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March 15, 2010

Jolly Good Fellows

 

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Despite the cold, it's also been another giant season of birthdays and those depicted here span October to March, and the concoction of many a novelty cake! The first is an enormous single cupcake, done by Lynn for Jason's father's birthday, and the second cake is the Espresso Chiffon Cake with Fudge Frosting picked up from the Smitten Kitchen's adaptation of Alisa Huntsman's Sky High: Irresistible Triple-Layer Cakes cookbook. We also enjoyed a genuine Viennese chocolate cake (an authentic gift from Austrian friends) and others to celebrate some benchmark anniversaries.

I myself have always been more a fan of fruit pies and chocolate mousse than cookies and cakes, but birthday's reliably scream for cake and candles are getting so fun these days, that how can you resist?

February 06, 2010

Drunken Shepherd's Pie

 

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My thoughtful husband has been so great about ensuring we don't eat Anna's burritos and take-out pizza all week long, so tonight I decided my turn was long overdue. I went with an old favorite - Shepherd's Pie - but off the recipe books this time! A blend of onions, peas, ground beef, and the secret ingredient... about half a cup of Port. But let's face it - Port is pretty good in just about anything. I have been practicing more with Sherry in sauces too. It's got me on the hunt for a good sauce-cooking class. You know, in my free time!

 

Imitation (T)art

 

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Do you ever judge the success of your cooking ventures by how closely the result matches the picture in the cookbook? Me too. I'm not even sure how people manage to get excited about cooking without the pictures. Particularly when there are so many beautiful ones out there. I watched Baking with Julia this morning and sighed on cue as she helped make a flourished chocolate cake with a pastry chef colleague. And sometimes it is just all about the flourish!

Anyway, here's a recent holiday effort to make an apple tart courtesy of Smitten Kitchen via Alice Waters, via Jacques Pepin. Unfortunately, the picture didn't come out like I'd hoped, and I (gasp)skipped a couple of steps, so this version is missing the fold-over crust. I'd give it a "6." But, as they say, it's good to have goals.

 

Birthday Breakfast

 

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I love our neighborhood!! This is just one that one of our local restaurant cooks up on Saturday mornings, and this is what we had on Jason's birthday this year - the first celebration of many! Lately, I've become something of a quarter-dozen cook - I don't do it quite enough to justify more than three eggs in the refrigerator at any given time, and since that causes me to buy eggs much less... it's very important to have a breakfast joint nearby! I only wish the coffee were a little stronger, but this food will get you started - with or without the caffeine!

 

June 23, 2009

Quest for the Perfect Mushroom Soup

 

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At the rehearsal dinner a few weeks back, I met with the most divine mushroom soup I've ever tasted. Ever since, the only things I've cooked in my kitchen have been attempts to copy that elusive soup... with Portobellos, with Chanterelles, with White Button mushrooms, even leeks... but nothing made a soup so mysteriously rich and creamy as the "creamless" mushroom soup I had there. I did finally remember that the description on the menu promoted asparagus as a key ingredient, so I finally added that, but the result was, well, stringier than I'd hoped. And of course, my poor little Cuisinart has a tendency to leak when the liquid content starts to outweigh the solid, and the whole thing basically exploded on me in the kitchen. So there I was, mushroom-covered kitchen, broth and stringy asparagus leaking down the sides of the (new) countertops, Jason heroically trying to catch the drips... I was a shade of blue away from turning into Bridget Jones! Needless to say, I still haven't found my perfect, smooth creamless mushroom soup... but something tells me maybe I need better tools!

 

April 04, 2009

The Little Things

 

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I'm marrying Jason for his coffee maker. Not quite true, but i absolutely LOVE this thing. He has an Estro Vapore espresso machine that he got 15 years ago and the thing is still chugging. That, and it's just about the only thing we have plugged in at our new home. We never had counter space for it before, but now we're using it about four times a day! I'm absolutely hooked and the coffee is so delicious. In my opinion, if you have good coffee and toast in the morning (and someone fabulous to make it for you) - that's just about all you need.

One of the best things about moving is that it totally brings you back to basics. You don't have any of the modern conveniences right away - your favorite clothes are all still packed, no television, your mail's still being delivered to the wrong address, and no Internet! (Of course, we have it now, thus my immediate attention to blogging again.) But we are still living in piles of boxes, with a shop vac and toolboxes filling a couple of the rooms and plates of cardboard covering the floors. We've got a basket of our favorite liquors that we pluck from to concoct nightcaps in the evening, which we then drink out of paper cups!

It's kind of like fancy camping. Of course, you can't live this way for long. If you're as antsy as me, you want to start having people over, cleaning up the rooms and revealing their full potential, cooking meals for dinner parties and actually being able to serve on real plates! But for now, I'll take a cappuccino, please.

 

March 17, 2009

La-Va Land

 

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We took a break last weekend to celebrate my dad's birthday, complete with a gorgeously executed caramel cake made by my sister, the would-be pastry chef. While caramel has never been my personal favorite flavor, I was extremely impressed by the presentation of this dessert - kind of a once-molten lava around a candle-post landscape look. And frankly, I don't care that it doesn't represent the four food groups - it's home cooked!

 

Burritos or Bust

 

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I am longing to eat something other than fast food. For the past month and a half, burritos have been our routine quick meal while working on the kitchen, and I have to hand it to Anna's and the rest of the burrito joints we've hit up for a quick fixin' over the past several weeks - they make an efficient-eating, self-contained, less-mess meal that is a perfect complement to manual labor and limited seating! But I am counting down the days until our stove arrives and I can once again begin posting pictures of home-cooked meals up here! I love you Anna's and all that you do, but there's only so much beans, salsa, and cheese a girl can eat!!

 

January 19, 2009

Smoke & Mushrooms

 

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Okay, I haven't cooked in weeks. But these stuffed mushrooms were made during my holiday frenzy of cooking, and I'm flashing back out of guilt over my unused kitchen. This shot is of the hors d'oevres right before they went in the oven. Oddly enough, I don't even like mushrooms that much, but doesn't stuffing, oil, and cheese make just about anything taste amazing? I was surprised at how much they smoked in the oven, even though they didn't appear to be burning. This is a really quick appetizer to make, as long as you have time to prepare right before you serve, since they are best devoured hot.

 

January 01, 2009

'Tis the Season to Be Baking

 

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I feel like I've been baking all week. But maybe that's because I've accomplished so little on the culinary front lately. Eating a lot, mainly. But the gloves came off and the apron on this past week, as I faced the challenges of gingerbread men, my favorite almond torte cake, and a few other odds and ends for family holiday parties and new year's visits. Despite the nimbleness of my overly floured fingers, though, I did not accomplish the one feat I had hoped to - the task of baking a traditional English Christmas cake - essentially a light fruit cake (think, Panettone) with dense, glossy white icing all around its visible surfaces. In taste, it's a little like a stollen, I think. Though, I couldn't find the time, energy, or, after all the other desserts, the audience for yet another cake, so I contented myself with a close parallel - a new drink I've recently discovered: the Hungarian liquor, Zwack! Like Christmas in a bottle.

 

December 27, 2008

A Very ME Meal

 

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We were totally impressed with the breakfast buffet at our hotel. The restaurant in ME by Melia was called Salt and they had the most elaborate spread I think I've ever seen for breakfast. Everything from custom-made crepes to a fully stocked juice bar! One of the surprising favorites of our group was this seaweed green-looking juice shown here which contained cactus! Strangely delicious (and healthy tasting). Though despite the impossible array of choices, the price tag was high for breakfast. So we turned it into a multi-course meal, enjoying breakfast and then breakfast-dessert to maximize the value at each meal, carrying away orange juice for our mid-day mimosas! Luckily we skipped lunch, or else we'd have been eating all day long!

 

December 19, 2008

Fisherman's Pie

 

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I was trying to remember whether I'd ever heard of "Fisherman's Pie" when making this recipe. So I did a little Internet research and found myself hypnotized by this hilarious (yet highly educational) tutorial on cooking Fisherman's pie. It does exist! It's a seafood variation on Shepherd's pie using Cod - not quite the same as this tunafish pasta bake. I think VideoJug Food & Drink might be my new favorite cooking site now - if only I had a scale to measure ounces! I love how they do the ingredient credits. It's like a little perfectly executed British play.

 

Potato Po-ta-to

 

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I did manage to find a pretty cool looking vegetable while at Russo's though, and I did, of course, what you must naturally do with food you don't understand. I ruined it. It never occurred to me that it might be a good idea to investigate recipes with purple potatoes or to figure out whether they ought to be treated differently than the regular stock. So I sliced and cooked them, and then made the most horrendous-looking warm potato salad (note, it's brown, sludgy overtones were only part of the reason the raw model and not the result made this post). Poh-tay-toe does not, apparently, equal poh-tah-toe. They're a marvelous-looking species, but now, it's time for me to do my homework.

 

October 09, 2008

Offscreen Drama

 

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With sore calves and hungry bellies, we spent Sunday in a more indulgent fashion. We rolled up to a great breakfast joint Kismet - a local, vegan-friendly hangout with just five or six environmental cement tabletops, fliers promoting CSA lotteries for families in need, and a sensational menu filled with root vegetables, raw-milk cheddar, and an abundance of vivid wheatgrass! Afterwards, we wandered around sunny Montpelier, raising eyebrows at the real estate prices, ducking into an art museum, and stopping at Gesine's Confectionary for this gourmet cup of cappucino. It turns out Gesine happens to be Sandra Bullock's sister, but it's very brushed under the rug - not a mention in the whole bakery. And when I took out my camera, they freaked a little. I've never been mistaken for the paparazzi before...

 

October 07, 2008

Smitherines

 

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This past weekend we went to Vermont to spend some time with my great friend Hilary and her husband Noah in their brand new hideaway. If you call early 1900s brand new, that is!  One of the many highlights of the visit was witnessing (on the late end, of course) Hilary up early in the morning making an apple pie with this amazing apple peeler. I have never seen its equal in apple-peeling technology! It's essentially a vice with a lever that you turn to make the apple spin as a lightly rested peeling blade rests against the ouside layer and pulls off the waxy skin in ribbons. To be honest, I wasn't sure what would be more beautiful: the photo of the mechanism or the delicious pile of ribbons in its wake. You can also just make out, at the top right of this shot, the cores that are conveniently also left behind in this process. As the vice clamps, the core is cut out of the apple, enabling the spinning movement and removing the pips. Yes, that's what they're called.

 

The Flurry of the Feast

 

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My dad is my culinary hero. Just look how fast he works!  But seriously, the color and depth of flavor he brings to his dinners is inspiring, and his consistency unachievable in my personal experience! I blame it on my need to experiment with everything and never be satisfied cooking the same dish twice. But my dad would argue that the dish never is the same twice even if you attempt the same recipe over and over again. In fact, he prides himself on being the kind of cook who can use whatever's in the fridge to dish up a quality meal. The amazing thing is, he always does.

 

Digging the Clams

 

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Oh, the last fleeting days of summer! I have spent so much time tracking the pre-election debates that I've hardly had time to write and illustrate! This photo was snapped just a few short weeks ago at a weekend retreat to the shore with both sets of our parents - and here's a bowl of clams (I can still appreciate the beauty, even though I don't partake) that Jason's dad whipped up for a Sunday lunch. I wonder if we'll be able to afford clams in a few weeks... But summer has slunk away again, and now we're thick into the fall (pictures to come). Thinking about it now, as I'm wrapped up in whatever blankets and slippers I can find, I even miss the humidity.

 

September 14, 2008

Veggie Mulch, Two Ways

 

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The idea of trying to make my own veggie burgers came to me one night a few weeks ago at a restaurant as I considered ordering one from their menu. My fears were realized when a flat, generic, Boca-style patty was placed in front of me. Why is it that restaurants seem to flock to this cookie-cutter bean burger to satisfy their vegetarian clientele? I actually happen to love vegetarian food, but only if it's a bit more innovative than a pile of lettuce! Indian and Mediterranean cuisines do a good job with this. But I wondered... what is the real challenge behind the home-made veggie burger? Why do restaurants all resort to the template? Shouldn't these be pretty easy to make? So I collected my favorite veggies: leeks, Brussels sprouts, onions, garlic, parsley, and broccoli and pureed them in the Cuisinart with eggs and bread crumbs. The first dish, veggie burgers (er, on toast) turned out a little, well, soupy, and Jason tactfully declared them the perfect meal: soup AND sandwich, but I wasn't satisfied. Next time, need a vegetable that will hold the structure of the burger better, like potato or parsnip or chickpea. So I took the remaining "mulch" and used it for appetizers on the weekend - wrapping it up in crescent roll pastry and baking. This was much more successful. Overall, an interesting experiment, but I am starting to empathize with the American diner here.

 

September 05, 2008

Burnt Ends and New Beginnings

 

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We went all the way to Kansas City, and all we got were these burnt ends. Well, not quite. We actually went to Kansas for my friend Brian's wedding, and to visit a former co-worker, Aimee, and family at their gorgeous newly renovated home. The Kansas City barbecue was a bonus and the feast certain gave us the energy to make us through an exhausting night of dancing, although I guiltily couldn't say I noticed a huge difference between the taste of this and what you get at Blue Ribbon Barbecue out East. Even so, that's still a compliment, and I have to give Jack Stack credit where credit is due - that's good barbecue.

 

August 26, 2008

Shake It!

 

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A quick salad I whipped up recently for a summer party. I thought the pinwheels made it much more fun - plus they trap all the juicy mayonnaise. I sauteed some onions, asparagus spears, and thinly sliced zucchini, chopped a few green onions, and threw everything together with Miracle Whip (my mayonnaise of choice). Then, at the last minute (because they go brown in the sunshine), chopped up some avocado and dumped them in the mix. I love recipes where all you really have to do is assemble ingredients and shake.

 

August 20, 2008

Dunked in Velvet

 

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My sister is a master baker. Jason thoughtfully remembered my near year-long obsession with this red velvet cake, from the first time I saw it on Smitten Kitchen, and suggested it to my sister, who brought this beauty to life! The summer berries were a nice touch to offset the startling number etched in the middle! I'm so glad she picked this particular recipe, because you can really taste the cocoa inside (apparently a hard balance to strike with red velvet). The whole birthday had a delightful red theme (my favorite color), right down to the cakey red center.

 

July 06, 2008

The Devil's in the Details

 

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Earlier this week, I took a quick trip down to New York City with my sister and parents to see a rare showing of a Franz Lehar work at the Met - the adapted ballet version of The Merry Widow. I've been to this show several times now in Operetta form, but the ballet was much different, with an entirely rearranged score and amazing expressiveness on the part of the dancers to successfully convey the plot without words. Best yet, we got to meet the choreographer during intermission, an older gentleman who had met his wife back when they danced in the Royal Ballet together over forty years ago. Such a nice couple! We stopped at an incredible Italian place before the show called Arte Cafe on W 73rd Street, and the next morning grabbed a quick bite at Isabella's on Columbus Ave before leaving the city. Isabella's is where I ordered this scrumptious looking salad - tomatoes, mozzarella, pesto, balsamic, pickled onions, and arugula. The presentation was actually more impressive than the taste here (thus the featured photo), but I know from many failed attempts at marrying culinary elegance with excellent taste that it's a difficult art to master. That's why I'd absolutely recommend Arte Cafe for anyone looking for an unforgettable meal in Manhattan. They've mastered the delicate blend of these two fine arts.

 

July 05, 2008

Sweet Tooth

 

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At the Greasy Pole, they were also serving childhood favorites like Kettle Corn, Fried Dough, and Cotton Candy! It had been ages since I'd sunk my then cavity-free teeth into a pillow of this whipped sugar confection. My friend Ashley agreed to hand-model for this up-close shot of the stuff. It was as satisfying as I remembered, and probably just as chock full of the familiar threat of tooth decay!

 

Loch Delicious-Ness

 

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While my brothers are getting a little old for most of the traditions of childhood birthday parties, the one thing that will never get old is the theme cake! My sister made this gem at the youngest's most recent birthday party - a chocolate cake in the form of a green snake, complete with candy fangs and jelly bean stripes. I fully recommend trying this at home, even for no better reason than to indulge in a creative impulse. The best part of all is that there are very few additional pieces and parts to this cake than a regular cake - the pieces are just arranged differently. Sophie got the recipe from a household favorite cookbook, but you can find many varieties all over the web on sites like this one.

 

May 04, 2008

Having It Marinade

 

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I love new recipes. Particularly when they involve very little elbow grease! This one came from a visiting aunt, who then passed it along to my mom, who - in a moment of eerily good timing - then suggested it to me in the heat of yet another it's-nine-thirty-at-night-and-I-haven't-even-thought-about-food moment. Mix oil, herbs, lemon juice, salt, pepper, and garlic in a bowl - marinate chicken tenders (or sliced chicken breast) in the mix and grill on 425 in a metal pan. A great complement to the bag of potato chips we consumed as an "appetizer" before getting on with dinner!

 

Seasonal Color

 

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Bring on the summer vegetables! When at a loss for what to cook in the summer, there's sure to be a few great veggies at the supermarket to create a quick primavera meal. This particular version consists of an orange pepper, brussels sprouts, almonds, and thinly sliced parsnips. With a little bit of white sauce mixed in, this made a great quick-fix dinner and pretty good leftovers too!

 

April 13, 2008

Gnocci Anymore

 

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Now that I've gotten these experiments with gnocci out of my system, I thought I'd share one of the plated results. After realizing how easy it was to make the Meyer Lemon variety, I improvised an oregano/parsley blend - this time with egg whites instead of yolks. Though I used fewer potatoes, I somehow came out with more dough - enough to feed about sixteen! I ended up giving several frozen batches away, and just making the remainder for us, with a tomato fennel sauce. Now that I've satisfied my curiosity, I can move on to something new!

 

March 30, 2008

New Cures for the Common Potato

 

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And just for fun, here's another shot of the tray of delicious potato dumplings. It's especially fun to watch them float to the surface of boiling water as you cook them. In the process, I also learned a new cooking term through error. The term "rice" as a verb apparently means "sieve to the consistency of rice" and not "scatter" as I originally guessed.

 

Making Gnocci

 

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Last night I attempted a new recipe I ripped out of my favorite magazine, The Week. It's called Meyer Lemon Gnocci, and it's made with the zest of two full lemons and amazingly only two potatoes (to feed five of us)! A few friends swung by to partake in the experiment and all got put to work in the kitchen since we were running so late! Ash did an amazing job of "forking" these potato dough bites, delicately making the intended impression with all sorts of other frantic activity in the background! It is served with a buttery sauce which I might re-think next time I make these... but my mind is already racing with other ingredients I can introduce into the very basic dough. Stay tuned for more gnocci gnovelties...

 

March 23, 2008

One of a Kind

 

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And here's the final result. I got my steamed cheeseburger with lettuce and sauteed onions.  Apparently, this 46 year-old establishment used to dish up a meltier cheese and a harder and more delicious roll, but I have nothing to compare it to, and it tasted pretty damn good to me! The trip is worth it for the unique concept alone!

 

How to Make a Steamy Beef Cake

 

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These little trays are a critical part of the refined process of making the steamed cheeseburger, a specialty of Ted's in Meriden, CT. Today Jason's family took me here to experience my first steamed cheeseburger ever. I've been waiting years to taste these delicious treats, described to me many times as gray, sock-like patties that taste much better than they look. The trays are packed with beef and cheese alternately and slotted into a metal box that continually projects steam upward, cooking the burgers and melting the cheese. Jason's dad tells me he can replicate the process at home, which sounds difficult; I'm looking forward to seeing this...

 

February 22, 2008

Dream Topping

 

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Doesn't coffee make everything just that little bit much better? This cake is some miraculous combination of coffee, chocolate, almond, and other cakey goodness which I hope to re-create one of these days; my sister actually bought it from a bakery, so sadly I don't have the recipe. But it's important to have goals. And the chocolate covered coffee bean on top - it beats the icing on the cake!

  

The Lunch of Champions

 

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Feast your eyes on this. I don't often crave specific foods, but the mozzarella, tomato, and basil sandwich is a complete exception. So much so that I spent an outrageous $2.99 on a bouquet of basil from Whole Foods. Does that drive anybody else nuts... that you have to spend three dollars when you really only want five little leaves? And no matter how many ways you try and squeeze basil into every dish for the next two days, you still end up with a handful of withered herbs? But I just can't bring myself to gripe because it was so very delicious.

 

February 04, 2008

All Buns and No Surprises

 

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Some of you may remember my past experiments with the enormous cookie. It was time to break out the frosting yesterday - this time for re-constructing some of Tom Brady's celebrated assets. Truthfully, against all odds, and though you will find it hard to believe given the image in this post, I am not Brady obsessed like many of the local ladies out here in Boston. But it was too tempting to resist a play on those amazingly tight pants, so I built this cookie as a joke to bring to a Superbowl party. Little did I know the party would be half-full of Giants fans! And I think it actually turned bittersweet toward the end of the fourth quarter. It was a sorry, downhearted lot walking through town this morning, but I blame the hype. And I think Brady has a few backup career paths... should he need to avail himself. Happy Valentine's Day, Ladies.

 

Wonders with Peanut Butter

 

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My sister works wonders with peanut butter. We've started a gym kick together over the last month - I know, how predictable after the holiday gluttony - and, well, it just seems to make us hungrier. So we've started cooking for each other occasionally, and here's something she created for us one night. It's a dish of alternating toasted pita bread, grilled eggplant, garbanzo beans, and a mixed peanut butter and yogurt sauce. Throw in a handful of celery, and it's actually a pretty healthy meal!

 

January 26, 2008

A Bloody Cold Day

 

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I ordered this Bloody Mary last weekend while overlooking a much iced-over North Shore. I'm not sure what prompted me to desire such a dressed-up drink... maybe the incongruity of being at the beach in these chilled winter months made me wish for something bright, cheery, flavorful, and reminiscent of summer days! At any rate, it was the fanciest bloody mary I'd ever received with not one but three olives, celery, lemon, limes, etc. Quite the party drink!

 

January 18, 2008

Ricotta on the Loose!

 

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Here's a recipe that got completely out of control, but it ended up tasting OK, so I figured it qualified for a post! The stuffed ricotta was store-bought and pre-frozen, and I fell victim to either poorly written directions or a complete missed synapse, as I could've sworn they told me to place in a pot of boiling sauce and stir occasionally. However, having seen stuffed shells served before, I really should have realized the less-than-figurative hole in this plan... After I'd baked the meatballs and they were ready to be added, I realized the ricotta was dripping out of every crevice in the pasta. But it made for a cheesy, bisque-like sauce - not half bad! I'd probably still recommend going the traditional route, but everything here kept well for leftovers, and I hate to use the expression - but it all ends up down the hatch, no?

 

January 10, 2008

Griddle Masters

 

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I am always astonished by the distractions my siblings come up with over the holidays. My sister always insists that we get through at least one favorite trilogy on DVD that we she doesn't have the stomach to watch alone. This year it was Lord of the Rings, fast-forwarding through the long-winded Golem parts (I love the master, I hate the master... grr). We spend lots of time trying to remember games from childhood and arguing over what we can play until there's no time to play the game at all. This time it was the magical griddle. Silver dollar pancakes and grilled cheese sandwiches seemed to be on the burner around the clock, saturated with buttery goodness. On the day I headed home, we threw together a tuna salad mixture with all the leftover vegetables, nuts, and raisins from the holiday and tossed it on the griddle too, wrapped in thin slices of bread. And I served them on this great presentation platter (which, in my view, made the dish) from my friend Abby. It's so gratifying when food doubles as a work of art!

 

December 30, 2007

Roast and Toast

 

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I still assert that the best part about Christmas dinner is the bread pudding. I love all the other favorites that sometimes make it onto the menu, like green beans, brussels sprouts, roasted potatoes, and chicken liver stuffing, which I finally grew to appreciate - but bread pudding is notable because this is the one time of the year it makes an appearance. The subtle cloves flavor and finely ground onions contribute to this basic and yet surprising dish. Luckily, my mom only makes a limited amount or I'd be in serious trouble!

 

November 05, 2007

Those Turbo-Charged Twos

 

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This weekend I learned that household cleaning products are the easy-bake-ovens of the twenty-first century! And unisex! Apparently, the home improvement industry isn't just for grown-ups anymore. At this second birthday party, I found out that Target now promotes aisles overflowing with toy Dirt Devil vacuum cleaners, mops, rakes, snow plows, lawn mowers, and, my favorite, full-on sets of fake cleaning supplies in a bucket! Jason's nephews were too busy wiping down the picture frames to say goodbye to us, but I did manage to grab one of these cookies before they got all tidied up.

 

October 24, 2007

Let Them Eat Cake!

 

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All right, my friend Nitasha is taking me to task on this one. This little blog of mine used to deviate far more frequently toward food, but alas I've been working my butt off these days and my cooking has been suffering, so I've digressed more toward music and those brief and blissful moments between electronic devices.

But Nitasha has caught the bug and passed it on to me... perhaps you foodies have seen it going around. It's a challenge to identify the "five foods you hate to love" and pass it along, ala the sock exchange chain letter, to another desperate, food-obsessed soul to write about in her blog - a meme. So I'll spare you the ginger-beer-soaked sagas of Dark and Stormy nights, and keep it to the tangibles here today.

While cake is actually not one of the weaknesses I'd like to write about, I recently learned that the phrase, "let them eat cake" was originally coined from a Maria Theresa of Spain comment, quite literally meaning "let the peasants eat garbage." And what more appropriate segue to take us to the five foods I hate to love...

1. Bread, glorious bread.
Bread is not a brunt to bear, but a body - and what a body it is. I love the different textures of daily bread... the fresh, astronomical, eggy challah; the soft, doughy, spicy tandoor naan (how do they do it?); the molten, sweet, dark, dense, steamed Boston bread; the twiggy, salty, brittle pretzel; the rough-edged, thick-skinned, soft-middled baguette... need I go on?

2. Cheese and the evil empire.
I recently read in one online food fascinator about a debate that was held between the chocolate and cheese camps to determine which vice was easier to kick. Surprisingly, the argument seemed fruitless (hee hee!). Chocolate lovers are as stubborn as cheese lovers are willful and both held their ground against the clear allure of the other. But I fall, perhaps squarely, on the cheesy side of that fence. Feed me cheese over chocolate any day... if chocolate is seduction then cheese is utter destruction. 

3. Thai iced tea.
Have you seen the condensed milk they put in this stuff? It's shameful, and oh-so-delicious. And I never hesitate to order it when enjoying a nice Thai meal. It's a good thing I don't often splurge on Thai restaurants, or I'd really be in trouble. Can't replicate the stuff to save my life, but my friend Christine can and has promised to teach me. That will be a dark day, friends, but you can be sure to read all about it on the blog.

4. Tongue-twisters.
Truth: last week, I got super-sized. I bought the bag that I think Hershey's marketing department only put out on the Walgreens rack as a joke. I think I hurt my back carrying them home. It took us a week and a couple of house guests, but we got through it. And I can never look at another Twizzler again. Until next week anyway.

5. "Guinness is good for you."
And so are lima beans and Brussels sprouts, but I'll tell you why they double up to be my final entry for foods I hate to love. Nobody believes me! Yes, this is for you, Jill. These delicious vegetable miracles make the meal for me, but many people - still scarred by force-feeding experiments of youth - are still traumatized. I beseech you disbelievers out there... give them another try! And cook them in butter. Hey, it's no coincidence they're named after mouth-watering cities in Europe.

And, with that, I pass along this task of endurance to Emily, who I'll soon be collaborating with on her latest blogging adventure, We Smell Food. Emily, do your worst.

 

October 11, 2007

Learn to Love Your Leeks

 

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Here's a quick dish to get your heart thumping... Actually, it's a much less cholesterol-ridden concoction than most of my quiches, probably because the veggies take up too much space, and this one stars the lovely leek! The leek doesn't appear on our table all that often, but they seemed to be really fresh at the moment at the supermarket and I gave it a go. Leeks, broccoli, mozzarella, eggs, spring onions, white onions, and milk! That's it! And a really basic pie pastry made of flour, salt, shortening, and water. Crazy easy.

 

September 29, 2007

Disgustingly Rich

 

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The recipe for these magnificent brownies came from an old children's cookbook we used to have lying around as kids. Although, apparently, while I was tending to my Easy Bake, my sister Sophie was developing her baking skills with this work of art - and now she's the designated brownie maker at home. She made them again, during a spontaneous family get-together this weekend, and we ate them warm with fresh vanilla ice cream. Perfection.

 

September 27, 2007

Comfort Food

 

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Everyone remembers this winning combination from elementary school, right? Heck, when it's tomato soup day at work, Lawrence, who makes the best grilled cheese sandwiches in town, tells me he can't catch a break between requests. My co-worker has a whole theory that you can fairly evaluate a grilled cheese sandwich by certain characteristics: the crunchiness of both the inside/outside, the still-gooey consistency of the melt, the depth of char marks on the toast... it's funny because it's true.

 

Shake and Bake

 

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Ever made pasta in a cake pan? Here's your chance! Actually, Timballo has visited my blog before... a little over a year ago, but I made it again this fall in celebration of the engagement of Christine and Will, currently two of the giddiest sweethearts I know. Search Timballo for the recipe... It's the perfect dish to get you back to cooking just as it's getting cool enough to use the oven again.

 

September 23, 2007

Seafood, Indian Style

 

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My friend Nitasha is a genius. In fact, for more genius recipes and life lessons, you should go to http://bloomersandbuns.blogspot.com to understand a little bit more about this tremendously creative and endlessly skilled woman and her hobbies. On Friday, she treated us to a marvelous shrimp and corn dish - she'll have to comment on whether you'd categorize it as curry, stew, or... dare I say... medley? Whatever it's called, it was delicious and although I have never cooked with shellfish, she's tempted me to try. And hey, Dionne, that's what friends are for.

 

September 20, 2007

The Simple Life of a Ginger Man

 

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I love this cookie cutter. It's been in my family for years and I recently found it among my cooking tools, hanging out in shameful disuse. Like other discovered items that have been stolen away to my apartment, it brought upon me a quick pang of guilt followed by an impassioned urge to make use of it before it was discovered missing! So I made gingerbread cookies. Two success tips for these that made them better than previous batches: 1) Don't roll them too thin and don't overcook - just enough so poking them (Pillsbury dough style) leaves a slight indent but bounces back a bit, and 2) cool them between layers of foil so that they retain some of their initial moisture, then store in an airtight container when cool.

 

September 06, 2007

All Calzone-y

 

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I read about the idea of making Calzones in one of the dozens of magazines we now subscribe to, thanks to Jason's successful attempt to get rid of expiring frequent flier points in a hurry! I can generally hardly get through the paper, but somehow I came across an idea for home-made broccoli and cheese calzones - an easy recipe if you use the pre-made pizza dough from the supermarket. Yes, I know it's cheating, but I ran out of time. And yes, that tomato sauce in the background (tellingly blurred) is Ragu.

 

A Family Fave

 

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Knocked out with a cold for the majority of the long weekend, I lost all energy and got reaquainted with my couch. After doing virtually nothing for four days, I finally got a burst of energy and started cooking again like a fiend. And what's better after incessant orange juice, soup, and vitamins? Good, old-fashioned, comfort food. This is a standby recipe of my dad's - spaghetti bolognaise, prepared with whatever's in the fridge and a lot of love. Lacking too many exciting ingredients handy, I added some garam masala - for a spicy kick. That's the way to get back in gear!

 

August 28, 2007

Fennel Vision

 

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I'm showing off a new recipe tonight, straight from Munich, but also a beautiful ceramic bowl, straight from Bar Harbor, Maine. A pair of these bowls was a gift from my parents who must be getting a sense of how much I adore my pottery mugs and dishes. The recipe my brother brought home from his bachelor pad in Germany - a very simple dish where you cook leaves of fennel in hot oil with salt until tender. The secret is to cover the bottom of the pan with oil so that they all get a good coating. Then, at the very end, add chopped garlic to the mix. They are surprisingly rich tasting for a vegetable, and they also have a hint of anise flavoring (like mild licorice). I hear they complement a lot of strong flavors, and I fully intend to add them to my soup stockpile in the fall...

 

August 05, 2007

The Iron Chef

 

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And to close the circle of our Gloucester weekend of fish, my dad's signature salmon in a cast iron frying pan dish. Based on overfishing and various forms of pollution, my dad thinks fresh, ocean-caught fish will be a vague memory for us fifty years from now. Man, I hope not.

 

A Fried Fruit Feat

 

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For my part, I tackled my own red monster - this bubbling skillet of Italian prune plums. Having read the recipe for an Italian Plum Torte in my favorite magazine, The Week, I thought I might be able to handle this summer evening treat. With the help from my friends Joy and Abby, it came to be, although I think the plums I used, while the right variety, were much larger than they should have been, and dominated the cake a bit. Originally, it was a recipe from Cooks Illustrated, another worthy resource. Just about everything I make from their recipes is at least tasty, if not exactly visually perfect!

 

All Guts, No Glory

 

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My uncle Steve tackled this lobster (one of the first cooked by my family here on the premises). I learned today that you can tell that a lobster is cooked when it turns red. Due to my lack of experience eating or cooking these critters, I had no idea this was the case. It's amazing how colors are such an integral part of cooking and establishing the readiness of food.

 

Halibut

 

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And now for the food... Seafood was the order of the day, and this Halibut was one of the best whitefish steaks I've ever tasted. I think fish tastes best with just the bare minimum of added ingredients, and this one was pan seared, baked, and garnished with fresh parsley. Lovely! Still hungover from our breakfast gluttony, we just stole a taste from this exotic lunch my parents had prepared.

 

An Ocean Town's Bread and Butter

 

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To begin our morning in Gloucester (with friends from out of town), we hit the popular breakfast spot, The Two Sisters cafe in the town's center. This eatery features a host of homemade bread options including this Patriot Bread, made with blueberries and cranberries in honor of the New England Patriots. We also got some great tips on things to do in Gloucester, including a street bazaar just a block away from the restaurant and a recap of the late-june Greasy Pole event, where local heros hurl themselves across a greased, horizonal telephone pole, trying to capture a flag at its end. Few succeed, but they certainly go out in style (or pain). Look up "Greasy Pole 2007" on YouTube for footage of some of the classic tumbles.

 

July 22, 2007

Beef - It's What's for Breakfast

 

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Being in Brooklyn, it seemed only natural to check out a local hangout for our last meal in the city. Our friends Amelia and Pete introduced us to a place called the Union Smith Cafe. Jason gave a lot of lead-up to the fact that I love to photograph food, so I think by the time the order arrived, Pete was expecting paparazzi for his entree. I didn't want to disappoint...

 

Bean Nubs

 

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Here was the second part of my job. I thought we'd have too many green beans, but people love their legumes, apparently! We only just had enough!

 

Easy Peasy

 

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My job was to recreate this simple pesto and peas salad that my friend Joy had found in a Barefoot Contessa cookbook and to chop everything else...

 

The "Hens"

 

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I went to a ladies-only birthday dinner this weekend, and one of my friends served as the master chef, planning not only the execution of this Cornish hen dish but also an entire menu soup to nuts - or, rather, cheese to carrot cake. The rest of the course included green beans with almonds and pancetta mashed bliss potatoes. When I first heard about any involvement of hens, I thought it was a reference to the "hen" attendance of the party and didn't realize it was to be the meal until these eight little guys were arranged in the oven. I'm impressed that all eight fit!

 

Breakfast of Champions

 

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One of the built-in benefits to working from home (other than skipping the AM commute) is getting to eat lunch for free (leftovers). Since I'm bad at getting to breakfast before noon, this was more like a late brunch - consisting of pinto beans, tapenade, tabouli, hummus, yogurt, and pita bread. Good thing I ate healthy for lunch...

 

July 16, 2007

The Stunted Side of the Bell Curve

 

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This one didn't stand a chance. It split before it even felt the heat of the oven, but this actually helped to build a better golden crust. It may have been vegetarian, but I thought it was a promising first foray into hearty stuffed peppers.

 

Pick a Pepper

 

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Tonight I thought I was on my own, so I figured I'd go vegetarian with some of the peppers wilting in our refrigerator crisper. Let me start by saying I have no idea how to make stuffed peppers. I've heard of them... I've seen them brightening hte pages of many a cookbook, but have I ever attempted to stuff a vegetable, let alone a pepper? Hardly. So I took out the Cuisinart and went to work blending together everything I had handy: sour cream, more chopped peppers, red onions, garlic, cream cheese, paprika, and basil. Then, I stuffed two hollowed peppers with Tabouli, breadcrumbs, and the Cuisinart mix. Jason got an early flight... good thing I made two!

 

July 05, 2007

Sweet Produce

 

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Grilling isn't only for meat enthusiasts! This summer, I've already exprimented several times with grilled vegetables, always obtaining a tasty result. The key - use loosely chopped veggies (not too small), keep them toward the center of the skewer and grill, and don't over-salt! The variety in color doesn't hurt either. I am absolutely in love with red and yellow peppers, but I think the grilled red onion is my favorite. Even cooler was the grill my dad rigged up over a fire pit in the back yard. The idea is to have a three-legged "tripod" suspension grill that you can raise and lower as necessary during the barbecuing process. Comes in handy for when you want to step away from the grill but still keep everything warm.

 

Getting Our Grill On

 

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My mouth has been watering ever since I set eyes on these skirt steaks that Jason's parents brought up from Connecticut the other day. We had them in a fridge waiting for the perfect opportunity to break out the grill and test out Bob's now famous recipe. Now, I'm not one to use "break out the grill" lightly. Never having had a grill when I was growing up, it seems quite a process to me, and I am always amazed at the frequency that people muster up the energy to cook outside in the summer. But it does lend a different taste to food, particularly those marinated meats. It was every bit as delicious as advertised - we've actually had this before in Connecticut - but I don't think I dare give away the recipe.

 

June 24, 2007

Sunday Spontaneity

 

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Today was one of those Sundays when you get home from running errands, exhausted, famished, and without even the energy to order takeout. Luckily, we'd had a few friends over for dinner on Friday and had some cold salmon, a picked-over salad of tomatoes, black beans, and red peppers, a few scraps of mozzarella cheese, and a carton of eggs. I can work with this! So tonight was omelette night - complete with fresh basil snatched from the flowerpot of our generous upstairs neighbor. I couldn't have been more contented if it were served by professionals. In my opinion, leftovers round out a Sunday just right.

 

Leggo My Leg-o

 

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For Father's Day (or any other day), what's better than a roasted chicken with bacon? My dad actually made his own Father's Day meal, but we all cleaned our plates as a gift. Well, we'd do that anyway...

 

May 10, 2007

Taste of India - Take Two

 

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Take two was MUCH more successful! This time I tried to stick to ingredients that I could actually find at the American supermarkets - a little fresher - and used a recipe found in one of the best cookbook magazines there is, in my view. Cook's Illustrated led me through this version of vegetable curry and it came out amazing! Jason and I were both smacking our lips, really reeling from the spice, but also loving the relief of the cool Greek yogurt I used as a side. Jason did an amazing job as sous-chef tonight, chopping all that needed to be chopped. That's the one thing about this dish - there are lots of bits!

 

May 07, 2007

Taste of India - Take One

 

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I tried my first homemade Indian dish since my trip last night, and it didn't come out so well! Those deviled eggs in the front were pretty good, but the paneer dish I tried at the back was supposed to be something akin to deep-fried cheese ("Paneer Koliwada") from a recipe book that my friend Madhu and family gave me, but I admit that I subbed in a few ingredients for the real thing, not anticipating too much of a difference, and I didn't have the right pan to effectively deep fry. I plead exhaustion, considering that it took every iota of strength to get over to the grocery store for the yogurt in the first place. However, it was a feeble first try and I am committed to getting good at at least one curry before I give up!

 

April 30, 2007

Proof in the Pudding

 

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My friend Emily got married this weekend! It was a surprisingly warm day filled with emotion, wacky dancing, and frosting! I love the trend of having cupcakes instead of a single, multi-tiered cake - so much more accessible! We devoured these over coffee in the late hours of the party. I was amazed to find out that she had individually painted the color onto each one of these cakewalking couples in preparation for her big day. Here's a girl who knows what she wants!

 

April 24, 2007

The Whole World in My Hands

 

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This masterpiece of freshness can be found in the town of Manhattan Beach. It's called the Earth Wrap and it was so California I had to do due tourism diligence and eat the thing.

 

Pacific Turf

 

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Yum! Swordfish skewers at a restaurant called LaLa's in Hollywood. We went there with two great friends - Rick and Jocelyn - and feasted on a few delightful Argentinian favorites. All together, we sampled both surf and turf - and I washed this course (or most of it) down with a light Argentina beer before hitting Melrose for some strolling, a wee bit of shopping, and an introduction to Galaga at a bar called the Snake Pit - which, incidentally, had the most interesting collection of liquor bottles lining the walls I think I've ever seen.

 

Back to the Beef

 

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Where's the beef? It's right here! Jason spoiled me with a welcome dinner of hamburgers and wonderfully washed lettuce after two months in India - I could almost feel my iron count climbing! In all honestly, it hasn't been terrible living without red meat; in fact, I even began to prefer the veg cuisine to "non-veg" meals after a while, particularly in Delhi. But I do miss the occasional fast-food fix (especially when it's homemade)!

 

April 18, 2007

Utthappam

 

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Here's a delicious south Indian concoction that vaguely resembles a pizza. It's called Utthappam, and it has the consistency of a ricey bread stuffed with all kinds of vegetables and herbs. It's very good with chutneys or yogurts (curds), but better with these accessory foods than on its own in my view. I continue to be amazed at how creative the Indians are with their vegetarian fare. Why oh why can't we get away from soggy salads in the States?

 

February 15, 2007

Pretty Fish All in a Row

 

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Okay, this one is from the archives, but it cracked me up as I reviewed some old photos and so I had to put it up here. Jason's dad figured out how to make a sushi plate out of candy! I believe the ingredients are Mounds bars, topped with Sweedish Fish, wrapped in Fruit Roll Ups (er, seaweed!). They are pretty convincing I think and the grandkids got a kick out of them.

 

Sugarlumps

 

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Presenting... Sophie's famous sugar ball cookies. Actually, they have a much cooler name, but I am scratching my head to remember it right now. Anyway, little smudges of heaven. They must be made nearly entirely out of butter. But who's counting. This was my final dessert before India - and what a dessert it was!  For India stories: www.pippalehar.com/indiablog.

 

February 03, 2007

Fodder for a Sweet Tooth

 

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I think this one's pretty self-explanatory. Just a cool picture of a berry up close.

 

Now That's Salty!

 

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Here's the saltiest dish I've ever made. It consists of heavily salted pasta, slow-cooked tomato sauce made from the salty fat of pancetta, and a surprisingly salty cheese: ricotta salata. Not sure I could eat this every day, but it was definitely an unusual episode of our experimental kitchen!

 

A Little Irish Tradition

 

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OK, well I'm not Irish, but growing up we ate a lot of Shepherd's Pie - mainly because in a big family, a little has to go a long way. This differed from my family's traditional take though, calling for lamb shoulder instead of ground beef and peas (which I think really pulled it all together). Aside from the slow cooking of the meat, the recipe is not very much work and the leftovers will last you for days!

 

Pie in Your Eye

 

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When we had friends over for dinner the other night, we had no idea we'd be dining in style out of a picnic basket! One of our guests brought this incredible apple tart, which looks like something out of a gourmet magazine. Not only did it look perfect, but it tasted fabulous too. One of these days, I think we'll be visiting this friend at her own restaurant...

 

January 28, 2007

A Twist on Italian

 

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I had a craving for the pesto that had been sitting in the fridge a little too long... but mahi mahi was on sale at the supermarket and we hardly ever splurge on fish. Here was our surf 'n earth creation: pesto pasta topped with chopped tomatoes and grilled mahi mahi.

 

Fabulous Fungi

 

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A great mushroom risotto recipe, courtesy of my friend Karen. It's very easy to make, although it takes some attention and constant stirring (if you don't want to ruin your pans). I just added the brussel sprouts (and walnuts) because brussel sprouts go with everything.

KAREN'S FAVORITE MUSHROOM RISOTTO 

1 C arborio rice
5 C boiling water (2 veg. bouillon cubes) to make stock
1 diced portobello mushroom (or more, if it's small)
2 tbsp olive oil (enough to almost cover bottom of pan)
Grated Parmesan cheese
fresh rosemary
(I also added some chopped onions, white wine, and parsley to my version)

1. Boil water then add the bouillon cubes. Add chopped mushrooms to the boiling water. (This way they flavor the broth while also softening up.)

2. In separate pan, heat olive oil. Add arborio rice. Stir to coat rice with oil and cook for about 1 minute until lightly browned. Then add broth a little at a time, stirring in and letting it all get absorbed (at least mostly) before adding more. One ladle at a time is a good amount.

3. Add some crushed rosemary (or other herbs) and wine to rice fairly early on in the process. Stir almost constantly adding broth every couple of minutes, until you are out of broth or until you are satisfied with the flavor and softness of the rice. This usually takes about 25-30 minutes.

4. Serve on a plate or bowl with some black pepper and parmesan cheese and serve immediately.

 

January 14, 2007

Pancakes: A Profile

 

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These pancakes look fit to thumb through! My dad has a talent for creating these thin, crepe-like pancakes that taste much heartier than they look. The secret is using a very hot cast-iron frying pan to cook them, but while I've tried this recipe many times, I never seem to get them to turn out like this. They're an art form!

 

Let Her Eat Cake!

 

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My poor sister has a birthday directly following Christmas, and delays in celebrating are routine, just because it quickly becomes one of the busiest times of the year in our family. But at last, we got around to celebrating as a family in early January, and she got her cake. This one was courtesy of Wilson's Farm and delicious! Not too rich and with frosting that didn't remind me of eating butter straight out of the fridge...

 

January 06, 2007

Food Palette

 

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Jason is good to put up with me snapping pictures of our food before we sit down to eat... We tried a new yellow rice and tomato salad with our special occasion pork chops last week and if you stare at the image and let your eyes unfocus, the result resembles a painter's palette. (I think.)

 

December 25, 2006

Beigli

 

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My cousin from New Zealand joined us for Christmas this year, and, as luck would have it, is an excellent cook! He made these two variations of Beigli (a Hungarian family tradition): Dios (walnut) and Makos (poppyseed). I remember having these at our grandparents' house as a child. Yum!

 

December 21, 2006

Shepherd's Cauliflower

 

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This dish was sort of an accident. I went to my parents' place to hold down the fort one night and cook dinner for our family and couldn't find any potatoes for my shepherd's pie (because they were now logically located in the bread bin). So I improvised and used a cauliflower head instead. Hey, anything's good with cheese.

 

December 13, 2006

Gingerman Preview

 

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Gingermen - all stacked up. I am trying out a few different gingerbread recipes this week - one is vegan, one has light and fluffy dough, and one even has a secret ingredient! The jury's still out on the best tasting of the three. But they are ALL highly photogenic!

 

December 04, 2006

Pretty Icing, Cupcake.

 

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This is the perfect cupcake made by the perfect hostess. My friends Megan and Jeff had me over on Sunday morning, and let me tell you, this is the perfect reward for a long night of dancing. Yup, that's what I was doing. This followed a delicious spinach and sausage risotto - maybe she'll share the recipe with us someday... ;)

 

November 29, 2006

Garlic Dreams

 

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Well, it must be winter. I'm on a new soup kick after having a water cooler discussion with a coworker about how easy it is to freeze homemade soups and how you can avoid getting all the store-bought preservatives in your dinner this way! Here's the garlic soup that you can see me assembling in the entry below. And Erin, it's totally vegan! Check it out!

CREAMY ROASTED GARLIC SOUP WITH SAUTEED CAULIFLOWER AND FRESH HERBS

3 tbsp extra virgin olive oil
1/2 cup chopped onion
1 leek (white and light green parts only), chopped and well rinsed
2 large boiling potatoes, peeled and chopped
1 tbsp fresh thyme, chopped
1/2 cup dry white wine
Homemade or low-salt vegetable broth (vegan)
4 heads garlic, roasted (that's heads, not cloves)
Freshly ground black pepper
1/2 tsp kosher salt, more to taste
1/2 cup fresh chopped fresh sorrel leaves or chives, or a combination
2 tbsp olive oil
1 small head cauliflower (2 lb), cut into small florets (about 1/2 in. at the widest point)

1. Make the soup: In a soup pot over low heat, saute the onion and leek in 1 tbsp of olive oil until very soft but not brown, about 10 mins. Add the potatoes and thyme and cook another 1 minute. Turn the heat to medium high, add the wine, and let it reduce to just a few teaspoons, about 4 minutes. Add the broth; bring to a boil. Reduce the heat and simmer for 10 mins. Add the garlic pulp and simmer until the potatoes are very soft, another 15 to 20 minutes.

2. Strain the soup, saving both the liquid and solids. In a blender or food processor, puree the solids in batches, using some liquid to help it blend, and pour the pureed solids back in teh pot. When all the solids are pureed, add as much of the remaining liquid as necessary to get a consistency like heavy cream. Season to taste with salt and pepper.

3. Saute the cauliflower: Heat 2 tbsp oil in a large saute pan over medium heat. Add the cauliflower florets and saute. Once they begin to soften, after about 5 minutes, season with salt and pepper. Continue to saute until the cauliflower is deep golden brown and tender but still firm, another 7-10 minutes.

4. To serve: Reheat the soup. Ladle it into individual bowls, add the cauliflower, and garnish with the sorrel or chives.

 

What an Interesting Smell You've Discovered...

 

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Note to self - garlic smells a lot different than you expect when you bake four heads of it in the oven for an hour and then loiter over the mushy remains, peeling them from the skin. For the first time, I tried roasting my own garlic, and I don't think the apartment will smell the same for days.

 

November 26, 2006

Toasty Memories

 

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After spending part of the weekend with my family, I came home feeling nostalgic for some of our breakfast traditions growing up. When we were very little, my dad would draw faces on our peanut butter toast in the morning. I made one for myself today for fun.

 

November 21, 2006

All Astir

 

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Putting the final touches on my very first homemade soup! For the recipe, see below.

 

Curried Parsnip Soup

 

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Sandwiched between two gluttonous weekends, this week is all about eating light and healthy. Well, I'm not sure how healthy this Curried Parsnip Soup is (it includes a cup of cream), but it certainly hit the spot and it's all vegetarian for a change. My one piece of advice is to prepare the ingedients beforehand - otherwise, you'll end up like I did with the pot sitting on the back burner as you try to catch up! Here's how to make it:

CURRIED PARSNIP SOUP

1/4 cup vegetable oil
1 large onion, chopped
2 cloves garlic, crushed
1 tsp ground turmeric
1/2 tsp ground cumin
1/2 tsp ground ginger
1/2 small chili pepper, seeded and sliced
1-1/4 lb parsnips, peeled and chopped
2 cooking apples, peeled, cored, and chopped
4 cups vegetable stock
sea salt and freshly gorund black pepper
1 cup cream

1. Warm oil in large saucepan over medium heat. Add onion and garlic and cook until onion softens, about 2 minutes. Stir in turmeric, cumin, ginger, and chili, and cook for 3 minutes, stirring occasionally. Add parsnips and apples and stir well. Cover and cook for 5 minutes, stirring occasionally. Stir in stock and season with salt and pepper. Bring mixture to a boil over high heat, then reduce heat, cover and simmer until parsnips are soft, 30-40 minutes.

2. Remove soup from heat and transfer to large bowl. Working in batches, ladle into a food processor and process until smooth, about 20 seconds. Return soup to suacepan and heat through over medium heat, about 5 minutes. Stir in cream just before serving. Garnish with pepper and chopped scallions.

 

November 17, 2006

Bacon Bits

 

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So, I guess it's no surprise that two of these featured appetizers are made with bacon! Bacon photographs well, though, and this appetizer seemed particularly innovative. These are bacon-wrapped dates, believe it or not, devised by a coworker.

 

If the Earth Were Made of Cheese

 

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This would be Epcot Center! I'd never heard of a cheeseball before, strangely enough, but this particular construction looked so cool on its bed of lettuce that it turned me onto the idea.

 

Deeply Dippy

 

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Occasionally, we hold an appetizer bake-off at work, where employees can bring in their favorite dishes and recipes and compete against each other to make the best dish. This one was called "EZ Cheezy Dip." I've featured a few of the entires here.

November 12, 2006

Almost Homemade

 

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Here's a slice of the pizza I made tonight. Mine included tomato sauce, brussel sprouts, sun-dried tomatoes, brie, garlic, and a few olives! Rich, but scrumptious.

 

Slightly Creepy Cookies

 

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So these cookies are appallingly easy - and also appallingly creepy. The recipe offered the option of adding food coloring, so I added 3 drops of red to the cookie dough. I left the glaze neutral (or, nude, as it turns out), and instead they turned out looking like flesh drops. We joked that if you shaped these differently they'd make amazing Halloween finger cookies. ;)

 

November 09, 2006

That's a Spicy Meatball

 

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I can't believe this is my first attempt at meatballs, but I found a cool sounding recipe on the Internet and tried it out. I was looking for the baked-not-fried variety with a homemade sauce. I highly recommend it. Even though the sauce is very simple, it's delicious. Just make sure you have a couple of hours, since it's slow cooking.

SPAGHETTI AND MEATBALLS

Meatballs:
2 eggs
1/2 C milk
3 slices bread, crumbled
2 lbs ground beef
1/2 C finely chopped onion
2 tbsp chopped parsley
1 clove garlic
1 tsp salt
1/2 tsp pepper

Sauce:
3 tbsp olive oil
1/2 C chopped onion
2 cloves garlic
1 tbsp sugar
2 tsp salt (or a little more)
2 tsp dried oregano
1 tsp dried basil
1/4 tsp pepper
1 large can crushed tomatoes (28-36 oz)
2 cans tomato paste

16 oz. thin spaghetti
Parmesan cheese

1. Make meatballs. In medium bowl, beat eggs lightly, add milk and bread and let stand for approx. 5 minutes. Add ground beef, onion, parsley, garlic, salt, and pepper.
2. Mix gently until well blended.
3. Shape into ~24 meatballs about 1 1/2 inches in diameter. Place meatballs in a generously greased shallow large baking pan. Bake meatballs at 450 degrees F for 25 minutes.
4. In a Dutch oven, in hot oil over medium heat, saute onion until tender and just beginning to turn golden. Add remaining ingredients; bring to a boil. Reduce heat, cover, and simmer for 30 minutes. Taste and adjust seasoning, adding more salt, if necessary. Add meatballs; cover and simmer 50-60 minutes longer, stirring occasionally.
5. Cook spaghetti according to directions.
6. Serve spaghetti topped with meatballs in sauce; sprinkle with grated Parmesan cheese.

 

November 07, 2006

Cajun Catfish!

 

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Finally! Fish on sale at Whole Foods! Yesterday I bought two small filets of catfish for $3.99 and Jason floured them and cooked them up with a bunch of spices. I used small red potatoes, sour cream, rosemary, and milk to make the mashed potatoes. Excellent and quick, but watch out for the little bones!

 

November 04, 2006

Too Much for Two

 

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Here's a stew that calls for entire cobs of corn! We certainly felt corn-fed after two helpings. We are bringing the leftovers to family tonight! Two nights of hearty beef stew in a row is good enough for me! We don't currently have an oven-proof lid for this thing, so I've been eying casserole pans this week, which are also, as I found out, called "Dutch ovens."

 

November 02, 2006

Hungarian Halloween

 

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I made dinner for a few friends before we headed out for our "observed" Halloween night. This spaghetti bolognaise is inherited from my father's culinary repertoire. We ate this all the time growing up and I still love it. He even managed to make brussel sprouts taste good and they're now one of my favorite vegetables. Another loaf of Harpoon bread (left) finished the effect.

 

October 22, 2006

Heads or Tails?

 

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Here is the top of the Pineapple Ginger cake shown cooking below. This illustrates the "upside-down" part. I am a huge fan of this recipe, although I hope to get the pineapples in better concentric circles next time so that the top of the cake looks more like a pinwheel.

 

Cake in a Pan

 

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Who ever heard of cake cooked in a frying pan? Here's a cake I tried out today - Pinapple Upside-Down Gingerbread Cake. I thought this side looked very edible, but this is actually the bottom of the cake. See above for the pineapple top side.

 

October 21, 2006

Wobbly Bits

 

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Jason bought these oysters in Massachusetts and we took them down to Connecticut for his dad's birthday. I hadn't had an oyster in a long time, but these were pretty tasty. I have trouble with the texture, though, so one was all I could manage. They're beautiful on ice!

 

October 19, 2006

Spaetzle

 

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Here is a dish made from very little. My parents used to make it a lot when we were kids - it's a German starch side pronounced [SHPEHT-sluh, SHPEHT-sehl, or SHPEHT-slee] (I prefer the latter). I did some research and it translates to mean, "little sparrow" - totally cute, although maybe a little unappetizing... It's very simple, made with flour, eggs, milk, and salt, and me without my spaetzle-maker, I used a collander instead to form the squiggly little dumpling-like noodles. I was in a hurry that night, so just added a spicy curry sauce (in a jar) to the little guys, and it came out very nice - and very spice. I just learned that it is also good second-day when fried up with butter and onions, though, so I'm sure I'll be using that tip often in the future. Nothing better than buttery onions.

 

October 13, 2006

High Rise from the First Story

 

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I was delighted to find this recipe (along with a series of memorable famous quotes) written up by my most enthusiastic college English professor. This guy sported a Rip Van Winkle beard, right down to the downy white point, and used to wear Chrismas tree lights in it during the holiday season. For essay reviews, we'd go over to his house and discuss our papers over homemade bread.

PROFESSOR RUBADEAU'S FRENCH-STYLE BREAD

1 1/2 tablespoons yeast
1 tablespoons sugar
2 cups warm water (100-115 degrees)
1 tablespoon salt
5-6cups flour
1 egg mixed with 5-6 tbsp water (or olive oil)

Mix together the sugar, yeast, and water. Let proof 10 minutes. Add salt and flour in one cup at a time. When it's too stiff to mix, turn dough onto a floured board and knead until smooth and elastic (this will take at least 10-15 minutes). Must be very sticky!
      Let rise in a greased bowl until doubled. Punch down. Form on floured cutting board into two loaves about 12 inches long. Knead dough during the shaping process.
      Slash the loaves diagonally about 1/2 - 3/4" deep every inch or so and paint with egg wash. Put the loaves on a greased cookie sheet and place it in a cold oven. Let rise 10 minutes. Then set the temperature at 350 and bake for 30-35 minutes. (Bake for 18 mins. and then check to make sure loaves have not grown together; if they have, split them with a knife.)

 

October 10, 2006

Pork Chops Taste Goooood...

 

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That's a little reference to a Travolta line from Pulp Fiction if you don't know the movie. "But bacon tastes goood, pork chops taste gooood," which is eventually followed by Samuel L. Jackson's: "Sewer-rat may taste like pumpkin pie, but I'd never know, 'cause I'd never eat the filthy..." well, you know the rest. How did I get so off topic? Anyway, this meal was the closest I've gotten yet to roasting meats. It's amazingly easy to make and the mushroom/apple sauce I invented to go alongside wasn't bad either!

 

October 06, 2006

A Match Made in Vegetable Stock

 

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Risotto for Christine! We enabled my friend Christine's first encounter with a brussel sprout this week and I think they're friends for life. The other part of the meal (Mushroom Risotto) was a hodge podge of other recipes I've tried, but I think a reduced amount of water, white wine, and overall longer cooking (we ate at 10 p.m.) made it more savory than usual.

 

October 02, 2006

Mounds of Cheesy Goodness

 

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Here lies the lasagne that fed us for a week. I think we must have eaten it for breakfast, lunch, and dinner, but it was finally conquered last Thursday night. The cheeses are ricotta, parmesan, and mozzarella, and they appear to make up most of the dish, although I swear there's meat and pasta in there too.

 

September 20, 2006

Breakfast Done Up Right

 

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This is how they do the breakfast burrito at the Miracle Grill on Bleecker Street. Save your pennies!!

 

September 11, 2006

Is That Stardust or Flour in My Eyes?

 

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Here's a whole pile of star-shaped sugar cookies my sister made (and I helped cut out and decorate) for my very first artist's open studio this weekend! We could have gone store-bought, but for the rave reviews these babies got, it might just have been worth it. Soph, feel free to comment... ;)

 

September 06, 2006

My Everest

 

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Ladies and Gentlemen - I give you Timballo! Here is a concoction I've made only once before at Oscar Party 2005 and this time it came out pretty differently - still delicious, though. You may remember the name of this dish from the movie "Big Night." It's like a wine and cheese party in your mouth (I recommend a dry red).

Timballo

3 tbsp olive oil
4 large cloves garlic, minced
1 28-oz can whole Italian plum tomatoes in puree
1 tbsp tomato paste
6 anchovies (or, I prefer 5 large strips of bacon, crisped or a few slices of smoked prosciutto)
1/2 tsp crushed red pepper flakes
Salt and pepper to taste
1 lb dried tagliatelle or fettucine pasta
3 tbsp butter, divided
1 cup pitted and roughly chopped kalamata olives (I used whole)
3/4 cup freshly grated Parmigiano-Reggiano, divided
2 tbsp panko (or fine dry bread crumbs)
12 oz smoked mozzarella, grated

Heat olive oil in large skillet over medium heat. Add garlic and saute until aromatic, 2-3 minutes. Finely crush tomatoes and add to pan along with puree. Stir in tomato paste, anchovies/bacon, hot red pepper flakes. Season with salt and pepper to taste. Cook, stirring often, 20 minutes.

While sauce cooks, bring large pot of liberally salted water to rolling boil. Add tagliatelle and cook according to package directions until not quite al dente. Drain well, turn into large bowl. Toss with 2 tbsp of butter to keep noodles from sticking together. Add tomato sauce, olives, and 1/2 cup Parmigiano-Reggiano to pasta; mix well to distribute ingredients evently. Set aside until cooled. (Note: cooling is not essential as long as you distribute the smoked mozzarella evenly between layers of pasta so it doesn't all melt on top.)

Heat oven to 350 degrees. Use remaining butter to thickly grease 9-inch springform pan. Dust with panko, turning to coat bottom and sides of pan, shaking off excess. (If breadcrumbs are not fine enough, ok to add some flour to help coat the grease.) Add mozzarella to tagliatelle, again mixing well to distribute cheese. Scrape pasta into prepared pan, pressing to compact it and smoothing top. (I used the base of a cup measure for this.) Sprinkle with remaining Parmigiano-Reggiano. Bake 45 minutes. Let stand for 10 minutes. Run thin spatula around inside rim of pan to loosen; remove springform. Using sharp knife, cut into wedges to serve.

Serves 8-10.

 

 

Tagliatelle It to the Judge!

 

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I was getting bored of defrosted veggie burgers for dinner so I decided to change it up with this nutty recipe called Beef and Artichoke Fettuccine. Take this as a testament to my faithfulness to written recipes: the recipe calls for beef and toasted pecans - this dish has neither. However, with a few deli slices and some honey-roasted cashews it wasn't half bad! The judgment came in unanimous for making this one again (with a little less sugar, maybe).

August 06, 2006

Circular Seasoning

 

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Another culinary experiment - steak strips wrapped around spinach, mozzarella, and cilantro and sauteed with onions and a veal de-glaze. It didn't come out bad, although I would have opted for wider strips of beef next time, as the filling fell out of several of the pieces.

 

 

Eggheads Wear Nice Hats

 

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I made dinner for Jason the other night, but to add a little protein, started out the meal with deviled egg appetizers. These took very little time to make, but had a nice effect, particularly when topped with a fresh leaf of basil. I changed up the standard deviled egg recipe to avoid the mayo. Here goes for those interested:

MUSTARD-BASIL EGGS

Fresh basil leaves
Dijon mustard
1 egg per intended serving, hard-boiled
Paprika

Halve the boiled eggs, place a dollop of mustard on each, sprinkle with paprika, and top with a fresh basil leaf. Ta-da!

 

Fake It Till You Bake It

 

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This is an old favorite recipe of my mom's that I tried to re-create by memory recently. We call them "Courgettes," the British term for zucchini, but it's actually kind of a zucchini/tomato bake.

COURGETTES 

1 can peeled or diced tomatoes (or fresh tomatoes)
2-3 zucchini, sliced and steamed
1-2 slices bread, crumbled
1/2 cup parmesan cheese     
oregano, salt, and pepper to taste

Pile zucchini then tomatoes in a casserole dish. Mix bread and cheese together and season. Sprinkle as a surface layer over vegetables. Cook on 350 F for 20 minutes or until crunchy on top. C'est tout! 

 

A Slice of Ice (Cream, That Is...)

 

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 I'm a little behind in my photo publishing! A few weeks ago my friend Jill brought yummy wedges of ice cream in watermelon's clothing... the "seeds" are actually chocolate chips and the rind a lemon sorbet! We garnished with berries and anise wafers and presto - dessert! Best of all, it was unbelievably refreshing in the 100 degree heat!

 

July 23, 2006

A Spudly Salad

 

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 This is my new favorite potato salad. I took a basic recipe and elaborated a bit:

PIPS' POTATO SALAD

1 bag boiled red potatoes, cubed
4 hard boiled eggs, cubed
handful of chopped fresh basil
1 medium onion, diced
5 sliced stalks of celery
1 cup of Miracle Whip
1 tablespoon white wine vinegar
1 clove garlic
salt, pepper, paprika

Mix all ingredients together except potatoes and eggs. Mix in cubed potatoes, then eggs. Refrigerate at least 2 hours before serving.

 

July 03, 2006

A Hersheys Smacker

 

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This Hershey bar really latched on and left its wafer-thin imprint on my graham cracker!

 

Life Is Like a Napkin Full of Cherries

 

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Real cherries! July is the season when at last you get an alternative to those sugar-marinated marsachinos at the bar! FINALLY!

 

Minty Nightcap

 

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We followed the Campari with some homemade Mojitos - even more refreshing! I feel as though I should use mint more. I don't really cook with it much, but I'm sure there are some great recipes. If anyone knows of any, I'd love to hear about 'em!

 

Blood Oranges

 

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This weekend, we mixed up a couple of sunny Campari Oranges after a long day in the sun! The effect the Campari makes as it mixes with the orange juice is particularly beautiful.

 

July 01, 2006

Color Me American

 

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Well, it's Fourth of July weekend, and I get to celebrate with authenticity this year, as I am officially a U.S. citizen! So, my friend Abby and I took a break from the heat in Davis Square with FroYo with red, white, and blue sprinkles. The presentation was better than the flavor, but who's counting?

 

June 19, 2006

Lobstah Land

 

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This was the dish at a rehearsal dinner I attended this weekend. It was during this trip that I learned that Maine, land of the lobster, is also nicknamed (at least by the state highway board) "Vacationland"! Now I don't know if lobster has climbed the ranks to be one of my "favorite" things, but cracking into one was certainly a memorable vacation experience... and the presentation was striking.

 

June 10, 2006

We've Got It Stacked

 

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The day after a bachelorette party. Pancakes make for great hangover medication.

Pancakes: Mix 3.5 cups flour, 2 eggs, 1 tbsp flour, 1/4 tsp baking powder and milk until the right consistency is reached.

 

June 03, 2006

Sweet Child of Mine

 

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Couldn't you just eat him up? A recent baby cookie I made for a company baby shower. I dyed the cookie slightly pink for the feet and face portions.

 

May 09, 2006

Showing a Little Leg

 

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Some folks joined us for a potluck up north and here's an up close and personal shot of Joy's amazing roast chicken.


May 06, 2006

All I Want for Breakfast

 

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This was breakfast this morning. It was sunny and must have been 80 degrees and we ate on the deck with strawberry seeds in our teeth and sun on our faces. Perfect!

 

Loaded Fruit

 

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Homemade sangria brought along by Chris.

 

April 23, 2006

8-Minute Love Handles

 
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These blueberry scones are my new Saturday morning obsession.  They're quick to make and absolutely delicious.

Blueberry Scones

1/3 cup butter
1 3/4 cups all-purpose flour
3 tbsp sugar
1/4 tsp salt
1 egg, beaten
1/2 cup frozen blueberries (add last)
4-6 tbsps half-and-half or milk
1 egg, beaten

Heat oven to 400 F. Cut butter into dry ingredients with fingers until in fine crumbs. Stir in 1 egg, half-and-half, and the blueberries until a dough is formed. Turn onto floured surface; roll out until dough forms an approximately 1/2-inch thick square. Cut into quarters with a knife, then cut each quarter in half diagonally so you have eight triangles. Place on ungreased cookie sheet and brush with the remaining egg. Bake 10-12 mins or until golden brown. Serve warm!

 

Spring Medley

 

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I made up this yummy salad last night for a quick dinner: grilled chicken (cooked in pepper and paprika), mozzarella, tomatoes, spring onions, black beans, avocados, raw chopped onions, minced garlic, and a little olive oil, salt, and pepper to pull it all together. It tasted even better the next day. But watch out for onion breath! 

 

April 17, 2006

'Chokes

 

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We went to a great local farmstand for Easter flowers, but these artichokes were the most beautiful thing there! 

 

April 15, 2006

A Little Liquid Relief

 

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Slow day, so here is a shot of the Gatorade I've been drinking to stay hydrated through my spring cold! 

 

April 07, 2006

My Favorite Sandwich

 

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OK, I know this is now two posts in a row about food, but I made my favorite sandwich today and it just looked so good, I had to take a picture.  Tomato, buffalo mozzarella, basil pesto (even better with fresh basil), and ground pepper.  YUM!

 

April 06, 2006

I Don't Have a Square to Spare!

 

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Jason's mom brought us these unbelieveable espresso brownies last weekend!  They have a crispy espresso surface layer.  I am hopelessly addicted.