Homemade Easy Ricotta Recipe

Ricotta and StrawberriesOne of the easiest traditional recipes around is homemade Ricotta. First, it is so soft and delicious and store-bought does not even come close to its fresh texture. Plus it can be expensive when it’s purchased at the store. Since its’ few ingredients are almost always in your kitchen it’s something you can whip up anytime. Homemade Ricotta is great just smeared on bread or crackers served with honey or fruit. It’s amazing in homemade lasagna or any ravioli.

 

  • 1/2 Gallon (2 quarts) Whole Milk (low-fat or non-fat really doesn’t work well).
  • 1/3 C Lemon Juice or White Vinegar
  • Pinch of salt (optional)

 

Heat milk in a pot until it’s foamy and almost boiling.

 

Remove from heat and immediately stir in lemon juice or vinegar.

 

Stir and then let stand for about 10 minutes.

 

Set up a colander with a cheesecloth in it (or use a coffee filter in a small colander).

 

Remove any large chunks that do not have to be drained with a slotted spoon and place in bowl.

 

Slowly pour the remaining mixture through the colander and let sit for as little as 15 minutes or as long as an hour depending upon how thick you’d like your cheese.

 

Seal and refrigerate.

 

Pasta Salad with Tuna and Peas : Recipe

Sweet and Tangy Pasta Salad with Tuna and Peas.

Sweet and Tangy Pasta Salad with Tuna and Peas.

I don’t know where this super simple recipe originated. But it is a far cry from an old fashioned tuna casserole. We had something like it on the salad bar when I worked for Cheesecake Factory. The sweetness of the peas and dressing makes it. 

 

Someone brought this dish to an overnight birthday party for my friend she held at

at Malibu Creek Park.

 

 

Malibu Creek State Park Potluck Overnight.

Malibu Creek State Park Potluck Overnight.

What a great idea for a group get together! Everyone brought kids, tents and blow-up beds (who knew you could use a car battery as an energy source to blow one up?) and of course loads of

potluck food. 

 

 

So easy. Just mix. Done.

So easy. Just mix. Done.

Ingredients:

 

  • 1 bag / lb Pasta (like large shells, or rigatoni or….) boiled per directions
  • 1 drained Can of Tuna 
  • 1 Cup Frozen Peas
  • 1/4 Cup Sweet Pickle Relish
  • 1/2 Cup Ketchup
  • 1/2 Cup Mayonaisse

 

(Or you can just use 1 Cup of your favorite Thousand Island Dressing).

 

 Mix together. Done!

 

 

 

After dinner, enjoying the fire with our puppy, Bella.

After dinner, enjoying the fire with our puppy, Bella.

Chinese Cold Spicy Sesame Noodles – a la Shorty Tang’s recipe

Pasta like Spaghetti can be used instead of the Noodles in most recipes.

Pasta like Spaghetti can be used instead of Chinese Noodles or Soba in many recipes.

There’s a restaurant in Manhattan Beach that serves a great spicy sesame noodle recipe topped with peanuts that I was seriously craving the other night. When I worked at Cheesecake Factory, we had a similar dish called the Peking Salad although I don’t believe it is on the menu any longer. As I pondered how to recreate either of the sweet, salty, nutty, tangy noodle dishes, I wondered if there were an authentic, original version for Spicy Cold Sesame Noodles. 

 

After some research, I learned that there is actually a guy named Tang Win Fat, nick-named Shorty Tang who legend has it, is responsible for the first cold, sesame noodle

Shorty Tang gets credit for inventing the Cold Spicy Noodle Recipe

Shorty Tang was a well known New York restauranteur who invented the Chinese Cold Spicy Noodle Recipe.

recipe. His story is featured on his grandson’s WordPress Blog RiceWineVinegar and he was also featured in a story about his historical New York restaurant and in the recipes section in the New York Times. Shorty Tang was born in 1926 in Sichuan’s Nianchang, worked in restaurants starting at the age of 12, and left China for Taiwan in 1946 where he worked as a street vendor before opening his first restaurant there. Then, he moved to Queens, NY in 1967 and opened a restaurant in Manhattan’s Chinatown which was famous for among other dishes, his Cold Sesame Noodles. This recipe is supposed to replicate Shorty’s but I’ve also listed Madame Wong’s recipe below it which I just happened to have found (strange coincidence) when making a version of her Chinese Lemon Chicken recipe. We served these noodles with a simple Pork Loin Roast and it was a great pairing. 

 

 

 

The easy way to add Fresh Ginger to any recipe. Freeze it, then grate it in.

The easy way to add Fresh Ginger to any recipe. Freeze it, then grate it in.

  • 8 ounces Chinese Egg Noodles or Soba or Spaghetti, cooked and cooled. 
  • 4 Tablespoons Soy Sauce or Tamari 
  • 2 Tablespoons Sesame Oil
  • 2 Tablespoons Rice Wine Vinegar
  • 1 Tablespoon Peanut Butter
  • 1 Tablespoon Sugar
  • 1 Tablespoon Red Chili Paste (or Chili and Garlic Paste or even Sriracha Sauce)
  • 1 Tablespoon Grated Fresh Ginger 
  • 1 Tablespoon Chopped Fresh Garlic
  • 2 Tablespoons Sesame Paste (I forgot this ingredient and it still tasted amazing!)
  • 1/2 Cup Chopped Peanuts
  • 4 Chopped Green Onions
  • 1/2 Red Bell Pepper, diced (my addition)
  • 2 Cups Spinach Leaves (my addition)
  • Feel free to add any other vegetables you like (like broccoli, bean sprouts, celery, cucumber etc…)
  • Feel free to add egg, tofu, leftover chicken, ham or turkey. 

 

Make noodles per package instructions. Drain and rinse in cold water. 

I add Spinach, Peppers and Grated Carrots to the mix.

I add Spinach, Peppers and Grated Carrots to the mix.

When cool, mix all ingredients with the sauce. Done.

 

 

 

As an alternative, here is Madame Wong’s Easy Cold Spicy Noodles Sauce Recipe Ingredients (a quicker, easier version but both recipes are delicious):

 

  • 1 Tablespoon Red Chili Sauce (or Chili and Garlic or Sriracha Sauce)
  • 1/4 Cup Sesame Oil
  • 1/4 Cup Soy Sauce or Tamari
  • 1/4 Cup Rice or Regular Vinegar
  • Salt and pepper to taste

 

Either of these recipes work well for a kids’ lunch, or to bring to a picnic or a party although I would use Cashew or Almond Butter and Cashews instead of Peanuts as you never know who might be allergic if you’re sharing this dish with a crowd. Summer is over, but it is still warm in California. Jackson Brown just played at the Santa Monica Pier last weekend. So, I will eat these noodles until it starts to rain and think of Shorty and his lovely family and how even a single recipe can touch so many for years down the road.

 

  

Maura’s Italian Grandmother’s ” Jumbot “

Maura is one of my BFF’s. She is the youngest of 11, from Peabody, Mass.. She has so much East Coast spirit, it’s contagious. Her mother’s name is Carmella. Of course she has a sister named “Tony” and Eva, who is the oldest. When I was describing the point of this recipe blog to Maura ( to post only easy recipes that are as healthy as possible and ideally handed down generation to generation so that I too could share with my kids), she immediately said, “My Grandmother’s Jumbot!”. I had to look up the spelling because it is not pronounced how it is spelled. Maura can say it like a true Italian.

 

Italian Jumbot Ingredients. ( Sausage optional.)

Italian Jumbot Ingredients. ( Sausage optional.)

You know someone is  a “foodie” when (like Maura) they describe a recipe and are so detailed, even when it’s a simple recipe like this one. “You have to use CRUSHED tomatoes, NOT diced or whole – CRUSHED!”. I had to twist her arm a little to share this recipe with me as lovely and simple as it is – that , and I showed up with a pitcher of Margarita’s when we went to Palm Desert together for a girls’, “get out of Dodge” weekend. I think the Tequila (even though it’s not Italian) may have helped motivate her to share. While this recipe is specific, the traditional “Jumbot”, is made with whatever vegetables and meats one has in the house. Without the sausage and cheese, it’s still a delicious vegetarian and vegan meal. Either way – it’s a great, healthy gluten-free option for my kids as well!

 

1 or 2 of each vegetable. So easy.

1 or 2 of each vegetable. So easy.

Ingredients:

 (double for a larger family or crowd):

  • Few Tablespoons of Cooking Oil (Olive or Coconut…)
  • 1/2 Yellow Onion, chopped
  • 2 Cloves Garlic, chopped (optional)
  • 1 Can Crushed Tomatoes + 1 Can of Water
  • 1 Sm. Can Tomato Paste
  • Tablespoon Dried Parsley
  • 1 Cup Mushrooms, sliced
  • 1 Cup Whole Green Beans
  • 1 Red Bell Pepper, cut into squares
  • 1 Large Potato, cut into cubes (personally, I scrub potatoes clean, it’s easy)
  • 1 Zucchini, cut into cubes
  • 1 Yellow Squash, cut into cubes
  • 2 Tablespoons of Grated Parmesan
  • Salt and Pepper, to taste
  • 2-3 Sweet Italian Sausage, cooked in water (pierced to let the fat out) 

 

Cook onions in oil until start to look clear.

Cook onions in oil until start to look clear.

Cook onions in a large pot in oil until they start to look a little clear. Add the garlic if you’re using it and cook for an additional 20 seconds.

 

 

Add 1 can of water to crushed tomatoes,onion and garlic.

Add 1 can of water to crushed tomatoes, onion and garlic.

Then, add the crushed tomatoes, tomato paste, parsley and water. Reduce for 30-60 minutes on a low flame.

  

Then, add all the cubed vegetables except the zucchini and squash. When the potatoes are almost done, add the zucchini and squash and cook until done.  

 

If you are eating with sliced sausage, add and heat through. You can also add earlier if you want more sausage flavor infused in the liquid.

 

Add parmesan and serve alone, with crusty bread or over pasta or cous cous.

Add parmesan and serve alone, with crusty bread or over pasta or cous cous.

Serve in a bowl with crusty bread, or over pasta, rice or couscous.