Tag: ratatouille

Zucchini Caponata

Caponata is a traditional Sicilian eggplant dish  that is similar to ratatouille, except it that it’s sweeter and more sour (thanks to vinegar and sugar!). I first tried caponata at Ruth’s kosher restaurant in Florence last summer and I fell in love. Here I made a lighter zucchini version with summer squash, to make the most of it as summer comes to an end!

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Zucchini Caponata

3 tbsp olive oil
1 medium onion, chopped
1 stalk celery, sliced
4 cloves garlic, sliced
1 red pepper, diced
1 yellow squash, diced
1 large zucchini, diced
1 plum tomato, diced
8oz tomato sauce
1/4 cup sliced castelveltrano olives
2 tbsp capers
1/4 cup red wine vinegar
1-2 tbsp sugar
Salt and pepper, to taste
1 tbsp tomato paste
1/3 cup chopped fresh parsley

Method:

Heat the olive oil in a large sauté pans, Add the onions and celery and sauté until translucent. Add the sliced garlic and stir until fragrant. Stir in the red pepper, squash, zucchini, and tomato. Seasoned with salt and sauté until softened. At the tomato sauce, olives, capers, vinegar, sugar, salt and pepper. Stir in the tomato paste and Simmer over low-medium heat for until the vegetables are tender and the sauce has thickened, about 20 minutes. Stir in parsley and serve.

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Italian Antipasto Salad

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Ratatouille Roast Chicken

Y’all know I’m not really one for traditional dishes, but if there’s any time where tradition plays an essential role, it’s Passover, or Pesach. The Passover seder is all about the rituals that we observe each year – from preparing our homes and making them chometz-free (free of any leavened grains), to eating matza and morror (bitter herbs), drinking four cups of wine, hiding the afikomen and reciting the Haggadah. It’s all about, as Fiddler-on-the-Roof used to say, TRADISHUN!

Because this holiday has always been about creating special memories with family, I’m all about the simple kosher-for-Passover foods that my mom prepared each year. On the eve of Passover, we would all wash up with soap, put on some aprons and get to work peeling and chopping veggies for her classic Pesach dishes.

We’d fill mason jars with ratatouille, mock chopped liver, cucumber salad and vinaigrette (a salad of cooked beets, carrots, potatoes and red onion) and each meal over Passover, we’d dig a little deeper into the jars, until they were finished. Somehow, we never got bored of eating the same dishes over and over again because that’s what the holiday was all about.

This ratatouille dish is not quite the same as my mom used to make (since she did not use any processed ingredients like spices or tomato paste!), but it’s definitely inspired by the Passover dish of my youth.

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chimicken
pulled pesto chicken with fire roasted tomato jam
harissa roasted chicken

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