I would like to start by saying that I don't think Sungold
tomatoes taste "like candy." I love them, and yes, they're really
surprisingly sweet--but Michael and our friend Lydia hover around the plants
behind our house, popping tomatoes in their mouths and exclaiming over their
candylikeness, and all I can do is roll my eyes. Maybe if there's, like, some
kind of a soft, gel-filled, viney-tasting gummy eyeball with seeds, Sungolds
are a little like that. "You don't think they're like candy?" Lydia
goads. "I can't believe we're even friends." I know. I am the
Ebenezer Scrooge of the vegetable world.
Similarly, I never think that corn on the cob is "so
sweet it doesn't even need butter." It is often really, really sweet.
"Wow!" I might even exclaim happily while the perfect kernels burst
under my teeth. "This corn is so sweet!" But I will exclaim only
while the melting butter drips down my chin and pools on the plate in front of
me. So sweet it doesn't even need butter? That's just crazy talking. That's
like substituting applesauce for butter in a cake, and then imagining that it's
so "moist and good that I didn't even need to add any sugar!" Okay!
Enjoy!
And so, if you are skeptical, what I'm saying is that I hear
you. Kale chips? I know. They are not "as addictive as potato chips,"
if that's what you've been told. Unless the people who told you that were
eating potato chips that were actually made out of a kind of seaweedy
paper--then, yes! But no, it's not a Pringles kind of a situation. And yet, we
have never not eaten all the kale chips within fifteen minutes of their
emergence from the oven. They are bizarrely delicious and strangely hard to
stop eating: saline and crispy, with a kind of a mild, green flavor that will
have you neither on your knees in swooning gratitude nor suffering vegetally.
But make no mistake here: it's all about the oil and salt. So please don't
start imagining that these are so good they even need any oil or salt! They're
not. I promise you. But they are really amazingly good--and almost wildly
nutritious, given that it's kale, but distilled into a dense crunch of
cruciferous vitamins and antioxidants.
This recipe--one that I dreamed up only because I saw but
didn't actually try expensive "miso-flavored kale chips" in a
store--is my favorite version: the miso is both salty and sweet, and it gives
the chips that Doritos kind of savory-meaty umami that I'm always craving in
snack foods. However, I've made them with olive oil and heaps of fresh garlic
(the first recipe I ever tried, thanks to our beloved Uncle Barbara), with
sesame oil and tamari, and with just oil and salt, and it's all good. Let me
know please if you try something different. I am (almost) always open to
change.
Miso Kale Chips
Makes about 2 cups
Active time: 5 minutes; total time: 25 minutes
1 bunch of kale, washed well (I used Dinosaur or Lacinato
kale for this batch, but only because that's what was at our farm this week;
regular curly green kale works great too)
1 tablespoon vegetable oil
1 tablespoon miso (I used a mild white miso)
2 teaspoons balsamic vinegar
Heat the oven to 300 and prepare two rimmed baking sheets by
greasing them lightly or covering them with parchment paper.
Separate the kale leaves from their tough stems: I do this
by running my hand down the stem, the way you would if you were, um, let me
think. No, I guess it's not like anything else I can really say. You could use
a large knife for this job, and simply cut down the side of each center rib.
Now cut across the leaves to make 1- or 2-inch pieces of some or other shape.
Use a whisk to combine the oil, miso, and vinegar in a large
bowl, then dump in the kale and use your hands to coat the pieces evenly with
the mixture. Spread it in a single layer across the two sheets and bake until
crisp and dry but not black or papery--around 15-20 minutes. The timing is both
important and a little tricky, so check it starting at 15 minutes to get a
sense of where it's headed and how quickly it's likely to get there. Cool and
eat. Store leftovers airtight, I'm thinking, though we have literally not once
had any leftovers.
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