Tag Archives: #recipe

Some of the other foods I cooked recently

WOW some prices at the supermarkets are out of sight. Today I saw salmon that was double the price of what I was expecting. I also saw beef ribs that looked like a small amount of beef for $45. Even the cheapest chicken breasts at Walmart gone up from $2 a pound to $3. a pound that is 33% more expensive…….I did notice that beef shanks (smaller sized ones) seemed still very reasonably priced compared to everything else so I picked one pack up. It’s fun to make them osso buco style. I’m not big on beef dishes but this is one of my favorite beefs.

First you brown them up on both sides preferably in beef fat.

Then you get soup type vegetables sort of soft with the dripping from your fry pan. You add white wine and reduce. Add stock and or tomato juice, the vegetables, and the beef shanks to a pan. Cover well and roast at 375 F till falling apart tender. (If you have nice bigger beef shanks you might prefer to tie them up so they stay together.) Depending on the size of the beef shanks this will take at least 3-6 hours (If you have giant ones then maybe more time). But you do need to add water to the pan after a few hours.

The beef shanks came out good. I removed the bay leaves and blended up the liquid and vegetables and used it like a gravy for the beef shank and polenta. I also made a basic gemolata of parsley, celery leaves, and lemon zest.

beef osso buco

The one beef shank was big enough for two dinners.

Got a second meal for two out of the second beef shank. Made Italian flavored tacos. (don’t mean to brag but this came out so good I could get rich selling them)

Used that Italian chili crisp I made recently that adds all kinds of flavors, textures, and heat.

Italian Chili Crisp

Mixed the pulled beef shank meat and mixed it with some Italian chili crisp and the leftover gremolata…….Put them on radish (Korean Radish) slices, topped with some pickled baby bell peppers..

They were really delicious.

Someone was very interested in them.

Earlier in the week recently I made braised and crispy leeks with this tarator sauce ( long story……I made toum sauce (garlic sauce that comes with shawarma…kept adding nuts and other things and turned it into tarator sauce…but it did come out amazing). This dish also came with date brown butter.

Braised and Crispy Leeks with Tarator Sauce & Date Brown Butter

Leftover tarator and datÄ™ brown butter also went well with Japanese sweet potatoes with a very thin olive oil crisp.

Those were a few things worth mentioning.

The Forking Truth

Reduced Fat Purple Potato Salad

This is a basic potato salad with added home made pickles that make it unique. The pickles add a tasty surprise factor that also lightens the salad up some. I made the dressing flavorful and reduced the fat as much reasonable. Equal parts of fat free sour cream, reduced fat mayonnaise, dijon mustard and apple cider make a pretty indulgent dressing that can pass as full fat. I think the purple potatoes seem a little sweeter than other potatoes and I read that they are a healthier potato for you too. Whenever I boil potatoes for something I add a banana pepper….(not the sweet banana pepper)…The banana pepper…that is plain is actually spicy. For some unknown reason if you boil potatoes with a banana pepper that is cut in half it adds the most delicious flavor to potatoes…..

Ingredients for about 10 servings

3 lbs purple potatoes – cut in large bite size pieces (depending on the size of your potatoes that might be half, quarter or more….you want the peices on the big side because they will break some when you stir)

1 Tablespoon salt – to boil potatoes

1 banana pepper – cut in half on a diagonal to boil with potatoes and then throw out

1 medium size sweet onion – chopped

2 celery ribs – chopped

1/4 cup fresh parsley – chopped

1/4 cup dijon mustard

1/4 cup fat free sour cream

1/4 cup reduced fat mayonnaise

1/4 cup apple cider vinegar

1 Tablespoon dried dill

1/2 teaspoon celery seed

1/2 teaspoon cayenne pepper

1/4 teaspoon ground white pepper

fresh ground sea salt to taste

fresh ground black pepper to taste

1/2-1 dill pickle – preferably a home made one or one you purchased from a farmer’s market or got from a very good deli – (depending on size …….maybe around a 1/2 cup) – chopped

Directions

In a sauce pot on medium high heat add the potatoes, salt and banana pepper and boil till the potatoes are fork tender……timing will differ but mine took only 10 minutes. (I do note purple potatoes cook up faster than other potatoes.)

While the potatoes are cooking mix up the dressing in a large bowl. Mix up the dijon, sour cream, mayo and vinegar. Then add the celery seed, cayenne, dill, white pepper and mix well. Add the onions, celery, parsley.

When the potatoes are done drain them and then gently toss them in to the large bowl with the pickle chunks.

Depending on your taste you might want to adjust with a little bit of fresh ground sea salt and fresh crushed black pepper.

Reduced Fat Purple Potato Salad

It’s a healthy tasty potato salad! (gets a prettier more purple color the next day)

The Forking Truth

Leeks Two Ways with Tarator and Date Brown Butter Recipe

This recipe is a happy accident. I was reading up on how to make Toum sauce. Toum sauce is that garlicky thick white sauce that you eat with shawarma. Most of the recipes were very similar…..almost exact for toum sauce…….They all involved blending together garlic, neutral oil, salt and lemon………but all toum recipes I read also suggesting adding one more ingredient to soften the garlic flavor and also for thickening…….One person suggested adding mashed potatoes. Other suggestions were egg whites, yogurt, and mayonnaise. I made the toum and it came out probably the way everyone else’s toum sauce come out…….It came out thinner than what I would like and also far more garlicky than anyone on earth can handle. This stuff can kill all the vampires and maybe weeds and insects too!. ….I was planing on making the leeks and serving them up like Shawarma with the sumac onions, toum sauce and tehini sauce………..Then I got inspired from chef Neil Campbell’s recipe for charcoal roasted leeks with tarator and date brown butter….I thought that sounds really good but I don’t have any charcoal……….and I already had my toum sauce……..So I thought that I could change the toum sauce into tarator sauce. Tarator sauce is an emulsified sauce of nuts, garlic oil, and other things. Unlike toum sauce every recipe that I read was completely different but they all had nuts, oil, and garlic. Then I read latter that there are at least three main kinds of different variations of tarter that are different. The Turkish version is made with walnuts, garlic and sometimes bread. The Lebanon and Syrian versions are made with tahini instead of nuts and the Balkan style is more yogurt with cucumbers…….At the time I was in panic mode when I made tarator style sauce so I didn’t measure…… You got guesstimates there. Anyways….Leeks are very delicious with tarator and date brown butter. This recipe makes more tarator sauce and maybe more date brown butter than you might use but they are delicious together and would be great on most vegetables.

This recipe makes at least 4 servings

1 bundle of leeks (these were the biggest leeks ever with lots of green leaves that I boiled with vegetable bullion and pureed for other things) Greens trimmed off. Cut in half long ways. Tips cut off to fry crispy. I think this dish is best served at room temperature.

canola oil for frying.

1 head garlic – all the garlic cloves peeled and ground to paste

1/2 teaspoon sea salt

1/2 cup canola oil

1/2 large lemon – just the juice

1/2 large lemon – just the juice (this goes on the leeks latter)

1/2 cup toasted walnuts

1/2 cup roasted almonds

1/4 cup mayonnaise

1/4 cup tahini

1/4 cup yogurt

6 oz feta cheese

1/2 cup home made jalapeño brine

4 oz butter (I used unsalted but either works here)

2 Tablespoons date syrup (or to taste because they all taste different…some are sweeter and some taste more like dates)

1/4 teaspoon dried thyme

sea salt to taste

fresh ground black pepper to taste

Directions.

Make the date brown butter. In a sauce pan on medium heat add the butter. Let it go till it turns brown. Take off heat and add date syrup to taste.

Make the tarator sauce. Blend together the garlic, sea salt, canola oil, lemon juice, walnuts, almonds, mayonnaise, tahini, yogurt, feta cheese, and home made jalapeño brine till it’s like a thick sour cream consistency. Put to the side.

Put a fry pan on medium high heat with around three tablespoons of canola oil. When the oil is hot add the leeks cut side down and leave them there till the brown. Flip them over and add 1/2 cup of water and let them cook about ten minutes. (you can leave them that way but I prefer to cut them up because they are easier to eat that way. When they are done remove the braised leeks and put them to the side. Add salt, pepper, thyme, and remaining lemon juice to the leeks.

Clean out the pan and add enough oil to fry up the leek tips (around an inch) on medium-medium high heat. When the oil is hot add the leek tips. Fry till crisp (around seven minutes)

Put together however you like and enjoy.

Braised and Crispy Leeks with Tarator Sauce & Date Brown Butter
The Forking Truth

Fennel Marmalade Recipe

When I was on vacation in Napa we enjoyed our dinner at La Torque. It was there that I tasted for the first time Fennel Marmalade. It was amazing with fish but I was thinking today that it would also be amazing stuffed into a turkey breast that I prepared in the sous vide. It would have also come out great doing the turkey breast stove top in a fry pan too. Anyway this is how I made fennel marmalade. I got 6 generous servings.

Ingredients for around 6 servings

2 fennel bulbs – core removed, remove dry outer coating, save fronds for garnish, slice thin

1 sweet onion – peeled, slice thin

1 hot pepper or to taste – sliced thin (I used 1/2 spicy banana pepper

1/4 cup sugar

2 lemons – the fresh squeeze juice and zest (save zest for garnishing)

2 Tablespoons extra virgin olive oil

2 Tablespoons white wine

1/4 teaspoon white pepper

3/4 teaspoon sea salt (or to taste)

1/2 teaspoon fennel seeds – crushed fine

Directions

Everything (except garnishes fennel fronds & lemon zest) goes in a pot on medium high heat. You need to bring this to a boil and then reduce to simmer till thickened like marmalade. I think this took close to an hour.

Enjoy with fish, chicken, or turkey!

Fennel Marmalade stuffed Sous Vide Turkey Breast

Enjoy!

The Forking Truth

Feta Stuffed Corn Cakes with Beet – Apple Salad Recipe based on Yotam Ottolenghi & Ramael Scully’s Corn Cake Recipe

When ever I don’t know what I want to make I have a list of creative chefs that I like. Safeway had a sale on corn so I needed a new idea for corn. I came across Yotam Ottolenghi & Ramael Scully’s recipe for corn cakes. They were seasoned a little differently than what I would normally do with fennel, cumin, celery seed, and tarragon. But what I really liked about the recipe was that it was nearly free of flour…..only two tablespoons for 5 ears of corn so it also seemed like a healthy recipe and that is a big bonus to me. I didn’t change much in the corn cake recipe….but I did make them much smaller, added more cheese to each one and didn’t bother buttering the cups I put them in. The beet-apple salad is suppose to be creamy with yogurt. I left the yogurt out so it would be just a nice light salad that isn’t drippy. The recipe is pretty easy but the hardest part of the recipe is to know how much to process (or blend) the corn mixture. You want the corn ROUGHLY CHOPPED BUT NOT A WET PUREE….some kernels will still be whole. This came out delicious…..The corn cake is sort very creamy and tasty. It did come out extremely delicate. I was sort of lucky that mine came out of the pan. I should have used cupcake liners. I thought that they would pop out more easily so I will recommend to use some sort of liner. The original recipe says 6 servings. I got 16 much smaller corn cakes. Depending on how you are serving them you will want to use either one or two a serving. Serving sizes are going to differ here. I don’t know if you want only one corn cake or three corn cakes. I’ll say that this recipe makes around 8 servings.

Ingredients for around 8 servings

5 corn on the cobs – peel corn, remove kernels with a knife or use 500g frozen corn kernels thawed

100g shallots – rough cut

3 garlic cloves – chopped

1 teaspoon fennel seeds – lightly toasted and coarsely crushed

1 teaspoon ground cumin – lightly toasted

1 teaspoon celery seeds

15g small tarragon leaves rough chopped

1 teaspoon baking powder

80g sweet butter melted (original recipe calls for 20g more butter to grease the molds….I used non -stick spray)

2 large eggs – yolks and whites separated

2 Tablespoons flour

90g feta cheese (original recipe calls for 60g…I think I actually went slightly over 90g) The cheese needs to be cut into a chunk for each corn cake. You can make any size you like because they are YOURS! The original recipe suggest 6-12 corn cakes…I got 16 corn cakes ……so I needed 16 chunks of cheese.

1 teaspoon course sea salt (or to taste)

1 Tablespoon Aleppo pepper (or to taste)

1/2 teaspoon ground black pepper (or to taste)

1/4 teaspoon ground white pepper (or to taste)

2 raw beets – peeled and cut in very thin shreds

1 apple peeled, cored, cut in very thin shreds

1 Tablespoon sherry vinegar

2 Tablespoons extra virgin olive oil

1 lemon (just the juice)

1 teaspoon fennel seeds – roasted and coarsely crushed

1/2 teaspoon celery seeds

15g parsley leaves – rough chopped

5g small baby basil leaves

Directions

Preheat oven to 400 degrees F.

Line your cupcake pan with either cupcake liners, Elongated cupcake liners, or parchment. Then either butter the liners or spray with non stick spray.

Combine the corn kernels, shallots and garlic until the corn kernels are rough cut but not a wet paste.

add the fennel seeds, cumin, celery seeds, tarragon, baking powder, butter, egg yolks, salt, and peppers.

Whip the egg whites till stuff. Fold a little in till gone.

Time to fill the cupcake pan. I didn’t use liners so some of mine were a little harder to get out. I don’t want you to have any trouble so I recommend to use liners.

Next I squish down a chunk of feta into each of the corn cakes.

After I patted the edges down on top of the cheese.

Then I put them on the middle rack of my preheated 400 degree F oven for 25 minutes till they gave off aroma and looked toasty done. If you did yours bigger they will need more time. Maybe around 40 minutes.

While the corn cakes were in the over it only took a few minutes to make the beet-apple salad.

In a large bowl combine the beets, apple, sherry vinegar, oil, lemon juice, fennel seeds, celery seeds, parsley. Finish with the tiny basil leaves.

Soon the corn cakes will be coming out of the oven. They need around 10 minutes to cool a little before you can serve.

Feta Stuffed Corn Cakes with Beet-Apple Salad

A special THANKS!!!! to Yotam Ottolenghi & Rameal Scully for sharing their AMAZING Recipe so I could come up with what I got here.

Feta Stuffed Corn Cakes with Beet-Apple Salad

ENJOY!

The Forking Truth

FORKING DELICIOUS Corn Salad made with Italian Chili Crisp Recipe

I had three leftover corn cobs from the recent 8 for a $1 corn sale from Safeway. My last recipe I published was Italian Chili Crisp. In case you didn’t know chili crisp is this amazing condiment that adds textures and delicious flavors, crunch and some heat to food. Anything plain can turn FORKING amazing with the addition of a chili crisp. This corn salad came out BOMB!….. Just so you know I didn’t measure the chili crisp and sherry vinegar exactly, I guesstimated and just threw it together but it truly did come out amazing. Since I used three ears of corn I will say that this makes around three or more servings because most people will eat one ear of corn most of the time…..but I got 6 servings because I like smaller portions so I’m going to call it 4 servings.

Approximate Ingredients for around 4 servings

3 Tablespoons canola oil to grill the vegetables (approximate)

3 ears of corn – peeled (boiled or grilled or parboiled and grilled) , cut off cob

6 baby bell peppers – core and stem removed, grilled then rough cut

1/2 large red onion – peeled, grilled then rough cut

sea salt – to taste for the grilled vegetables

fresh ground black pepper- to taste for the grilled vegetables

3 small dried figs – rough small cut

3 tablespoons (I might have used more) Italian chili crisp

3 tablespoons (I might have used more) sherry vinegar

1/2 cup fresh basil – torn or cut

Directions

In a large mixing bowl combine the corn kernels, baby bells, onion, figs, Italian chili crisp, sherry vinegar, and basil.

FORKING Delicious Corn Salad made with Italian Chili Crisp

Enjoy!

The Forking Truth

Italian Chili Crisp Recipe based on www.CookingWithKerry.com Recipe

In our local newspaper recently they had a recipe for Italian chili crisp with tomatoes. I thought the idea was really great because……..Chili crisp is an amazing condiment. It adds textures, flavors, crunch, and heat to different foods. It makes anything that is plain really special…..The recipe in the paper might be good but looked a little too basic. I thought I’d see how other people make an Italian version of chili crisp. I came across www.CookingWithKerry.com and I thought her recipe was closer to the way I would make an Italian Chili Crisp. I made some modifications and slight changes. But I have to give Kerry her credit that she deserves because this came out insanely delicious. I made it and my husband said what did you make that smells so good? Try the Italian Chili Crisp in sandwiches, pasta, vegetables, pizza or a chicken. According to Kerry this recipe makes around 32 servings.

Ingredients for around 32 servings

1/2 cup dried Calabrian Chilies – stems removed and crush pods (I recommend gloves and a mask, onion goggles just in case so none gets in your eyes)

1/4 cup toasted pine nuts

3 Tablespoons capers – drained & dried off

3 anchovy filets – minced

1 Tablespoon dried thyme

1 Tablespoon dried oregano

1/2 Tablespoon white sugar

1 Tablespoon sea salt

1/2 teaspoon ground black pepper

1 1/2 cup extra virgin olive oil

1 cup shallots – sliced very thin on a mandolin

1 regular sized head of garlic – cloves sliced very thin (I used a truffle slicer)

Directions

In a large heatproof bowl mix together the chili flakes, pine nuts, capers, anchovies, thyme, oregano, sugar, salt, and pepper. Set to the side.

Add olive oil to a medium sized pot on medium high heat. When the oil is hot add the shallots. Remove the shallots with a slotted spoon when they turn light brown. Have a paper towel lined pan for the shallots. (around 6 minutes)

After the shallots are removed you need to turn the heat down to medium. Wait two or three minutes and add the garlic. If you sliced thin the garlic gets done pretty fast….Like 2-21/2 minutes. Take the garlic out with a slotted spoon and drain the garlic on a paper towel lined pan.

Add the hot oil to the bowl with the crushed chili. Let this sit out until it cools.

When it’s cool you can mix them up together and put in a container. Refrigerate and enjoy!

Italian Chili Crisp

I used it on a heirloom tomato and butterbean salad.

Tomato and bean salad with Italian Chili Crisp

A Special THANKS to www.CookingWithKerry for her Forking Amazing Recipe so I could come up with what I got here.

The Forking Truth

Salsa Macha Different but based on chef Nud Dudhia’s Salsa Macha Recipe

I am always looking for beet recipes. I read this combination of beets, orange, mint, cheese and salsa macha on a menu somewhere and wrote it down so I could prepare it. Everything here is easy but I had to learn how to make salsa macha. I studied several recipes and they all were somewhat similar but also were different. Salsa Macha is basically a rich Chile oil from Veracruz Mexico. It’s basically made up of chilies, garlic, nuts, and seeds that are fried in oil and then chopped or blended. I picked chef Nud Dudhia’s recipe because I love some of his other salsa recipes. I added four ingredients to his recipe. These ingredients make it pop just a little more and also happen to add a little more shelf life to his recipe. Portion size is difficult to judge. I don’t know if you need a very small amount for a small taco or more to cover a vegetable. I think salsa macha would be delicious on almost any vegetable. This recipe makes around a cup so I’m guesstimating around 6-8 servings.

Ingredients for around 7 servings

1 habanero pepper – (you need to wear glove) – stem removed. quarter it

1 dried pasilla or guajillo chile pepper

1 dried chipote pepper (I used a tablespoon of chipotle flakes)

1/2 star anise

2 garlic cloves

1/2 teaspoon cumin seeds

1 cup extra virgin olive oil

2 oz peanuts

1 Tablespoon jalapeno brine (only use homemade or just add plain vinegar)

2 Tablespoons toasted sesame seeds

1/2 teaspoon sea salt

1 teaspoon honey

Directions

Heat up the oil in either another pan or in a microwavable dish in the microwave oven (about 90 seconds in microwave)

Toast the chiles, garlic, cumin seeds , habanero, and star anise in a dry pan on medium high till the pan gets fragrant.

Add the heated oil and let it cook up for a few minutes. Then add remaining ingredients (brine, sesame seeds, peanuts, salt, and honey. You can take it off the heat. If using a stick blender you can transfer to your blending container and blend. If you are using a traditional blender then you should wait till it cools off and then blend.

ENJOY! Use the salsa macha however you like.

Beets with Orange, Mint, Cheddar Cheese, and Salsa Macha

A Special THANKS!!!!!! To chef Nud Dudhia for sharing his FORKING Amazing recipe so I could come up with what I got here.

The Forking Truth

Roasted Carrots in Honey Miso Butter with Roasted Spiced Carrot-Peanut Crumbs Recipe

I was thinking about doing a honey miso butter sauce for a vegetable…..I thought that it would work best on carrots so here it is. Serving size is always difficult to judge. I don’t know if you want a small serving or a big plate. I see this as 4 servings.

Ingredients for around 4 servings.

2 lbs. carrots – scrubbed, peel if not organic (two carrots cut in thin match sticks or shred)

2 Tablespoons canola oil

2 Tablespoons sweet butter

2 Tablespoons white miso

2 Tablespoons honey

1/3 cup roasted salted peanuts – lightly crushed

2 Tablespoons extra virgin olive oil

1 teaspoon paprika

1 teaspoon smoked paprika

1 teaspoon Aleppo pepper

1/4 teaspoon cayenne pepper

2 Tablespoons fresh mint leaves – chopped or torn

2 Tablespoons cilantro leaves (fine stems ok) – chopped or torn

sea salt – to taste

black pepper – to taste

Directions

Set oven to 420 F.

If you have a grill pan use it or a baking sheet. Lighty oil it with a small amount of canola oil. Use the rest of the canola oil to oil the whole carrots.

In a medium mixing bowl add the carrot shreds, olive oil, paprikas, Aleppo & cayenne peppers and sea salt. Mix well. Shred this mixture on a baking sheet.

Put the whole carrots on the middle rack of your oven and the carrot shreds on a lower rack.

In around 20 minutes the shreds will be done. Mix in the peanuts to it.

It is also time to flip the whole carrots. They will need around 10 minutes more. (maybe slightly less or more depending on size)

Make the honey miso butter. Melt the butter in a small dish in the microwave or oven (since it’s on) mix in the honey and miso and it’s done. Keep to the side.

When the carrots are done salt and pepper them lightly. Spoon the honey miso butter butter over the carrots. Top the carrots with a spiced carrot peanut shreds and top the shreds with the fresh mint and cilantro.

Roasted Carrots in Honey Miso Butter with Roasted Spiced Carrot Peanut Crumbs

Enjoy!

The Forking Truth

Sweet Potato Ravioli with Beet Puree Recipe

This recipe is sort of a spin off of Food & Wine Magazine’s recipe Sweet Potato Gyoza with Beet Puree. I wanted to make my own pasta instead of buying gyoza wrappers. I also needed to change a few things. But I did the beet puree almost the same. This recipe made me 22 half moon ravioli. Serving size is difficult to judge…It depends if you only want a couple of ravioli or a whole plate of ravioli. I’ll guesstimate this to be 4 servings for the majority of people.

Ingredients for around 4 servings

2 eggs – pasta

3 egg yolks + 1 egg white – (the egg white is for sealing the ravioli) – pasta

1 cup ap flour + a few tablespoons + a sprinkle for rolling (different brands are ground different you might need up to 1/3 cup more than one cup)- pasta

1 Tablespoon extra virgin olive oil – pasta

2 pinches sea salt – pasta

8 oz beets -peel, cut in half or thirds depending on size -beet puree

2 Tablespoons unsalted butter – beet puree

2 Tablespoons rice vinegar – beet puree

2 Tablespoons cooking water from beets – beet puree

1/2 teaspoon lemon zest – beet puree

1 lb sweet potato – peeled, sliced 1 – 1-1/2 inch disk -filling

1 Tablespoon unsalted butter – melted – filling

2 Tablespoons hazelnut butter (I made mine in a spice grinder) – filling

1 teaspoon sumac – filling

1/2 teaspoon ground coriander – filling

1/2 teaspoon ground sea salt – filling

1.4 teaspoon ground black pepper – filling

2 Tablespoons scallions – sliced thin for finishing

2 Tablespoons fresh cilantro leaves – chopped or torn for finishing

Directions

Set oven to 400 F.

Put the sweet potato slices in a pan and add about 1.2 cup of water and cover the pan with foil. Do the same with the beets. Timing might differ some. In my oven on the middle racks the beets took 90 minutes and the sweet potatoes took 60 minutes. Take them out of the oven when you can piece them with a fork.

Make the pasta dough.

In a medium sized bowl mix up the two eggs with the three egg yolks, oil, and salt. Mix well. Add the cup of flour and mix well. I suggest to have up to 1/3 cup of flour on the side. Each brand of flour is ground different so it is impossible to give an exact measurement. Today I needed to add about half of the 1/3 cup of flour that I had on the side. You knead the dough and you can tell it’s right with it doesn’t stick to your hands. Wrap the dough up in plastic wrap and leave out till you are ready to roll it out. (You will need a little more flour for rolling.

Mash the sweet potatoes with the butter, hazelnut butter, sumac, coriander, salt and black pepper. Set to the side.

Blend the beets with butter, rice vinegar, beet water, and lemon zest. Set to the side.

Roll out the pasta dough around 20 x 15 inches.

I used a three inch cookie cutter and painted the edges with egg white. (I also didn’t re-roll the pasta scraps. You can re-roll the scraps but the dough will be tough…Instead it’s a better idea to just hand cut the scraps into strips and make something like a macaroni and cheese….

Anyway…back to ravioli

Then I used my smallest scooper and scooped out the filling.

I think it is easiest to start in the middle……and just pinch your way down on each side.

Have a pot of salted water boiling.

Boil up your ravioli. They don’t need too long maybe up to two minutes. If you aren’t eating them all now you might want to give them a spray of oil so they don’t stick together.

Serve with beet puree and top with cilantro and scallions. (I had some leftover squash puree so I added that for a pop of color.

Sweet Potato Ravioli with Beet Puree

A Special THANKS!!! To Food & Wine Magazine for inspiring me to come up with what I did here.

Don’t waste the pasta scraps.

The Forking Truth