I got an idea the other day, out of the blue. That’s the way
they come. One minute you’re trying to get to your exit across three lanes of speeding
traffic because that’s how New
Jersey highway engineers thought it should be done,
and the next, you know how your heroine will catch the killer.
When I got home, I was inspired. I had to, had to sit down and write. But it was my
turn to cook dinner and I hadn't been to the store. I was saved because
my husband, David, is a writer, too, and he said, sure go on, go write. And I
did. But later, I began to think about what a writer does when she comes home
inspired but has hungry kids waiting and no one to cook for them. Put off writing for a couple of hours? Or order a pizza stuffed
with something only chemically related to real cheese?
I shared this thought with David while slurping down my
second helping of his vegetable soup, made magically with whatever he'd found in the crisper
and pantry. I asked whether it would be possible for a writer to cook a homemade meal
that kids would eat and be out of the kitchen in, say, thirty minutes and
headed for the computer? Here, my darlings, mommy cooked real food for you; now I’m taking a plate upstairs, so put on a movie and
don’t bother me.
I said, “Not 30 minutes in TV-cooking-show time, where the
prep staff cuts everything up while the host is getting hair and eyeliner. I
mean 30 minutes in real-person time.”
He said, “Would this include actually reading the recipe first?
And getting your equipment together?”
Right. Cooking-show and cookbook estimates never take that into account either.
I said, “What could you give me?”
He leaned over and wiped some soup off my chin. “Thirty-five, forty at the outside.”
And he did it. Twice.
The two recipes he adapted (and appear at the end of this blog) are hearty one-dish meals, with few utensils and simple instructions, and have ingredients relatively easy to find.
Most of the ingredients also have a long shelf life and so could be easily on
hand in pantry or freezer for the next inspiration emergency. Even the greens
and the thyme can keep well for quite awhile in the refrigerator.
If your kids are ravenous teens, hand them a pint of cherry
tomatoes and a loaf of bread, too. Tell them to wash the first and toast the
second. Welcome to writer side dishes, kid!
Here's the farfalle. And no, I didn't take this picture. I took a picture of a picture. You learn fast how much work it is to make real food look as good as it tastes in a photo. This is from a Martha Stewart cookbook called Fresh Flavor Fast. Good book. But try saying that title three times fast.
The chorizo shot is also grabbed from its source, the February 2013 Bon Appetit.
The chorizo shot is also grabbed from its source, the February 2013 Bon Appetit.
My husband, David F. Nighbert, has begun migrating his backlist to e-books on Kindle and Nook. The mysteries (starred Kirkus reviews) Strikezone, Squeezeplay & Shutout are up now. And two SF novels, Timelapse & Clouds of Magellan, will be available soon. I highly recommend all!
This picture of us was taken by friend photog Mariann Moery as guests were arriving for the launch party for Death in Her Face at
Mysterious Bookshop in Manhattan
last fall. (If you look closely, you can spot Annamaria headed for the bar just beyond the man with the green bag strap on his shoulder to the left.)
We tried to create the recipes below as links to printable versions, but it's beyond the reliable skill of this blog tool (or maybe this blogger). But a simple cut and paste into Word will do the trick for you.
Sheila York
Sheila York
Farfalle with Arugula and White
Beans
Ingredients
|
Utensils
|
Coarse (kosher) salt and
freshly ground pepper
|
Dutch oven (with lid) big
enough for at least 5 qts water
|
12 oz farfalle (bow-tie) pasta
(about 6 cups dry)
|
Chef’s knife & cutting
board
|
4 Tbsp unsalted butter, cut
into 1-Tbsp slices
|
Colander
|
4 small to medium garlic
cloves, peeled and thinly sliced
|
Small skillet
|
1 pound baby arugula
|
Small plate to cool walnuts
|
1 can (15.5 oz) cannellini
beans, drained and rinsed
|
Wooden cooking spoon
|
1/3 cup walnut pieces,
toasted, for garnish
[Keep toasted walnut pieces on hand. They’re nice additions to simple salads] |
Measuring
cup with pouring lip
|
Gather all your ingredients
and utensils before starting your food prep.
|
|
1.
|
Start bringing 5 quarts of water
to a boil over high heat in large covered Dutch oven. (Pasta is happier if it
has plenty of water to swim in.) This is what takes time, so put the pot on
your strongest-heat burner and keep it covered till water boils.
|
2.
|
While waiting, do your ingredient prep:
Peel and slice garlic; rinse
and drain beans in colander; cut butter using the 1 Tbsp markers on the
wrapping; chop walnuts into pieces if they didn’t come that way.
|
3.
|
Toast walnuts. Heat a small
heavy skillet over medium heat for a minute. Add walnut pieces. Shake the
skillet occasionally to keep walnuts from burning. After 2-3 minutes,
transfer walnuts to a plate to cool.
|
4.
|
When water boils, add a generous amount of salt (about 4
Tbsp) and the pasta. Bring water back to a boil (cover the pot to make this
happen faster). Cook pasta, pot uncovered, stirring occasionally to make sure
pasta doesn’t stick together or to the bottom. Cook according to the timing
on the package till it is al dente. (You’ll have about 10 mins here to get
out your plates and flatware, and finish any ingredient prep)
When pasta is done, reserve ½ cup of the pasta water and set it
aside.
Then drain pasta; leave in colander. |
5.
|
In the now-empty Dutch oven,
heat 1 Tbsp of the butter over medium heat, then add the garlic. Cook,
stirring, 1-2 mins. Do not brown the garlic.
|
6.
|
Add the arugula, handfuls at a
time, and stir/toss just till wilted, a couple of minutes.
|
7.
|
Add beans, pasta and remaining
3 Tbsp of butter; season with salt and pepper.
|
8.
|
Heat, tossing, till butter is
melted and beans and pasta are warmed through, about 1 minute. While doing
this, add enough of the pasta water slowly to create a thin sauce. You will
not need all the water.
|
9.
|
Check seasoning; adjust as
necessary.
Serve in shallow bowls and garnish with the walnuts. |
Adapted from Fresh
Flavor Fast, copyright 2010 Martha Stewart Living Omnimedia
Chorizo and White Bean Stew
Ingredients
|
Utensils
|
2 Tbsp olive oil, divided
[‘divided’ means you won’t use it all at once] |
Large Dutch oven
|
1 lb. chorizo (buy it
precooked). You can use other spicy, precooked sausages (Italian, andouille,
etc.)
|
Wooden cooking spoon
|
1 large onion, thinly sliced
|
Tongs to turn sausage &
remove thyme
|
4 garlic cloves, peeled and
finely chopped
|
Colander
|
1 sprig fresh thyme. [How much
is a ‘sprig’, you ask? The equivalent of three 3-inch leafy pieces works for
us]
|
Chef’s knife & cutting
board
|
2 cans (each 15.5 oz)
cannellini beans, rinsed, drained
|
Small plate
|
2 cups low-sodium chicken
broth
|
Measuring cup with pouring lip
|
5 oz baby spinach (about 10
cups).
|
Measuring spoons
|
Kosher salt, freshly ground
pepper
|
|
Smoked paprika (optional)
|
Gather all your ingredients
and utensils before starting your food prep.
|
|
1.
|
Heat 1 Tbsp of oil in large
Dutch oven over medium heat. Add precooked sausage and brown, turning
occasionally, 5-8 minutes.
|
2.
|
While sausage browns, slice onion;
chop garlic; rinse/drain beans in colander.
|
3.
|
Transfer sausage to a plate.
Leave fat from sausage-browning in the pan. Still over medium heat, add
remaining 1 Tbsp oil to same Dutch oven (2 Tbsp might be necessary if the
sausage did not leave much fat). When oil/fat is heated, add onion slices,
garlic and thyme sprig. Cook, stirring occasionally, till onion is softened,
about 5 minutes.
|
4.
|
Add beans and broth, and cook
8-10 minutes, crushing a few of the beans with the back of a wooden spoon to
slightly thicken the sauce. While this is cooking, slice the chorizo and
collect plates and flatware.
|
5.
|
Season stew with salt and
pepper
|
6.
|
Add spinach in handfuls and
cook till just wilted, about 2 minutes.
|
7.
|
Fold chorizo into the stew;
Add a bit of water to thin, if desired.
|
8.
|
Remove thyme sprig (if you can
find it). Divide stew into bowls, sprinkle with the paprika if you choose,
and serve
|
Adapted from Bon
Appetit magazine, February 2013. The original recipe calls for fresh sausage,
which would take longer to cook. We’ve been able to find spicy, precooked
sausage at our regular grocery store.
Yum! Thanks, Sheila. Though I'm nominally home all day, there are times when I don't become conscious of the kitchen until half an hour before we're supposed to eat.
ReplyDeletePut my husband on your speed-dial! I enjoy cooking; I find it relaxing. But it takes not only the in-the-kitchen time, but menu-planning so you don't end up with a fridge full of moldy leftovers and furry vegetables, list-making, shopping. My sister hates cooking. When I visit, I cook and she happily cleans up the whole kitchen afterward.
ReplyDeleteI know exactly how you feel re writing it down when the inspiration comes!!! This often hits me in the middle of the night so I keep pen and pads by my bed. Thelma
ReplyDeleteNotepads by the bed! You bet. Of course, in the morning I can't tell what I wrote. My handwriting is so bad wide awake that David got me a small recorder; he was tired of me asking "What does this look like to you?"
DeleteI usually end up with the fridge full of furry vegetables and things stuffed hastily in the freezer and then forgotten about. When I go shopping, full of good intentions, and buy three nights' worth of dinner ingredients, it never fails that we end up eating out one of the three nights and that my husband has a Zoning Board meeting on the other and he comes home and eats frozen pizza at 11 p.m. The things I throw in the freezer stay there for years. I always forget about them (I recently found frozen bluefish from 2009). These recipes will be very helpful! - Mimi
ReplyDeleteLOL: Putting dates on the freezer food helps. But it also leads to the sort of moment you had with the bluefish. Mine is usually like "Honey, come see what chicken turns into after it's been in the freezer for a decade."
DeleteGlad to read that you are working on the next book :-)
ReplyDeleteThe flip side of the cooking vs. writing? - from the days when I had a job, a commute, and children at home, I am pretty good at planning ahead and cooking in quantity. And then we get really, really, really tired of eating it! Even freezing half, it ends up being a lot.
Fortunately, my husband's solution to that is often ordering in. Some days it's impossible to disagree
I've just received the contract for the fourth Lauren Atwill adventure, which will be published late next spring, and am putting nose to grindstone this long weekend on the fifth book, to fill in some of the space between Chapter 3 and the big ah-hah I had about how she catches the killer.
DeleteBoth recipes sound yummy! You both are fabulous cooks! Loved reading how your inspiration hit you while traveling. You are lucky you both can pitch hit for each other when the need to write strikes!
ReplyDeleteTraveling. In New Jersey, that's more like combat maneuvers. Maybe it gets me in the "your life is in danger" mode so important to mystery writers.
DeleteFriend Sheila, I simply do not have the psychic energy to do all that cookery! BUT - if you sold your recipes to some congloms like Lean Cuisine etc I'd buy them in a heartbeat!!!!! Thelma
ReplyDelete