It's also where our very good friends live (our friends who
are Ben's friend Ava's parents, if you're a long-time reader here). Not
surprisingly, given the whole world-capital situation, our friends live across
the street from a ginormous asparagus farm. An asparagus farm the owners of
which have told them to go ahead and help themselves! Whenever! (They also live
across the street from a tobacco farm, but don't worry--I won't be posting any
recipes.)
"It's hard not to be greedy!" our friend Nicole
said, after walking the kids across the street to pick with her. And then she
pulled a gigantic asparagus-stuffed bag out of her backpack. And then another.
"Very hard, it looks like," her husband said, and we laughed. But oh
they are good.
Don't believe the hype about the skinny ones. Pencil-thin
this and that is everyone's favorite, but not mine. I like the big, fat
asparagus, which are the sweetest I think. Also, fatness is not a sign of age:
while asparagus do get longer as they get older, they poke out of the ground as
thin or fat as they are ever going to be. When I was visiting my brother's
family a few weeks ago, my sister-in-law ended up having to explain the word
"phallic" to my nephew, who had overheard us in the garden laughing
our heads off over a particularly well-endowed specimen in the asparagus patch.
Oops.
So, now that I seem to have managed to mention both tobacco
and x-rated vegetables, it's time to talk about cooking the asparagus before I
say something gross about the way it makes your pee smell. I love asparagus
roasted in the oven: I toss it with olive oil and salt on a foil-lined baking
sheet, then roast them at 450 until they're browning and tender. But when
they're super-fresh like this, I find a brief boil the best way to emphasize
their mellow sweetness. Plus, this is the way the kids are most likely to eat
them. You know what I said last week about salmon? That's how the kids are
about asparagus too. Sometimes they love them and sometimes not. Right now they
love them. Maybe later in the week I'll post my hollandaise recipe, which is a
great way to get kids involved with any vegetable that has them shuddering. But
for now, we're going to make this lovely salmon-colored dip that is zingily
delicious and insanely easy and also uses some of those chipotles I made you
buy for the dinner beans and the tamale pie. (See? Aren't they coming in
handy?) This dip is also great with other veggies--raw carrots and blanched
broccoli, for example--as well as on sandwiches and in chicken salad. My kids
love it, but if it's too spicy for yours, you can always cut back on the
chipotles, or substitute some smoked paprika, which is smoky but not hot.
As with all vegetable matter, put this out before dinner
when your kids are milling around starvingly. They'll eat it.
Asparagus with Delicious Dip
If you want to serve the asparagus hot, simply omit the dip
and the cold-water rinse, then add butter, salt, and a squeeze of lemon juice
to taste.
1 or 2 bunches of very fresh asparagus (the bottoms should
look moist and freshly cut)
1/2 cup Hellman's or Best Foods mayonnaise (not reduced-fat)
1 tablespoon lemon or lime juice
1 small clove of garlic: cut it open, pull out the green
shoot, and then finely chop it or put it through a garlic press
1/4-1/2 teaspoon chipotle puree (see photo at right and
instructions here)
1/4 teaspoon kosher salt (or half as much table salt)
Wash the asparagus in a large sinkful of cold water while
you bring an inch of water to a boil over high heat in a very wide pan. Now
snap the bottom off of each asparagus spear: there will be a place where it
naturally wants to break, a couple inches up from the very bottom, and you will
feel this if you bend it a bit. Add the asparagus to the boiling water,
spreading them out in the pan as best as you can, and cover. Check for doneness
starting at 2 minutes: stick the tip of a paring knife into one and see if it
feels tender. If not, boil another minute or two, moving them around in the pan
with tongs so that they all get a fair shot at submersion. Drain them and run
cold water over them until they're cool, then spread them out on a clean
dishtowel to dry. Meanwhile you've whisked together the mayo, lemon juice,
garlic, chipotle, and salt. Use a cooked asparagus to taste the dip, and
re-season it if it needs more salt, chipotle, or lemon juice.