Last weekend was the annual Gamma Phi gift exchange. We had a great time despite the windy weather, cold temperatures and BAD traffic. Thanks everybody for another year of GPB holiday fun! This year we added a cookie exchange to the festivities. It was a big hit and hopefully we'll make it part of the annual celebration. We were left with a lot of left over cookies. It was a long weekend of trying NOT to eat another cookie. If there's any truth to my baby getting a taste for foods that I'm exposing her to in the womb the poor thing is going to have a sweet tooth like you wouldn't believe. Hopefully she'll take after her dad and she'll be tall and slim and able to eat whatever she wants!
We had a great soup for dinner from the Barefoot Contessa. Very easy and very delicious.
Sausage and Lentil Soup
Lentil and Sausage Soup
1 pound French green lentils (recommended: du Puy)
1/4 cup olive oil, plus extra for serving
4 cups diced yellow onions (3 large)
4 cups chopped leeks, white and light green parts only (2 leeks)
1 tablespoon minced garlic (2 large cloves)
1 tablespoon kosher salt
1 1/2 teaspoons freshly ground black pepper
1 tablespoon minced fresh thyme leaves
1 teaspoon ground cumin
3 cups medium diced celery (8 stalks)
3 cups medium diced carrots (4 – 6 BUY 10 carrots)
3 quarts Homemade Chicken Stock, recipe follows, or canned broth
1/4 cup tomato paste
1 pound kielbasa, cut in 1/2 lengthwise and sliced 1/3-inch thick I just used Italian Sausage
2 tablespoons dry red wine or red wine vinegar
Freshly grated Parmesan, for serving - I skipped this and I can't really imagine adding cheese to it, but cheese generally does make everything taste even better, so who knows?
Directions
In a large bowl, cover the lentils with boiling water and allow to sit for 15 minutes. Drain.
In a large stockpot over medium heat, heat the olive oil and saute the onions, leeks, garlic, salt, pepper, thyme, and cumin for 20 minutes, or until the vegetables are translucent and tender. Add the celery and carrots and saute for another 10 minutes. Add the chicken stock, tomato paste, and drained lentils, cover, and bring to a boil. Reduce the heat and simmer uncovered for 1 hour, or until the lentils are cooked through and tender. Check the seasonings. Add the kielbasa and red wine and simmer until the kielbasa is hot. Serve drizzled with olive oil and sprinkled with grated Parmesan.
Wheatberry Salad - Junior League cookbook (the one with Rain in the title)
1 C. red wheat berries- pearl barley can be substituted
1/4 t. salt
1/2C diced apple or pear tossed in 1T. lemon juice
2/3C. hazelnuts, toasted and skinned
2/3C. finely diced Gouda cheese (optional)
1/2C. dried cranberries
1/2C coarsely chopped dried cherries
1/2C chopped dried apricots
1/2C minced celery
3T. minced parsley
Red Onion Dressing
1/4C vegetable oil
1/4C cranberry juice
3T. raspberry vinegar
1T. balsamic vinegar
1 1.2t. Dijon mustard
salt and pepper
¼ c minced red onion
Bring a medium saucepan of salted water to a boil over high heat;
add the wheat berries, reduce the heat to medium and cook until tender but still a bit chewy, about 1 hour, stirring occasionally. Add water if needed. Drain the wheat berries well, set aside in a large bowl and let cool. Add the rest of the ingredients. Toss with dressing.
Trios - Gourmet Magazine
2 1/2 cups all-purpose flour
1 teaspoon salt
2 sticks (1/2 pound) unsalted butter, softened
1 cup sugar
1 large egg
1 teaspoon pure vanilla extract
About 2 tablespoons seedless raspberry jam
About 2 tablespoons apricot preserves
About 2 tablespoons strawberry preserves
Equipment: a 1/2-inch-thick wooden spoon handle or dowel
Make dough:
Whisk together flour and salt. Beat butter and sugar with an electric mixer until very pale and fluffy, about 4 minutes, then beat in egg and vanilla. At low speed, mix in flour mixture in 3 batches just until a dough forms. Divide dough in half and form each piece into a 6-inch disk, then chill, wrapped in plastic wrap, until firm, about 1 hour.
Assemble and bake cookies:
Preheat oven to 350°F with rack in middle. Line 2 large baking sheets with parchment paper.
Roll 3 separate level teaspoons of dough each into a ball, then flatten each ball slightly (to 1 inch wide and less than 1/2 inch thick). Arrange them in a triangle on baking sheet with edges touching in center, then make a deep indentation in center of each round with wooden spoon handle. Make more cookies, arranging them 1 inch apart on baking sheets.
Fill indentations in each cookie with about 1/88 teaspoon jam (each cookie should have 3 different fillings), avoiding any large pieces of fruit.
Bake until cookies are baked through and golden-brown on edges, 15 to 20 minutes. Cool on baking sheets 5 minutes, then transfer to racks to cool completely.
Bake more batches on cooled baking sheets lined with fresh parchment.
Cook's notes: • Dough can be chilled up to 2 days. • Cookies keep, layered between sheets of parchment, in an airtight container at room temperature 1 week.
Chocolate Candy Cane Cookies - Bon Appetite (These were my favorites)
Cookies
1 3/4 cups all purpose flour
1/2 cup unsweetened cocoa powder (preferably Dutch-process)
1/4 teaspoon salt
1 cup sugar
3/4 cup (1 1/2 sticks) unsalted butter, room temperature
1 large egg
Filling
1 cup plus 2 tablespoons powdered sugar
3/4 cup (1 1/2 sticks) unsalted butter, room temperature
3/4 teaspoon peppermint extract - Careful with this ingredient they can get too pepperminty
2 drops (or more) red food coloring
1/2 cup crushed red-and-white-striped candy canes or hard peppermint candies (about 4 ounces)
For cookies:
Whisk flour, cocoa, and salt in medium bowl to blend. Using electric mixer, beat sugar and butter in large bowl until well blended. Beat in egg. Add dry ingredients; beat until blended. Refrigerate dough 1 hour.
Preheat oven to 350°F. Line 2 baking sheets with parchment paper. Scoop out dough by level tablespoonfuls, then roll into smooth balls. Place balls on prepared baking sheets, spacing about 2 inches apart. Using bottom of glass or hands, flatten each ball to 2-inch round (edges will crack). Bake until cookies no longer look wet and small indentation appears when tops of cookies are lightly touched with fingers, about 11 minutes (do not overbake or cookies will become too crisp). Cool on sheet 5 minutes. Transfer chocolate cookies to racks and cool completely.
For filling:
Using electric mixer, beat powdered sugar and butter in medium bowl until well blended. Add peppermint extract and 2 drops food coloring. Beat until light pink and well blended, adding more food coloring by dropfuls if darker pink color is desired. Spread 2 generous teaspoons filling evenly over flat side of 1 cookie to edges (I only added about half as much frosting to each cookie, maybe it's just me, but they were pretty rich and very sweet with this much filling); top with another cookie, flat side down, pressing gently to adhere. Repeat with remaining cookies and peppermint filling.
Place crushed candy canes on plate. Roll edges of cookie sandwiches in crushed candies (candies will adhere to filling). (Cookie sandwiches can be made ahead. Store in single layer in airtight container at room temperature up to 3 days or freeze up to 2 weeks.)
Orange Coconut Snowballs - Bon Appetite
1 1/4 cups sweetened flaked coconut
1 cup (2 sticks) unsalted butter, room temperature
2 1/4 cups sifted powdered sugar (sifted, then measured)
1 1/2 teaspoons vanilla extract
3/4 teaspoon coconut extract
2 1/4 cups all purpose flour
1 1/2 tablespoons grated orange peel
1/2 teaspoon salt
Preheat oven to 350°F. Bake coconut on rimmed baking sheet until light golden, stirring occasionally, about 12 minutes.
Using electric mixer, beat butter, 1/2 cup powdered sugar, and both extracts in bowl to blend well. Beat in flour, orange peel, and salt. Stir in coconut. Cover and chill at least 1 hour and up to 1 day. Soften dough slightly before shaping.
Preheat oven to 350°F. Line 2 large baking sheets with parchment paper. Using 1 level tablespoon dough for each cookie, roll dough between palms of hands into balls. Place on prepared sheets, spacing 1 inch apart. Bake until golden on bottom but pale on top, about 18 minutes. Transfer cookies to racks; cool 5 minutes. Place remaining 1 3/4 cups powdered sugar in bowl. Roll hot cookies in powdered sugar, covering completely. Cool cookies on rack. Roll cookies in powdered sugar again, coating generously. (Can be made 5 days ahead. Store airtight between sheets of waxed paper at room temperature.)
Tuesday, December 16, 2008
Tuesday, November 25, 2008
Baby Room Excitement
I've started decorating the nursery... it's been SO much fun already. So far I have some bedding and some artwork. I still need furniture, drapes, a rug... lots of stuff, but I have a pretty good start. I found some adorable artwork on Etsy and the perfect bedding on sale. Charlie told me that I should wait till January to buy anything, but the bedding was on sale and never would have lasted till January and the artwork is one of a kind and may have sold before January so I ignored his rules and went with my gut. I think he picked January just to test my patience anyway, so my patience loses again, oh well, our baby's room will be cute!
Notice that the Pottery Barn picture shows the crib in black. I think it looks very striking, but I can't decide if I'm ready for black baby furniture. What do you think? Also, one wall is going to be painted with chalkboard paint. I saw it in a Domino magazine profile that showed the designer for J Crew's baby's room and she had a whole wall painted as a chalkboard, we may just go for a stripe, but I haven't made any definitive decisions yet. Anyway, just wanted to share my progress. Happy Thanksgiving everyone!
These are mobiles but I emailed the artist and she said that they work well in frames too. I'd love to frame them without backing so that the pale yellow wall shows through the back. I may hang one mobile too just for variety.
Here's the bedding. So cute!
Notice that the Pottery Barn picture shows the crib in black. I think it looks very striking, but I can't decide if I'm ready for black baby furniture. What do you think? Also, one wall is going to be painted with chalkboard paint. I saw it in a Domino magazine profile that showed the designer for J Crew's baby's room and she had a whole wall painted as a chalkboard, we may just go for a stripe, but I haven't made any definitive decisions yet. Anyway, just wanted to share my progress. Happy Thanksgiving everyone!
These are mobiles but I emailed the artist and she said that they work well in frames too. I'd love to frame them without backing so that the pale yellow wall shows through the back. I may hang one mobile too just for variety.
Here's the bedding. So cute!
Monday, November 24, 2008
Commercial Real Estate by Day and Rockers by Night...
Charlie and his work friends my seem like stiff suits during the day, but check them out them while they ROCK at night. :) Here they are practicing, hopefully they don't quit their day job anytime soon!
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Nw4S4R9K9gw
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Nw4S4R9K9gw
Wednesday, November 19, 2008
Another picture from my Mom...
Tuesday, November 18, 2008
Baby News...
Thursday, November 6, 2008
Doodles for Obama!
You may remember that Sammy was an ardent supporter of Obama and had her own Doodles for Obama pin... well, as it turns out, there may soon be one of her own in the White House! I just read in the NY Times that the Obama's are considering a Goldendoodle. Sammy is SO, SO proud. : )
http://thecaucus.blogs.nytimes.com/2008/11/05/the-search-for-the-first-puppy/?scp=1&sq=obama%20dog&st=cse
My Favorite Quick Dinner
I was on jury duty for the last two days. It was completely pointless, all I did was sit in a room for 2 and a 1/2 days. I would estimate that there were probably 150 other people there with me. About 3 times on the first day they called the names of 30 people at a time to form 3 potential juries. Out of these 3 groups only 1 of those groups ever went up to a courtroom and after lunch on the second day they let all the other people go... so about 90 of the people there all left without doing anything. Very frustrating. If you ever are called to jury duty, whatever you do, don't forget your book.
Anyway, I wasn't sure if my schedule would be as accommodating to cooking dinner as usual while on jury duty so last night we had my favorite quick dinner, grilled cheese and tomato soup. This may seem boring to you, but I promise it is delicious if you use two of my new favorite things:
1) Beecher's Marco Polo Cheese
According to Beechers: Marco Polo takes lightly milled green and black Madagascar peppercorns and blends them with our creamy cheese. The result is cheese with bite and texture, sophisticated yet approachable. According to me: AWESOME with tomato soup!
2) Manoucher Bread
This bread cost way more than the other breads, but it's worth it, especially if you are only having grilled cheese and tomato soup for dinner.
For soup we just use a can of soup. I like wolfgang pucks. Anyway, I just love this cheese and bread so I thought that I would tell all of you about it.
Monday, November 3, 2008
My husband the rock star...
I got Charlie an X Box for his birthday this year... before I bought it, I did think I wonder if he'll play it ALL the time and I'll regret this? So, I'm glad to report that in the almost 4 weeks that he has had it, he's shown remarkable restraint, AND we have one game that we play together. It's called Rock Band and we have formed a band: Doodle Romp (named after, you guessed it, Sammy Doodle Malley and the bi-weekly gathering of Doodles at the dog park that we always seem to miss). Anyway, Charlie is really good at the guitar and the drums. I lack a lot of skill, but make up for it in enthusiasm. We have a great time and love to have guests over to ROCK with us. I do hope that all of you can make some time to come over and play a gig with us. To incite you even further, I'm including this action shot from a few weeks ago.
Tuesday, October 28, 2008
Baby Malley preditions...
I keep going back and forth on whether I think we're having a boy or a girl. I took a quiz online today and it said girl and that combined with my lack of excitement for girl names has me convinced, at least for today, that it's girl. I like the idea of having a girl for many reasons but the easiest to explain are 1) I love baby girl clothes and 2) I really want a girl with short bangs and a little bob. I think little girls with this haircut are the cutest thing ever. I happened to flip though my most recent J Crew and found this little girl that fits my vision perfectly and she even has nerdy glasses that out future children are probably doomed to wear. Isn't she the cutest? I hope that I have a girl and she looks just like this!
Monday, October 27, 2008
October Chili Night...
We have had some beautiful sunny weather this October and some very chili nights, so in honor of the glorious weather and perfectly crisp fall nights we had some friends over for chili. I love this chili recipe from my friend Kylee's husband, Robby. It is always a hit and pretty easy to make too. It tastes great with cornbread and I've included a special butter recipe too because I love "fancy butter". The squash recipe is from Gourmet, but I needed a salad to serve with my chili so I added a few ingredients and it made a great salad. I made a bit extra of the vinaigrette to accommodate my salad and I thought it was missing something so I added honey to the dressing. Anyway, I hope you enjoy the rest of our beautiful October and maybe some chili too!
Autumn Squash Salad with Chili Vinaigrette
2 (1 1/2 - to 1 3/4-lb) acorn squash
1/2 teaspoon black pepper
1 teaspoon salt
6 tablespoons olive oil
1 garlic clove
2 tablespoons fresh lime juice, or to taste
1 tablespoon honey
1 to 2 teaspoons finely chopped fresh hot red chile, including seeds
2 tablespoons chopped fresh cilantro
cotija cheese
roasted pumpkin seeds
mixed greens
Put oven racks in upper and lower thirds of oven and preheat oven to 450°F. Halve squash lengthwise, then cut off and discard stem ends. Scoop out seeds and cut squash lengthwise into 3/4-inch-wide wedges. Toss squash with black pepper, 3/4 teaspoon salt, and 2 tablespoons oil in a bowl, then arrange, cut sides down, in 2 large shallow baking pans. Roast squash, switching position of pans halfway through roasting, until squash is tender and undersides of wedges are golden brown, 25 to 35 minutes.
While squash roasts, mince garlic and mash to a paste with remaining 1/4 teaspoon salt. Transfer paste to a small bowl and whisk in lime juice, chile (to taste), cilantro, and remaining 1/4 cup oil and honey until combined. Transfer squash, browned sides up, to a platter and drizzle with vinaigrette.
Reserve some of the vinaigrette for the mixed greens and toss with pumpkin seeds. Serve on plates and add squash to the top with a sprinkle of cotija cheese.
Robby’s Awesome Chili
8 T vegetable oil
3 lbs. Stew meat
1 onion, diced
2 cloves garlic, minced
2 red bell peppers, diced
2 jalapeno peppers, seeded and minced
2 T light brown sugar
2 T chili powder
2 T cumin
2 tsp cayenne pepper
3 T cilantro, chopped
3 15 oz. Cans diced tomatoes, with juice
½ cup honey
½ cup prepared black coffee
½ cup bourbon
2 15 oz. Cans of black beans, drained
2 15 oz. Can kidney beans, drained
Salt and freshly ground pepper to taste
Pour 4 T of oil into large stockpot and place over high heat for 2-3 minutes. Season meat with salt and pepper and brown in batches. About 5 minutes per batch. Set aside the browned meat.
Pour remaining oil into the pot and add the onion, garlic, bell peppers and jalapenos. Season the veggies with brown sugar, chili powder, cumin, cayenne, salt, pepper and cilantro
Add meat back into the pot along with tomatoes, honey, coffee, and bourbon. Add the beans, stir well, bring up to a simmer and then lower the heat. Let simmer for 3 hrs. or until the meat is very soft.
Cornbread Muffins with Sweet-Smoked Paprika Honey Butter
1 cup (2 sticks) unsalted butter, room temperature
2 teaspoons hot smoked paprika
honey
1 garlic clove, chopped
1/2 teaspoon sugar
Pinch of salt
Blend butter, honey, paprika, garlic, sugar, and salt in processor until smooth. Wrap paprika butter in plastic, forming 1 1/2-inch-diameter log. Refrigerate butter until very cold, about 2 hours. (Can be made 1 day ahead. Keep refrigerated.)
Jiffy cornbread mix
Monday, October 20, 2008
Mark Your Calendars!
For April 5th because Charlie and I are having a baby! Needless to say, we are beyond thrilled and April can't come soon enough. Thank you to all of our friends and family who were saying little prayers for us, we are so happy to be able to report that they payed off. In one short month we will be able to tell you if we're having a boy or a girl, so more news to come soon!
Wednesday, October 15, 2008
Melissa's Monthly Blog?
I haven't been blogging and I have no excuse other than my life has been a little too boring lately. Oh, and I feel awful that I forgot to post on Charlie's birthday. I promise to have something heartwarming to say next year on his birthday. Maybe my forgetfulness was my subconscious punishing Charlie for saying that he was "sad to be getting older". This is an actual statement that he made to me, his 31 year old wife on his 29th birthday. Are you kidding me? Anyway, I don't hold grudges so we had a great celebration and I am only giving him a hard time in a loving way... :)
I wanted to post something really exciting to win back all of my faithful readers, but like I said, my life has been pretty boring lately, so all I can do is share one especially exciting thing that recently happened: I finished my "last" business trip! Hallelujah! I put last in quotes only because my boss has reserved the right to send me out if there are no other options, but I reserved the right to have a really bad attitude if that happens, so I'm hoping we have a real agreement. Yay! I spent this summer travelling slight less than usual, but I still had to go to Kansas City, MO, Spokane, Rosedale, NY (basically JFK airport and vicinity - lovely part of town), Melville, NY, and Mexico, MO. Mexico was my last trip and I spent about a week in the middle of nowhere Missouri. It was pretty boring, although I did get to see much of the state.
Aside from my excitement over never having to get up at 4 a.m. on another Sunday morning (for work at least) I am also overjoyed at putting an end to one of my least favorite activities ever - my expense report. It probably wouldn't be as bad if I didn't wait until I have about 3 months saved up. Accounting HATES me. Anyway, check out my lame cell phone pic of the worlds biggest pile of receipts.
Tuesday, September 16, 2008
Happy Birthday Kelsey!
Today is Kelsey's birthday so I am going to take a moment to tell all of you about what a great sister Kelsey is... Kelsey is great for the following reasons:
1. She is really inspirational, just read this quick list of amazing feats that I thought of off the top of my head: she has ran many marathons mostly without the traditional training that a normal person would do, she biked from Seattle to WA DC with a bunch of strangers, she gave birth to Eli without any drugs and she is a special ed teacher that has to put up with a lot of crazy and sad situations and she doesn't complain even half as much as I do about my job.
2. She is really easy to make laugh or scream. If you were fortunate enough to grow up with Kelsey your entire life, like I did, then you would think you are really funny (like I do) because Kelsey laughs a lot and laughs hard. I've always been a little jealous of how easy Kelsey laughs. Also if you drive down a hill fast or go on even a small roller coaster Kelsey can't stop screaming... I don't think she can help herself and I find this highly amusing.
3. Kelsey is really loving, but gives the worst hugs ever. This forces her to show her love in other more subtle ways and somehow that makes her a lot more genuine.
4. She is a really loyal friend and sister and is the perfect amount of serious, fun, energetic and practical.
I think that's a good start, but there are many, many more reasons why she is a great sister and friend. I hope you all get to have a friend like her in your life. Happy birthday Kelsey!
Wednesday, August 27, 2008
Happy Birthday Sammy Doodle Malley!
Today is Sammy's second birthday. We are really excited to celebrate with her tonight. Unfortunately, the poor girl is cooped up all day while I'm here at work, but tonight I plan to make up for it with some special treats and new toys. She is such a perfect little companion and Charlie and I love her more each day. Here are the top 5 reasons why we love Sammy:
5. It's so easy to make Sammy's day, there are 3 things that Sammy loves to hear: Do you want to go in the car, Dog Park and Let's go for a walk. By saying any one of these things you can immediately make her day.
4. Sammy is a really good listener. I wish I had a little video for you, because if I did you could see that when you talk to Sammy she really looks you right in the eye and cocks her head at just the right time to make you think she's really considering whatever it is that you just said. It's very sweet.
3. Sammy thinks the bed is her bed. This may not seem like a reason to love Sammy more, but it's really fun to have a doodle that just wants to sleep with you. She usually ends up down by my feet or on her back right between us.
2. She is super dramatic. Sammy is generally one of three emotions, totally EXCITED!, really happy, or frustrated. You can tell the difference because when she is EXCITED! she runs around in circles and for reasons only known to Sammy kind of scrunches down so her belly is closer to the floor and when she's just happy she usually has a ball in her mouth and/or a big smile and when she's frustrated she makes very dramatic whining noises and collapses to the floor over and over again. She usually creates these frustrated moments by putting one of her balls under some furniture.
1. Sammy LOVES to cuddle. From the first days that we had Sammy she has always loved to snuggle up and take a nap with us. One of Sammy's most enduring moves is to lay her little head over your chest or neck and fall asleep. Actions do speak louder than words and just try not to get the I LOVE YOU message when Sammy decides to take a nap right next to your face.
5. It's so easy to make Sammy's day, there are 3 things that Sammy loves to hear: Do you want to go in the car, Dog Park and Let's go for a walk. By saying any one of these things you can immediately make her day.
4. Sammy is a really good listener. I wish I had a little video for you, because if I did you could see that when you talk to Sammy she really looks you right in the eye and cocks her head at just the right time to make you think she's really considering whatever it is that you just said. It's very sweet.
3. Sammy thinks the bed is her bed. This may not seem like a reason to love Sammy more, but it's really fun to have a doodle that just wants to sleep with you. She usually ends up down by my feet or on her back right between us.
2. She is super dramatic. Sammy is generally one of three emotions, totally EXCITED!, really happy, or frustrated. You can tell the difference because when she is EXCITED! she runs around in circles and for reasons only known to Sammy kind of scrunches down so her belly is closer to the floor and when she's just happy she usually has a ball in her mouth and/or a big smile and when she's frustrated she makes very dramatic whining noises and collapses to the floor over and over again. She usually creates these frustrated moments by putting one of her balls under some furniture.
1. Sammy LOVES to cuddle. From the first days that we had Sammy she has always loved to snuggle up and take a nap with us. One of Sammy's most enduring moves is to lay her little head over your chest or neck and fall asleep. Actions do speak louder than words and just try not to get the I LOVE YOU message when Sammy decides to take a nap right next to your face.
Wednesday, August 20, 2008
A week from today...
Is Sammy Malley's second birthday! I can't believe our baby will soon be 2. I'm dedicating this whole week to Sammy's birthday countdown and since I don't have any pictures of her on her actual birthday I'll include this one of the first day that we had Sammy. Here she is in the car on the way home. Look at that big smile - she knew we were a match made in heaven right from the start.
Sammy's Life Story - Day One
Sammy was born on a farm in Yamhill, OR. She had at least 4 brother/sister pups that I can remember. When we picked her up on the farm all the puppies were in a little shed all huddled in one corner. The only puppy to run up and great us was little Sammy Doodle. She had a pink nose and wanted to give us as many kisses as possible. We were so excited to drive home with Sammy! The first night that we had her we tried to make her sleep in her kennel in the hallway, she whimpered for about 30 minutes before we couldn't take it anymore and put her in our bed. She has been cuddling with us most nights ever since! One of the worst parts about traveling for work and spending the night in a hotel is missing my little Sammy Doodle's head on my feet.
Tuesday, August 19, 2008
Dinner Club 2
We had another dinner club last night, this dinner club is different than the other one I posted about. This one is just girls and we've been meeting on and off for either four or five years... I can't remember, maybe even six years. It's been a great run though and even though we don't meet nearly as often as we used to and we only have guest appearances from some members that have moved across country, we still have a great thing going and I hope it continues for many years to come! Last night we had a simple and yummy cheese platter, some delicious asparagus and cherry tomatoes, honey bourbon pork chops with glazed peaches, nectarine cous cous salad and some scrumptious blueberry lemon bars. A delicious meal for sure. The goal of this dinner club when it first started was to get us cooking and sharing recipes... well we were never very good at sharing recipes, but it's not too late to start right? The two things I made were courtesy of Cooking Light. Both were pretty good and very easy to make.
Nectarine-and-Chickpea Couscous Salad With Honey-Cumin Dressing
INGREDIENTS FOR 6 SERVINGS:
1-1/4 cups water
1 cup uncooked couscous
2 tablespoons fresh lime juice
1 tablespoon olive oil
1 tablespoon honey
1/2 teaspoon salt
1/2 teaspoon ground cumin
1/2 teaspoon ground coriander
1-1/2 cups coarsely chopped nectarines (about 3 medium)
1/2 cup coarsely chopped spinach
1/4 cup thinly sliced green onions
1 (15-1/2-ounce) can chickpeas (garbanzo beans), drained
Nectarine slices (optional)
INSTRUCTIONS:
Try this as a light summer lunch or as a side dish for pork or ham.
1. Bring water to a boil in a medium saucepan; gradually stir in couscous.
Remove from heat; cover and let stand 5 minutes. Fluff with a fork; cool.
2. Combine lime juice and next 5 ingredients (juice through coriander) in a
large bowl; stir well with a whisk. Add couscous, chopped nectarines, spinach,
onions, and chickpeas; toss well. Garnish with nectarine slices, if desired.
Yield: 6 servings (serving size: 1 cup).
NUTRITIONAL INFORMATION:
CALORIES 213 (16% from fat); FAT 3.9g (sat 0.5g, mono 2g, poly 0.8g); PROTEIN
7.8g; CARB 38.8g; FIBER 3.6g; CHOL 0mg; IRON 2.2mg; SODIUM 297mg; CALC 36mg
Bourbon-Glazed Pork Chops with Peaches
1/3 cup bourbon
1/4 cup honey
3 tablespoons low-sodium soy sauce
1 tablespoon vegetable oil
3/4 teaspoon ground ginger
1/4 teaspoon ground black pepper
1/4 teaspoon crushed red pepper flakes, or dash red hot pepper sauce, such as Tabasco brand (optional)
4 thin loin pork chops (bone-in or boneless)
2 peaches, halved and pitted and, if desired, skinned
In a shallow resealable container, stir together the bourbon, honey, soy sauce, oil, ginger and black pepper and the pepper flakes or hot sauce, if using. Add the pork chops and peaches and turn to coat. Set aside. (May cover and refrigerate for up to 2 hours.)
Preheat the grill or place a grill pan over medium-high heat. Transfer the pork and peaches to the grill or pan, reserving the marinade. Cook, turning once, until nicely browned on both sides and cooked through, about 4 minutes per side.
Meanwhile, in a saucepan on the stovetop or in a microwave-safe bowl in the microwave, bring the marinade to a boil.
To serve, divide the pork and peaches evenly among individual plates and spoon the sauce over them.
Nutrition Facts
Information per serving
Calories: 292 % Daily Values* Total Fat: 9g 14 Saturated Fat: 2g 10 Cholesterol: 39mg 13 Sodium: 492mg 21 Total Carbohydrates: 33g 11 Dietary Fiber: 3g 12 Protein: 13g *Percent Daily Value based on a 2,000 calorie diet. Your daily values may be higher or lower depending on your calorie needs.
Total Fat: Less than 65g Saturated Fat: Less than 20g Cholesterol: Less than 300mg Sodium: Less than 2,400mg Total Carbohydrates: 300g Dietary Fiber: 25g
Nectarine-and-Chickpea Couscous Salad With Honey-Cumin Dressing
INGREDIENTS FOR 6 SERVINGS:
1-1/4 cups water
1 cup uncooked couscous
2 tablespoons fresh lime juice
1 tablespoon olive oil
1 tablespoon honey
1/2 teaspoon salt
1/2 teaspoon ground cumin
1/2 teaspoon ground coriander
1-1/2 cups coarsely chopped nectarines (about 3 medium)
1/2 cup coarsely chopped spinach
1/4 cup thinly sliced green onions
1 (15-1/2-ounce) can chickpeas (garbanzo beans), drained
Nectarine slices (optional)
INSTRUCTIONS:
Try this as a light summer lunch or as a side dish for pork or ham.
1. Bring water to a boil in a medium saucepan; gradually stir in couscous.
Remove from heat; cover and let stand 5 minutes. Fluff with a fork; cool.
2. Combine lime juice and next 5 ingredients (juice through coriander) in a
large bowl; stir well with a whisk. Add couscous, chopped nectarines, spinach,
onions, and chickpeas; toss well. Garnish with nectarine slices, if desired.
Yield: 6 servings (serving size: 1 cup).
NUTRITIONAL INFORMATION:
CALORIES 213 (16% from fat); FAT 3.9g (sat 0.5g, mono 2g, poly 0.8g); PROTEIN
7.8g; CARB 38.8g; FIBER 3.6g; CHOL 0mg; IRON 2.2mg; SODIUM 297mg; CALC 36mg
Bourbon-Glazed Pork Chops with Peaches
1/3 cup bourbon
1/4 cup honey
3 tablespoons low-sodium soy sauce
1 tablespoon vegetable oil
3/4 teaspoon ground ginger
1/4 teaspoon ground black pepper
1/4 teaspoon crushed red pepper flakes, or dash red hot pepper sauce, such as Tabasco brand (optional)
4 thin loin pork chops (bone-in or boneless)
2 peaches, halved and pitted and, if desired, skinned
In a shallow resealable container, stir together the bourbon, honey, soy sauce, oil, ginger and black pepper and the pepper flakes or hot sauce, if using. Add the pork chops and peaches and turn to coat. Set aside. (May cover and refrigerate for up to 2 hours.)
Preheat the grill or place a grill pan over medium-high heat. Transfer the pork and peaches to the grill or pan, reserving the marinade. Cook, turning once, until nicely browned on both sides and cooked through, about 4 minutes per side.
Meanwhile, in a saucepan on the stovetop or in a microwave-safe bowl in the microwave, bring the marinade to a boil.
To serve, divide the pork and peaches evenly among individual plates and spoon the sauce over them.
Nutrition Facts
Information per serving
Calories: 292 % Daily Values* Total Fat: 9g 14 Saturated Fat: 2g 10 Cholesterol: 39mg 13 Sodium: 492mg 21 Total Carbohydrates: 33g 11 Dietary Fiber: 3g 12 Protein: 13g *Percent Daily Value based on a 2,000 calorie diet. Your daily values may be higher or lower depending on your calorie needs.
Total Fat: Less than 65g Saturated Fat: Less than 20g Cholesterol: Less than 300mg Sodium: Less than 2,400mg Total Carbohydrates: 300g Dietary Fiber: 25g
Monday, August 18, 2008
Dinner Club
Last night we had our second successful dinner club and the meal was fantastic. Amy and Sean hosted and it was a hit on multiple levels, the food was great, the company fun and festive and almost best of all... they have AC. I was in heaven. Amy picked a south american theme and it was the perfect compliment to our hot, hot weather. This chimichurri sauce was SO GOOD. I'm definitely making this recipe soon. (Oh and Amy made it all the night before so all she had to do was cook the beef - that's my kind of dinner party menu!)
char-grilled beef tenderloin with three-herb chimichurri
Bon Appetit
Spice Rub
2 tablespoons dark brown sugar
1 tablespoon sweet smoked paprika*
1 tablespoon coarse kosher salt
1 1/2 teaspoons chipotle chile powder or ancho chile powder
1 teaspoon ground black pepper
Chimichurri sauce
3/4 cup olive oil
3 tablespoons Sherry wine vinegar or red wine vinegar
3 tablespoons fresh lemon juice
3 garlic cloves, peeled
2 medium shallots, peeled, quartered
1 teaspoon fine sea salt
1/2 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper
1/2 teaspoon dried crushed red pepper
3 cups (packed) stemmed fresh parsley
2 cups (packed) stemmed fresh cilantro
1 cup (packed) stemmed fresh mint
Beef tenderloin
1 3 1/2-pound beef tenderloin
2 tablespoons olive oil
For spice rub: Combine all ingredients in small bowl.
Do ahead: Can be made 2 days ahead. Store airtight at room temperature.
For chimichurri sauce: Combine first 8 ingredients in blender; blend until almost smooth. Add 1/4 of parsley, 1/4 of cilantro, and 1/4 of mint; blend until incorporated. Add remaining herbs in 3 more additions, pureeing until almost smooth after each addition.
Do ahead: Can be made 3 hours ahead. Cover; chill.
For beef tenderloin: Let beef stand at room temperature 1 hour.
Prepare barbecue (high heat). Pat beef dry with paper towels; brush with oil. Sprinkle all over with spice rub, using all of mixture (coating will be thick). Place beef on grill; sear 2 minutes on each side. Reduce heat to medium-high. Grill uncovered until instant-read thermometer inserted into thickest part of beef registers 130°F for medium-rare, moving beef to cooler part of grill as needed to prevent burning, and turning occasionally, about 40 minutes. Transfer to platter; cover loosely with foil and let rest 15 minutes. Thinly slice beef crosswise. Serve with chimichurri sauce.
*Available at specialty foods stores and from tienda.com.
Monday, August 11, 2008
Another Recipe...
I know that I'm getting a little boring with recipe after recipe, but nothing else is really going on besides Eli and what I eat for dinner, so bear with me. I promise to be more inventive in the future. The fun thing about all these recipes is that I have discovered them only because I had to use certain ingredients that came in my produce delivery... I feel like I'm on some kind of cooking scavenger hunt and even though I love deciding what I'm going to make for dinner each night, this has made it even more fun because I must use some ingredient! Tonight's dinner was a big hit, both Charlie and I loved it and the colors were so pretty! It was a gold medal dinner alright!
Open-Faced Lamb Burgers with Pistachio-Apricot Relish
2 1/2 pounds freshly ground lamb (preferably shoulder)
2 1/2 teaspoons coarse kosher salt plus more for relish - I didn't do a great job measuring, but I thought that the patties were a tiny bit salty
1 cup diced pitted fresh apricots
1/4 cup finely chopped red onion
1/4 cup diced drained roasted red pepper from jar
2 tablespoons Sherry wine vinegar
2 tablespoons extra-virgin olive oil
1/4 teaspoon curry powder
1/4 teaspoon sugar
1 cup coarsely chopped unsalted natural pistachios
3 tablespoons chopped fresh mint
Nonstick vegetable oil spray
6 (4-inch-diameter) slices (about 1/2 inch thick) sourdough bread - I used pita bread instead and I think it was a good call because it was easy to cut through, I think sourdough might be a pain...
Place ground lamb in large bowl; sprinkle 2 1/2 teaspoons coarse salt evenly over. Gently mix in salt and shape meat into 6 patties, each about 3/4 inch thick. DO AHEAD Patties can be prepared 6 hours ahead. Arrange on baking sheet, cover, and refrigerate.
Mix apricots and next 6 ingredients in medium bowl; season with salt. Mix chopped pistachios and mint into relish.
Spray grill rack with nonstick spray. Prepare barbecue (medium heat). Place burgers on grill. Place bread slices at edges to toast. Cook burgers to desired doneness and until slightly charred, about 5 minutes per side for medium rare. Transfer bread to plates. Top each with burger. Spoon relish atop burgers.
Sunday, August 10, 2008
Eli's Favorite Salad
We went over to the Graves' house last night to make them dinner and check in on Eli (still as cute as ever) and I made this salad. I think I lucked out since I happened to receive beets, plums (well, pluots so close enough) and spinach in my delivery. I pretty much always have red onions on hand so all I had to do was go to the store and buy the cheese. It's a tasty salad and very pretty too...
Beet Salad with Plums and Goat Cheese
Bon Appetit
12 2-inch-diameter beets, tops trimmed (I happened to get chioggia beets in my delivery and they are very pretty so use those if you can get them)
1/2 cup white wine vinegar
1 teaspoon sugar
1/2 cup vegetable oil
1/4 cup walnut oil or olive oil
1 1/2 pounds firm but ripe plums, pitted, cut into 1/2-inch pieces
1 medium-size red onion, sliced into rings
1 1/2 6-ounce bags fresh baby spinach leaves
8 ounces soft fresh goat cheese (such as Montrachet), crumbled
Preheat oven to 375°F. Wrap beets tightly in foil packages (3 beets in each). Place on baking sheet. Roast beets until tender, turning packages occasionally, about 1 hour 45 minutes. Unwrap beets; cool completely. Peel beets and cut into 1/4-inch-thick rounds. Place in large bowl.
Combine vinegar and sugar in blender. Gradually blend in vegetable oil, then walnut oil. Season vinaigrette to taste with salt and pepper. (Beets and vinaigrette can be prepared 2 days ahead. Cover separately; refrigerate. Let beets stand 2 hours at room temperature before continuing. Rewhisk vinaigrette before using.)
Toss beets with 1/4 cup vinaigrette. Toss plums and onion with § cup vinaigrette in another large bowl. Season with salt and pepper.
Overlap beets around edge of platter. Mound spinach in center of platter; drizzle with some vinaigrette. Spoon plums and onion over salad. Sprinkle with goat cheese and serve.
Friday, August 8, 2008
Restaurant Review: Joule
I love trying new restaurants and a couple weeks ago Charlie and I tried Joule on Wallingford. I had heard good things about it and it just so happened that we were on our way to a party nearby so we stopped in and tried it. I'm not sure how to classify the food but I know that the chef had a Korean French fusion restaurant before she opened this one and I don't know that I tasted or saw anything French, but many of the dishes we got seemed at least sort of Korean. It doesn't really matter though, all that matters is that it was GOOD. Since we were headed to a party after dinner we decided to get a selection of small plates to share, so I can't really tell you if the entrees are that good, but we each got 3 "small" plates (that weren't really that small if you ask me) and all of them were good and a couple really knocked my socks off. If you go, you must get the bacon salad with corn and cilantro, this bacon was more like slices of delicious thick, salty meat - the best salad I've ever had. Also the spicy beef soup was a big hit. We ate at the bar overlooking the chefs. I love to do that, it's such a great opportunity to see all the food going out! So to sum it up, we really liked this place and I will go back. It's really close to Tilth another "trendy" Wallingford spot and between the two of them, I'd choose Joule any day.
http://www.joulerestaurant.com/
Neighborhood Night Out
These pictures are of Peter arriving at local Neighborhood Night Out BBQs around the east side. I think these pictures are really funny... especially when I think back to Peter as a little kid. I think Peter was an "Army Man" for Halloween 3 years in a row. My mom never really liked him to play with fake guns or GI Joe because it was too violent and look at him now... he's a cop riding through Sammamish on a tank. I guess all my mom's efforts to keep fake guns out of the house backfired a bit. Not to worry though, Peter LOVES being a king county sheriff and this is just another example of why. What other job allows you to ride a tank around to neighborhood BBQs and that combines 3 of Peter's top 10 favorite things: being a cop, chatting with strangers and food. :)
Pluots
I got my Full Circle Farm delivery yesterday and inside was a new fruit discovery: Pluots. I'm not much of a fruit lover. I like fruit sliced and easy to eat and most fruit is sticky and you have to sink your teeth right into it and something about that bothers me. I rather have a nice carrot or broccolli most of the time... but I'm happy to say that I now have to eat fruit because of my organic produce delivery and it's a good thing. I just discovered that I really like Pluots. It's a cross between a plum and an apricot. It's more like a plum than an apricot and they are one of the best natural resources of vitamin A. So go out and get some pluots today!
We also have 2 apple trees, a pear tree, a plum tree and 2 peach trees at the new house so it's a good thing I'm warming to the idea of eating more fruit now because we will soon have a house FULL of fruit.
Thursday, August 7, 2008
Eli Graves is here!
Yesterday at 11:34 a.m. Elijah Francis Graves (Eli) was born! He weighed 8 lb. 9 oz. and was 21 1/4 inches tall. He has black curly hair and really big hands and feet. He was gracious enough to stay awake and let all of us hold and talk to him for a good hour plus last night and we're all head over heals in love with the little guy. Kelsey and Brian are both doing great and can't wait to get home with their new little family member.
Friday, August 1, 2008
My Husband the Restaurant Critic...
A few weeks ago Charlie and I went to this restaurant by our house called Entotria. While we were there they asked us to take part in a little video for City Search. They only used Charlie's portion for the actual video (even though I had just watched an episode of America's Next Top Model explaining how to answer questions during an interview - I totally froze when I got in front of the camera. Sorry ANTM contestants modeling really is hard). Anyway, check out the video on city search:
http://seattle.citysearch.com/profile/46320554/seattle_wa/enotria.html
Tuesday, July 29, 2008
New Favorite Dinner
Charlie and I have a new favorite summertime dinner. It's easy to make and so good that I had to share.
Sloppy BBQ Chicken Sandwiches
2-3 servings
2 boneless skinless chicken breasts
1-2 tablespoons cilantro
1 walla walla sweet onion
1 tablespoon of oil
2-3 tablespoons of Tom Douglas Rub with Love Ancho Molasses BBQ Sauce (or delicious bbq sauce of your choice)
Whole Wheat hamburger buns
All I do is cook up a little boneless skinless chicken breasts. We don't have a microwave so I just boil it in a pot of water with some seasoning - usually a little Mexican seasoning or something with some spiciness (to be honest I don't know if this really adds any flavor, but it makes me feel good because it changes the water into more of a broth). Boil until done, then chop it up in small pieces and put it in the fridge to chill it.
Chop the cilantro and about 1/4 of the onion very finely and mix in with the chicken. Slice the rest of the onion into strips. Heat about 1 tablespoon of oil in a pan over med-high heat and add the onion strips. Season with some salt and cook until golden brown. Add to the chicken mixture.
Take the chicken mixture out of fridge and add the bbq sauce. Toast the buns and heap the chicken on top! Yummy! (one time I also made some coleslaw and put this on the sandwich too, I enjoyed this a lot, but Charlie was less enthusiastic...)
Sunday, July 27, 2008
So proud of my pots...
I got back from Spokane on Thursday afternoon and I planned to go to the nursery to plant my pots that afternoon... but instead I got a flat tire on the way home from the dog park and had to scrap that plan and put it off for the weekend. Fortunately, yesterday I finally finished the two on my front porch. I picked out all the plants by myself and I really tried to pay attention to the sunlight, watering and other needs of the plants, so hopefully I got it right and all will flourish. I was more interested in picking out pretty flowers, textures and height and shape of the plants and at the very least I think I got that part right. I even picked out some fragrant items so hopefully the next time you are waiting for me to come to the door you'll feel calmed and soothed by the smell of lavender and orange blossoms. :)
Full Circle Farm
Charlie and I joined a CSA with Full Circle Farm in Carnation and we had our first delivery a week ago. Check out all the fresh, local and organic fruits and veggies we got! We got our delivery on Thursday and I had to leave for a week in Spokane on Sunday so we were under some serious pressure to use them all up quickly, but I made a summer squash and corn soup with the squash and corn and a kale and beet salad, a cherry compote that I'm saving for this week, a couple green salads with amazingly delicious avocados and more... Check it out for yourself, you can request special items and switch out fruits or veggies that you don't like!
http://www.fullcirclefarm.com/
Friday, July 18, 2008
All the baby showers are over, now it's time for Milton!
Kelsey had another baby shower last night with family this time. I was amazed at the talent and skill that went into some of the gifts. You should visit Kelsey's blog for some examples, but here's a pic of me, Mom, Kelse and Grandma enjoying ourselves. Kelsey and Milton received quite a bounty of gifts... hopefully it will inspire Milton to come out and see it all for himself. He's not due for another 2 weeks, but I have a feeling he's coming sooner than that!
Tuesday, July 15, 2008
Lemons and pots and plants, oh my!
Today I am going shopping for pots with my Mom's bff B-Z. She is a buyer for a store and therefore has access to a fancy pot store that Swansons and Ravenna Gardens and all the local gardening stores get their fancy pots from. I am thrilled because I always longingly walk by the Ravenna Gardens pot displays and quickly walk away before I can convince myself that $100 (or sometimes even more!) is a reasonable price for a pot. Soon I will be walking by with a big smile knowing that I got myself a deal on some of those same pots! I love a good bargain! My plan is to buy a tall pot for the front porch to go with a small squat one that I already have and maybe a couple more for the back deck, and if I can find something perfect then one for my living room to add a little indoor life to that room. I have already set my sights on a plant for the living room. It's ambitious for a novice gardener like me, but I'm motivated so I think I can make it work. Hopefully sometime this winter you will visit us and find that we have our very own, fruit producing, meyer lemon tree! Wouldn't that be the coolest thing? Apparently they smell good too! Love the smell of lemons... These trees come with a 3 year warranty too so that's bolstering my confidence quite a bit :)
Sunday, July 13, 2008
New Friends...
Look how happy Sammy is about all of her new friends!
We teamed up with Charlie's college friend Sean and his girlfriend Amy to create a dinner club. We each found another brave couple that would be willing to commit to a monthly dinner to be hosted by one of us each month. Saturday was the first one and I'm excited to say that we all hit it off and this just might work! We didn't plan this, but fortuitously 3 out of the 4 couples has at least one member that moved to Seattle in the last 6 years. I don't think I've been to a Seattle party with that many out of staters since my first frat party! I had planned a Northwest themed meal, so if all the out of staters haven't had a chance to get their fill of Washington flavors, then they might of last night... Anyway, I think it was a great way to meet some new people and I can't wait to see what next month's party has in store. Here are some recipes and pictures from the night:
Warm Goat Cheese with Tomato Herb Salad
1/2 cup dried break crumbs
salt & pepper
1 egg
goat cheese
tomatoes - the recipe actually calls for beefstake slices, but I used grape tomatoes and assorted heirlooms because the color was prettier
2 cups of lightly packed mixed herbs - my herb garden had a hard time with this tall order, but I managed. In retrospect I would have added some arugula or something
balsalmic glaze - the recipe calls for red wine vinegar, but I prefer balsamic (especially the yummy reduced kind that comes as a glaze)
olive oil
Slice the goat cheese into medalions. Dip in egg, then coat with bread crumbs. Refriderate for 15 minutes.
Toss the herbs and tomatoes together and dress with a little oil and vinegar. I added a little garlic, red pepper flakes and fennel, because I cannot leave anything simple. If you found the beefstake tomatoes instead, then toss the herbs in a little dressing and place a slice of tomato on each plate with some dressed herbs on top.
Heat a large nonstick skillet over med-high heat. Add 2 tablespoons of oil. When the oil is almost smoking, add the cheese rounds. Cook until lightly browned, about 45 seconds, then turn and cook the other side until the cheese feels just quivery, about 45 seconds longer. Place the cheese on top of your salads and serve immediately.
Alder Smoked Salmon with Raineir Cherry Walla Walla Onion Relish
Alder planks - soak them overnight so they don't burn up
Salmon
1 t Salt
1/4 t freshly ground pepper
1/4 t mustard powder
1/4 or less of brown sugar
olive oil
1 T butter
Mix together the salt and pepper, mustard powder and brown sugar. Brush the salmon with melted butter and season with your mixture.
Put the soaked planks on the grill and cover. Heat each side for about 3 minutes (or follow the directions that came with your planks). Once finished, immediately brush the plank with olive oil and lay the salmon on top. Cook until done. FYI - it took a LONG time for our salmon to cook so plan accordingly.
Relish:
2 Walla Walla onions
1/4 lb cherries
balsamic vinegar
salt and pepper
grill the onions with salt and pepper. Chop them up. Chop up the cherries. Mix onions and cherries with a tablespoon or so of the vinegar, add salt and pepper to taste. FYI - I used a little reduced balsamic vinegar that comes as a glaze instead and found it delicious. I also used a tiny bit of smoked black sea salt and that added a nice smokiness.
We also had some these recipes out of two of the barefoot contessa's cookbooks.
Green Green Spring Vegetables
http://www.foodnetwork.com/food/recipes/recipe/0,,FOOD_9936_35318,00.html
Coconut Cupcakes - I know there's nothing Northwest about coconut, but I L-O-V-E these cupcakes, so whatever :)
http://www.foodnetwork.com/food/recipes/recipe/0,,FOOD_9936_21486,00.html
We teamed up with Charlie's college friend Sean and his girlfriend Amy to create a dinner club. We each found another brave couple that would be willing to commit to a monthly dinner to be hosted by one of us each month. Saturday was the first one and I'm excited to say that we all hit it off and this just might work! We didn't plan this, but fortuitously 3 out of the 4 couples has at least one member that moved to Seattle in the last 6 years. I don't think I've been to a Seattle party with that many out of staters since my first frat party! I had planned a Northwest themed meal, so if all the out of staters haven't had a chance to get their fill of Washington flavors, then they might of last night... Anyway, I think it was a great way to meet some new people and I can't wait to see what next month's party has in store. Here are some recipes and pictures from the night:
Warm Goat Cheese with Tomato Herb Salad
1/2 cup dried break crumbs
salt & pepper
1 egg
goat cheese
tomatoes - the recipe actually calls for beefstake slices, but I used grape tomatoes and assorted heirlooms because the color was prettier
2 cups of lightly packed mixed herbs - my herb garden had a hard time with this tall order, but I managed. In retrospect I would have added some arugula or something
balsalmic glaze - the recipe calls for red wine vinegar, but I prefer balsamic (especially the yummy reduced kind that comes as a glaze)
olive oil
Slice the goat cheese into medalions. Dip in egg, then coat with bread crumbs. Refriderate for 15 minutes.
Toss the herbs and tomatoes together and dress with a little oil and vinegar. I added a little garlic, red pepper flakes and fennel, because I cannot leave anything simple. If you found the beefstake tomatoes instead, then toss the herbs in a little dressing and place a slice of tomato on each plate with some dressed herbs on top.
Heat a large nonstick skillet over med-high heat. Add 2 tablespoons of oil. When the oil is almost smoking, add the cheese rounds. Cook until lightly browned, about 45 seconds, then turn and cook the other side until the cheese feels just quivery, about 45 seconds longer. Place the cheese on top of your salads and serve immediately.
Alder Smoked Salmon with Raineir Cherry Walla Walla Onion Relish
Alder planks - soak them overnight so they don't burn up
Salmon
1 t Salt
1/4 t freshly ground pepper
1/4 t mustard powder
1/4 or less of brown sugar
olive oil
1 T butter
Mix together the salt and pepper, mustard powder and brown sugar. Brush the salmon with melted butter and season with your mixture.
Put the soaked planks on the grill and cover. Heat each side for about 3 minutes (or follow the directions that came with your planks). Once finished, immediately brush the plank with olive oil and lay the salmon on top. Cook until done. FYI - it took a LONG time for our salmon to cook so plan accordingly.
Relish:
2 Walla Walla onions
1/4 lb cherries
balsamic vinegar
salt and pepper
grill the onions with salt and pepper. Chop them up. Chop up the cherries. Mix onions and cherries with a tablespoon or so of the vinegar, add salt and pepper to taste. FYI - I used a little reduced balsamic vinegar that comes as a glaze instead and found it delicious. I also used a tiny bit of smoked black sea salt and that added a nice smokiness.
We also had some these recipes out of two of the barefoot contessa's cookbooks.
Green Green Spring Vegetables
http://www.foodnetwork.com/food/recipes/recipe/0,,FOOD_9936_35318,00.html
Coconut Cupcakes - I know there's nothing Northwest about coconut, but I L-O-V-E these cupcakes, so whatever :)
http://www.foodnetwork.com/food/recipes/recipe/0,,FOOD_9936_21486,00.html
Home Improvement!
Today we got a new chandelier for the kitchen. I never liked the one that came with the house and this morning I was looking through the Pacific NW section of the paper (I love to look at the mansions for sale in that section) and there was an add for Rejuvination that featured the light of my dreams. The Rejuvination store is just south of Safeco Field and they have some really cool stuff there. It seemed to me that the focus of the store is to provide lighting, light switches, door knobs, etc. that match up to the period of your house. I didn't ask about the period for the light we picked out, but it has a cute retro vibe so hopefully it isn't totally out of character with our house.
Before, we had this really ugly very Shaky's Pizza circa 1988 chandelier:
After, cute and unique!
http://www.rejuvenation.com/index.html?ipb=GA2001&gclid=CMLUm8z7vZQCFSEbagod9HgLUA
Before, we had this really ugly very Shaky's Pizza circa 1988 chandelier:
After, cute and unique!
http://www.rejuvenation.com/index.html?ipb=GA2001&gclid=CMLUm8z7vZQCFSEbagod9HgLUA
Friday, July 11, 2008
Sammy's Dream Day
One of the most important things in Sammy's life is her collection of balls... she loves tennis balls that squeak the most, then plain tennis balls (preferably one that's been left behind by another dog), then squishy plasticy ones that she can destroy and then any other kind of ball (I've even seen her try and pick up a basketball), so you can only imagine Sammy's pure shock and delight when we arrived at the dog park yesterday to discover 2 garbage bags, filled to the brim with tennis balls. Sammy could not pull herself away. She would grab one and I'd throw it, she'd bring it back, discard it, grab another one... we did this for probably 30 minutes and went through about half of one bag before I finally convinced her that it was time to go swimming... She ran around the park like it was Christmas morning and as she approached each new dog to play I could swear that each dog was saying to the other "Did you see the bags of tennis balls?!?"
Thursday, July 10, 2008
It's hard work being a doodle...
Charlie and I are both morning people so our household is up an out of bed pretty early... this is even more so now that we don't have adequate curtains to block out the blinding sunrise, but Sammy is another story. She is not a "morning dog". She wakes up for her breakfast and then promptly goes right back to bed (with her favorite ball of course). This morning she was in deep REM and slept like this for the entire time that I was getting ready. She was nice enough to lazily get up and walk me to the door when I left, but I have a feeling she went right back up to bed and is probably sleeping there right now! What a lucky little doodle!
Monday, July 7, 2008
Back from KC!
Kansas City was actually very pleasant. They have lots of parks and shopping and the city was much prettier than I expected. So that was a nice surprise. I sure am glad to be home though and I want to tell you guys about the book I'm reading. It's called What is the What and it's by one of my favorite authors, Dave Eggers (If you haven't read A Heartbreaking Work of Staggering Genius then I highly recommend that you do) but his new book is actually a biography of a guy from Sudan. He was one of the lost boys that made their way here to the states after having their families and villages murdered. These kids wandered through jungles and deserts to find their way to refuge camps and the story of how they managed it is riveting and heartbreaking. I have to keep reminding myself that it's a true story, that thousands of little kids actually made this trip. Anyway, it's a great book and it really opens your eyes to struggles in other parts of the world and makes you thankful for what you have. There's nothing like a story about civil war and refuge camps to make a 5 day business trip to KC seem pleasant...
http://www.amazon.com/What-Vintage-Dave-Eggers/dp/0307385906
Saturday, June 28, 2008
Glassybaby Mania
I went to the glassybaby seconds sale last weekend and it was mayhem. I was prepared for chaos, but I didn't expect the level of excitement and pushing and shoving that was the glassybaby second sale. I got there about 45 minutes before the sale started and I was the last person in line before the line turned the corner to start circling the block. Once it was my turn inside the little studio shop I got a box and had to find my way through the crowd to the different colors set on each table. The smart, veteran glassybaby ladies all had handy tuperware boxes of their own. I was jealous. I went in without a plan or color scheme and it was a mistake, I was immediately overwhelmed by other people's beautiful collections of colors and there was NO time to figure out what colors I like best, so I picked a hodgepodge of color. It may not be a martha stewart collection, but it's certainly festive - oh and some of them are definitely seconds because they don't "glow" like a glassybaby should, so if I ever go again I'm going to be like those totally intense ladies with flashlights so I can figure out which glassybabies glow and which ones are duds... for now I'm pleased as punch with my collection of glassybaby rejects. :)
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