Bruschetta With Peppers and Gorgonzola
- By Katie Roche
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- 08 Sep, 2018
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For this recipe, Me, Myself, & Ina took a field trip to Indianapolis, IN! Actually me, myself, and TWO Inas, because I did bring more than one Ina cookbook on the 10-hour drive from SC. I brought Cooking For Jeffrey because it has this amazing Kahlua meringue buttercream recipe that I wanted to make with my sister, but we decided to spare her KitchenAid the HOUR of mixing involved. When we make it at our house, we plug the KitchenAid into the guest room and shut the door. ANYWAY! My sister and her family live in the Indy area, and we decided to go surprise the nephews with a visit over our long weekend for Memorial Day. Since my brother-in-law, Duston, is the brains behind all of this looking nice and neat and the wind beneath my wings as far as assuring me that it would be doable and awesome, I thought it would be fun to cook one of the recipes in their kitchen. We heavily debated making the lobster chowder there, but as Indiana is n-o-w-h-e-r-e near anything of any topographical or geographical interest, like an ocean, the only place you can buy live lobster there is Red Lobster and if you do that, you cannot buy it without also getting some nast Red Lobster food with it. PASS.
When Dan and I show up at their house, we basically have to map out the days and the foods we are wanting to eat, because my family’s #1 hobby is eating, and there are just too many options. One evening has to be dedicated to the 45 minute trek across the city for some seriously pretentious and expensive cake at The Cake Bake Shop. We eat out for dinner at least once as well, since Indy has a pretty amazing dining scene for all it is lacking in topographical features. I guess no mountains = more flat space for beef cows and like, real estate developments so you can pack your suburbia with “upscale American” restaurants. In an effort to save room for more food later, we decided to make this appetizer for a light “lunch” after church.
In order to take advantage of having new grocery store options, we chose Meijer for our procurement mission. We needed a baguette for this, and I was counting on the Meijer bakery to be pretty quality. Grocery store bakeries are rather hit-or-miss; Krogers’ bakeries are usually pretty terrible, as are Food Lions’. My preference is Carrs (Safeway) in Alaska, and Publix when I’m in the south. The produce section was well-stocked for basil and bell pepper needs, and though it took some time in the cavernous depths that is Meijer (it is seriously giant), we finally found capers, or, as Dan has called them since seeing Pitch Perfect 2, “those salty peas”. The one thing I never did find was “creamy” Gorgonzola - I had to settle for whatever ordinary and non-descript Gorgonzola they had in the deli.

Once topped with a little dot of Gorgonzola each, we popped them in the oven to lightly melt the cheese. We ate them while playing board games, and by we, I mostly mean Duston and me. My sister was not a fan of the salty peas and Dan was trying to say he’s “intermittent fasting” but I think he actually just didn’t want to eat the Gorgonzola - he is not a stinky cheese person.




#1: Butternut Squash Soup

So with that, #1: Juice of a Few Flowers

We went to Publix to ItemQuest for this and Dan said, "Don't we already have strawberries???" And I had to confess that I had eaten them all because it's honestly amazing how good fruit can be when it's 1) in season, 2) somewhat local, and 3) not ludicrously expensive. I'm about to travel home to Alaska for about a month, and it's going to put a real damper on my current fruit-snacking habits when I go into Fred Meyer for some strawbs and they're like, $7/lb and already trying to be moldy. Also needed blueberries (partly for the jam, mostly for the snax), one Granny Smith apple, and more superfine sugar. Publix had all of these things, plus about a million old people 'cause Sunday + Publix = Old People City.




So down to the granola bar ingredients. I rolled up to Kroger only to find that their already meager bulk bins had been EMPTIED because if you scoop dates into a bag and then someone else scoops dates into a bag, you might get the coronavirus. I'm glad they've taken the precaution of removing this shopping option, since I cannot resisting licking my hands after every grocery trip I make. Thankfully, they still had the lil tower of small containers of some of the weirder items right there in the organic section, which was where I was able to find dates. The rest of this stuff was on the baking aisle, with the exception of wheat germ which was, for some reason, with the cereal. I'm still kind of unclear on what wheat germ is actually used for by people, and the context of it being located on the cereal aisle makes me wonder even more. Do people eat it like grape nuts? Sprinkle it on stuff like how people like to do with nutritional yeast right now? ("It tastes just like cheese!" You know what else tastes like cheese? Actual cheese. You're welcome.) Anyway, I was very grateful that Kroger at least had everything I needed and I didn't have to go on a for real ItemQuest.

ItemQuest was only dramatic because the stores just DID NOT have puff pastry sheets; I was only finding it in "shells". I tried Bi-Lo and Dan tried Food Lion before he finally located sheets at Publix. The rest of the ingredients, I already had on hand!