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General Cooking (rec.food.cooking) For general food and cooking discussion. Foods of all kinds, food procurement, cooking methods and techniques, eating, etc. |
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On Sat 23 Jul 2005 10:16:57p, wrote in rec.food.cooking:
> Someone gave me some Swiss Chard. What do I do with it? > > Thanks > Marty Steam, butter and lemon juice. -- Wayne Boatwright *ż* ____________________________________________ Give me a smart idiot over a stupid genius any day. Sam Goldwyn, 1882-1974 --- avast! Antivirus: Outbound message clean. Virus Database (VPS): 0529-2, 07/21/2005 Tested on: 7/23/2005 10:46:58 PM avast! - copyright (c) 1988-2005 ALWIL Software. http://www.avast.com |
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![]() > wrote in message ... > Someone gave me some Swiss Chard. What do I do with it? > > Thanks > Marty Trim the ends of the stems, rinse and clean the leaves as required. Fold the leaves in half or thirds and do a kind of large chiffonade, cutting the leaves and stems into sideways strips. Put the strips into a large frying pan with a small amount of water. Cover and bring the water to a boil, let boil 30 seconds and turn off, toss the chard and let sit a little until almost tender. Toss the chard with vinagrette and chill. Eat very cold. Vinagrette: Wine vinegar Lemon juice Olive oil Salt Mix 1 part wine vinegar, 1/2 part lemon juice, and 2 parts olive oil with salt to taste. Toss with chard. |
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Melba's Jammin' wrote on 24 Jul 2005 in rec.food.cooking
> In article >, > wrote: > > > Someone gave me some Swiss Chard. What do I do with it? > > > Remove the stem and cook like fresh spinach. Nice if it's not old. I use it raw in salads and Cooked in soups. -- It's not a question of where he grips it! It's a simple question of weight ratios! A five ounce bird could not carry a one pound coconut. Are you suggesting coconuts migrate? |
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Hope > wrote in
: > > It's better for you than spinach, cause it has the iron without the > oxalic acid. Here is Australia it's often referred to as spinach- > with spinach called "english spinach' or baby spinach. > I've always called it silverbeet, but it certainly is often labelled spinach in fruit & veg shops. I think this newsgroup may have been the first place I heard the name swiss chard for it.I've used it in place of spinach in spanokopita (sp?), but mostly just have it steamed with lemon juice. Saw a bit of a cooking show on the TV on the weekend, though, and an Italian chef cooked it briefly in boiling water, then with some of the larger stems, sliced them through, sandwiched two slices with some fontina between them, coated them with breadcrumbs and deep fried them. Served them with a salad made of the leaves. The show mostly just has pieces from other shows, and has no website of its own. However, did a bit of a search and have found the recipe. http://www.uktvfood.co.uk/index.cfm/....newrecipe/ID/ 511717.shtml Something different to try with this vegie. Rhonda Anderson Cranebrook, NSW, Australia |
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![]() > wrote in message ... > Someone gave me some Swiss Chard. What do I do with it? Collard Greens and Lentils (Recipe From Michel Richard) Total time: 20 minutes, plus 2 hours, 15 minutes simmering time, Servings: 6 2 tablespoons olive oil 1 onion, diced 1/4 pound bacon, cut in thin strips 1 pound collard greens or mixed collard and mustard greens, ribs removed, chopped 2 cups chicken stock 3/4 cup green Le Puy lentils or other lentils Salt and pepper Balsamic vinegar 1. Heat the oven to 250 degrees. Heat the olive oil in a large Dutch oven or ovenproof pot and sauté the onion over medium heat until it becomes translucent and begins to soften, about 3 minutes. Add the bacon and cook until it softens, about 5 minutes. Remove the pot from the heat and remove any excess oil by patting the bacon and onion with a paper towel. 2. Return the pot to the heat and add half the greens. This will fill the pot, but as you cook, stirring frequently, the leaves will wilt and shrink. When there is enough room, add the remaining greens and the chicken stock. Stir to mix evenly. 3. Cover the pot and place it in the oven to cook until the greens are well stewed and deeply fragrant, about 1 1/2 hours. 4. Add the lentils, stir, cover and return the pot to the oven until the lentils are tender but still a little chewy, about 40 to 45 minutes. 5. Season to taste with salt and pepper and stir in 1 tablespoon of balsamic vinegar. Taste and add a little more vinegar if necessary. Serve immediately. |
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![]() "Desert Rainbow" > wrote in message ... > > > wrote in message > ... >> Someone gave me some Swiss Chard. What do I do with it? > > > Collard Greens and Lentils > (Recipe From Michel Richard) > > Total time: 20 minutes, plus 2 hours, 15 minutes simmering time, > Servings: 6 > > 2 tablespoons olive oil > 1 onion, diced > 1/4 pound bacon, cut in thin strips > 1 pound collard greens or mixed collard and mustard greens, ribs > removed, chopped > 2 cups chicken stock > 3/4 cup green Le Puy lentils or other lentils > Salt and pepper > Balsamic vinegar > > 1. Heat the oven to 250 degrees. Heat the olive oil in a large Dutch > oven or ovenproof pot and sauté the onion over medium heat until it > becomes translucent and begins to soften, about 3 minutes. Add the > bacon and cook until it softens, about 5 minutes. Remove the pot from > the heat and remove any excess oil by patting the bacon and onion with > a paper towel. > > 2. Return the pot to the heat and add half the greens. This will fill > the pot, but as you cook, stirring frequently, the leaves will wilt > and shrink. When there is enough room, add the remaining greens and > the chicken stock. Stir to mix evenly. > > 3. Cover the pot and place it in the oven to cook until the greens are > well stewed and deeply fragrant, about 1 1/2 hours. > > 4. Add the lentils, stir, cover and return the pot to the oven until > the lentils are tender but still a little chewy, about 40 to 45 > minutes. > > 5. Season to taste with salt and pepper and stir in 1 tablespoon of > balsamic vinegar. Taste and add a little more vinegar if necessary. > Serve immediately. > When I have simply fried cabbage, if I have a leaf or two of chard, I have sometimes added a little bit of tchopped chard to liven it up in color and taste. Dee Dee |
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![]() Dave Smith wrote: wrote: > > > >>Someone gave me some Swiss Chard. What do I do with it? >> >> > >Feed it to your pet rabbit. I tried that stuff a few months >ago. It was disgusting. > > And such is how gormets (sp?) are born. Chard is wonderful, just simply steamed with a bit of fried meat and garlic. Oh well, different strokes.. > > > |
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![]() Dave Smith wrote: > wrote: > > > Someone gave me some Swiss Chard. What do I do with it? > > I tried that stuff a few months ago. It was disgusting. What else to expect from someone whose taste is in their ass. |
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Chard enchiladas are a long-time favorite, but recently
I usually use kale instead. Any of chard, kale, or spinach can be "wilted", which means they are sauteed for a bit, then vinegar is added, covered and steamed until reduced into a soft mass. (Or mess.) Then add to any cheese enchilada recipe. Or if you prefer a Japanese preparation, serve these greens chilled, dressed with rice vinegar and sesame oil and, if you like, dried bonito flakes. Steve |
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![]() "~patches~" > wrote in message ... > wrote: > >> Someone gave me some Swiss Chard. What do I do with it? >> >> Thanks >> Marty > Cook it like spinach. I've cooked spinach two different ways, but prefer the taste of #Two. One: After I wash it, I put abt. 2 tablespoons water into a pan and steam it in the pan (not in a steamer). Two: Since I've started buying thrice washed spinach, I do it this way. I fill a pan with water, get it to boiling, gather up what I consider to be one person's on-the-large-size serving of the spinach and put it into the boiling water, boil 2 minutes, then lift out with a handled-sieve (to drain) and put into a serving bowl. Add butter and/or vinegar if you wish. If I cook other portions, just get the same water to boiling again. I've read that vinegar added to spinach will keep the calcium in your body from binding; but kale will not bind calcium. Dee Dee |
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Dee Randall > wrote:
> I've cooked spinach two different ways, but prefer the > taste of #Two. One: After I wash it, I put abt. 2 tablespoons > water into a pan and steam it in the pan (not in a steamer). > Two: Since I've started buying thrice washed spinach, I do it > this way. I fill a pan with water, get it to boiling, gather up > what I consider to be one person's on-the-large-size serving of > the spinach and put it into the boiling water, boil 2 minutes, > then lift out with a handled-sieve (to drain) and put into a > serving bowl. The problem I see with this is that by draining it you might drain away nutrients. This is why I like to use a minimum of liquid when cooking spinach or kale. Hadn't heard that vinegar might interfere with calcium availability -- that easily could be. Steve |
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![]() "Steve Pope" > wrote in message ... > Dee Randall > wrote: > >> I've cooked spinach two different ways, but prefer the >> taste of #Two. One: After I wash it, I put abt. 2 tablespoons >> water into a pan and steam it in the pan (not in a steamer). >> Two: Since I've started buying thrice washed spinach, I do it >> this way. I fill a pan with water, get it to boiling, gather up >> what I consider to be one person's on-the-large-size serving of >> the spinach and put it into the boiling water, boil 2 minutes, >> then lift out with a handled-sieve (to drain) and put into a >> serving bowl. > > The problem I see with this is that by draining it you might drain > away nutrients. > > This is why I like to use a minimum of liquid when cooking > spinach or kale. > > Hadn't heard that vinegar might interfere with calcium > availability -- that easily could be. > > Steve Funny you should mention a 'minimum of liquid' when cooking .... kale. Being from where they cook green beans a minimum of 2 hours in a large amount of water and never having seen kale cooked in less than a couple of gallons of water (a bit of hyperbole), for less than 3 hours, I had never cooked kale except in at least a gallon of water and for at least 45 minutes. Re kale, I've in recent years cut down on the timing and the amount of water; I usually prepare kale with potatoes or in a Portuguese-type 'soup'; that's about the end of my creativity for this vegetable, although I love kale. But eating a cold kale dish that I've eaten at Whole Foods in Vienna, VA, that, as I remember. included a few carrots, sesame seeds and some kind of oil, perhaps sesame?, perhaps tofu? and maybe someother small amount of ingredients, it was tough and chewy, but excellent and most of all, it was bright green! How does one get kale to remain that beautiful color? > Hadn't heard that vinegar might interfere with calcium > availability -- that easily could be. No, it's the other way: Spinach can block calcium from being absorbed, but adding vinegar will release calcium. But with kale, it is not necessary to add vinegar -- although I love it that way. Dee Dee |
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Dee Randall > wrote:
>"Steve Pope" > wrote in message >> This is why I like to use a minimum of liquid when cooking >> spinach or kale. >Funny you should mention a 'minimum of liquid' when cooking .... kale. >Being from where they cook green beans a minimum of 2 hours in a large >amount of water and never having seen kale cooked in less than a couple of >gallons of water (a bit of hyperbole), for less than 3 hours, I had never >cooked kale except in at least a gallon of water and for at least 45 >minutes. Yes, if it's particularly tough kale, it can take 30 or more minutes to cook. If you go to farmers' markets and buy young, baby kale, then 15-20 is usually enough. I add liquid as I go along so it does not dry out. > But eating a cold kale dish that I've eaten at Whole Foods > in Vienna, VA, that, as I remember. included a few carrots, > sesame seeds and some kind of oil, perhaps sesame?, perhaps tofu? For us, cold kale w/ tofu is a standard. I'm not aware that the Japanese will include tofu in a kale/vinegar/sesame oil dish, but it makes sense. Sesame seeds are also typical. >> Hadn't heard that vinegar might interfere with calcium >> availability -- that easily could be. > No, it's the other way: Spinach can block calcium from being > absorbed, but adding vinegar will release calcium. Cool. Steve |
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