Mushroom, Spinach, and Sausage Penne

When I was growing up, every kid I knew loved Popeye the Sailor Man. We followed the comic in the Sunday newspapers and roared with our friends when a Popeye cartoon came on the screen before the matinee at the theater Saturday afternoons. When we tried to cadge a Coke at the drug store, we loved to promise, “I’ll gladly pay you Tuesday,” but since the soda jerks knew us we were less successful than Wimpy who loved to beg for hamburgers.

Adults liked the comics ands cartoons too. By 1938 Popeye was a more popular cartoon character than Mickey Mouse. He got his strength from eating canned spinach. When his girlfriend Olive Oyl was in danger from the nasty Bluto, Popeye needed only to gulp down a can of the green stuff to get the best of his foe.

Popeye was capable of great things. One miraculous thing he did was to increase the consumption of canned spinach in the US by nearly a third during the 1930’s. The most popular brand was Popeye Spinach, which was the kind my mother forced us to eat at least once a month. “It’s good for you, it has lots of iron to make you strong like Popeye.” I figured that he had to be strong to eat the stuff.

After we were married, Jerri continued the torture. Every couple of weeks she served canned spinach with a chopped hardboiled egg and vinegar. Though it’s still not my favorite, her recipe for canned spinach made it palatable if not exactly a gourmet food.

Then one day I discovered that I liked spinach, fresh spinach to be exact. A friend sneaked some into a salad and when I asked what the dark green leaves were that tasted so good, she told me that it was spinach from their garden. I have been hooked ever since.

The recipe below is further evidence that lightly cooked fresh spinach is a food of the gods.

INGREDIENTS:

1 T olive oil
1/2 lb. breakfast sausage
8 oz. penne pasta
Water and salt to cook the penne
8 oz. mushrooms
2 cloves garlic
1/2 cup Parmesan cheese
12 oz can cream of mushroom soup
2 – 3 T dry white wine
2 – 3 cups chopped spinach
Grind or two of black pepper

PROCEDURE:

Start warming the water for the pasta over low heat.

Clean and slice the mushrooms and put them into a medium bowl.

Wash and coarsely chop the spinach.

Put a tablespoon of olive oil into a large skillet over medium heat. Add the sausage and break it into small pieces. Cook it until it is no longer pink, seven to eight minutes.

Remove the paper from the garlic and mince it. Add the mushrooms to the sausage and cook them for four to five minutes. Add the minced garlic and cook for another two or three minutes.

Bring the pasta water to a boil while the sausage is cooking. Add a teaspoon of salt and the penne. Cook until it reaches the al dente stage, about ten minutes, then drain it.

Add the cream of mushroom soup, wine and Parmesan cheese to the sausage and stir for two or three minutes. Turn the heat to low and add the spinach and pasta. Grind some black pepper into the mixture and stir to mix well until the spinach has wilted.

Taste and adjust the seasoning.

NOTES: Spinach may not make you as strong as Popeye, but it has significant amounts of vitamins A, C and K, so it really is good for you.

We use either sauvignon blanc or Chardonnay wine. In a pinch you could use vermouth, but avoid any of the sweeter wines like Riesling or Gewürztraminer.

This recipe benefits a lot from the spinach, so don’t be afraid to add a generous three cups of it, but if you are cooking for people who announce that they don’t like spinach, use only two cups and tell them that the green stuff is kale. If they say that they don’t like kale either, you might offer them peanut butter sandwiches.

Pork and Broccoli Stir-Fry

Lard sandwiches. They don’t sound very tasty to me, but lard is actually lower in saturated fats than butter and contains none of the trans fats found in most margarines. Of course, in the Great Depression people didn’t eat lard sandwiches for the health benefits. They ate them because lard was cheap. They trimmed the pork roast before it went into the pot, rendered the fat to make lard and used the lard to make sandwiches.

Cooks like my grandmother and mother also used the lard to make biscuits and pie crusts and saved bacon grease to fry potatoes or season vegetables. They didn’t do it because bacon grease happens to be really great for frying potatoes or because lard makes good biscuits and crusts. They did it because they couldn’t afford to waste food.

Things were tough for millions of families during the 1930’s and my mother’s family was no exception. When my grandmother developed tuberculosis and went to the sanatorium in Eau Claire, Wisconsin, my mother became the family cook and learned to make lard sandwiches.

Even as a girl she was willing to experiment in the kitchen. She told me that her onion lard and apple lard sandwiches were popular. I don’t remember eating any, but my father said Mom’s apple lard sandwiches were delicious, so I may have eaten them without knowing what they were. When I asked how she made them, she told me that she just chopped an apple, fried it in lard and mashed it to make a spread. It’s possible that when I thought I was eating apple butter it was really apple lard.

I don’t remember Mom making apple peel jelly or chicken foot soup (two other recipes popular in the Great Depression), but she didn’t waste very much food. She taught me to enjoy the core from the cabbage she chopped to make boiled dinner and fed any bad outer leaves to the chickens. She never threw away a potato or apple just because it had a bad spot. Jerri’s mom had the same thrifty habits. Our mothers cut away the damaged parts and used the rest, and we do the same today.

Americans waste a huge amount of food. According to a 2015 study by the Natural Resources Defense Council, forty percent of harvested food in the United States is now wasted. That amounts to 35 million tons each year worth $165 billion dollars or over $2,000 per family. Jerri and I waste some food, of course, but our mothers trained us well. For instance, we use the thick stems from the broccoli that some people throw away. Good chefs use those stems too. They don’t throw out something that costs over a dollar a pound and tastes good.

Broccoli florets are the unopened flowers on the head of the broccoli. The small stems and flower buds are tender and cook very quickly. The large stems taste just as good as the florets but they are tougher and take a little longer to cook. Just follow the recipe below and add them a few minutes before you cook the florets.

This stir fry is delicious for dinner and the leftovers make a tasty lunch the following day. We warm them in the microwave. No need to waste anything!

INGREDIENTS:

1 lb. lean boneless pork
1 T vegetable oil
1 large or 2 medium garlic cloves
1/8 tsp. dried chili pepper flakes
4 cups fresh broccoli
1/2 red bell pepper
1/2 green bell pepper
1/2 lb. mushrooms
3-4 scallions
3/4 cup water
3/4 tsp. instant chicken bouillon
1 T cornstarch
2 T oyster sauce
1 T soy sauce
1/2 tsp. minced fresh ginger
1 cup white rice
2 cups water
1/2 tsp. salt
Black pepper (optional)

PROCEDURE:

First prepare the ingredients. Slice the pork into quarter inch strips about an inch and a half long and set them aside in a bowl. Peel and mince the ginger and add it to the meat.

Wash and trim thin slices from the cut ends of the broccoli stalks. Discard the trimmings and chop the stalks into a half-inch dice and set them aside in a small bowl. After removing the paper from the garlic, mince it and put it in the same bowl as the broccoli stem pieces. Top the stems and garlic with the chili pepper flakes.

Separate the florets into bite-sized pieces and set them aside in a medium-sized bowl.

Clean and cut the mushrooms in half, then cut each half into four or five slices. Clean and chop the scallions into quarter inch rounds. Put the mushrooms and onions into the bowl with the broccoli florets.

Wash and remove the stems, seeds and white membrane from the peppers. Cut the peppers into thin slices about two inches long. Set the peppers aside in another small bowl.

Dissolve the chicken bouillon, cornstarch, oyster sauce, and soy sauce in three-fourths cup of water in a small bowl and set it aside.

Now you are ready to begin cooking the ingredients. Start by rinsing the rice and bringing two cups of water and the salt to a boil in a one quart pan with a tight-fitting lid. Stir in the rice and bring the pan back to a boil. Turn the heat down to a simmer, put the lid on and allow the rice to cook until the water is all absorbed. Do not remove the lid for the first fifteen minutes. Turn off the heat and fluff the rice with a fork before serving.

After the rice is simmering, heat the oil in a large skillet or wok, coating the bottom and sides of the pan. Add the garlic and meat and stir fry it until it has turned from pink to white, about three minutes. Add the broccoli stalk pieces, garlic and pepper flakes and continue cooking for another three to four minutes.

Add the broccoli florets, mushrooms and onions to the pan and stir fry them for three minutes. Stir in the peppers, add a teaspoon of water, cover, and steam the meat and vegetables for another minute.

Add the broth mixture to the pan and stir to coat the meat and vegetables with the sauce as it cooks for about three minutes, thickens and becomes smooth and clear.

Taste and adjust the seasoning with a little more soy or oyster sauce or pepper if necessary. Serve over the rice with tea, beer or white wine.

NOTES: This recipe is a fun one to do when you are expecting guests for dinner, since you can prepare everything ahead of time. Once the rice is simmering, you can continue visiting from the kitchen as you empty bowls into the skillet or wok and keep stirring. People will be impressed.