Summer Greek-Style Pasta With Fresh Tomatoes, Feta, and Dill

Christiana George

On Saturday, when the sky was all kinds of bruised, I hurried to the Meatpacking District to attend a fashion show. In the fashion industry, the spring season is showcased in September of the previous year and the fall season is showcased in February, so it was a Spring/Summer 2013 show I was going to see. This can be disorienting. I mean, the clothes seen on runways won’t appear in stores for another half year or so. And by the time the clothes featured half a year ago hit the stores, they already seem outdated.

On the other hand, I’ve always been the kind to be stuck in the past. To bemoan how quickly time passes, to feel tugs of anxiety when I rip another page from my calendar, to cling to the smoldering embers of things that once were. I realized that last week, I seemed to have offhandedly written off summer, as if I was ready to move on and let it go. As if I’d gotten my fill of summer fruit and summer weather and long days with endless, golden light. As if I had renounced it for its cooler, crisper sibling, who wears tissue-thin black turtlenecks with A-line skirts and knee-highs and the most stylish tortoiseshell glasses imaginable.

I still want to eat all the peaches I can get my hands on, throw together caprese salads with those glorious in-season tomatoes, walk through farmer’s markets stocked with the most vibrant produce. I wish watermelon would last and last, and that livin’ was always easy. I realize a lot of people are in one camp or the other, but I’ve always been an indecisive person, so I want the best of both worlds. Is that possible?

This pasta recipe slinked (slunk?) onto the scene, begging to be made. It’s totally an end-of-summer dish: the sauce is uncooked, requiring the freshest tomatoes, herbs, and feta you can procure. But it’s pasta, which I’ve avoided up to this point, because it’s been the last thing I’ve felt like eating in 90+ degree, humid-as-hell weather.

This dish is light, it’s hearty, and it gently eases me into a more forward way of thinking. So while I may not be ready for Spring/Summer 2013, I can begin feeling excited about wearing long sleeves again

SUMMER GREEK-STYLE PASTA WITH FRESH TOMATOES, FETA, AND DILL

Adapted from Bon Appétit
Serves 2

Ingredients:

1 pound tomatoes, halved, chopped (I used cherry tomatoes)
1/2 cup chopped scallions (white and light green parts only)
4 ounces feta cheese, crumbled
1/4 cup fresh parsley, chopped
2 Tbsp fresh dill, chopped
juice from 1 lemon
2 Tbsp EVOO

2 servings of pasta

Directions:

Mix the first 7 ingredients together in a medium bowl. Set aside.

Make the pasta. When ready, reserve some of the pasta water if needed and drain. Add hot pasta to tomato mixture and toss to coat. Season with salt and pepper and serve. Also good cold.

Note: This should be good with pitted Kalamata olives as well, but I don’t really like them so I didn’t use them. Let me know if you do!

Also, I failed to describe the show, didn’t I? For those of you who are interested, here are some pictures I took (I decided to omit the rated-R photos, haha).

Imitation of Christ Spring/Summer 2013

Imitation of Christ Spring/Summer 2013
Imitation of Christ Spring/Summer 2013
Imitation of Christ Spring/Summer 2013
Imitation of Christ Spring/Summer 2013
Imitation of Christ Spring/Summer 2013
Imitation of Christ Spring/Summer 2013
Imitation of Christ Spring/Summer 2013
Imitation of Christ Spring/Summer 2013

It was more of a non-show. It was more of a presentation. Like an installation, rife with social commentary (on appearance pressures? Vanity and narcissism? The disturbing effect that fashion can have on women?). There was no apparent clothes on display. But lots of women of various ages in various states of undress. It was bizarre.

Pancakes Oatmeal Recipe

Christiana George

Pancakes oatmeal recipe is a very easy and quick recipe. The ingredients are all available in my home. In this recipe, I have used whole wheat flour, but you can use refined flour.

You can serve pancakes oatmeal with any chutney or sauce of your choice. This recipe is good for kids as well as teenagers. The pancakes are soft and tasty. You can store them in an airtight container and eat them later when required.

Pancakes oatmeal is a good source of carbohydrates, proteins and vitamins. they are also healthy as they contain fiber, iron and calcium which makes them good for digestion system as well as bones and muscles.

Pancakes Oatmeal Recipe Ingredients:

  • 1 cup whole wheat flour/ atta
  • 1 cup oats
  • 4 teaspoon sugar
  • 3 teaspoon baking powder
  • 2 teaspoon oil/ butter (optional)
  • 1 cup milk
  • 1 cup water

Preparation Method:

  • Mix whole wheat flour, oats, sugar, baking powder, oil and milk in a bowl. add water slowly and mix till the batter is of pouring consistency.
  • Heat a tawa or a griddle and pour a ladle full of batter on it and spread in round shape as shown in the picture.
  • Flip on the other side when bubbles start to appear on top surface of the pancake.
  • Cook for 1 minute or till browned spots appear on both sides of pancake.
  • Remove from flame and serve pancakes oatmeal hot with chutney or sauce of your choice
Pancakes Oatmeal Recipe

Nutrition Facts:

  • calories -144.3
  • Total Fat -2.3g
  • Saturated Fat -0.1g
  • Polyunsaturated Fat 1.7g
  • Monounsaturated Fat 0g