Saturday night I relied on a tried-and-true recipe from a Food & Wine cookbook: Pasta with Canned Tuna, Capers, and Olives. Literally just heat up the tuna with some spices, olives, and capers and bam! A yummy, delicious, inexpensive dinner. I think I ate an entire "family" portion myself. I've found myself eating more as a vegetarian - I guess I'm not filling up with meat proteins and consequently I'm eating larger meals and snacks throughout the day. And that's completely fine by me.
Sunday night I needed something filling and nutritious, but could be prepared ahead of time. I was to pick up Sophie & Erik from the airport at 7pm - poor child had been traveling for 12 hours, I really didn't want to make her wait for a warm dinner. Ah! Vegetable lasagna! I've never made lasagna before and consequently looked over several recipes to get the feel of the meal - one called for broccoli and no tomato sauce (yuck!), another was just sauce and cheese (oh please). So I experimented and come up with a pretty darn fine meal.
Layers from bottom up (3x):
1) preboiled, not-quite-done lasagna noodles
2) 10oz thawed spinach, squeezed of excess water - stirred into jar of pasta sauce
3) spooned ricotta with some shredded mozzarella sprinkled on top
4) then repeat 2 more times, adding some Parmesan on the top layer
5) pop in oven at 400 degrees for about 30 minutes and yuuuuuuum
*I admit it was a lot of spinach - I might scale back the next time.
After a quick reheat everyone, small children included (!) ate large portions! Yaaay!
1) preboiled, not-quite-done lasagna noodles
2) 10oz thawed spinach, squeezed of excess water - stirred into jar of pasta sauce
3) spooned ricotta with some shredded mozzarella sprinkled on top
4) then repeat 2 more times, adding some Parmesan on the top layer
5) pop in oven at 400 degrees for about 30 minutes and yuuuuuuum
*I admit it was a lot of spinach - I might scale back the next time.
After a quick reheat everyone, small children included (!) ate large portions! Yaaay!
I have to say I'm proud to have successfully improvised with this recipe. I usually follow the instructions to the letter, unsure of my skills as an interpretative "chef" (wait, you don't have to actually measure out that 1/2 tsp. of salt?). Erik teases me for it - but I'm slowly learning to trust my cooking intuition. In college, I can still remember being astounded when a roommate constructed a meal from seemingly nothing. Peering in the refrigerator, he said "alright, looks like we have some linguine, pesto, some fresh bread, even spinach - we could make a nice pasta dish". I blinked quietly and said softly "you can do that? just make up a meal?". I felt slightly ashamed when asked with bewilderment "you've never done that?!" I was lost without a frozen box with printed instructions...
1 comment:
Sounds really yummy! :) Every time I try to cook lasagna, it ends up really awful, even with following a recipe.
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