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I prefer to do the very thin asparagus, so you can saute them without pre-cooking. If they're not very thin, then you have to pre-steam, shock then in ice to stop cooking, and then saute. That's easy enough and gets good results, but it's even easier if you can skip that step.
Last time DW bought the super-thick ones, so I roasted. They were OK but kind of mushy and overdone. I forgot to take them out while they were still a little underdone to let them finish while resting. |
PP who asked about amount of time. Thanks for these cooking tips! I'll try these next time--wasn't thinking about the fact they would continue cooking a little. |
| I would do a salad and corn on the cob. Vegtables IMO require exact timing to taste good (I hate mushy overlooked) and if I was you I would get distracted talking to my guests. |
| If using the grill, I would cook yellow and green squash, asparagus, onions with garlic and olive oil. |
| Roasted fennel -- slice thin, shred parmesan on top, and drizzle with olive oil. Different and very yummy. |
Oh ffs. Specific vegetables are not intrinsically "classy." |
| Green beans sautéed with browned butter and garlic |
Asparagus suggestion reminded me of an event in a nice hotel that we went to several years ago - during dinner service everyone was served asparagus as a side so when I went to a ladies room later it smelled so strong of the "asparagus pee" - that was funny indeed: several hundred people having asparagus pee at the same time - the ultimate revenge of the "evil chef"
Needless to say I no longer serve asparagus to anybody besides the immediate family )
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I can't get enough of this salad
http://cooking.nytimes.com/recipes/1012582-sugar-snap-pea-salad-with-radishes-mint-and-ricotta-salata |