We've got the beet!
As I have mentioned before, Gemini Bistro is one of my favorite restaurants in Chicago. It only opened a few weeks ago, and already they seem to have the ease and consistency of a beloved neighborhood restaurant. Pete and I eat there at least once a week, we are old and boring and like our routine thank you very much. Besides the risotto (I.die.) my favorite thing to order there is the beet salad.
{Photo courtesy Kevin D. Weeks}
First of all, I am not really a salad type of girl. And before sampling this delicious dish, I was not really a beet type of girl either. However, the combination of the beets, goat cheese, and truffle oil seduced me and I have never looked back. The flavors are so nuanced and right on, I thought to myself:
Self, what else could you do with these ingredients?
The answer?
First, Beet risotto.
Which, although it was delicious, lacks the potential to be a signature dish mostly because of the reaction you get when you serve adult humans, particularly adult male humans, a heaping plate of hot pink mush. Once Pete tried it, he liked it, but I basically had to pretend the fork was a plane coming in for a landing at Chicago O'Pete airport first.
A much more successful interpretation came from adapting my friend Frankie's amazing recipe for Ravioli Casunziei.
Instead of ricotta I used goat cheese, and added a bit of truffle oil to the puree. For the sauce I nixed the poppy seeds and again added a small dash of truffle oil.
To my utter surprise and delight, the recipe turned out like gangbusters (much better than the pumpkin ravioli disaster of 2009 that I will surely be shamed into blogging about soon). Completely simple and completely delicious. I would highly reccomend even the most timid of cooks try this one out, and check out more of Frankie's videos at The Young & Hungry.
Beet puree, 3 beets, goat cheese, dash of truffle oil
My pasta dough I made. From scratch. I am a domestic goddess. That is until pumpkin ravioli took me down.
Tablespoon of beet puree.
A little egg wash and a second layer of dough.
Press it out.
Voila!
Yummmmy.
That looks absolutely incredible!! I've been curious how to branch out with beets and this looks like the perfect recipe. Way to go, Bailz!
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