Make a simple salmon dinner, or a riff on a Middle Eastern fried eggplant sandwich.
 | | Dane Tashima for The New York Times. Food Stylist: Erika Joyce. |
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Two Kinds of Sheet-Pan Recipes |
Most of the time, I'm an eager beaver in the kitchen, but there are days when life gets so busy that by dinnertime I become more of a languid cat. |
A few nights ago, I made a dinner so easy that I didn't even get out a knife. Here's my no-chop, no-recipe recipe: I tipped whole cherry tomatoes onto a sheet pan, coated them with olive oil and salt, and roasted them at 425 degrees until they shriveled and sweetened. Then I nudged them to one side of the pan, laid salmon fillets on the other side and topped everything with more salt, oil and a sprinkle of dried oregano and chile flakes. Less than 10 minutes later, I drizzled on rice vinegar and served it all with a baguette, a green salad and salted yogurt. It was a tasty, satisfying meal prepared in under 30 minutes, without so much as dirtying a cutting board. |
The thing is, I like to chop. I like grabbing my big chef's knife and reducing unruly mounds of vegetables and herbs to tidy piles. I'll put on some music and sway, knife in hand. There's a lot of satisfaction in this kind of busy-beaver energy. And a good place to direct it is Kay Chun's new recipe for sabich bowls (above), based on the beloved Middle Eastern fried eggplant sandwich and prepared on a sheet pan. It takes a lot of chopping, slicing and dicing to make, but the glorious results are well worth it — a mix of velvety eggplant, crisp chickpeas, hard-cooked eggs and a cucumber-tomato salad all coated with a creamy tahini dressing. |
I'll see you on Wednesday. |
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