Jerri’s Ham and Swiss Lasagna

Like many good cooks who enjoy trying new recipes, Jerri notes ones that turned out especially well by writing the name and page number of the recipe on the flyleaf of the cookbook where she found it. “It saves a lot of time,” she observes.

There are four thus noted in the Better Homes and Gardens Meat Stretcher Cook Book, which we bought shortly after it was published in 1974. She annotated others throughout the thin volume that came close to making the cut as truly superior. “Good, but a little bland” is her assessment of a ham and cheese bake while Pork Florentine earned a “Good.” In the margin for Corn Chowder she judged it good and said that you could also make it with ham rather than bacon and suggested adding some chopped carrot for color.

I’m sure that she tried many recipes in the book, but there is not one negative comment, unless “bland” qualifies. Like me, she was taught to say nothing if you couldn’t say something nice. Unlike me, she follows that rule.

Of the four recipes she listed on the flyleaf, Ham and Swiss Lasagna is the one we have most often. This may be partly because when Jerri was giving piano lessons, she cooked things that she could assemble before her students came for lessons after school and pop in the oven a half hour or so before I got home from work.

But we cook it today because it is easy to make and has a combination of flavors that we find delicious.

INGREDIENTS:

6 Lasagna noodles
1/4 cup chopped onion
1/4 cup chopped green bell pepper
2 T butter
3 T all-purpose flour
1 3/4 cups milk
5 – 6 ounces Swiss cheese
2 cups chopped cooked ham
1 can mushroom stems and pieces
Paprika

PROCEDURE:

Start by heating the water to cook the lasagna noodles. As the water is heating, peel an onion and finely chop a quarter cup of it. Wash and finely chop a quarter cup of green bell pepper. Chop about two cups of cooked ham into a quarter inch dice.

Thinly slice about five ounces of Swiss cheese and set it aside.

Cook the lasagna noodles according to the package directions until the noodles are al dente, about thirteen or fourteen minutes. Rinse them in cold water and set the drained noodles aside.

Warm the milk to steaming in the microwave or a small saucepan over moderate heat. Preheat the oven to 375º. Drain the mushrooms.

Heat the butter to foaming over moderate heat, then add the onions and pepper. Cook the vegetables for three minutes, then stir in the flour and cook the mixture another minute, string constantly. Blend in the milk and keep stirring until the sauce bubbles and thickens. Stir in the ham and mushrooms and remove the sauce from the heat.

Grease an eight by eight or six by ten inch baking dish. Arrange three of the noodles on the bottom of the dish, cover them with half of the sauce, then cover the sauce with a layer of Swiss cheese. Repeat with a second layer of each ingredient and finish with a sprinkle of paprika.

Bake the lasagna, covered, for about twenty-five minutes until everything is heated through. Remove the lasagna from the oven and allow it to cool for ten to fifteen minutes before serving.

This recipe makes six servings.

NOTES: Simple as it is, this dish deserves the honor of being served with with a good beer or a pinot noir or sauvignon blanc wine. Pair it with some French bread and butter and a green salad for a simple but elegant dinner.

A four ounce can of mushrooms works fine, but you can also sauté about four ounces of fresh mushrooms, which makes the dish taste even better.

Lorrie’s Baked Oatmeal

Long before Jerri became my wife, when she was in high school, she had a dog named Inkabelle Susan (a.k.a. Inky). She also had a loving father who got up at dawn and left her a serving of oatmeal on the pilot light of the range every morning before he took his pickup to check on the steers in the pasture about four miles west of town.

Jerri loved her father, but she also loved Inky, so she never told her father that she really did not like oatmeal left on the pilot light but she did give Inky a nice warm serving of oatmeal in his dish every morning. Both her father and dog thought Jerri was a wonderful person.

Jerri was the starting pitcher on her high school softball team. Jerri’s father came to just about every home game to watch his daughter play the game he loved. Inky came because he loved the girl who gave him such good breakfasts. Jerri’s father sat in the bleachers and cheered. Inky came out to the pitcher’s mound and sat beside Jerri until he was led away by the umpire.

When Jerri and her parents went to church Sunday mornings in the summer, her mother and father sat in their pew and listened proudly as their daughter played the piano for the service. Inky came and sat by the pianist until he was escorted out by an usher.

And it was all because of the oatmeal.

Not long ago I asked a friend if she had any special recipes that she cooked for her family. Lorrie paused a moment, then told me that they really liked her baked oatmeal. When I confessed that I had never even heard of baked oatmeal, she said she would send me the recipe.

She did, and I made it, and both Jerri and I think it is a delicious addition to any family’s list of breakfast or brunch dishes. Made according to Lorrie’s instructions, it is a kind of oatmeal pudding with a just a hint of a crunchy texture from the steel cut oats. The oats, applesauce and fruit combine to make this a dish that tastes good and is good for you.

We used frozen blueberries for the fruit, and all I can say is if you enjoy blueberry muffins or pancakes, you’ll like baked oatmeal with blueberries.

If your oven heats quickly and you mix the dry ingredients together before you go to bed, you can have this breakfast casserole baking in ten minutes.

INGREDIENTS:

2-1/2 cups regular rolled oats
1/4 cup oat bran
1/4 cup steel-cut oats
2 tsp. baking powder
1/2 tsp. salt
1/2 tsp. ground cinnamon
2 cups milk
1 large egg
1/3 cup applesauce
1/4 cup canola oil
1/4 cup granulated sugar
1/4 cup packed brown sugar
2 cups fresh or frozen fruit (such as blueberries, pears, apples or strawberries)
Yoghurt or milk or cream

PROCEDURE:

Preheat the oven to 400° Fahrenheit and lightly grease a two or three quart casserole or soufflé dish.

Stir together the rolled oats, steel-cut oats, oat bran, baking powder, salt, and cinnamon in a large mixing bowl. In a medium bowl beat the egg until it is lemon colored, then whisk in the milk, applesauce, oil, and sugars. Stir the liquid ingredients into the dry oat mixture and mix well.

Pour the batter into the soufflé dish or casserole and bake for twenty minutes. Remove the casserole from the oven, stir the oatmeal and gently fold in the fruit. Return the casserole to the oven and bake it for another twenty minutes. Check to see if the top is lightly brown. If not, bake it for another four or five minutes..

Spoon the oatmeal into bowls and serve it warm. Pass cream, half and half, milk or yoghurt that diners can add at the table.

NOTES: This recipe makes six to eight servings. Lorrie says that you can use many different kinds of fruit. She recommended blueberries, pears, apples and strawberries as good choices. Next time I make this baked oatmeal I plan on using some blueberry craisins. If I don’t forget I will add a note to this recipe with the results of the experiment.

This recipe almost begs one to try different fruits. If you find one you like, let me know and I will share your report.