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Baked Artichokes

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  • Baked Artichokes

    I tried something out a couple of days ago that came out so well I thought I should share.

    I was baking some mahi for dinner. We had some artichokes that needed to get used, so I decided to try baking them at the same time as the fish. I did some googling, and found this recipe, For the Love of Cooking - Printable Recipes: Baked Artichokes with Lemon, Garlic and Basil, which I used as a point of departure.

    I modified the olive oil mixture a bit. I used more olive oil, so it was more of a dressing than a paste. I increased the garlic, and used a garlic press. I added marjoram and fresh ground coriander to the mix. I didn't have a lemon, so I used lemon juice.

    ******

    I cut the artichokes in half and cleaned them as described. As soon as I sliced and cleaned an artichoke half I liberally applied lemon juice, letting the juice get into the cavity and making sure it got among the leaves before I went to work on the next half. (At this juncture the primary purpose of the lemon juice is as an anti-oxidant.)

    After I had cleaned the artichokes I worked the olive oil mixture into the artichoke halves, coating the cavity and being sure ample portions were worked in among the leaves.

    I then put the artichokes, cut side down, into a baking dish along with the chicken stock. I drizzled about a half teaspoon of balsamic vinegar on each half, making sure that the vinegar got in among the leaves.

    I didn't bother with trimming the ends of the leaves.

    *****

    I covered the baking dish and put in the covered dish in the oven at 260 deg for about two hours of cooking. Nice thing here; since I work at home I look for things that can slow cook while I get back to work.

    When I checked it about an hour later most of the chicken stock was either cooked off or had been absorbed. I drizzled the artichokes with a pomegranate-blueberry vinaigrette salad dressing (from the local Safeway) to add a bit of sweetness and bite (again making sure that the vinaigrette got into among the leaves) and added a bit to the bottom of the dish, and put the dish back in the oven with the temp turned down to about 225. On a whim, in the last half hour I turned the artichokes over and filled up the centers of the artichokes with grape tomatoes.

    ******

    Best frickin' artichokes I've had in my life. Definitely a do-it-again, and now I'm going to get a bit more creative with the stuffing that I add to the artichokes at the end.

    With an appropriate stuffing this could easily be a main course for us. We don't eat much red meat, favor seafood, and emphasize veggies and fruits in our meals.

    *****

    Sometime within the next week or two I'm planning to fix some seafood with a Veracruz sauce. I figure that if we end up with some leftovers that aren't enough for an entire second meal, I can just make a stuffing for the artichokes with the leftovers and get at least one, if not two, added meals out of the veracruz.
    “Maybe you shouldn't dress like that.”

    “This is a blouse and skirt. I don't know what you're talking about.”

    “You shouldn't wear that body.”

  • #2
    I love artichokes - this sounds awesome! Thanks for posting.

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    • #3
      I've never eaten an artichoke , prefer grits but I saw a lot of them growing when I went on a tour on the way back from Carmel. shaggy

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      • #4
        We have no guests for dinner tomorrow night, so it would be only the four of us-----come on down!

        Seriously, we are artichoke fans (husband is from Watsonville, just a few miles from Castorville, and you should see him shop for artichokes at the grocery store; it's a sight to behold), so I see this recipe in our future for tomorrow night.

        If you and your wife arrive, we'll get more and you can be in charge.
        "You cannot legislate the poor into prosperity by legislating the wealthy out of prosperity." Adrian Rogers

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        • #5
          Originally posted by Pstreet1 View Post
          We have no guests for dinner tomorrow night, so it would be only the four of us-----come on down!

          Seriously, we are artichoke fans (husband is from Watsonville, just a few miles from Castorville, and you should see him shop for artichokes at the grocery store; it's a sight to behold), so I see this recipe in our future for tomorrow night.

          If you and your wife arrive, we'll get more and you can be in charge.
          DW is a Redwood City lass, and we lived in the Bay Area for about 15 years. I regularly got down to the Monterey area for business or pleasure, and almost always brought back fresh artichokes with me.

          We eat artichokes often. Such a splendid vegetable!
          “Maybe you shouldn't dress like that.”

          “This is a blouse and skirt. I don't know what you're talking about.”

          “You shouldn't wear that body.”

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          • #6
            Yum!
            Thanks.
            Syd

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            • #7
              Backyard

              Originally posted by shaggy
              I've never eaten an artichoke , prefer grits but I saw a lot of them growing when I went on a tour on the way back from Carmel. shaggy
              Have grown them many times in my own yard in Santa Clara County. Shaggy, you don't know what you are missing!
              I enjoy the story my wife tells of how when she was little her two older brothers would take turns cleaning the inside out of her artichokes for her so she didn't choke on anything. It took her until she was about 13 to realize she never got the heart because they were ripping it off each time.
              Bart
              I live to vacation and vacation to live.

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