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Tuesday, December 10, 2013
Sunday, December 8, 2013
Day 8
So
yummy when it's cold outside
Parisian Hot Chocolate
Makes
4 servings
2
cups milk
4
oz top-notch semi-sweet or bittersweet chocolate, finely chopped
pinch
of sea salt
In
medium saucepan, warm milk, chocolate and salt. Heat until it begins
to boil. Lower the heat to very low and simmer, whisking frequently,
for 3 minutes.
Pour
into small cups and serve, with a cloud of whipped cream if desired. Add
some sugar to taste.
….
from David Lebovitz's book the Sweet Life in Paris
Friday, December 6, 2013
Thursday, December 5, 2013
Day 5
The
Grinch: “The nerve of those Whos. Inviting me down
there - on such short notice! Even if I wanted to go my schedule
wouldn't allow it. 4:00, wallow in self pity; 4:30, stare into the
abyss; 5:00, solve world hunger, tell no one; 5:30, jazzercize; 6:30,
dinner with me - I can't cancel that again; 7:00, wrestle with my
self-loathing... I'm booked. Of course, if I bump the loathing to 9,
I could still be done in time to lay in bed, stare at the ceiling and
slip slowly into madness. But what would I wear?”
...from
the movie How the Grinch Stole Christmas
Tuesday, December 3, 2013
Day 3
This has Christmas written all over it:
Glühwein (Mulled Wine)
Ingredients:
1
bottle (750 ml.) red wine
6
whole cloves
4
star anise pods
2
cinnamon sticks
2
juniper berries
2
oranges
1/4
cup brown sugar
Preparation:
Pour
wine into a medium pot. Add cloves, star anise, cinnamon and juniper
berries. Bring to
a gentle simmer over low heat, don't let it boil. Meanwhile, wash
oranges and cut into 1/4-inch slices, toss into wine. Add brown sugar
and stir until dissolved. Simmer wine mixture 10 minutes. Strain and
serve piping hot in mugs.
From
Cloud Nine Alpine Bistro, Colorado via Sunset Magazine Dec 2013
Sunday, December 1, 2013
Tuesday, November 26, 2013
Real fiction
I
was a kid that was constantly reading, whatever I could get my
fingers on, from my father's extensive Readers Digest collection and
his Bertelsmann Book Club books to our small town's library stack,
reading my way through anything that looked even faintly interesting.
One
of the books that fell into my hands was called The Egg and I
which also had a few sequels. I
couldn't get enough of these stories that quirkily describe a place
that was completely exotic to me. Where ferns grow as big as
umbrellas and mushrooms the size of my father's fist (which is a very
big one!). Muddy egg farms house hundreds of chickens, thousands of
eggs and cake recipes ask for 40 eggs at a time. There are comically
eccentric neighbors that smuggle illegal alcohol, and the heroine has
to wake up at 4 am to catch a ferry to go to work, and sleeps in her
car when the one going home is unserviceable. Spunky skunks and
raccoons bug the hell out of the residents. And always rain and more
rain, every plant growing so fast that you can practically watch its
progress.
I
would never have believed that this was real, until I got married and
found myself with a family living on Washington's Vashon Island, the setting of the story. Whenever I visit and set foot on
this darling little island, I can't help but feel like I am stepping
into a work of fiction.
Vashon
just has that dreamy, fairy-tale way about it, especially in the
winter, with quiet and misty days and the comforting smells of moss
and wet soil. And everything does grow like crazy!
My
brother-in-law Steve just walks outside their house and picks plenty
of rainbow chard that has taken over an empty flower bed, growing
like a weed. He makes an awesome, stick-to-your-ribs kinda breakfast
for everyone almost every day. It varies at times, but always involves
some hardy sautéed greens,
lots of slowly caramelized onions and an ungodly amount of finely
chopped fragrant garlic with some fresh eggs from their chickens
cracked on top. The cozy kitchen smells delish and the commingling of
garlic with a cup of strong coffee works surprisingly well. Nothing
fictitious about that!
Serves
2 - 4
1
bunch of red or rainbow chard, removed from stem and roughly chopped
to bite-sized pieces
½
small onion, finely sliced
1
clove garlic, minced
1
TB olive oil
1
sweet potato, diced into ½ inch cubes
4
large eggs
Salt
and pepper
Sharp
cheddar cheese (optional)
Wash
chard and dry well. In a large skillet, cook onion in olive oil over
medium-high heat for about 5 minutes or until golden. Add the sweet
potato cubes and garlic and cook for about 10 more minutes or until potatoes are barely tender. Add chard to the skillet and cook,
stirring occasionally until the greens begin to wilt and cook down
but are still bright green, about 2-3 minutes. Season with salt and
pepper. Make four small dents in chard and crack eggs into it. Cover
and cook until just set. Grate some sharp cheddar over eggs before
serving.
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