Showing posts with label lasagna. Show all posts
Showing posts with label lasagna. Show all posts

Friday, June 10, 2011

Fun Playing With Pasta in Solon

Something new has been added to Solon's main drag, with the opening of Dino's of Solon in the old Anthony's/Blue Fig/Lu-Lu's spot at 6372 Som Center Rd, Solon, OH 44139. Dino's is the latest installment of a small, locally owned group of restaurants/caterers based in Willoughby. Dino's relies on a fairly standard Italian-American-Red Sauce type menu. If this is what you crave, you will also find plenty of old-fashioned touches and quality ingredients prepared well and served with a smile. The website for the Solon restaurant isn't fully operational yet, but may be found here.

Bob and I wandered in Thursday evening, which turned out to be only their second day in operation. The space is bright and airy, and the smaller front dining room is ideal for those with mobility issues. The tables were mostly occupied when we arrived a bit before 7pm; a line for tables formed shortly after we were seated. There were a few small service hiccups, but nothing I wouldn't expect from a restaurant in its second service. 

We were started with a basket of warm rolls. Though the menu says they are made in house, they struck us as the pre-fab brown and serve variety - but still nice. 


We both opted for pasta; each entree would be preceded by salad.

House-made Vinaigrette

We loved this dressing - redolent with fresh herbiness and perfect balance among the components.



Two elements raised this salad above what I'd normally expect in a place like Dino's - first, it wasn't chilled to Mister Freeze temperature and second, the lettuce was actual head lettuce that had been washed and torn to make salad, not poured out of a food service bag. You can see it and taste it, and my question to the FOH person who stopped by to check on us confirmed it (she said her mother, one of the owners, is on a mission to eliminate bagged salad from the face of the earth, to which I say, bravo!).

The menu describes two types of house-made pasta - spaghetti (which I do not believe is the default for side orders; spaghetti is also listed twice as an entree, with the house-made at a slightly higher price-point than the dried) and cavatelli. I asked our server - which do I want? She recommended the cavatelli.


Lasagna

This was Bob's entree.  The menu does not tell you that the pasta sheets in the lasagna are fresh pasta and not dried - but fresh pasta it is! This is a straight-ahead version of the classic, topped with just the right amount of house-made sauce. The only criticism we had of this dish (and mine as well) was a bit of blandness to it - it wanted some salt and pepper, or other seasoning, to wake it up a bit. Dino's does offer an optional garlic-marinara sauce; we need to try that next time. The default tomato sauce is a family recipe that is made in-house.


Cavatelli with One Meatball



My dinner likewise lacked seasoning, but the freshness of the components jumped right off of the plate. The house-made pasta was cooked to the perfect level of doneness, and the flavors of pork, veal and beef shone clearly through the meatball, without fillers to block their way. As you can see, Dino's does not over-sauce their pasta dishes as so many other places do. Overall, Bob and I enjoyed playing with Dino's food and we will return to play some more (I need to try the pizza). Dino's is open for lunch and dinner seven days a week, at very modest prices. The space is very casual and friendly, with a full bar and outside dining also available. Welcome to Solon, Dino's!

Thursday, December 23, 2010

Fun Playing with Lasagna with Help From Ohio City Pasta and Michael Symon

Lasagna is one of those foods, like meatloaf, that everyone's mom makes and it's all good. And I don't know about your mom - but my mom's lasagna rocks. I still can't exactly duplicate my mom's delicious lasagna, but to me, it was always the best lasagna.

Bob and I planned to shop at the West Side Market last Saturday and pick up the December installment of my Ohio City Pasta prize - and I'd been fantasizing about making a lasagna with fresh OCP pasta sheets and frozen garden tomatoes. I don't usually follow a recipe when making lasagna, though I do like to consult a couple of "reference" recipes when constructing the sauce. For years, my "go to" for this purpose has been from Dom De Luise's "Eat This, You'll Feel Better," which I've annotated with tips from other chefs I respect. But I knew that Michael Symon's book Live to Cook had a sauce recipe, which is why I reached for our copy of this book last Friday night. It turned out that the Iron Chef included his mom's lasagna recipe! And that recipe contained some unique elements, like using pork neck bones in building the sauce. I couldn't wait to try it.

The recipe's ingredient list practically begged for a trip to the West Side Market. I knew we could get every ingredient that we didn't already have, including pork neck bones and fresh mozzarella. We'd also defrosted a pound of Miller Livestock Co. ground beef (which we could have bought at Foster's Meats at the WSM if we didn't already have) and a pound of spicy Italian sausage from our Breychak Farm hog (we could have gotten lovely sausage at the Market if we'd needed it). The only deliberate variation from Michael's recipe would be the use of fresh pasta from OCP rather than dried. I was excited to photograph and blog this meal because it would be loaded with fantastic, locally sourced ingredients and promised to taste so good. I anticipated those photos capping off a post showing off the Ohio City Pasta prizes from October, November and December (don't worry - I'll be showing you October and November shortly in another post).

After a Saturday morning of running around and shopping, about 3pm, I propped open the book and began to follow the recipe. If I use an actual recipe when cooking (which isn't often), I like to follow it pretty exactly  the first time I use it - how else will I learn anything new? However, over the next two hours, it became apparent that somehow, the recipe contained a few wrong turns.

When Alton Brown signed our copy of "I'm Just Here For More Food," he made a point of correcting a typo that found it's way into a recipe for pizza dough (page 238) that he told us could kill him - the "chewable children's vitamin C" in the recipe proof sent to the printer somehow came out of publication as "aspirin." Alton told us that he is deathly allergic to aspirin, and this fact made the publishing error just a bit ominous, even though it was sheer happenstance. My friends Linda and Fred Griffith have written no fewer than six cookbooks (one of which won a James Beard Award), and they also tell me that these kinds of things happen more than you'd think between final proofs and publication. So - I regret that a long day and late dinner made me rant to my Facebook friends about  some glitches in the published lasagna recipe. Of course, it isn't every day that people who are involved in the creation of a published cookbook are also reading your FB posts - but I now know on very reliable authority that the recipe for "Mom's Lasagna" on page 234 of Live to Cook has a couple of publishing errors. And while those errors led to some extra fussing and achy feet last weekend - they did not detract from the ultimate deliciousness of the dish. Which by coincidence, Michael's mom actually made for him the very next day!

I was blissfully unaware of any of these issues as I prepped the items needed for the sauce pan.
 

Chopped Farmers' Market Onion, Garden Garlic, Bay Leaves


Pork Neck Bones - Foster's Meats (WSM)


Hot Italian Sausage - Breychak Farms Berkshire Hog


Ground Beef -  Miller Livestock Co.


Ground Veal - Sebastian's Meats (WSM)

Unfortunately, the very first steps of the recipe became my undoing. The recipe said to sweat the onion and garlic in olive oil with salt, then add the pork bones and brown them, then add the rest of the meat and brown on medium heat. Oops. Moments after the bones hit the pan, I knew I was in trouble. The high heat needed to brown the bones would scorch the vegetables. So I scooped the bones out. Then I scooped the veggies out. Then I returned the bones to the pan on high heat to brown. But since I hadn't re-rinsed the bones, bits of garlic and onion were stuck to them, and yes, they burned. Ruined the fond. Luckily, the smallest piece of neckbone Foster's had was 1.5 pounds - a bit more than the 1 pound called for in the recipe. So even though I lost the fond, my sauce still had a fabulous depth of porky flavor. Note to self - always brown the bones first, then meats, then and only then veggies and only after removing said meats from the pan. No matter what the recipe says. The sauce also seemed to need more tomato balance, so I added a small can of tomato paste a bit at a time as the sauce simmered.

And [insert best Droopy voice] do you know what? Though it wasn't fun while it was happening (it was a pain in the buns to switch to a clean pan and to get everything in the right order, and we did try to save the scorched fond), and though the process took about two hours total because of the snafu - the final result was a mighty fine, mighty porky, yet still beefy sauce:


While the sauce simmered for two more hours, I assembled the ricotta cheese mixture. Thankfully, the recipe did not call for the traditional bechemel sauce, which would have required still more cooking prior to final assembly.


Fresh Ricotta - MEDITERRANEAN IMPORTED FOODS STAND: NW Corner of the Market


Fresh Mozzarella - MEDITERRANEAN IMPORTED FOODS STAND: NW Corner of the Market


Fresh Ohio City Pasta Sheets





The Ohio City Pasta was simply fabulous. I neither precooked it, nor did I slice it into strips, as some online recipes suggested. Due to the large size of the pan (Bob talked me out of using a smaller glass lasagna pan in favor of a roasting pan), it took two sheets of pasta to make each layer (which is why I didn't cut it up further). Also, I should note that OCP makes several flavors of pasta sheet, though we stuck with the traditional for this application.



Here, a layer of sauce is covered by the raw OCP, then a layer of sauce.



The ricotta was mixed with fresh parsley and oregano, and frozen garden basil, as well as farmers' market eggs and some of the fresh mozzarella that didn't like my attempt to grate it in the Cuisinart. A layer was spread over the sauce in the pan. Then more fresh pasta, sauce and cheese mixture. Since the fresh mozzarella didn't like the automated grating process (though to be fair, grating a similarly fresh cheese by hand on the box grater did work), I sliced the rest for the topping. That's how my mom topped her lasagna, anyway. A generous dose of grated Parmesan went on top as well, per the recipe. Covered and baked for an hour, then uncovered and baked for half an hour - we got this:



Another oops - I probably should have cut the pasta sheets into strips - we got a bit of an air bubble, which disappeared upon insertion of a sharp knife point.



And so, around 10pm - dinner was served, and yes, it was a dinner worth waiting for. We added additional mozzarella to the top of the leftovers for the re-heats (remember, I lost a bunch of my original mozzarella topping to the Cuisinart, though it's in there!), but don't worry, the top layer of cheese only looks sparse - the taste and texture were simply marvelous.



The OCP pasta sheets added an even fresher and toothier dimension to the fabulous ingredients listed in the recipe. The only other note is that the final product needed more salt - I suspect that the raw pasta cooking in the lasagna pan may have sucked out some of the salt from the other ingredients.  But with a little sprinke of salt, the taste was sublime. No, this wasn't my mom's lasagna - but it was definitely a mom's lasagna and most worthy of the moniker.







I promise to show you October and November's Ohio City Pasta goodness in another post - but this lasagna seemed to deserve a post of it's own. And we will be enjoying it right through Christmas Eve!

So, what did this kneehopper learn? First - never ever put your brain in park when cooking - even if the recipe originated with people you adore and respect - there are so many ways it can go wrong. Listen to your inner cook if a step in a printed recipe seems a little off. Use amazing ingredients if you can; they can cover many cooking sins. And don't hesitate to laugh at yourself if things seem like they are getting out of hand. Chances are, it will still taste good! Follow these guidelines to play with your food and you will be rewarded with yummies.

Merry Christmas to those who celebrate on Friday and Saturday (I'm going to my first ever Christmas dinner this year), and best of the Holiday Season to all!

Monday, February 2, 2009

Fun Playing With Lasagna Before and During the Superbowl

Superbowl Sunday is a top day for playing with food throughout the United States. Our Superbowl Sunday was no exception. A sure fire choice to be decadent and delicious, but no fuss during the game, is lasagna. Assemble during the day and pop in the oven before the game starts - and you have a hot, comforting dinner by halftime (or in our case, shortly thereafter). Inspired by a couple of friends' posts on Facebook, Bob decided to make a loaf of fresh Italian Bread.

I began in the afternoon by browning some beautiful ground grass-fed beef from Sand Farm LLC. As an aside, as many of you may know, Emma and Brandon (and little Zoe) lost their home and most of their possessions on Christmas Day. Contact Slow Food Ohio if you have anything you can donate to help them out.


Beef Sautees in Olive Oil


Onion, Carrot and Garden Chile Pepper From the Freezer Are Added

Salt and pepper also. I loosely followed Emeril Lagasse's Lasagna recipe. The sauce is liquid enough to cook the dried lasagna noodles perfectly and still have the right sauce consistency.


Garlic Joins the Party


Garden Tomato - Skinned, Seeded, De-Watered and Concentrated

Unfortunately, Bob only prepped about half the amount of tomato I needed, so I also added a can of crushed tomato. Also - about a quart of mixed stock that Bob recently made (turkey, beef, lamb, chicken bones) with a small can of tomato paste whisked in.


Meat Sauce - A Beautiful Thing

I got so caught up in putting together first the cheese mixture, then the lasagna, that I forgot to photograph. Micelli's Ricotta and Mozzerella joined together with 2 Aaron Miller eggs, lots of Romano and Parmesan cheeses, freshly grated nutmeg, salt and pepper and a little milk. This was layered upon the dry pasta sheets, then covered with sauce (except for one layer, which I kept straight cheese).


Ready for the Oven and I haven't Missed a Play or Commercial

Around halftime, Bob dished up some salad and a slice of his beautiful bread:







And then - the lasagna - and we barely had to take our eyes off the TV to serve it!







Here's a shot of it after it cooled - alas, I still failed to really capture the cheesiness - oh the horror!



I hope you had fun playing with your Super Bowl food, too. Oh - who did I root for? Well . . . I live in Cleveland - 'nuff said?