Wednesday, September 13, 2006

Green Bean Gratinate

From Lidia Matticchio Bastianch. I saw her prepare this on her PBS cooking show, and they turn out great!

Green Bean Gratinate

Servings: 6 or more

Description: One day, when I was wondering what to make with a nice batch of fresh green beans, my daughter Tanya remembered a salad she’d had on a recent trip to Italy—perfectly cooked green beans, cherry tomatoes, basil and cubes of fresh mozzarella. Because I long to take things a step further, I decided to combine the very same ingredients in a casserole and bake them with a grattinata of bread crumbs and grated cheese. It was wonderful. And it is a fine example of how one simple procedure—baking ingredients coated with cheesy bread crumbs—can work so well with so many foods. The Broccoli & Cauliflower Grattinata and the Crispy and Cheesey Turkey Cutlets use the same method. Of course, there’s another kitchen principle evident here: good ingredient combinations lend themselves to different preparations.

Ingredients: 1-1/2 pounds fresh green beans
1/2 teaspoon kosher salt
3/4 pound cherry tomatoes (about 3 cups), preferably small “grape” tomatoes
1/2 pound fresh mozzarella
4 to 6 fresh basil leaves
1 cup grated Parmigiano-Reggiano or Grana Padano
1/2 cup dry bread crumbs
3 tablespoons extra-virgin olive oil
3 tablespoons butter

Directions: Arrange a rack in the top half of the oven and preheat to 375. Fill a large pot with water (at least 5 quarts) and bring it to the boil. Trim both ends of the beans and remove strings (if they’re an old fashioned variety and have strings). Dump them all into the boiling water, cover the pot until the water boils again, then cook uncovered, for 10 minutes or so, until they are just cooked through—tender but still firm enough to snap. Drain the beans briefly in a colander then put them in a big kitchen bowl. Sprinkle 1/4 teaspoon of salt on the hot beans and toss them so they’re all seasoned. Let the salt melt and the beans cool for a couple of minutes.
Meanwhile, rinse and dry the tomatoes; if they’re larger than an inch, slice them in halves, otherwise leave them whole. Cut the mozzarella into 1/2-inch cubes. Slice the basil leaves into thin shreds or chiffonade.

Toss the grated cheese and bread crumbs together in a small bowl. Lighlty grease the insides of the baking dish with a teaspoon or more of the butter. Sprinke 1/4 cup of the cheese-and-bread-crumb mix all over the bottom of the dish. When the beans are no longer steaming, drop the tomatoes, cubes of mozzarella, and basil shreds on top. Drizzle the olive oil over all, sprinkle on the remaining 1/4 teaspoon salt and toss together a few times. Sprinkle 3/4 cup of the cheesy breadcrumbs on top and toss well, so everything is coated. Turn the vegetables, scraping up all the crumbs, into the baking dish, and spread them in an even layer. Sprinkle over the remaining 1/4 cup of crumbs; cut the rest of the butter in small pieces and scatter them all over the top. Place the dish in the oven. Bake the gratinate for 10 minutes, the rotate it back to front and bake another 10 minutes. Check to see that it is browning and bake a few minutes more, until the gratinate is dark golden and crusted. (If the crumbs still lok pale after 20 minutes in your oven, raise the temperature to 400 or 425 and bake until done.)

Serve the hot gratinate in the baking dish.

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5 comments:

Sarah - The Home Cook said...

I love Lidia! I've made this recipe before and it truly is fantastic.

Unknown said...

This does sound wonderful ^_^ but I dont particularly like greenbeans *gasp* can you think of a suitable substitute, or would that just ruin it?

Lobster Boy said...

Do you like asperagus? You could make it with some other things as well, but might have to adjust cooking time according to the veggie you choose. If it is a slower cooking veggie it might take longer (or quick veggie will take less). It should be a fairly transportable recipe.

Lobster Boy

Thy said...

yum. sounds good.

thanks : D

OldSchoolD15 said...

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