I used the recipe for Paella Mixta from Hamptons Lane, but did not want to do seafood. (I grew up with a kind-of kosher-type diet, so while I'll eat non-kosher seafood if it's served to me, I'm not comfortable cooking it.) I did, however, have turkey breast tenderloins and green beans in the freezer, and that seemed a fair substitution. The green beans were locally grown, I think, and the turkey I'd picked up around Thanksgiving. So I defrosted three turkey breast tenderloins using this recipe, adding on a little paprika. I ate one for lunch on Friday, and shredded the other two for the paella.
And I didn't have to defrost the green beans, as I riffed off this recipe from The Kitchn. Tossed them with olive oil and baked them at 425F for about 15 minutes, voila!
Since the farmers' market didn't have tomatoes, I picked up a few at HyVee. They do this thing where they highlight produce that was grown within 200 miles--these tomatoes were grown a couple of towns over.
Again, take a look at the Hamptons Lane paella recipe for specifics. I went ahead and used a grater on the two tomatoes (I do this, too, when I'm making marinara sauce from scratch). The recipe says to discard the tomato skins, but since they had a bit of flesh on 'em, I wrapped them around a slice of Monterey Jack cheese and ate 'em like a sandwich.
I chopped up one shallot and two stalks of green garlic from the farmers' market. These are pretty robust for green garlic--they look more like leeks, but I guess it's pretty late in the season for the more delicate stalks.
While the onions and garlic sauteed in the pan, I assembled the other ingredients and chopped up the pearl oyster mushrooms (about 1/4 pound).
And then more sauteeing!
Then I added the tomato pulp, the rice, the stock, and the bay leaves. And waited.
After about fifteen minutes, with added chorizo.
Then I added the green beans and turkey.
After about ten minutes, I turned the heat off, but left the pan on the burner.
Note, also, that I didn't add any salt or pepper--since the turkey and chorizo had already been pretty well-seasoned, I figured it wasn't necessary. Yum.
More soon!
1 comment:
Yum!
Also: tomato skin on mozzarella = brilliant.
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