I don’t really like eggs, but they seem so convenient. Here’s a recipe for huevos rancheros adapted from the accidental vegetarian. Everything I’ve made from this cookbook has been awesome…except for the banana tarte tatin, which was probably my fault…I’ll be writing about that tragedy soon.
Huevos Rancheros, serves 1
Ingredients:
oil for frying
2 tablespoons butter
1 (or 2) eggs
2 warm corn tortillas
for the salsa
1/4 onion, small dice
1/2 mild pepper of some sort
a little hot sauce
1 clove garlic, minced
1/2 cup crushed tomatoes
salt and pepper
Instructions:
mix all the salsa ingredients in a bowl
put some oil in your pan and add the salsa
make a hole in the middle of the salsa, or rather, create a “ring of salsa”
melt the butter inside the ring of salsa
break the egg (or two eggs, if you have room) into the ring
cover the pan and let cook for about 3 minutes, until the whites are set and the yolk is to your preference
attempt to slide the salsa-egg onto a place and accompany tortillas
If you want to make more than one serving, you have to repeat the process or get a couple pans going.
I just don’t feel like cooking. When I don’t feel like cooking, I usually don’t have any food in the house that doesn’t require cooking. Therefore, I float along nutritionless until my hunger outweighs my laziness. Once it does, I have about five minutes to concoct something or I’ll drift away…metaphorically or something. This is cheesy toast; my mom used to make it for me.
Cheese Toast, serves 1
Ingredients:
ONE slice of bread
cream cheese
shredded mozzarella
salt
paprika
Do you really need instructions for this? Fine.
spread the cream cheese of the bread. I suggest using a knife.
The recipe is based on one from The America’s Test Kitchen Family Cookbook. Along with the 800-odd pages of recipes, the book focuses on processes: what worked for them and what didn’t, products: reviews of various ingredients and cooking supplies, and photos: I like photos.
Chocolate Cake,makes 2 9-inch rounds or 24 cupcakes
prepare a couple 9-inch cake pans butter/flour style, or parchment paper style, whatever you have to do to keep the cake from getting stuck in the pan…or set up your cupcake pan
use your trusty wooden spoon to mix the drys in a bowl
should you choose the fancy route, get out your electric mixer and beat the butter and sugar until light and fluffy; otherwise, get a large bowl and a fork and mix the butter and sugar until your arm is too tired to continue
add an egg to your butter-sugar; mix. repeat 3 more times
mix in the vanilla
mix in 1/3 of the drys, carefully, so you don’t spray the counter with cocoa flour
stir in half the milk
go ahead and just dump in the rest of the flour and milk and stir it all up
pour the batter into your two meticulously prepared pans (or cupcake pan), evenly, so the cakes turn out equally good (or equally screwed up)
put them in the oven, obviously. wait 20-25 minutes. take them out when a toothpick, inserted in the cake, comes out with just a couple crumbs on it. no gooey stuff
OMG, this post is so long and I haven’t even got to the frosting yet.
put all that butter in a bowl and stir up. so it’s smoooooth
mix in the powdered sugar
add the milk, vanilla and salt
just beat and beat and beat until it looks like fluffy bunnies and clouds, or whatever
Now, you can just stop here if you want. Rip off a chunk of cake and start scooping frosting into your mouth. If you want to actually frost your cake, please wait until it’s completely cooled.
If you plan on actually building this thing, you’ll have to devote about four hours of your day to cake. What, you’ve got more important things to do? I obviously didn’t.
Even though frozen and deflated (like my attitude), the ten blueberries resting atop my yogurt-granola really add some zing (also like my attitude), don’t you think?
Somedays, a lot of days, I go to the kitchen around dinner time. It’s a fairly predictive occurrence. Out of those times when I go to the kitchen, more often then not, I am in search of food. As one would expect. I go, I bake a potato, I eat the potato. I realize an hour later, I’m hungry. I go, I put some cream cheese on bread, I eat the cream cheese bread. A half-hour passes by, and I wonder why I didn’t just make a whole dinner and be done with it.
Now is the time to make dinner. This one took about 10 minutes from thinking about what to make to having the fork in my mouth. So it should take less time for you, I suppose.
Soba noodles with spinach, serves 1
Ingredients:
a pot of boiling water
buckwheat soba noodles
1 clove garlic, minced
1/4 inch slice fresh ginger, minced
soy sauce
rice or cider vinegar
1 handful spinach, chopped up into little pieces
sesame seeds
Instructions:
cook the noodles in your pot of boiling water
take your noodles out of the water and place them in your soup bowl
leave some water in the pot for soup broth (maybe a cup and a half)