I’ve never before seen a blue potato. A few weeks back I saw them at the union square greenmarket. I fell in love with them. First of all they taste nothing like a potato. Not a white potato or a sweet potato. They are unique in flavor, like nothing I can describe. They are also blue. Incredibly blue. I guess I’ve seen blue potato chips, so they can’t be a complete mystery to me, but these potatoes – small in size and decadent to nibble are quite different than even the chips I’ve sampled so many years ago.
In my love affair with color I got some yellow and orange carrots (I was hoping for purple ones, but alas could not find any), burdock root – which is wonderfully cleansing for the liver, salsify (which is black, but white on the inside), celeraic and some chicken pieces. On my stove now simmers: the roots, chicken pieces, some lamb stock from a previous night’s dinner, dried figs and a melange of spices. I can’t wait for it to be done. I’m sure its going to be delish.
Your mouth watering yet? A recipe you demand?
Here’s the best I can do:
1 tablespoon olive oil
1/2 white onion – local if possible, chopped
1 large orange carrot, chopped
2 stalks of local celery (hard to find in these rough NY winters – can skip), chopped
about 1 pound of chicken parts (I used breast and thigh meat, just a personal preference)
1 cup stock (chicken, beef, lamb, whatever tickles your fancy – I used half chicken (boxed) and half lamb – homemade)
1 yellow carrot
2 blue potatoes (small, the size of fingerlings, each quartered)
1 white turnip (quartered)
6-8 Brussels Sprouts, halved – little stem chopped off
2-3 tablespoons of fresh dill
black pepper
curry powder about 1 tsp
lots of love
Directions:
Heat olive oil in a cast iron stock pot. When smoking add mire poix (carrots, onion and celery) and stir 5 minutes until softened. Add chicken and sear on both sides until slightly browned (2-3 minutes). Add stock, root veggies, spices and other ingredients. Cover and cook 45 minutes to one hour until cooked through, roots are soft and your kitchen smells unbelievable. You will just know. I don’t cook with salt, but if you like salt, you can add some when you add the pepper. If you need a bit more spice – add some more curry powder. The dill and the black pepper and the taste of fresh vegetables in the stocks usually do it for me. I also added just a touch of butter when I put the vegetables in before I set the simmer.
Enjoy with someone you love!
visit www.sobelwellness.com to learn how you too could have meals prepared like these in your kitchen!