Today’s Food Tip: Fresh Basil
Door to Door Organics

If you live in the Kansas City area, you can have the freshest organic fruits and vegetables delivered to your door once a week or once every other week from Door to Door Organics.
This is a great way to “eat fresh” and you can actually save money, too, IF you plan your weekly menus around the fresh produce that is delivered to your door. I usually go to the Door to Door Organics website each weekend to see what will be included in the box of goodies that will be delivered to my door on Wednesday. Then I plan my menus and make out my shopping list for additional items I’ll need in order to prepare the meals I have planned for the coming week.
I’ve also found that planning meals around what comes in the delivery box has made me a more creative cook. For example, I’ve learned a simple recipe for Swiss Chard, and it has now become one of my favorite side dishes even though I NEVER bought Chard of any kind when I shopped for fresh produce at the grocery store.
Planning menus around the “fresh” foods that come in the box each week has also helped my whole family eat fewers processed foods.
For more information visit kc.doortodoorganics.com
Door to Door Organics is also available in other cities. Check out the other delivery areas here now.
Presto! It’s Pesto!
Pasta with a basic pesto sauce is a casual dinner to enjoy any time. But it’s particularly nice eaten outside on a warm summer evening. The beauty of pesto is you don’t have to cook it. Just pop a few ingredients into your blender or food processor and – Presto! It’s pesto!

For a delicious pasta and pesto dinner, simply cook some of your favorite pasta and drain it (but save some of the water for making the pesto – see recipe, below). Make the pesto, then pour some of it onto the pasta and mix the two items together. Grate a little extra Parmesan onto the pasta, if desired. Serve with a green salad, crusty bread, and a glass of your favorite wine.
Here’s a recipe for traditional Basil Pesto, taken from the cookbook, Everyday Italian: 125 Simple and Delicious Recipes, by Giada De Laurentiis.
BASIL PESTO
2 c. (packed) fresh basil leaves
1/4 c. toasted pine nuts
1 garlic clove
1/2 tsp. salt, plus more to taste
1/4 tsp. freshly ground pepper, plus more to taste
About 2/3 c. extra-virgin olive oil
1/2 c. freshly grated Parmesan cheese
In a blender, pulse the basil, pine nuts, garlic, 1/2 teaspoon of salt, and 1/4 teaspoon of pepper until finely chopped. With the blender still running, gradually add enough oil to form a smooth and thick consistency. Transfer the pesto to a medium bowl and stir in the cheese. Season the pesto with more salt and pepper to taste.
The pesto can be made 2 days ahead. Cover and refrigerate.
And here’s the SECRET to making pesto into a great pasta dressing. “Mix in just enough of the pasta cooking liquid to get the pesto to coat the pasta, but not so much that you’ve created pesto soup,” says De Laurentiis. She also says that while traditional pesto is a green sauce made with pounded basil and pine nuts, “these days any uncooked sauce that’s easy, quick, and pureed can be called a pesto.”
Look for additional pesto recipes in her cookbook.
Free Ice Cream Today
Get FREE ice cream today!
Today is National Doughnut Day!

Did you know that the first Friday in June is National Doughnut Day in the United States?
That’s today!
This annual event was started in 1938 as a fund raiser for the Salvation Army.
Today, get a FREE doughnut in honor of National Doughnut Day at your local participating locations for the following:
Krispy Kreme: All customers receive a free doughnut. No purchase necessary.
Dunkin’ Donuts: Free doughnut with the purchase of a beverage.
LaMar’s: All customers receive a free Ray’s Original Glazed doughnut. No purchase necessary.
Shipley Do-Nuts: Free glazed doughnut with purchase until noon.
Now at Dean & Deluca Online

For retail orders of single packets of our Divine Dill Dip Mix, please go to Dean & DeLuca online.
Boeuf à la Bourguignonne

Have you seen the movie Julie and Julia?
My husband and I saw it over the weekend. Watching it made me want to blog. It made HIM want to cook, and now ne wants to attempt to make Julia’s famous Boeuf à la Bourguignonne.
I thought other people might want to try it, too, so here’s the recipe, straight from Julia Childs’ cookbook Mastering the Art of French Cooking.
Boeuf à la Bourguignonne
Serves 6
INGREDIENTS
6-ounce chunk of bacon
9- to 10-inch fireproof casserole, 3 inches deep
1 tablespoon olive oil or cooking oil
A slotted spoon
3 pounds lean stewing beef cut into 2-inch cubes
1 sliced carrot
1 sliced onion
1 teaspoon salt
1/4 teaspoon pepper
2 tablespoons flour
3 cups of a full-bodied, young red wine such as one of those suggested
for serving, or a Chianti
2 to 3 cups brown beef stock or canned beef bouillon
1 tablespoon tomato paste
2 cloves mashed garlic
1/2 teaspoon thyme
Crumbled bay leaf
Blanched bacon rind
18 to 24 small white onions, brown-braised in stock
1 pound quartered fresh mushrooms sautéed in butter
Parsley sprigs
DIRECTIONS
Remove rind and cut bacon into lardons (sticks, ¼-inch thick and 1½ inches long). Simmer rind and bacon for 10 minutes in 1½ quarts of
water. Drain and dry.
Preheat oven to 450º. Sauté the bacon in the oil over moderate heat for 2 to 3 minutes to brown lightly.
Remove to a side dish with a slotted spoon. Set casserole aside. Reheat until fat is almost smoking before you sauté the beef.
Dry the beef in paper towels; it will not brown if it is damp. Sauté it, a few pieces at a time, in the hot oil and bacon fat until nicely browned on all sides. Add it to the bacon.
In the same fat, brown the sliced vegetables. Pour out the sautéing fat.
Return the beef and bacon to the casserole and toss with the salt and pepper. Then sprinkle on the flour and toss again to coat the beef lightly with the flour.
Set casserole uncovered in middle position of preheated oven for 4 minutes. Toss the meat and return to oven for 4 minutes more. (This browns the flour and covers the meat with a light crust.) Remove casserole, and turn oven down to 325 degrees.
Stir in the wine and enough stock or bouillon so that the meat is barely covered. Add the tomato paste, garlic, herbs and bacon rind.
Bring to simmer on top of the stove. Then cover the casserole and set in lower third of preheated oven. Regulate heat so liquid simmers very slowly for 2½ to 3 hours. The meat is done when a fork pierces it easily.
While the beef is cooking, prepare the onions and mushrooms. Set them aside until needed.
When the meat is tender, pour the contents of the casserole into a sieve set over a saucepan. Wash out the casserole and return the beef and bacon to it.
Distribute the cooked onions and mushrooms over the meat.Skim fat off the sauce. Simmer sauce for a minute or two, skimming off additional fat as it rises. You should have about 2½ cups of sauce thick enough to coat a spoon lightly. If too thin, boil it down rapidly. If too thick, mix in a few tablespoons of stock or canned bouillon. Taste carefully for seasoning. Pour the sauce over the meat and vegetables.
Recipe may be completed in advance to this point.
For immediate serving: Cover the casserole and simmer for 2 to 3 minutes, basting the meat and vegetables with the sauce several times.
Serve in its casserole, or arrange the stew on a platter surrounded with potatoes, noodles or rice, and decorated with parsley.
For later serving: When cold, cover and refrigerate. About 15 to 20 minutes before serving, bring to a simmer, cover and simmer very slowly for 10 minutes, occasionally basting the meat and vegetables with the sauce.
Bon Appetit!












