Daily Archives: July 30, 2008

Stuffed Peppers

Serves 4

We grew up with stuffed peppers as kids and once I was an adult and got to make my own recipes, I came up with one that I continue to modify constantly.

Take a snug dish for four half-peppers, either 8X8″ square or an oblong or whatever pan you like.

Ingredients:

Two large peppers, I try for color, halved and seeded, de-ribbed and stemmed. Salt and pepper the upturned peppers in dish.

Take 1/2 medium onion and 1 large garlic clove, chopped finely, and sautee in olive oil with salt and pepper and a pinch of thyme until soft, no caramelizaton. Remove to large bowl.

For the meat, I prefer 1 lb. ground white meat turkey. Jim prefers ground beef, which I drain before adding to the mixture. Season with salt and pepper, pinch of thyme and marjoram/oregano. Add to large bowl.

3-4 canned tomatoes, seeded and chopped. Add to large bowl.

1 cup rice with two cups water or stock, cooked through about 17 minutes, boiled then simmered. Yep, add to bowl.

Grated fresh Parmigiano-Reggiano cheese and about 1-2 Tbsp. unseasoned bread crumbs.

You control the mixture here as to what you like. The rest can be leftovers for you or the dog!

Mix onions, garlic, meat, rice, tomatoes, about 1/3 c parmesan and taste and correct seasonings.

Fill pepper halves, spilling any extra along the sides inside the baking pan. Top with bread crumbs and additional parmesan cheese. Bake at 350 degrees for about 45 minutes, uncovered, until everything is warmed through and the peppers are cooked.

Note: Mom used to always boil the peppers before baking. Nowadays we prefer to keep all those good vitamins in and the peppers really do cook in this time. Cheers! Dee

Concord Grapes, Redux

Most people don’t read comments so here’s my original comment to aforementioned post:

“Concord grapes are mainly used in juices and grape jelly, also my home town was host to a winery which makes kosher wine from Concords.

Chautauqua is the home of the WCTU (Women’s Christian Temperance Union). When alcohol was banned from the US Chautauqua County, with the most grapes per acre anywhere in the US, was forced to replace its vinifera grapes with table grapes.

Years later when wine enthusiasts wanted to take advantage of Chautauqua’s unique and very brief growing season they grafted vinifera grapes onto Concord rootstock. The upshot is that NY didn’t get the phylloxera virus prevalent in Napa simply because the ancient Concord rootstock is too hardy.

Just a little tidbit of extra knowledge… D”

I also see that the bunch of grapes I photographed are kind of grainy. I did get one of the valiant rootstock, however, to share. Whenever you eat a bunch of Concords or drink Welch’s juice think of it.

I also included a photo of the grape harvester Jim Deakin uses for his vineyards. When I was a girl, local school kids, the farmer’s kids, got out of school for a week to harvest grapes by hand. My sister and I thought it would be cool to get out of school for a week but our parents knew we were not prepared for that kind of backbreaking work, especially as we were age 8 and 6. All for now, must get dinner out of the oven and give you the recipe later. Dee