Cheese-Topped Baked Polenta

Homemade stock and dried herbs give polenta enough flavor to stand on its own yet remain neutral enough to take any of my favorite sauces. Learn more at TwiceasTasty.com.
My husband George will happily eat a bowl of noodles or a baked potato seasoned with just butter and cheese. Give me a simple, starchy base like pasta, rice, potatoes, or cornmeal, and I will bury it in a deeply flavored sauce every time. With the polenta recipe I share this week in my Twice as Tasty column for the Flathead Beacon, I can satisfy both of us.

Homemade stock and dried herbs give polenta just enough flavor to stand on its own, especially when baked or grilled and smothered in cheese. Yet it remains neutral enough to take any of my favorite sauces. I’ve served polenta as a bruschetta-like appetizer, a holiday side dish, and the base layer for a weeknight meal—and then snacked on the leftovers like cornbread. I often make a double batch of polenta and serve half straight off the stove in its soft, porridge-like form. I spread the rest in a baking pan and refrigerate it until the next day to bake and serve as an entirely different meal.
Learn to make Cheese-Topped Baked Polenta

Squash and Goat Cheese Ravioli with Nutty Butter Sauce

Fill store-bought wonton wrappers with squash and goat cheese to create impressive pasta with a scratch-made delicacy. Learn more at TwiceasTasty.com.
There’s no way to make homemade pasta look quick and easy when the alternative is to boil a pot of water and dump in a box of dried noodles. But homemade pasta shortcuts do exist, and this week, I share one of my favorites in my Twice as Tasty column for the Flathead Beacon: wonton wrapper ravioli.

Like hand-rolled Homemade Pumpkin Gnocchi, filling store-bought wonton wrappers with squash and goat cheese still creates impressive pasta with a made-from-scratch delicacy. But whereas both squash gnocchi and Homemade Pan-Fried Potato Gnocchi showcase the pasta, the ravioli filling plays a huge flavor role. Its nutty butter sauce and my recommended base of torn arugula or kale enhance the filling—and work equally well as a gnocchi presentation.

Learn to make Squash and Goat Cheese Ravioli with Nutty Butter Sauce

Chickpea Vegetable Skillet with Couscous and Feta

Veggie couscous works as garden-to-table meal or one that fits neatly in a cooler and kitchen box on the water or in a campground. Learn more at TwiceasTasty.com.
My garden is bountiful so far this year, and many of my home-cooked meals begin with me spreading out my harvest on the counter and chopping up a little of everything for an impromptu, no-recipe vegetable sauté, salad, or pasta meal. But when I’m not making dinner at home these days, I’m usually making it aboard our sailboat, the Blue Mule, where my range of options becomes more limited. One of the beauties of the recipe I share this week in my Twice as Tasty column for the Flathead Beacon is that you can approach it as garden-to-table meal or as a pantry-focused one that fits neatly in a cooler and kitchen box on the water or in a campground.

As I teach in my Fine Dining: Front Country workshop, the key to making such a veggie-heavy meal in the galley or at the campsite is to choose vegetables that travel well. Whole carrots, onions, and garlic can tumble around as the boat surfs waves or the car bounces down gravel roads, and they’ll still look and taste great at dinnertime. I pack small zucchini, so I don’t have a partial one left with an exposed cut edge that’s more susceptible to damage. I also tuck zukes and other tender vegetables into a plastic storage box that fits inside my ice chest and minimizes their bumping and bruising—and their direct exposure to melting ice.
Learn to make Chickpea Vegetable Skillet with Couscous and Feta

Gingerbread Pancakes

Some foods stick with you not only because they’re delicious but because of the fond memories they evoke. Gingerbread pancakes fall in that category for me. Learn more at TwiceasTasty.com.
Some foods stick with you not only because they’re delicious but because of the fond memories they evoke. Gingerbread pancakes fall in that category for me, as I explain this week in my Twice as Tasty column for the Flathead Beacon. I was thrilled when I checked up on Zazie, where I first tasted these pancakes, to find that not only was it still open but thriving. Brunch at this French-style bistro was always a calm, relaxed affair amid San Francisco’s bustle, and I recommend a visit if you’re in the city.

Now that I’m more than 1,100 miles away, I’ve replaced that experience with this week’s pancake recipe and a quiet morning on my cabin’s deck. The spices and molasses give these pancakes their distinctive flavor, and Cultured Buttermilk and egg whites make them ultra-fluffy. The buttermilk gives them just a hint of the tang that dominates Overnight Sourdough Pancakes and Sourdough–Yogurt Pancakes.
Learn to make Gingerbread Pancakes

Smashed Bean Pasta

Mexican restaurants have made rice and refried beans an American staple, but the Italian tradition of pairing pasta with beans hasn’t caught on here—yet. Learn more at TwiceasTasty.com.
We often put a meaty protein on pasta—fish and shellfish, chicken breast, all sorts of meat ground and shaped into meatballs. Yet we tend to overlook the pairing of pasta and beans, a prime vegetable source of protein. Whereas Mexican restaurants have made rice and refried beans an American staple and the Southern population has long served up red beans and rice, the Italian tradition of pairing pasta with beans hasn’t caught on.

That will hopefully change in your household with this week’s recipe in my Twice as Tasty column for the Flathead Beacon. It’s an easy, filling meal that can be made at the last minute from ingredients in the pantry. Leave off the cheese for a vegan version, and pile in olives for a little zing. By smashing some of the beans, they find their way, along with the tomato juices, into the pasta’s holes and pockets.
Learn to make Smashed Bean Pasta

Tomato–Basil Mac and Cheese

Boost the flavor of macaroni and cheese by loading in vegetables: the garden harvest in summer and fall and home-preserved produce in winter and spring. Learn more at TwiceasTasty.com.
Mac and cheese lands firmly in my comfort food category, and I do my best not to feel guilty about biting into that cheesy, gooey pasta—especially when I make a pan that feeds eight people for our household of two. As I share this week in my Twice as Tasty column for the Flathead Beacon, one way I decrease the guilt factor while boosting the flavor is to load vegetables into the dish. This works in summer and fall with the garden harvest and in winter and spring with homegrown produce that I preserved for just such uses.

In fact, I originally wrote this recipe for frozen cherry tomatoes, frozen cubes of basil pesto, and grilled and frozen onion. Sometimes I use home-canned tomatoes instead or, when I deplete my stash, store-bought cans of diced tomatoes. Dried basil works well too. Still, when you have fresh in-season options, they give the best flavor and the prettiest meal.
Learn to make Tomato–Basil Mac and Cheese

Mushroom-Filled Blini

Blini are delicious stuffed with cremini mushrooms, those brown-toned baby Portobellos, or with wild mushrooms. Learn more at TwiceasTasty.com.
When my Twice as Tasty column for the Flathead Beacon went live with the latest recipe, Mushroom-Filled Blini, one of the first reactions that I received focused on the mushrooms, rather than the thin pancakes I wrap around them. Although I wrote the recipe for cremini mushrooms, the brown-toned baby Portobellos that are easily found in most grocery stores, I ate delicious blini stuffed with wild mushrooms while traveling across Russia.

In my corner of Northwest Montana, spring mushroom foraging season is just around the corner. I recommend bookmarking this week’s recipe if you’ll soon be out hunting for morels, our most popular edible spring fungi. You can find more ideas for cooking your bounty in this blog post. It also links to a Flathead Beacon column I wrote in 2022 after interviewing local forager Dale Johnson, who offered tips for identifying and using your wild mushroom collection.
Learn to make Mushroom-Filled Blini

Cooking with Bulgur Wheat

A chewy, nutty form of wheat, bulgur cooks relatively quickly and contains loads of nutrients and fiber. Learn more at TwiceasTasty.com.
Although I use many grains when cooking at home, I tend to overlook bulgur. When it sits at the front of my shelves, I reach for it as a base under everything from shrimp to shish kebabs, but I forget about it as soon as the jar gets shoved to the back. So I was excited to dig out my jar and create a primer about cooking with bulgur in my latest piece for Taste of Home.

This chewy, nutty form of wheat cooks relatively quickly and contains loads of nutrients and fiber. It comes in grinds ranging from fine to extra coarse—info that isn’t always listed on bulk bins or packaging. In the Taste of Home article, I explain how to identify the size, and thus the cooking time, as well as offering tips on preparing and using it.
Learn about cooking with bulgur wheat

Sunshine Risotto

When you freeze and dry the ingredients for a favorite summertime meal, it becomes a sunny midweek, midwinter one. Learn more at TwiceasTasty.com.
The risotto recipe I share this week in my Twice as Tasty column for the Flathead Beacon started out as a from-the-freezer meal. It tastes of summer, but the grated and frozen summer squash, burst yellow tomatoes, and dried basil and parsley aren’t nearly as photogenic as fresh, barely cooked tomatoes and thin slivers of fresh squash and herbs. I altered my original recipe just so I could photograph the fresh dish, and it’s become a summertime favorite, especially when I’m cooking for family or friends.

My column includes both the fresh and the frozen versions, with the steps for adding fresh ingredients in the recipe and notes in the header for making this risotto in winter. Sungold, yellow pear, and other cherry-size tomatoes are so easy to freeze: just give them a rinse and pop them in a freezer bag. For summer squash, you’re getting the prep out of the way by grating and freezing. Drying herbs is simple, especially if you follow these tips. With these ingredients in your freezer and spice rack, along with homemade vegetable stock, this risotto becomes a sunny midweek, midwinter meal.
Learn to make Sunshine Risotto from fresh or frozen vegetables

Pasta That Pops

Pick fresh cherry tomatoes, or save them for later by freezing them, to cook into a pasta sauce that intensifies their tart-sweet taste. Learn more at TwiceasTasty.com.
We typically choose cherry tomatoes for fresh dishes, but they’re delicious when preserved and cooked. The easiest way to save cherry tomatoes is to freeze them, as I share this week in my Twice as Tasty column for the Flathead Beacon, along with my favorite way to cook cherry tomatoes and intensify their tart-sweet taste.

You can make this week’s pasta sauce with other tomatoes, fresh or frozen, but it won’t “pop” as the skins burst and you may want to stir in a tablespoon of honey or sugar at the end if the tomatoes aren’t as sweet. Larger tomatoes may also release more juice—which means you’ll need more of them to end up with the same volume of sauce and they’ll take longer to cook down. When freezing larger tomatoes to cook into pasta sauce, soup, or stew, you can cut them in chunks and bag them by weight. It takes a little more time than freezing them whole, but tomato chunks need far less freezer space.
Learn to make Pasta That Pops