perfect balance of salty, sour (from the artichokes) and creamy (from all that cheese). Pro tip: the flavor gets a glow-up when you add a few tangy-roasted mushrooms on the side. 

  • We are floored that Alison doesn’t mention any options for ready-to-bake noodles. This feels like an obvious miss for the many people who don’t want to deal with the labor of parboiling noodles before assembling the dish. We simply refused to parboil, and so put our ready-to-bake noodles straight into the casserole. The top layer of noodles sure stayed tough and became like noodle chips. Not the worst outcome, but certainly not the most optimal. 

  • In our humble, yet knowledgeable opinions, we don’t love the lasagna noodle choice. We believe in using a penne or rigatoni. We want to avoid the noodle chip effect.

171, 172, 173 recipes cooked, 52 to go.

All-Out-Alison Meal with Turmeric-Roasted Lamb, Sour Cream Flatbread, & Apple and Endive Salad

Another All-Out-Alison meal is in the books. I love making All-Out-Alison meals - who doesn’t want multiple Alison dishes in one sitting? But on days when I make these meals, I find myself in the kitchen for a stretch of hours, flitting between tasks and ingredient prep, and it’s really quite an ordeal. Today’s post will document my process. I’m guessing at the timestamps, but they’re close to being accurate. 

To indicate which dish each step belongs to, I’ll label them with [lamb - Turmeric-Roasted Lamb Shoulder and Carrots with All the Fixings], [flatbread - Sour Cream Flatbreads], [salad - Apple and Endive Salad with Parsley and Salted Almonds], and [salsa verde - Another Salsa Verde]. 

Oh wait, one note before we begin. Alison’s lamb instructions suggest a 3.5-4 lb. boneless lamb shoulder, but I could only find lamb leg (similar cut) that was much smaller or much bigger. Since we were having company, I went with the larger 5.5 lb. cut, which meant that I used more garlic/turmeric for the marinade, and had to cook the lamb longer than instructed. More on that in a bit… 

Let’s make a meal, shall we? 

8:40am: [lamb] Remove the lamb leg from the fridge to let it finish thawing on the counter

11:43am: [lamb] Peel and dice the fresh turmeric and excessive amount of garlic cloves - I used 13

11:53am: [lamb] Create the marinade by combining the turmeric and garlic with olive oil and cumin

11:57am: [lamb] Salt and pepper the lam, then rub the marinade all over, getting in all the cracks. 

12:03pm: [lamb] Search for butcher’s twine in the craft box hiding in my coat closet. I find only crafting string, but decide that it’ll do the job. 

12:08pm: [lamb] Use a sharp knife to cut a slit in the center of the lamb, so the whole thing can fold over like a book, allowing you to tie it like Alison says. 

12:09pm: [lamb] Use the found crafting string to tie the lamb, one inch apart. My hands get very yellow and oily from doing this. 

12:20pm: [lamb] Place the tied lamb on a baking sheet covered with tin foil and, with plastic wrap covering the meat, place it in the fridge to marinate. 

1:01pm: [flatbread] Stir the warm water, sugar, and yeast together until the yeast dissolves. Add four cups of flour and combine until no major dry spots remain. Cover, and let sit for ten minutes to hydrate the flour. 

1:20pm: [flatbread] Add the melted butter, salt, and sour cream to the dough using your hands. The dough feels wet and slimy. The goal is to fully incorporate the sour cream. Once done, cover the dough and let it rest for two hours. 

3:20pm: [flatbread] Uncover the dough bowl and punch down the dough, knocking some of the air out of it. I hear the air escape and it's kind of thrilling. Cover the dough back up and let it sit for another two hours. 

3:22pm: [salsa verde] Slice a shallot in half. Reserve one half in the fridge and dice the other half into the smallest pieces possible. 

3:24pm: [salsa verde] Slice a lemon and squeeze two tablespoons of lemon juice over the shallots. 

3:26pm: [salsa verde] Retrieve my herbs: cilantro, parsley, mint, and chives. Tiny dice two whole cups of herbs (which is a lot of herbs). Use mostly parsley and cilantro, but supplement with mint and chives. 

3:42pm: [salsa verde] Cover the bowl and store in the fridge. Alison’s Another Salsa Verde is complete.

4:00pm: [lamb] Turn on the oven. 

4:15pm: [lamb] Pull out the dutch oven and pour some oil into the base. Turn on the burner to medium heat. Remove the lamb from the fridge and place it in the dutch oven to brown the meat, turning the meat with your tongs every 4-6 minutes. 

4:35pm: [lamb] Place the carrots in the pot with the lamb, and toss the carrots in the excess fat at the bottom. 

4:40pm: [lamb] Lift the pot, with lamb and carrots inside, into the oven. Set a timer for one hour and ten minutes. Alison recommends one hour for a medium-cooked lamb. But given the size of the cut of meat, I know I’ll need more time. I just need to check and see how much extra time at the 1:10 mark. 

4:42pm: [salad] Quarter the endives lengthwise, and toss the leaves in a large bowl. Slice the other half of the shallot into very thin rounds, separating them as I lob them into the bowl. Trim several strands of parsley and mint, also adding them to the bowl. 

4:52pm: [salad] Pour out a pile of almonds on the cutting board and chop them into small bits. Place them into a bowl on the counter. 

4:58pm: CLEAN THE HOUSE - GUESTS ARE COMING OVER 

5:20pm: [flatbread] Pour the dough onto a cutting board, and using a dough cutter, create six equally sized balls of dough. Using just a modicum of flour to dust them so they don’t stick to your hands. Coax the first dough ball into a flat, mini pizza shape, letting the dough stretch over the back of my hands like Alison says. 

5:27pm: [flatbread] Get out the cast iron skillet and turn the heat to medium-high. Pour out a bit of olive oil and lay the first dough round in there. I hear it sizzle, and within three to four minutes, just like Alison says, the dough is bubbly and golden. I flip the bread and let it heat for two minutes on the other side. Continue with the rest of the dough, rolling each one out just before the skillet frees up. Keep the flatbreads warm under two plates. One dish done! 

5:50pm: [lamb] Check on the lamb. Insert the meat thermometer. Oh boy, it’s still 95 degrees in the deepest part, and we’re aiming for between 145 and 160. Push it back in and set the time for another 30 minutes from now. 

5:56pm: [salad] Add olive oil to the bowl of almonds, along with salt and pepper, and stir to combine. 

5:59pm: [salad] Thinly slice the Honeycrisp apple into rounds. Then toss the apples with the endive and herb mixture, along with salt and lemon juice. 

6:05pm: [salad] Arrange the salad on a serving platter, then drizzle the almond mixture over the top. Quick! Take several fabulously lit pictures just before the sun goes down. Wrap the plate and place it on the table. Two dishes done! 

6:15pm: [lamb] Check on the lamb, and realize it still has another 15-25 degrees to go in several parts before it’s considered medium-rare. Slide it back in and set a new timer for 20 minutes. 

6:20pm: Get changed, remove your apron and brush your hair. 

6:30pm: Guests arrive! Friends from my hometown in Southern California. Marissa and Drew. Entertain them with a glass of wine (that they brought - it’s so good!). 

6:45pm: [lamb] Check on the lamb, and it’s done! Probably could have taken it out 8-10 minutes earlier… Oh well. It’s still soft and easy to chew. The flavor is incredibly rich but not too overpowering. The turmeric is less harsh and the garlic more potent than you expected. The lamb is delicious. A success! Just next time, try to get one in the right weight range. I think that’ll save lots of guesswork. 

6:50pm: Serve the lamb with garlicky yogurt, Alison’s Another Salsa Verde, and flaky salt. 

7:45pm: Transition from dinner to the gf apple crisp Marissa made, and enjoy every sweet bite. Even better? The company and conversation. 

I hope you enjoyed this play by play. Making meals can be a lot of work, but at least they’re rewarding. 

161 recipes cooked, 64 to go.

Spelt with Crispy Sausage, Flowering Broccoli, and Green Garlic by Alison Roman

I went gluten free in July 2020. As if a pandemic wasn’t enough of a strain, I committed to saying farewell to many foods I enjoyed and, frankly, depended on. The transition took an emotional toll. Meals I relied on as quick-and-easy staples were suddenly off limits, and I grieved the fact that my body could no longer digest those meals without consequences. I remember a meltdown, very early on, when I became somewhat irrationally frustrated that I had eaten black beans three nights in a row because the only other thing I had on hand was pasta. I could have easily walked to the store to buy other options, but the conundrum overwhelmed me. The most likely explanation for my meltdown is the fact that I was actually coming to terms with the underlying conditions that caused me to go gluten-free. I had just been diagnosed with endometriosis. But that was out of my control. Instead, what I ate for dinner each night was inside my control, and suddenly that too had become limited.

No matter why someone makes a dietary change, it’s always a hard, and emotional, transition. When safe foods become unsafe, we experience a real loss of something that brought us pleasure and sustenance. It takes time to adjust to the new normal and all that it implies. Since that pasta meltdown, I’ve made many strides. I still miss real pizza and bagels. But I’ve found decent alternatives like cauliflower crust pizza and gluten-free frozen bagels that mostly scratch the itch. I’ve had to make some real changes for this project to accommodate my dietary needs, especially when it comes to Alison’s desserts. King Arthur’s gluten-free baking guide has been hugely helpful. Other recipes I’ve simply had to swap or eliminate ingredients all together. 

For this recipe, I had to substitute brown rice for spelt because spelt is a form of wheat. However, I’d say that the rice did a fine job of mimicking the chewy texture of spelt, and I didn’t miss the spelt at all. I chose Trader Joe’s frozen brown rice. They come in packages of 2-cups worth of rice and require three minutes in the microwave. A yummy substitute AND a time saver. 

I used Trader Joe’s hot italian sausage here, and started by browning the meat fillings. Before turning on the pan, I tried to separate the meat into smaller pieces, because I find breaking up sausage meat with a wooden spoon to be quite difficult and sticky. Once the meat was browned, I added garlic (I used regular garlic cloves, not green garlic) and the rice, and let the rice get toasted and crunchy. At one point, I began adding the broccoli rabe into the pan, bit by bit, until dark green. I topped the whole pan with a bit of parmesan and called it a day. 

This is a quick, satisfying, and well rounded meal that I quite enjoyed eating. I love when one pan can hold a vegetable, a protein, and a starch. This recipe provides all three in a cohesive effort, and it can be made entirely gluten-free! I call that a win-win meal. 

155 recipes cooked, 70 to go.