meatless tuesday . #7 {red lentil curry}


Valentine’s Day 2011 plans: dinner at Canlis.  Now I know that the restaurant would have provided a vegetarian prix fixe menu if requested, but there was no way was that happening.  Canlis salad, salmon with sunchoke [Goldfarb’s kryptonite lately] puree, beef tenderloin!  Are you kidding me?  So this week, we moved Meatless Monday to Tuesday. I doubt the MM police would care.  Isn’t the more important objective to set aside one day a week to eat meatless? 

So by now you can probably guess I am obsessed with Ross Dobson’s recipes.  This week’s meatless dish is adapted from his Market Vegetarian cookbook cover recipe.  It is the cover that captured my attention.  We love bold flavors so I tweaked the recipe just a tad to add a little more oomph.  This is not a curry that most of us would think of as traditional.  There is not a lot of sauce, although you could add more stock or water if you wanted.  But there is enough to serve it over basmati rice.  I love the bitterness of the eggplant but what makes this recipe is the gently cooked cherry tomatoes.  Once you cut into them, their juice and seeds incorporate into the stew giving it the perfect sweetness to complete the dish.  Yummy and so pretty.

Eggplant, Tomato & Red Lentil Curry 

3 tbsp olive oil
1 large eggplant cut into large cubes
1 red onion, chopped
2 garlic cloves, minced
1 tbsp fresh ginger, finely minced
12 cherry tomatoes
1 ½ tsp curry powder
1 tsp ground cumin
¼ tsp chili powder
2 tbsp tomato paste
3 c vegetable stock {or water}
2/3 c red lentils
handful fresh cilantro, roughly chopped
1 small serrano chili, thinly sliced

Heat 2 tablespoons of the olive oil in a skillet over medium high heat.  When the oil starts to smoke, add the eggplant.  Cook for 5 minutes turning the pieces to brown on all sides.  Remove from skillet just when the eggplant starts to release its moisture.  Set aside.

Add the last 1 tablespoon of oil, onion, garlic and ginger to the skillet; cook for 5 minutes. Add the cherry tomatoes and cook for 1 minute or until they just start to soften.  Remove from the skillet and set aside with the eggplant.  Add the curry and cumin to the pan; cook until they get fragrant – about 1 minute.  Add chili powder, tomato paste, stock and lentil.  Simmer for 15 minutes or until lentils are al dente. Salt and pepper to taste.  Stir in the eggplant mixture and tomatoes; cook for 2 minutes to heat.   Add the cilantro, stir and serve over basmati rice.

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zebra stripe

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love, naturally

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beauty parlor regular

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moss no 3

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old-school task manager


I am so old-fashioned.  Love pens, pencils and paper.  I am and always will be a list maker. There is something really satisfying about writing things down and crossing them off.  And if I were to tell you something about me that I don’t disclose often it would be that I am a huge procrastinator.  A lot of my friends will shake their head in disbelief but it is true.   I’ve always worked toward deadlines and in my head, that can be a detriment because things get put off until they start to come due.  But I’ve never missed a deadline.  Why?  Because I keep meticulous, color-coded lists!   Work, house projects, volunteer deliverables and especially party lists.  Books to read, places to visit, restaurants to try, recipes to make.  All of them save me from running around like a chicken with its head cut off and remind of things I run across.
These are the three things that are always on my desk and when I’m out, in my purse.   For two centuries Moleskin books have been the gold standard of notebooks for artists, writers and journalists.  Their website also lists intellectuals.  Ha!  It should list ‘note-takers and list-makers.’  My favorite notebook is the Volant line: ruled pages with soft colorful covers.  The size that is perfect for me is the large – 5″ x 8.25″.  Not too small but not too big.  A set of two is $12.95 and you can buy them online or at Barnes & Noble.   When one becomes completely filled, it gets filed away and a new one comes out.  You should see my stock of colorful notebooks!

I’m very particular about pens and pencils; always have been.  The mechanical pencils and rollarball pens from Tul [products made exclusively for Office Max] are great.  Except for Sharpie Extra Fine Permanent Pens that I use for addressing envelopes, these are my go-to pens.  I was so excited when Sharpie came out last year with a mechanical pencil. Rushed right out to get some.  Was totally disappointed.  They wrote like the old erasable pens.  Remember those?  They were awful. Tul does the mechanical pencil right!  The nonslip grip runs the entire length of the pencil, the eraser is held in a twist cap so you can expose as much as you need, the point is retractable so there isn’t a lot of lead breakage and it writes smoothly.  The last feature is the reason why I love their rollerball pen.  It writes so smoothly  and has a sharp writing point.  Pencils are two for $8.50, pens four for $9.99.  A little indulgent but they last a long time.  Plus the sleek designs are fashionable…they’re just pretty.

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discarded

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moss no 2

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my las vegas love

Yes, it’s true.  There is another man in my life.  He is someone I almost always see every time I go to Las Vegas, which is often.  And yes, Goldfarb knows about him.  Actually, he has a little man-crush on him, so all is well. If you don’t know about Michael Mina, let me introduce you to a talented chef and restauranteur.   Born in Cairo and raised in Ellensburg, WA Michael Mina has become one of my favorite chefs.  Bourbon Steak in Scottsdale [oh my goodness, it was delish!], Strip Steak in Las Vegas…but the place that is my favorite is Michael Mina at the Bellagio.  Trained at the CIA, he studied on the weekends under Charlie Palmer at Aureole.  It is no wonder that he has a knack for perfectly marrying American cuisine with contemporary techniques and flavor profiles. Much of his menu highlights fresh, seasonal seafood which may seem out of place in Las Vegas, but after all, he was one of the chefs responsible for making the city the dining hot spot it is today.  The result  of all Mina’s imagination and training is magnificent food that is impeccably presented.
I first discovered Michael Mina about four years ago after an afternoon of gaming and cocktails.  Hungry and without a dinner reservation at the time Las Vegas’ culinary world was starting to explode could have proven to be a bad combination.  But as I wandered into the packed restaurant nestled behind the Bellagio’s conservatory, hoping they’d have some room…anywhere…I was escorted to seats at the beautiful marble bar.  A great glass of wine was soon followed by a meal so memorable that today I still pine for that trio of lamb entree.  And so I’ve gone back, over and over and over again.
Unlike many of Vegas’ haute couture restaurants, Michael Mina is a relatively small space.   Let me rephrase.  It is the perfect size and not cavernous.  Who wants to go to dinner and feel like you’re just a number on a busy night?  Move them in and move them out.  Maybe that is why this is one of my favorite places in a city that moves at warp speed nearly 24 hrs a day.  Amber lighting, exposed light wood everywhere, open kitchen and immaculate, crisp white linens.   It’s a warm, inviting place that serves as a haven from the casino.  Wonderful menus, comfortable ambience together with attentive and knowledgeable food and wine service [courtesy of their Master Sommelier]: it’s a culinary trifecta.
Renown chef Michael Mina has a talent for creatively reinventing classics and also presenting familiar ingredients in new, exciting ways.  On our last visit, my starter was a the above pictured caviar parfait.  Layers of smoked salmon, crème fraîche, lots of osetra caviar atop the most delicious potato cake.  It was a little stack of heaven paired with a glass of Veuve Cliquot.  But if there could only be one example from this chef of a simple dish transformed into a modern delicacy it would have to be Mina’s signature Lobster Pot Pie. Imagine the most delicate but flavorful lobster bisque riddled with precisely cooked vegetables and tender lobster meat, a hint of brandy and cream all topped with a thin puffed pastry pyramid.  I am not a food writer so my words could never do this dish justice.  So you’ll just have to try it at either one of his 18 restaurants around the country or in your home courtesy of this recipe.
There are rumors the two-time James Beard Foundation award-winning chef will be bringing his RN74 wine bar restaurant concept to Seattle this spring.  I hope the rumors are true.  I like the idea of only having to travel a couple of miles to get my Michael Mina fix.

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valve


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