Craving: Portabello, Bacon, and Goat Cheese Frisée Salad

My cravings aren’t specific. Most of the time, planning dinner, I sense the type of dish I want–spicy, woodsy, basic bland, sweet, pungent, delicate—and I’ll go from there. I’ll often yearn for general flavors, the ol’ sweet tooth actin’ up, but I hardly ever crave a certain food.

And then there’s goat cheese. I’ll be minding my own business and all of a sudden I can’t control my thoughts, my drool, my urges—I need goat cheese. This is a stange thing for me since I’ve never been a believer in the cheese cravings that so many women claim to have, always assuming they were just making excuses to stuff themselves. And while I love all kinds of cheese, and eat it daily, I’ve never had cravings for a type. Now, in the middle of the day or night, I’m thinking goat cheese. Just the fleeting mention of those two words—goat, cheese—puts a giddy smile on my face, one of those eyes rolling in the back of your head, mouth open, exhaling deeply giddy smiles.

Perusing the cookbooks at Barnes and Noble the other day, I knew that a recipe containing goat cheese, mushrooms, and bacon would have to be on my dinner table that night. No way around it. This recipe, adapted from my memory of it in Alfred Portale Simple Pleasures, is a frisée salad with aged goat cheese. The frisee, which is more bitter and sharp than mixed greens or Romaine lettuce, allows for pungent goat cheese instead of the standard Parmesan topping. The mushrooms also stand up nicely against the cheese—a woodsy counterpart. And bacon, well, bacon tastes good in anything.

I recommend using a good red wine vinegar for this. I used O Olive Oil brand’s Zinfandel Vinegar. I’ve heard so much about this brand of oil and vinegar, and it seems that all the hype is justified. The vinegar was delicious by itself and would be perfect of simple salads of a little oil and vinegar.

I’m entering this recipe into Leftover Queen’s Royal Foodie Joust. The event looks like tons of fun, and we all get to talk about it on the website’s forum, so I couldn’t resist. You can check out the details here.


Portabello, Bacon, and Goat Cheese Frisée Salad

adapted from Alfred Portale Simple Pleasures

Place mushrooms on a baking sheet and sprinkle with thyme, salt, and pepper. Place in the oven at 350º until browned and tender, about 15 minutes. Meanwhile, cook the bacon slowly over med-low heat until crisp and fragile-crumbly (which is my preference, but by all means cook the bacon however you please). Transfer bacon to a plate and discard all but 1 Tbsp of the bacon fat. In a small bowl, whisk together the bacon fat, olive oil, vinegar, shallots, mustard and a pinch of thyme, salt, and pepper. Taste and vary the dressings ingredients to your liking (add more vinegar a little at a time if you think the dressing is to oily). Remove mushrooms when done and in a small bowl combine mushrooms with 2 Tbsp of the dressing. Let sit as you prepare the salad bowl with frisée lettuce, bacon, and dressing. Mix in mushrooms and grated cheese. Top with extra cheese if you like. Enjoy!

  • 5 portabello mushroom caps, sliced
  • 2 Tbsp dried or fresh thyme
  • 6 slices smoked bacon, cut into 1-to-2 inch pieces
  • 2/3 cup olive oil
  • 2 Tbsp red wine vinegar
  • 2 Tbsp chopped shallots
  • 2 tsp Dijon mustard
  • 6 cups frisée lettuce
  • 4-to-6 oz grated aged goat cheese, I recommend this one
  • Salt, Pepper
  • Related Posts with Thumbnails

    10 Responses to “Craving: Portabello, Bacon, and Goat Cheese Frisée Salad”

    1. claudia Says:

      once again – great food
      what a combo
      bacon… goat cheese…
      and then well, just about anything else will do
      but your salad sounds perfecto

      you foodie you

    2. peabody Says:

      You had me at bacon.

    3. Jim Says:

      Does it really count as a salad once you include bacon? :)

    4. Maninas Says:

      oh no…. talk about craving for goats cheese…. i managed to successfully steal myself from buying some, and then i come home and read this… :(

    5. Ley Says:

      Ooh- that looks really good! I’ve been on a salad kick lately, so I will definately have to try this one out!

      What kind of camera and lighting do you use? I really like how your photographs turn out- such fabulous dimension!

    6. Clumsy Says:

      Claudia- You are too good to me! Thanks!

      Peabody- Haha, I was thinking about the amount of bacon I eat per week last night, and, oh man, it’s not good…. or actually, it IS good!

      Jim- Does ANYTHING count without bacon??

      Maninas- Sorry! But I’m not big on willpower—go out and get some cheese!!

      Ley- I have a canon powershot SE I3, nothing fancy at all, and the lighting I use i just the lamps around my apartment, though I want to make a lightbox at some point. I do, however, use photoshop on all my photos, usually brightening them up a little to take away from the fact that most of the photos are done at night with unnatural light. Thanks for the compliment!!

    7. kate Says:

      thats a gr8 mix of salad leaves too. Here in Africa- Ghana u get only 2 kinds of lettuce …and that too the boring kinds. Your salad looks very refreshing and has not got me wanting some goats cheese :P

    8. melissa Says:

      thanks for stopping by my page clumsy – I linked to you from the foodie blogroll over the weekend and enjoyed reading some of your archives.

      and I need to do what you do with your pics – run them at least through picasa to make them a little brighter and to bring out the colors. it’s hard for me to get the pictures I want.

      salad looks good – I’m having something similar for lunch today – yum!

    9. candykane Says:

      Oh my gosh! :) This looks fantabulous. What a great, quick, easy, delicious looking meal. I’m so busy, it’s so hard to find good meals sometimes. Lately, I’ve been having to hit up the freezer aisle instead of my fridge. The new Bertolli Mediterranean Style frozen dinners have become my staple. They’re really good, and backed by Rocco DiSpirito from The Restaurant tv show, who I’m a huge fan of, especially after Top Chef. He’s got some great videos online that you guys should check out: http://www.whatsyourmedstyle.com. Let me know what you think of the videos, and if any of you are a big fan of Bertolli’s frozen dinners. I know they’re good, ’cause I work with them. I’ll let you know how the salad works out tonight! Thanks again, great post.

    10. Misslionheart♥ Says:

      A *brilliant* entry for the Joust!

      Well done and good luck!

    Leave a Reply



  • Subscribe



    RSSSubscribe to C&C

    Subscribe to Jersey Bites
  • Calendar


    October 2007
    M T W T F S S
    « Sep   Nov »
    1234567
    891011121314
    15161718192021
    22232425262728
    293031  



  • Recent Comments


  • Summer Recipes


    Corn husksSweet Corn Soup
    Zucchini Basil SoupZucchini Basil Soup
    tomato saladSimple Tomato Salad
    Bacon-wrapped YellowtailBacon-wrapped Yellowtail IMG_3168Apricots Poached in Vanilla-Thyme Syrup
    summer squashSummer Squash Carbonara
    parsleySteak with Parsleyed Butter


  • Local Farms & Markets


    Big Bear Natural Foods
  • Birchwood Dairy
    Blue Moon Acres
    Cherry Grove Farm
    Griggstown Quail Farm
    Heller's Seafood
    Highland Gourmet Market
    Homestead Farm Market
    Jamie Hollander Gourmet Foods
    Manoff Garden Market
    Maresca & Sons Fine Meats
    Metropolitan Seafood
    Podere di Melo Farm
    Readington River Buffalo
    Slack Farm
    Solebury Orchards
    Tanner Brothers Dairy


  • Archives





  • Robin on Jersey Bites



    chorizo quesadillaCasa Maya, Highbridge fried chicken at It's Nutts
    It's Nutts, Titusville

    IMG_1670 The Fine Diner, Clinton
    48-hour Short Ribs, Hash, Eggs Elements, Princeton



  • Blog Love


    A Bad Guide
    The Blue Hour
    The British Larder
    Bucks County Taste
    Celiac Teen
    A Chow Life
    A Cozy Kitchen
    Cucina Nicolina
    The Dinner Files
    East Village Kitchen
    Fat of the Land
    The Food Chain
    forty-sixth at grace
    The Honey Bakes
    Houseboat Eats
    Hunter Angler Gardener Cook
    In Jennie's Kitchen
    Jersey Bites
    Joy the Baker
    Kiss My Spatula
    Kitchen Bite
    The Language of Food
    The Kitchenist
    La Tartine Gourmande
    Married..with Dinner
    Milk+Honey Cafe
    Ming Makes Cupcakes
    The Merry Gourmet
    Not Without Salt
    Nourish Me
    Orangette
    Politics of the Plate
    Sassy Radish
    Slow Like Honey
    Sprouted Kitchen
    A Sweet Spoonful
    Tea & Cookies
    The Sophisticated Gourmet
    Voodoo and Sauce
    We are Never Full
    The Wednesday Chef
    Wild Table




  • My Fiance Wrote a Book!


    And gave up crystal meth, obviously.

    51TB0LUU7vL._SL500_AA300_




  • Categories


  • Caviar and Codfish powered by WordPress
    designed and maintained by Bella Design.