surviving the holidays
It’s that time of year, as I note every year, when the pages start to fly off the calendar and the hours on a clock spin around, just like in a cartoon. In the three weeks before we head “home” for Christmas in Connecticut, we have two plays to see, a carol concert to attend, two dinner parties to go to and at least as many to host, a visit to the orthodontist, a trip for us grownups to a landmark house in West Sussex and a school trip to St Petersburg for Avery. It makes me tired just to write it all down, but the way I get around that is by reminding myself that all these things will be great fun individually; it’s just looking at the calendar that’s daunting.
Thanksgiving has come and gone. I think every single flat surface in my kitchen, that evening, was covered with something to eat. And eat we did, with lots of blazing candles and little fairy lights I’ve obsessively ordered from a really cheap lighting company, Lights4Fun. Our garden is full of them, our kitchen is draped all over. Of course, John reminds me that all the money I save buying them discounted, I will more than make up for in batteries. But it’s worth it, look and see.
The best part of the whole Thanksgiving dinner was, everyone agreed — even little children who took second and third helpings! — the cheesy spinach. After many years of offering you seemingly endless varieties of recipes for this dish, I have hit upon the perfect version. It’s simply to die for: creamy, salty, bright green, garlicky, cheesy. You will be shocked at how much everyone can eat.
The Ultimate Cheesy Spinach
(serves 4 easily)
500 grams (about 8 loosely packed cups, or 2 large packages in the UK) fresh baby spinach
3 tbsps butter
2 tsps flour
5 cloves garlic, minced
1/3 cup light cream
1 1/2 cups sharp Cheddar cheese, grated
celery salt to taste, perhaps 2–3 tsps
sprinkle grated Parmesan cheese
Simply chop the spinach in your food processor, a large handful at a time, pulsing so the leaves are incorporated from the top and the bottom leaves don’t turn to mush. You want the consistency of chopped onions. As you go through the handfuls, place the chopped spinach in a large bowl.
Now melt the butter in a large, heavy-bottomed frying pan or saucepan. Stir in the flour and cook, bubbling, for about a minute, not letting the mixture brown. Add the garlic and stir for a moment.
Add all the other ingredients but the Parmesan, and stir patiently over a low heat. At first it may seem that the ingredients will never come together, but they do, after 4–5 minutes. Taste for celery salt: don’t add too much at first because it is quite salty. When the cheese is melted and the spinach creamy, pour the whole lot into a baking dish, about 9x9 inches, and sprinkle the grated Parmesan on top. Bake at 350F/180C for about 25 minutes or until nicely golden and bubbly.
Let’s hope that all the goodness of this dish: the iron, the calcium, and let’s face it, the GARLIC, will give us all the strength to get through our Christmas prep, and maybe even enjoy it at the same time.
I am going to try your Spinach. Looks SO yummy!
Sarah
We had it again tonight, a total winner: goes with ANYTHING!
Sounds fabulous ~ I’m going to whip this up asap!! :)
Looks and sounds delicious! I’ll definitely try this.
I’m so glad I’ve inspired you! I’ve never seen people eat so much spinach. Our family of three can easily eat two whole bags as a side dish. Magical! If you don’t have celery salt, celery seeds and chopped leaves will be good, but not as good.
I so enjoyed having a “snow day” today. I definitely agree that at this time of year any tiny bit of blank space on the calendar is a great relief. But a trip to St. Petersburg? Sounds wonderful … if a bit cold. (btw, I remember reading about your Christmas in Connecticut last year … and, oh my, I can’t believe we’ve rolled around again and still not found a day to meet up in all of 2010. January, hopefully?)
I’ve enjoyed variations of this spinach dish, but I will definitely try YOUR version. What, in England, counts as “light cream?” Do you buy single cream?
I will definitely try this for the holidays. We love the steak house creamed spinach (Morton’s, Smith and Wollensky) Never made it using celery salt
Ahhhhh, the Christmas tree! Is that the Bibendum ornament I see? And the lobster? And the avocado? Wait, wait, there’s a clear pattern here.
Bee, 2011 certainly MUST see our meet-up in person, and with Yaz as well, pretty please! And Dotti, everyone, yes it’s the best spinach recipe, IMHO, ever. Fantastic leftover, as well, heated up NOT in the microwave but in the real oven, till bubbling.
John’s mom, isn’t the tree lovely? Nothing broke this year, knock on a cat (my new lucky gesture). What sort of decorations are you doing? To think we’ll be together in just a few weeks!