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Embracing Bread for Dinner: Simple Ideas and Culinary Inspiration
Crafting this newsletter fluctuates in ease from week to week. Inspiration disregards schedules. Often, ideas strike during commutes, leading to quick paragraph drafts in a notes application, or in the shower, prompting a dash for a phone on the sink to dictate voice memos brimming with culinary thoughts, perhaps about pesto, amidst the bathroom ambiance.
Other weeks present a challenge to assemble content, often relying on seasonal shifts for direction. One Monday, I sent my editor, Mia, a series of hesitant messages. āPerhaps frozen peas?ā
Once I resolved to write about springtime produce like peas and asparagus, words escaped me. I appreciate both ingredients! However, the desire to consume peas and asparagus is absent at the moment, even with Aprilās arrival. Bread for dinner is appealing. This concept, while unconventional for a newsletter titled āThe Veggie,ā became a motivating challenge.
Should you also favor bread for dinner, be it from fatigue, lack of inspiration, or perhaps marathon training, know that itās perfectly acceptable and achievable with a sense of virtue often associated with a bowl of vegetables. Consider Lidey Heuckās chopped salad featuring chickpeas, feta, and avocado. While undeniably green with lettuce, diced cucumber, green olives, scallions, capers, and herbs (dill, basil, mint, or parsley), it also acts as a welcome option when craving carbohydrates, a foundation for crispy, olive oil-coated croutons.
Chopped Salad with Chickpeas, Feta, and Avocado
For recipe details, view here.
Bread salad serves as an excellent solution for using leftover bread, be it stale bread heels, hot dog buns, pita, lavash, or even day-old bagels. Revitalize any of these by baking them into croutons for Naz Deravianās vibrant dooymaaj salad, Hetty Lui McKinnonās spiced chickpea salad with tahini, Yotam Ottolenghiās chopped salad with everything bagel croutons, Lideyās taverna salad, or a classic fattoush like Joan Nathanās adaptation of Ramzi Osseiranās recipe.
Dips provide a fantastic rationale for enjoying bread for dinner, though justification is hardly necessary. Carolina Gelenās smoky spiced eggplant dip? Yotam Ottolenghiās butter bean dip with frizzled onions and preserved lemon? Yossy Arefiās protein-rich herby cottage cheese dip? All are perfect served with ample bread.
Pizzas and flatbreads stand out as consistently satisfying bread-centric dinners. Reserve Ali Slagleās creamed kale pizza for times when you have more energy, and Dawn Perryās pesto and mozzarella French bread pizza or Ali Slagleās smoked Gouda and broccoli flatbreads for simpler, relaxed evenings.
Bonus Tip: Melissa Clarkās Garlic Croutons
I have the pleasure of working near Melissa Clark at The New York Times office, and we recently discussed bread for dinner. āOoh, ooh, ooh, can I share my crouton method?ā she inquired. Gaining culinary insights from Melissa is a delightful perk of an open office environment.
Here are her crouton instructions: Crush cloves of peeled garlic and tear pieces of day-old bread ā āUsing old bread is essentialā ā and place them in a pan with enough olive oil to cover the base. āCrucially ā use low heat.ā SautĆ© the bread and garlic until golden brown and crisp, approximately 10 to 15 minutes. Melissa then seasons with salt and Parmesan, ācreating a frico-like crust overall.ā Occasionally, she includes red pepper flakes or a sprig of rosemary. Importantly: āYou must eat the garlic.ā
Sometimes, embracing bread-for-dinner fully, she serves these croutons in a bowl alongside olives as dinner. āDo we really need a salad?ā she remarked with a laugh.
Thank you for reading, and until next week!
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