
This is one of those dinners that is not for the kind of person who is afraid of mixing things on the plate. I caramelized zucchini in a tablespoon of olive oil with whole cloves of garlic — a medium heat, with infrequent stirring and a good stout pan, will get it done in a reasonable amount of time — and then fried two eggs over easy in the residual oil left in the pan. After breaking the yolks, I ate the garlic and zucchini with yolk and bits of eggwhite and some black pepper. Sublime, especially because I made a nice cucumber salad to chase it with. The salad is a riff on the cucumber salad from Friday last, only since I had no cilantro left I used some onions pickled in rice vinegar that were lingering in the back of the fridge. Salt-fermented chiles add a little dimension and floral heat. A fine contrast to rich eggyolk and unctuous-yet-nicely-crusted zucchini and garlic.

These tomato babies were hanging out in their fetching green hats, soaking up the sun when I went out in the garden a little while ago.

Ushi likes to watch over the garden and supervise me while I work.
Posted by Hanne Blank at 7:53 pm on June 28th, 2010.
Categories: Eggs, Entrees, Garden, Vegetables, Weeknight Dinner. Tags: chiles, cucumber, dog, Eggs, garlic, monday's supper, pickles, salads.
Oh, I took photos. But would they really express the satisfaction, a long day of writing behind me, an evening’s worth still to go, of spending a half an hour in the kitchen with the cool crispness of bok choy and cucumbers and scallions? Would they convey the sizzle of the tofu hitting the hot oil in the wok, so loud it made me flinch even though I expected it? I’m fairly sure they wouldn’t give the remotest impression of how mud-luscious (oh e.e.!) the sensation of mashing soaked fermented black beans with your fingertips can be, or how tantalizing the pungency that rises to the nose when you do it. And as for the visceral gratification of whacking a peeled whole cucumber with the flat of a cleaver blade until it cracks into chunks, well, I think we can agree that no photograph could do that justice.
We ate a shrimp-broth based egg flower soup, black bean sauce tofu with bok choy, and smacked garlic cucumbers. No rice, we usually don’t unless company’s in the offing, the better to spare my temperamental metabolic system. Thumb-thick, winey-ripe blackberries for dessert. Salutary indeed.
And so, back to work.
Posted by Hanne Blank at 8:27 pm on June 16th, 2010.
Categories: Chinese cooking, Entrees, Vegetables, Weeknight Dinner, Work. Tags: black beans, bok choy, cucumber, garlic, home cooking, leafy greens, soup, stir-fry, tofu, wednesday's supper.