Summer (Grilled) Ratatouille

One of my favorite movie scenes is from Ratatouille when the hardened hard-to-please food critic tastes Remy the rat’s ratatouille and the scene quickly shifts to him as a young boy coming home upset and his mama putting a plate of ratatouille in front of him.  I love how it shows how a taste brought him back in time to a fond memory.  Food smells and tastes can have a strong effect upon us and seemingly transport us in time.

I love ratatouille (the vegetable medley) and first learnt how to cook it from a James Beard cookbook my mother had owned.  I used to add mushrooms though.  Maybe that’s where my youngest gets his mushroom genes from. It was these thoughts running through my head as I attempted a different way of cooking ratatouille. 

To me ratatouille is a fall dish.  A cold evening warm-you-up dish.  But, eggplant, zucchini, tomatoes, peppers are in season right now.  Seemed like the perfect time to make it.  Since it’s summer, I thought grilling the vegetables made better sense.  I was planning to grill some chicken anyway.  I found this recipe I liked by Emeril Lagasse and only changed it a little to accommodate what I had in the fridge or garden.  This recipe is time consuming, so beware.

Grilled Vegetable Ratatouille

  • Ÿ        2 Eggplants- peeled and cut into lengthwise ½ inch pieces.  Sprinkle with salt and let stand in bowl for 20 minutes.
  • Ÿ        2 Zucchinis- cut lengthwise into ½ inch thick strips
  • Ÿ       2-3  Squash- (don’t advise you to use crook neck like I had, unless you peel it as it’s skin was too tough) cut lengthwise into ½ inch thick strips
  • Ÿ         2 large ripe tomatoes- cubed
  • Ÿ         2 bell peppers (I used green and purple, but any color is good)
  • Ÿ         Red onion- peeled and cut onion into ½ inch  rings (yellow onion would work too)
  • Ÿ         Basil- large handful, chopped
  • Ÿ         Parsley- handful, chopped
  • Ÿ         Hungarian hot peppers- cut top and take out seeds and white ribs
  • Ÿ         4 garlic cloves- peeled
  • Ÿ         Olive oil
  • Ÿ         1-2 Tbsp Balsamic vinegar
  • Ÿ         Sea salt & fresh ground pepper

Coat the garlic with olive oil and roast in foil boats on grill until soft. Coat each vegetable (not tomatoes) with olive oil, salt and pepper and grill, turning several times, until soft.  Peel the bell peppers (if you put over flame to blister outside then pop it in a paper bag, the skin comes off easier).  Once vegetables are cooked cut into ½ inch pieces. Crush garlic and toss with tomatoes and all the vegetables (except Hungarian hot peppers).  Add herbs.  Drizzle a little vinegar over vegetable mix and separate into two bowls. In one bowl add the chopped Hungarian hot pepper.  This way you can control the heat factor for the kids.  Mine like some hot things (wasabi, chili) but not all.  The grilled pepper sweetens and loses some of its heat when it’s grilled, but not enough for all my little ones’ palates. 

I served it with a grilled half chicken (coated in olive oil, s&p, chopped sage and rosemary).  Since the bones were still on the chicken it took at least 30 minutes.  I kind of lost track of time with refereeing kids’ squabbles and the ratatouille making.    I also made some just-picked Swiss chard about which my 3 year old declared “I love it!”.

The ratatouille was deemed “delicious” by my 8 year old.  When I asked my 6 year old if he liked it he humorously responded “red” by which I eventually understood to mean “no”.  My 3 year old refused to try it.  Since he had seconds of Swiss chard, I didn’t make him taste it.  It was still on his plate and one day, he might even say it was “delicious“ and remember the dish fondly as an adult.  Until then he will get served a small amount and soon will be made to try just one bite.  No dessert for any of them since they didn’t finish— it’s my way of ensuring the healthier foods get eaten: eventually. 

BTW, I served a soft tortilla and some ate it whole but my eldest made the chicken, brown rice and Swiss chard into a burrito; which my middle son soon followed suit.  It’s a great trick to make food fun.

Grilled Chicken with Indian/Asian Spices

I was browsing through Jamie Oliver’s recipes when I came across a marinated and grilled chicken dish.  I took the idea but adapted it… I do that sometimes, depending on what I have in the house, what I like, and/or what I think might work.  Sometimes it works, other times it doesn’t.  This time was a big winner.  Love when it happens.  Especially when all three kids and I like it!

Mix together into paste:

  • 1 tsp garam massala
  • 1 tsp  paprika
  • 1 tsp turmeric
  • 1 tsp coriander seed (first toast in pan then grind with mortar/pestle)
  • 1/4 tsp allspice
  • 1/4 tsp ginger
  • 1/2 ground garlic
  • juice of one lime
  • 2 Tbsp pureed tomatoes
  • 1/4 cup olive oil

Coat boneless, skinless chicken thighs on both sides and let sit in refrigerator for one or more hours.  Grill until done about 5-8 minutes each side depending on thickness, should read about 140F before you take off and let sit 5-10 minutes before serving as it will keep cooking.  (For safety reasons chicken should be cooked to 165F) 

I served it with brown rice (cheated— Trader Joe’s 3 minutes in microwave, baby!), steamed kale and broccoli from our CSA.

Kids really loved it and I found a new dish that I can also cut into small pieces and serve as appetizers at parties.  Woo-hoo!

 

Priorities

Tonight I came down to the kitchen, having fallen asleep reading to my sons hours before, to the dishes and pans piled up from tonight’s dinner.  Ugh.  Last thing I felt like doing was dishes.  The dishwasher was full of clean things I put on this afternoon and the pots and pans still needed to be washed.  The funny thing about my love of cooking is that I am anything but a domestic goddess; I hate cleaning the house and doing laundry.  I am constantly battling piles of papers that I need to weed through.  But that never stops me from cooking, especially for others.  I remember at university I’d rather cook a spectacular Indian/Japanese meal for my 7 flat mates (it was really 5 but we had one live-in girlfriend and an exchange student staying with us for several months), than go to my lectures.  Messed up priorities.

I mean, I love in the summer that we often grill, just so that clean up is easier.  Or in the winter a crock pot meal is perfect for the ease of cleaning and also that the prep time is not during the kids’ witching hour.  Marinating a food for grilling later can also cut your stress when you’ve planned that day’s dinner beforehand.  Even if we are pressed for time, I usually  make sure my kids have healthy meals.  I will take short cuts but won’t skimp on vegetables.

Today, I was reading a Parent & Child magazine my son brought home from school and saw a recipe for chicken satay.  I love satay, and though I haven’t made it before, thought my kids would love it too.  I had time this morning so I made the recipe. But I thought about the satay that was made in a restaurant I worked at during senior year of high school and thought they made it without the peanut butter in the marinade, so I adapted it in another marinade as well. 

 

Annabel Karmel’s Satay Marinade:

  • 1 Tbsp grated ginger
  • 1 clove garlic, crushed
  • 1 Tbsp lime juice
  • 1 Tbsp soy sauce (I use tamari)
  • 1 Tbsp honey (try to buy local)
  • 1Tspn peanut butter (I use Trader Joe’s Organic salted- just peanuts and salt)

My version had above without the peanut butter and I added a Tbsp of OJ. I pretty sure the restaurant I worked at used pineapple juice but I didn’t have any.  

Annabel Karmel’s Peanut sauce

  • 1/3 cup chunky peanut butter (I only had smooth, but it was ok)
  • 1/3 cup coconut milk
  • 1/3 cup water  
  • 1 Tbsp sweet chili sauce
  • 1 tsp soy sauce
  • 1 tsp lime juice

I cut the chicken breasts into strips and marinated them in two different containers in the

fridge for 8-9 hours.

So, this evening, after I started the grill, I made my vegetables and grains.  I used the Trader Joe’s Harvest Grains.  It’s a mixture of Israeli Couscous, orzo, baby garbanzo beans and red quinoa. It takes 10 minutes to cook, very easy.  My eldest loves it so much, we always make enough for leftovers so he can take it to school for a snack. 

We had baby spinach from our CSA and broccoli.   Those are probably our go-to vegetables.  All three of my kids love them and I can store it more than a couple of days if need be.  If you’ve read my other posts, I did my usual preparation— steam, shock, reheat with little butter, sea salt and pepper.  Tonight I added a little garlic powder to the spinach. 

My kids loved the satay but didn’t care too much for the peanut sauce because they supposedly don’t like coconut at the moment.  News to me.   But they cleaned their plates of all their vegetables and most of the grains. 

Now, I have dishes to do.  I washed up the pots and pans, rinsed the food off the plates and cutlery, and will unload/reload in the morning.  Now it’s time for bed.  Priorities.

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