Archive
pasta

Spinach Feta Tortilla Lasagne

If I told you that I have somewhere around 20 lasagna (or lasagne? which one?) recipes bookmarked, would you believe me? If there’s one thing all of them have in common, it’s some unusual twist; an ingredient you don’t typically find in such a dish (like hazelnuts or pumpkin for example). Here’s the thing: I’ve never made proper, Garfield-style lasagne. I know it’s not exactly rocket science but I’m always put off by worries about what type of lasagna sheets to use and my dislike for tomato based sauces and for handling minced meat (just when you thought I couldn’t get much weirder, right?)

One evening last month, our next door neighbors (a bustling full-of-life family with 3 kids of varying ages, managed by 2 successful entrepreneur parents) knocked on our door with a huge pan of half-baked lasagne. Due to some clerical error their electricity was cut off in the middle of baking and they asked if they can finish baking in our oven (it is moments like this when I think ‘gosh, I really should clean the oven more often!‘). As their youngest daughter entertained Ognen and we grownups had a cup of coffee, the aroma of the lasagne bubbling in our (not so clean) oven was intoxicating, even to me.  When it was finally baked and before they headed back to their place to eat a family dinner by candlelight (I guess you have to take romance where you can get it when you have a house full of kids), they left two sizable slices for us to try. As we sat in silence and gobbled them up, I guess what was going through Ivica’s mind was something along the lines of “who the hell did I marry? couscous, sweet potato burritos and salads with pears? there’s families eating lasagne out there…

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Pasta Peperonata

Remember that jar of roast red peppers? Well I do. Mostly because half of its contents are still lingering on in my fridge, obviously cast away and forgotten, oblivious to the fact that their fresh perky remote cousins are getting prime time right about now. It’s officially red pepper season and I haven’t been able to resist their charm. Heck, I’ve even contemplated trying to make my own preserves (just a few of my faves) but thankfully we have a trip ahead of us so I won’t be embarking on what I surely know is too ambitious a project for me.

But there are things you can whip up with fresh red peppers and eat right then and there (ok, besides the obvious choice of chopping them up and adding them to just about anything), no jars required. Like this delicious pasta sauce, for example.

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Penne Tuna Casserole

Many years ago (back in the previous millennium!), I spent my senior year of high school as an exchange student in a little place called Thomasville, GA, in the US. Beyond meeting some pretty cool people (some of which I’ve kept in touch with over the years) my year as an exchange student was, all taken into consideration, one of the strangest years of my life so far. I guess the fact that I was a hormonal teenager who moved from a 700K country capital city to a 20K Southern US town didn’t help any. The year involved changing host families halfway through my stay as well as a series of culture shocks which can easily fill a whole book. Meanwhile, as a background noise, bombs were being dropped a borderline away from where my family lived. Did I say it was a strange year? But beyond strange, it was also a year of growing.

And by growing, I don’t only mean the maturing-emotionally kind of growth. There was also some serious physical growth; all of it, sadly, on the x scale. The summer I graduated I came back home weighing 10kg/22lbs (every single gram of it pure fat) more than I did when I left Macedonia, even though I was on the the cross country AND the tennis team and ran at least 5miles every day cutting like a knife through the worst humidity I am yet to know. I wonder what would have happened to me if I weren’t that physically active. I probably would have required two airplane seats on the way back home.

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Creamy Spaghetti with Chard and Walnuts

I have a very weird relationship with eggs. My general standpoint is that eating them is evil (come on, they’re embryos!) BUT I don’t seem to mind them when they are 1) used in baking, as in cakes, cookies and other sweet and savory baked goods, 2) used in the batter for french toast, 3) hard boiled, as part of breakfast buffets in hotels when I’m on vacation or 4) in fried rice.

Recently, I ran into Heidi Swanson’s recipe for spring pasta where she adds eggs at the very end of making the dish to give it a creamy touch. I thought of fried rice and well, decided to give eggs a go in a possible 5th acceptable scenario, in pasta.

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