7.23.2010

The Last Supper

I recently read a post on a blog that I love, The Kitchn (part of the Apartment Therapy family of blogs, which are all awesome), about what to have for your first meal in your new house. Most of what the commenters came up with was takeout, but there were some fun ideas in there, too. Admittedly, I will probably get takeout on my first night in my new place. However, this is one of my last nights in my old place, and I feel the need to say a proper goodbye to my kitchen.

The problem with the last meal in a soon-to-be former home, of course, is that you've emptied the contents of your kitchen cabinets into boxes. My kitchen is currently in the back of my Outback, save 2 plates, 2 forks, 1 knife, 1 travel mug, and 1 non-stick frying pan. It is with these limited resources that I made a surprisingly delicious dinner out of what was left in my pantry and refrigerator.

What did I have left?
The remains of my pantry in an empty kitchen.

1 frozen ostrich burger patty, defrosted (Birdbrain Ostrich Ranch)
1/3 French baguette, baked from frozen (Chef Charles Catering)
1 tablespoon garlic scape pesto*
1 tablespoon shredded Parmesan cheese
2 tomatoes, grown in my front yard
1 apricot
Jane's Krazy Mixed Up Salt (a family favorite and a must in my pantry)
Olive oil

I put a little Jane's on the ostrich burger and heated about a tablespoon of olive oil in the frying pan over medium-high heat. Ostrich is extremely lean (40% less fat than beef!) and thus needs a little lubricant in the pan. When the pan was hot, I added the burger patty, let it cook for about 2 minutes, and then reduced the heat to medium.

While the burger continued to cook, I sliced the baguette and spread one side with the pesto. I sliced both tomatoes, and put one of them on the baguette. The other tomato I fanned out on the plate and sprinkled with Jane's. I cut the apricot in half and removed the pit.

When the burger was nicely browned on one side, I gently loosened it from the pan before flipping it. I topped the burger with the Parmesan cheese, and let it cook for another 3 or 4 minutes. I like my burgers medium or medium rare, and this is important with ostrich. Because it is so lean, it is very red, almost purple. If you wait until it is just pink in the middle (or worse, no pink at all) before you take it out of the pan, you'll have a lovely hockey puck, but not much in the way of dinner. If you are nervous, use a meat thermometer. Once you get to 160 degrees F, you're done; be sure not to exceed 165 degrees F.

Finally, I sliced the burger into thirds, laid it out on the baguette, and sat down to enjoy a scrumptious last supper with my little house. I'll miss you kitchen, it's been fun!

The Last Supper


*What is garlic scape pesto? It's a homemade pesto that I love to make in the late spring and early summer with garlic scapes in place of basil. Garlic scapes are the stalks of the garlic plant before the garlic head forms. They are a verdant green coil of delightful garlic flavor. Simply cut off the bulb end and cut into 1 inch sections to use. My "recipe" for garlic scape pesto is a handful of this and a handful of that, but it's similar to this recipe that I found at Food.com (but ignore the part about artichokes and pasta...). Make up a batch and store it in a glass jar in the refrigerator for up to 3 weeks. It is great on sandwiches, pasta, mixed into hummus, and anywhere else you would use a basil pesto.

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