My day off in pictures:

Coming VERY soon: Aubergine Slippers, a yummy Greek eggplant recipe.
Happy Monday! I am generally not Monday’s biggest fan, but I’ve got Friday off this week due to parent-teacher conferences Thursday night (ah!), so it feels more like a Tuesday which is A-OK with me.
Hope everyone had a good weekend! I spent the weekend in Illinois visiting my parents so that’s why I took a tiny break from blogging. I have an incredible Greek eggplant-based recipe to share with you that my mom showed me how to make Saturday! Unfortunately, I forgot the recipe at my parents’… but have no fear: my mom will send it to me tomorrow morning so I should have it up here for you ASAP! You will love it!
But in the meantime…
I have a delicious 3 ingredient dinner for you: Raclette!
Here is a little background. I spent the 2011-2012 school year in Nantes, France as an English Teaching Assistant in a French high school through the Teaching Assistant Program in France (TAPIF).
During my year abroad, I was invited to several dinner parties by French friends I had met as well as teachers I worked with. The number one dish that was almost always served at these dinner parties? Raclette. Raclette is a type of Swiss/French cheese that melts really well. It’s extremely popular in Northern France where it gets quite chilly in the Winter. It’s a very comforting Fall/Winter dish and has a way of warming you up!
There are a couple ways the French melt it: the first one is with one of these:
By the way, this picture is from a restaurant I went to with some friends in Nantes… look at that giant piece of cheese! We were amazed.
It melts the top layer of cheese, and once it is melted, you scrape it off.
The second way is a table-top grill:
Most French families I met in Nantes own one of these. You place a slice of Raclette cheese on one of the little trays and place it into the table-top grill. Once it is melted, you slide it off, onto your plate.
Raclette cheese is usually melted onto roasted/baked potatoes and different charcuteries like ham, salami, prosciutto, etc.
It sounds so simple – and it is – but let me tell you… it’s delicious! A perfect dish for chilly Fall and Winter nights.
Now I realize not everyone has a special Raclette machine to do this – so here is my easy way of making Raclette.
First, assemble your ingredients. I used 1/2 lb of Teeny Tiny potatoes from Trader Joe’s, low sodium ham, and Raclette cheese, also from Trader Joe’s.
Aren’t the potatoes adorable? I couldn’t resist buying them – I love anything in miniature form! They taste great too!
Next, wash the potatoes and brush them with some olive oil and sprinkle with your favorite herb – I used basil, but rosemary or thyme would be delicious. Place the potatoes on a foil-lined baking sheet and place in a 325 degree oven.
After the potatoes are done, around 30 minutes, take them out of the oven and cover each of them with a little piece of cheese. I used about 1/2 a slice per potato, less for the tinier ones. Place the pan under the broiler for a few minutes until the cheese is melted.
Take them out of the oven and serve with ham, salami, prosciutto, or other deli-style meats. Et voila!
Raclette
Serves 2
Ingredients:
½ lb Potatoes (doesn’t matter what kind – I used teeny tiny potatoes from Trader Joe’s)
4 slices Raclette cheese
4 slices ham, salami, prosciutto or other cold cuts
~ 1 tablespoon Olive oil
Any seasonings you like (I used dried basil, but thyme and rosemary would be good)
1. Preheat oven to 325 degrees. Brush clean potatoes with olive oil and sprinkle with the herb of your choice. Place in a foil-lined baking sheet and roast for 30 minutes (for the teeny tiny ones) or until potatoes are cooked.
2. Cover the potatoes with slices of Raclette cheese then place under the broiler for a few minutes. Take them out of the oven when the cheese is melted.
3. Serve with ham, salami, prosciutto, or other deli meats.
Okay, I may have gone a little overboard with the cheese… but really, how can you have too much cheese? Impossible I say.
What’s your favorite comforting Fall/Winter dish?
Well, it’s been an interesting couple days. I’ve had a series of ups and downs at work lately. I teach French at a high school in Milwaukee, and since I am the only French teacher, I have every level so I see a large variety of students. Yesterday, school started off badly with several students giving me all sorts of lame excuses as to why they did not have their projects that were due (my computer wasn’t working, I had papers for other classes, etc.) Give me a break!
I was in such a horrible mood by lunch that I was really dreading my last 2 classes… until my French 2 class performed their skits. I like to have the students do skits sometimes in lieu of a unit test so that they can show me they know how to use the grammar and vocabulary in conversation, so the French 2’s created group skits with the requirements that I provided them. Oh. My. Gosh. They went way above and beyond the call of duty for these. They were so creative and not to mention freaking hilarious. One involved kidnapping and interrogating Gilbert Gottfried (one of my students does a really accurate impression of him!), another was an Oprah interview, and I had one male student who pretended to be Miley Cyrus and entered the room on a stability ball (or as one student called it: the weird ball with udders) and there may or may not have been some twerking upside down on the wall involved. It was a little disturbing, but nevertheless I laughed hysterically.
When I got home from work, I was in the mood for something homemade, but quick. I decided on my go-to quick dinner: Chicken Pad Thai. If you haven’t made it before, I recommend it. It’s quite tasty and very easy to make.
I apologize for the picture by the way… I was so hungry that scarfing it down immediately was more important at the time than presentation.
Chicken Pad Thai
Recipe adapted from Thai Cooking & More, by Publications International, Ltd.
Serves 5
Ingredients:
8 ounces uncooked rice noodles, 1/8 inch wide
2 tablespoons rice wine vinegar ( I used brown rice vinegar – just as good!)
1 ½ tablespoons fish sauce
1 to 2 tablespoons fresh lemon juice
1 tablespoon ketchup
2 teaspoon sugar
¼ teaspoon red pepper flakes (I used a bit more – I like a little more kick to it!)
1 tablespoon vegetable oil
1 boneless skinless chicken breast (about 4 ounces), chopped into bite-sized pieces
2 green onions, thinly sliced
2 cloves garlic, minced
¾ cup shredded red cabbage (not pictured)
1 medium carrot, shredded (not pictured)
*The original recipe calls for bean sprouts, cilantro, and peanuts, but I prefer the Pad Thai without these.
I love this recipe because I am a Thai food ADDICT, so I am thrilled when I can successfully recreate my favorite dishes at home (still looking for a good recipe for Thai Red Curry if anyone knows of one – my last attempt was an epic failure!). It’s also incredibly versatile – you can add whatever you’d like to it – shrimp, lime, onions, etc. I can’t stress enough how easy it is. The longest part of making this Pad Thai dish is soaking the noodles, and while those babies soak you can mix up the sauce and get everything chopped up and ready to go. I definitely recommend it!
Hello and welcome to my blog! I’ve been lurking in the blogging world for a couple years reading food blogs, and I finally got inspired to be brave and create my own.
My name is Nicole and I am a French teacher in Milwaukee, WI. Both of my parents were born and raised in Greece, so my cooking (and life in general!) is definitely Greek-influenced; hence the name of the blog! I love to cook and try out new recipes all the time, so this will be an outlet for me to share my recipes, try out recipes I’ve found, and basically an excuse for me to cook a ton.
Along with cooking, my other passion is traveling. I’ve spent quite a bit of time traveling, studying, and living in Europe and have many future travel plans, so I want to give tips to help others have amazing trips as well! I will also give suggestions for some of my favorite places to visit in many cities, so hopefully that will be useful to some of you trip planners.
Thanks for checking out my blog! I’ll write again soon with a yummy recipe. 🙂