Last night I went with a few friends to a creamery in Oakland, California. Being lactose intolerant, I knew I'd be sorry in the morning for this splurge of dairy. But I figured I've been behaving myself lately (in regards to dairy) and figured it would be a nice treat to myself before school starts. I've always heard good things about it. Fenton's serves items from a crab melt to Cobb salad to a dessert called The Saddleback Brownie.
My friend Jessie and I both had the small 'Old Fashioned Sundaes.' The sundaes were very good. They were served in a goblet that is placed on a small plate to hold all the fudge and toppings that drip off the ice cream. It contains a generous scoop of ice cream topped with one topping of our choice, whipped cream, almonds and a cherry. Jessie went with the traditional vanilla and I went with Mint Cookie ice cream. After scarfing down my sundae, I realized I would have been completely content with the petite size.
Our friend Dave got the Banana Jr that was anything but junior! A banana slice was buried under 3 heaping scoops of vanilla, chocolate and strawberry ice cream which was covered in pineapple, strawberries and hot fudge. With additional toppings of whipped cream, almonds and a cherry. Needless to say, it is not a diet friendly dish.
Saturday, September 18, 2010
Sunday, September 12, 2010
Baingan Bharta (Eggplant Curry)
Having church earlier now leaves me more time in the afternoon to make a Sunday dinner. A neighbor dropped off an eggplant earlier in the week so that was the inspiration for tonight's meal. I asked Lindsie what she would do with it and she sent me a link to a recipe for Baingan Bharta.
Next time I will double the recipe because this was enough to serve myself, Dean and Greg with no second servings. It was a tasty meal for cooking with eggplant for the first time. I think Dean is starting to get used to our vegetarian dishes. :-)
Ingredients
- 1 large eggplant
- 2 tablespoons olive oil
- 1 teaspoon cumin seeds (could not find cumin seeds at the regular grocery store so used ground cumin instead)
- 1 medium onion, thinly sliced
- 1 tablespoon ginger garlic paste (grated a half inch nub of peeled ginger and 2 cloves of garlic in place of the paste)
- 1 tablespoon curry powder
- 1 tomato, diced
- 1/2 cup plain yogurt (used a 6 oz container)
- 1 fresh jalapeno chile pepper, finely chopped (we used serrano because we had a few left over from Lindsie's Thai curry dish)
- 1 teaspoon salt
- 1/4 bunch cilantro, finely chopped
Directions
- Preheat oven to 425 degrees F (230 degrees C).
- Cut eggplant in half and place cut side down on a medium baking sheet. Bake 30 minutes in the preheated oven, until tender. Remove from heat, cool, peel, and chop.
- If serving with rice, start the rice before you continue. Rice should be done around the same time as the curry.
- Heat oil in a medium saucepan over medium heat. Mix in cumin and onion. Cook and stir until onion is tender.
- Mix ginger garlic paste, curry powder, and tomato into the saucepan, and cook about 1 minute. Stir in yogurt.
- Mix in eggplant and serrano pepper, and season with salt.
- Cover and cook 10 minutes over high heat and stir periodically. Remove cover, reduce heat to low, and continue cooking about 5 minutes.
- Garnish with cilantro to serve.
Next time I will double the recipe because this was enough to serve myself, Dean and Greg with no second servings. It was a tasty meal for cooking with eggplant for the first time. I think Dean is starting to get used to our vegetarian dishes. :-)
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