Sunday, April 19, 2009

For lunch the other day, I broiled Salmon fillet and made a tomato-and-herbs sauce to accompany it. Served with brown rice, this was a meal that left both Patrick and I satisfied. I'm not much of a fish-eater, but the tomato-herb sauce helped me appreciate salmon in a whole new way. What a fantastic alternative to the staple of tartar sauce. love, A

Happy Birthday Geoff

for my brother-in-law's birthday, I asked what kind of cake I could make him as a gift from us. he requested chocolately chocolate chocolate cake- with cherries. then Patrick suggested we make it in the shape of Number Man- a disgruntled character Geoff created and has written some comic books about. Thus-the creation of the cake you see pictured. Number Man is looking at a pile of the leftovers after cutting him out... saying "What a shitty cake."
The ridiculous part: when we delivered the cake, part of the Number Man frosting stuck to the cover of the cake pan...and therefore ruined it before Geoff got to see it. but he was gracious and cited the irony of how a ruined cake fits the essence of Number Man.
Tracing with icing is trickier than I suspected- but it turned out alright for my first try.... love, A

Tuesday, April 7, 2009

ginger beer


Here it is! The much anticipated beverage has been bottled and will be available for our consumption in 14 days. It smelled so good today as I transferred it from the large pot to the liter jars, and it had a bit of fizz already. This is such a fun process- I feel like Christmas is just a couple of weeks away! I'll be sure to update once we have a taste. love, A

Dill Pickles


They taste so good- and now they're half a shelf in the refrigerator. I made a mistake while mixing the vinegar and water...which led me to then make a double batch of these to correct the proportions, but I'm excited to be stocked with pickles for the year. It was fun to see what actually goes into a jar of these tangy and great green wonders. love, A

Thursday, March 26, 2009

Spiced Dates

Through a treasured friend next door, I have recently realized how very wonderful dates are. Having just one is a fabulous treat- I consider them nature's caramel. After falling in love with these little wonders, I came across a recipe for 'Stuffed Dates' that included double-boiling them in brandy and orange juice, stuffing them with blanched almonds, and rolling them in a combination of sugar, cinnamon, and orange zest. I substituted coconut oil for the sugar this time, and next time I think I'll try the recipe with evaporated cane juice as the substitute for refined sugar. The down side- the recipe only made 30. This will definitely be made by the double or triple batch next time. I am having visions of these as a traditional holiday treat for us.
I call them Spiced Dates because I think it is a more suitably descriptive name-the cinnamon, orange, caramel-like essence of 'Spiced Dates' are perfect as a decadently warming sweet. love-A

Wednesday, March 25, 2009

Brownies

Patrick surprised me a couple of weeks ago with some "healthy" brownie mix from the co-op. I'm trying to reserve this blog for things made basically from scratch, but this seemed worth mentioning as a jewel because it contains rice flour, evaporated cane juice instead of sugar, and an array of other wonderfully healthier ingredients. The mix was enough for 2 8x8 pans, and this is the second batch, to which I also added some pure maple syrup, a shaved cube of unsweetened cocoa, and chopped walnuts. They were phenomenal. Just like my wonderful husband who brought home the mix that day... xxxoooxxx

A story I found: A young girl was at the dentist for a check up. With much tutting, the dentist examined all her teeth. Finally he announced crossly "Young lady, you've been eating far too many sweet things, several of your teeth need filling."
"Oh goody!" she replied happily. "Can I have chocolate filling please?"

love-A

GINGER beer!

I am incredibly excited about this one. The photo to the left is from the 2nd day of making ginger beer, and the photo to the right is from the 7th. The whole process takes 28 days and at the end we'll have 8 quart-sized bottles of the hopefully delicious non-alcoholic concoction. I'm thinking it will be tasty in the summer over ice, or great for stir fry, or just fantastic in general. More photos and news to come on this rather exciting development. love-A