Welcome to the April 25, 2012 issue of the Serious Eats Weekly Recipe Newsletter. Sandwiched Every week we bring you a new sandwich recipe, from dainty tea sandwiches to the hefty Monte Cristo, in our column Sandwiched! The Serious Eats Book Serious Eats: A Comprehensive Guide to Making and Eating Delicious Food Wherever You Are features our favorite eats from across the country and 50 recipes developed by J. Kenji López-Alt. Read more about the book here! Pass it on Know anyone who might be interested in our newsletter? Forward this email to up to 5 friends at once. | This Week's Best Recipes on Serious Eats  - Nigel Slater's Grilled Beef Vietnamese Salad: Tired of boring salads? Try grilled beef, cilantro, and mint, dressed with a pungent mixture of fish sauce, chiles, and sugar.
- Grilled Garlic Bread With White Bean Shrimp Scampi: Grilled country bread gets topped with a 5-minute stew of big, juicy shrimp, creamy, hearty white cannellini beans, white wine, tons of garlic, parsley, cold sweet butter, and arugula.
- Spring Salad Of Asparagus, Ramps, Snap Peas, And Peas, With Poached Egg And Lemon Zest Vinaigrette: Here's a way to get the most out of those perfect spring vegetables.
- Red Wine-Braised Short Ribs With Lemon-Herb Gremolata: Traditionally a cold-weather comfort dish, short ribs get a seasonal update when topped with a citrusy, herbaceous gremolata.
- Colombian and Venezuelan Arepas: Grilled or griddled, cheese-stuffed or plain, Columbian and Venezuelan corn cakes are awesome.
- Salted Chocolate Caramel Tart: A chocolate crust gets filled with gooey caramel, covered with dark chocolate, and sprinkled with sea salt.
- Bi-Rite Creamery's Strawberry Balsamic Ice Cream: This is a bright, fresh, and impressively fruity ice cream that rises above the strawberry pack.
- Perfect Brownies: These brownies are not a mocha-macchiato-molten-center brownie, a death-by-triple-truffle brownie, or a cheesecake-chocolate-crack brownie. They're just a good 'ole basic brownie.
- 5 Fruity Margarita Recipes for Warm-Weather Entertaining: We got out the blender at Serious Eats HQ and perfected five fresh-fruit-focused recipes for everyone's favorite tequila cocktail.
Featured Recipe  [Photograph: David Loftus] These Toasts with Ramp Butter and Fried Quail Eggs from April Bloomfield's A Girl and Her Pig are yet another way to enjoy everyone's favorite fleeting spring vegetable. The butter in this recipe incorporates both the cooked bulb of the ramp and its tender, raw greens into a rich butter dressed up with capers, anchovies, lemon, and chiles. Served on crusty slices of toast with a crisp-runny quail egg, the butter is downright fantastic. And luckily, this recipe makes enough butter that you'll be incorporating ramp butter into many meals to come. What Worked: Adding a few anchovies to the oniony ramp butter is a genius move. Upping the umami factor works to up the tasty quotient. What Didn't: No complaints, especially about the leftover ramp butter in the fridge. Suggested Tweaks: No quail eggs? No problem; your run of the mill chicken eggs will do just fine. And there's no need to reserve this butter for toast. It also makes for a great pasta sauce or finisher for a grilled steak. Reprinted with permission from A Girl and Her Pig by April Bloomfield. Copyright © 2012. Published by Ecco. Available wherever books are sold. All rights reserved. Toasts with Ramp Butter and Fried Quail Eggs - serves 4 - Active time: 30 minutes Total time: 30 minutes Ingredients A scant 1/4 pound ramps, roots trimmed 11 tablespoons unsalted butter, at room temperature Maldon or another flaky sea salt 3 whole salt-packed anchovies, rinsed, soaked, and filleted, then finely chopped 1 tablespoon finely grated lemon zest (from about 2 large lemons) 1 1/2 teaspoons freshly squeezed lemon juice, or more to taste A few glugs of extra virgin olive oil Dried pequin chilis or red pepper flakes Freshly ground black pepper Eight 1/2-inch-thick diagonal slices from a baguette, toasted and cooled 8 quail eggs Procedure 1. Pile the ramps on your cutting board so the bulb ends line up. Start by thinly slicing the bulbs, working your way toward the green leaves. After you’ve sliced the purple stems and reached the greens, make your slices even thinner. Gather the sliced bulbs and stems into a little pile. Set the greens aside for the moment. 2. Put 1 tablespoon of the butter in a sauté pan and set it over medium-high heat. Once it melts and froths, add the sliced ramp bulbs and stems (along with a five-fingered pinch of greens) and a sprinkle of salt. Cook, stirring often, until the ramps have a hint of brown, 2 minutes or so. 3. Scrape the ramps into a bowl and add the remaining 10 tablespoons butter, the anchovies, lemon zest, lemon juice, a glug of olive oil, a few crumbled chilies, and, if you fancy, a few twists of black pepper. Mash, toss, and stir the mixture with a fork or wooden spoon just until everything’s nicely mixed. Give the reserved ramp greens a brief chop, then stir them in. Have a taste. You should taste the gentle onion flavor of the ramps, a good bit of umami-saltiness from the anchovies, and brightness, not tartness, from the lemon. To me, this butter tastes like spring. You might want to add another 1/4 teaspoon salt or another brief squeeze of lemon. (You can refrigerate the butter for a day or two in a bowl, or roll it into a log, if you’re feeling fancy.) 4. Slather the toasts with the ramp butter (you’ll have extra butter; reserve it for another day). 5. Pour a glug or two of oil into a nonstick pan just large enough to hold the eggs comfortably (you can also fry them in 2 batches) and set it over medium-high heat. When the oil is barely smoking, crack the eggs into the pan. (it helps to insert the tip of a knife into the shell, though not so far in that you break the yolk.) You should hear spitting and sizzling when you add them. Cook them until the whites are set and golden brown at the edges but the yolks are still runny, about a minute. Top each toast with a quail egg and add a little sprinkle of salt. Serve straightaway. Last Week's Recipe Last week's Recipe Newsletter recipe was for Zakary Pelaccio's Lobster Club Sandwich. Check out more recipes at Serious Eats! |
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