Showing posts with label Andrew Jackson. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Andrew Jackson. Show all posts

Monday, June 25, 2012

Lundi: Recipes

Last week, the ubiquitous Times-Picayune laid off half their staff and announced that they would be publishing only three times per week.  This despite having the largest readership, judging by paid subscriptions, of an daily newspaper in the United States, including the New York Times.  The Times-Picayune has officially been in business for 175 years but, prior to being a Times subsidiary, was a local southeastern Louisiana paper dating back to the days of Jean and Pierre Laffite.  If that isn't a sad comment on the state of journalism in the modern U.S. I don't know what is.

In honor of the great Picayune whose name came from how much it once cost, a wonderful old Creole recipe which has been featured in the Times-Picayune on more than one occasion: spinach Madeleine.

This recipe was probably first published in the now famous River Road Recipes cookbook from the Junior League of Baton Rouge.  It's a casserole that many Louisianans wouldn't dream of leaving off the Thanksgiving or Reveillon sideboard and it has, these days, one curiously modern ingredient: Mexican Velveeta.

2 10 ounce packages of frozen, chopped spinach
4 tbsps butter
2 tbsps all purpose flour
2 tbsps finely chopped onions
1/2 cup evaporated milk
1/2 tsp black pepper
3/4 tsp celery salt
3/4 tsp garlic salt
1 tsp Worchestershire sauce
Salt
Cayenne pepper
6 ounces Velveeta Mexican Mild, cut into small pieces
Bread crumbs (optional)

Preheat oven to 350 degrees.  Coat a 9 inch square casserole dish with butter or non-stick spray.

Cook the spinach according to the package directions. Drain and reserve 1/2 cup of the liquid from the pot.

In a saucepan, melt the butter over low heat.  Add the flour, stirring to blend; continue to stir for about 1 minute, making a very light roux.  Add the onions and cook until soft, not brown.  Add the milk and reserved spinach liquid, stirring constantly to avoid lumps.  Cook until liquid thickens and coats the back of a wooden spoon, about 10 minutes.  Add pepper, celery and garlic salts, Worchestershire sauce, salt and cayenne to taste.  Add the cheese and stir until it is melted completely.

Place cooked spinach in an even layer in the prepared casserole dish.  Pour the cheese sauce over the spinach and top with bread crumbs if you like.  Bake until golden and bubbly, about 30 minutes, and serve warm.

This recipe has another little connection to old New Orleans and Jean Laffite, at least to my mind.  One of the ladies he was linked with at times was named Madeleine Rigaud.  That's all we know of her, just her name and her connection to Laffite the pirate.  You can make up the rest over the spinach dish that shares her name.

Header: Andrew "Action" Jackson salutes the Times-Picayune

Monday, February 21, 2011

Lundi: Recipes

Today is “Presidents’ Day” here in the U.S. which, as Homer Simpson so aptly put it, is really a “rip off”. We used to celebrate Lincoln and Washington separately, on their actual birthdays (February 12th and 22nd, respectively) but now we just have this third Monday in February for “Presidents”. In the spirit of rebellion that I always feel on this measly holiday, I am wearing a shirt with neither of those guys on it. Instead it is adorned with my favorite President: Andrew “Action” Jackson. My husband’s t-shirt has William Howard Taft, our fattest President, on it. In honor, then, of a hard-nosed Kaintuck who got shit done and a guy who could really eat, it’s a carnivorous recipe today. Throw that steak on the grill and eat hearty!

1 cup red wine or Balsamic vinegar
½ cup olive oil
2 tbsps onion flakes
2 tsps thyme
3 tbsps lemon juice
1 crushed bay leaf

Place all in a baking dish in which your meat of choice can lie flat. I recommend a London Broil for this marinade but it’s also great with fillet mignon, strip steak, caribou and moose. Allow the meat to marinate at least two hours and up to overnight in the fridge. Turn it once in a while to evenly cover with marinade. Cook as usual, allowing a few minutes of rest before carving. And safety first: the stuff is super tasty but you need to dispose of the marinade after you’re done. Bon appetite ~

Header: Jackson Square, NOLA and Taft on the stump