Tag Archives: real food

Just BAKE IT!!!

As opposed to just doing it. It was a New Year’s resolution to bake more. I am trying to find my own sugar cookie recipe that tastes as good as my mom’s.

This recipe isn’t bad. My mom’s uses margarine. I don’t like using margarine, but every recipe I find without margarine isn’t as good as hers. I will continue this quest to find crispy chewy cookies without margarine.

my mom’s cookies

My mom’s cookies are also incredibly thin. Every time I try and roll mine that thin, they break. Still, this isn’t a bad recipe. Pretty easy too. I am blessed with the space to bake without stress as I have an area in the kitchen I only use to bake, and it is away from cooking prep.

I have already started assembling the supplies to make all the cookies I plan to bake for the holidays. My board is actually the cut out of the Corian counter from where the sink went, from our old house. Works great as a pastry, pasta and baking rolling base.

The recipe for the cookies:

2 1/4 cups all purpose flour
3/4 cups fine granulated sugar
1/4 teaspoon salt

Slowly mix together. Then add:
2 sticks unsalted butter, very cold and cut into thin slices

Keep mixing on low. Add 2 large egg yolks and 2 tsp vanilla extract. Mix until it becomes clumpy. Make two flattened disks of dough, wrap in plastic and refrigerate for at least 30 minutes. Roll out, cut and bake at 375 degrees for 12-14 minutes. Rotate pans halfway through baking.

I put the sanding sugar on top before baking. I think it adheres better that way. You can also ice them. Too much work to make icing, so I like the simple addition of red and green sugar.

I make a few little blobs to use for taste testing. I also make one big blob with the last of the dough. That is my husband’s cookie so he won’t take the good ones.

Now I just need to clean up my mess so I can make some other favorites tomorrow. I think I am looking to make dark chocolate chunk cookies. And my hazelnut butter ball cookies.

What are your favorite cookies?

hocofood@@@

A Windowsill Full of Sunshine

It may be cold and blustery out, but it is so satisfying to pull out the last of the bag ripened tomatoes from the laundry room, where they have been ripening for a month, and line them up on the windowsill. Evoking memories of summer.

I had picked the last of the green tomatoes on October 20th, and put them away to ripen. The little ones ripened first and were used, but these were the last to turn. They sat in a dark cool corner of the laundry room for a month. Closed in a paper bag.

They mostly survived. I had to toss a few of them. They obviously don’t have that fresh from the vine taste, but are much nicer than store bought tomatoes. I will make a pasta dish with these, sauteed and adding some of my pesto I will pull out of the freezer. Back from when I was overloaded with basil and put up containers in the freezer.

Here’s to memories of summer and my garden.

hocofood@@@

Small Business Thanksgiving

I didn’t get out shopping today. Out Thursday and yesterday, and I knew I needed to cook the turkey I got. It does look good, doesn’t it? A Maple Lawn Farm turkey, not brined. Convection baked. Simple, elegant, so full of flavor. Why did I ever buy Butterball?

My small business shopping will take place tomorrow and Monday. Tomorrow for Christmas greens and poinsettias at Greenway, and Monday to Atwater’s for bread, and the antique stores in Catonsville for inspiration.

Besides, next Saturday is the natural crafts sale at the Conservancy. The info:

Dec 1 – Saturday 9 am – 3pm Natural Holiday Sale and Crafts FREE! Browse tables of natural gift items, create critters from seed pods and natural gatherings. Enjoy beautiful music with a cup of tea. Watch Master Gardener demonstrations (creations to be raffled off), visit with talented local craft vendors, local farms, and nature critter crafts for the children of all ages. FREE

Last year I won the centerpiece for our holiday table at the Master Gardener raffle. This year I am looking to get local honey for gifts, and to replenish my stocks. I think I can pass on shopping today since I spend so much time supporting our local businesses and farms.

As for the Thanksgiving meal today, it was mostly local and almost all small business, so I did support the local economy heavily. The dressing contained Boarman’s sausage and veggies from my CSA. The bread was a baguette from when I went to Linden. They buy them locally and bake them. We bought one extra so I could cube it for my sausage, bread, celery, onion, sage dressing.

The wine was local, as well. Black Ankle 2008 Pinot Noir. OK, when we bought it, it was good. Today, it was stellar. Rivaled any Carneros pinot. Not quite Burgundian, but not bad for young vines.

Not a bad meal. Our personal private Thanksgiving, after the family feast on Thursday. Almost all items on the plate from CSA, Roots, Boarman’s, Maple Lawn, and England Acres. My local resources page provides links to most of my sources for this dinner.

hocofood@@@

Fall CSA Week Four Happy Thanksgiving!

I have already posted about things I give thanks for having. The freshest, tastiest vegetables to add to our meals is certainly a contender here. Today we got a dozen wonderful items. Lots of goodies like baby romanescu cauliflower. A treat.

sandy spring fall csa 2012 thanksgiving week foods

The list:

2 Gold Beets, almost two pounds
1 Head Baby Romanesco Cauliflower
4 small Bunches of Celery
1 Bag Sweet Hakurei Turnips, over a pound
1 Bag Purple Carrots, almost two pounds
1 Bag Watermelon Radishes, these are awesome
1 Bunch Collards
1 Bunch Leeks
1 Bag Sweet Potatoes, almost four pounds
1 Head Napa Cabbage (I swapped this for the radicchio in the swap box)
1 Bag Red Potatoes, three pounds
1 Carnival Squash, this is so cute

I have never had Carnival squash. And, watermelon radishes only once before. Lots of supporting items here for Thanksgiving dinner. Potatoes, carrots, celery. There was an alternative of green cabbage for some boxes, but not in mine. So, no sauerkraut in the near future.

The baby romanescu is adorable.

I haven’t done the math yet today, but when I get a chance I will. The radicchio will probably be grilled if the weather holds. The squash I have to research. Maybe some pumpkin pancakes this weekend. I am seeing pumpkin recipes everywhere.

hocofood@@@

Things to Be Thankful For

Two days left before the holiday season kicks off with Thanksgiving. For us, a little bit hectic but not like it was when we had two sets of families to juggle with visits. Now, we are pretty much all residing in Maryland and my brother hosts many of the holidays.

My mom lives about 30 miles east of us, and my brother about 30 miles southeast near Annapolis. Both are easy rides. I am thankful we can avoid the holiday traffic on the highways. I remember when I was still going to Hopkins at night to study electrical engineering and we had class the night before Thanksgiving. We worked in Silver Spring. I never made it to class. Sat for three hours trying to get up the highway to Baltimore. So, I am very thankful I still have family locally.

I am thankful they found my collapsing discs before I had permanent nerve damage, and that I had a great neurosurgeon repair it. Health is something we take for granted when we are young, and don’t know how hard it is to recover from injuries or illnesses as we get older. I still have bad days after doing things for the first time since the operation. A little Tylenol and I cope. It could have been life changing if I hadn’t found out in time.

I am thankful my husband and I could retire and enjoy it. Enjoying our hobbies, our friends, the local events and get togethers. Finding my niche at the Conservancy to still feel useful.

Him connecting with the radio clubs and getting to do something he loved as a teenager. Something he gave up when we lived in Columbia in a town house. Having fun at field day every year.

Putting up the antennas and getting on the air is his hobby. No, he doesn’t play golf. He never wanted a boat. All those hobbies that many people have, he wasn’t into those things. His hobby is practiced right in the rec room, on his radios. Maybe I do get a little tired of “CQ contest, CQ contest” for up to 48 hours. I like the CW (Morse Code) contests better. I can’t hear him using the keyer. Phone contests I get to hear him call stations and give the proper exchanges to validate a contact.

I am thankful we went through the derecho and the hurricane with minimal damage. We were counted among the lucky ones. For that, we are making sure we help those who still need help. Giving clothing, non perishable foods, toiletries, and contributions where we can. We lost a few trees. We lost some food after the derecho. Nothing earth shattering for us. We know we were very fortunate. The largest ones were caught in others and missed our home.

I am thankful we live in such a pleasant and relatively safe environment. Even with all its warts, this country and, personally for us, this area are peaceful. Civil unrest, riots, financial crises like those across the pond, we are relatively insulated here. I am thankful I got my degree, thanks largely to encouragement from the good nuns in my high school. They insisted I take math and science. From thinking I would do a business curriculum and get a job in Baltimore at 18, to getting to go to college and major in math. Without that push, I would have had a vastly different life. Instead, I got to experience amazing things.

young and adventurous, my month at an ice research station

I am glad the Dream Act passed. Education is key to making a life better. Any type of education. I learned that. So did my husband. Both of us worked our way through college, and made better lives for ourselves. Without that education, we wouldn’t be retired and enjoying life. I am so eternally grateful to our parents for helping us, even though they struggled. My dad was a policeman. His dad a coal miner, then a factory worker. We know that our education, his in engineering, mine in math and computers made us marketable and employable, even during the recession in the seventies when we graduated.

We have much to be thankful for. Thursday we are off to visit my family and celebrate the traditional turkey day the way we have for many years. Dinner, a nice long walk, then some football.

Today is CSA day. We are getting good things for my dinner. Tomorrow I pick up my Maple Lawn turkey. Then, off to England Acres to get a centerpiece and some things that won’t be in my CSA box today.

This weekend our little private personal Thanksgiving, a tradition we started years ago when I wanted to learn how to cook a turkey, we will give thanks again for what we have.

Happy Thanksgiving to all my cyber readers, and my cyber circle of locavores.

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@@@

Restaurant Quality Dinners

What would you pay in a restaurant for a really good steak salad?

steak salad

My husband really loved dinner tonight. Simple, elegant, sort of. We had one leftover package of meat in the freezer from last winter’s CSA. It needed to be eaten. It was a skirt steak from our Zahradka CSA, sourced from JW Treuth’s in Oella. I marinated it in olive oil and red wine vinegar and added a coffee based dry rub.

Put together a salad of arugula, microgreens, scallions, tomatoes and added a potato with tzatziki on the side. The salad base is the key. Fresh organic arugula and microgreens from Roots. Scallions from the CSA. Tomatoes were from Costco. I mixed some very old balsamic and olive oil from St. Helena Oil in California to drizzle over it. With this base, dinner only needed a small amount of the slightly rare, dark and juicy steak, and half a potato with the tzatziki on the side.

With the dinner we opened a 2009 Petit Verdot, a signature grape being cultivated in Virginia. This was a cellar selection from Breaux. A lovely fat wine. A good salad under a beautiful skirt steak. A little carbohydrate in the potato we shared. Looked like a restaurant meal to me.

If you haven’t had the opportunity to drive over to Oella, right next to The Breadery, you really need to try Treuth’s beef. Outstanding stuff.

hocofood@@@

Shirt Sleeve Weather

aka Indian Summer

This weekend and today certainly have been those types of days. The high today is supposed to hit 70 degrees. It was a beautiful morning. The maple finally peaked, and I had to record it before the rains come tomorrow and bring down most of the leaves. It is amazing how it turns from green to yellow to red within the span of a week.

the maple today

This morning it was just spectacular, as seen from the driveway coming into the property. And below, this is the closer look from last Tuesday, as it was just really beginning to change.

the maple beginning to turn

We finally got the garage doors cleaned. We were out there in jeans and T shirts. Can not believe how nice it has been.

no more dirt and grime left from Sandy

With how nice it was, we considered lunch outdoors. After all, the patio was sunny and we were repositioning the furniture back where it belongs and returning the place to its pre-storm condition. We could not believe how much trash and junk was blown under and around all the plant beds, but now it is cleaned up. Finally. The bird feeders are all hung. The branches and most of the leaves cleaned up. The only thing left is cutting back the spirea and the spice bush, once we have a few more freeze warnings and they all lose their leaves.

I made us salads using CSA veggies, and we wandered outside to enjoy the warmth of the sun. The salads include one of my favorite ways to serve chicken and swiss. Getting one thick slice of each at Boarman’s. This time I got some honey BBQ chicken breast. Cut it in cubes and serve on top of greens with an apple diced on top.

chef’s salad, my way

Loving the Hakurei turnips and the French breakfast radishes on this salad. Can’t wait to see what goodies the CSA brings this week.

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

Posted on

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@@@