Baking

The Only Comfort Food That Matters: A Macaroni & Cheese Recipe

When it comes to comfort food, everyone’s got their top five, but no one can disagree: Mac and cheese reigns supreme. There’s something about even the basest combination of pasta and saucy cheese that makes it as satisfying to cook as it is to eat. Because it’s such a blank canvas, it means everyone also has their own take on how to put together this classic dish.

This week, in the spirit of staying home and keeping cozy, we’re offering a recipe that’s a collaboration between our Beer Buyer, Brian Cullen, and our own Carla Bueno. Plymouth Hot Pepper Cheddar provides a strong base with a nice kick, while Aarewasser brings a buttery, raclette-style richness that will deepen all your flavors.

Brian recommends the Greenhouse Pils from Evil Twin Brewing NYC to pair with this mac. This super crisp, light yet flavorful German-style pilsner balances perfectly against the dense, savory richness of the king of comfort food.

Ingredients:

1 lb (or 500g) macaroni pasta
1/2 lb Plymouth Hot Pepper Cheddar, coarsely grated
1/2 lb Aarewasser, chopped into small pieces
1 cup heavy cream
1 cup buttermilk
3 tbsp cultured butter
2 tbsp all-purpose flour
1/2 tsp paprika
1/2 tsp dry mustard
1/2 tsp ground sage
Salt & pepper to taste
2-4 cloves of garlic, chopped finely
1 bunch scallions, chopped
1/4 cup panko breadcrumbs

Let’s Get Cooking!

  1. Preheat oven to 350°F. Butter or otherwise grease a 9×13 baking pan and set aside.
  2. In a large pot, bring salted boiling water to a boil, and cook your pasta of choice according to package directions. Drain and set aside.
  3. While the pasta is cooking, melt 2 tbsp butter in large sauté pan on medium-high heat. Cook garlic in butter for no longer than 30 seconds, then add flour and whisk to create your roux. Reduce temperature to medium-low.
  4. Begin pouring heavy cream in small quantities into your roux, whisking as you go to create your bechamel. Refrain from pouring until previous pour has fully combined with the roux.
  5. Repeat with buttermilk. Remember, you don’t need to rush this!
  6. Once your bechamel is complete, add salt, pepper, paprika, mustard, and sage. Let simmer while you chop your scallions.
  7. Add that cheese into your bechamel! Set a small amount of cheddar aside, equivalent to about 1/8 cup.
  8. Once the cheese is fully incorporated, add your cooked pasta and chopped scallions, mixing well.
  9. Pour the entire contents of the sauté pan into your 9×13 greased baking pan.
  10. In a small skillet, melt remaining tbsp of butter and add your breadcrumbs, toasting and coating them. Combine with remaining cheddar and quickly spread the mixture across the top of the macaroni and cheese.
  11. Place baking pan in oven for 30 minutes until breadcrumb topping is crispy, then allow to cool before serving. Don’t forget the beer!
Carla Bueno-SandersThe Only Comfort Food That Matters: A Macaroni & Cheese Recipe
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More Than A-peeling: Locally Harvested Apples

A walk through our produce section makes two things clear: fall is here, and so are apples! In addition to classics like Gala and McIntosh, we have many varieties you might not see in a typical grocery store. Our Produce Department works directly with ecologically-minded local farms like Champlain Orchards and Scott Farms in Vermont, and Lancaster Farm Fresh Cooperative in Pennsylvania. These farms grow a variety of apple species that support the local ecology by promoting biodiversity. While we recommend trying them all out, we thought we’d provide a little context to inform your choices in cooking and snacking.

Applications for Apples

If you’re looking for the perfect baking apples, we have a number of great options. Yellow with a pink blush, Honeycrisp apples live up to their title in both texture and sweetness. They work well baked into pies, crumbles, and other desserts. Their crisp texture also makes them ideal raw in salads and coleslaw.

For a great raw apple snack, the gala apple really shines. One of the sweetest apples, Galas pack some of the best nutritional value, containing vitamins A, C, and B in and pectin. Eat them raw or add them diced up to salads, salsas, and chutneys. Similar to Galas, we also carry the Sansa apple. Sansas are a Japanese species that are complexly sweet and mildly tart. They contain important nutrients like potassium and dietary fiber, and are a perfect snacking apple eaten fresh and raw.

Juicy and lightly tart, Paula Reds are a dusty red apple with gold spots. They break down quickly and easily, and are ideal for applesauce and apple butter. Similarly, McIntosh apples have a delicate flesh and spicy flavor that makes them ideal for cider and applesauce.

Mike FunkMore Than A-peeling: Locally Harvested Apples
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Another Little Pizza my Heart

Any gathering can be a party with one simple ingredient – The Greene Grape Pizza Recipe! A homemade pizza is a great way to custom tailor your pie to your guests and a fun cooking activity to boot. Scoops and Sweets’ Housemade Pizza Dough streamlines the process while preserving the thrilling parts of pizza making: shaping your pie and picking your toppings! Some of our favorite toppings at the Greene Grape are fresh pesto, marinara sauce, roasted veggies, cured meats and charcuterie, our housemade mozzarella, aged parmesan, fresh basil, and our housemade sausages, just to name a few! – You can take it up a notch with this great pizza recipe for a grilled pie by our own Kelsey Werner!

Here’s our easy-as-pie guide to making your own pizza:

Ingredients:

  • 1 ball of our Housemade Pizza Dough (which makes two 12” round, thin crust pizzas)
  • All-purpose flour
  • Olive oil
  • Toppings of your choice

Instructions:

Preheat the oven to 450 degrees fahrenheit. If using a pizza stone, put it in the oven now to heat up as well

  1. Remove thawed dough from fridge and allow to sit at room temperature for about 1 hour. Use fresh dough within 5 days of defrosting.
  2. Prepare a clean work surface and lightly dust it with all purpose flour
  3. Remove the dough from the package and dust it with flour so it’s easy to work with.
  4. Press out the dough into your desired shape using your fingers.
  5. If using a pizza stone, transfer the dough to a flour or cornmeal dusted pizza peel, and continue to press out into a round shape. If baking in a pan, lightly oil a rectangle or round baking sheet and gently transfer your dough over and onto the sheet, and continue to shape as desired.
  6. Gently brush the edges of the dough with olive oil using your fingers or a pastry brush
  7. Add your toppings! As many or as few as you’d like, don’t be afraid to get creative!
  8. When the oven reaches 450, bake until bubbling, golden on the edges and crisp; about 20 minutes.
  9. Slice and enjoy!
Angela GelsoAnother Little Pizza my Heart
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Summer Jams

Late Summer Jam
We all know that the best time to enjoy fresh berries and stone fruits is during the Summer months. But if you can spare enough of the season’s bounty to make this sweet and simple jam, you’ll be thanking yourself come Winter whilst enjoying a bite slathered on fresh toasted bread with butter.

Ingredients

-or-

  • 8 cups well mashed stone fruit (peach, nectarine or plum)
  • 2 tablespoons Pomona Universal Pectin + 2 tablespoons calcium water (following box directions)

-and-

  • ½ cup lemon or lime juice
  • 2 cups granulated sugar
  • Optional: 1 cinnamon stick or 1 vanilla bean, using the scraped out seeds, and the pod for added flavor

Directions

  1. Wash and rinse jars according to pectin package directions
  2. In a bowl whisk together the sugar and pectin to combine evenly
  3. In a deep sauce pan, combine the fruit, lemon juice and calcium water, and if using, the cinnamon or vanilla bean, and bring to a boil
  4. Add sugar and pectin mixture, stirring vigorously to dissolve pectin and return to a boil
  5. If using, remove and discard the cinnamon stick or vanilla bean pod
  6. Fill jars to ¼” from top, close lids, and boil according to pectin package directions
  • Enjoy jam within 1 year
  • Jam will keep for 3 weeks in the fridge once opened
Meg ChristmanSummer Jams
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Silly Name, Serious Vanilla


When we first received samples of Singing Dog Vanilla, we scoffed at the name, we admit. But when Tracy, our amazing new pastry chef gave her approval after baking with it, we decided we had to have it!

Singing Dog is all organic, with rich, deep flavors. We’re stocking the pure vanilla beans as well as bottles of extract, so whatever your baking needs are, we’ve got you covered!

Greene GrapeSilly Name, Serious Vanilla
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Dairy Queens


In honor of Spring finally here, we’ve got a double whammy of free tastings this Saturday with three amazing ladies.

First, from 11am-1, Jody from Kriemhild Dairy will be bringing their sun-drenched grass fed butter. Bright yellow from the grass’s natural beta carotene, and one of the highest butterfat contents we’ve ever seen (85%!), this butter is absolutely delicious shmeared on any of our local breads or fresh seasonal vegetables.  Come chat with the owner about the nutritional benefits this butter packs, and what it’s like to be a farmer in upstate NY!

After you’ve spent the day foraging around Brooklyn, come back at 3pm and cool off with a taste of Phin and Phebes  ice cream, made right here in our fair boro. Made with milk from the Quality Dairy Farms coop in NY state, these ladies offer some super creative flavors such as Banana Whama and Vietnamese Iced Coffee. And if you check out their site, you’ll discover some of their experimental ice cream float ideas with some of our favorite adult sodas. Yum!

 

Greene GrapeDairy Queens
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FREE COOKIES!

Shira Berk, of TriBeCa’s esteemed and estimable Goodie Girl Bakery, will be at Provisions today at 4pm to sample from her arsenal of her jaw-droppingly delicious cookies. There’s no understanding someone who denies a free cookie, gluten-free or not, but be advised that hers are especially good; crispy, meticulously flavored (this number has flecks of cereal in its dough) and perfect for dipping into a cup of coffee.

Security personnel will be at the ready to catch customers fainting from their deliciousness. See you then!

Greene GrapeFREE COOKIES!
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Gluten-Free Pumpkin Cupcakes at Annex!

 

In our rigorously scientific, humble, 101{0886acb4f5be58b49bf4e022446f4168c3918f2aad77c1481cecb92c8f2156f3} unbiased opinions, it’s hard to zero in on just one pastry from the Annex kitchen.

But on the recommendation of a gluten-free friend (plus the head pastry chef), we’d like you to consider stopping by this exceptionally brisk weekend for one of our delicious Pumpkin Cupcakes. For a place traditionally steeped in butter, flour and sugar, gluten-free baking was a dicey proposition at first, but your correspondent watched agog as a new batch was made with organic pumpkin puree, a dash of cinnamon, almond flour and topped with roasted pistachio nuts. Of course the two in the photo are lonely – all the rest were gone by 4PM.

Greene GrapeGluten-Free Pumpkin Cupcakes at Annex!
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