Tuesday, September 29, 2009

Simple Fall Lunch



I feel my appetite shifting a bit with the season. I always eat less in autumn and beyond. I think it is because flavors move from being light and refreshing to deeper, denser, and more flavorful.

I have been writing more and working less so I have also returned to my preferred mode of eating: grazing. I eat toast with jam in the morning and a large cup of coffee with milk a couple of hours later. For lunch, leftovers. Yesterday it was a thin crust pizza topped with cheese, lots and lots of basil, and prosciutto; today a large pear, some sliced cheese and some buttery salty pita chips. I always have a snack. Today it was something sweet in honor of my friend Suzi's fortieth birthday.

For dinner, who knows? It was cool and windy today and for the first time it seems possible to eat something fallish -- tomatoes over polents, roasted vegetables and pasta, a big full glass of red wine.

This is my favorite time of year and I love diving into all the flavors that are available. I'm off to shop for dinner produce at Toby's -- I think an eggplant is calling my name.

Monday, September 28, 2009

Laura Parker's Taste of Place

I'd love for you to check this out:

http://www.culinate.com/articles/features/laura_parker_taste_of_place

It is an article I wrote for the Culinate website about tasting dirt.

Really, I liked it!

Cooking on vacation...

I am at it again: away from home on a writing hiatus.
So nice to experience quiet -- this morning I was awakened to the sound of a flat black crow tap tap tapping on the skylight above me. The day makes me realize how rarely I actually get true space and silence in my everyday life.
I am alone so I can cook whatever I want. Last night it was a leftover hamburger (slider size, sans bun) with a big green salad followed by a scoop of coffee ice cream and a hunk of bi-rite rocky road chocolate. So decadent.
What would you make if you were alone and on vacation?
Do all dietary rules go out the window?
Do you cook or eat out?
What makes you feel fed when you are away from home?

Thursday, September 17, 2009

Yosemite Day Two: North Dome




Did I mention I'm in Cambridge, Massachusetts? This could explain why these Yosemite North Dome photos, taken a mere six days ago, seem like they were taken in a past lifetime.

So beautiful, right? It was an 8.8 mile trek that uniquely started at a higher elevation than it ended. And I did the whole thing in Danskos. When I hiked in them on Friday I thought my real hiking shoes were in the car. Surprise, surprise, they were really on the floor at home. But I did it! One fellow (starting off on a major back packing trek) said "cool hiking clogs."

I am always game to be the one starting a new fashion trend, though usually I prefer my forays into fashion to be slightly more deliberate.

Monday, September 14, 2009

Yosemite Day One: Vernal Falls





What a beautiful day Friday was. After an early morning yoga class and a latte I was primed for a road trip. And oh how easy it was to slip into vacation mode.

This was our first hike of the weekend, originating from the Yosemite Valley floor. I hiked this "short easy hike" (according to a volunteer ranger) that turned out to be a "strenuous and up hill hike with some decent elevation changes" in Dansko clogs.

Afterwords, I felt very deserving of a bison burger, french fries and an icy cold beer.

Wednesday, September 09, 2009

Shakshouka



This Sunday night supper is an excellent example of the different meals M. and I are drawn to. I am the type that tears recipes from magazines, clips them from the paper and prints them off of the web. And then there are the cookbooks -- it is overwhelming, really, when I think of all the recipes I have. And yet, there are still some days I can't decide what to fix for dinner.

M. is the total opposite. He cooks from his head, knowing somehow what will taste good with what, where to add, and where to simply let ingredients shine.

I was so surprised when he found this recipe from the September issue of Sunset Magazine.

"Save this" he said. "I want to make it."

The recipe was for "paprika tomatoes with poached eggs," aka Shakshouka, a dish from Tunisia and Israel. We had it for dinner that night.

There is nothing about this recipe that would have compelled me to dog-ear the page. Poached eggs simmered in tomatoes? Weird. But it was good -- rich and saucy (its chilly here in San Francisco). We ate our tomatoes and eggs with toast and wiped our plates with hunks of Firestone Bread made in Oakland.

We both agreed that it was a quick and easy go-to dish for any meal (it would be super for lunch or brunch), and could be especially good over rice or pasta on those nights when you don't want to cook at all.

Now, as summer turns to fall, we are thinking again about the kinds of dishes that will keep us warm when it is cold outside. This is one of them. Even if it doesn't sound like your thing, print it out, put it in the big pile of Dishes to Make and promise me you'll try it some day.

1 and 1/2 tsp coriander seeds
1 tsp cumin seeds
1 and 1/2 tablespoons hot or sweet Spanish or Hungarian paprika
about 1/2 tsp salt
3 large cloves garlic, peeled
1 large poblano chile stemmed, seeded, and chopped (we forgot this & it was fine without).
1 to 2 tablespoons olive oil
2 tablespoons tomato paste (forgot this too, still good)
1 and 1/2 pounds roma tomatoes, halved lengthwise
4 large eggs
freshly ground pepper

1. Put coriander, cumin, paprika, and 1/2 teaspoon salt in a mortar and pound until crushed (or seal in plastic bag and roll with rolling pin). Add garlic and pound into a paste. Set aside.
2. In a large frying pan over medium heat, cook chile in 1 tbl. oil, stirring often until well browned, about 10-12 minutes.
3. Add spice mixture and tomato paste, and cook, stirring, until fragrant, about 1 minute. Stir in 3/4 cup water, then tomatoes. Cook, turning tomatoes occasionally, until softened, 10 to 20 minutes; add more water, 1/4 cup at a time if the mixture starts to get dry -- you want some juices simmering!
4. With a wooden spoon, make 4 depressions in tomato mix and crack an egg in each. Season with salt and pepper. Cover and cook until eggs are set but yolks are still runny, about 5 minutes.
Serve right away with good crusty bread and big green salad.

Sunday, September 06, 2009

Blueberry muffins for when the fridge breaks



When I woke up this morning, the old fridge was in the middle of our (very small) kitchen. I couldn't reach the stove or the toaster or the temporary icebox with milk, almond butter, and other cold sundries. The table was piled with dishes, glass wear, a farmer's market box of tomatoes, figs, peaches, nectarines, and assorted bottles of hard alcohol. Don't ask.

Fortunately, these muffins were within reach. I made them on Friday, just after we discovered the fridge was broken. It was a new recipe, picked because it used yogurt, eggs, and butter -- all perishable things I was worried about using up ASAP.

The recipe calls for lemon zest and cinnamon, but I found this convoluted the flavor a bit. If I made them again I would pick either citrus flavors or spices -- not both. And I might add even more of either: 1 tablespoon plus zest or 1 teaspoon plus cinnamon to bump up either the spicy or zesty qualities.

I was happy that the recipe used wheat and white flour which made for a dense and puffy muffin. And they're big too -- not the puny muffins some recipes make.

They were the only thing that got me through a messy, disorganized, not-at-all-relaxing morning. Ok, the divine latte from 4 Barrel Coffee helped too. I am developing a serious Sunday morning addiction.

Blueberry Muffins
1 cup all purpose flour
1 cup whole wheat flour
1 and 1/2 teaspoon baking soda
1/2 cup brown sugar
1 cup plain yogurt (I used fat free because this is what we had -- it turned out super)
2 eggs
1/4 cup melted butter
1+ teaspoon cinnamon OR 1+ tablespoon
1 cup blueberries, fresh or frozen

Preheat oven to 375 and spray muffin tins with cooking spray and line with liners.
In a small mixing bowl, sift together flours and baking soda. In another bowl, combine sugar, yogurt, eggs, butter, cinnamon or lemon zest. Mix until thoroughly combined.
Add the dry ingredients and mix until just blended -- don't over mix! Gently fold in blueberries and spoon the batter into muffin tins, filling each cup 2/3 full.
Bake for 15 minutes or until the tops are golden brown and a toothpick inserted in the middle comes out clean. Cool for 5 minutes before serving.
Makes 12 muffins.

Saturday, September 05, 2009

Simply Breakfast

My new favorite blog:

simplybreakfast.blogspot.com

So beautiful.

What I ate for breakfast today: blueberry muffins made from yogurt, eggs, and butter from the [dead] fridge (recipe to follow), mashed banana, a bit of kefir, and coffee.

Will be at Sears when the doors open!

Friday, September 04, 2009

What a way to start the weekend!

Is there anything more annoying than discovering your fridge doesn't work on the Friday of a holiday weekend? The Bay Bridge is closed and we were planning to stay home, cook in, work on the yard, and rest.

The lack of fridge will put a serious dent in these plans. I hope there's a Labor Day sale at Sears!

Happy cooking this weekend. I am so jealous!

Tuesday, September 01, 2009

Dried Apricot & Peanut Granola Bars



In honor of September, journeys back to school, and our upcoming trip to Yosemite, I decided to dive into the world of granola bars. I was tired of spending dollars and dollars every week on granola bars that were either unsatisfying or delicious but packed a serious caloric punch. I wanted something made just for me: sweet but not too, maybe a little salty, cut to the perfect size for a mid-afternoon snack.

Why didn't I make granola bars sooner? I already make my own granola. Why it never occurred to me that making my own granola bars was just as easy is beyond me. It might have something to do with the large amount of space "all things book writing related" takes up in my mind.

Thanks to Shelly I knew that Ina Garten had a granola bar recipe that was worthy of trying. Of course I had to mix it up a bit, both because I didn't have all the things she called for, and because I wanted to make the granola bar exactly to my liking.

And it was. I sliced these small -- snack size not meal sized -- and they were very good. I stored most in the freezer for our upcoming Yosemite weekend, but I think we're already down to the last two. Another batch will be whipped up this weekend, maybe with Almond Butter and Dried Cherries? Sounds delicious for munching on while hiking, don't you think?


Dried Apricot & Peanut Granola Bars (easily doubled)
1 cup oatmeal
1/2 cup puffed rice cereal
1/2 cup coconut
1/4 cup dried fruit, I used apricots, chopped
1 tablespoon butter
1/4 cup honey
1/8 cup brown sugar
1 teaspoon vanilla
1/4 teaspoon salt
1 tablespoon peanut butter


Preheat oven to 350 degrees and line a standard sized loaf pan with parchment.
Combine oats, puffed rice, coconut, and dried fruit in bowl.
Place butter, honey, brown sugar, vanilla, and salt in a small saucepan and bring to a boil over medium heat. Add peanut butter. Cook and stir for a minute, then pour over oat and dried fruit mix.
Stir well to combine (will be gooey).
Pour mix into prepared pan. Wet your fingers and lightly press mixture evenly into the pan. Bake for 25 to 30 minutes, until light golden.
Cool well (2 to 3 hours) before attempting to slice into squares.
Makes 6 "snack sized" rectangles.

P.S. Did you eat granola bars when you were a child? I never did. After school it was apples and peanut butter, yogurt, or cheese and crackers for me. Now I wonder how I made it through the school day without a mix of oats, dried fruit, and nuts.

P.P.S. Check out Smitten Kitchen's version of the same Ina Gaten recipe here. The granola bar mood in the air is palpable! Get out the oats.