peas

Accidental Locavore Recipe: Crab Meat Risotto With Peas

by Anne Maxfield on October 21, 2011

Accidental Locavore Crabmeat Risotto

A couple of weeks ago, the Accidental Locavore got a package with a can of Miller’s Select Jumbo Lump Crab Meat. While my first thought was to make crab cakes (easy and quick, click for recipe), my more rational/adventurous being thought: been there, done that. It was such beautiful crab meat, it needed to be shown off and since it was canned, I could take my time figuring it out.  A quick Internet search brought up the usual recipe sites (don’t get me started about Google Recipes) then back to favorite food sites. On Epi (the Epicurious app) the first thing to come up was a recipe for crab meat risotto with peas (a Frank favorite) from Gordon Hamersley’s Bistro Cooking at Home (a Locavore favorite). Here’s the recipe as I adapted it; remember risotto takes time, but it’s just stirring. Serves 6:

  • 5-6 cups seafood stock (I used a quart of seafood stock and a cup of water; vegetable stock or water would be fine)
  • 1 cup dry white wine
  • 3-4 tablespoons unsalted butter
  • 1 small onion, finely chopped
  • 3 garlic cloves, peeled and finely chopped
  • 1 ½ cups Arborio rice
  • Kosher salt and pepper
  • Pinch of saffron (optional)
  • 2 cups fresh or frozen peas
  • 1 bunch scallions, the white parts and 2” of the green, sliced thin
  • 6-8 ounces crab meat, preferably lump (I used my can from Miller’s and it was perfect)
  • 4-6 fresh mint leaves, roughly chopped, plus a couple whole ones for garnish (optional)
  • 1 ½ teaspoons lemon zest (I used most of a whole lemon)
  • ¼ cup Parmesan cheese, grated (you’ll probably want more)

In a medium pot, bring the stock and wine to a boil, lower to a simmer. In the largest sauté pan you have, or a Dutch oven (it’s easier if you have a large shallow surface), heat the butter over medium-high heat. Add the onion, lower the heat to medium and cook until the onion is tender, but not browned, stirring occasionally, about 7 minutes. Add the garlic and cook for 2 minutes. Add the rice, stirring to coat well, about 1 minute.

Add about 1 cup of the hot stock and stir gently until most of the liquid is absorbed. Add another cup of the broth, still stirring, until that’s absorbed. Continue, one cup at a time until you’ve used 3 cups of stock. When that’s absorbed, add the saffron, peas, scallions, and about 1 ½ cups of the broth. Continue to cook, always stirring, until the liquid has been absorbed. Taste the rice. If it’s still hard, add more stock or water and cook until it’s almost tender (al dente, anyone?).

Add the rest of the butter, crab meat, mint, lemon zest, salt and pepper, Parmesan and 1 cup liquid. Cook, stirring, until the crab meat is heated through, the liquid is mostly absorbed and the rice is plump and just slightly chewy. Garnish with the mint leaves, serve and enjoy!

My rating: 3.5 out of 5

The original recipe calls for 3 cups of peas which is what I used. I thought there were too many and they overpowered the rice and crab. However, since they were the last of what I had shucked and frozen from the spring, we agreed to live in harmony. The crab was lovely and subtle, the mint and lemon zest added a nice light touch. The next time I make this, the Locavore might replace the peas with frozen artichoke hearts. What do you think?

Frank’s rating 4 out of 5

He thought the rice was well cooked, but thought there were too many peas (and this from a pea fan) and too much crab meat.

 

 

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Accidental Locavore Farm Box Week 5

This week’s farm box for the Accidental Locavore was packed full of great stuff! There were radishes, turnips (both with their greens), green and yellow beans, peas, arugula, mesclun, perfect tiny heads of broccoli, small bunches of dill, rosemary, thyme and sage and the last of the season’s strawberries.

When the Locavore drove up to pick up my box, all the plants at the farm that had been under cover were suddenly almost a foot tall. So what to do with all this bounty? First, an arugula pesto made with some of last week’s wild arugula, tossed over homemade fettuccine. Then added: sautéed peas and broccoli with strips of prosciutto and topped all of it with Parmesan. Delicious!Accidental Locavore Pasta With Arugula Pesto

The beans inspired a Salad Nicoise with some of the beautiful lettuce, a couple radishes, basil from the garden, local eggs, and lots more goodies.Accidental Locavore Green & Wax Beans

Then, the rest of the broccoli, tossed in olive oil, lemon juice, garlic, steamed for a few minutes and roasted to go with grilled steak. Great broccoli!

Later in the week, the peas were quickly sautéed in olive oil with toasted cumin seeds, cayenne and a splash of lemon juice to go with an Indian salmon in mustard sauce.And for a home-alone locavore, braised turnip greens were used as a bed for a pan- seared lamb chop, fragrant with the rosemary and a little garlic.

The Accidental Locavore has been feeling a little guilty about the massive amount of plastic bags used for storing all these great greens and has been trying to re-use them when possible. Recently I was checking out alternative storage solutions, which seem to be limited and still mostly plastic. Any kind of hard containers (plastic or glass) take up way to much (already limited) refrigerator space. And just dumping greens in the crisper drawer doesn’t work because they go limp way too quickly.

Any good ideas for storing produce out there?

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What do You Know About Kohlrabi? Farmbasket Week 5

Accidental Locavore Kolhrabi

by Anne Maxfield on June 24, 2010

 What do you know about kohlrabi? Kinda weird looking, don’t you think? Along with romanesco, it will definitely go in the Accidental Locavore’s veggies from outer space file…

Doesn’t seem to have much of a fan club, starting with my farmer, Paul, who told me it was my problem, when I asked him what to do with it (don’t get upset with Paul, it was really hot and humid, and he was out picking summer squash), and continuing with Mark Bitman whose How to Cook Everything says “see turnips“. However in the land of Twitter and Google, all is well, and there are lots of us looking for kolhrabi inspiration. The two that look the best to me are this one for a curry made with it, and chard (which I still have from last week’s basket), and a suggestion from someone on Twitter, to grate it, mix with lemon juice, good olive oil, capers, olives, salt & pepper and serve as a salad. Going to give it a shot. Do you have any interesting recipes for kolhrabi?

The rest of this week’s basket:

  • first zucchini and summer squash of the season
  • even more peas
  • great green & wax beans, that already made themselves into another salad Nicoise with
  • the red leaf lettuce we got.

I’m thinking corn is just around the corner…

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Local Wax Beans and Cauliflower: Farmbasket Week 4

by Anne Maxfield on June 21, 2010

Accidental Locavore Wax Beans

This week’s basket had some new members, wax beans (one of my husband’s favorites, who knew?), cauliflower, broccoli, more rainbow chard, radishes, peas, mesclun.  

The Accidental Locavore has been on a big salad making spree, so yesterday for lunch I took some local chicken that I’d grilled and put it on top of a big salad for two. We had the mesclun, some of the snow peas, radishes, the wax beans which I steamed until just crisp-tender, and then shocked (ice and water) to stop the cooking, local bacon, herbs from the garden, a little Roquefort (definitely not local, but one of these days…and if I had some I could have used some Berkshire Blue, local and delicious) and a vinaigrette with lemon juice, mustard, balsamic vinegar, salt and pepper. Delicious and just the thing for a 90 degree Sunday. 

We’ve got a lot of peas, who has a great ideafor them? Bill Telepan told me to just shuck them and freeze them, so I had a big pea shucking afternoon, and am stockpiling them for the winter.

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