Thursday, December 29, 2011

Hot Pastrami Stromboli and Cheese Pierogi



     After a grueling couple of days of work, I was kicking myself for not stealing the extra dough I made in Nisswa for the pizza rolls.  I consoled myself with the fact that if I just bit the bullet and made the dough, I would have two other doughs for future use, sitting in my freezer, to make some other rough Wednesday a little easier.
     I had decided a couple of weeks ago that instead of doing both versions of the pierogi in one night, that I would split it up and do the mushroom pierogis and save the cheese pierogi for the next Pizza Night.  I still had all of the ingredients from then.  I read the instructions of "forcing the cottage cheese through a sieve" and decided that sounded messy and unnecessary.  I threw everything on the ingredient list into my Vitamix.  The only item I didn't have on the ingredient list was the chives.  When I was making my grocery list for this recipe a few weeks ago, it was still warm outside.  I didn't put chives on the list, because I figured I could still salvage some chives out of the greenhouse.
     I looked at the incipid layer of snow leading out to the greenhouse and decided I probably wouldn't find anything salvageable out there, and the greenhouse seemed really far away, and it looked really cold outside.  I did have several green onions that needed to be used up, so I decided to substitute those.  I threw them in the Vitamix with everything else.  It smelled wonderful - oniony, cheesy, with just a hint of the menthol from the nutmeg.  However, when I emptied the blending container, I wondered if I had made the wrong choice - maybe the Vitamix wasn't the correct tool for this job.  The mixture was pretty runny.  I put it in a container and put it in the refrigerator, hoping that it would set up and become thicker overnight.
     At this point, I made another brioche dough, shredded the Provolone for the stromboli, and then called it a night.

     Pam showed up first, so I put her to the task of rolling out the brioche dough for the pierogi.  It took a little consideration to figure out which dough was which.  When I had taken them out of the refrigerator that morning and set them on the counter, I had briefly considered writing labels on them, so I knew which was which, but I had decided I would know and didn't need to do that.  Apparently, I did need to label them.  I couldn't tell the difference between them. 
     I opened one and started to roll it out on my pizza paddle.  It seems a little stretchier, more pliable than the usual pizza dough.  I asked Pam what she thought.  She said that she thought she had the regular dough, and the one I had was "yellower" than hers.  We traded doughs, so she could still be on pierogi duty.
     Unfortunately. the cheese didn't set up as I had hoped it would overnight.  It was still runny.  Pam was having a hard time keeping it from leaking out of the dough as she squished it together. 
     Jennifer came in and suggested that she use the pocket makers.  I had totally forgotten about them - I am surprised Jennifer remembered.  Grandma Anniebelle had these pocket makers, as seen on t.v.  They are little round plastic thingees that have a hinge in the middle.  You place the dough on top of it while it is open, put the filling on top of the dough, then fold the two sides together, and it crimps the dough shut.
     Pam said she had thought of it first, but she figured it would squoosh all of the filling out during the crimping process, but she said she would give it a try anyway.  Afterward, she decided she should have been doing it that way all along.

     Meanwhile, I was rolling out the stromboli dough, covering the dough with olive oil, strategically placing the pastrami over the dough, and sprinkling the mozzerella and Parmesan on top.  I rolled it up jelly roll style and placed it on a tray for cooking.  I read the directions over a couple more times to make sure I wasn't missing an egg wash or anything, and then placed it in the preheated oven.

     Jennifer had brought a frozen roasted vegetable pizza for the kids (and Roger, if he rejected the choices offered).  Since Jonah had rejected all pizza-type options, including the frozen one, in exchange for a peanut butter and peach preserve sandwich (or two), we girls decided we should sample the vegetable pizza to make sure that it was okay.

     With the frozen pizza done, and me on the stromboli, and Pam on the pierogi, we assigned Jennifer to the drink making duties.  The drink was similar to a manhatten, but instead of whiskey, it was brandy.  There were some other additions to it that differed from the Manhatten, but the flavor profile was very similar.  It was called Mikado.

     Jennifer and I both liked it very much, and as soon as Jeff saw us drinking it, he decided to try drink of the week for the first time in a couple years.  He can't resist a Manhatten, and since we were out of whiskey, he decided to give our drink a go.  We thought it was a little too sweet, so we tried it a second time, with double the brandy to the other ingredients.

MIKADO

1½ measures cognac
2 dashes orange bitters
2 dashes creme de noyau
2 dashes amaretto
2 dashes Angostura bitters

Shake ingredients with ice and strain into a cocktail glass.  Garnish with a half slice of orange and a cherry.

     I actually remembered to "wash" the periogi before putting them in the oven this time.  I didn't remember at the last pizza night for the mushroom pierogi.  We will see what the difference is.  I think I also had twice the amount of dough than I did for the mushroom pierogi.  I remember being able to see through the dough to the mushroom filling, because the dough was so thin.  This time, it wasn't like that.  Last week, I had pulled the dough out of the freezer, giving me the impression that it was half or less of a recipe amount, and since I was now using the entire recipe, it only made sense that it would be at least twice as much dough for the same amount of filling.  Once I had pulled them out of the oven, it was obvious that there was more dough.  They were beautiful, though.  They were puffy, glossy, brown, and pillowy.  The egg wash was definitely an improvement, and our fear that the filling was going to leak out was apparently unfounded.


     The stromboli recipe suggested that it be served with a mustard or a tomato sauce.  I had purchased an unusual msutard last time I was at Kowalski's (on our "yuppy turd-head adventure this summer).  It was a habenero roasted garlic honey mustard that was local.  I hadn't tried it yet, but it sounded like it would be the perfect sauce to serve with the stromboli.  It turned out it was.  Despite its description, it wasn't spicy.  It had a nice tang to it, and against the beefy, peppery pastrami it was fantastic!  It smoothed it out, complimented it, and enhanced it all at once.
     We were critiquing the stromboli, and considering that maybe it should have more cheese, and then visions of Wednesday raced through my head!  What did I shred all of that Provolone for??  I raced back into the kitchen to recheck the recipes.  Sure enough, the stromboli recipe had Provolone listed in the ingredients, but there was no further mention of it in the instructions of the recipe!
     Gracie and Roger showed up after Gracie's swimming lesson.  Grace had decked herself out in her new pink sequined dress, and we have never seen a more beautiful princess!  It appears, however, that I will be sweeping up red glitter for quite some time to come!

     She was a big fan of both recipes, and we packed her up a to-go back so she could enjoy some the next day for lunch.  Imagine how much more she would have liked the stromboli if it had all its cheese!

Sunday, December 25, 2011

Christmas Eve and Day

     I didn't have pizza night on Thursday, because I had Friday off of work.  Jennifer and Grace and I drove up to Nisswa to our parents house Thursday after I got off work.  Pam was already there with Jonah, and Jeff would join us Saturday night after he got off work.
     The Freese tradition has been to eat no meals on Christmas Eve, just to make and eat appetizers all day.  It is one of my favorite days of the year.  We always make much too many snacks and end up eating them all again after breakfast on Christmas Day.  This year was no different.
     Pam and Jonah started preparations Wednesday night.  They made beautiful Christmas tree cookies.
They also made some almond puff-pastry pinwheels, which were lovely.  They were flaky and almondy and creamy all at once, with a nice snap of crispy almond on top.  They also made some churro-type cookie that Pam said were a mistake, but they weren't bad,m and Gracie loved them.  Another cookie they made was an almond wafer that was going to have some french silk concoction on top of it and dipped in chocolate. 
     Pam decided to finish those cookies on Saturday morning.  Of course there were a few wafers short, since dad discovered them and decided they were pretty good by themselves.  Unfortunately, the chocolate she melted for dipping the silk covered cookies into had seized up and wasn't cooperating with the plan.  It still tasted good, so we forged forward.
     Pam also had brought a recipe that she had gotten on a recent trip to Alabama for a hot bacon cheese dip that is cooked and served in a bread bowl.  Mayonnaise, bacon, and cheddar piled into a hollowed loaf of sourdough and heated in the oven.  What's not to like?

     I made Chex Mix.


CHEX MIX

                                         6 cups Corn Chex
                                         3 cups Rice Chex
                                         1 cup Peanuts
                                         1 cup Everything Bagel Pretzels
                                         1 cup Cheezits
                                         12 tablespoons Butter
                                         4 tablespoons Worcestershire Sauce
                                         3 teaspoons Harley's Seasoning Salt
                                         1½ teaspoons Garlic Powder
                                         1 teaspoon Onion Powder
                                         ¼ teaspoon Cayenne Pepper
                                         ½ teaspoon Cumin

     Mix the first five ingredients together in a large bowl.  Melt the butter and mix it with the remaining ingredients in a medium bowl.  Drizzle the butter mixture over the cereal mixture and toss to coat.  Put the coated cereal mixture into a roasting pan and cook at 250º for two hours, stirring every 15 minutes.


       Jennifer made an encore performance of the blue cheese quiches she made for Thanksgiving, along with some premade frozen quiches (bacon and cheese quiches and spinach and cheese quiches).  Mom made her traditional cocktail ryes (little rye toasts with a mayonnaise, cheddar, onion, and olive mixture spread on top and baked in the oven).  We had veggies and dip, meatballs in barbecue sauce, and caramel corn that one of Mom's friends made. 

     Dad made his traditional "roll mops".  These are fun little appetizers that we learned of from our neighbors, the Swansons.  Mr. Swanson used to make these.  He would spread cream cheese on salami or really thin roast beef and wrap it around a green onion. I always thought he was calling them "roll mops", and I learned years later that he was calling them "roll-m-ups".  I liked my interpretation better, but these are addicting little morsels.
     I had decided that, since we missed pizza night, that I would go ahead and make the next pizza in line for one of my contributions to appetizer day - especially since the next recipe in one of the books was appetizer-esque.



     Unfortunately, I hadn't even thought to bring or get mozzarella.  Since I keep a large stock of it in my freezer, it didn't even cross my mind that Mom wouldn't have mozzarella.  I had asked Pam to get pepperoni for me, which she reassigned to Mom.  Mom had asked me while she was shopping whether I needed anything else, and it still didn't occur to me.  Well, Mom had an overabundance of Tillamook Sharp Cheddar, so I substituted, and it was delicious. 
     The other tried and true Freese Family tradition is to have Eggs Benedict after we open the presents.


     Mom has done this for years.  We (girls) have tried to help along the way. Sometimes, I don't know if we are a help or a hindrance, and we always fight over who gets to lick the pan once the sauce is done.  She starts with poaching the eggs.


     Then, she makes the sauce, and I think she uses a different recipe every year, but the gist of it is: you melt a bunch of butter and add egg yolks and lemon juice or wine to it and stir over a very low heat until it becomes this thick, silky, heart-stopping sauce.

  This is the pièce de résistance of Christmas food for me.  It is buttery and tangy and creamy.  It gets poured over an English muffin that is topped with Canadian bacon and a poached egg, and when you break into that soft yolk, and it runs out into the plate, making a creek through the sauce, it makes me quiver. It just adds to the richness of the sauce.  It is a warm, earthy flavor in a sea of buttery goodness.  A sprinkle of cayenne over the top and a salty black olive turn the entire dish into a masterpiece.

Thursday, December 15, 2011

Phyllo & Spinach Wedges; Pierogis; Borodino


     I thought it was interesting that I should come to another recipe using phyllo dough the very next week.  It was nice that last week's recipe hadn't used all of the sheets from the box.  I still had over half of the sheets left over.  I wondered how close it was going to be to the spanikopita we had last week.
     My next stroke of luck was that I had one more brioche crust left in the freezer that I could use for the pierogis.  I read the recipe (past the ingredient list, which is the only thing I had read prior to Wednesday) and realized that the recipe is really set up for two different types of pierogis.  Since I didn't know whether I was going to have any guests tomorrow or not, I decided to make only one type - the mushroom ones.  I figured that the items I had purchased for the cheese filling would probably keep for a while, but the mushrooms were highly perishable.
     I decided the first order of business was to saute the green onions, garlic, and parsley for the phyllo wedges.  Then, add the spinach and cook it down.  I opted for less spinach than the recipe called for.  This was mainly because I had chosen my pan poorly.  I had two bags of spinach in the fridge, and realized that didn't come to three pounds, so I was going to call Jeff and have him pick some up on his way home, since they were buy one, get one free at Cub.  I picked up my phone, and he walked through the door with a bag of groceries.  I said, "shoot! I was going to have you get some spinach!"  He laughed and said he was way ahead of me and pulled out two more bags of the green weed.  As it was, though, I crammed the first two bags into my pan and could barely get the lid on.  That was when I decided 20 ounces was close enough.  You would think that I would have realized that, since I did almost the same exact thing last Wednesday.
     While the spinach was wilting, I mixed together the cheeses and eggs and set them aside to wait for the spinach.
     With the spinach cooked down, cooling and draining in a colander, I started working on the mushrooms for my pierogis.  In my first batch of mushrooms, I found a Siamese twin!


 
     It is probably a pretty common thing, but I hadn't ever remembered seeing it before, so I thought it was cool.  I almost hated to chop it up, but I did anyway.  I put the mushrooms, the onions and the hard boiled eggs all through my nifty chopper and got perfect cubes of each item.

     That warm, earthy smell of hot onions and mushrooms filled my kitchen and made my stomach growl.
I just love the aroma of sauteing mushrooms.  It is a warm and homey smell.  It reminds me of steak and woods and coziness all at once.

     After everything had completely cooled, I mixed the spinach in with the cheeses, and I mixed the mushroom onion combo with the sour cream, eggs, and bread crumbs.  All of it went into the fridge overnight.

     I came home on Thursday a little late.  I dove right into the preparations.  I went through the same tedious process I went through last Thursday - only I was using olive oil instead of melted butter. I knew it was worth it, so I kept going. Brush the pan with olive oil, lay down a sheet of phyllo, brush it with oil, lay another sheet down, brush it with oil, and continue in this manner until there are twelve sheets in the bottom of the pan.
     Then I piled the cheesy spinach mixture onto the phyllo.


     Then it started over with the layers of phyllo again until there were twelve layers of oiled phyllo over the cheese.
     It looked like I was tucking the cheese into bed.  I folded all of the excess phyllo back into the pan and down the sides of it, until the filling was all snug inside.
     I rolled the brioche dough out as thin as I could.  The recipe indicated that it should make 24 little dumplings, but I think my dough was half the amount that I was supposed to be using, and I only had one type of filling.  I found Jeff's biscuit cutters, thinking I could use one of those to cut out the circles of dough.  They were supposed to be four inches, but his largest biscuit cutter was 3 inches.  I decided to make it work anyway. I cut out a circle, and then I stretched it to four inches or close to that.  I think that they ended up being even larger than that, because when I looked at how much filling I had, I tried to shove as much into the disks as I could, stretching the dough even further to get it around the mound of mushrooms.



     I ended up with 19 dumplings.  They weren't uniform, and they weren't pretty.  I like to think of them as "rustic".
     At this point, I started wondering where my sisters were.  I texted each of them.  Jennifer was the first to respond: "I am in Birmingham".  She went on to remind me that she told me that last Thursday, but I had forgotten.  Shortly afterward, Pam texted, "I am in Birmingham."  That's right!  They were doing family things without me!  Not really - Pam was there for a flight training program she is a member of, and Jennifer was there for her job.  I looked at my pan of phyllo dough and my tray of pierogis and wondered if Jeff was going to be able to make it home in time to eat...  That is a lot of food just for me!  I debated about freezing them while they were uncooked.  I could bag them up and throw them in the freezer as they were and cook  them up for our Christmas Eve appetizer day.
     I made myself a Borodino while I contemplated.


Borodino


1 Measure Vodka
1 Measure Gin
1 Measure Cointreau (I used Grand Marnier)

Shake all the ingredients well with ice and strain into a cocktail glass.  Add a small piece of orange rind.



     The result of the deep contemplation?  I went through all of this effort, I wanted to eat these things tonight!  I could always freeze the leftover pierogis and bring them to Mom and Dad's for Christmas Eve.
     The cheesy phyllo pie took longer than the 35-40 minutes listed in the recipe.  I was guessing that it was because the filling was cold, straight out of the fridge, to begin with.  Once it was done, though, it was a beautiful, glossy, warm golden brown color.

     The pierogis were even more lovely.  Quite a few of them had split open at the seams, but they looked crispy and brown and sizzling hot.


     Jeff came home, just as I was pulling these out of the oven, and he was "starving"! 
     The phyllo wedges were heavier, cheesier, but less crispy than last week's spanikopita, but I felt it had a deeper flavor.  It was more of an entree than the spanikopita of last week.  It wasn't as salty, but it was delicious, all the same.  How can you go wrong with layers of oily crunchiness?
     I really enjoyed the pierogis, too.  I think Jeff liked them, too.  He had 6 of them, I think.  The crust was crispy on the outside and soft and chewy inside.  The filling was just as it smelled, warm and moist and homey.  They were good as they were, but I envision taking them up a notch with some sort of dipping sauce.  Jeff's preference would be a bowl of gravy, and that wouldn't be bad, but I am thinking of something with ginger and beef juis.  Maybe I will come up with something for the leftovers I will serve at Christmas Eve.  I look forward to trying the cheese version as well.

Thursday, December 8, 2011

Porcini and Chicken Calzone; Spanikopita; Vodka and Kumquat Lemonade



     I jinxed myself.  A couple of weeks ago, Debi had said that she was congested, and I offered her a decongestant that I had in my drawer.  She looked at in, then remarked on the fact that it didn't come from the "free" medicine cabinet at work, that it was actually "real" medicine.  She suggested that I save it for myself for the next time I get sick.  I informed her that I do NOT get sick.  She shrugged and took the medicine.
     Last Friday, after they had laid Debi off, the CFO had called a meeting.  He called in customer service and their supervisor and me.  They wanted to talk about how things were going to go, now that I had no back up. 
     This came after I had brought up the fact that I was originally told (years ago) that the credit department could never be unmanned.  Now that it was just me, how was I supposed to take lunch?  Now, I have probably taken 30 lunches in the past four years, just because getting the work done was more important to me than taking a break.  I would rather eat while working than stay much later than five, or come in the next day, feeling behind before I got started.  Apparently no one was aware of that (or cared), but even if they were, the subject had never been addressed, and it offended me.  My first instinct was to just leave after the deposit was done, and take my hour lunch, and see what happens, but guilt and sense of duty did not allow me to do that.  Instead I sent an e-mail to the new CFO.  First it was just simply: "Lunch????".  I hit the send button, then stewed on it for a while.  That really wasn't professional, nor did he deserve the brunt of my anger, since he had no idea what went on prior to his arrival on the scene a couple of month ago.  I hit the retract button and waited.  The e-mail program informed me that it was able to delete the message successfully before it was read (thank goodness!).  I replaced it with a very calm, professional: "How are lunches going to work now? Are we going to have to coordinate three hour lunches between me and the two customer service girls, or do we lift the rule that credit cannot be unmanned for an hour, or do I just simply not get one?"
     So, the CFO called a meeting.  The customer service girls and their boss were there and the CFO and me.  The CFO told me that I could take a half hour lunch, for the time being, and Laura (from customer service) would man the desk "just for the time being" until we could figure out a better solution. 
     Anyway, this led to the topic of what is going to happen if I get sick.  They spoke in vague generalities about having Laura train to sub in for me, if it were to happen.  I didn't say it out loud (because I still wanted to reserve the right to call in sick), but I thought to myself "I never get sick".  It would be nice to have a contingency plan anyway.
     Well, apparently I was wrong.
     When I came home from work on Tuesday, I started in on the bills.  Tuesday is bill-day.  I work on bills for the store, and I work on bills for us personally.  I started with the mail.  I open each item and sort it: recycle pile, shred pile, bring up to the office for entering, filing, paying, etc.
     I had progressed to actually entering items into the computer (Quickbooks) when Jeff got home.  I had poured myself some Crystal Light tea to get through the bill-organizing-and-hoping-to-pay process, but my throat started getting a little scratchy.  I was probably a little dehydrated, and the house was probably a little dry.  I am sure that we hadn't changed the setting on the humidifier since it started getting cold.  I was sure that was it.  Jeff suggested that a martini might make it feel better.  I concurred, but I was wrong again.
     By Wednesday morning, it felt like a semi truck had parked on my chest.  I didn't have a stuffy nose or anything like that, but my throat was really sore, and there was a heaviness in my chest.  Still, I put on my work-out clothes, and headed downstairs for my morning workout.  I tried.  I really did, but half of my workout time was spent lying on the floor, wishing it would swallow me up.  The bastard never did.
     As mentioned previously, it wasn't an option for me to call in sick yet.  I went to work.  I performed the required duties, and I came home straight home afterwords.  I was feeling better, but my voice was fading.
     I was determined to take care of my pizza preparations, because I was sure that I would be well by then. Also, I didn't think that there were a whole lot of steps I could do the night before.  So, I just convinced myself to do one thing at a time.  I started thinking about the chicken and porcini calzone first.  Did I really need cook up some chicken for this?  I mean, it was just Thanksgiving, and I had plenty of pre-cooked turkey in the freezer.  It took about 30 seconds to decide on that substitution, and I pulled a package of turkey out of the freezer to thaw.
     I needed to think about the crust for the calzone.  It called for 1/2 recipe of Classic Crust.  I had 1/4 recipe in the freezer.  Should I make a new batch?  I looked in the freezer again, hoping that another 1/4 would appear.  I found a brioche crust dough in there.  What the heck?  Let's try that, too.  I pulled that out along with the classic dough and put them in the refrigerator to thaw.
     Next was the mushrooms.  I was unable to find "fresh" porcini mushrooms at Cub when I shopped for them, so I had settled for the dried ones.  This turned out to be a good thing, since I had postponed this pizza two weeks.  I never did find fresh ones on my return visits to Cub, so now I needed to rehydrate.
     According to Wikipedia, porcinis are rarely sold fresh, because they haven't been successfully grown in cultivation.  So apparently, it grows wild in a few places in the world, and then they are dried and shipped all around the world.  That must be why they are so expensive.

     I boiled about two cups of water in the microwave, poured it over the 'shrooms that I had placed in a soup bowl, and put a small plate over the top of it to hold the floating mushrooms down into the water.  I left those on the counter to rehydrate until we were ready to assemble the calzones on Thursday.
     With that done, I was still feeling relatively "OK", so I looked over the recipes to see what else could be done in advance.  They both called for chopped green onions.  Perfect.  I decided to chop those up all at once for both recipes, and see how I felt afterwards. 
     I have several flexible mats that I use in lieu of the traditional cutting boards.  I like them, because you can curl them up to form a makeshift funnel and pour the chopped items into a pan or container and then easily slip them into the dishwasher when you're done.  Some of the mats I have are stiffer than others.  I had chosen a particularly stiff mat for the job of scallion-chopping.
     Once I had chopped a large pile of onions, I saved out some for the calzones.  I looked over the spanikopita recipe to see what was going to happen to the scallions.  I still had some energy left in me, so I figured I could saute the onions and spinach and get that ready for the next night, also.  I grabbed the mat and started walking it over to my saute pan to cook them for the spinach concoction. I had curled the mat downward in the middle a little, so as to cradle the onions on my way across the kitchen.  Halfway across the room, the mat objected and suddenly bowed the other direction, sending a shower of green onions  (and the ulu I was carrying with them) across my kitchen.  Some of them made it into the pan...
     I didn't lose as many as I could have, so after I swept up and threw away the ones on the floor and flicked the ones from the stove into my pan along with the remaining onions from the mat, I started on the spinach.  The recipe called for one pound of spinach.  I had an open 10oz bag that I estimated to be half gone, and I had an unopened 10oz bag.  I decided that was close enough.  I stemmed it all and chopped it up.  I was surprised at the volume of that amount of spinach.

     I was more careful this time traveling across my kitchen with the mat in hand, but it didn't cooperate in the end, when I tried to "funnel" the spinach into my saute pan.  It didn't curl up enough to prevent the spinach from spilling out over the edge of the pan....


     Or maybe my pan was just too small.  Either way, it was an equipment failure rather than operator error.
I piled the spinach into the pan, turned it on, and waited for it to shrink up.

     Once it had, I took it off the burner to cool.  While the spinach was cooling, I stirred together the cheese, eggs, salt, pepper, and nutmeg.  My last task of the day was stirring the spinach into the cheese mixture with the parsley and dill, putting it in the fridge, and cleaning the dishes.
     Jeff came home while I was looking over the recipes again to make sure that I had everything.  I stopped him before he came all the way inside and sent him out to the garage freezer for a package of mozzarella for the calzones. 
     While he was doing that, I started thinking about the drink of the week.  We were going to have Vodka and Kumquat Lemonade last Thursday, since I had kumquats, but I hadn't realized that you needed to soak them in vodka for a few hours first, so we had made something else.  I wanted to go ahead and make that Thursday, so I decided to start working on soaking the kumquats.  I sliced them up, put them in a canning jar with a lid, covered them with vodka, and added some peppercorns that I had barely cracked in my mortar and pestle.

     On Thursday, when I woke up, I hadn't been cured.  My throat was till raw and my chest was still heavy.  By the time work was over, after spending all day on the phone with customers and reps, I could barely talk.
     I started Jen out with the dough for the calzones.  I explained (in my squeaky whisper-voice) how the recipe had called for half a recipe of dough, and I had a quarter, so I thawed the brioche dough, too.  She asked how many circles she needed to roll the dough into.  I told her that the recipe said it made three 8 inch calzones, but that would be too hard to split between seven people (or five, if the kids weren't going to have any, which was likely), so I wanted her to make four circles and get them as close to 8 inches as she could.
     While she was doing that, I started the layering of the spanikopita.  That really is a tedious process.  I melted the butter in the microwave and started by brushing an 8x8 Pyrex baking pan with it.  Then, I placed one layer of phyllo one direction, with the last inch or so of the dough hanging over each edge of the pan.  I brushed that with butter.  Then, I put another sheet of phyllo over it crosswise, hanging the extra over the other two sides of the pan.  I repeated this process until I had six layers (or somewhere close to that - I often lost count).
    Jennifer had finished her four circles of dough, so I set her on to make the drink:

VODKA & KUMQUAT LEMONADE
from The Ultimate Book of Cocktails by Stuart Walton

3oz. Kumquats
4oz. Vodka
3 Black Peppercorns
1T White Curacao (we used Grand Marnier)
1T Lemon Juice
1/4 Pint Sparkling Mineral or Soda Water

Thickly slice the kumquats and add to the vodka in an airtight jar with the cracked black peppercorns.  Set aside for at least a couple of hours or overnight, if possible.  Fill a pitcher with cracked ice and then add the curacao, the lemon juice, and the kumquat-flavoured vodka with the sliced kumquats (but not the peppercorns).  Using a long swizzle-stick, stir together well.  Add the mineral or soda water and a few fresh mint leaves and gently stir everything together.  Pour the drink into chilled glass of ice.  Add slices of kumquats to the glasses and garnish with extra mint sprigs.

     I told her that I had tripled the kumquat, vodka, and peppercorn combo, so if she just wanted to make a pitcher of the stuff, she should triple everything.  She painstakingly picked all of the peppercorns out of the mixture I had made the night before.  She poured it into a pitcher and followed the rest of the directions.  When she got to the part, where she should add fresh mint leaves, she asked me where those were.  I had to think about it.  When I had originally planned this drink, it hadn't really been cold yet, and I had a whole deck full of mint that had taken over during the summer.  I didn't buy mint, because I was planning on using some of that.  I looked out the window at the snow that blanketed the back yard.  With a sigh, I grabbed a pair of scissors and headed outside.  The mint definitely didn't look good.  It was dried, dark, and shriveled.  I cut a hunk of it off anyway and brought it inside.
     Jennifer and I examined it sceptically, and then we sniffed it.  It smelled great.  She reasoned that many people freeze their herbs at the end of the season, and this really wasn't any different.  It was obviously going to taste like mint.  It just wasn't that pretty.  She crumbled it up and threw it in the pitcher.
     She decided on the big globe wine glasses for this drink.  She filled them with ice, poured some of the drink over it, and fished out some kumquats to add to the glass.  She (smartly) skipped the mint garnish.  It was beautiful.  It tasted tart without being overwhelmingly so with a hint of sweetness and a slight effervescence.  It was a breeze of summer on a cold winter's day.  The peppercorns gave it an almost imperceptible heat on the finish.  It was lovely!
     Once I had my drink in hand, and the spanikopita was assembled - after the 6ish layers of phyllo came the cheese and spinach mixture, then 6ish more layers on top - I looked at her handiwork on the crusts for the calzones.  She had made four, as I had instructed, but the brioche dough hadn't been touched.  I showed it to her, and we laughed.  She could only hear half of my instructions and didn't want to ask me to repeat it, since talking was such an effort, and couldn't figure out what I was going to make with the brioche.  Well, since it was already thawed, and I think we had a rather large amount of ingredients for four little calzones, I decided we should roll those out as well and make eight calzones instead of four.
     First, though, I wanted to put the spanikopita in the oven, because the recipe indicated that it was going to take 50 minutes.  We had already had the oven on, because we cooked the requisite chicken Alfredo pizza for the kids.  Since that had already been taken out (and mostly eaten), I reduced the oven temp and looked at the spanikopita.  The instructions said to cut off the extra phyllo dough that was overhanging the sides, but I couldn't bring myself to do it.  The more crispy phyllo layers, the better, right?  So, I folded the overhangs back inside the pan, making a sort of pile around the edges.
     Jennifer started shredding the turkey while I rolled out the brioche dough.  She had a captive audience in Pele and couldn't help but give in to his cuteness and toss him some turkey every now and then.  It is hard to ignore him when he can stand on his hind legs and reach the counter with his paws.  I'm not sure how much turkey she gave him, but after it was all shredded and the onions and mushrooms had been added to the mix, Pele had to take a time out and rest his belly.

     After Jennifer spread the garlic olive oil over each of the crusts, I came along after her and plopped some ricotta on each one.  She followed behind with the turkey, we folded up the calzones and placed them on a cookie sheet.

     We had increased the temperature of the oven to 350º and slid the tray of calzones in with the spanikopita.
     Pam arrived just about then and asked if we saved her anything.  We let her know that we hadn't even gotten anything out of the oven yet (we omitted the part about the chicken Alfredo pizza that kids (mostly) ate).    We poured her a drink and got caught up on her day of flying with a student.
     When the time was up on the spanikopita, it was gorgeous!  The phyllo had turned a warm golden color, and it was almost as if each layer was standing at attention, ready to be eaten.
     The calzones didn't even come close to the warm golden color of the calzone.  They were a little white and pasty looking, actually, but the ingredients were leaking out of the edges of the seals, so I figured they were done and pulled them out.  We let them rest a little before we ate them.  We didn't want any scalded tongues at our table.
 
     Meanwhile, I cut the spanikopita.  It was too much of a challenge (especially after some vodka kumquat lemonade) to cut the end product into enough pieces to be divisible by 5 (to give each adult the same amount of pieces).  There was also the added challenge of the corner pieces.  I knew that all three of us girls were hoping to get a corner piece - all the more crispy goodness.  Was it fair to make the boys have the inside pieces, or would they even care?  Jeff doesn't particularly care for crunchy things, so I knew he wouldn't care.  I asked, just in case, and he chose the middle edge piece.  Problem solved. It was rich and buttery with the salty tang of the cheeses.  It was warm and homey and delicious.
     The calzones were also delicious.  They had great flavor.  The creamy ricotta nicely enveloped the turkey, and the mushrooms gave it a lovely earthy flavor.  The crusts, despite their sickly appearance were crispy in the right spots and warm and bready on the inside.  Of course, I only tried one type of crust, and I wasn't sure whether it was the classic crust or the brioche (pretty sure it was the classic, though), but I didn't hear any complaints about the other variety, so either it was good, or my family was too polite to say anything negative.  Someone did pipe up and say that they thought that it would be better with some regular cheese, too, to sort of hold everything together and add a gooey-ness.  I started to agree and then jumped up!  There was supposed to be cheese in there, and we had forgotten it!  It was still tasty, but it hadn't reached its full potential.  Once again, I had served the diet version of the recipe.