This weekend's choice were "Watercress Salad with Quail Eggs" (pg. 12), "Curry-Roasted Root Vegetables with Lime Leaves and Juice" (pg. 177) and "Tomato and Almond Tart" (pg. 272). Or I must say... a version of those recipes as many ingredients were changed.
I found all vegetables and main fresh ingredients and the local store and on the next day it was cold and raining, I woke up late and didn't really feel like going on a quest for Kaffir lime leaves and Nigella seed so I had to improvise.
I started earlier this week and started with the prep (lesson learned). I cleaned, washed, peeled and cut most ingredients before starting. It took me over 2h this week, but I had an incident in the kitchen where some kind of oil/fat dripped on the bottom of the stove and in the middle of the baking, it created a smoke that triggered all fire alarms in the house several times. I had to turn everything off, clean up and start over.
Starting from the salad, the steps were easier comparing to last week, the only real prep was boiling eggs and heating the seeds. Oh, and I didn't find quail eggs. I thought it would be easy since it's a super common ingredient in Brazil and you can find it pretty much everywhere. Not in California. I also forgot to buy basil and couldn't find Nigella seeds so I used more sesame and mint as a replacement.
The prep is also simple, arrange the watercress and herbs with the eggs and ricotta; toss the olive oil and lime dressing on top. That was the easiest recipe.
The curry-roasted vegetables are delicious and my husband's favorite dish from the project so far. I tasted Rutabaga for the first time, an ingredient I never even heard of before reading this recipe. I forgot to take a picture of it alone but it's the round thing inside a bag next to the parsnip and dill on the pic below.
Last recipe was the one I was most excited about since it requires puff pastry. Few ingredients say "comfort food" as much as a buttery, flaky, delicious puff pastry. And it gets better, the first step is mixing butter, eggs, ricotta, spices and almonds for the filling.
The fire alarm episode happened right during the preparation of the tart so I didn't take any more pictures from now on since I needed to speed up the process as I didn't want to mess up the baking time.
If it wasn't for the use of the mixer, this would have been the easiest recipe. You just spread the the butter, ricotta and almond paste on top of the pastry, cover with tomatos and olives and bake. The results are just as amazing as it sounds like.
And here is the final dish:
I think that was a great combination. The salad was herbal and bitter with toasted notes. The texture is also great with the eggs, seeds and different greens. The dressing is simple, but it's supposed to be as there are many flavors already. Vegetables were also amazing, spicy as the curry power is the strongest flavor in the mix. The texture of the carrots are softer, parsnip is more consistent and the rutabaga is a bit fibrous but overall there isn't a major difference on the vegetables after they are roasted and seasoned. Finally, the tart is everything it's supposed to be: delicious and comforting.






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