This recipe was given to me from a friend, Erin, whose blog can be found here (It's About Birth is not a cooking blog, it's um, about birth). The original recipe is from Ina Garten's book "How Easy Is That?"
¼ cup olive oil, divided
1 leek, white and light green parts, thinly sliced
2 large or 3 medium carrots, peeled and diced
1 tsp. minced garlic (I used quite a bit more, around a tablespoon)
1 cup lentils
1 whole onion, peeled, halved
6 whole cloves (I skipped the cloves because I didn't have any)1 white turnip, cut in half
4 tsp. Dijon mustard
2 Tbsp. red wine vinegar
1 Tbsp. kosher salt (I think this might be a typo and it should be 1 tsp. because this was way too salty)
1 tsp. freshly ground black pepper
1 tsp. unsalted butter
chopped parsley for garnish
Heat 1 Tbsp. olive oil in a large saute pan over medium heat. Add the leek and carrots, cook 5 minutes. Add garlic and cook until fragrant, about 60 seconds. Turn off heat and set aside.
Carefully pierce the onion halves with the cloves (as you would with a large ham) and add to a large saucepan with lentils, turnip, and 4 cups water. Bring to a boil, lower the heat, and add leek-carrot mixture. Simmer uncovered 20-30 minutes or until lentils are tender (for some reason this took quite a bit longer than 30 minutes for me).
While the lentils simmer, prepare the dressing. In a large mixing bowl, whisk together 3 Tbsp. olive oil, Dijon, red wine vinegar, salt, and pepper.
Once lentils are done, remove and discard turnip halves and onion. Drain lentils and toss with dressing plus 1 tsp. unsalted butter. Let cool about 15 minutes until warm (but not room temperature).
My pictures of this dish didn't really turn out. They all just looked like piles of lentils on a plate. I should have taken a picture of Eli with lentils smushed all over his face because that would have been cute. Instead I give you this:
Review - This recipe needs some tweaking. I think the tablespoon of Kosher salt was way too much. It was also pretty tangy, almost too tangy. I'm not sure how I would compensate for the tang factor, maybe adding some plain yogurt or cream to the dressing. I'm not going to put too much thought into it because I probably won't be making these again (sorry Erin and Ina). Josie took one bite and spit it out. Eli picked out the carrots. Jay said it was good, but I think he was being nice. He didn't have seconds. He always has seconds. My positive out of this is that I learned what leeks and turnips look like. I'd never cooked with either before tonight. The leeks were really pretty. I'm looking forward to trying another dish with leeks in it, probably sooner than later because I have another one sitting in my vegetable drawer.
No comments:
Post a Comment