Photo: Sarah Shatz/Food52

I’m filing this under the why-didn’t-I-think-of-that category.

This recipe for a banana cardamom milkshake was posted by Merrill on the Food52 blog today and seems like another great entrée to summer. Better, even, than the bubble tea I’ve been drinking all week from Saint’s Alp (that’s not a typo by the way).

Made with vanilla ice cream, whole milk, cardamom pods, banana, and lime, this would make for a refreshing dessert or afternoon pick-me-up. Heck, I’d even try it for breakfast.

Banana Cardamom Milkshake

1 large banana, ripe but not brown, and peeled
2 scoops of good vanilla ice cream
1/2 c whole milk
Juice of 1/2 lime
Seeds from 4 cardamom pods, crushed

Chill a tall glass. Blend everything together and serve with a wedge of lime or chunk of banana.

Makes 1 large milkshake or two smaller shakes.

And don’t think I haven’t considered adding peanut butter.

When it comes to fast and easy appetizers, shrimp cocktail is a surefire crowd pleaser (unless you’re feeding vegetarians). And when it comes to summer, simple is the name of the game.

I love shrimp cocktail in the hotter months – served chilled with a biting cocktail sauce, it can be light and crisp, like the seafood equivalent of a crunchy salad.

In honor of the first day of summer, thought I would share this easy-peasy recipe for shrimp cocktail that’s made by roasting the shrimp for a mere 8 minutes. This being summer though, you may not want to turn your oven on at all, which would be understandable. In which case you can grill these crustaceans on an open flame. I just love that you don’t boil the shrimp here, which leaves them, well, kind of tasteless.

This recipe is adapted from Ina Garten’s Back to Basics.

Roasted Shrimp Cocktail

For the shrimp:
2 pounds cleaned, deveined shrimp, tail on (about 12-15 critters)
1-2 tbsp good olive oil
1/2 tsp kosher salt (I like flaky Maldon salt)
1/2 tsp freshly ground pepper

For the sauce:
1/2 c chili sauce
1/2 c ketchup
3 tbsp horseradish
2 tsp freshly squeezed lemon juice
1/2 tsp Worcestershire sauce
1/4 tsp Tabasco

Preheat the oven to 400 degrees. Drizzle the olive oil on a baking sheet then add the salt and black pepper. Place the shrimp on the baking sheet, coating both sides with the oil, salt and pepper. Roast for 8 to 10 minutes until just pink and firm. Set aside to cool.

For the cocktail sauce, combine all the ingredients and serve as a dip for the shrimp.

Another summery way to serve the roast shrimp would be to forego the cocktail sauce, chop the roasted shrimp into small pieces and add to summer rolls or lettuce wraps with avocado, cilantro or mint, julienned carrots, Vietnamese cellophane noodles, and Sriracha.

Turns out, ricotta is almost easier to make yourself than it is to buy.

(Especially if you shop at Whole Foods and drive there in which case you should watch this for a good laugh.)

My friend Mark and I embarked on ricotta-making a couple nights ago; having begun around midnight, I was tucked into bed by 1 am with a pound of fresh ricotta tucked in the fridge.

Ricotta is a fresh cheese typically made from cow’s milk – it’s essentially curdled milk (and I mean that in the best possible way) and its mild flavor and creamy texture improve many a dish from breakfast to dinner to dessert. Personally I think it should be a kitchen staple the way olive oil, butter, or Parmesan are.

Springtime, and summer, are the best times for making and eating ricotta because it’s when cows are munching on fresh green grass, so the milk tastes better. Since ricotta is essentially only milk, the quality of the final product is largely determined by the milk one uses.

So depending on where you live, take the time to search out the best quality milk you can find. I’d recommend getting it from your local farmer’s market if possible; it really does make a difference in taste if the milk is whole, not homogenized, and comes from grass-fed cows. The difference is flavor in marked.

There are a few different ways to make ricotta, here is a very easy method. You’re basically boiling milk, then adding buttermilk, skimming the curds off the top, then letting them drain for half an hour to a few hours. And voilà! You’re left with a velvety, thick fresh cheese that’s delicious in a number of ways. A few of my favorites include:

*Scrambled eggs with ricotta and chives (or parsley)
*Ricotta drizzled with honey, black pepper, and walnuts
*Ricotta gnocchi served with a simple tomato or Romesco sauce
*Prosciutto-wrapped ricotta and melon
*Penne with ricotta, tomato, and basil
*Orecchiette with peas, mint, and ricotta
*Ricotta cheesecake served with fresh berries
*Ricotta pancakes with maple syrup, jam, or berries

Fresh Ricotta

1/2 gallon milk
1 pint buttermilk
olive oil
zest of 1/2 lemon
salt

(Makes 1 pint ricotta)

Bring the 1/2 gallon of milk to nearly a boil in a large sauce pan or stock pot. Pour in the buttermilk, turn the heat down to low, stir continuously, and lo and behold the curds will begin to form instantly before your eyes. After 2-3 minutes turn off the heat.

Line a colander or fine-meshed sieve with two layers of cheesecloth and place over a bowl. With a slotted spoon skim the curds from the pot and transfer to the colander. You can discard the liquid (whey) remaining in your stock pot or tell me if you know a great way to use it. Leave the cheese curds to drain for at least a half hour and up to a few hours. The whey remaining in the curds will drain into the bowl and you’ll be left with ricotta.

At this point you could be done and enjoy your ricotta, or you can continue with a couple extra steps for an added boost of flavor:

Once the ricotta has been drained, I recommend transferring to a food processor or bowl and mixing with a pinch of salt, the zest of half a lemon, and 2-3 tbsp extra virgin olive oil. I also liked cracked black pepper, but this can be added at the time of serving.

So remember, if you can buy milk, you can make ricotta. If you can buy good milk, you can make excellent ricotta.