Baked Summer Squash with Cream and Parmesan Bread Crumbs by Alison Roman

Wait... Annie. I thought you were cow’s dairy free? Why did you make this dish with heavy cream and parmesan cheese? 

Thanks for that thoughtful question. I made it and ate it because there are some things worth breaking the rules for. And for me, that list includes creamy baked squash with sourdough, parmesan bread crumbs. A girl’s gotta have standards. This is one of mine. 

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First, I prepared the sourdough breadcrumbs. I had the stale ends to an old loaf I’d made a few weeks prior and pulsed them in a food processor until they were not too small, but not too big. (It’s all about precision for me.) Then I combined the crumbs with salt, pepper, aleppo pepper, freshly grated garlic, and a half cup of parmesan cheese. I set this aside. 

The recipe calls for about a pound of summer squash, which for me came down to 2 large-ish zucchinis. The quartered them and laid them in a 2-qt. dish. I poured a cup of heavy cream, some dried oregano (sorry, I didn’t have the bandwidth to buy fresh), and some olive oil. Then I sprinkled the bread crumbs over the top of the zucchini. As the dish bakes, the creamy gets bubbly, the parmesan melts, and the sourdough bread crumbs turn a golden brown. It was worth every bite. 

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While squash is especially in season during the summer, it’s also around in the fall. I think this would be a lovely side dish on a night when the weather starts to chill and the leaves start to turn. A marriage of seasons in a baking dish. Or a sign of transition between them. (And a delicious sign at that!)

87 recipes cooked, 138 to go.

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Perfect Asparagus with Garlic and Salted Olive Oil by Alison Roman

For every way to prepare great asparagus, there are at least eight ways to screw it up. I like asparagus, but the reason I don’t love it is because I’ve had far more asparagus-gone-wrong’s, than right’s. Too soggy, too tough, too stringy, too limp, too mushy – we’ve all made asparagus one or more of these ways. It’s easy to do! 

Alison claims that she’s found the *perfect* way to cook asparagus. In my opinion, she’s gotten pretty darn close. 

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Alison’s asparagus method includes blanching the greens in a pot of boiling, salted water for 45 seconds (that’s it!). The asparagus must be on the thinner side for this to work. Not so thin that the top flops over, but not so thick that it doesn’t do a little wavering when you hold it up from the bottom. Once the 45 seconds are up, the asparagus can rest on a plate with paper towels to soak up excess water. Plate the greens and drizzle with a mixture of olive oil, salt, grated garlic and aleppo pepper, and of course, flaky sea salt. The flavor is subtle. The asparagus (asparagi?) are still crunchy, but not tough. They’re a beautiful bright green, and taste as fresh as they look…

The longer I think about it, the more I’m inclined to agree that it is the perfect asparagus. 

81 recipes cooked, 144 to go.

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Fried Eggplant with Harissa and Dill by Alison Roman

I made seven Alison Roman recipes last week. All of them, except one, were very good. But for whatever reason, this eggplant dish is the one I can’t stop thinking about! 

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Through this project, I’ve grown to really like eggplant, which is saying something considering where I started. I used to shutter at the soggy appearance of cooked eggplant in the cafeteria, and wondered how anyone could want to eat it instead of the always-available pizza and salad bar. I now realize that my college cafeteria, as exemplary for the circumstances as it was, did not treat eggplant with the care and flavors that it is due. 

I started to appreciate eggplant for all its creamy and flavor-soaking qualities when I first made Alison’s Long-Roasted Eggplant with Garlic, Labne, and Tiny Chile Croutons. There especially I learned how well eggplant goes with spice. Which is exactly what this fried eggplant recipe does so nicely. 

The eggplant is sliced into ½-inch rounds and fried in a boat load of olive oil (I probably used 1½ cups when all was said and done). The eggplant gets a nice toasted surface and soaks in all the yummy oil. It took about 20 minutes to fry it, since I could only fit so many rounds in my large skillet. Once the frying is complete, the pan is removed from heat and filled with a spicy sauce made of water, harissa paste, red pepper flakes, tomato paste, and vinegar. The sauce immediately bubbles in the pan, inviting the eggplant back into the skillet for tossing. Though 2 tbsp. of harissa and a teaspoon of red pepper flakes are used, the spiciness was quite tolerable and the heat more acidic than dry. The creamy eggplant played well with the tangy spices. Finally, the whole plate is topped with dill and flaky salt. 

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I made this dish for dinner on a night when my brother-in-law was coming over. I could see his polite skepticism as soon as I brought out the plate. He reached for only two pieces and began eating the rest of his meal. But after a few bites, I could tell he had changed his mind. He and Jordan both helped to finish off the eggplant, which I count as a real victory. The leftover oily juices also made a lovely dipping spread for sourdough bread. 

70 recipes cooked, 155 to go.

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Mustardy Green Beans with Anchovyed Walnuts by Alison Roman

I’ll admit I was skeptical about anchovyed walnuts. I wasn’t in the mood for fishy nuts as I started my dinner prep. To be honest, anchovyed anything never sounds appealing to me. And yet, I thoroughly enjoy eating anchovyed foods 9 out of 10 times they’re on my plate. So, it was past experience that pushed me to follow through with Alison’s instructions, not my appetite. 

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And like most of my prior experience, these anchovyed walnuts were delicious. In a pot filled with a ¼ cup of olive oil, toast a cup of coarsely chopped walnuts until fragrant and golden. Remove from heat, and swirl in anchovies and grated garlic until the anchovies have melted and disappeared. Set them aside for later, and also snack on them while you make the rest of dinner. They’re just as nice on their own, and they’re not too fishy. 

We eat oven-roasted green beans, tossed with olive oil, salt, and pepper, about every 1-2 weeks here, so preparing the beans was a simple repetition for me. Alison has you throw in some thinly sliced lemon pieces, another standard addition in my kitchen. While everything gets lightly charred in the oven, prepare a simple dressing made of whole grain mustard, white wine vinegar and olive oil. When the beans are done, they get tossed in this tangy vinaigrette. 

The last step is to plate the saucy lemon and beans and sprinkle with whatever walnuts are left, post-snacking. The whole dish is bursting with my kind of flavor palette (I LOVE anything that boasts salt and vinegar). And the toasty walnuts are a nice textural contrast to the beans and charred lemon. While I don’t think I’ll go out of my way to make beans like this all the time, I do think I’ll start to go this route more often when I’m up to the extra steps. The reward is certainly worth it.

63 recipes cooked, 162 to go.

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Lemony White Beans and Escarole with Anchovy and Parmesan by Alison Roman

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To the three of you who read this blog somewhat consistently — I know that you know that I’m obsessed with beans, and saying so again will sound awfully redundant to you…. But what else can I express other than admiration for this versatile source of protein? And here, another way to make them that isn’t tomato-oriented or meant to fill a tortilla. An entirely new way to treat your beans! 

We’re talking oodles of garlic, anchovies, capers, and red pepper flakes, each infusing a small pool of olive oil. Cannelini beans marinating in the umami-rich liquid, losing all sense of having been in a can. Big pieces of torn swiss chard (or escarole) — some wilted, some fresh. Parmesan shavings, parsley and fresh mint scattered over the top. We’re talking lunch, dinner, a midday snack, or a midnight snack. Main dish or side dish — your call. 

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I’ve made this twice in the past week. (When I enjoy something, I want it again right away.) Once it was served just by itself for dinner. The second time as a side with Alison’s Grilled Lamb Shoulder. Both were excellent. 

Here are some ways that you, too, could make this dish over and over without getting tired of it:

  1. You could forgo the greens and just make the beans. 

  2. You could swap the chard or escarole for kale. 

  3. You could ditch the greens, double the parmesan, melting it over the beans under the broiler, and serve it with crackers like a dip. 

  4. You could spread the beans over sourdough toast. 

Once again, Alison has presented us with yet another inventive way to make beans the center of everyone’s attention. She has my attention, at least. 

54 recipes cooked, 171 to go.