Holiday Entertaining: Tips for Keeping It Simple
My idea of cooking is simplicity! When it gets right down to it, that’s the way I like to cook, eat and entertain! After all, I have book and magazine deadlines, a cooking class to teach, a television show to produce! But more than anything, it’s simply my philosophy! It’s probably a holdover from my years of cooking at Chez Panisse and what that means to me is that I prefer to eat delicious, healthy, fresh and very flavorful food and take the easy road doing it.
But here’s the dilemma… It’s coming up to the holidays and what can I have around the house that will be healthy, fresh and make holiday entertaining a breeze? Wine is no problem, I have a big wine cellar and I can always grab some great bottles from there. But I want to make sure I have a few things in the pantry so that if friends stop by over the holidays, I’m prepared.
I was looking for inspiration for holiday entertaining and what I always seem to do is to go to my latest cookbook, in this case, Wine Country Cooking. As I looked through my book, it occurred to me that simplicity is where it’s at for me. Let’s admit it, who has the time to shop in multiple stores, to run from here to there for hard-to-find ingredients. Nor do I want to spend hours in the kitchen cooking! If I don’t have the time, why should I think that anyone one else would be any different?
I know everyone thinks that just because I’m a chef that I spend all day in the kitchen making squab stock and homemade puff pastry. Every once in a while I like to do that but for the most part, I’m the one opting for ease as opposed to anything complicated. In these busy, hectic times it just makes sense to me.
So it got me thinking…How can I do a little holiday entertaining, really “wow” my guests and not spend much time doing it! Now that’s a challenge I like and here’s what I came up with…
For more recipes and holiday tips, go to my website www.joanneweir.com
Menu:
Warm Olives
Place assorted olives in a saucepan with a good drizzle of fruity extra virgin olive oil, a pinch of crushed red pepper, a couple sprigs of fresh rosemary and thyme, a bay leaf and a couple strips of lemon zest. Heat them just until warm and serve.
Roasted California Almonds
Place a few handfuls of almonds on a baking sheet. Drizzle with a couple tablespoons extra virgin olive oil and bake in a 400 ̊F oven for 10 to 12 minutes until crunchy and dark golden. Remove from the oven and toss with Maldon salt or Fleur de Sel.
Manchego and Membrillo
Buy a nice big chunk of Manchego Cheese, a flavorful sheep’s milk cheese from Spain. Place it on a plate with a cheese knife and some sliced membrillo or quince paste. The sweet membrillo versus the salty, earthy Manchego is a fantastic compliment.
Crostini with Fennel Sausage
Adapted from Wine Country Cooking
1/2 pound hot Italian sausage, either bulk or the casings removed
5 ounces grated fontina or crumbled robiola or taleggio cheese
1 teaspoon fennel seed, coarsely ground
2 tablespoons chopped fresh flat-leaf Italian parsley
Salt
12 slices rustic, coarse-textured bread, cut into 2 to 3-inch serving pieces
Preheat an oven to 350ºF.
Crumble the sausage in a bowl. Add the crumbled cheese, fennel seeds, parsley and salt to taste. Spread onto the bread, distributing evenly. Place in a single layer on a baking sheet. Bake in the oven until golden and crispy, 15 minutes.
Serves 6



