Leafy Greens
Polenta-Cheese Timballos with Eggs and Spinach
A staple of Milanese cuisine, polenta is delicious here teamed with tomatoes and spinach, two other ingredients typical of the Lombardy region. The combination of Parmesan and Gruyère cheeses adds richness to the dish. If you prefer, the eggs in the center can be replaced with more spinach. Simply sauté ten ounces of fresh spinach leaves in one tablespoon olive oil, then divide the spinach among the cups. Serve these with Dolcetto d'Alba, a mild red wine from the neighboring Piedmont region.
Braised Escarole with Currants and Pine Nuts
This lovely side dish is delicious with roast pork or chicken, or grilled sausages or fish.
Market tip: Escarole has a pleasantly mild bitterness and sturdy leaves that hold up well to cooking. Young escarole (available at farmers' markets) is mellower and makes a wonderful salad green.
Garlic Toasts with Swiss Chard, Raisins, and Pine Nuts
Although this mix of greens with pine nuts and raisins is typically a vegetable course, here it is placed on toasted bread rounds to serve as a tapa. If you prefer it as a side dish, chop the chard very coarsely.
Asian Chicken Salad with Roasted Peanuts
Use leftover chicken if you have any on hand, or start with a rotisserie chicken. Be sure to pick up the sliced peppers from the salad bar while you're at the market. Crunchy sesame breadsticks are all you need to complete the meal — except, of course, dessert, which could be pineapple slices sprinkled with coconut and broiled.
Stir-Fried Chestnuts and Chinese Cabbage
An Asian treatment of chestnuts that will be right at home with all your side dishes.
Tuna Salad on Olive Bread with Arugula
Complete this one with cherry tomatoes, potato chips, and lemonade.
Smoked Turkey Sandwiches with Blue Cheese and Red Onions
Potato salad, grapes or fresh figs, and brownies round out this lunch. To make things even easier, use raw onions.
Red Cabbage and Pork Casserole
Maude Emhoff, Stafford Springs, Conn.
Watch the heat carefully, lowering it as necessary. Do not let the casserole boil, or the pork ribs will toughen.
Watch the heat carefully, lowering it as necessary. Do not let the casserole boil, or the pork ribs will toughen.
Arugula, Corn, and Tomato Salad with Shaved Parmesan
Fresh kernels of raw corn are so sweet and tender that they don't need to be cooked. Their natural sugars and crisp juiciness pair wonderfully with the salty Parmesan and peppery arugula.
Shrimp Dumplings
When we were children, shrimp dumplings were our favorite dim sum dish. The classic filling is shrimp and bamboo shoots. The dough is not difficult to make, but it is very important that the water be boiling hot. If it is not hot enough, the wheat starch will not cook and the dough will not work. Wheat starch _(dung fun)_is only available in Chinatown; regular white flour is not a substitute.
The tortilla press used here is excellent for making the dough into thin, uniform rounds, but you can also make the dumplings by hand: Roll the dough into scant 1-inch balls. Place one ball between your lightly floured hands and press to form a circle. Press the dough evenly with your fingertips to make it as thin as possible, about 3 inches in diameter and a scant 1/8-inch thick.
By Grace Young