Tag Archives: foodie

Pleasant Surprise Today

While running around getting things for the holiday weekend, I saw that England Acres had stated they were open today. They are a working farm just four miles west of Mt. Airy. I buy many of my meats and cheeses from them, as well as Trickling Springs Dairy products. They are open year round on weekends and other days, like today, announced on their facebook page.

After picking up my turkey at a very busy Boarman’s this morning, I headed out to Mt. Airy to hit Tractor Supply and England Acres. Consolidating those errands and using the back roads. I needed bird seed from Tractor Supply, and wanted some dairy and meat from Judy at England Acres.

I was pleasantly surprised today to see that a new source of produce at their market is the supplier of my summer and fall CSA, Lancaster Farm Fresh Coop.

They had organic sauerkraut, as well as half a wall of fresh organic produce, the same stuff that comes in my CSA basket every week. The organic kraut, though, made me very happy. We have not gotten green cabbage lately, and I haven’t starting making kraut in my crocks. This jar of lovely organic kraut will become part of our Thanksgiving dinner this weekend.

They also had absolutely beautiful fresh cranberries today. I am torn between making relish or salsa. These are so tart, and bursting with flavor. Decisions, decisions.

If you live in West Howard County, anywhere convenient to I-70, the farm is really quite easy to find. West on rte. 144, four miles outside of town, on Detrick Road. Judy has a great assortment of products from MD and PA farms. She listens to us about what we want to find there. Her baked goods are awesome. Her chickens run around and are obviously quite content. During the day, the gates are open and they wander in and out of the coops. The eggs are generally one or two days old. You can’t get any fresher than this.

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Significant Birthdays

Sort of significant. Not the divisible by five ones, like 55 or 60. Those are the ones we celebrate by going out to dinner. Otherwise, I make a simple tasty meal with a killer wine for a fraction of the restaurant cost.

Today was sort of significant for my husband. Sixty two. Old enough to receive Social Security. That is a milestone. He was out all day with his radio buddies, fixing cable on the towers used for field day. They did bring him cupcakes to celebrate. I knew he would be out all day, so I just made one of those simple dinners with first class ingredients.

Anyone can make something this easy. The food cost me less than $25 total for the two of us. The wine, a splurge, RdV Rendezvous. Still dinner for under three figures. Find somewhere that serves petite filet this good, for $12 a person. Please let me know if you do.

The salad was microgreens, arugula, radishes and tomatoes, with a bleu cheese dressing. Steamed broccoli with the same dressing. Filets from Harris Teeter. They really looked good when I was there last week. These were fork tender steaks. Pan seared, then finished in the oven. Nothing but garlic powder, salt, pepper. and balsamic on them before cooking. Put in the hot pan from room temperature. Then, about 5 minutes in a 350 degree oven to cook to medium rare.

The 2009 RdV Rendezvous was just this amazingly huge wine. Dark, deep, full of tannin and with a very long finish. Perfect with the beef.

Later on tonight, I will open a late harvest Petit Manseng with some aged Parmesan, for dessert. No more sweets today. The wine with the cheese is a great pairing, and a very good dessert for us. The wine is a 2005, from Linden. Here’s to sort of significant birthdays.

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Cooking from Scratch Sunday

It is going to be one of those crazy weeks. Every day something going on. Holidays with heavier foods. Today I wanted vegetarian, and I wanted to use up some of the CSA veggies.

You know that Bank commercial, the one where they picture “homemade” lasagna from Stouffer’s. That was me twenty years ago. Thankfully, I now make my own lasagna.

I had beaucoup squash on the counter. Greens in the fridge. My trusty iPad gave me inspiration.

It is funny. The author improvised. So did I. I roasted a couple of squash, delicata and acorn, at 350 degrees for 30 minutes. Peeled and sliced, so I could layer them easily. A little salt and pepper and olive oil. I also took a large bunch of lacinato kale and sauteed it in olive oil, with salt, pepper and nutmeg.

I made the sauce. A 15 ounce container of ricotta mixed with two eggs, and a healthy sprinkling of parmesan. About four ounces of milk added to thin it out. A third of it went in with the kale. Add more nutmeg, salt and pepper to both. Do it to your taste.

Take a square pan. Grease it. Add a layer of sauce, then kale. Put noodles on it. Add some sliced mozzarella. Then put all the squash on it and press it down. More sauce. More noodles. Kale, mozzarella and then sauce on top. A little oregano, salt and pepper on top. If you like garlic, add granulated garlic powder to each element. Same for the nutmeg. I grind my own.

Bake all of this for 25 minutes covered with foil (spray it with Pam first), then take off the foil and bake 15-20 minutes longer until it browns. Take it out and let it rest.

Cut it and serve it with a big white wine. You will not miss the meat. Kale and squash. Good for you and really a great taste. The only discussion we had about it, was that it was slightly underseasoned. Next time we may add some cayenne flakes, to spice it up.

Not bad for vegetarian.

hocofood@@@

Thanksgiving Wines

One of the hardest dinners to pick a wine to match. We get to bring wines to my brother’s house every year, as we have the cellar and have been collecting for a very long time. But, our older reds aren’t the perfect match for the turkey, particularly when other dishes would compete with them. Easter is always easy for me, since he makes lamb. Christmas generally he has a Smithfield ham and we always have shrimp, so a nice white works there.

Thanksgiving though, drives me nuts with choosing the pairings. One of the couples only drinks reds so I considered getting this year’s Nouveau. I do hear it’s slim pickings due to a small harvest.

I think I finally settled on what I am taking. I need to come up with four bottles total, to cover the number of people. These were the choices and they all will complement the turkey, stuffing, sweet potatoes, and won’t be totally messed up by the sauerkraut, that Maryland anomaly on the table. 😉

locapour dominating the Thanksgiving choices

It turns out I will be bringing the three local wines on the left, and not the Hillinger. I may take that down for Christmas as it will fit better there. The Vidal Riesling is my mom’s favorite. It has a little spritz and is an off dry wine, but not too sweet. It really goes well with the stuffing, if you use a spicy sausage in it. It is a perfect wine for novices to drinking wine, but has enough structure to make a wine lover happy. I will take one of those.

The other two wines are pretty big rose wines. Linden’s is made dominantly from their merlot. Breaux’s is a blend of Nebbiolo, Cabernet Sauvignon and Chambourcin. 2011 was the year Hurricane Irene and Tropical Storm Lee did a number on the red grapes in the area. Wineries like Linden and Breaux used some interesting red grapes to make these wines. They didn’t try to force big red wines from grapes that had too much rain dilute their structure. It became a year with many very good roses, and there are some decent light reds out there in Virginia from 2011.

These two will both pair nicely with a Thanksgiving dinner. As for what we will be opening on the weekend when I make my turkey, it will probably be a Maryland red. My weekend Thanksgiving turkey, bought from Maple Lawn, and served with stuffing made with local bread and sausage, and CSA veggies, will be grilled if the weather holds. I am thinking of opening one of the Black Ankle pinot noirs. We have two of them from their first vintage, 2008. I think it is a better choice than the Syrah, which is bigger.

It is nice that there are such good wines made locally. You do have to search for the better wineries around here, but you can usually find something that meets your needs. Making this locavore a locapour as well.

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The Fall CSA, Three Weeks In

I can tell Thanksgiving is here. The veggies attest to it.

Sandy Spring Fall CSA Week 3 of 2012

I keep playing “I’m celery the eighth, I am, celery the eighth I am, I am” in my head. These two heads of organic celery were just massive. More than enough for stuffing, or dressing (your preference), and for under the turkey and to use when making turkey noodle soup with the leftovers. Of course, we are also getting veggies next Tuesday (early because the holiday is Thursday), so we may be really up to our ears in celery.

Here’s the list, but modified to show we got extras of a few things, in order to make up for the lost week. Next to each is the cost from my visit today to Harris Teeter. Organic, when possible. Otherwise, regular. The popcorn a guess, based on cost of microwave popcorn in the store. I round up the penny.

1 Bunch French Heirloom Carrots $3
1 Head Broccoli $3.50
1 Butternut Squash (2 1/2 lb) total comes to $3.25
1 Bag Hakurei Turnips (2 1/2 lb) $14.95 (see below)
2 Bunches of Celery $8 (yes, organic were $3.49. EACH)
2 large Yellow Onions (1 1/2 lb) $2.70 total
1 Bunch Lacinato Kale $3
1 Head Napa Cabbage (3 lb) $5.10 total
1 Bunch Yellow Popcorn use $4 to compare to microwave
2 Rutabaga (2 1/2 lb) $3.25 total

The added up cost for this week is $49.65. Cost for a share $31.25 a week. Add to last week where it was $42.22 (remember we lost a week due to Sandy), total is now $91.87. I think. I may need to check my math but it looks like after week 3 we are almost even with what we pay. Down only $2. If they keep adding amounts like they did this week, twice the celery as originally stated. A very large amount of turnips. We should be way ahead by Christmas, as is usually the case with this CSA.

As for the turnips, Hakurei are a delicacy. A small bunch of them (less than 8 ounces in weight) were $2.99 at Harris Teeter today. We got two and a half pounds of them. I really love these turnips. They are sweet. They can be eaten raw or cooked. I am thinking of taking them to my brother’s for Thanksgiving, baked in a light butter sauce with Brussels Sprouts. I need to find Brussels sprouts at one of the last markets this weekend.

Hakurei turnips

As for that popcorn, we found a recipe that says, just put it in a paper bag in the microwave. We need to try this.

Last night was “Use up the CSA” dinner. My roasted root veggies before baking. I added some of my bag ripened heirloom tomatoes to the pan, too.

veggies before roasting

After they finished, I boiled some pasta, added a few cubes of my garlic scape pesto I took out of the freezer and had a primavera of sorts that was so good. We did eat the last grillers from TLV on the side.

Not bad for using up leftover veggies, roasted with olive oil, salt and pepper.

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The Value of Our Fall CSA

Fall is when most of the markets go away. Buying local and organic gets harder. Our CSA provides us with fresh organic veggies. How does it all shake our from a financial standpoint?

Last week our ten items came in this way.

Turnips and greens $3.28. Carrots 2 lb.$2.98. Sweet potatoes, 4 lb. $7.98. Scallions $2.58. Collards $2.69. Cabanelle peppers $4.29. Heirloom squash $3.49. Radishes $2.97. Leeks $3.49 each! Two of them $6.98. Celery $3.98.

Total: $42.22. We pay $31.25 a week for the CSA. I still believe some of them aren’t adequately priced when I can’t find them on the web sites.

Already more than $11 up. Even after the storms, we are ahead.

hocofood@@@

Something to Nosh On

The invite said bring something to nosh on, and something to sip. An old friend, met twenty years ago when he worked with my husband, now is living not far from us. He sent the email inviting a bunch of us to join them for an evening of music by some very talented musicians who get together periodically to play.

We haven’t done an evening of listening to great jazz, classic rock, some reggae and all sorts of improv good stuff in a very long time. It was absolutely fantastic, but I can’t get Radar Love out of my head now. It is funny how you still know all the lyrics of songs from your college years.

Of course, I may not forgive them for doing Don’t Worry, Be Happy, but they redeemed themselves with Bob Marley’s Is This Love. I have to rummage around and find my Legend CD now.

Anyway, besides the fact we stayed out late enough that we didn’t get to the birding today, I did have a good time making some of my new dips to take as the noshing contribution to the evening.

I have perfected for my taste, both the pumpkin hummus and the Ajvar recipes.

ajvar and hummus

I decided to experiment with the hummus and I did finally succumb to buying tahini. It gives me the incentive to make more hummus and stop buying it. I also found great hummus dipping chips, Flamous Falafel Chips These work so well with hummus, and with the ajvar.

To make the hummus, this is now my recipe. I adjusted what I use to make it taste the way we like. The amounts are approximate for the seasonings, but here are the basics.

One medium butternut squash, roasted in the oven until soft and scraped out of its skin. I slow roast at a lower temp, 300 degrees. One can of organic chickpeas, drained and rinsed. Three cloves of garlic. Put these three things in the food processor first. Add olive oil, about a 1/4 cup and pulse until it is chunky. Add the juice of one lemon. Plus 2 heaping tablespoons of tahini.

Now, seasonings. I have been experimenting and I like these. Garam masala, sriracha, salt, white pepper and a drop of sesame oil. This is where it gets interesting. I don’t measure seasonings. I try and taste. There is at least a teaspoon of garam masala and salt used this time. Half a teaspoon of white pepper. As for the sriracha, I probably used at least a dozen drops to start, because we like the spicy undertones. I added a few drops when I served it, swirled in to add a little more heat to the sweetness and the garlicky tones. If you aren’t a garlic fan, cut back to one or two cloves. But I love garlicky hummus.

Now, for the ajvar (pronounced eye-var). I have seen recipes that go all over the place and are attributed to Macedonia, Serbia and elsewhere across the Mediterranean. Some use eggplant, and others use only red peppers and garlic. I like the version with eggplant, but next summer when I can get large numbers of peppers, I am going to try the one without eggplant.

oven roasted eggplant

I made this version with four very large red peppers, and one large eggplant, all drizzled with olive oil and roasted until the peppers blistered. I used 325 degrees, and watch it closely. Put the peppers in a container and seal so they steam. Remove skins.

eggplant and peppers, to show sizes used

After removing the peppers and eggplant, turn off the oven. Immediately put cloves of garlic in the oven wrapped in foil and drizzled with oil. They will roast to the perfect texture without burning in the residual heat. I always make a few extra to use for garlic bread, or to put in omelets.

oven roasted garlic

Take the eggplant out of its skin. Remove some of the seeds if you want. I like the slight bite from them, so I leave some of them in.

Pulse the eggplant first, with three cloves of garlic and drizzle in the olive oil. Then add juice from half a lemon plus the peppers, peeled, and making sure no seeds remain on the peppers. Add salt to taste. It also gets better the longer it sits. Do not use jarred peppers to do this. The taste will not be the same. If you have a gas grill, or a gas flame, you can char them over the flame, but I think slow roasting them until they char gives it something better. Do it both ways and see which one you prefer. That is part of the fun of making a recipe “yours”.

hocofood@@@

It’s a Chicken Soup Kinda Day

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You know, a little blustery. Sunny, but breezy. Fall weather that makes you crave chicken soup. I knew when we got celery and carrots in the CSA box that I would be making soup.

Turns out that I bought a rotisserie chicken from Costco last night as I was running late. I always turn leftover rotisserie chicken into soup if I have the ingredients. So right now, soup is happily bubbling on the stove top. It will be ready to serve about an hour from now.

chicken soup simmering on the stove

I started with about half the chicken, including all the bones, the skin and shredding the breast meat before adding it to three cups of chicken stock and two cups of water. For herbs and spices, I used tarragon, salt and pepper, all to taste. I don’t measure herbs.

I added the trilogy. Celery, carrot and onion. Two carrots. One onion. About half a cup of celery. That’s it for now.

By the way, purple carrots aren’t purple inside. Here is one I was starting to peel. They are really sweet, though. I love them shaved into salads, too. But this one and another made it into the pot.

As for the noodles, they will go in just before I serve the soup. Only staying in for a few minutes. These are fresh egg noodles from Baugher’s in Westminster. I love these noodles. Four simple ingredients. Oodles of taste.

Chicken noodle soup. Reminds me so much of my childhood. Makes me feel warm just thinking about it. And, to serve with it, I will pull a Stone House Bakery loaf of bread out of the freezer and pop it in the oven for 10 minutes. Warm bread and hot soup. Yum!

hocofood@@@

What Goes Around Comes Around

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I have to admit, learning the new shorthand used in tweeting and in texting, as well as some of the acronyms around here has been interesting at best, and downright confusing at times.

It used to be that we, the govvies in the area, i.e., government employees, were the best at making entire conversations using acronyms designed to confound our non-govvy friends and family.

“I work at NHTSA on IVBSS and I will be at UMTRI next week”. “I work at NSWC on the MK 116 ASW FCS”. Our pasts. The DH and me.

What’s a DH, you say? Same as an OM. Dear Husband. Old man. One picked up on web forums years ago, the other an amateur radio standard. It is why my gmail account has xyl in the address. I am the wife, aka x-young lady, of a ham.

Now, my blogging friends here in the area are working to get uniform hashtags that we use when we tweet. Whenever I put up a post I sent it off to twitterland using #hoco. These days #hoco is overrun by colleges and homecoming, and we are getting lost in the noise about whose dress is best, and who can get more drunk. It seems to be time for us to find a new place to “hang out”, and we have graduated to using #hocomd more.

Jessie over at Jessie X, who also cofounded and administers hocoblogs where about 300 of us are more or less active about blogging in the County, or about the County, is working to get us to use more specific hashtags.

I feel like I am back at work, learning new acronyms after changing jobs. What used to be the geekiness of our govvy lives is now the new normal of social media. Like, learning a whole new language.

Add to that, in our world, where we have been active in amateur radio, a “shack on a belt”, or HT (handy talkie), once a sign of real nerdiness, with the hands free headphone really stood out. Now, you can lose yourself in the midst of the bluetooth crowd. What was once cause for comments, and a little ridicule, is now mainstream.

As I said, what goes around comes around. The entire world has become geeky. What the heck. If you can’t beat them, join them.

So, Jessie asked me to become the queen of #hocolocavore and #hoconature on the spreadsheet being assembled for county tweets. I promise to try and remember to use them. At least I do remember to use my hocoblog hashtags appropriately, like the one at the end of this post.

So, when I post about local foods and farmers, I will be using #hocolocavore.

And, about the Conservancy, or the birds, or the garden. #hoconature

And, since I am attempting to complete NaBloPoMo (look that one up!), there will be lots to read about Howard County.

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Making Meals Mine

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Putting my signature on them. Using items I grew or made. Tonight’s dinner reflected that. All three elements included foods from my garden or my freezer.

We wedged dinner between football games and finishing a radio contest, so it was mostly leftovers, but not without my input. The joy of having a garden and of preserving foods lets me add my signature by placing at least one ingredient in each dish from my resources.

The salad. The microgreens from today’s visit to Olney. Topped with my last pineapple tomato from the garden.

I opened up the brown bag in the laundry room today and found a ripe tomato inside. Believe it or not, that bag ripened heirloom had more taste than many store bought tomatoes could ever have. The rest of the tomatoes went back into the bag. If they get close to ripe, there will be a green tomato pasta on the menu soon. I have oodles of pesto.

Speaking of pesto, it made its way onto the top of the focaccia, to add some flavor and even more depth to it. The pesto was made with African blue basil from my garden.

Then, the soup. Potato leek made the other day. Veggie broth as a base. The broth made with CSA veggies and put away in the freezer. The fresh garden touch. Chives from my window boxes that sit on my deck railing. With the freeze warning tonight, they may bite the dust, but they did brighten up the soup.

Sometimes it is the little things that make a meal. For me, it is the satisfaction of including foods from my garden into those basic leftover meals. So worth it.

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