Since it's my sweet Pickle's 5th birthday, here's a little ditty to get your weekend going.

p.s Happy Birthday, Pickle. I love you. You are my sweet, sweet boy and you amaze me everyday with your wit and charm and funny personality. I'm so proud of how you're growing. xoxo.


p.p.s We're heading to Rhys's favorite place for dinner, Pizza Brutta, but you can re-create their pizza margarita at home with this recipe I highlighted a little while ago. Serve it with this family favorite:


Fennel and Apple Slaw ala Pizza Bianca
serves 4 hungry bambini

Ingredients
1 teaspoon white wine or champagne vinegar
1 teaspoon maple syrup
big pinch of kosher salt
freshly ground black pepper
4 tablespoons toasted walnut or hazelnut oil

1 fennel bulb, cored and shave
1 tart, crisp apple, cut into matchsticks 
1/4 cup toasted walnuts or candied walnuts
fennel fronds for garnish

Directions
In a large serving bowl, add the first 4 ingredients. Whisk to combine, then slowly add the oil. Whisk until emulsified. Taste and adjust as needed.

Add the fennel, apple and walnuts; toss to combine. Garnish with the fluffy fennel tops.

Enjoy!


Happy eating, -s.
the wild klein boys
We had a great weekend for it being SO gross outside - the weather was cold, rainy and grey. Fog rolled in and out both days and we spent a lot of time running around our basement playroom. We had some good, head- and booty-shaking dance parties and there may have been some delicious pastries on Sunday morning to offset the dreaded time change.

Dinners were a team effort this weekend, with both Mr. Klein and me tackling the prep. The boys have been playing so nicely together that it actually allows us to collaborate in the kitchen (like the good old days :).

Chris LOVES salads - the heartier the better, so Saturday night we made Parmesan-coated chicken breast paillards with homemade Caesar salad. I went all-out on the dressing (even coddling the eggs, which was a first for me!). I have to say, it was pretty good. Chris said he could have eaten the whole bowl of salad himself and even Rhys ate a good helping of the greens (shocked!). He, of course, had ketchup with the chicken :)

Caesar salad adapted heavily from marc bittman's how to cook everything

Ingredients
1/2 a clove of garlic, chopped roughly
2 anchovy fillets or 2 tbs. anchovy paste
dash of Worcester sauce
2 eggs
2 tablespoons Meyer lemon juice (regular lemons work too)
6 tablespoons olive oil
salt and pepper to taste
1/2 cup finely grated parmigiano reggiano
One head of romaine lettuce, cleaned, dried and torn into pieces

Directions:
Bring a small sauce pan of water to boil; with a pin, poke of broad end of each egg. Drop the egg carefully into the water for 60-90 seconds. Remove and carefully crack the eggs into a blender or tall measuring cup. Add the garlic, lemon juice, anchovies and Worcester sauce. Using an immersion blender (or regular blender), blend the ingredients until smooth. Taste and season with salt and pepper as needed. With blender running, slowly add the olive oil until the dressing thickens and becomes viscous. Taste and adjust seasonings as needed.

Dress the salad, coating evenly with the dressing; add the parmigiano and serve with crispy chicken breast paillards, grilled chicken breasts or croutons.


Here's what we're eating this week ...

Menu: week of 9 March 2013
Saturday: Chicken Parmesan paillards with Caesar salad
Sunday: Split-pea soup with smoked pork shank and Yukon-gold potatoes
Monday: Impossible ham and cheese quiche from Cook's Illustrated
Tuesday: Winter pizza margarita with apple-fennel salad
Wednesday: Eggs poached in tomato sauce with crusty bread
Thursday: Pasta with sauteed Italian sausage, green cabbage and fresh ricotta
Friday: Fish tacos with avocado crema and shaved cabbage

Happy eating, -s.
I’ve have slowly come to the realization that there are two parties in this world: beet lovers and beet haters (no political affiliations here!). I am head-over-heels, a beet lover. Thankfully, Chris is too. Pickle is still on the fence. The beet haters, as I’ve come to learn, think that they taste like dirt. This is understandable, since that’s where they grow, but their earthiness is so nicely paired with their inherent sweetness — especially when roasted — that I can't understand the anti-beet sentiment. Anyway, this recipe is for the LOVAHs out there who can get enough beets!

The inspiration for this dish was that fact that I had a heck of a lot of beets in the fridge and needed to do something with them — new. I had been counting the days for tomato season to begin, so naturally I had panzanella on the brain. With some day-old bread on the counter and a bevy of basil from our CSA, I thought, “beet panzanella.” I’m sure someone else has made this before me, but I seriously thought I had a moment of brilliance, especially since I was utilizing a whole slew of ingredients from my overflowing icebox.

I roasted the beets the night before, so they were ready to go. While I baked the croutons in the oven, I prepped all the other ingredients, first by making the vinaigrette. Here’s one thing I learned in making this: a tomato-based panzanella is juicier, so you’ll need more dressing for the beet version. When the vinaigrette hits the tomatoes, they start releasing their own juices and this gets mixed into the salad and good things start to happen. Beets don’t have a lot going on in the juice department (poor beets), so you’ll need to compensate for that in a little more vinaigrette, but still go slow in adding it to the salad because there is nothing worse than an overdressed, gloppy salad.

With that, get roasting and chopping and mixing and dicing your way to beet happiness.

p.s. as you can see in the photo below, a fortunate or unfortunate side effect is the fantastic Technicolor-pink hue the entire salad takes on the minute the dressing hits the beets.

Beet Panzanella
Serves 4 hungry adults as a starter or 2-3 for a main course

Ingredients
6 medium-sized mixed beets (ruby, golden and Chioggia), roasted – I used the Marc Bittman version from How to Cook Everything since it’s super easy.
½ a red onion sliced very thinly into half moons
1 cucumber, seeded and diced
A large bunch of basil, roughly torn into pieces
½ loaf of day-old bread cut into 1-inch cubes
Olive oil
Kosher salt and pepper

For the vinaigrette:
1 teaspoon Dijon mustard
3 teaspoons red wine vinegar
½ teaspoon salt
¼ teaspoon freshly ground black pepper (about 8 turns on the peppermill)
1/3 cup extra virgin olive oil

Directions
Preheat the oven to 400 degrees. Line a rimmed baking sheet with foil. On the baking sheet toss the bread cubes with a few glugs of olive oil, a large pinch or two of salt and a few grinds of pepper. Toss well and bake until the croutons are toasty browns and crisp all over – about 15 minutes.

While the croutons are baking, make the vinaigrette. In a medium-size bowl, whisk together the mustard, vinegar, salt and pepper until incorporated. While whisking, slowly pout the olive oil into the mustard-vinegar mixture until emulsified. Set aside.

Remove the blackened skin from the beet, trim the ends and cut into 1-inch pieces. Add them, along with the onions, cucumber, beets and basil to a large serving bowl.

The croutons should be done by now; remove from oven and let cool for a few minutes. Add to the salad and toss with hands to evenly distribute everything. Add the vinaigrette. Taste and adjust for seasoning. Eat within the hour or the croutons start to lose their crispness.

Happy eating, -s.
Panko-crusted American farm-raised tilapia tacos with avocado crema and a black-bean salad

Fish Tacos
You can pretty much use any fish you’d like for this. I love whole-wheat panko, but for some reason the crumbs are a bit more robust in size that the white panko, so I crush them ever-so-slightly for more uniformity when coating.

Serves 2 adults and 2 hungry bambinos

Ingredients
4 tilapia fillets
¼ cup flour
1 egg
1 tablespoon milk (preferably whole or 2%)
¾ cup whole-wheat panko (slightly pulverized with a rolling pin)
¼ cup olive oil
Kosher salt and freshly ground black pepper

8-10 corn tortillas (heated just before dinner in oven or microwave)
Optional (but yummy) garnishes: sliced radishes, microgreens or sprouts, cilantro leaves

Directions
Preheat oven to 200 degrees. In a Ziploc bag, add flour and a generous pinch of salt. In another Ziploc bag, add panko and gently roll with a rolling pin a few times to break of the really big pieces of panko. In a flat dish, whisk the egg and milk together, season with a pinch salt and a few grinds of black pepper.

Season each fillet with salt and pepper and place in the flour bag, shaking it gently to evenly coat the fillets. Dunk each fillet in the egg mixture and then one at a time shake in the panko. Place coated fillets on a plate while you coat the rest.

Preheat a large skillet. Add olive oil and when hot add two fillets. Cook 3-4 minutes, until golden brown. Flip carefully and cook an additional 3 minutes. Remove to a paper-towel-lined plate and pop into the oven to keep warm. Repeat with remaining fillets. Serve immediately in warm corn tortillas or keep warm in the oven while you prep the other components.
Avocado crema
In our house, avocado is king. Click here for a mind-blowing list of stats on why avocado is oh-so-good for you. This creamy fruit is loaded with fiber, filled with good fat and packed with B vitamins.

Ingredients
1 avocado, ripe as hell
½ cup sour cream or Mexican crema
Zest and juice of half of a lime (zest first, juice second)
1-2 tablespoons tap water
¼ teaspoon ground cumin
½ teaspoon kosher salt
Few grinds of black pepper

Directions
In the bowl of a food processor or blender, add all of the ingredients. Pulse a few times to get things going and then process until smooth and creamy. Taste for seasoning; add more salt, lime juice, cumin as needed.

Black-bean salad
This recipe is great because it can be changed to what you have in the pantry and to what cuisine you are cooking. This version is great with Mexican, Latin and Tex Mex flavors. It’s simple and easy to execute. Enough said.

Ingredients
15 oz. of cooked black beans, either canned or homemade, rinsed and drained
1 small red onion, finely diced – rinsed in cold water for a few minute and drained
1 lime, zested and juiced
1 teaspoon cumin
1 tablespoon fruity olive oil
Kosher of raw vegetable of your choice: halved grape tomatoes, diced cucumber, chopped roasted red peppers, grated carrot
Cilantro, a large handful, chopped

Directions
In a large bowl, add the onion, the lime juice and a large pinch of salt. Stir to combine. This will slightly “pickle” the onion and kill some of oniony-ness. Prep everything else and then add to the bowl, stirring to combine. Taste for seasoning and adjust as needed.

Note: if you are making this a day ahead, don’t add the cilantro until right before serving.

Happy eating, -s.
I love beets. I should clarify; I love roasted beets – pickled or canned beets, not so much. This recipe is a mainstay in my kitchen – I use everything from late spring's baby beets to summer's glorious full-size ones, be it garnet, golden or chioggia beets. The inherent sweetness of the beets is offset by the smoky cumin, the tang of the red-wine vinegar and the goat cheese that adds a perfect, creamy salinity to balance it out. Throw in some pistachios for both the amazing color contrast and texture and you have a really delicious, healthful salad that goes well with fish, chicken, pork, beef, lamb, etc.

Disclaimer: The beets have barely made it to Pickle's lips. I'll let you know when one is actually ingested.

Roasted beet salad with goat cheese and pistachios
Ingredients
1-2 bunches baby beets or one bunch, medium-sized beets, greens removed and reserved for other use
4 oz. goat cheese
¼ cup pistachios, shelled and roughly chopped
2 tablespoons olive oil
1 ½ teaspoons red wine vinegar
½ to 1 teaspoon cumin, to taste
½ teaspoon kosher salt
A few grinds of freshly ground black pepper

Directions
Preheat oven to 425 degrees.
For baby beets: wrap 4-5 beets on heavy duty aluminum foil. Repeat with remaining beets. Larger beets can be wrapped individually. Place foil packets on a baking sheet and roast beets for 45 minutes to an hour. Let beets cool and then peel the beets and remove any remaining stems. Slice beets into quarters, lengthwise, and place in serving bowl.

For the vinaigrette: In a small bowl, add vinegar, cumin, salt and pepper. Whisk to combine. In a slow stream, add the olive oil, whisking continuously until you get an emulsion. Taste vinaigrette and adjust seasonings, adding more cumin, salt or pepper. Pour dressing over beets and toss to coat. Garnish with pistachios and crumbled goat cheese.