Posts tagged Héloïse Brion
Delicious Roasted Tomato Soup
Home-Grown Tomatoes

Home-Grown Tomatoes

There are lots of wonderful recipes for your home-grown tomatoes, like bruschetta, tomato tart, caprese salad, or just an awesome BLT sandwich. I remembered reading recently the Roasted Tomato Soup recipe from Miss Maggie’s Kitchen cookbook, and wanted to try it. So simple, so seasonal, so divine.

Steamy Roasted and Charred Soup Ingredients

Steamy Roasted and Charred Soup Ingredients

Roasted Tomato Soup

Lovingly Adapted from Miss Maggie’s Kitchen Cookbook

Ingredients:

2-1/4 pounds assorted tomatoes

2 red onion quartered

4 cloves garlic, unpeeled

3 tablespoons extra-virgin olive oil

2 tablespoons balsamic vinegar

2 teaspoons sugar

Leaves of three sprigs of fresh thyme

Leaves of 3 sprigs fresh basil

1-1/2 cups warm vegetable broth

salt and freshly ground pepper

Directions:

1) Preheat the oven to 325 degrees F.

2) Rinse the tomatoes, cut them in half, and set on a rimmed parchment-lined baking sheet with the cut side up.

3) Place the onions on the baking sheet, then crush the garlic cloves with the flat side of a chef’s knife and scatter them around the tomatoes and onions.

4) Drizzle with the olive oil and balsamic vinegar, sprinkle with the sugar and thyme leaves, and season with salt and pepper. Roast for 50 minutes, then turn on the broiler and cook for an additional 5-10 minutes, until the tomatoes and onions are lightly charred and caramelized.

5) Remove the skin from the garlic cloves and place in a blender with the tomatoes, onions, any pan juices, and the basil. Process until smooth, adding the warm broth in two or three stages, until the soup reaches your preferred consistency. Serve warm or cold. Makes 5-6 servings.

Recipe Note: Like most soups, this soup is even more delicious the next day. I used “Fresh Basil” Temecula Olive Oil with my Early Girl and Celebrity Tomatoes.

Soup is On After Blending

Soup is On After Blending

This soup was delicious the day I made it. However, the next day I couldn’t resist enjoying it with an extra aged cheddar melted cheese sandwich with a touch of peperoncini on rustic country bread. Yum!

Good  to the Last Spoonful

Good to the Last Spoonful

Related Linked Posts:

Miss Maggie’s Kitchen, Relaxed French Entertaining

Bon Appétit et Bon Weekend….Bonnie

End of Summer Lunch Part Deux
Miss Maggie’s Kitchen Salad Recipe

Miss Maggie’s Kitchen Salad Recipe

Last week I mentioned I would share the recipes from my previous blog post, End of Summer Lunch. I’ve written before about Héloïse Brion of Miss Maggie’s Kitchen, and her cookbook, and even the original winter version of this salad recipe. It is a bright composed salad that lends itself to seasonal variations easily. A composed salad is generally creating an individual salad usually in layers on each salad plate and drizzling the dressing over the top of each salad, versus creating one large salad in a bowl and tossing everything together.

Where you have pear and endive in the winter, you can have mixed summer greens and ripe peaches in late summer. The dressing is simply sauteed shallots in a little olive oil with warmed chopped pecans and almonds, placed over your bed of greens. Slice your desired seasonal fruit and place on one side, slice and place your burrata cheese on the other. Mix juice of one lemon and one tablespoon of honey, add salt and pepper and spoon over each salad. It is a simple salad with big flavor. Use the freshest and finest seasonal ingredients you can.

This salad has it all. You have your fat with the olive oil, nuts, and cheese. You have acid with your lemon juice. You have a hint of sweetness with your honey and fruit. You experience different textures throughout the salad when eating.

 
Dorie Greenspan’s Goat Cheese and Fig Quick Bread

Dorie Greenspan’s Goat Cheese and Fig Quick Bread

This is a great recipe for entertaining, and for apéro hour. It is a cinch to make like a banana bread, with no yeast, kneading, waiting, etc. It is a quick savory bread that really captures many of the essential flavors of Provence and the Mediterranean. When I first read this recipe I knew it was going to be really good! How can you go wrong with goat cheese, dried figs, honey, olive oil, fresh herbs, and even citrus zest. It gets better, Dorie Greenspan suggests that you can easily substitute ingredients such as dried tomatoes instead of figs, different neutral oils, different cheeses, basil instead of parsley, and lemon instead of orange. She also suggests serving it warm and in thick slices. Heaven!

Goat Cheese and Fig Quick Bread

Lovingly Adapted from Dorie Greenspan for New York Times Cooking

Ingredients:

butter

4 ounces very cold soft goat cheese

4-6 moist plump dried figs, such as Mission, cut 1/4-inch pieces

1/3 cup finely chopped fresh parsley

1-1/2 teaspoons finely chopped fresh rosemary

1/2 teaspoon finely chopped fresh thyme

1-3/4 cups all-purpose flour

1 tablespoon baking powder

1/2 teaspoon fine sea salt

1/2 teaspoon freshly ground pepper

3 large eggs at room temperature

1/3 cup whole milk lukewarm

1/3 cup olive oil or another neutral oil

1 tablespoon honey

1 clementine or 1/2 tangerine zest

Directions:

1) Center a rack in the oven and heat oven to 350 degrees. Coat an 8 to 9-inch loaf baking pan with butter.

2) Cut the goat cheese into 1/2-inch pieces. It can be messy, and sticky, so don’t worry. Keep in refrigerator until needed.

3) In a small bowl, toss together the figs, parsley, rosemary, and thyme; set aside.

4) In a large bowl, whisk together the flour, baking powder, salt, and pepper. Working in a different medium bowl, whisk the eggs until blended, then whisk in the milk, oil, and honey.

5) Pour the wet ingredients over the flour mixture, and using a sturdy spatula, stir until the dough is almost blended. You’ll still see some streaks of flour, and that is okay. Scatter the fig and herb mixture over the dough, and then cover with the chilled bits of goat cheese. Grate the zest of the clementine or tangerine over the cheese. Using as few strokes as possible, stir everything together. Once again, it might not look perfect, and once again that is fine. Scrape the dough into the baking pan, and use the spatula to poke the dough into the corners, and to even out bumpy top.

6) Bake for 34 to 38 minutes, or until the top is golden, the bread has started to pull away from the sides of the pan, and a tester or toothpick inserted into the middle of the bread comes clean. Unmold the bread onto a rack, turn it right side up and let cool. Wrapped well, the bread will keep for a day or two at room temperature. Time: 50 minutes. Yield: 8 servings.

Mixing the Fig and Herb Mixture Into the Dough Before Baking

Mixing the Fig and Herb Mixture Into the Dough Before Baking

 

Dessert is light with fresh seasonal berries topped with vanilla mascarpone cheese. Mascarpone is a light, slightly sweet Italian cheese that is easily spreadable for toast and bagels, and also used in desserts. To make vanilla mascarpone cheese simply combine well 8 ounces mascarpone cheese with a heaping tablespoon of sugar and 3/4 teaspoon vanilla extract. Place a dollop on top of your berries, and add a bit of Demerara sugar for glisten. Enjoy!

Fresh Seasonal Berries Dressed With Vanilla Mascarpone Cheese

Fresh Seasonal Berries Dressed With Vanilla Mascarpone Cheese

Related Post Links:

End of Summer Lunch

Miss Maggie’s Kitchen

Bon Appétit et Bon Weekend…..Bonnie

End of Summer Lunch
End of Summer Lunch Beckons Fall

End of Summer Lunch Beckons Fall

I write and speak a lot about seasonal living. You can feel it in the air, as exciting leisurely summer turns into reflective autumn. Our everyday routines begin to change and adapt to the season. Small subtle changes such as our weather transitioning, the foods we eat, the clothes we wear, our gardens changing, all tell us we are into a new season. We have a short window to embrace this fall season, and then it is gone for another nine months, and winter heralds in. Living seasonally heightens our everyday living, and in turn living in the moment.

On the cusp of summer ending, means I can use a pretty autumn tablecloth, a fall-scented tawny candle, a beautiful blooming dahlia from a friend, and a menu which uses both summer and autumn flavors. The menu was a lovingly adapted composed salad from Miss Maggie’s Table, a savory warm Goat Cheese and Fig Quick Bread by Dorie Greenspan, and a light dessert of summer berries with a dollop of vanilla mascarpone Italian cheese with a sprinkling of Demerara sugar.

I will share with you these recipes next week. In the meantime, how have you transitioned into autumn? What do you love most about autumn?

A Related Past Blog Link:

Follow the French

Bon Appétit et Bon Weekend…Bonnie

Miss Maggie's Kitchen, Relaxed French Entertaining
Cover of Miss Maggie’s Kitchen

Cover of Miss Maggie’s Kitchen

Just when I think there couldn’t be another great French Country cookbook, I am introduced to, Miss Maggie’s Kitchen , by Héloïse Brion. I first learned about her and some of her recipes in an article in My French Country Home, March/April 2021 issue. It is another beautiful story about a very talented woman reinventing herself, and pursuing her dreams. After fifteen years in the fashion industry in France, Brion and her husband purchased an old hunting lodge in Normandy, calling it “Miss Maggie.” This beautiful property and home inspired her to pursue her passion for cooking, developing recipes, and self-publishing her recipe journals full time. Now, her first cookbook.

Wait, there is a bit more to the story, she grew up between two countries: the United States and France. She spent most of the year in Florida with her family and in school, and spent idyllic summers in the family’s old mountain farmhouse in the Pyrenees. Could you ask for anything more growing up? I do believe something magical happens when you are exposed to other cultures, foods, people, and landscapes other than your native land. So, yes, her cookbook, recipes and social media are effortlessly published in English as well as French. Yes, there is a bit of “Ying” and “Yang” to her cooking and relaxing style which must come from the best of both her worlds.

Héloïse Brion’s style is relaxed, and comes from the heart. She cooks seasonally, which I absolutely love, and encourages you upfront to make substitutions for ingredients in her recipes, which I also love. See the Winter Salad recipe below.

 
Miss Maggie’s Kitchen Tasty Winter Salad

Miss Maggie’s Kitchen Tasty Winter Salad

The first time I made and tasted this Winter Salad, there was an explosion of flavors and textures which were so delightful. I think sautéing fresh shallots with a pinch of fleur de sel, and then adding pecan and almond pieces to toast is genius. Further adding sliced pears and burrata cheese is heaven. I did substitute right off the bat, baby spinach for mâche and radicchio for red endives. Mâche, also called Lamb’s Lettuce or Corn Salad, is a small annual plant, with a nutty flavor, dark green, and served as salad greens. I think next year I will grow it, as I couldn’t find it at our Farmers Markets or grocery stores in the produce section.

As we move more into spring now, I will continue to make this salad, and substitute seasonal spring ingredients. I have made this salad with goat cheese which is also very tasty. Enjoy!


Winter Salad

Lovingly Adapted from Héloïse Brion, Miss Maggie’s Kitchen

Published in My French Country Home magazine, March/April 2021

Serves 4, Preparation time 10 minutes, Cooking time 10 minutes


Ingredients:

5 cups mâche or other salad green

2 red endives

2 pears

1 burrata cheese

1 handful of pecan pieces

1 handful of sliced almonds

2 shallots

Olive oil

1 organic lemon

1 tablespoon honey

Salt & pepper


Directions:

1) Peel and thinly slice the shallots. Place 3 tablespoons of olive oil in a frying pan and sauté the shallots with a pinch of fleur de sel. Place the pecans and almonds in the pan with the shallots over low heat for a few minutes.

2) Cut the endives and rinse with the mâche or your substitute salad greens. Drain, dry and arrange them on a dish. Place the shallot-nut mixture on top.

3) Slice the pears, cut the burrata into pieces and add both to the arrangement. In a small bowl, mix the juice of a lemon with the honey.

4) Season with pepper and salt to taste, sprinkling over the salad. Serve immediately.

 

Bon Appétit and Bon Weekend….Bonnie