green beans & hazelnuts
Serves 4
- 2 tablespoons unsalted butter
- 1 tablespoon olive oil
- 1 pound green beans, cleaned and trimmed
- ¼ teaspoon salt
- ¼ cup hazelnuts, shelled, halved, and chopped
- 2 lemon wedges, for garnish
In a large sauté pan, combine the butter and oil, and set over moderate heat. Add the green beans to the pan, coating them in butter and oil. Season with salt, cover with a lid, and steam for 4 to 5 minutes.
Transfer the green beans to a serving plate. Add the hazelnuts to the pan, coating them in the remaining oil. Cover and return the pan to low heat for 1 to 2 minutes. Remove from heat and sprinkle hazelnuts over the plated green beans. Garnish with lemon wedges, and serve.
RECIPE AND PHOTOGRAPH BY KRISTEL MATOUSEK
WWW.PHOTORICALFOOD.COM
butternut squash salad
Serves 2
- 5 ounces 50/50 salad mix
- 1 tablespoon balsamic vinegar
- 1 tablespoon + 1 teaspoon olive oil, divided
- 1 cup (5 ounces) small-diced butternut squash
- ¼ teaspoon salt
- ¼ cup cranberries
- ¼ cup blue cheese crumbles
- 1 tablespoon shelled pumpkin seeds
Place the salad greens into a large mixing bowl. Pour the vinegar over the greens and toss to coat, then drizzle 1 tablespoon olive oil over the greens before tossing again.
In a frying pan over moderate heat, preheat 1 teaspoon olive oil, coating the surface of the pan in oil. Add the butternut squash, toss it in oil. Season with salt and steam covered for 2 minutes. Remove the lid, increase to moderately high heat and slightly brown the squash on all sides, stirring occasionally to prevent burning. Remove from heat, add the cranberries to the pan, cover and let steam for an additional 3 minutes. Remove the lid and let cool before adding the mixture to the salad greens.
Serve the salad greens on a large plate or serving tray. Top with the squash and cranberries, blue cheese crumbles, and pumpkin seeds.
RECIPE AND PHOTOGRAPH BY KRISTEL MATOUSEK
WWW.PHOTORICALFOOD.COM
apple cider bread pudding
Serves 4
- ¼ fluid ounce melted butter
- 4 cups small-diced brioche bread
Custard
- 7 fluid ounces well-beaten eggs
- 14 fluid ounces heavy cream
- ½ teaspoon vanilla
- ¼ teaspoon salt
- â…“ cup + 1½ teaspoons brown sugar, divided
- ¼ cup fine-diced apple
- 1½ teaspoons granulated sugar
- ¼ teaspoon ground cinnamon
Apple Cider Glaze
- 32 fluid ounces apple cider or pressed apple juice
- 2 fluid ounces heavy cream
Brush the lining of your baking vessel with butter (use a loaf pan or 8 fluid-ounce mugs or ramekins for individual servings). Layer the bread in the cooking vessels.
Prepare the custard mixture by combining the eggs, heavy cream, vanilla, salt and â…“ cup brown sugar, mixing well to dissolve the sugar.
Divide the prepared custard among the baking vessels. Pour it over the bread so the bread is submerged in custard. Sprinkle diced apple on the top of each bread pudding. In a bowl, mix the granulated sugar, remaining brown sugar, and cinnamon. Use a sifter or fine mesh strainer to sprinkle the cinnamon sugar over the top of each vessel, then place the baking dishes in the refrigerator to rest for 1 hour to allow the bread to soak up the custard.
Preheat the oven to 325 degrees F.
Make apple cider glaze by pouring the apple cider into a saucepan and bringing it to a simmer over moderate heat. Leave uncovered. Cook to reduce. Monitor temperature with a candy thermometer and pull at a temperature of 235 degrees F (a soft ball consistency).
Remove from heat and whisk in the heavy cream while still hot. Adjust consistency as desired with additional cream or water. Glaze will thicken slightly as it cools.
Place the baking vessels into a larger oven-safe dish and fill with hot water 130 to 140 degrees F, leaving ¼ inch headspace. Transfer to preheated oven to bake until the custard is set or the bread pudding reaches an internal temperature of 160 degrees F and the bread on top begins to brown, approximately 40 minutes. Drizzle apple cider glaze over each dish and serve warm.
RECIPE AND PHOTOGRAPH BY KRISTEL MATOUSEK
WWW.PHOTORICALFOOD.COM