Corn, Bacon, and Parmesan Pasta

Corn, Bacon, and Parmesan Pasta

At the peak of summer we try to eat as much corn on the cob as possible, because it’s so good this time of year. This year I’ve been exploring recipes that use fresh corn and recently decided to make this Corn, Bacon, and Parmesan Pasta from the Smitten Kitchen blog.

This recipe comes together in a flash, so you’ll want to prep your corn and bacon before you get going. I managed to get the bacon perfectly crispy without burning it, which was very satisfying. You’ll want to keep a close eye on how it’s cooking up, and as it starts to crisp, move it around the pan frequently. That way you won’t have any bits that are getting blasted by hot spots in your pan.

We used fresh cavatelli that we picked up at the farmers market. It’s sold frozen and was more than we needed for the recipe, so I had to take a few minutes to pry off 8 ounces, but that didn’t take long. It was a fun shape for this dish as pieces of corn nestled into the cavity.

This is a very simple and light dinner. We got two dinner servings out of it, but we didn’t have anything on the side. If you add a side salad; a green veggie; or a plate of heirloom tomatoes with salt, pepper, and olive oil; you could stretch to 3 or 4 servings. This would also be very easy to scale up.

A shallow white bowl holds a big mound of pasta, pieces of bacon, and corn. The pasta is cavatelli, which are ovals smushed into a long U shape. The whole thing is scattered with basil and chives.
The Corn, Bacon, and Parmesan Pasta from the Smitten Kitchen blog.
Buffalo Chicken Cobb Salad

Buffalo Chicken Cobb Salad

One of Deb’s latest recipes is this Buffalo Chicken Cobb Salad, which I made less than two weeks after she posted it to the blog. I don’t do them super often, but we like an entree salad here and this combines our preferred cobb salad format with buffalo chicken. What’s not to like? (This isn’t a Deb, but another favorite cobb salad variation is this Autumn Cobb Salad, which will basically take any roasted squash you can throw at it.)

For veggies I used a mix of cucumber, celery, carrot, bell pepper, and tomatoes. But as she says, you can really do whatever combination of veggies you like. I did skip the blue cheese because I’m just not a fan. I thought about substituting cheddar, but I didn’t think we’d miss the cheese, and I was right.

I did a pretty simple baked chicken thigh for this. They got a brief marinade in some olive oil, salt, pepper, Penzey’s Mural of Flavor spice mix, and a splash of champagne vinegar. I prepped an entire two-pound package because I know we’ll use up the leftovers.

This came together pretty easily, though it is one of those meals where there’s a lot of chopping. But that also means there’s a lot you can do ahead of time. Basically you can prep this entire meal ahead of time, and I don’t think you’d even need to do it at the same time.

A sliced chicken thigh, flecked with spices and doused in an orange sauce, rests on top of a bed of romaine lettuce you can barely see. Around the edges of the chicken are chopped yellow peppers, celery, orange and red cherry tomatoes, carrots and cucumbers. They're all drizzled with a white dressing with a generous amount of chives.
The Buffalo Chicken Cobb Salad from the Smitten Kitchen Blog.
Baby Wedge Salad with Avocado and Pickled Onions

Baby Wedge Salad with Avocado and Pickled Onions

The Baby Wedge Salad with Avocado and Pickled Onions caught my eye immediately when Deb posted it to the blog this spring. I like to do taco night, but I struggle with a side dish. Last summer I was throwing together corn salads, which is fine but not quite what I was looking for. Normally I don’t gravitate towards iceberg lettuce, but the form factor intrigued me and I knew this would feel light and refreshing in the summer.

Overall this dish was a winner! The presentation is really fun, and the crunch of the iceberg is great with the various other toppings. It’ll look like too much of everything, but you want that abundance with iceberg. Especially since there isn’t really a dressing on this.

The one major hitch I ran into was that I accidentally burned the first batch of pepitas. If you’re also starting with roasted ones, start that one minute timer the second you start to see bubbling, and be ready to take them off the heat right away.

I also encountered a minor hitch, which was that I didn’t have enough red wine vinegar to pickle the onions. So I just used some from a big jar of them we keep in the fridge. The flavor profile isn’t quite the same since I made these with white vinegar, but I don’t think we missed much.

A square white platter holds small wedges of iceberg lettuce, liberally covered in crumbled white cotija cheese, rounds of red radish slices, diced avocado, baby pink pickled onions, and dark brown toasted pumpkin seeds.
The Baby Wedge Salad with Avocado and Pickled Onions from the Smitten Kitchen Blog.
Turkey Pesto Meatballs and Orecchiette

Turkey Pesto Meatballs and Orecchiette

I know that not everyone wants to use the oven to make dinner in the summer, but if you’re not opposed to the idea, the Turkey Pesto Meatballs and Orecchiette from the Smitten Kitchen Blog are a great way to use up some of that summer squash you bought at the farmer’s market.

Instead of pesto, I use a homemade basil garlic sauce and just add some additional parmesan cheese as I go. I try to make a batches of that a couple of times during the summer, and then freeze it for use later. So it’s not as much work as it sounds like (at least all on one day). I don’t miss the pine nuts, especially in something like this, but if I wanted that texture I’d probably add some toasted walnuts, chopped fine.

I made this once last summer, and put half of the meatballs and squash in the freezer. They held up pretty well, but for me the 1/4″ thick slices of squash were a little too thin, especially once frozen. They kind of fell apart. This time I sliced them thicker, somewhere in between 1/4″ and 1/2″ inch.

As I did last year, I made the full amount of meatballs and squash, but halved the rest of the recipe to make two dinner servings. I actually knocked the amount of pasta down further, to 6oz, but probably could have gotten away with 4 or 5oz. When I want to make the leftovers, I’ll just heat up the meatballs and zucchini while the pasta boils, and then make the brothy sauce.

This is a light but satisfying summer meal, and it would also lend itself well to being made ahead of time.

A shower of white parmesan coats a pile of lightly browned meatballs, half moons of summer squash, and orecchiette. Everything is covered in green flecks of basil, and there's a small puddle of golden broth at the bottom of the dish.
The Turkey Pesto Meatballs and Orecchiette from the Smitten Kitchen blog.
Crispy Rice and Egg Bowl with Ginger-Scallion Vinaigrette

Crispy Rice and Egg Bowl with Ginger-Scallion Vinaigrette

I made the Crispy Rice and Egg Bowl with Ginger-Scallion Vinaigrette on a night when I only had to feed myself. It’s one of those dinners that comes together very easily, and is flexible in that you can just use whatever veggies you have or like. I used carrots and snap peas, as there were some at the farmer’s market that looked good.

Per Deb’s suggestion I made brown rice. I should have paid a little more attention because our brown rice is long grain, and she calls for short grain, which has more starch. This meant that when I crisped it up, it didn’t stick together. It just sort of all got a little dried out, which wasn’t the greatest texture. So make sure you use short grain rice, as that will stick together better and you’ll have rice that is crispy in some spots and soft in others.

I used sherry vinegar for the ginger-scallion vinaigrette, but next time I’ll try rice wine vinegar, as sometimes the sherry felt a little overpowering. I also made a note to scale back the oil in the vinaigrette by about a quarter, as it seemed a little oily to me.

I thought the crispy egg worked really well here. The creaminess from the yolk adds a nice contrast, and the ginger-scallion sauce is really good with the egg. I topped my bowl with a little bit of toasted sesame oil, toasted sesame seeds, and some gochugaru. Despite the weird texture of the rice it was still a pretty good dinner.

I had this again the next day but didn’t crisp the rice, I just warmed it up in the microwave. That was good, so if you only have long-grain rice I’d skip the crisping.

Overall this was a good, if light meal. But that makes it a great entry into the lunch rotation since it leaves room for an afternoon snack break! Plus it would be really easy to do the prep on the weekend, and then lunch would come together in just a smidge more time than it takes to fry an egg.