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Just boil water for a quick summer meal

a bowl of chopped tomatoes, becoming no-cook sauce
We've talked before about meals that require minimal cooking to go from kitchen to table. How about a couple of dishes that only require a bit of chopping and a single pot of boiling water for the pasta? The first recipe comes from Nigella Lawson. She appeared on NPR's morning edition last week, and offered up a no-cook pasta sauce that marinates sliced mushrooms in a vinaigrette of lemon juice, olive oil, garlic and thyme until they wilt. Then she tosses them with just-cooked linguine, some grated parmesan cheese and chopped parsley for an easy meal. You can get the recipe on the NPR website, but I recommend listening to the segment as well, as Nigella is always so nice to listen to.

The second no-cook recipe is my take on a recipe I've seen all over this summer. It's so easy that there's hardly even an actual recipe to share at all. Chop up two big summer tomatoes (it's really gorgeous if you use a combination of red and yellow tomatoes). Drizzle the tomatoes with olive oil and add a pinch of salt and a couple of grinds of black pepper. Stir it up and push it to the back of the counter for half an hour. In the mean time, put a large pot of water on to boil. When the water is boiling, add some salt and pasta (any kind you like, I'm a fan of cappellini). While the pasta cooks, chop some basil and pull a ball of mozzarella cheese apart into shreds. Add the cheese and basil to the tomatoes. When the pasta is done, loosely drain it and add it to the tomato bowl. Toss and eat. The heat of the pasta melts the cheese a bit and gives the sauce a creamy, blushing color. It is so delicious.

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Lifehacker gets dinner on the table in no time

a plate with tilapia, mashed potatoes and braised bok choy
I have two different speeds when it comes to working in the kitchen. I either want to get in and out as quickly as possible or I want to wander, meandering over herbs and flavor combinations. You can probably guess that the first way is typically reserved for weeknights and the second is more a weekend attitude. However, I am always looking for ways to make my time in the kitchen more efficient and useful (because who has any time to waste these days?) and that's where a recent post at Lifehacker comes in.

Last week they posted a nice, long feature by Kevin Purdy called Kitchen Timesavers That Speed Up Dinner that details nine very useful ways to make your meals more rapidly. His suggestions include picking shorter, simpler recipes, keeping cheat sheets on the insides of your cabinet doors and blanching veggies by pouring a little boiling water over them from your kettle instead of dirtying another pot.

What are your secret tricks and tips to making meals quickly?

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Filed under: On the Blogs, How To

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Vintage Recipe: Fillet of Sole, Autumn

fillet of sole, autumn by Esther Barbanti
I love old community cookbooks. I pick them up at thrift stores, bookshops and yard sales whenever I can. I especially like the ones from the fifties and sixties, as they allow a peek into the kitchens and dining rooms of a time before food television and the gourmetification of the world. I rarely cook out of these books, perusing them mostly for entertainment and occasionally for inspiration.

Several weeks ago my cousin and I were going through her cookbook collection to find some recipes for my thesis, when we stumbled across a copy of the Norristown State Hospital Women's Medical Auxiliary cookbook, which she had because her mother had contributed several recipes. The pages are rough half sheets that have yellowed with age. It is bound with a plastic spiral, like the ones we used in elementary school to make books. I've enjoyed flipping through it, checking out the recipes with my aunt's name attached, to see what she was cooking in the late fifties or early sixties.

Although we aren't officially in fall yet, Labor Day marked the end of summer in my mind, so I offer you a recipe that seems to be expressly designated for this time of year. I'm not entirely sure why this dish should be made in the Autumn, but Mrs. Barbanti believed that was when it was best, so I won't argue with her.

Filed under: Retro cookery, Ingredients

Mellowed Fresh Tomatoes from the Weeknight Kitchen

white bowl with streaked tomatoes, mellowing
Lynne Rosetto Kasper, host of American Public Media's weekly food show The Splendid Table, had a weekly newsletter called the Weeknight Kitchen. Every Wednesday she (or some Public Radio staffer) sends out a email that contains a seasonal recipe, along with tips for adjusting it, dishes that would accompany it nicely and anecdotes from Rosetto Kasper about they first time she tasted this or that particular foodstuff.

Oftentimes I get the email, read it through and then delete it after realizing that I'd never make the recipe. However, the one that came out this week is simple, and hardly requires any cooking at all (just the boiling of some pasta). She just has you chop up fresh tomatoes, mix them with some seasonings and let them hang out for 30 minutes to 3 hours. The broken-down tomatoes get tossed with quickly cooked pasta and a grating of cheese and dinner (along side a green salad or some grilled zucchini) is done.

Lynne's full recipe is after the jump.
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Filed under: Ingredients

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