simple side dishes

Antipasto
We had people over for dinner on Saturday night to break in the new place.  I went with the casual buffet style option with all the vegetable side dishes served room temperature.  Each dish was actually a bit better when the dishes were warm ( since I tasted them in the afternoon ) but being able to hang with everyone and not worry about cooking makes for a much better evening...particularly for the host.

There were four sides.  Beet orange mint salad, potatoes and cauliflower, grilled asparagus and roasted fennel.

Beet Salad:

6 beets

3 naval oranges cut into 1/4" pieces

lots of chopped mint

3 Tbsp. Balsamic Vinegar

6 Tbsp. fresh orange juice 

6 Tbsp. olive oil

Kosher Salt

The ingredients says it all.  After roasting the beets, slice them into wedges and mix with the orange pieces.  Toss in the chopped mint.  Mix together the vinegar, orange juice and oil and pour over the salad.  Mix.  Lots of salt for taste.  I also thought my salad needed a little bit more orange flavoring so I just took another orange ( one that you would use for juicing ) and squeezed it over the salad.  Simple and really tasty.

Cauliflower/Potato salad:

1 lb. Yukon gold potatoes sliced in half

1 cauliflower head cut into small florets

1 red onion - thinly sliced

1/3 cup capers

3 tbsp. red wine vinegar

olive oil and kosher salt

Preheat an oven to 400.  Take a deep cookie sheet and line with parchment paper.  In a bowl, toss the potatoes with olive oil and salt.  Spread them on the cookie sheet and bake until the potatoes get crispy brown.  Remove from the oven and let cool.

In a large deep frying pan cover the bottom with oil.  Take the cauliflower florets and toss them in the same bowl you used to season the potatoes and season the cauliflower.  Put them in the hot frying pan and saute until browned.  Once the florets are browned, turn the heat down to medium low and cover with a lid.  That will allow the cauliflower to roast.  When ready ( 6 minutes or so ), remove from the heat.

In a separate saucepan, cover the bottom with olive oil and turn the heat to high.  Drain the capers so that they are quite dry.  Add the capers to the saucepan and stir for a few minutes until they get crispy and really open up.  Add in the sliced red onion and mix for a few minutes or until the onion gets soft.  Remove from the heat, add in the red wine vinegar.

Now take all three parts and mix into a bowl.  Add salt for taste and a little extra vinegar if you need it.

Roasted Fennel:

I cut off both ends of the fennel and took off the outside layer.  Rubbed each bulb down with olive oil and kosher salt.  Set them in a roasting pan and put them in a oven at 400.  I covered the pan with tin foil before putting it in the oven.  I literally left the fennel in the oven for easily 3 hours if not more.  Once I could slide a knife through like butter, I took off the tin foil.  Then I took shaved Parmesan and put it over the top.  Once the cheese melted and started to brown, I took the fennel out.  This was really delicious and just needs a long time in the oven.

Grilled Asparagus is just what it is.  Grilled on the grill with a little olive oil and salt. 

That was it.  Served with some steak on the side and everybody seemed quite happy. 

blog comments powered by Disqus

Joanne Wilson Joanne Wilson loves food, books, and music. She lives in New York City. Her husband Fred and children Jessica, Emily, and Josh are bloggers too. More »

gotham gal updates

RSS    Email updates    Gotham Gal Twitter updates

ask gotham gal

Powered by Formspring.

books of the moment

  • Peggy Riley: Amity & Sorrow: A Novel
    A mother drives for days with her daughters and ends up in a random Oklahoma town after crashing the car. They come from a polygamous community where there were 50 wives. The mother had grown up knowing life outside that community. Over time, after leaving, she almost becomes deprogrammed. The realization of what she did to her daughters who no nothing outside the world they came from including how to read. Then there is the family that brought them in. It is a fascinating story. Well written. Worthy read.
  • Charles Graeber: The Good Nurse: A True Story of Medicine, Madness, and Murder
    An amazing true story of a male nurse who was arrested in 2002. I actually remember the story as I followed it in the papers. This nurse was a serial killer who had probably murdered over 400 patients that were under his care. A seriously well researched book. Great read.
  • Meg Wolitzer: The Interestings: A Novel

    Meg Wolitzer: The Interestings: A Novel
    Wolitzer writes about a group of camp friends who all come from different walks of life (some on scholarship) as their friendships continue through their mid-50s. At the beginning the story seems trite but as you continue to read there is a lot of be said. The story is sticking with me. She makes the case that everything that happens to you from your childhood makes an impact on who you become or don't become. Worthy read.

  • Elizabeth Strout: The Burgess Boys: A Novel

    Elizabeth Strout: The Burgess Boys: A Novel
    Strouts last book won a Pulitzer. She focuses on family issues. I enjoyed this book much more than Olive Ketteredge which I found utterly depressing. This book follows two brothers and a sister who live in the shadow of their fathers accidental death. Like most siblings, all have turned out very different yet they are connected. I did not love any of the characters, like her last book, yet as The Burgess Boys moves forward and memories are revealed, it is an interesting perspective on human character.

  • Tamara Shopsin: Mumbai New York Scranton: A Memoir

    Tamara Shopsin: Mumbai New York Scranton: A Memoir
    Great book. A witty spare inventive personal diary of Tamara journey from Indian to New York to Scranton. Really really enjoyed the book.

  • Michael Lavigne: The Wanting: A Novel

    Michael Lavigne: The Wanting: A Novel
    An incredible book that tells the human side of the many layered issues in the Middle East. From immigrating to Israel from Moscow, to being a victim of a suicide bomber yet surviving, to being pulled into an Israeli radical group. Each character is connected. Very layered well written book. Powerful

  • Alessandro Piol: Tech and the City: The Making of New York's Startup Community

    Alessandro Piol: Tech and the City: The Making of New York's Startup Community
    A history of the Internet that I lived through. Great job of recording what happened.

  • Amity Gaige: Schroder: A Novel

    Amity Gaige: Schroder: A Novel
    Not sure how much I loved this book. A father loses his child in divorce and decides to kidnap his own daughter. He is not a stable person but he obviously loves his daughter. His own childhood has made him a disconnected human being. An interesting journey but not sure I'd recommend.

  • Ernest Hemingway: The Old Man and the Sea

    Ernest Hemingway: The Old Man and the Sea
    Classic.

  • Janice Steinberg: The Tin Horse: A Novel

    Janice Steinberg: The Tin Horse: A Novel
    a good novel that not only tells the tale of another dysfunctional jewish family in the early 30's but interweaves pieces of los angeles history throughout the book.