Currently viewing the tag: "Red Ace Beets"

This dish has an earthy flavor that has sweetness and complexity to it. It can serve as a side dish, a base to a stack of items, or thinned a little it can be a sauce. Formed into quenelles it elevates the lowly beet into something quite elegant. A scattering of tender fresh herbs such as tarragon, basil, or shiso is nice, and chervil seems to work quite well here.

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These quick pickled beets can be seasoned with whatever herbs or spices will suit your palate or recipe. For this recipe, the quickling solution is heated up and the beets lightly cook in it while absorbing the flavors. Use these in salads, sandwiches, and as a side to a main course.

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Although the notion of the apricots may seem odd, they are a nice contrast to the slightly bitter lettuce and earthy beets, and the acid is nice against the cheese. Sort of like using dried cranberries or raisins in a salad, but brighter. Whatever you use, the cheese should be a lightly crumbly and not too salty. Think in terms of little logs of chevre, a less briny feta, or even ricotta salata grated.

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This is a variation on the Quickle theme. The “pickling” solution is heated to infuse it with the flavors of the herbs and spices, and then is poured over the roasted beets so it is absorbed as the beets cool. Tarragon is a great flavor to go with beets, and the other spices are there to enhance this marriage.

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The dressing for this salad has only a little cream in it, hence it is mentioned last. It is just creamy enough enhance the earthiness of beets and offset any sharpness of the mustard. The colors of this salad are nice and bright, and the flavors are vivacious. If you do not have a fixed-blade slicer for the carrots, see the method for using a peeler in the notes. A grater just doesn’t give sharp edges to the carrots to achieve the desired effect of crispness.

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This is a variation on the classic Red Flannel Hash of New England. There are many versions of this dish, some starting with raw vegetables, some use already cooked vegetables (left over from the corned beef dinner of the night before), some with eggs, all usually with corned beef. This version uses some cooked veg, some raw, and does not call for any meat, although there is an option for that. Also, this version calls for a smaller dice than most recipes, but this yields more crunchy surface while allowing the vegetables to cook all the way through without burning the surface. If you wish to use eggs, you can either cook them separately or add them to the mix and bake the lot until the eggs are done.

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Red Ace BeetsClick for beet recipes

We grow several varieties of beets.  Red Ace beets are the earthy deep red kind. Chioggia beets are a beautiful candy-striped beet, an heirloom variety from the Italian town of Chioggia, near Venice. Golden beets are sweet (and won’t turn everything you are cooking red). 

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Here is a variation of the beet and kale salad. Using a mandolin for this is ideal, but a grater could be used, although the beets will bleed and the apples will break down more rapidly.

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When my rosemary plant flowers, I like to collect the flowers and infuse honey with them. I use this fragrant honey to glaze vegetables and pork, for lacquering poultry, and on yogurt. I love the floral notes this infusion gives up. See recipe below for making rosemary flower infused honey.

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With one large beet in my fridge and a beet-themed dinner in the future, I decided to make a beet-asiago gnocchi for dinner. Most people roll their gnocchi dough into a thick straw and cut the gnocchi; in Italy I was taught to hand-form them, so mine look less uniform.

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INGREDIENTS:

1 bunch of beets
1 teaspoon olive oil
salt and pepper to taste
2 tablespoons of water
1-2 tablespoons vinegar such as white balsamic or sherry

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INGREDIENTS:

2 cups roasted beets
1 Tbsp neutral flavored oil such as grapeseed or olive oil
1 Tbsp unsalted butter
2 oz. orange juice

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