Posts Tagged ‘Featured Contributor’

Polenta Pasticciata ai Funghi e Gamberi {Polenta with a Mushroom and Shrimp Sauce}

This week’s gorgeous taste of Italy comes from none other than Paula- the meravigliosa cook behind bell’alimento!

Polenta is incredibly versatile and can be eaten either creamy or solid. In solid form you can make it into various shapes which also allows for it to be grilled, pan fried, or oven baked. You can top your polenta with just about anything. How is that for versatile ; )

Like Risotto, polenta needs to be stirred and often. Be mindful when cooking the polenta as it tends to “bubble” and we don’t want to burn ourselves ; ) It’s equally as delicious creamy but for today’s recipe we are going to bake it, which means it needs to be refrigerated after it’s done to allow it to set up. This also allows you to make this well in advance of your meal {great time saver} Depending on how thick you like your polenta cakes will depend on what dish you use to set it in. I like mine no more than 1″ thick. When warming your polenta through cooking time will depend on the thickness of your polenta.

Feel free to cut the polenta into any shape you like. I like a circular shape and I use a glass to cut mine with. Cookie cutters would work as well.

Mushrooms are a natural pairing with polenta. Their earthy flavor pairs beautifully with the corn. You can use any mushrooms you like here. A combination would be fantastic! Remember when making this sauce to add the shrimp towards the end so that you do not overcook them {you don’t want rubbery shrimp} Cooking time for the shrimp will depend on the size of shrimp you use.

What you’ll need:
1 cup polenta {cornmeal}
salt
2 tablespoons unsalted butter
1 pound shrimp – peeled and deveined
8 ounces of fresh mushrooms – sliced
2 cloves of garlic – minced
1 tablespoon flat leaf Italian Parsley – chopped
1 cup dry white wine
2 cups stock
pepper
pinch of ground nutmeg

What to do:

1. Into a large sauce pan add 3 cups of water and season with salt. Bring to a boil. Slowly sprinkle in the polenta. Using a whisk to combine, stir constantly to achieve a smooth texture. Reduce the heat to low and simmer until mixture thickens. Use a wooden spoon to stir.

2. Once polenta has thickened, spray a rimmed baking sheet or similar dish with cooking spray and pour polenta into sheet/dish. Use a spoon to evenly distribute polenta. Cover polenta with a piece of saran wrap {so that a skin does not develop} and transfer to refrigerator to cool completely.

3. Into a sauté pan melt the butter over medium heat. Add the mushrooms, garlic and parsley. Stir to combine. Add the wine and allow to reduce. Add the stock and season with pepper and nutmeg. Add shrimp and cook until mixture has reduced and shrimp are pink.

4. Preheat oven to 350 degrees. WHILE the mushroom and shrimp sauce is cooking. Remove the polenta from refrigerator and cut into desired shape. Place the polenta onto a baking sheet and place into oven to heat through.

5. Plate the polenta and serve with a generous topping of the mushroom/shrimp sauce.


Buon Appetito!

Featured Contributor: Mushroom Beef Gravy Recipe from In Erika's Kitchen

Erika Kerekes is a dot-com product manager by day and a relentless home  cook and food blogger by night. She started writing In Erika’s Kitchen in 2008 because she was tired of hearing her mother ask “When are you going to write a cookbook already?”  A native New Yorker, she now lives in southern California and marvels every day about the fact that food grows on trees in her backyard.

There are nights when only comfort food will do. In my house, these nights typically follow days like this:

  • Wake up before dawn.
  • Get two boys fed and into the carpool with their lunches, backpacks, completed homework, assorted permission slips, musical instruments and the like.
  • Get to the office to find that more than 100 emails have accumulated while you were sleeping.
  • Go from meeting to meeting, inhaling lunch (maybe) while dealing with the additional emails that have piled up during said meetings.
  • Arrive home and realize that if dinner is not on the table in half an hour, there will be major meltdowns – and they won’t all be coming from the kids.

Comfort food means different things to different people, but for me it’s got to be hot, creamy, salty, and on the table fast. That’s why mushrooms often figure into my comfort dishes – they’re hearty, satisfying, and quick to prepare. We buy two-pound containers of Baby Bellas at our local Costco, and on a comfort food night, they’re the first ingredient I reach for.

This mushroom beef gravy is a cross between a stroganoff and creamed chipped beef, which, inexplicably, is what I was craving that night. It took just a few minutes to prepare; I served it over biscuits, but it would be equally good served over thick slices of toasted country bread if time is really tight.

Mushroom beef gravy

  • 2 lbs Baby  Bella mushrooms, cleaned
  • 1 lb ground beef
  • 1 large onion, diced
  • 1/4 cup dry sherry
  • 2 Tbsp all-purpose flour
  • 1 cup milk
  • 1 cup beef broth (or water plus 1 packet  Savory Choice liquid beef broth concentrate)
  • Salt and pepper to taste

Separate the stems from the caps of the Baby Bella mushrooms. Slice the caps. Put the stems into a food processor and chop finely.

In a large frying pan over medium-high heat, brown the ground beef, breaking it up with a wooden spoon. Add the onion and the chopped mushroom stems and cook about 5 minutes, until the onions are soft. Pour in the sherry and stir until most of the liquid has boiled off.

Sprinkle the flour over the mushroom mixture and stir for a minute or two until it is well incorporated. Add the milk and broth, bring the mixture back to a boil, and turn the heat down. Simmer the mushroom gravy about 5 minutes more, or until the gravy has thickened and is creamy. If it’s too dry, add a little more broth or milk.

Season with salt and pepper to taste – if the broth was salty, you’ll probably want very little additional salt, and in any case you’ll want a good dose of pepper. Serve over warm biscuits or thick slices of toasted country bread.

Fettucine Profumate by Paula of Bell'Alimento

Editor’s Note: Today’s post is the first recipe from Paula of the Italian cooking blog Bell’Alimento.  Incidentally, this is a beautiful site to bookmark if you do not have pasta sauce coursing through your veins and could use a little help preparing gorgeous Italian meals like this one.

Fettucine Profumate… Is Italian for Aromatic or Perfumed Fettucine. And I can’t think of a better description than aromatic. You’ll be smelling this one long before it’s on the table. It’s an incredibly creamy, flavorful and filling dish that’s chock full of mushroom flavor! You’ll only need a small bowl of this! You’ll want more but a small bowl will do the trick *wink wink*

I love the baby bellas or crimini in this dish but feel free to substitute button mushrooms if that’s what you have on hand. The hardest part of making this dish is the mincing and chopping. Once you’ve done that it’s smooth sailing. You can use any type of broth that you like, I used chicken broth here. Also, if you don’t have any truffle oil on hand you can easily swap it out for a good quality extra virgin olive oil. I just like upping the mushroom ante!

Baci!

What you’ll need:

  • 1 pound of Fettucine Nests
  • 8 ounces Baby Bella {Crimini} Mushrooms – roughly chopped
  • 1 small carrot – peeled and minced
  • 2 stalks celery – minced
  • 1 small onion – minced
  • 1 clove garlic – minced
  • 1 cup heavy whipping cream
  • 1 ounce grappa
  • 1 tablespoon fresh flat leaf Italian parsley – chopped
  • 1 tablespoon corn starch {dissolved in 2 tablespoons of water}
  • 3 tablespoons unsalted butter
  • 3 tablespoons truffle oil
  • 1 cup broth
  • 1 cup Parmigiano Reggiano – grated
  • salt and pepper

What to do:

Gently wipe your mushrooms clean with a paper towel. Into a large sauté pan heat butter and truffle oil over medium heat. When melted add the mushrooms, carrot, celery, onion, garlic and parsley. Stir to combine. Allow to cook until onions begin to turn translucent and vegetables begin to soften, just a few minutes, stirring as necessary. Season lightly with salt. Remove pan from heat and pour the grappa in. Mix well and carefully return to heat and cook until grappa has evaporated. Add broth lower heat slightly and allow to cook for approx 10 minutes, stirring as necessary. Add the corn starch {which has been dissolved in water} and mix together until it thickens. When thickened, add cream, Parmigiano and season lightly with pepper. Reduce heat to lowest setting and allow to simmer for approx 5 minutes.

WHILE sauce is nearing the final stages cook your pasta in generously seasoned water until al dente. Drain well and add to the sauce pan. Toss well to combine. Transfer to serving bowl, garnish with additional Parmigiano if desired and serve immediately.

Buon Appetito!

Mushroom Meatball Sub from We Are Not Martha

This week’s featured contributor is Boston-based food writer Susie Anderson of We Are Not Martha.  Recently featured in the Boston Globe, We Are Not Martha takes the recipes of their food folk heroes (like site namesake, Martha Stewart) and delivers them in a way any kitchen beginner would feel safe to try them.

When it comes to meatball subs, you pretty much always know what you’re getting. And while some think this is a fabulous thing, I have to admit, I’ve been a bit bored with the traditional meatball sub lately. I just feel they need a little extra flavor kick; something that takes them from traditional and moves them to exciting, crave-worthy even.

And what better way to add some pizazz to a meatball sub than with mushrooms? OK, I suppose some brie and red wine couldn’t hurt either (do brie and red wine ever hurt?)*. I got some inspiration for these meatball subs from The Noshery, but I changed the recipe a bit and went a step further by adding chopped mushrooms to the actual meatball itself. While the meatball sub was amazing, I could have been happy simply eating a big bowl of these meatballs without even craving any pasta or extra carbs. And that’s not something I can often say.

Meatball subs have always been the perfect Friday night meal to me because they’re simple, but hearty and delicious. Though this recipe adds a ton of flavor and sophistication to the meatball sub, it doesn’t take much more time. After you indulge in a meatball sub stuffed chock full of mushrooms, you may never be satisfied with the plain original again.

Mushroom Meatball Sub with Brie with Mushroom Red Wine Sauce

  • 1 lb. ground turkey (or beef if you prefer)
  • 1/2 C mushrooms, finely chopped + 1 C mushrooms, sliced
  • 1 large onion, diced, with 1/4 C reserved
  • 1 egg
  • 1/4 C plain bread crumbs
  • 1/4 C red wine + 3 T red wine
  • 1 t dry rosemary
  • 1/2 t thyme
  • Salt and pepper
  • 12 1 inch cubes of brie
  • 1/4 C butter (1/2 stick)
  • 1/2 C beef broth
  • 3 cloves garlic, minced
  • 2 sprigs fresh rosemary, minced
  • 1-2 T flour
  • 1 toasted loaf of french bread or ciabatta

1) Pre-heat oven to 400 degrees.

2) Combine the turkey, 1/2 C finely chopped mushrooms, 1/4 C onion, egg, bread crumbs, 3 T of red wine, thyme, rosemary, salt and pepper. Make a thin patty with the mixture about the size of your palm, put a piece of brie in the middle, and roll into a ball.

3) Place meatballs in a glass baking dish or baking sheet and drizzle with olive oil. Bake in the oven for 12-15 minutes at 400 degrees, until brown.

4) While the meatballs are baking, start making the mushroom sauce.  Melt butter in a saucepan over medium heat.  Saute the rest of your onions and the garlic for about a minute before adding 1 C sliced mushrooms, and fresh rosemary. Cook for about 3 minutes. Add beef broth and 1/4 C wine and bring to a boil. Turn down to a simmer for about 10 minutes. Stir in as much flour as you want to get the sauce to the thickness you desire.

5) Put the meatballs in the sauce and toss to coat. Slice the meatballs (or use them whole) in the toasted and sliced bread and top with sauce and extra brie.

*Note from the editor: No. Red wine and brie do not ever hurt. Thank goodness mushrooms are fundamentally healthy because I’m compelled all sorts of gorgeous items to them.

2010 Mushroom Channel Contributors

Featured Contributor

The wait is over.  After considering every awesome entry until the last possible minute, your Mushroom Channel team is thrilled to announce the ten official contributors for 2010.  Sincere gratitude is in order for everyone who took the time to write us an email, expressing love for mushrooms. The process of going through the submissions warmed our fungi-friendly hearts.

Without further ado, the 2010 Mushroom Channel Contributors are…

Colleen from Foodie Tots

Erika from In Erika’s Kitchen

Kate from Savour Fare

Lauren from Healthy Delicious

Mardi from Eat Live Travel Write

Patti from Worth the Whisk

Paula from Bell’Alimento

Rachael from Fuji Mama

Sabrina from Rhodey Girl Tests

Susie and Chelsee from We Are Not Martha

To our contributors, be on the lookout for an email from the Mushroom Channel editorial staff to talk through details.  To our readers, be on the lookout for a new post from one of these contributors every week starting April 26.


Write for the Mushroom Channel!

For the last year, the Mushroom Channel has hosted posts from some truly incredible contributors. Kath from Kath Eats Real Food, Jenna from Eat Live Run, Susie from We Are Not Martha, Rachel from A Southern Fairytale, and Luisa from The Wednesday Chef just to put names to a few of the words that have graced these pages with delicious recipes and photos. We’re now looking to expand that program significantly.

Several of you have asked how you could become featured contributors to the Channel and we’re excited to announce that we’re opening up 10 contributing spots in April.

These are paid positions.  Consider the Mushroom Channel as the perfect outlet for all of your marvelous mushroom discoveries. We’re also interested in sending traffic your way from our various sites. All of your posts will feature a short bio that links back to your personal blog and your post will be linked to via both the Mushroom Channel’s Twitter and Facebook pages.

We’re looking for food bloggers with an eye for photos and a healthy level of curiosity.  Posts could range from a great new mushroom recipe of your own to an old family favorite or even a profile of a restaurant dish.  Creativity is encouraged and the editorial staff at The Mushroom Channel is more than happy to work with you if you’ve got grander ideas.  Compensation details are readily available, just send your question to mushroomchannel@gmail.com and we will respond promptly.

How It Works:

1) Submit a sample post with a photo and mushroom recipe to mushroomchannel@gmail.com.  Tell us a little bit about yourself in your email and please include a link to your blog. Posts tend to be 250-300 words if you need a frame of reference and it’s okay if the recipe is something you’ve posted in the past. Deadline for submission is April 6, 2010.

2) When we go through the entries, we’ll be looking for the following in all contributors:

  • Someone who knows how to engage an audience
  • Posts at least weekly on their personal blogs
  • Past mushroom content (Every other post doesn’t need to be about mushrooms, we just want to know that our contributors are fans.)
  • Clear, illustrative photos
  • A unique voice

We’ll be looking for a few of these among individual contributors:

  • Health backgrounds (RD in particular)
  • Parents with advice on healthy meals kids love
  • Frugal-minded fresh mushroom lovers

3) Selections will be made by Friday, April 16th and announced on the Channel. From there a member of the Mushroom Editorial staff will be in touch to sort through compensation and assign deadlines for your four posts in the next eight months.

Umami Girl's Vegetarian Mushroom Stuffing with Gravy

MC Editor Note: We have a new guest contributor among us! Everyone give a warm, seasonal welcome to Umami Girl!

Photo Credit: Carolyn Cope for Umami GirlThanksgiving at our house inspires a devotion that borders on the comical. A day when the whole country stops to give thanks for delicious food is essentially a national endorsement of our family’s way of life, and we think that’s really something to celebrate.

Most of the time our devotion borders on the comical. Then, of course, there are the times when devotion shows its passport, crosses the border and never looks back. We train for Thanksgiving dinner the way runners train for a marathon. With a certain scientific precision, all meals on Thanksgiving Eve balance maximum stomach stretching with minimal caloric intake. Several family members arrive on the big day with elastic-waisted sweatpants in tow, in case the need arises before dessert. And then, of course, there’s the stuff-off.

Its proper name is The Great Great-Grandmas’ Stuff-Off, but don’t try to say that five times in a row after the tryptophan hits your bloodstream. Each year the two family matriarchs prepare their two outrageous stuffings. This recipe is adapted from one of them.

Although the original recipe contains no small amount of meat, I’ve adapted it over time into a vegetarian dish. With all the savory, meaty mushrooms in this version, it’s sure to please carnivores and vegetarians alike. The gravy is our go-to recipe for a versatile vegetarian sauce. It can also be prepared with turkey stock if that’s how you like to gobble.

Umami Girl’s Vegetarian Mushroom Stuffing

Ingredients
1 1/2 to 2 baguettes, cut into 1-inch cubes (12 slightly heaping cups)
6 Tablespoons butter
2 medium onions, diced
3 stalks celery, with leaves, diced
1 teaspoon salt, divided
1/8 teaspoon pepper
8 ounces shiitake mushrooms, stems removed, caps halved if large and sliced
8 ounces cremini mushrooms, halved if large and sliced
4 cloves garlic, chopped
1 Tablespoon minced fresh thyme
2 Tablespoons minced fresh sage
1 cup dry white wine
3 large eggs
2 1/2 cups vegetable stock
1/4 cup minced flat-leaf parsley

Method
1. Preheat the oven to 250° F. Arrange the bread cubes in a single layer on a baking sheet and place in the oven for 25 minutes to dry. (Alternatively, leave the bread cubes out, uncovered, overnight.) Remove the bread from the oven and raise the oven temperature to 375° F.

2. Meanwhile, in a wide pan, melt the butter over medium-high heat. Add the onions and celery along with 1/2 teaspoon of the salt and the pepper. Cook, stirring occasionally, until beginning to soften, about 5 minutes. Add the mushrooms, garlic, thyme and sage and cook, stirring occasionally, until the mushrooms have halved in volume, about 8 minutes. Add the wine and cook, stirring occasionally, for 2 minutes. There will still be liquid left in the pan. Remove from the heat to cool slightly.

3. In a very large bowl, beat the eggs with a fork until slightly frothy. Add the remaining 1/2 teaspoon salt and the vegetable stock and stir to combine. Add the bread, the mushroom mixture and the parsley and stir to combine thoroughly. Let the mixture sit for a few minutes, stirring occasionally, until the bread has absorbed all the liquid.

4. Bake in a 3-quart covered casserole or a deep 13×9-inch pan covered with aluminum foil for 35 minutes. Then remove the cover and bake 15 minutes more. Serve hot with mushroom gravy.

Note: You can, of course, also bake this recipe stuffed inside a turkey. It will fill an approximately 17-pound bird.

Umami Girl’s Vegetarian Mushroom Gravy

Ingredients
2 Tablespoons butter
4 garlic cloves, chopped
6 ounces shiitake mushrooms, stems removed, caps halved if large and thinly sliced
6 ounces cremini mushrooms, thinly sliced
2 Tablespoons all-purpose flour
1/2 cup dry white wine
2 1/2 cups vegetable stock
2 Tablespoons soy sauce
Freshly ground black pepper, to taste

Method
1. Melt the butter over medium-high heat in a wide pan. (If making the stuffing, you can use the same pan from Step 2 without washing.) Add the garlic and mushrooms and cook, stirring occasionally, until the mushrooms are browned in spots and substantially reduced in volume, 5 to 8 minutes. Sprinkle the flour over the mushrooms and cook, stirring constantly to prevent burning, for one minute.

2. Add the wine and stir for one minute, scraping up any bits of flour from the bottom of the pan. Then add the soy sauce and vegetable stock along with a generous amount of freshly ground black pepper. Bring to a boil, stirring frequently. Reduce the heat to maintain a brisk simmer and cook until the gravy thickens slightly, 5 minutes or more.