Quinoa (Sort Of) Diane

  1. Measure quinoa of your choice (red would be very dramatic, though I used white) into a strainer and rinse under cold water. Bring stock to a boil, add quinoa, cover pot, reduce to a simmer, and set a timer for 10 minutes. When time is up, add asparagus and red pepper, and steam for 5 minutes. Remove from heat when time is up. Season to taste with salt and pepper, and put the lid back on the pot.
  2. Meanwhile, back at the mushroom venue, be sure to wipe the caps gently with a damp towel to clean, and save the stems for stock. I find them to be different enough in texture from the caps that I separate them. Generously film the bottom of a wide skillet or a wok with a nicely fruity olive oil. I know, olive oil is pressed in the fall, but work with me here. Heat the pan over medium-high heat. When the oil shimmers, add the shallot and a pinch of salt to encourage it to shed its water rapidly. When just softened and fragrant, add the mushrooms and a few pinches of salt. They want to shed their water quickly without overcooking. Salt has a great love of water, and heaven knows mushrooms contain a lot of it. When you can see that they've stopped shedding water into the bottom of the pan, add the white vermouth. Let it come to a good boil, then flame it off with a match or a fire starter. After flames subside, let liquid reduce by about half. Remove from heat and add lemon juice. Stir in, and season to taste with sea or kosher salt to taste.
  3. Light a candle. Pour a glass of your favorite wine. If you love it, it will go with this dinner. Set place settings.
  4. Spoon some of the quinoa mixture into a bowl. Spoon some mushrooms over it. Snip some fresh chives over, pick up a fork, and savor the taste of spring.

quinoa of any color, chicken, stalks nice thin spring asparagus, red bell pepper, olive oil, shallot, button mushrooms, white vermouth, lemon, kosher salt, fresh chives

Taken from food52.com/recipes/11210-quinoa-sort-of-diane (may not work)

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