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Category Archives: french

Puy Lentil and Goat Cheese Omelette

20 Wednesday Feb 2013

Posted by Zoli in breakfast, cheese, comfort food, eggs, french, omelettes, quick and awesome, Vegetarian

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goat cheese and lentil omelette, goat cheese omelet, vegetarian, vegetarian brunch, vegetarian omelet

Goat cheese and lentil omelet

Although I love omelettes* as a base for all kinds of stuffing and flavors, I don’t often cook them. This morning, as it happened, I had leftover lentils from a vegetarian lasagna and I had soft goat cheese. This classic combo of lentils and goat cheese makes (in the words of my italian father in law) ‘one mean omelette’. As a side note this is a great meal for a vegetarian with the triple protein of lentils, cheese and eggs.

eggs, butter, goat cheese, lentils and chives

For the omelette: eggs, butter, salt and pepper. I decided to throw in a little bit of garlic* and some chives but they are not necessary.

Goat or chevre cheese. ‘Chevre’ is simply the french word for goat. I had an inexpensive, soft goat cheese log to hand but this recipe works best with a ‘surface-ripened’ chevre cheese which has a rind and is much creamier and ‘meltier’ inside. Needless to say it is a little more expensive! I would recommend against buying pre-crumbled goat cheese from a bag or plastic container.

The lentils. I cannot rave enough about my favorite lentil, the puy lentil. In french it is the ‘Lentilles vertes du Puy’. I have seen them in this country called ‘lentils vertes’ and also simply labeled ‘lentils’. But they are very different from the more common brown lentil. They are smaller, chewier and IMHO more delicious. Please try them in a bunch of different recipes. As a vegetarian I recommend them for any recipe where you need a pulse to replace a ground meat, such as a veggie bolognaise sauce, shepherd’s pie or taco filling. Another fantastic lentil is the black lentil.

puy lentils, lentilles du puy

You can get pre-cooked lentils, but it’s more nutritious to cook your own (and not nearly so labor intensive as a dried bean). Takes about 30 minutes. Simply wash them, bring to boil in a good amount of water (with a bay leaf of bouquet garni if you like) and simmer till tender. If you are going to use them for this dish or a salad, you can season them a little with olive oil, salt and pepper and a splash of white wine vinegar.

Next, heat up a frying pan to at least medium heat and melt in a good chunk of butter. Omelettes need a high heat, unlike scrambled eggs. Blend your eggs and season a little with salt and pepper. Goat cheese is fairly salty so you don’t need much. Toss in some herbs if you like.

making an omelet

Just in case there’s someone out there who’s never made an omelette (is there?), the practice is simple: lift up the edges of the omelette and swirl the egg around to make the omelette fluffy and cook as much of it as you can. What you are aiming for is a cooked golden crust and a soft eggy center.

DSC_0416

When the egg is mostly cooked, (or first put it under the broiler for a minute if you want the inside a little less runny) top with the lentils and goat cheese.

puy lentils and goat cheese

Put your frying pan under the broiler to warm up the lentils and melt the goat cheese. Get it nice and hot. Then fold over and slide onto a plate. We think this is pretty yummy and hope you do too.

DSC_0429

* I did check if I should spell ‘omelet’ the American way or ‘omelette’. It seems there is no hard and fast rule. Either is acceptable.
** I forgot to put in the garlic but it was not missed!

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The simple and delicious crepe

16 Saturday Feb 2013

Posted by Zoli in breakfast, crepes, dessert, french, kids, quick and awesome, the basics, Vegetarian

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crepes with chocolate, crepes with lemon and sugar, easy crepe recipe, pancake day recipes, vegetarian

Crepes with lemon and sugar

One of the things I miss about living in England is Pancake Day, also known as Shrove Tuesday or Fat Tuesday. (Pancake here meaning crepe, not to be confused with the American pancake which is more of a novelty there.) What a cute holiday. To celebrate, eat a pancake. Our local pub in South London would sell mounds of them for one pound each and it was a popular, boisterous event.

I’ve been back in America for two years now and forgotten to celebrate it both years. At least this year I remembered that I had forgotten within the same week! So this morning, having time and kids to feed, I got down to making some crepes. (Also see what to do with leftover crepes: Kale, rosemary and cheese crepes)

easy to make crepes with basic ingredients

All you need for a crepe

I must put a disclaimer here that I didn’t follow a recipe. But for those who wish, I posted Julia Child’s ingredients list below. I really did just dump in a cup of flour, a glass of milk, a pinch of salt, 2 eggs (not three) and some melted butter. You kind of can’t fail. I didn’t add any water and they were fine. I have also made these with white wheat flour for the kids and they turned out yummy.

Julia Child’s Crepe Recipe

Ingredients:

1 cup flour
2/3 cup cold milk
2/3 cup cold water
3 large eggs
1/4 teaspoon salt
3 tablespoons melted butter, plus more for brushing on pan

Whether you do it my way or Julia’s, the steps are the same.

1) Dump it all together and whisk or use a hand-held blender. The end. This really is the easiest thing to make. The consistency is much wetter and thinner than American pancakes. It should be like a cream.

DSC_0062

2) Heat up a good quality frying pan to medium or medium high and put just a speck of oil or butter in. Ladle in the crepe batter and tilt the pan to swirl around. You can also ladle in a little bit more if you messed up the shape or it got torn. No fear! If you want to avoid getting those little ‘legs’, make sure there is enough batter so that it swirls all the way to the walls of the frying pan to keep a perfect circular shape.

crepe batter

3) Cook till one side is golden and then flip to cook the other side. Maybe a minute or less each side. They cook very quickly.

easy crepe recipe

When you’re finished, it’s time to decide on fillings. Strawberries and cream. Carmelized pear and chocolate. At our house the kids usually stick with nutella and my husband likes the classic lemon and powdered sugar.

crepe filling

For the kids, Trader Joes chocolate almond spread!

crepes with nutella or chocolate spread

I had the lemon and powdered sugar. Delicioso! Tart and sweet. Simple and chic. Just squeeze a lemon wedge all over the sucker and drench in powdered sugar.

crepe with lemon and powdered sugar

Maybe next year I’ll remember on the right darned day!

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