Perfect Cornbread Muffins

There are a few things everyone needs in their life. A friend who loves you no matter what. Chocolate cake. A car mechanic who doesn’t overcharge. And a recipe for perfect cornbread muffins. Cornbread is that all-American comfort food that goes with just about anything. Well, anything with the words “down-home,” “country-cookin’,” or “barbecue” in front of it. Not to mention soups, stews, and chilis. And Mexican-flavored dishes. And butter and jam. The more I make cornbread, the more multipurpose I realize it is. In fact, cornbread has a long history of satisfying American hunger.

Corn-based dishes have been made since time immemorial by the Native peoples of the Americas, but when European settlers arrived in the colonial era, they began using corn in place of wheat in breads. Throughout the Civil War, cornbread became especially popular because of its versatility and cheapness. Since then, it has remained a staple of Southern and Western food.

Whatever its history, this cornbread muffin recipe is my call-off-the-search gold standard. After experimenting with numerous other versions, I slightly modified this one from an unlikely place: a hand-me-down Better Homes and Gardens New Dieter’s Cookbook my mom gave me. (No, I don’t think she was trying to make a statement about my weight. Just downsizing. Her downsizing. From a house. Just digging the hole deeper here, aren’t I?) Despite being a little dated at 18 years old, it’s a cookbook that’s been a surprising resource for me. I’ve gotten numerous recipes I trust from it.

This particular recipe produces a muffin that’s a little dense, not too sweet, and—possibly most important to me—holds its shape beautifully. While some folks want their cornbread crumbs to mix and mingle with accompanying foods, I am more of a cornbread isolationist. A plate for everything and everything in its plate. While you could of course crumble these muffins up into a chili garnish, they’re not going to fall apart the minute you bite into them. They also fit squarely in the dinner category, not corn-flavored dessert.

So allow me to introduce you to your new stew-adorning, barbecue-loving, Mexican-dish-complementing favorite cornbread. (Complete with lots of pictures. It’s apparently quite photogenic.) I think this is the beginning of a beautiful friendship.

 

Perfect Cornbread Muffins

(Adapted from Better Homes and Gardens New Dieter’s Cookbook)

Ingredients:

1 c. all-purpose flour
2/3 c. yellow cornmeal
3 Tbsp. sugar
2 tsp. baking powder
1/4 tsp. salt
1 egg
2/3 c. milk
1/4 c. vegetable oil

Directions:

1. Preheat oven to 425 degrees and grease 8 cups of a muffin tin.

2. In a large bowl, combine flour, cornmeal, sugar, baking powder, and salt. In a smaller bowl, stir together egg, milk, and oil. Add egg mixture to dry mixture, stirring until just smooth. Spoon into prepared muffin cups, filling about 3/4 full.

3. Bake about 12 minutes or until the tops are golden brown. Remove carefully from pan and serve warm.

Makes 8 muffins.

 

Creamy Tomatillo Lime Dressing (Cafe Rio Copycat)

 If you’ve ever been to the casual Mexican restaurant Cafe Rio, you probably know about the obsession.
What obsession? Oh, I see you haven’t been there.
The obsession people have with their creamy tomatillo lime dressing. When you order one of their salads, even the employees tell you there’s no use ordering any of the other dressings they offer. Resistance is futile. You WILL eat this dressing, and you WILL love it. I already like creamy salad dressings (a lot), but this is the one I want to sneak with me into other Mexican restaurants, the one I want to stockpile in case of Apocalypse, the one I *may* have a framed photograph of on my bedside table. I don’t normally post recipes that contain pre-packaged ingredients like a Ranch dressing mix, but this time I’m making an exception. It’s that good. It livens up any southwestern salad and makes a great topping on tostadas, tacos, chicken, pork, steak, I could go on…
So yeah, I’m drinking the Cafe Rio Kool-Aid. Actually, if no one’s looking, I’m drinking this dressing.
Creamy Tomatillo Lime Dressing (a la Cafe Rio)
Ingredients:
1/3 c. Greek yogurt
3 Tbsp. milk
1/2 c. mayonnaise
1/2 1-oz. package Ranch dressing mix
1/2 jalapeño, seeded and diced
1 clove garlic, minced
1 small tomatillo, roughly chopped
1/2-1 tsp. lime juice, to taste
1/4 c. cilantro
 
Directions:
 
In a small bowl or 2-cup measuring cup, mix Greek yogurt and milk. Add all other ingredients and blend with an immersion blender until combined and creamy. Alternatively, a regular blender can also be used.
Makes about 1 1/3 c.

Lemon-Dill Orzo with Chickpeas and Artichokes

I have a friend who used to say in the summer that she had “broken up” with her oven. It’s a mental image I’ve carried with me for years. I always picture this friend engaged in a painful split from Mr. Kenmore Oven. She tells him she can’t take the heat. First he wheedles, then he sends flowers, makes promises–he even bakes cookies. He writes love letters to prove his emotional range. She resists, ignoring him each time she walks through the kitchen, flaunting her new-found relationship with no-cook meals in his shiny metal face. But we know where this cat-and-mouse game ends when fall rolls around. Every year she comes running back to his warmth–how could she stay away when he’s SO HOT??–and the sizzling romance resumes. (Are you rolling your eyes at the oven puns yet?)

Awful oven puns aside, I get what my friend means. The to-oven-or-not-to-oven question is a seesaw many of us who love to cook tend to ride as seasons change. It seems counterintuitive to heat a metal box to 450 degrees in the middle of your house when every other effort you make all day is to stay cool. So while June hasn’t started off too terribly here in the Phoenix area (no temps soaring over 110–that’s what we call moderate), I still feel the pull to keep the oven off and serve something closer to air-conditioned room temperature.

When we tried this vegetarian orzo salad last night, it hit the non-piping-hot spot. The recipe does, admittedly, use the stovetop to boil the orzo, but 15 minutes on the range beats a lasagna in the oven for an hour, and the end result is a refreshing blend of cool flavors perfect for a warm day. It’s packed with:

    • Chickpeas for fiber and protein (see my ode to the nutritional value of chickpeas here)
    • Feta for a non-fatty cheese indulgence (the Pasta Salad Code of Ethics states that every pasta salad needs a cheese indulgence)
    • Artichokes for veggie goodness including additional fiber and Vitamin C
    • Fresh dill, lemon juice, garlic, and olive oil to add flavor without overdoing it on calories and fat (in keeping with the ideology of the Mediterranean diet).

Put them all together and you have a quick, light one-dish dinner or a hearty potluck side. So, sorry, Mr. Oven. Like my friend, I’m off for my annual summer fling without you. Or at least a few days’ break…you know I still need you for cookies.

Lemon-Dill Orzo with Chickpeas and Artichokes
(Adapted from Cooking Light)

Ingredients:

1 1/4 c. uncooked orzo
1/2 c. sliced green onions
3/4 c. crumbled feta cheese
1 14-oz. jar marinated artichoke hearts, drained and chopped
5 Tbsp. chopped fresh dill
2 15-oz. cans chickpeas (also known as garbanzo beans), drained
1/4 c. fresh lemon juice
2 Tbsp. extra-virgin olive oil
1 Tbsp. cold water
scant 3/4 tsp. salt
3/4 tsp. minced garlic

Directions:

1. Cook orzo according to package directions. Drain and rinse with cold water.

2. In a large bowl, combine cooled, rinsed orzo, green onions, feta, artichoke hearts, dill, and chickpeas.

3. In a small bowl, whisk together lemon juice, olive oil, water, salt, and garlic. Drizzle over pasta mixture and toss gently to coat.

Serve immediately or refrigerate.

Serves 5-6 as a main dish, 8-10 as a side dish.

Spiced Red Lentils

In my last post, I shared about what I had learned from writing a research paper on the multifunctional spice turmeric and its many potential medicinal uses. Today I thought I’d share a real-life example of how to incorporate turmeric into your diet. (Because turning research into dinner always sounds like a good idea.) This red lentil side dish was a real sleeper hit at our house. It’s a classic example of don’t-judge-a-book-by-its-cover–I mean, how often do we expect something that looks like a pot of rust-colored mush to turn out to be full of restaurant-quality deliciousness? Not often, yes? But that’s just what happened the night we gave this recipe a try.

As for myself, I would never have started cooking with lentils if it hadn’t been for a half-finished bag my vegetarian brother left at our house after one of his visits. Being a neurotic food-user-upper, I knew I had to find a purpose for the remaining legumes in the bag. But how to do so was kind of a mystery to me, because prior to that, my only mental associations with lentils had been the following:

1.) Thinking of them as “those tiny beans that people from other countries eat” (my inner ‘Murica coming out)

and

2.) The line in the musical Funny Girl: “When a girl’s incidentals are no bigger than two lentils, well, to me that doesn’t spell success.” (Don’t tell my husband that quote or he’s gonna start using it about me).

So figuring out how to cook and serve lentils was a real education. And as it turns out, a useful education, since turmeric is such a health-beneficial spice. (Again, see that last post.) As discussed in that post, turmeric is best absorbed by the body when paired with black pepper. This red lentil dish does so with a 2:1 ratio of turmeric to pepper.

Looks like they like each other. Turmeric and pepper, sittin’ in a tree…

In my research, I found out that a typical amount of turmeric in the dietary supplements people take to experience its health benefits is between 400 and 600 milligrams. With this in mind, I was curious–how much benefit would be gained from eating this red lentil dish with only a 1/2 teaspoon of turmeric in it? A half teaspoon doesn’t sound like a lot. Would it be at least the same as one dose of turmeric in supplement form? To find out, I had to do a little finagling involving my food scale. Since a teaspoon is a measurement of volume and milligrams are a measurement of weight, they don’t convert. The half teaspoon had to be weighed to determine how its content might compare to a supplement.

See, honey, that food scale is good for something!

The verdict? One half teaspoon of turmeric is equivalent to 2 grams (my spoon weighs 18g–don’t get too excited), or 2,000 milligrams. So if you ate the entire batch of spiced red lentils (good for you in the turmeric department, bad for you in the bathroom department) you would get a whopping five times the capsule amount. But if you, like a normal person, eat a regular serving–say, 1/5th of the recipe–you’ll get about as much as if you took one turmeric supplement. As someone who would rather eat than take a pill, I call that good news. While I don’t expect it to keep me from getting cancer, it’s a nice way to incorporate a health-beneficial spice into my diet from time to time. Maybe over the long term, it will work some magic.

But I digress. The important thing is mainly that these lentils are incredibly, aromatically delicious. Served with a tortilla-crusted tilapia and a drizzle of red pepper-shallot aioli, they were HEAVEN. My husband talked about this dinner for days afterward. I could also see them pairing well with grilled chicken or pretty much any Indian dish. Give them a try even if you think you don’t like turmeric–your taste buds and your health will thank you.

Spiced Red Lentils
(Adapted from Myrecipes.com)

Ingredients:

2 Tbsp. butter (or olive oil, to make vegan)
1/2 onion, diced
4 garlic cloves, minced
28 oz. chicken or vegetable broth
1 1/4 cups red lentils, thoroughly rinsed
1/2 tsp. turmeric
1/2 tsp. cumin
1/4 tsp. black pepper
salt to taste

Chopped basil for garnish, if desired

Directions:

1. Melt butter in a large saucepan over medium heat. Add onion and garlic and sauté about 6 minutes or until onion is tender. Add broth, lentils, turmeric, cumin, and pepper.

2. Bring to a boil, then reduce heat and simmer uncovered 20-30 minutes, stirring occasionally, until lentils are tender and have absorbed the broth. Season with salt to taste and garnish with basil, if desired.

Makes 5 cups.

Sweet Potato Goat Cheese Galette

Every year I take time before the holidays to plan our White Elephant Christmas party menu as meticulously as time and an Excel spreadsheet will allow. It’s typically a buffet of 7-9 appetizers and sides (plus dessert), and I attempt to include something for everyone: meat-lovers, vegetarians, gluten-free, whatever. As I brainstorm about what constellation of items to serve, I try to think of foods that strike me as interesting and classy. Somehow I always manage to end up with at least one recipe that calls for goat cheese. Maybe I need to get with the times, but any appetizer made with goat cheese just seems fancy to me. (I know, 1999 called. It wants its party food back.) Maybe this is how my grandmothers felt about Jell-O in 1955. Or anything with the word “mousse” in it, like shrimp mousse or the ever-popular “ham mousse ring.” Does that just scream ELEGANCE, or what? I do wonder if in fifty years I’ll look back at my Christmas party menus and cringe. Goat cheese? WHAT was I thinking??

But for now, I do love me some delicious, creamy chèvre, and any appetizer that relies heavily upon it. Like this sweet potato goat cheese galette. (P.S. Can I also earn some fanciness points for making something called a “galette”?) Actually, a galette is just “a food prepared and served in the shape of a flat round cake.” In this case, sweet potatoes are thinly sliced and stacked in layers, alternating with goat cheese, parmesan, and a sautéed shallot-olive-oil-thyme mixture to give the effect of a flat round cake. A delicious, savory cake that pairs well with roasted meats or as a stunner on the Christmas/New Year’s party circuit. I know I’ll be serving it again.

Sweet Potato Goat Cheese Galette
(Adapted from Fine Cooking)

Ingredients:

3 Tbsp. extra virgin olive oil
1/4 c. finely chopped shallots
1 1/4 lb. sweet potatoes, peeled (about 3-4 sweet potatoes)
2 tsp. coarsely chopped fresh thyme leaves
3/4 tsp. kosher salt
1/2 c. Parmesan cheese
1 c. crumbled goat cheese

Directions:

1. In a small saucepan, combine olive oil and shallots. Bring to a simmer over medium heat. Reduce to a low simmer and cook 2 minutes or until shallots are softened but not browned. Remove from heat and let cool.

2. Preheat oven to 400 degrees. Coat the bottom of a 9-inch tart pan (a pie plate will work in a pinch) with cooking spray. If using a tart pan, place it on a baking sheet lined with foil.

3. Slice the sweet potatoes as thinly as possible, about 1/16th inch. In a large bowl, toss the potato slices with the cooled olive oil mixture and fresh thyme until potatoes are well coated.

4. Beginning at the outside edge of the tart pan, cover the bottom of the pan with one layer of sweet potatoes, making slightly overlapping rings. Sprinkle some kosher salt over the whole layer, then a quarter of the Parmesan and a quarter of the goat cheese. Repeat two more times until you have three layers of sweet potatoes, salt, Parmesan, and goat cheese. Top the last layer with any remaining cheese.

5. Bake on the foil-lined baking sheet in the preheated oven 40-45 minutes or until a fork easily pierces potatoes all the way through. (The top layer of goat cheese will brown a bit–this is okay.) Cool 10-15 minutes and slice into wedges.

Serves 4-6 as a side dish.