A busy 7 days of food food food! Did i mention food?
November 30, 2008
The december holidays are a day away (if you count advent), and we have kicked off the season with 3 dinners for thanksgiving, and our own tomorrow afternoon.
What started out as a relatively small family get together has morphed into dinner for 13 (yeah, i know the superstition, but i don’t think it will bother anyone.) So we are having it at e&T’s, which can easily accommodate that many, whereas our tiny abode would not.
In the past, I have made big dinners for Das and the moth that last all day, starting with salads around 11am, and culminating in something sweet around 9p. One year i served 18 courses, but it took that long to eat them.
This year, i’m going as traditional as i can bring myself to do so, turkey was out of the question, i didn’t talk to many people who really actually liked it other than on thanksgiving, so I’m making game hens and a pork shoulder, with cranberries, sweet mashed potatoes, mashed potatoes, and stuffing. I’ve never made 3 of those, so im awake and nervous, a little bit.
The only person i really really want to impress is Das, and then after that is the moth. Ideally, i would like everyone else (starting with the rest of the quad) to enjoy it immensely as well. For Das’ birthday, i cooked for a lot of the same people, so I know i can do it : )
One thing that is hard is distinguishing a good dish when you don’t really eat it. I don’t eat cranberries except in juice, and i don’t even like sweet potatoes, so those go by how well emmie likes them. She was asleep when i made the cran, so let me share my recipe with you for that
4c cran
1c sugar
1c water
1tsp lemon zest
1/2 tsp pepper
Make a simple syrup by dissolving sugar in boiling water. Add cran and zest and pepper, stir. Return to a boil then simmer for 10 mins or til cranberries burst.
That’s it!
Here’s the simple steps to the smashed sweetatoes.
5lbs sweet potatoes, baked til they peel easily.
*i have found that this takes waaay longer than an hr at 350: i baked an extra 30 mins on 400, and then they were perfetto*
2tsp vanilla extract
several handfuls of brown sugar
splash of cream (maybe 1/3 cup)
put together and then Mash. I am hoping to whip them in a food processor if there’s one available tomorrow, but if not, it will be no hardship, they are very soft and not terribly lumpy.
I have been having quite a time figuring out the stuffing. I didn’t want it to sit all assembled overnight, so i put the chopped veggies in one container and the bread crumbles in another, and will combine tomorrow before baking. I am thinking about using bacon grease for sauteeing the veggies, to add to the sausage flavours. I haven’t decided
I am going to refrain from including this recipe til I know how it comes out. I hope it does well, it’s going up against some serious stuffing competition (m of m & W; Master O, i mean you!)
One of the things i love about this holiday is the tradition of sharing it with friends. And it means so much to me that so many people have touched our lives in the last year, and that i had a hard time keeping this list reasonable. The community (and my only vanilla, the moth) has been so supportive of us, and has reached us in so many ways. Thank you to all of you who will break bread with us, again, and here is to many more meals and warm hearths together.
mitda
Rule Britannia
July 22, 2008
emmie and i threw Das a surprise party for his 40th birthday.
we started planning it on monday, and by wednesday, he totally knew what was up. Except for the company
and the food.
My darling Das is from England, and once introduced me to the Melton Mowbray Pork Pie. Which i did enjoy, very much. Even one superbowl sunday, that’s what we ate. Forget hot dogs and hamburgers w/ football (american). We had these pork pies. And, if i’m not mistaken, Canadian beer.
So, Das’ birthday approaches (it was on Sunday) and i knew i had it in mind to make Melton Mowbray pork pies. And then, in chatting with someone from the community, to throw him a surprise party. And then discussing with someone else from the community, i realized that we could do all English pub fare.
So, along about Tuesday, maybe wednesday, Das figures out there’s a party afoot. I burst into tears, because i really wanted to surprise him, really a lot.
I can’t keep a secret from him for anything, though.
But i managed (with brave help) to perform this feat:
Melton Mowbray Pork Pie
Welsh Rarebit
Scotch Eggs (thanks to Scarlett)
Bangers and Mash (with thanks to e&T)
with chips and queso, watermelon, and (drum roll) Cheez Whiz on Celery!
Melton Mowbray pies are very weird, and a bit more difficult than Cornish Pasties, but i don’t know how to make those either, and dove into discovering a good recipe, one i could get my head around without too much sturm und drang. My mother aided by preparing the stock the night before, and roasting waaay too much pork (i can’t convert in my head, clearly.)
When i do them again, i won’t roast the pork beforehand, but it was much easier to manipulate already cooked. Here’s the recipe from which i bounced:
And the rarebit
Could be this:
“Rare bit of eating” or
a slur against welsh, who were, by different ideas, either very poor (so no meat) or very poor at hunting.
(i’ve always heard it pronounced “rabbit”, but i heard otherwise sunday.)
I had lots of compliments on the rarebit, which was pleasant, but Das eating two pork pies was enormously meaningful to me, as i have never said i could bake worth a shit.
thanks to everyone who came, and ate, and talked and had a really good time.
love, mitda
Iced Coffee Invitation
June 24, 2008
There is a simple trick to iced coffee perfection: brew double strength. To wit: if there is a 12 cup coffee maker, put 6 cups of water with and the normal amount of grinds. One could just brew twice into same pot in order to have 12 cups of 2x strength coffee.
Simple, right?
Das likes iced coffee, double strength or no, in the afternoons. If my mint plant had made it, i would have minty water or minty lemonade on hand, i’m sure, but the mint didn’t live, alas, and so for refreshing delicious, there’s a good chance you’ll be offered an iced coffee should you decide to drop by. Please, do, by all means, drop by.
I remember iced coffee being very popular at starbucks when i worked there, especially in afternoons, especially in the summers. I hadn’t thought i would like it all that much, but i gave it a try, of course with a little cream and sugar (sweet and creamy in our parlance), and discovered quite a treat.
(Psst: At Starbucks they make their Iced Coffee with Italian Roast, unless they’ve changed it– Italian is nearly as dark as French.)
I have thought about making Sun Tea but don’t have an appropriate vessel on hand so to steep, so haven’t quite jumped on that Southern refresher just yet. I feel sure that before too long I’ll find something.