Friday, October 30, 2009

Allergen Free Cookies

These were so good! Keagan and I baked some Sunflower Seed Butter cookies yesterday. These are free of many major allergens, though if you can’t eat egg, you would have to use a substitute.
I pieced together a few recipes to try and make a gluten free peanut free alternative to a peanut butter cookie. Here’s what I came up with:

1 cup sunflower seed butter
3/4 cup evaporated cane juice (or you could use basic sugar)
1 egg
1 teaspoon vanilla

Bake at 350 for about 10 min.

These were seriously so delicious. A lot of allergen free alternative are good, but can leave you wanting the real thing. I liked these better than “real” peanut butter cookies.

Keagan had a lot of fun helping. Or should I say stirring the sunbutter, stealing the spoon and running to the living room to hide.

He really did enjoy the whole process. I always try to distract him when I cook and I know everyone always says to include the kids and how much they learn from it, but it just always stressed me out. I realized yesterday it was no big deal and was more fun for both of us. I see a lot of baking together in our future.

Eden kept herself busy with some ribbon while we baked. She’s not quite ready for baking

Naptimes’s over, so this blog is too

Weigh in 4

Well peeps I lost another pound this week which makes the total 4 pounds in 4 weeks.  Now I have to say I am quite disappointed in this, especially since my friend has been going for 6 weeks and has lost 13 pounds!!!!!!

However I MUST remind myself that I haven’t been an angel and I have went out for dinner and drinks etc and still managed to lose.  I also think that the gym isn’t doing my any favours on the scales, obviously I am getting fitter and am enjoying it so will continue to go but I think for some reason it is causing me to not show a loss on the scales.

BUT I am still losing and it might just be that in order for me to get to where I want to be now I will just have to be patient, and wait for my pound loss every week.  Unfortunately I have lots planned this weekend, but I think I have nothing on next weekend so I will try and be as good as gold and see if I can possibly go for 2 instead of 1 pound.  But we will see

Anyway I know I haven’t posted any recipes for a while, I added one this morning though, so I thought I would share a couple of pictures I have taken recently and I will eventually post the recipes for.  But if you like the look of them and would like the recipe sooner, please just let me know and I will kick my lazy bum into gear

Oh and I am working on a few cakes for some friends for a party tonight, and if they turn out really want to share them with you.  I will warn you now, you don’t want to make these if you are on a diet but I have to say I have found a passion for baking and making everyone else fat

Soooooooo here are my pictures:

Spring rolls with filo pastry:

Vegetable chilli with a baked potato and cheese:

Vegetable Curry:

Wednesday, October 28, 2009

Vegetables!

This week's CSA box

I really miss my freedom of cooking. The hardest thing about my community experience here has been not being able to think, hey, this sounds good, I think I’ll make that for dinner! I only get to cook once a week, and some weeks not at all. I could cook on the weekends, but we don’t usually have house money to spend on ingredients, and my $100 stipend doesn’t go very far when it comes to groceries. I don’t mean to have a pity party, living on $100 a month is not the hardest thing I’ve ever done. At least I know that $100 will be there every month for the next 9 months. But I’m really struggling with my own personal lack of food sovereignty.  Especially after cooking for myself for the last 3 or 4 years.

My saving grace is my CSA box. The thing about cooking that is so fulfilling to me is the experimentation and creativity. Knowing that there will be a couple pounds of vegetables that aren’t claimed for meals, and that are often unusual vegetables that no one else is dying to cook, like tokyo turnips. These humble little roots have preserved my sanity for several weeks in a row now. I had never heard of them until they arrived in my box, but I’ve found several ways to cook them since then. I’m pretty sure that no one else in my house even knows what they are except maybe Maria, because I made her try some last week. She’s a good sport. I can also usually count on radishes and squash to sit neglected until I either eat them myself or use them in a dinner dish. And I love them for that.

Monday, October 26, 2009

Sonny's Bibimbap

When I was in Colorado Springs recently, my friend Sonny made this delicious, traditional Korean dinner just for me.  It’s what I always order when we go out for Korean food.  Yes, I know it’s cooked and it has rice, thus breaking the rules, but it was delicious nonetheless!

I don’t have the exact recipe she used for the bibimbap, but it was brown rice with poached egg, julienned carrots and cucumber, and spinach sauteed with garlic.  I topped it off with tamari.  Delish.

She also made a fantastic raw cold Korean cucumber soup with an apple cider vinegar broth filled with thin cucumber and green onion slices.  Raw and refreshing!

Maybe one day when I figure out how to have guest authors on this blog, Sonny can post the actual recipes for me. 

Overall, a big 4/5 happy monkeys for this lovely meal.

Aromatic and Delicious Sunday Evening :) :) :)

Last Sunday, i tried something unusual and different. Ok it’s unsual because, i never cooked on a Sunday evening and it is different for two reasons, firstly, i never tried a French recipe before; secondly, i cooked it with my French friend in her house in Rue Franscois Martin street( French part of my town). Actually, we (me and celine) planned two things, cooking and movies. Unfortunately, i was not able to stay in her house. I dropped the movie plan in the last minute. Every tea break discussion of ours carried the menu for sunday evening. Eventually, we finalized Quiche, pop corn, vegetable cheese sandwich and a desert with puffed rice ( in tamil it is called a “Aval”). I reached her house around 5 pm in the evening, there i got introduced to another French girl named “Manon”. She is also staying with Celine with a quite interesting profile, she is working on ecological issues and travelling the world to make a study on it. We left the house for buying the ingredients like Cheese, Carrot, Fresh cream, Mushroom and eggs. To my surprise the supermarket where i usually buy vegetables and fruits has got expanded with cosmetics, food items and other households like a typical supermarket. So we found everything there, except fresh cream and eggs. Later, i drove her to Nilgris. While driving in the French town we narrowly escaped from hitting a van. Big vehicles are not usual in French part of the town and we never heard the sound of the van. (It is a “T” shaped road, imagine the van is coming from one end and we are in the road intersecting or perpendicular). I took a deep breath, (if only i do it regularly it is a yoga ) and drove to Nilgris, we finished our shopping and returned home. I started to do pop corn, i made it some five times before. It was successfull all the time except yesterday, because i forgot to turn off the flame after the popping stopped. So, some 5% of the corn was burnt completely. Thank God it still had its taste and aroma . Celine appreciated me
I started to cut vegetables for the sandwich, meanwhile Celine was frying mushroom and onions for the quiche. I stacked my sandwich with sliced onions, carrots, tomato, cheese and chat masala to taste. This time i was 100% successfull with my dish. The sandwich came well with a minimum roasting. This time Manon appreciated me Before we left for the shopping, we made the aval desert so that, the mixture sets wells, with aval, coconut milk, milk and sugar. The process of quiche involved many ingredients and stages as well, like Chopping, Frying, layering, mixing, Baking etc., Usually Quiche is made with pork but Celine used chicken since i will not eat pork. We set the oven temperature for the quiche and relaxed our backs in front of the TV watching Indiana Jones and the last Crusade in star movies and Cats & Dogs in HBO by swapping the channel in ad breaks. Sadly, Yesterday the cable TV operator of our location failed (for hardcore cricket lovers like my brothers it is compared to a brutal murder) telecasting the first one day series between India and Australia. I didn’t follow the news as well for the whole day. When i took a pause at CNN IBN seeing the shots from Cricket i was thrilled to know the result. Because by that time i know the match will be over. Ok, i saw the shots when India was 288 with four runs more to beat Aussies. Here comes the sad television editing, they showed the Indian players standing and cheering the players which looked like India won the match. But, horribly the news ticker at the bottom carried Australia won India by 4 runs . I was really shocked and felt bad in missing a good series But i soon got over it to taste the Quiche which carried a devouring aroma. Hmmmm, it was really good and tasted heavenly. The hard labour in the preparation of Quiche would have made it taste heavenly With a feeling of a satisfied evening i took some Quiche for my family. This time my cousins appreciated me for something really good:) All appreciation goes to ma cher Celine

Friday, October 23, 2009

Puddy

That is some weird stuff. It’s sorta like sawdust foam, sorta like sand, sorta like play-doh. And then it dries to the crunchy, crusty stuff that trails all over the house. The kids and I had the job of filling nail holes today(which I sunk into the wood). #2 and #3 (yeah, can you believe it?) moved all the leftover wood from the living room to the kitchen for the time-being.

 

And for those of you who are wondering what possessed me to allow #2 to touch a bucket of puddy- it was over before it started. He was fired after the first two handfuls of puddy.

 

Here's what #3 was doing. That thing on the floor is a little clay dinosaur that #1 made in 1st grade. She is absolutely TERRIFIED of that thing and will scream bloody murder if you even think about putting it near her. I set it one the floor and she actually walked up to it. She thinks it is real.

 

A close up of the clay dinosaur. Not too scary.

 

And Husband finished laying wood the foyer the other night. It looks so awesome, especially next to the french doors.

 

 

 

Thought I would add this other pic of Husband and #3. It is so cute of them!

 

And also, #1 decided that I needed a break after this week of work, so he made dinner- french toast and eggs.

I know what you're thinking- but there wasn't any Windex in the toast that I know of.

Wednesday, October 21, 2009

I win. Linda Blair loses.

You know that list that I have that I’ve been meaning to cross some things off of?

Well now I can. I am soooooo productive.

Motivated by having another one of our fantastic dinner parties, I went back to that cupcake recipe that seemed like way too much work. I got it off of this girl\’s blog. On the same page you can learn how to make an easy chicken costume. She has lots of other cupcake recipes up but most of them are vegan and being the total asshole that I am, I automatically think all things vegan taste like piss and feet.

These cupcakes, however, tasted like magic. Pure magic.

So I get to cross baking something off the list. Though in order to really cross it off, I need to be baking more. I had so much fun that I most likely will.

Champion that I am, I also made an appetizer that I had never made before. Mushrooms stuffed with cream cheese, artichokes, jalapeno, and cheese and then wrapped with bacon. So. Fucking. Good.

Lucy beamed at me that all I needed to do was floss that night and I’d be a total winner.

But of course I drank so much wine and smoked weed to the point where I totally forgot to floss.

Side note:

I had never seen The Exorcist before. I was always too terrified that my overactive imagination would never let me sleep again if I watched what was considered to be the most horrifying film ever made. I’ve avoided seeing it for years. Perhaps it’s the fact that I spent all day shopping for Halloween supplies with Lucy and Ryan or perhaps because after three hits of weed anything seems like a good idea but last night I finally watched it.

Uhhhhhhhh…..where were the scary parts?

I think that perhaps it was not the best movie to watch after smoking. I was alternately bored to tears and laughing my ass off. Lucy kept warning me that I would have nightmares, to just wait for the good parts. But the good parts never came. Though I was pleasantly surprised by the vulgar shit that came out of Linda Blair’s demon mouth. Telling your mom to “Lick me! Lick me, bitch!” and screaming to a priest “Your mother sucks cocks in hell!” is damn fine entertainment in my book.

But scary? No.

I’ll have to try again someday.

In the meantime, can someone please tell me a good scary movie to watch this month? Please no serial killer movies. I’m not into humans torturing other humans so much. I prefer supernatural shit torturing humans. God bless The Shining. They don’t make them like that anymore.

P.S.

For the record, Lucy, I did have Linda Blair nightmares. She was propped up next to me in bed, leaning over me on one elbow with her little face all shredded and bloody, screaming:

“CLEAN YOUR FUCKING ROOM, WHY DON’T YOU!?!”

And wagging her finger at me.

No joke.

Autumn Has Arrived

Well Autumn has arrived and the unemployed academic is still unemployed.

In fact there is even less of a chance of a job now than there was three months ago. The websites have become even less helpful and the hope of a job in a university have lessened given the time of the year.

Oh Well. Though the downside of the changing of the seasons is that the days become shorter, the weather becomes chiller, and there are fewer opportunities to go outside and spend some time walking the dog, window shopping or generally frolicking in the sunshine (though I must admit that I didn’t do too much frolicking even when the sun WAS out!).

In other words boredom has started to set in. Life on the dole is fine. Life without a job is fine. Life stuck in the house is okay. But all of these things together can lead to boredom. Some weeks seem to fly by at the moment. Meeting friends, lunches out, taking care of a Jack Russell, cooking, cinema, birthdays and of course jobseeking, all take up quite a long time. But sometimes one finds oneself sat, on a Tuesday morning, in front of the telly, with no money, no one to meet, nowhere to go and totally nothing to do. No doubt my working friends would suggest that I’m complaining about a situation they would love to find themselves in, but one finds that after a few such mornings this situation can become more than a little depressing. So, I’ve decided I will have to do something about it before I slip into the darkness that is the winter and depression.

So where to begin……

Well, by blogging is one way. Though I set up this blog a month ago I have been rather less than diligent, and should it continue than this page will become yet another dead page on my favourites list that I have signed up to. So, I shall aim to update three-four times a week and aim to get a readership.

I have also continue to cook quite a lot, though became a little jaded of the constant sweating of onions and continuous washing of pots and pans. Plus, cooking is not a cheap hobby, nor easy on the waistline, but I shall continue and have decided to move into creole cooking (though I aim not to confuse my blogging with my cooking as the whole online Julie and Julia thing has pretty much been done to death, though the odd story may be posted of my general cookery advances and failures).

I have considered getting my Latin books out again and brushing up on my amos, amass and amats, but I’m not quite that bored yet.

I shall also try to get back into my reading again. I was doing pretty well until I started Wolf Hall. I understand that it won the booker and all, and I like historical fiction a lot, but I just couldn’t get into it. Maybe that is more a reflection of my jaded reading ability than the quality of the book. Very likely indeed.

Also, I’m going to try and get an article published, lest I slip into the academic wilderness and perhaps even forget what my PhD was about. This is easier said than done. Motivating oneself to write an uncalled for article is one thing. Actually getting it into a journal is another thing entirely. But I shall try. Or at least start to think about it!

So these are the plans, and with luck I shall not find myself lounging in my pyjamas and 11am on a Tuesday morning with nothing to do and no reason to get up.

That way lies madness!

Regards,

UA (The Unemployed Academic)

Monday, October 19, 2009

Are eggs becoming harder to peel?

We have an idea of how the perfect hard boiled egg is supposed to look — like a perfect white orb, deprived of shell, with no jagged edges.

But as more people start purchasing eggs straight from the farmer’s market, they’re noticing a trend. Hard boiled eggs are no longer easy to peel.

Why? Because farm fresh eggs aren’t old enough:

As an egg ages, it loses some carbon dioxide through tiny pores in the shell, making the egg white more basic. At the same time, it loses moisture, which increases the size of the “air cell” at the bottom of the shell, between the inner and outer membranes. The dynamics of this process are, in the words of a University of California, Davis agriculture publication, “not completely understood,” but the combination of these changes makes an old egg a lot easier to peel than a one that is fresh out of the bird.

Adding baking soda to the water before it comes to boil will help to make the egg easier to peel, but it will also intensify the sulfury egg taste.

Suffrage in the Kitchen

Feminism is no passing fad. I am sure that has been established, but just in case, do indulge me by letting it ring loud and clear. Fire up the ovens, bring out the saucepans, and bust out with the measuring cups. Feminism is raging again in the form of cupcakes, phyllo pastry and perfectly done steaks.

Over the past fifty years, appliance manufacturers have created new ways to make a woman’s work easier. I am sure we have all seen through the gender-biased guise by now. Washing machines, dryers, dishwashers and anything else Kenmore can make electric have been touted as time saving and labor reducing and marketed towards women as illustrious machines that will ensure they can “do it all.”

Now, instead of spending hours doing laundry and raising children, a woman can easily do laundry, raise children, have a full time job, and still put the required effort in for her husband when he gets home.

Sounds quite awful, doesn’t it? Truth is, some families do indeed still operate this way and many people see this as a way of life. Does this mean these women are not feminists? Does this mean these women are degrading the very ideal of equality amongst all? Some would say yes. Some would say that by donning a pencil skirt, a pair of heels, and an apron, a woman is giving in to subservient lifestyle expected of her after generations of patriarchy.

I just don’t know if I agree.

This twenty something generation, the “Z’ers” as we are called, have had the great fortune to be raised by women who fought hard for their right to be called equals, even so far as to be the bread winner in the family. Great strides have been made: there is now maternity leave for fathers, open acceptance of day cares for working families, universities ensuring that child services are available for student mothers and fathers, and a greater encouragement for the “man of the household” to take a larger role in the domestic duties.

This is still not enough, as we all know. Misogyny is still commonplace in our society and women are much more at risk for domestic violence, marginalization. They battle inequity daily in the workplace and the grocery store. Women are still not paid as much as men in many industries and despite projects to encourage women to participate in trades, the culture is not nearly as accepting as the government funding.

This constant struggle to assert independence from the hearth has created an unfortunate backlash; making women who enjoy cooking, baking, staying at home with their children and yes, even getting married, feel inferior or like bad feminists. A woman proud of her skills on a gas stove, or her ability to make a perfect piecrust is often scoffed at. Women just do not cook anymore.

This is absurd. Do you truly think that while your grandmother was off bra burning she was also letting that pork roast go to pot? No. She was bra burning and then creating a meal with her own two hands because one can be as empowering as another. Cooking, baking, and cleaning, these are not things done because men need them to be done. Single women everywhere do these things, for themselves, because one has to eat, one has to eat delicious foods, and one should clean occasionally to ensure that the rustling noises are the cat and not the cat eating mice.

The Tyee’s writer, Vanessa Richards wrote, “In short, men come across as evolved, sexy and creative when they mix things up in the kitchen. But women seem stuck in Leave-it-to-Beaver-land when they step in front of the stove: domestic suckers who aren’t paying enough attention to their ambition or their libidos.” Yes, stepping away from the domestic duties and pushing for an equal responsibility in completing these tasks was necessary. Everyday I thank my foremothers for their actions. Attending a university, where men and women are treated equal – in an institutional sense – is not something I take lightly. I value the advances women before me made on my behalf and couldn’t imagine what my twenties would have been spent doing if I had been born seventy years earlier.

The strongest feminist I know, my grandmother, still cooks thanksgiving dinner every year. She taught me how to bake, and cook. She is no Julia Child, but she recognized the value of knowing how to make sourdough starter, and what a perfect cheese sauce can do in covering overcooked broccoli.

Michael Pollan, worldwide foodie superstar, said a brilliant thing when he came out with seven simple words: “Eat food. Not too much. Mostly plants.” Cooking isn’t about women’s liberation, cooking is about feeding oneself. It is sexy when a man can cook, is it not the same for a woman?

I have recently conquered my own fear of the kitchen, and after years of defending my right to sit in the living room and talk politics while my aunts and cousins would make a lavish meal, I realize that I am missing out. Proving myself to be as argumentative as my male relatives was not nearly as satisfying as reclaiming the grill from my Uncle and serving up some vegetarian delights. Hosting dinners for my friends is as satisfying some days as defending neo-liberal institutionalism to a small “c” conservative realist.

There is great honour in being able to provide for oneself. There is nothing un-feminist about loving to cook or bake. Women’s liberation should not be threatened by a home cooked meal. Women’s rights are threatened by a lack of strong representation in our governments, by the continued battle for equal pay, and by the fight against the right for a woman to choose. Those are the battles we should still be fighting, but the battle of the kitchen should be an easy draw. Partnership’s work on respect and like any battleground, territory is hard fought for but once its won, it seems less important that it did before.

Yes, supermarkets have a bevy of pre-cooked, ready to heat and serve options at anyone’s disposal, but that is not how women were liberated. Those cheap and easy options are unhealthy and antisocial. Sharing and learning takes place through doing. How does a child learn how to cook if they only see pizza boxes and sushi take-out? My grandmother is as feminist as they come, the examples are many, but one thing she insisted on was family dinners: dinners that she cooked. We spent many hours in the kitchen helping, hindering, but most importantly learning. Stories were shared and wisdom was imparted to our young minds and I would say all four of her grandchildren are better off for it.

We can all create meals that are the envy of others. We all enjoy cooking and baking and feel no shame in coming home from our jobs, our classes, or our dates and rifling through the recipe box, looking for a way to relax and create something enjoyable.

Denying something so fundamental to life is not liberating, it is shackling. Who doesn’t enjoy eating? Why would a woman, or anyone, not acknowledge the simple goodness of home cooked food. It is healthier, is cheaper, most importantly, it is a simple way to regain an iota of control in this crazy, mixed-up world.

I would rather spend my time learning from, than fighting with a partner over who is going to cook that night’s dinner. I have no shame in bringing freshly baked muffins to a meeting, because it was done out of a desire for community, not a sense of expectancy.

Not everyone likes to cook, and thankfully the options to skate around that task are many, but for those who do, relish in your hobby. Women and men, if Nigella Lawson’s piecrust recipe is better than porn for you – and believe me, it is – then kick off those Birkenstocks, slip on an apron and make something fattening. It is more liberating than you think.

Originally published in The Meliorist. Volume 43, Issue 06, October 8th, 2009.

Friday, October 16, 2009

lemon broiled tempeh

What I’m going to prepare to marinate overnight if I can get my ass off the couch.

From Donnie Yance, an herbalist, nutritionist, and author.

Ingredients

Serves 4

  • 1 twelve-ounce tempeh, cut into bite-sized pieces
  • 1 large onion, sliced
  • 2 medium zucchini, sliced
  • 1 red pepper, chopped
  • 2 freshly squeezed lemons
  • 1 freshly squeezed orange
  • 2 tablespoons tamari
  • 2 tablespoons toasted sesame-seed oil
  • 2 tablespoons untoasted sesame-seed oil
  • Freshly ground pepper
  • Crushed red-pepper flakes, to taste
Directions
  1. Combine all ingredients in a glass baking dish, and marinate overnight.
  2. Preheat oven to 400 degrees. Transfer ingredients to a shallow baking pan, and bake for 30 minutes, stirring occasionally to prevent sticking. Finish by broiling for 5 minutes. Serve over short-grain brown rice.

Foodie at 15 - Love this blog

Chefs are a different breed.  Those of you who know a chef know that.  Here is a blog that puts it into perspective.  I’ve been following Foodie at 15 (now 16), http://foodieatfifteen.blogspot.com/, for a while.  This kid is so cool!  He’s found his passion – lucky him.  He’s articulate – again, lucky him.  And, he epitomises the way a chef thinks.  I am no psychic, but I see a celebrity chef in the making.

Anyway, enough on that.  Nick’s posting on 10 October (Sous Vide Fried Chicken?) cracks me up.  It’s a short post, pretty simple, but to me it is the way a chef thinks.

For those unfamiliar, Sous Vide is a cooking style that more or less means to boil your meat.  It’s a lot more technical than this description I’ve given and always turns out delicious, so don’t turn your nose up because it’s not like your grandma’s boiled brown meat.  Yet, equally frying chicken is another cooking style (obviously!).  It is only a budding chef that would wonder if you could combine the two.  There is absolutely no reason one would need to, but its always about finding new flavours and new experiences with these guys.  I hope he does it, I hope he finds out how to sous vide fried chicken.  I myself am now curious as to whether it can be done.  (Mental note, I am going to ask Patrick this when he calls on his break)

Tests and experiments are a regular occurrence in our house too.  Because I don’t like the mess and I don’t really understand liking your job enough to want to do in your spare time, these experiments tend to happen when I am at work.  However, I have come home on more than one occasion to an unrecognisable house.  A kitchen covered in pots of mustard (all different colours), what seemed like a million varieties of carrots (I thought I was going to turn orange), meat meat and more meat all cooked in a moderately different way; I’ve even come home to a deep fried mars bar!  Though my favourite was the time I came home to a house (not just kitchen) full of yorkshire pudding.  I’ll save that story for another blog posting, I think I even have pictures.

I hope that Nick continues to pursue his passion.  I wish I’d found my at 15!  And, I hope that he continues to experiment…the thing that I am learning to love about being married to a chef is that by conducting these experiments, my meals get better every time

Wednesday, October 14, 2009

food and cooking

pretty apron

My niece would like become a chef or work with food in some way.   She’s very good and always wants to help when it comes to cooking or baking.  She even cooks once a week for her hard working mummy.  She’s only 10.

These interests definitely need to be encouraged though I think that the food industry is very, very hard work.  She’s a pretty bright little thing, she also draws very well, loves making things and is very musical.   One of the things that she should combine with her cooking is writing.  She writes wonderful essays for her age. It could make for a great combination.

The difficult decisions about school are being made at the moment and she isn’t enjoying it much.  She is likely to go somewhere different to a lot of her friends and isn’t keen on the change.

It’s getting her down a bit so I decided to make her something to cheer her up and encourage her a little.

flower detail

She has things at our house for when she comes to stay like her own towel, a toothbrush; the usual. She also has her own apron as we have been known to make biscuits or cakes when she’s here and she loves helping with supper.

apron with cloth

I expect she also has a cooking apron at home but I have made her a new one, along with a matching oven glove and her own tea towel cloth.

back of oven glove with contrasting mit

front of oven glove to match apron

I don’t know about you, but when I cook, I like to be able to wash and wipe my hands quite a bit (pretty obsessively to be honest) and shoving a tea towel into your jeans pocket or apron pocket are always unsatisfactory.

Hoping that even small chefs have these same issues with aprons, I have added a dedicated loop next to the patch pocket.  And because she is a girl and all things must be embelished to the maximum if they aren’t the pinkest thing in the world that was ever created, I’ve added a small corsage!!

I really like it and I made a second one which tinyinc is selling on folksy.

In the meantime, her mum has expressed an interest in having a matching tinyinc apron so I will do her one too and another to sell (I think I have just added another project to my collection of projects needing to be finished!).  I will have to explore a boy and grown up version too.

tinyinc's tag

Simple Vegetable Chilli

I have made this many many times and it is always lovely and so easy to make.  It freezes really well and only ever needs a touch more chilli powder once defrosted

It is a recipe I have adapted from the BBC Good Food website, see a theme here, and the original recipe can be found here.

Serves – 2 really hungry people

Syns per serving -Free on EE

Ingredients:

  • 2 garlic cloves , crushed
  • 2 red chillies , finely chopped
  • 1 large onion sliced
  • 2 tsp ground cumin
  • 250g chestnut mushrooms , quartered
  • 400g tin of chopped tomatoes
  • 400g tin of kidney beans
  • 150g green beans , cut into lengths
  • 1 tbsp chilli powder – or less if you don’t like it too spicy
  • 1 tbsp tomato puree – 1/2 syn
  • salt and pepper
  • 1 Courgette chopped if you have any lying around

Method:

  • Fry the garlic, onion and chilli in fry light for 2 minutes.
  • Add the cumin, mushrooms and courgette if using and cook for 3 minutes.
  • Add the tomatoes, tomato puree and kidney beans and 100ml water, stir and simmer for 10 minutes.
  • Add the green beans and cook for another 5-10 minutes until the sauce is thickened and veg is tender.

Enjoy.

Monday, October 12, 2009

Cookies

Mike and I are so lucky! We have such generous family and friends.

Last week wedding gifts began to arrive at our home. Every day as I got home from work I had a package or two to pick up at the front desk. It was so exciting to bring up those Macy’s boxes and open them up. It’s really such an exciting time!

One of the gifts we received last week was a baking set I requested from the Martha Stewart Collection at Macy’s. On Saturday while I was fulfilling my domestic duties around the apartment I decided to bake some cookies for my family and a special batch for Mike.

Cooling the Cookies

I baked some Toll House chocolate chip cookies and mini brownie bites. Although they turned out a little crunchy I recieved some rave reviews.

Cookies Presentation

Mike's Special Package

Thanks to Cindy Burke for this great gift!

Friday, October 9, 2009

Its Finally Friday!

Yeah! Friday!  This week has seemed to drag on and on, but now its Friday! 

Not that I have anything especially planned for the weekend or tonight I am just glad that its Friday!

What are your plans for this weekend?

Ours:  Well Blaine will be at work since thats what he is always doing, but that is how it is in agriculture the crops dont harvest themselves and the cows dont feed themselves either.  But I also think that we will try and cut some wood and winterize (is this even a word? I think so but maybe not) the house!  Exciting!  Oh an amybe get some baking done.

Homemade salsa

Some of you were wondering how on Earth I will ever use the giant bag of hot peppers that I received in my farm share. Well, I made salsa- and lots of it! Fresh salsa is absolutely wonderful.

Here’s the recipe that I use:
(Of course, substitutions are encouraged.)

About 6 lg. tomatoes, diced (if you prefer, seed the tomatoes to reduce the liquidity of the salsa)
1/2 sweet onion, diced (you could use red onion, but only use 1/4 or it will be too powerful)
1 garlic clove, minced
1/4 to 1/2 cucumber, seeded and diced
1/2 bell pepper, diced
5 hot peppers, seeded and diced (keep seeds in for more heat or remove the seeds and membrane for less heat)
1 Tb. extra virgin olive oil
1 t. lime juice
1 t. cilantro spice or 2 Tb. fresh cilantro
1 t. sugar
1/2 t. salt
Fresh ground pepper

Stir well and let it sit on the counter, covered for about an hour. Enjoy with tortilla chips or add to scrambled eggs, quesadillas or serve as a dressing for grilled chicken. You can’t go wrong with this garden fresh concoction.

Once we finally have a ‘real’ kitchen again, I will unpack my box of cookbooks. Somewhere I have a salsa cookbook and I’d love to experiment making peach salsa and salsa verde. Oh… I can’t wait, I can’t wait.

Progress is moving forward on the kitchen project. In fact, stay tuned for a sneak peek at our cabinets!

Wednesday, October 7, 2009

Take it From Julio...

Any Biggest Loser fans out there? I’ll admit, the show hooked me and now I sit on the couch (ironic?) every Tuesday night crying right along with the contestants. Pathetic, but true. This week’s episode made me even happier to watch the show. In the “where are they now” video clip showing the contestants’ continued weight loss journey, Julio says, “my love for food isnt gone, I’m just changing the way of doing it.” He continued, “I’m buying fresher food. When you buy local food, it has good flavor already…it doesn’t need any additives to make it taste good.” Hurray for Julio! We’ve said it all along, and you, as our reader, know too– local is best. Even in the pouring rain and gusty winds, the owner of Lipinski Farm was ready and willing to pack up a wooden crate full of fresh butternut squash for our prepared pasta. While handing us each a fresh ear of corn (delicious), he told us about the devastating effects of a hard rain on his mums, how corn, usually thought to be long gone by October is still in its peak, and explained to us what vegetables could last the longest in our cellars to be used throughout the winter. Listening to him passionately speak about his vegetables, flowers and land actually makes the experience of eating his produce all the better. There’s nothing better than chucking an ear of corn, biting into it raw, and knowing exactly where it was grown, who grew it, and how much time and care it took to nurture from seed to full growth. While not everyone may have the opportunity to actually listen to a farmer talk about his crops in his own field, we are lucky that the farmer comes to us, at our local farmers market, and we reap the benefits of better nutrition, better growing practices and most importantly, better taste! So here’s to all the farmers for making our food choices all the easier and to Julio for explaining a simple message to millions of Americans who might not know: it’s fun to eat fresh produce when it tastes so darn good!

Onto our menu… as you can guess from our morning field trip, its take 3 on our rigatoni with maple glazed butternut squash, brown butter thyme sauce, parmesan and toasted butternut squash seeds. We’re happy to say we’ve dressed up our samples as well. While we can’t actually serve the prepared pasta itself because the brown butter sauce hardens when cool, we did make a variation of the dish with the roasted squash, parmesan, fresh thyme and extra virgin olive oil in lieu of brown butter. For raviolis this week, we’ll bring our “fall harvest” variety for those Boston customers who have yet to try it. Roasted butternut sqash and Cortland apples, carmelized onions and garlic, fresh thyme and a blend of three cheeses- this ravioli pretty much screams fall. Try it with our brown butter sage (or thyme) sauce listed under the recipes section on the blog. We’ll also have our trusty staples: classic white capellini and whole wheat with ground flaxseed linguine. Come by tomorrow at the Prudential Farmer’s Market from 11-6 for some great fall flavors, a newly re-decorated autumn tent and of course, samples! (and I promise, no more lectures).

A Normal Birthday with an Abnormal Cake

Automatic translation of text

EN VANLIG FÖDELSEDAG… MED EN OVANLIG TÅRTA

Jag vaknade halv sex på morgonen av att någon tassade runt på övervåningen. Redan innan jag klev upp ur sängen visste jag vem det var. Isak var alltid ängslig inför stora händelser. Och idag var det en stor dag. Han skulle fylla nio år.

Jag gick upp och talade med honom. Som jag misstänkte hade han vaknat flera gånger under natten, orolig att vi skulle glömma honom. Jag lugnade honom och sa att det snart skulle komma en överraskning, bara han sov en liten stund till.

När vi senare steg in i hans rum, sjungandes på sången alla barn älskar att vakna till (om de nu verkligen sover), då satte han sig spikrakt upp i sängen. Sången hinner knappt ebba ut då han med lättnad suckar: ”Var har ni varit? Jag har väntat i fem tusen år!”

Han blev glad för alla presenterna; det var leksaker och sådant som de flesta pojkar i hans ålder skulle uppskatta. Men sedan fick han en annan liten sak, något som han faktiskt hade tjatat om i över ett år. Han ville ha en egen sådan, eftersom han alltid behövde låna min när vi var i kyrkan.

”Jaaa! En bibel!” ropar han med samma glädje som när han öppnade paketet med sparkcykeln.

Jag skrattar för mig själv. Hur många nioåringar skulle reagera så om de fick en uråldrig religiös text på 1500 sidor – på sin födelsedag!

Senare på eftermiddagen har vi en litet släktkalas för Isak med den enda släkten vi har i närheten: Richard och hans familj. De vet att våra grabbar är tokiga i Star Wars, så de ger Isak ett lasersvärd. Vilken succé!

Vi sätter oss ned och äter Isaks specialbeställda tårta: pannkakstårta. Innan han gick till skolan la han en beställning till mig på en stor hög med pannkakor som sedan mamma skulle proppa med glass, sylt och grädde emellan lagren. En riktig höjdare, tyckte Isak.

Vi hade en rolig kväll med mycket lek och sedvanligt fotande. Sedan, när det börjar närma sig läggdags, kommer Isak fram till mig. Jag märker att han har gått och funderat på något.

”Pappa, kommer inte du att kunna bära mig längre nu?”

Jag svingar upp honom luften. ”Lilla gubben, när jag är hundra år kommer jag fortfarande bära dig… om du vill, förstås?”

Han log och kramade om mig. Jag tolkade det som ett ja.

Men jag får nog börja träna ordentligt, tänkte jag. Grabben börjar bli ganska tung nu.

Å så lite bilder…


Den här skumgummigrejen älskade Isak. Enda problemet var att Clara gjorde det också. Hon stal den från honom hela tiden.


Och som sagt, den här var inte så dum heller.


Angelica gör i ordning pannkakstårtan. Inte för att skryta eller så… men visst ser pannkakorna väldigt goda ut!


Clara kommer och inspekterar också…


och blir så här glad.


Snart färdig…


Ta-da!


Våra barn med Richard, Marie och dottern Melina.

Monday, October 5, 2009

mental health day

If I’d posted last night at 10pm, which I almost did, here’s what I would have written:

This isn’t working. This isn’t fucking working. This isn’t FUCKING working. This isn’t FUCKING WORKING. THIS ISN’T FUCKING WORKING.

If I’d posted last night at midnight, here’s what I would have written:

Breathe in 1-2-3-4, hold 1-2-3-4-5-6-7, breathe out 1-2-3-4-5-6-7-8. Breathe in 1-2-3-4, hold 1-2-3-4-5-6-7, breathe out 1-2-3-4-5-6-7-8.

If I’d posted last night at 1:30am, I would have posted one of my favorite poems of all time, “The Telephone” by Robert Frost. I was reading it aloud to myself, keeping my voice steady and rocking myself with its words.

If I’d posted this morning at 10am, I would’ve written:

Taking the day off today. Need to clear my head. I need to make sure I’m okay. I need to keep in motion, because when I was learning about vicarious trauma as part of the rape crisis counseling training, I was taught that one of the best ways to move emotions in and out of us is to move our physical bodies. If I go to work, I’ll be sitting still all day. So I’m taking the day off.

And now it’s 3pm, and now I really am writing. I have been keeping moving — I got up and showered, I fixed myself a cup of tea and a grilled cheese and tomato sandwich and read while the morning sun streamed into my flat. I did the laundry I had as a goal for last week. I don’t use a dryer, so when it was done I went outside on our back balcony to hang it up and Fish, a neighbor’s cat, came by for a visit. He’s gotten in the habit of visiting every day for hours, and I love it. He’s standoffish a little bit, but also at times incredibly sweet. Today he was being sweet. I felt so peaceful, hanging up my laundry in the San Francisco Indian summer sun, with the cat curled up at my feet. Then I went out for a walk, and came back to bake another batch of vegan red velvet cupcakes. (I baked a batch on Thursday to bring to my training on Saturday, and had all these leftover ingredients so wanted to bake up another batch to send to my dad and brother and sister… and some to keep for myself and my roommate and mi’lady as well. They are DElicious, taste no different from ovo-lacto cupcakes, and maybe I’ll post the recipe…) And now I’m sitting here writing, dishes drying in the sun, Fish stretched out in a patch of sunlight, purring, cupcakes cooling on the counter, and I’m getting ready to go to yoga in an hour. I’m calm, and quiet. And the devastating emotion of the past days has, indeed, started to move. With every exhale I visualize it leaving me, dispersing into thin air.

Clearly, then, my experiment with discontinuing Prozac didn’t work. My period should start any day now, probably even today, and the past few days have been a nightmare. Wild and dramatic peaks and slumps, unbearable darkness and despair, hours of crying in a heap on my bed. I don’t know how to survive at times like those. It’s just not sustainable. It has to change.

It’s made worse, right now, by the recent knowledge that my parents are getting divorced. I found out from my sister about a month ago that she thought it was going to happen (to my complete shock), and then a little less than two weeks ago, my mom told me herself. Until then I hadn’t really believed it. And then, less than a week after that — last Saturday — my dad moved out. My parents, my mother whom I was born out of and my father who held me in his arms when I was moments old, mesmerized, my parents who are equal parts of me no longer live together. Are no longer family. What?

I haven’t really been able to process it yet. It just doesn’t compute. My parents have been married for 27 years. I’ve always known their marriage has had its bad moments, but doesn’t every marriage? And I’ve always known my dad is, well, abusive. He’s abusive. I’m coming to terms with that.  But 27 years of marriage and I know they’re best friends, despite my dad’s illness. That’s what it is, an illness. So why now? After 27 fucking years?

Well, I know. My little brother is finally out of the house, and my mother can finally, after 27 years, contemplate her own wishes, desires, hopes, and plans for the future. And I guess they don’t any longer involve my dad. It’s so, so hard to swallow. I love my father fiercely, although my relationship with him has been immensely complicated, fraught, and even damaging. And I love my mother too, differently from my dad but just as much. She’s been my mentor and my friend and a confidante, and it hurts me so much to see her hurting.

I haven’t been able to access any sort of emotion about this at all, unless I experience some sort of emotion from something else first. A gateway emotion, if you will. For example, Fish will do something hilariously cat-like, and then he’ll look at me like “what? I didn’t do anything” and I burst out laughing, and then somehow before I realize it I’m crying, sobbing even, crushed under the lack of comprehension of what’s happening to my family.

And here I am, typing away in the afternoon sunlight, and I think it’s time for motion again. I think I’ll go frost the cupcakes and then get ready for yoga.

Baked French Toast

After a long week and a longer Saturday, I wanted Sunday to be the day that K and I lazed around and ate some delicious foods. Since the upcoming week was going to be insane with work, gym, parties and many get togethers we used Sunday to relax and recoup.
The recipe below was adapted from Smitten Kitchen. I added a bit of this and that, but the original recipe was all hers.

Baked French Toast
1 loaf  Challah bread or any thick bread (your choice)
3 cups 2% milk
3 eggs
3 tablespoons sugar
1/2 teaspoon salt
1/2 teaspoon cinnamon
1/4 teaspoon allspice
1 teaspoon vanilla

Grease a 9×13-inch baking dish with butter. Arrange bread in two tightly-packed layers in the pan. Whisk all the ingredients together and pour over the bread. Sprinkle with cinnamon.
Now you can either make the dish the night before and let all of the custard soak in overnight or you can prepare the dish about an hour before and let it soak in the refrigerator. I did the hour soaking instead of the overnight.
Bake at 425 for 30 minutes, or until puffed and golden.

* I added a bit of powdered sugar, chopped cranberries and syrup! Delish!

Friday, October 2, 2009

schooled by Martha

Lesson 1: Choose your kitchen companion wisely.

This is a classic case of life imitating art.  Or to be more accurate, life that imitates art imitating life.

After watching Julie and Julia, the film based on the stories of writer/aspiring home chef Julie Powell and the famous Julia Child, I felt invigorated.  Eager to write, blog, cook, and eat all at the same time!  Just as Julie Powell was inspired to go through Julia Child’s entire cookbook, Mastering the Art of French Cooking, the film inspired me to also be ambitious in the kitchen.  A week later, one purposeful trip to Border’s with a friend led me to purchase Martha Stewart’s Cooking School: Lessons and Recipes for the Home Cook.

Browsing through all of the glossy covers of grinning Food Network stars, unknowns, and cheesy titles (e.g. The Cooking Bible), I found there are two types of cookbooks: 1) Ones with only recipes, 2) Ones with recipes and cooking techniques.  There are far more “recipe” cookbooks than there are “comprehensive and technique” cookbooks.  Most already assume that you know the basics, something that I did not have. Others, like Julia Child’s and the popular  Joy of Cooking, seemed intimidating and looked like encyclopedias – not too appetizing.  However, like Goldilocks who found Baby Bear’s porridge to be just right, I discovered that Martha’s book had everything I was looking for: a credible author (alright, so the lady embezzled.  That doesn’t discount her culinary and creative talents!), diagrams and descriptions of basic things like herbs, cookware, and cuts of meat, how-to lessons (I never truly learned the proper way to chop onions, to “sweat” them, or even how to blanch vegetables!), delicious recipes, and all complemented by gorgeous step-by-step photos.

I thumbed through the Basics chapter, and then worked my way into the first culinary challenge:

Chapter 1.8.  How to make vegetable pureed soup

My vegetable of choice – the lovely butternut squash.  Slightly sweet, creamy, and a beautiful orange color.

Split the butternut, scoop out the seeds, salt and pepper, and roast in a 375 degree oven for 40 minutes.  These things are not only hard to cut, but I felt clumsy trying to de-skin it after I took it out of the oven.  It didn’t peel off as easily as I had hoped and I lost precious chunks at the hand of my knife.  *sigh

The “proper way” to chop an onion is NOT EASY.  This is my unimpressive attempt.  Note the irregular dice.

Letting the onions, garlic, and pear “sweat” in butter and medium heat.  I learned that the purpose of this is to extract the flavor, in addition to cooking it.  I later added the chunks of roasted butternut and chicken broth to simmer.

A few minutes in the blender and a beautiful orange colored puree emerged.  In less than an hour, J and I enjoyed our freshly made butternut soup as a healthy appetizer.  It tasted way better and heartier than the kind I buy at Trader Joe’s.  Why buy canned when you can make your own?  Excuse the “velociraptor” style arrangement of the pear slices.  I still have some presentation skills to learn. There is, in classic Martha Stewart style, a garnish chapter somewhere in her book.

My goal is to be able to get through at least 1-2 “lessons” a week, eventually gleaning and utilizing all of the techniques she covers.  And just like Julie Powell, I plan on capturing this personal project via my blog.  Please feel free to post any tips or words of encouragement as I fumble my way through the culinary world.  Cooking School is in session!

Miso Soup – Hangover Cure

We’re coming up to the weekend, so in case you happen to accidently imbibe too much this weekend and wake with a head that feels as though a thousand elephants are stampeding through it, try this for a great hangover cure…

Miso soup is a cracking cure for a hangover…although this isn’t of course the only reason to drink it, after all you should never need a reason for a good bowl of miso soup coz its so delicious, but…

…it does work as a cure if you had one too many, in fact in Japan some companies even market special “hangover cure miso soup” like Nagatani-en whose packaging specifically shows a beer glass with the words “For people who like their drink”…

So there’s two ways to basically make miso soup, firstly using miso paste, and secondly using instant miso soup which reconstitute rapidly in hot water.  Now I’m not a huge fan of instant food for the most part, but you can buy some absolutely fabulous instant miso soup – often coming in a huge variety of flavours.  Giri-no-haha’s (mother-in-law) care packages often include boxes of very good quality instant soup.  Here’s one I had last night (just with dinner, don’t worry I wasn’t hungover…)

It may not looking appetising yet, and I won’t tell you what my seven-year thought it looked like, but add boiling water and hey presto…

Your other option is to use miso paste which is dissolved into dashi stock then put in your additional ingredients like tofu, chopped spring onions, clams, wakame (seaweed) etc etc.  Its really easy to make you just need to get hold of some good miso paste.  Now don’t be put off my the large tubs this often comes in and wonder how you will use it all…

…it has a great shelf-life, but as well as using it to make gallons of miso soup, you can use it in a myriad of other recipes.  One of my favourites which I’ll blog on one day is Miso Pork – smother pork in a miso sauce, ideally overnight, then scrape off the excess marinade and cook the meat (great on a BBQ).  The great think about this dish is that you can reuse the excess miso you scrape off the meat a couple more times as a marinade (just keep it seperate from the rest of the paste), and even then rather than throwing it out if you finally use it to make soup you get a nice rich flavour which just gives it that little bit of something different.

Enjoy!

Thursday, October 1, 2009

Call out the instigators, because there's something in the air

Hand out the arms and ammo
We’re going to blast our way through here
We’ve got to get together sooner or later
Because the revolution’s here, and you know it’s right
And you know that it’s right

We have got to get it together
We have got to get it together
Now…

- “Something in the Air” (LP: Hollywood Dream) by Thunderclap Newman (1969).

They eats chicken, don’t they? - Colonel Harland Sanders, asked his opinion of “the hippies”.

How do you serve this goddamned slop? With a straw? - Colonel Harland Sanders, asked his opinion of the “gravy” substituted for his own by the “McDonalds-like supercorporation” to which he sold his recipe and franchises.

Wendell Berry, Kentuckian elder statesman – belated Happy 75th, Wendell! – of the post-1960s agrarian strain in American letters, has the long cover story, “Inverting the Economic Order,” (read the teaser, stay for the full version) in the September number of The Progressive:

A society in which every school child ‘needs’ a computer, and every sixteen year-old ‘needs’ an automobile, and every eighteen year-old ‘needs’ to go to college is already delusional and is well on its way to being broke.

Russell Moore, influential Southern Baptist theologian, calls it “characteristically provocative”:

It made we wonder if the editors understood what he was writing, or if they’re just open-minded enough to include this perspective, one that skewers a leftist vision of big government just as surely as it skewers a corporatist view of big business.


Over at Common Dreams, Chris Hedges, author of War Is A Force That Gives Us Meaning, What Every Person Should Know About War, and American Fascists: The Christian Right and the War on America, and Empire of Illusion: The End of Literacy and the Triumph of Spectacle, has a Berry-flavored post, “Food Is Power and the Powerful Are Poisoning Us.”

Michael Pollan, marquee author of the current phase of the real-food revolution (The Omnivore’s Dilemma, In Defense of Food), says People Are Finally Talking About Food, and You Can Thank Wendell Berry for That.

A review of Berry’s new essay collection, Bringing It to the Table: On Farming and Food, to which Pollan’s essay serves as introduction.

A special issue of The Nation devoted to food:

Why Cooking Matters

Dan Barber : The campaign for food democracy needs to start with boning knives and cast iron skillets.

Detroit’s ‘Quiet Revolution’

Grace Lee Boggs : How we came to see vacant lots not as blight but as opportunities to grow our own food.

Wendell Berry’s Wisdom

Michael Pollan : Today’s conversation about food was started by dot-connecting writers like Berry in the 1970s.

Mississippi Growing

Habiba Alcindor : An African-American community with New Deal roots finds some hope in a farmers’ market.

Ten Things You Can Do to Start a Community Garden

Band together to gain control of your own food

Cornucopia Blues

Brent Cunningham: How will the good-food revolution move beyond its evangelical phase?

Our Krazy Kulture: one of the richest sources of merchandise imprinted with old-time pop-culture Americana.

Barrel of Funkys: Gun owners of America, disunite – you have nothing to loose but your vast white-wing conspiratorial stereotypes.

Documentary, “Off The Grid: Life On The Mesa”:

“Twenty-Five miles from town, a million miles from mainstream society, a loose-knit community of eco-pioneers, teenage runaways, war veterans and drop-outs, live on the fringe and off the grid, struggling to survive with little food, less water and no electricity, as they cling to their unique vision of the American dream…”

How To Live Freegan and Die Old.

An oral history of The Whole Earth Catalog, courtesy one of its influential editors, Kevin “Cool Tools” Kelly, also a Wired alum, who supplements his account on his own web site.

Exponents of parkour take the entire topographic urban landscape as their loose-limbed jungle gym, and give ol’ Spidey a run for his money.

A Montessori school in my onetime city of Charlottesville, Virginia, gets its young charges up to their elbows in Another Green World just outside the glass and steel of golden-rule days.

Another amazing pop-culture site, this one more purely eye candy than merchandising, heavy on fare familiar to all who ate cereal and/or candy, drank soda, watched cartoons, or sent off boxtops since the Eisenhower years. Grab the Kleenex, you’ll need it. If we disappear from blogging for days on end, you’ll know where we are.