Early Summer Panzanella + 5 Perfect Picnic Salads

esp705bI love when things fall into place without much effort, especially when it comes to a meal.  I didn’t stare at our CSA bounty this week, wondering what the hell I should make, anxious that somehow the beautiful produce would sit in our crisper untouched.  Bright green English peas and peppery arugula graced our share this week.  Basil and thyme wildly grow in our garden, thanks to the daily rain and cool temperatures.  (Summer can’t decide if she wants to stay.)  I purchased fresh asparagus and lemons a couple of days prior for a meal that never happened.  All of this produce ready and waiting for Heidi Swanson’s spring panzanella recipe.  The calendar says summer, but not here, not yet.  So, I took advantage of what I had available to me and made one more “spring” meal.

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The peas, asparagus and arugula harmoniously come together with the pancetta.  Chunks of hearty, toasted bread soak up the flavors of the garlic, shallot and thyme.  A few good squeezes of fresh lemon juice, a generous sprinkling of sea salt and basil make this the kind of salad you eat and share all season long.

Early Summer Panzanella

Serves 6 as a side-dish, 4 as a main-dish

Recipe adapted from 101 Cookbooks

Ingredients:

1 lb loaf of crusty, day-old, bread cut into 1 inch cubes (I used an Italian loaf from our favorite bakery. Anything will work.)

4 cloves garlic, finely chopped

1 shallot, finely chopped

1 tablespoon fresh thyme, leaves from sprig only

kosher salt

1/4 cup extra-virgin olive oil

1 bunch asparagus, cut into pieces

2 cups peas, either fresh or frozen will work (I used fresh.)

4 handfuls of arugula, tough stems removed

juice of one lemon

sea salt

fresh ground black pepper

4 ounces of pancetta, cooked and crumbled

1/4 cup small basil leaves

Directions:

Pre-heat your oven to 350F.  In a large bowl toss together bread, garlic, shallot, thyme, salt and olive oil.  Dump bread mixture on to a sheet pan in one even layer.  Toast in oven until golden brown and crisp, about 20 minutes.

Using a cold skillet, pour in a few tablespoons of water and olive oil and a pinch or two of salt.  Turn up the heat.  When the water just starts to bubble add the asparagus and cover for about a minute.  Next add the peas and cook uncovered for a couple of minutes or until bright green and heated through.   Remove from heat.

Place bread crumb mixture in a large bowl and pour the asparagus and peas and remaining pan juices all over the bread.   Add arugula, juice of one lemon, basil and crumbled pancetta.  Toss gently.  Season to taste with sea salt and fresh ground black pepper.  Tastes best the day it is made.  Enjoy!

5 Perfect Picnic Salads You Can’t Miss!

Buy the fresh cherries that are on sale now and make Not Without Salt’s couscous salad with fresh cherries.  This salad will be a hit at any picnic this summer!

If you need a healthy and gluten-free salad to bring to your next summer gathering, check out the kitchn’s brown rice salad with apples, walnuts and cherries.

Need a new pasta salad recipe?  Check out Smitten Kitchen’s summer pea and roasted red pepper pasta salad or the Pioneer Woman’s pesto pasta salad.

Bacon, green onions and a generous amount of cheddar cheese come together with russet potatoes for a loaded baked potato salad that will have friends and family asking for seconds and the recipe!  Thank you Foodie Crush!

And this!!!!

“No union is more profound than marriage, for it embodies the highest ideals of love, fidelity, devotion, sacrifice, and family. In forming a marital union, two people become something greater than once they were. As some of the petitioners in these cases demonstrate, marriage embodies a love that may endure even past death.

It would misunderstand these men and women to say they disrespect the idea of marriage. Their plea is that they do respect it, respect it so deeply that they seek to find its fulfillment for themselves. Their hope is not to be condemned to live in loneliness, excluded from one of civilization’s oldest institutions. They ask for equal dignity in the eyes of the law. The Constitution grants them that right.

The judgment of the Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit is reversed.

It is so ordered.”

Fresh Cherry Tart + 5 Tart Recipes You Need to Check Out!

 

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The cherries were on sale.  Fresh from Washington state, Bing cherries, $4.99 a pound! the sign read.  I stared at the individually wrapped 2 lb bags of cherries.  That’s still $9 for cherries.  No keep walking I told myself, but they were taunting me. I could almost taste their sweet, slightly tart juice and meaty flesh.  My mind started racing with recipe ideas: cherry salsa? hand-pies? trifle? I could eat them raw while watching Chopped.  The possibilities were endless.  After much back and forth, I found myself standing at the checkout counter paying for a $9 bag of beautiful cherries.

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I don’t regret it.  We snacked on the raw cherries, the kids taking turns with the cherry pitter, cherry juice staining their mouths and hands.  I managed to save half of the cherries and tuck them safely behind a gallon of unopened milk in the refrigerator.  The next day I made a fresh cherry tart, a Martha Stewart recipe I had my eyes on for weeks.

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I made a couple of changes.  Her recipe called for a graham cracker crust and I opted for a crunchy, sweet and delectable Cracklin’ Oat Bran crust.  My sister-in-law introduced me to this crust when she made Dorothy’s Fresh Blueberry Pie, again swapping out a traditional crust for this bit of crunchy food heaven.

fct588The Cracklin’ Oat Bran crust came together as easily as any graham cracker crust.  Once the crust cooled, I spread a silky honey and cream cheese mixture to the edges of the crackling crust.  I topped the tart with fresh cherries and a bit of raspberry glaze; I placed the tart in the refrigerator to chill and occupied myself with the kids outside.

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Patience is a virtue, but not my virtue…or Bubba’s…or the kids.  I sliced into this tart as soon as 30 minutes of chilling time passed.  Patience and willpower be damned!

Fresh Cherry Tart

Serves 8

recipe adapted from Martha Stewart

Cracklin’ Oat Bran Crust from Food 52

Ingredients for Filling:

6 ounces from bar of cream cheese, at room temperature

1 teaspoon vanilla extract

1/4 cup of honey (mild)

zest of 1 lime

3/4 cup heavy cream

1 lb Bing cherries, pitted and halved

1 tablespoon seedless raspberry jam

Ingredients for Cracklin’ Oat Bran Crust:

1 1/2 cups finely ground Cracklin’ Oat Bran Cereal

6 tablespoons unsalted butter, melted

Directions:

Pre-heat your oven to 375F.  Using a food processor with a blade attachment, pulse the cereal until fine.  Be sure to measure the cereal after you grind it.  You want 1 1/2 cups of ground cereal.

In a medium bowl, mix together the ground cereal with the melted butter until evenly combined.  The cereal should look like wet sand.

Dump the cereal/butter mixture into a 9 or 10 inch tart pan with a removable bottom.  Using the bottom of a measuring cup, press mixture evenly along the bottom of the tart pan and up the sides.

Bake the crust for about 9 minutes, but start checking it at 7 minutes.  The crust is ready when it is dry and a deeper shade of brown.  Cool on a wire rack before filling.

Directions for Cherry Filling:

Using a stand mixer with a paddle attachment, beat the cream cheese, vanilla and honey on medium speed until light and fluffy.  Slowly add the cream and continue to beat until soft peaks form.  (I switched from the paddle attachment to the beater attachment at this point.)  Gently fold in lime zest.

Spread mixture in cooled crust and top with cherries.

Using a small sauce pan, combine raspberry jam and 1 teaspoon of water.  Heat over low heat until liquefied, a couple of minutes.  Grab your pastry brush and dab the cherries with the glaze.  Cover the tart and refrigerate for at least 30 minutes or up to 1 day.  Enjoy!

5 Can’t Miss Tart Recipes!

If you love key lime pie check out Whisk Kid’s lime curd tart recipe.  This tart looks so refreshing!

I love when stone fruits start popping up at farmer’s markets and the grocery store.  When you see these beauties again why not make a tart?  Head to Apt. 2B Baking Co for a simple stone fruit tartlet recipe.

Pretty soon gardens will burst with beautiful tomatoes and being a tomato lover I can’t wait.  Brooklyn Supper’s tomato chevre tart is on my must make list.

Looking for a healthy spin on a butter tart? Head to My New Roots and check out a better butter tart recipe.  I am fascinated!

When apples are in season again, Flourishing Foodie’s salted caramel apple tart will make an appearance on my table.  I don’t want to wish the summer away, but I can’t wait!