Thursday, January 22, 2009

Comfort Food


Life as Mom is hosting a recipe swap with the theme of Comfort Food. I searched my mental recipe box for something that would qualify and what I came up with is Toast. There is no recipe to swap but I thought that good old, white bread, melty butter covered toast should get an honorable mention as my favorite comfort food. We rarely have white-bread in the house and whole wheat just isn't the same. Whenever we have the rare loaf of white or better yet Scali bread we all ask for toast.

Now for an actual recipe. I think everything that I make regularly, the things I learned from my mother all count as comfort food. I guess the king would be Shepherd's Pie. This recipe came from my French-Canadian grandfather and we always called it Pate Chinois and frowned on my peasant friends who called it by it's common name :) It wasn't until recent years that I even knew what the name meant. If you are interested you can see it here . After that I got embarrassed by a lifetime of mis-pronunciation and let my family call it Shepherd's Pie.
Here is our recipe.

I've tweaked it a tiny bit because I don't enjoy buying creamed corn - for fear that someone important will see it in my cart and somehow think less of me. This is the original version - no real measurements.

1 small onion
1 lb Ground Beef
1 can Creamed Corn
1 small package of frozen corn
small batch of mashed potatoes (make 'em good)
butter
salt and fresh ground pepper


Preheat the oven to 350. Prepare the mashed potatoes and brown the ground beef with the onion. In a medium casserole dish layer the ingredients in this order starting with the meat.
Browned Meat
Creamed Corn
Regular Corn
Mashed Potatoes


Score the top in fancy swirls with a fork. Dot with butter and sprinkle with salt and fresh ground pepper. Bake for approx. 1 hour or until the top is all crispy and everything is bubbling over. I usually put a cookie sheet underneath to catch any rogue liquid. Let it sit for a bit before serving. And dump as much salt and pepper as you can stand all over it.

Like a lot of comfort foods this has as many variations as there are families. My sister-in-law uses carrots. The Irish recipe is very different. Enjoy your version or try mine!

5 comments:

just another mother said...

I've never tried this... would it be good w/o the meat?? I know that's a key ingredient.... but we go meatless for heart health - husband had triple bypass at young age... genetics.

FishMama said...

Uhh, could you bring me that for lunch?

What's Scali bread?

Jennifer said...

I've done it with super lean ground turkey and it was a pretty good substitute. You could probably use beans or other veggies and get the same effect - if you saute the bottom layer in Olive Oil with the onions...

Jennifer said...

Scali bread - I didn't know it was a regional name but I guess it is -funny :)

Italian Bread with seasame seeds.

http://blog.kingarthurflour.com/2008/03/26/for-the-love-of-scali-bread/

Anonymous said...

Hi Jennifer,
I would like to try this version. We do this with left over roast and carrots and any other left over veggies that look like they might go well together. I suppose TVP or pintos or even chickpeas could be used for vegetarians.

Thanks,
Shell