- 6ounces dried farfalle (bow-tie pasta)
- 1tablespoon olive oil
- 1medium onion, chopped
- 1cup sliced portobello or other fresh mushrooms
- 2cloves garlic, minced
- 4cups thinly sliced fresh spinach
- 1teaspoon snipped fresh thyme
- 1/8teaspoon pepper
- 2tablespoons shredded Parmesan cheese
Friday, March 1, 2013
Spinach Mushroom Farfalle
Chicken Noodle Casserole
- 4stalks celery, chopped
- 1medium onion, chopped
- 1tablespoon vegetable oil
- 2pounds chicken legs and/or thighs
- 1/2teaspoon ground black pepper
- 1teaspoon dried thyme, crushed
- 1/2teaspoon salt
- 1slice bread
- 112 ounce package jumbo or extra-large egg noodles
- 18 ounce container sour cream dip, cheddar French onion dip, or French onion dip
- 2tablespoons all-purpose flour
- Nonstick cooking spray
- 2tablespoons fresh parsley
Monday, March 28, 2011
Butternut Squash, Parmesan & Pasta
By: erin, taken from NaturallyElla

- Prep Time:
10 min - Cook Time:
45 min - Ready In:
55 min
- 2 cups butternut squash 1/2" cubes
- 1 medium onion cubed
- 1 tablespoon rosemary
- 1/2 tablespoon olive oil
- 1/4 cup walnut pieces
- 1 tablespoon butter
- 4 ounces pasta
- 1/3 cup parmesan cheese
- Pre-heat oven to 425˚. Toss butternut squash, onion, rosemary, and olive oil together in a bowl. Spread on a sheet tray and roast until tender-about 25 minutes.
- Cook pasta according to box (or use fresh pasta). In a small skillet over medium heat, toast walnuts for 2-3 minutes. Add butter and let melt. Toss together pasta, butter, walnuts, and roasted veggies together. Place in serving bowls and grate parmesan over pasta mixture.
Butternut Squash Ravioli with Maple Sage Cream Sauce
By: erin, found at NaturallyElla

- Prep Time:
45 min - Cook Time:
30 min - Ready In:
1 hour, 15 min
- 1 recipe for whole wheat pasta dough link below
Filling
- 2 cups butternut squash
- 1 cup summer squash
- 1 clove garlic
- 1 tablespoon olive oil
- salt and pepper
- 1/4 cup caramelized onions (or quickly saute some onions until soft)
- 1 cup parmesan cheese
Sauce
- 1 tablespoon butter
- 1 clove garlic
- 1 tablespoon flour
- 2 tablespoons Nuefchatel cheese
- 1/2 cup milk I used skim
- 1 tablespoon fresh sage minced
- 1 tablespoon maple syrup
- salt and pepper to taste
- Pre-heat oven to 375˚. Peel and cube the butternut squash, dice yellow squash, and roughly chop the garlic. Toss squash mixture in olive oil and spread out on a sheet tray covered in tin foil. Sprinkle a pinch of salt and pepper over and bake for 25-30 minutes until squash in tender. Place squash in food processor and let run until squash is pureed. Stir in parmesan cheese and onions, set aside.
- While squash is roasted, make one recipe of whole wheat past dough.Once pasta is ready to go, divide in half and roll out each on a floured surface into a rectangles, 1/8" thick. Spoon 1 Tablespoon of squash mixture into rows on one piece of the pasta. Make sure as you create your rows you are leaving enough room to press the edges together. Once you have the first side ready, lay the second piece of pasta over the filling. press down lightly around each ravioli and then cut out squares.
- In a large pot, bring water to a boil.
- While waiting for water to boil, begin to make sauce. Melt butter in a small sauce pan and add in garlic. Saute until garlic becomes soft and fragrant. Whisk in cheese, sage, and flour until mixture is smooth. Continue to cook for 1-2 minutes. Pour milk into the pan while whisking and continue to whisk until sauce is smooth. Add in maple syrup and continue to whisk until sauce begins to think. Taste, add salt and pepper, then remove from heat.
- Once water in the large pot is boiling, add in ravioli, making sure to not crowd the pan. Let boil until ravioli float to the top. Remove with a slotted spoon, plate, and drizzle sauce on top.

Sunday, February 7, 2010
Create-Your-Own (perfect) Pasta Salad in 5 steps
Five Steps to Perfect Pasta Salad
By: Pam Anderson
Pam's formula:
Step 1. Pasta
Step 2. Key ingredients
Step 3. Intense flavors
Step 4. Onions & herbs
Step 5. Dressing
I teach cooking classes across the country, and as often as a possible, I demonstrate pasta salad. Why? Because people make it all the time. (When's the last time you attended a potluck that didn't have a pasta salad?) But rarely do these sturdy, colorful, economical salads taste as good as they look. They can be dry, bland, oily, sharp or uninteresting.
For a stunning, irresistible pasta salad, follow the five steps I've outlined here. If you're nervous about making your own salad, simply pretend you're at a salad bar. Be creative with ingredients you like to eat, but use a little common sense. When making an Asian-style salad, for example, use typical stir-fry ingredients such as celery and bell peppers.
Using this formula as a guide, you'll create beautiful pasta salads that will have people asking for your recipe. The proportions given make enough to serve as a side dish to 12 to 16 people.
Step 1:
Cook 1 pound of pasta. Select a 16-ounce box or bag of bite-size pasta. I recommend farfalle (bow ties), fusilli (corkscrews), penne, ziti, rotelle (wagon wheels), macaroni or small shells. Cook the pasta in a gallon of boiling water seasoned with 2 tablespoons of salt (that's right, 2 tablespoons!) until just tender. Drain but do not rinse the pasta. Instead, dump it onto a large-lipped cookie sheet to cool and dry. Don't worry if the pasta sticks together. The dressing will break it up.
Step 2:
Prepare 2 pounds of key ingredients. These are the salad's major add-ins: cooked and raw vegetables, poultry, seafood, canned beans and mild cheeses, for example. Some need little or no preparation before going into the salad. Others can be cooked in the pot of water along with the pasta. Still others are best sauteed or grilled. Choose at least 3 major flavorings. It's good to let one ingredient lead (for example, 1 pound of asparagus with 8 ounces each of sliced mushrooms and cherry tomatoes, for a total of 2 pounds).
Options for cooked vegetables
These can cook right along with the pasta in the pot of boiling water. Add them to the cooking pasta during the last minute of boiling. Drain and cool them with the pasta for that just-right, tender-crisp texture.
- Broccoli or cauliflower, florets cut into bite-size pieces, stems peeled and cut into 1/4-inch thick coins
- Asparagus, trimmed and cut into bite-size lengths
- Carrots, peeled and cut into 1/4-inch coins
- Green beans, trimmed and cut into bite-size lengths
- Snow peas or sugar snap peas, strings removed
- Zucchini, quartered lengthwise and sliced 1/4-inch thick
Options for no-fuss vegetables
- Canned artichoke hearts, drained, rinsed and quartered
- Bean sprouts
- Celery, sliced 1/4-inch thick
- Mushrooms, thinly sliced
- Cucumbers, quartered lengthwise, cut into bite-size pieces and lightly salted
- Fennel, trimmed, halved, cored and thinly sliced
- Avocados, halved, pitted, peeled and cut into bite-size pieces (add at last minute to prevent darkening)
- Zucchini, halved lengthwise if small, quartered lengthwise if large, then thinly sliced
- Cherry tomatoes, halved and lightly salted
- Bell peppers, cored and cut into bite-size strips
- Tomatoes, seeded and cut into medium dice and lightly salted
- Frozen green peas, thawed
Options for grilled or broiled vegetables
All of these vegetables should be brushed with olive oil and sprinkled with salt and pepper before grilling or broiling.
- Eggplant, cut into 1/2-inch-thick rounds; cut into bite-size pieces after grilling
- Fennel, trimmed, halved, core left intact, and cut into wedges; cut away tough core after grilling
- Large whole mushrooms; slice or quarter after grilling
- Bell peppers, cored, seeded and quartered; cut into bite-size pieces after grilling
- Zucchini, cut on the diagonal into slices 1/2-inch thick
Options for sauteed vegetables
Asian-style salads taste best with lightly sauteed vegetables, particularly celery and peppers.
- Celery, sliced 1/4-inch thick
- Bell peppers, cored, seeded and cut into bite-size strips
Options for other major add-ins
- Canned beans, drained and rinsed
- Chicken breasts, grilled, sauteed or steamed and cut crosswise into thin bite-size strips
- Italian sausage, steam-sauteed and sliced thin on a slight bias
- Cooked lobster
- Cooked and peeled shrimp
- Canned tuna, drained
- Mild cheeses (e.g., mozzarella, cheddar, Swiss, Monterey Jack), cut into 1/2-inch cubes
- Crabmeat (pasteurized lump), picked over for shell
- Ham, sliced 1/4-inch thick and cut into bite-size strips
Step 3:
Choose intense flavors. Stronger- tasting than the major add-ins, these ingredients should be used more sparingly. Pick at least one representative from this category, but feel free to use two or three--roasted peppers, pine nuts and feta cheese, for example, will give the salad a Mediterranean feel. If making an Asian-style salad, stick to nuts and seeds.
Options
In most cases, add about 1/2 cup, unless otherwise noted.
- Feta, crumbled
- Parmesan, shaved with a vegetable peeler
- Goat cheese, crumbled
- Capers, drained (1/4 cup)
- Olives, pitted and coarsely chopped
- Peperoncini, drained and thinly sliced
- Roasted peppers, cut into strips
- Sun-dried tomatoes packed in oil, cut into small dice
- Bacon, fried and crumbled (8 ounces)
- Prosciutto (8 ounces), thinly sliced, cut into small dice
- Smoked salmon (8 ounces), thinly sliced, then cut into thin strips (other smoked fish and shellfish are possibilities as well)
- Pine nuts, toasted
Roasted cashews, coarsely chopped - Roasted or honey-roasted peanuts, coarsely chopped
- Toasted sesame seeds (1/4 cup)
- Sunflower seeds
Step 4:
Add onions and herbs. No matter what else is in your pasta salad, always add three large green onions, sliced, or half of a small red onion, diced. The types of onions are completely interchangeable, although I tend to use green onions for Asian-style salads.
Then mince 3 tablespoons fresh herbs and/or grate 2 teaspoons orange or lemon zest (the peel minus the bitter white pith).
For Asian-style pasta salads, consider cilantro, basil and/or the citrus zests. Dill and mint are usually compatible with creamy-style salads. Because rosemary and tarragon are such strong flavors, use just 1 tablespoon of either herb combined with 2 tablespoons of minced parsley.
And if you're ever in doubt about which herbs to use, you'll never go wrong with good ol' chopped fresh parsley.
Step 5:
Make a dressing. Whether you prepare one of the following dressings or choose another, you'll need 1 cup to coat the salad. The key is to make sure the dressing is thick and emulsified; otherwise, the pasta absorbs the vinegar while the oil clings in droplets to the pasta's surface. Stick with milder rice wine vinegar or lemon juice. Balsamic vinegar, while flavorful, turns the pasta an unattractive brown, and stronger vinegars make bright green vegetables drab.
Each of these recipes makes about 1 cup. You can prepare the ingredients in advance, but toss the salad and dressing only 15 minutes before serving.
