Saturday, December 29, 2007

Grilled Baby Artichokes with Rosemary and Clementines



While the rest of the states were wrapped in warm blankets and shoveling snow, we enjoyed 84 degree weather today, with a late afternoon game of tennis and a grilled dinner to die for. The smell in our house tonight was intoxicating. We definitely indulged.

Grilled baby artichokes with fresh rosemary from our garden and grilled, sweet clementines took center stage, with peppercorn tenderloin steaks and asiago polenta coming in at a close second.

Husband and daughter soaked their tired toes in the tub while I prepared dinner tonight.



Artichokes were first streamed tender, marinated, and then grilled with the clementines.



Ingredients:
12 - 15 Baby artichokes
1 lemon, cut in half
4 clementines, sliced 1/4" thick
Zest of 2 clementines
Juice of 2 clementines (use the ones you zested)
5 long stems of fresh rosemary
3 tbs. olive oil
2 tbs. balsamic vinegar
4 cloves garlic, minced
Fresh cracked black pepper and sea salt to taste

Directions:
Fill a large stock pot with 2" of water. Squeeze lemons into the water and add a handful of salt.

Prepare artichokes. Wash the artichokes, as you would any vegetable, to remove any pesticides, dirt or bugs. Peel the tough outer layer of the stems with a vegetable peeler. Cut 1/4" off the top portion of each artichoke. Trim off any tough bottom leaves and cut the top spikes of all remaining outer leaves. Immediately place artichokes, as you trim them, in the pot with the acidulated water (lemon water) to prevent browning. Tip: the artichoke juice on your hands will oxidize quickly as well, turning your fingers and cuticles dark brown. Wear latex gloves to protect hands and nails if this bothers you.

Scoop up the artichokes and place a metal steaming basket into the water. Return the artichokes to the pot, on top of the steamer. Cover the pot and heat on high so the water begins to boil and create steam. Steam the artichokes for 15 minutes or until the bottoms are just fork tender.

While the artichokes are steaming, prepare the marinade in a platter or bowl large enough to toss and coat the artichokes. Place rosemary stems in the bottom of the bowl or platter. Add garlic, clementine zest, clementine juice (just squeeze the ones you zested), oil, balsamic vinegar, salt and pepper and casually mix to incorporate flavors. When artichokes are done steaming, slice in half and add them to the marinade. Toss to coat. Add clementine slices and gently toss again. Let stand for at least 5 minutes.

Light the grill for medium heat. Place artichokes and clementines on the grill with the lid open. Do not walk away as these will easily burn. Because grill temperatures vary greatly, you'll need to check for grill marks within a minute or two. Once a nice set of grill marks appear on both the clementines and artichokes, and the clementines begin to get soft, flip and grill the other side. Check for grill marks within another minute or two and remove from heat, placing everything back into the marinade bowl or platter. Toss again to coat with the marinade. Serve warm or at room temperature.

These also taste great cold and make a fantastic picnic side dish with salty olives and capers tossed in at the last minute. Lemons, oranges and even grapefruits will also work well in this recipe.

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We submitted this recipe to the Grow Your Own Food Blogging Event held monthly at http://www.andreasrecipes.com/, celebrating the foods that we grow ourselves and the dishes we make using our homegrown products.

7 comments:

Labyrinth Gal said...

Your FIL & I were both saying, "Did you see the artichokes???" Just your photos are DELICIOUS! :-) Hali

Wicked Good Dinner said...

Thanks, Hali!! We hope to get up to RI this summer for a visit and have the family over to the beach house for a GIANT feast :-)

Happy New Year to you!
-Dawn

jay.hsu@mac.com said...

I just linked into your site from steamykitchen's, and came across this artichoke recipe. Looks heavenly! I'll definitely be trying this one out! Great post!

Andrea said...

Wow, this looks and sounds so delicious! You'll have to share some information on growing artichokes, as we've never done it. Thanks for a tasty entry for Grow Your Own!

~Andrea

Wicked Good Dinner said...

Andrea,

Thanks so much! I can't take credit for growing the artichokes though. I bought the artichokes, but all of the herbs, including the Rosemary I used in the recipe, comes from our garden, grown from seed :-)

Laurie Constantino said...

My does this look good. Grilling clementines, what a wonderful idea, especially with baby artichokes,which I really love.

EAT! said...

The artichokes look amazing! I will give the recipe a try as soon as I don't have to wear my parka to grill.