Archives

Cozy Cold-Weather Bolognese

When I broke my fifteen-plus years of vegetarianism, this bolognese was one of the dishes I was most excited to enjoy again. I don’t have an Italian grandmother or any particular memory of it, but the experience of this kind of sauce is everything that makes cooking feel like magic. As the meat browns and begins to go from soft and pink to dark brown and crispy, the air is full of savory, buttery smells. You add the vegetables and the aroma becomes

more complex, then suddenly a rush of steam and a burst of bright sweetness hit you as the wine deglazes the pan. Then the tomato paste mixes with the fats, and suddenly it looks like sauce and smells almost illegally savory. Finally, the tomato and milk and parmesan simmer, and you take off the lid and it’s gone from soupy to a thick, red, oily sauce that smells like everything you could ever want. It’s not fast, but this is Potions Class and you are making magic.

This recipe is from Good Enough.

Good Enough cover

My newest creation, Good Enough, is a self-care cookbook that offers personal and vulnerable storytelling, delicious recipes, and encouraging advice to teach you how to accept yourself, love yourself, and find peace through the act of cooking. Learn more! I have more cookbooks, too!

Cozy Cold-Weather Bolognese
Print Recipe
TL;DR: Brown beef and pork, combine with chopped vegetables, and cook for 20 minutes. Deglaze pan, add remaining sauce ingredients, and cook for 45 minutes more. As the sauce cooks, boil pasta, grate cheese, and chop parsley for serving.
Servings
8 to 12
Servings
8 to 12
Cozy Cold-Weather Bolognese
Print Recipe
TL;DR: Brown beef and pork, combine with chopped vegetables, and cook for 20 minutes. Deglaze pan, add remaining sauce ingredients, and cook for 45 minutes more. As the sauce cooks, boil pasta, grate cheese, and chop parsley for serving.
Servings
8 to 12
Servings
8 to 12
Ingredients
  • 4 tablespoons butter (1/2 stick)
  • 1 pound ground beef
  • 1 pound ground pork
  • 1 teaspoon fine sea salt plus more to taste
  • 2 small red onions diced
  • 1 large carrot diced
  • 2 ribs celery diced
  • 1 (any color) bell pepper stemmed, seeded, and diced
  • 1/2 cup dry white wine
  • 6 tablespoons tomato paste (3 oz)
  • 1 28 oz. can tomatoes crushed or diced
  • 1 cup whole milk
  • 1 parmesan rind (see note)
  • 1 pound pasta of your choice such as tagliatelle (traditional) or orecchiette (pictured)
  • grated parmesan for serving
  • chopped flat leaf parsley for serving
Instructions
  1. Melt the butter in a Dutch oven or a large heavy-bottomed pot over medium heat. If it begins to brown, that is just fine, but make sure it doesn’t burn. Add the beef, pork, and 1 teaspoon of salt and break up the meat with a wooden spoon. Let the meat cook, stirring occasionally, until it is no longer pink and has plenty of dark brown bits, 15 to 20 minutes.
  2. Add the onions, carrot, celery, and bell pepper to the browned meat and stir. Place a tight lid on top and let the vegetables sweat, stirring occasionally, until they cook down about halfway in volume and your kitchen smells incredibly savory, about 20 minutes.
  3. At this point you will probably have some dark brown sticky bits on the bottom of the pan. This is good! Pour in the white wine and stir to gently lift the brown bits off the bottom of the pan. Cook until the mixture dries out a bit, a few minutes more.
  4. Add the tomato paste, mix it up with everything, and leave it until it loses its bright red uncooked color, a couple of minutes. Then add the canned tomatoes, milk, and parmesan rind—which will add a lot of savory saltiness! Stir it all together and put the lid on, just a little askew so a small amount of steam can escape. Turn down the heat to low and gently simmer for about 45 minutes.
  5. Cook the pasta in boiling salted water according to the package instructions, but take it off the heat a minute or so before it reaches al dente. That way the pasta will cook through in the sauce, drinking in a little more of the bolognese flavor. Drain the pasta and taste the sauce; add more salt, if needed. Add the pasta to the sauce and cook until it is al dente and totally covered in sauce, a minute or so.
  6. Remove the parmesan rind and serve the pasta and sauce in bowls, topped with grated parmesan and chopped parsley. Any leftovers will keep in a sealed container for a week in the fridge.
Recipe Notes

Note: The white wine deglazes the pan, meaning it gets the delicious brown bits into the sauce instead of letting them burn.

Note: I make a lighter, warm- weather version of this by substituting finely chopped cauliflower for half the meat;
I add the cauliflower with the other vegetables in Step 2. It is still lovely and hearty without sitting quite so heavily in your tummy.

Note: The parmesan rind adds salty richness to the sauce. If you don’t have one, just add
1 extra teaspoon of salt in Step 4.

Fast White Bean, Chorizo, and Hearty Greens Stew

This recipe is from Good Enough.

Good Enough cover

My newest creation, Good Enough, is a self-care cookbook that offers personal and vulnerable storytelling, delicious recipes, and encouraging advice to teach you how to accept yourself, love yourself, and find peace through the act of cooking. Learn more! I have more cookbooks, too!

It has taken maturity to embrace the glorious simplicity of this kind of dinner. My inner critic is prone to telling me that it’s not creative enough or new enough or whatever overachieving mark you might expect from a perfectionist fantasy. But this stew is made of pantry staples, comes together in 20 minutes, and is delicious, nourishing, and balanced. It’s a dream of a meal—fun to make, fun to eat, and proof that simple is wonderful. Like all stews, it gets better with a few days in the fridge. It also works well as a side dish for a larger barbecue meal and as a potluck dish.

Fast White Bean, Chorizo and Hearty Greens Stew
Print Recipe
TL;DR: Sauté vegetables, then chorizo and tomato paste. Add beans and water and cook until thickened and flavorful. Add greens and eat.
Servings
4
Servings
4
Fast White Bean, Chorizo and Hearty Greens Stew
Print Recipe
TL;DR: Sauté vegetables, then chorizo and tomato paste. Add beans and water and cook until thickened and flavorful. Add greens and eat.
Servings
4
Servings
4
Ingredients
  • 2 tbsp butter
  • 2 shallots (or 1 red onion) chopped
  • 1 bell pepper stemmed, seeded, and chopped
  • 1 tsp fine sea salt plus extra as needed
  • 5 ounces fresh chorizo or other sausage casings removed
  • 1 tbsp tomato paste
  • 2 cans white beans or chickpeas 15.5 oz each or thereabouts
  • handfuls hearty greens, such as spinach, kale, chard, or collards
  • Farro, pasta, rice, or hearty bread, for serving
Instructions
  1. Melt the butter in a medium pot over medium-high heat. Add the shallots, bell pepper, and 1⁄2 teaspoon of the salt to the pot and cook, stirring occasionally, until the shallots are translucent, 3 to 5 minutes
  2. Add the chorizo and tomato paste, using a wooden spoon to break up the chorizo. Cook until the chorizo is cooked through and beginning to brown, another 3 minutes. Then add the beans, 11⁄2 cups of water, and the remaining 1⁄2 teaspoon of salt. Put a lid on the pot and let it cook for about 10 minutes.
  3. Taste the stew and add more salt if you think it needs it. Squish a few of the beans with the back of the spoon to thicken the broth. Turn off the heat, add the greens, and stir them into the stew until wilted.
  4. Dollop the stew into bowls over farro, pasta, or rice, or serve with bread for dunking.
Recipe Notes

FEELING ADVENTUROUS?

• Use any sausage, ground meat, or meat alternative in place of the chorizo in Step 2. Try sweet Italian sausage, finished with parmesan or romano, for a different experience, or lamb sausage with harissa, coriander, and fennel seed for a North african take on the dish.

• add chile powder and/or chopped chiles along with the chorizo in Step 2.

Sunday Morning Pancakes with Coffee Syrup

This recipe is from Good Enough.

Good Enough cover

My newest creation, Good Enough, is a self-care cookbook that offers personal and vulnerable storytelling, delicious recipes, and encouraging advice to teach you how to accept yourself, love yourself, and find peace through the act of cooking. Learn more! I have more cookbooks, too!

One day I decided to stop trying to make pancakes healthy, and that was the time my husband said, with eyes wide, “Wow, sometimes I forget how good a cook you are, and then this happens.” So now, of course, I make them this way all the time. I am as vulnerable to flattery as the next person. These pancakes are rich, pillowy, buttery, and really quite cakey, but without the sweetness. They leave the job of sweetness for the syrup, and for their part they will soak that syrup up expertly.

You can easily add berries, banana slices, or chocolate chips to these pancakes. Simply sprinkle them on top of the pancakes after you have them in the pan, but before the flip to the second side. This works much better than trying to add the mix-ins to the batter itself.

In our house, we often make slightly more coffee than we can drink before it gets cold. Sometimes, by the time we get done running around after a small person, what’s left in the pot isn’t that appealing. So one day, when we had run out of maple syrup, I thought I should take that unappealing cold coffee and add sugar and heat. The result is surprisingly dark and complex, without being too in your face about its coffee-ness. Pouring this syrup over your pancakes creates the feeling of a great diner experience, where the smell of coffee is always in the background.

Sunday Morning Pancakes with Coffee Syrup
Print Recipe
TL;DR for Pancakes: Mix batter, let it sit for 10 minutes, then cook the pancakes in a hot pan. TL;DR for syrup: Bring leftover coffee and sugar to a boil, thicken into a syrup, and add vanilla.
Servings
8 to 10 pancakes and 1 cup of syrup
Servings
8 to 10 pancakes and 1 cup of syrup
Sunday Morning Pancakes with Coffee Syrup
Print Recipe
TL;DR for Pancakes: Mix batter, let it sit for 10 minutes, then cook the pancakes in a hot pan. TL;DR for syrup: Bring leftover coffee and sugar to a boil, thicken into a syrup, and add vanilla.
Servings
8 to 10 pancakes and 1 cup of syrup
Servings
8 to 10 pancakes and 1 cup of syrup
Ingredients
Pancakes
  • 1 cup all purpose flour
  • 1 tablespoon baking powder
  • 1 tablespoon sugar brown or white
  • 1 teaspoon sea salt
  • 2 large eggs at room temperatutre
  • 1/2 cup butter plus more for the pan
  • 1 tablespoon apple cider vinegar or distilled white vinegar
  • 1/2 cup plain yogurt
  • 1/2 cup whole milk
  • fresh fruit for serving
Coffee Syrup
  • 1 1/4 cups brewed coffee
  • 1 cup sugar
  • 1/2 teaspoon vanilla extract
Instructions
Pancakes
  1. Measure the flour, baking powder, sugar, and salt into a small bowl and give it a quick whisk so that all the ingredients are reasonably distributed.
  2. Crack the eggs into a large bowl and whisk them. Melt the butter in the microwave or on the stovetop and, whisking continuously, pour it into the egg mixture slowly, to prevent scrambling the eggs. Whisk until you have a smooth, thick, yellow liquid that looks kind of like hollandaise.
  3. Pour the vinegar into a liquid measuring cup, then add the yogurt and milk and stir. You should have 1 cup total. Let the mixture sit for a couple of minutes. Then, whisking continuously, slowly pour it into the egg mixture.
  4. Sprinkle the flour mixture over the wet mixture and gently mix it with a wooden spoon until most of the dry ingredients are incorporated. It’s okay to leave the batter a little lumpy because the lumps will cook themselves out. It’s much better to undermix than to overmix and have tough, chewy pancakes. Let the batter sit for 10 minutes.
  5. Preheat the oven to 150°F or the warm setting. Place an oven-safe plate or baking sheet in the oven—that’s where you’ll leave finished pancakes to keep warm while you make the rest.
  6. Place a cast-iron skillet over medium-low heat. Add a pat of butter to the pan and gently swirl it to coat. Use a ladle to pour a dollop of pancake batter into the buttered pan. It should become reasonably round naturally. It looks messy but will seize up and start cooking soon, so don’t panic. I usually do two pancakes at a time in our pan, but you can do more if your pan is bigger or if you are braver.
  7. Let the pancakes cook until bubbles begin to form not just around the edges but all the way through to the middle and they begin to look a little dry at the edges, 2 to 3 minutes. Then use a spatula to flip them over with confidence. Cook until they are just lightly browned on the bottom, another minute or so. The second side is always faster. Remove the pancakes from the pan and place them on the warming plate in the oven. (The truly perfect time to flip is just before the edges begin to dry out. You’ll get the hang of it with practice.)
  8. Repeat until you are finished with the pancake batter, adding more butter to the pan in between each batch.
  9. Serve the pancakes warm with Coffee Syrup (or your favorite syrup), fresh fruit, and whatever else you like!
Coffee Syrup
  1. Pour the coffee and sugar into a small saucepan. Bring to a boil over medium heat, then turn the heat down to medium-low and simmer until the liquid thickens into a syrup, about 20 minutes.
  2. Remove the pan from the heat, add the vanilla, and stir.
  3. Use the syrup immediately over pancakes, plain oatmeal, yogurt, ice cream, coffee cake, and so on. Or let the syrup cool and store it in an airtight canning jar or bottle in the fridge for up to a month.

Brussels Sprouts Hash and Eggs

cast iron pan with brussels sprouts hash and eggs

This recipe is from Good and Cheap.

Good and Cheap cover 2nd edition

Good and Cheap is a gorgeous cookbook for people with limited income, particularly on a $4/day food stamps budget. The PDF is free (ahora en Español!) and has been downloaded more than 15,000,000 times. I have more cookbooks, too!

This brussels sprouts hash and eggs is a great light lunch or side dish. The brussels sprouts get salty and tangy from the olive and lemon, then crispy and caramelized on the bottom. Mix in the little bit of fat from the egg yolk, and wow is this delicious. I make this often at food demonstrations and workshops and it is always a hit!

Keep reading

Leanne Brown

Hi, I'm Leanne Brown. I’m a bestselling cookbook author. I want to help you find peace, healing and freedom through cooking.

Sign up for my newsletter!

Subscribe
Good Enough cover

My newest creation, Good Enough, is a self-care cookbook that offers personal and vulnerable storytelling, delicious recipes, and encouraging advice to teach you how to accept yourself, love yourself, and find peace through the act of cooking. Learn more here!

Good and Cheap cover 2nd edition

Good and Cheap is a gorgeous cookbook for people with limited income, particularly on a $4/day food stamps budget. The PDF is free (ahora en Español!) and has been downloaded over 15,000,000 times. For more info, see All About Good and Cheap and Donation Impact.

Sign up for my newsletter!

Subscribe