Showing posts with label onion. Show all posts
Showing posts with label onion. Show all posts

Sunday, October 3, 2021

My Oma's Gurkensalat

Photo: Allrecipes

Whenever I see cucumbers I think of my Bavarian grandmother, who was the only person I know to make gurkensalat (or cucumber salad). My mother, an excellent home cook and her daughter, didn't make it. Mom always used cucumbers in a green salad to serve as a side with whatever dinner she prepared for us. I have memories of my Oma visiting us and making her gurkensalat in our kitchen. We liked it, but none of us have her recipe. As an adult, I had to try to figure it out from memories of eating it as well as seeing her make it:

Oma's Gurkensalat

2 cucumbers, peeled - (I don't peel them. Oma did.)
1 small yellow onion - sliced thin (or green onions when available)
1/2 cup of sour cream (or mayonnaise as a substitute)
1 teaspoon of salt
1/2 teaspoon of black pepper
3 tablespoons of cider vinegar
1 teaspoon of dried dill
Sprinkle of garlic
Sprinkle of paprika
Sprinkle of nutmeg 
Sprinkle of dried parsley
1 teaspoon of sugar, or to taste.

Optional: If the vinegar is too sharp, dilute it with 1 - 3 tablespoons of water ... but wait 30 minutes since cucumbers are largely water.

Directions:

1) Slice the cucumbers as thin as possible. Oma used a mandoline, but it can be done with a sharp knife.

2) Slice the onions thin too and toss them in with the cucumbers.

3) Add the sour cream (or mayonnaise). Oma loved sour cream.

4) Add the seasonings, and taste the salad. Adjust. Oma would sprinkle in a little sugar to balance the sour vinegar. 

She let the flavors marinate for at least 30 minutes in the refrigerator before serving it. The water from the cucumbers will draw out, so don't add tablespoons of water to counter the sharpness of the vinegar right away. Let the salad settle first. 

After chilling, it is ready to put on the table. Gurkensalat is a refreshing, light side dish with a crunch. Enjoy!


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Friday, April 23, 2021

Easy French Onion Soup

Photo: Betty Crocker

It's hard to be a great French cook while limiting fat and calories in your meals. Today I'm making French onion soup for the first time ever and will not cut calories. I don't think it's the most nutritious soup to eat -- lower in protein than many, only one vegetable -- nor is it a low calorie soup ... but at times one must eat what one wants, and today that's French onion soup!

The homemade soup is sitting on my stovetop. It smells and tastes delicious. I sampled it! For tonight's dinner, I'll add the bread and cheeses, broiling the topping in the oven until melted and slightly brown. The quantity is 4 large servings:

French Onion Soup

Ingredients:

2 tablespoons butter
2 tablespoons extra virgin olive oil
4 large onions, cut in strips (not diced small)
2 tablespoons all-purpose flour
1 large beef bouillon cube (or chicken bouillon cube; or 3/4 teaspoon salt)
3 cups beef stock (or chicken stock - I use whatever flavor is in the pantry)
1/2 cup red wine (or white - I use what's open, most often red. The color doesn't really matter. If tasty to drink, the wine makes excellent soup:)
1 bay leaf
1/2 teaspoon sage
1/2 teaspoon thyme
1 teaspoon Herbs of Provence
Sprinkle of garlic
Sprinkle of dried celery
Tiny pinch of sugar
white and black pepper to taste
Extra 1/4 cup of onion, diced
Swiss cheese (buy a brick of cheese)
Parmesan cheese

Directions:

1) Toss the olive oil and butter into a stockpot and heat it, followed by the onions and simmer on middle-low heat for 20 minutes to caramelize. Cover with a lid. Watch and stir so the onion doesn't burn. After 20 minutes ...

2) Whisk in the flour. Add the bouillon cube (or salt, not both). You can add about 1/2 cup of water if needed to dissolve the bouillon. 

3) Next add the beef stock and wine; follow with your dried seasonings. Add a pinch of sugar too. Simmer on low-medium heat for another 30 minutes. (Without a boil, the soup won't cook properly, yet too high a flame cooks the water out. That's the dilemma. Make sure you have a low boil, not a robust boil.)

4) Near the end of the cooking time (like the last 10 minutes) dice another 1/4 cup of onion (get out another small onion) and 1/4 cup of the Swiss cheese and a sprinkle of Parmesan cheese and toss into the pot. This adds omph -- more flavor and texture.

5) Pour into soup bowls and top with bread and cheeses. Read step 6.

6) {a} - For myself, I lay a couple of slices of toasted multi-grain bread on the soup and then top with lots of Swiss and a sprinkle of Parmesan cheeses, broiling the bread-cheese topping in the oven until the cheeses are hot, melted and slightly brown.

{b} - If I were to make this soup again for guests, I'd buy a loaf of artisan bread, cut it into thick slices, butter and brown the slices on a baking sheet in the oven, then top the bowls of soup with the oven browned bread peaked with plenty of cheese. Without guests, I skip this oven-browned-bread step to get out of the kitchen. Butter-less supermarket, toasted bread topped with cheese is fine for me! Still a success.
Update: Dinner is served at 6:50 pm. I'm afraid of ruining a mug or bowl by broiling, so I used mini cake pans, different, I know!
If I say so, myself, the soup looks, smells and tastes amazing! Restaurant worthy. Good enough for guests. Mine isn't as salty as I've eaten it out, so perhaps, it's even better.

Pandemic cook is back, sister!


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