This is a post that I've meant to write for a very long time. I took all the pictures for it, twice, and never managed to actually write it. So I am taking the pictures a third time and writing the heck out of it.
This is a recipe I got on
Digs Magazine, "a home and living guide for the post-college, pre-parenthood, quasi-adult generation." The main creator, Yee-Fan Sun, wrote a book called
First Digs, had twins, and
abandoned the website, it seems. But the
archive is still up, and I hope it stays that way. Needless to say, I've saved and printed many recipes from her site just in case. The Zucchini Pasta I made last week was from there, as are several other of my favorite pasta dishes, breads, and meats. Many of the recipes are targeted at either A) Entertaining on the cheap or B) Feeding one or two without a metric ton of leftovers.
So.
Linguine with mushrooms in cream sauce is a recipe that I like, Dan likes, and Sam will at least eat the plain noodles portion. That's sort of how a lot of my pasta dishes work out for Sam. One modification I've made to the recipe is that I double the amounts of everything in the sauce. We just wanted a higher proportion of mushrooms and sauce with our noodles.
Earlier in the day I try to chop the shallot and slice the mushrooms. Shallots are one of the best kept secrets I've discovered in recent memory. They are shaped a little like garlic cloves, but their interior is more like a very delicate onion. I find that they taste a bit like a cross between the two, only a little more mellow. I chop mine similar to how I do an
onion, but with smaller rows and columns. My shallot was fairly large so I didn't use two this time. It had three lobes, and normally what I get is one with two and one with one, so, same diff.
Big ol' shallot
Three lobes
Ready to throw in the fridge until cookin' time
I threw a little saran wrap on my ramekin of shallot and tossed it in the fridge. Now it was time for the mushrooms. My least favorite part of cooking with mushrooms is cleaning them. You don't wash mushrooms with water because they absorb too much of it. Instead, you sort of brush or rub any residual
growing medium off of them and call it a day. I don't have a fancy mushroom brush so I use a paper towel. My preferred mushroom for this recipe is baby bella (aka crimini with a name that makes people think they are cute). I've made it with regular white button mushrooms, but in a recipe where they are really the star ingredient and there's no color elsewhere, cooked white mushrooms take on a boring grey color that just makes the whole thing unappetizing. On the other hand, criminis, porcinis, or whatever else you want to use will probably turn a nice brown when cooked, which will in turn give the cream sauce a nice color. Anyhow, down to business with my mushrooms.
Remember, double recipe. Great with pasta...no, really?
Since the cleaning and slicing of the mushrooms can be kind of tedious, I tend to do one container from start to finish and then do the other. It also saves room on my cutting board.
Batch one, cleaned
Then I slice off most of the stem from each mushroom and discard. Too much stem can make the next step more difficult, and I just like having that fresh cut rather than a tough edge. Next, I put each mushroom through my egg slicer. Yes, I go through a lot of egg slicers this way...about one every couple years. Yes, it is worth it. You might wonder why I don't just buy the presliced mushrooms they sell at the store. To be honest, I have done so in a pinch. I really dislike doing it for several reasons: 1. They are usually more expensive. 2. They are dang near impossible to clean and I usually find bits of growing medium in with the slices. 3. They leave on too much stem for my taste, and 4. They are cut a bit thicker than I like, which makes them take longer to cook. Just not a fan.
Caps getting sliced
Batch one, cleaned and sliced
All of the mushrooms cleaned and sliced, ready to pop in the fridge.
When it's time to start cooking, I put a large covered stockpot 2/3-3/4 full of water on the back burner of my stove on high heat. In a large skillet, I saute the shallot and garlic in oil for a few minutes, until it is softened and translucent. Then come the mushrooms. I let them cook for a good while before adding the wine. Finally, when the wine has cooked down a bit, I add the cream (I used half and half) and let that cook down and thicken. Meanwhile, I'm cooking a half box of linguine according to package instructions. When everything's just about ready I grind some sea salt over the sauce and plate it up. This is another one that could be served with a salad or bread, but it usually is enough food for all of us without it. Here are some crappy photos of the process and final result.
Shallot and garlic starting to cook
Just tossed in the mushrooms
Added the wine
Added the half-and-half
All done!
I had a coupon for the mushrooms, so this meal cost very little. $2.56 for mushrooms, $0.36 for the shallot, and about $0.33 worth of pasta, $0.85 worth of cooking wine, probably about another dollar worth of cream+oil+salt+garlic. Roughly $5 to feed two adults and a preschooler, drinks not included. Not bad!
Tonight is tacos, so I probably won't write as much about that recipe, since it's just 1. brown meat & drain 2. add seasoning packet 3. put it in tortillas. Which means I might have to write about my feelings. Oh no! :)