Wednesday, December 30, 2009

Day 46 - Potato Gratin (again)

I'm sure you remember that on Day 18 (November 2, 2009) I made a potato gratin that didn't exactly thrill me. In fact, I thought it was yucky. So tonight I tried again with much success. Keeping it simple, the only thing I used other than butter, potatoes, milk, salt, and pepper was finely shopped fresh thyme. It was actually quite yummy. I'm feeling much better now, thank you very much.

I just paired the potato gratin with the other turkey tender, pan-fried again. Randy made a little green salad.

Otherwise, I continue unpacking and organizing. Ran another load of laundry. The usual stuff.

And, took a cat-care tour of North County Humane Society. I will be on the Board of Directors officially in 2 days. We have a lot of work to do since the economy has hit all of us non-profits so severely.

Went for a nice long walk with Randy this afternoon. Gee whiz, we live in a beautiful place.

Bottom line: no new recipes today, but I now feel confident about potato gratin

Tuesday, December 29, 2009

Day 45 - No Cooking Due to Avatar

Why is it that some mornings I wake up just filled with drive and enthusiasm, and other days I'm lucky to get out of my pajamas? Yesterday was the former type of day. Today was the latter. It was pressing on towards noon before I was finally dressed and busy working on the last pile of boxes in my studio.

Taking advantage of the week between Christmas and New Year's, that wonderful time when no one is expected to be anywhere doing anything especially useful, I took in a matinee of Avatar in 3D. I love scifi movies and action movies anyway, but this was really something. A nice story with a happy ending. Visually stunning. The last big Mano-a-Mano Fight Scene was too frenetic to follow. That was my only beef. I liked it alot. Good music, too.

After which I went to Barnes & Noble. Randy and I gave each other copies of Barbara Kingsolver's Animal, Vegetable, Miracle for Christmas. One copy in the house is sufficient, so I traded in mine (and a few bucks) for Martha Stewart's Cooking School. More supplemental reading. With pictures.

Randy had some Trader Joe's frozen biryani heated up for me when I got home, bless his heart.

Monday, December 28, 2009

Day 44 - Parsnips and Green Beans

Parsnip or Root Vegetable Puree - pg. 315
Green Beans with Toasted Almonds and Lemon - pg. 292
Pan-Fried Turkey "Tenders" - pg.231

It was a good, productive day. By the time I hit the sack tonight, my studio will be just about completely unpacked. I'm going to add some wall shelves and cabinets as soon as possible (another trip to Ikea; isn't that a shame?). Until then, some of my Barbies and my own art dolls will stay in boxes, but they'll all neatly be in file storage boxes. Of course I'll be moving stuff around and reorganizing for the entire new year, but that's anticipated. And I have to get my 3 floor looms put together and up and running. But that will be fun, not drudgery. Otherwise today? A couple loads of laundry. A grocery expedition to Trader Joe's. We are currently very well stocked with veggies, fruit, and proteins. I also discovered that our local woodpeckers are using the vertical pine posts outside the garage as graineries. They're storing acorns in them. Well, it's better than the bats we had in our ceiling in Los Osos. The birds will poop elsewhere.

Back to cooking tonight! I LOVE parsnips and was thrilled to see 6 recipes for them in the current issue of Fine Cooking. I made their Mashed Parsnips with Lemon and Herbs which is a slightly gussied up version of Alice's root vegetable puree. This veggie puree thing is new to me, and now I'm excited to try pureeing a whole range of root vegetables. FC's parsnip version adds creme fraiche, butter, lemon zest and lemon juice. And whatever chopped up green herbs you happen to have on hand. It was a major M.O. (mouth orgasm).

I also used the last of some green beans to make Green Beans with Toasted Almonds and Lemon, although I used pecans instead of almonds. Very tasty. Rounding out our plates were Pan-Fried Turkey "Tenders," whatever a tender is. I cut one tender in half horizontally to make 2 thin enough for pan frying.

Altogether, this was an excellent dinner, one I would serve guests. And I used my new warming drawer exactly the way I had planned. Instead of juggling 3 dishes simultaneously, I made the parsnips and put them in the drawer. Then I made the green beans and put them in the drawer. Then I made the turkey tenders. Everything was perfectly warm on the table simultaneously and I was cool as a cucumber.

28 recipes completed; 277 to go!

Sunday, December 27, 2009

Day 43 - Leftovers, Leftovers and More Leftovers

Apparently one's Christmas dinner need not have been huge and elaborate for one to have tons of leftovers for days after. This is a good thing.

Breakfast was a sliced pear with a chunk of gingerbread cake and a little cream. Lunch was leftover squash mixed and reheated with leftover pasta and a few pecans. Very tasty. Dinner was the rest of the pozole and leftover bread-machine bread. Three excellent meals. Nothing new was made except the vinaigrette for the green salad with dinner.

I'm thinking that I'll push to finish my TAOS project by the end of 2010. Obviously I won't cook every day. Just as obviously, I'm going to go astray and cook from other source material. But if I stay on track, I ought to be able to conquer those remaining 279 recipes by 12/31/10, don't you think? That's like 3/4s of a recipe a day. Three recipes every four days. Five or 6 every week. How tough can that be? Guess we'll find out.

In Unpacking Land, I unpacked a goodly portion of my weaving yarn today. What got unpacked is now living in one of my Ikea counter cabinets. Yeah! And I unpacked some of my Barbie collection. Hey! It's never too late to have a happy childhood!

And, we went to see another movie. George Clooney's _Up In The Air_. I thought it was funny. Randy thought it was depressing. Clearly a movie that will be interpreted differently by men and women, in my opinion. Clooney is one heck of an actor. He communicates more with his facial expressions than most actors can with an entire Shakespearian script.

That's it for today! Tomorrow I'm shooting for parsnips!

Saturday, December 26, 2009

Day 42 - An OMG! Dinner at Villa Creek

Since we're usually Home Alone on Christmas day, Randy and I have long gone out for dinner rather than eat at home. But, as my standards have improved, my satisfaction with what's available on The Day has diminished. This year I suggested a good, simple meal at home on The Day (which we had and loved) followed by a meal out later. Which was today.

Being new to the north half of San Luis Obispo County, we're just learning the restaurants up here. Tonight we tried Villa Creek in Paso Robles. O.M.G. I had one of the best meals I've ever had in my life, no kidding! VC aims to be local, sustainable and organic. In addition, Executive Chef Tom Fundaro is putting out some really tasty food.

To start, the waitress brought a basket of small, warm flour tortillas with a deeply-flavored, smokey salsa. Since we demolished that in record time, another round was promptly served. Boy, this was way better than the usual bread and butter routine!

Randy started with "fuyu persimmon & bitter greens, Maytag blue cheese, spiced walnuts with apple balsamic vinaigrette." He would only have made the persimmon slices chunkier. My "winter squash soup with sage oil & toasted pumpkin seeds" was perfect. Truly flavorful.

Randy went on to "grilled pork tenderloin with cider mustard sauce, sauteed apples & roasted root vegetables, herbed potato puree." His plate was bare at the end of dinner. I think he even ate his parsley sprig.

You know I love, love, love venison, so I went straight for the "pan seared venison double chop, quinoa lentil stuffed pumpkin with cherry almond demi-glace & sage." There was also some wonderfully flavorful spinach on the plate. The meat for perfect, topped with the cherry sauce. The pumpkin stuffing was surprisingly spicy and lively. The tiny pumpkin was worthy of eating, too, although I only had a few bites and brought the rest home. Let me tell you, the plate was absolutely gorgeous as it was composed. The entree was, by itself, the single most satisfying thing I've ever been served.

Yes, we soldiered on through dessert and coffee. Randy had a fabulous fruit crisp with pecans and a richly scented vanilla gelato. I had an amazing chocolate torte that I nearly couldn't finished. Well, I forced myself. The coffee, unfortunately, was pretty weak-kneed, although generously served in a large French press. Only the coffee kept the entire meal from being nearly perfect.

Yup, the whole thing was pricey, but no worse than a full lunch at the Chez Panisse cafe. I'd rather eat out less often and eat better quality food when we do. I am a happy little foodie tonight.

Otherwise, I spent our cloudy, drizzly day reading and unpacking. The upstairs storage closet is FINISHED! The upstairs bathroom is FINISHED! And I made a major dent in the remaining boxes piled in my studio. YIPPEE!! Mind you, although my studio is large, it has to contain nearly everything that I had spread throughout our entire Los Osos house. I had a lot of my weaving stuff in the family room and garage. Tons more stuff, including all my dyeing stuff, in the garage. Everything else in the sewing room and its closet (which was stuffed to the gills). There was a loom in the living room with assorted stuff scattered about. The only rooms in that house that weren't full of my stuff were the kitchen, bathrooms, and our bedroom. I even had some of my books in Randy's office. Admittedly, I'm putting much of my weaving and knitting yarn into the upstairs storage closet at this house. But, that stuff will get "used up." I promise.

Oh yes, I'm making a quart of Honey-Preserved Clementines today. They have to sit in the frig for a week before using, so I'll let you know about this experiment next week!

Friday, December 25, 2009

Day 41 - A Christmas Miracle!

Hope everyone reading this is having a terrific day today whether or not you are celebrating Christmas. Randy and I have had a lovely peaceful day at home cooking, opening gifts, reading, and just generally poking around.

And, a Christmas miracle occurred! I unpacked the LAST downstairs box this afternoon! The very last. There is a good chance I'll reach my unpacking goal by January 1.

Oddly enough, there was a strong food and cooking theme under the tree this morning. Santa must know. Why else would the kitties give me salmon for Christmas? I'm sure Santa helped with the shopping....

Randy made a terrific pozole for Christmas dinner. He made it with a batch of Santa Fe red chile sauce, which he also made. He says he may adopt this pozole as his new signature dish (which for years has been his fish soup). I made bread-machine bread, and Gingerbread Cake with Root-Beer-Poached Pears for dessert. This is on page 57 of the current issue of Fine Cooking. NOT a simple dish since there are 3 parts to it: the cake, the whipped cream, and the poached pears with root beer sauce. But it sure was good. I'm not sure I've ever made real whipped cream before. Sheez.

I think I've listened to the NPR Christmas stories about 4 times today. Time to move on. Back to global misery and mayhem. And whatever joy you can create in your own little corner of the world.

Thursday, December 24, 2009

Day 40 - Ho Ho Ho Eve

We did 2 remotely interesting things today. We had lunch at Hush Harbor. I ordered one of their daily specials, vaguely referred to as "Salmon Entree." One of the best meals I've had in recent memory, which is saying a lot. Perfect salmon atop perfect risotto, perfectly plated. Then we grocery shopped for stuff for tomorrow. Randy will make pozole. I'll take a stab at the ginger cake with root-beer poached pears in the current issue of Fine Cooking since we were gifted with a box of those fabulous Harry and David pears.

Otherwise, just same-old, same-old and other mop-up operations. Gift wrapping. Floor vacuuming. Pick-up-and-put-away. Last minute Christmas card writing. Tree ornament repair. Email catch up. Cat petting. Dish washing. Real life. No cooking accomplished since Randy made cream of wheat with bananas and raisins for breakfast and neither of us were particularly hungry after our Big Lunch. We just polished off the last of the brie, salami and crackers. I do my very best to keep my holiday expectations extremely low.

Last night I dreamed I had a dump truck. A real one. Now what was that all about? I'm wishing that Santa, and life in general, is treating you very well today.

Wednesday, December 23, 2009

Day 39 - Late Christmas Shopping!

I got something accomplished this morning -- I've nearly finished cleaning and straightening up the upstairs storage closet. Yippee!! One step closer to being moved in!!

Otherwise, Randy and I went our separate ways today to finish Christmas shopping. I'm usually done weeks before this, but not this year with our trip to Spain and cruise home. I can't share details in case Dear Hubby actually reads this, but I must reveal that after visiting at least 6 stores, I finally found a significant item on his wish list. Whew!! I didn't think I was going to come through which would have severely damaged my power-shopper reputation. It was a close call.

I've been reading a lot about food and cooking recently. Just finished Thomas McNamee's biography of Alice Waters. Tough to write about someone who is so ultra-private in spite of her high public profile. I read _Meat: A Love Story_ by Susan Bourette from the ship's library while at sea. A collection of individually well-written, semi-interesting essays, but without a clear point of view. The New Yorker had an entire issue in mid-November devoted to food which I read, literally, cover to cover. And I've discovered Holly Hughes's collections of "Best Food Writing," starting with the 2008 edition. (I believe that 2005 was the first.) Which has led me to, finally, pick up Michael Pollan's _Omnivore's Dilemma_, although what I really want to read is his _In Defense of Food_, a chapter of which appears in BFW 2008.

Sadly, I was reading OD in the middle of the night last night after waking up worrying about stuff I don't worry about during the day and shouldn't be worrying about at all. It doesn't help that December in general gets me crazy. I'd love if someone could put me in a deep freeze after Thanksgiving dinner and leave me there until a thawing scheduled for, oh, say, December 27. For all of you, I wish nights of good, restful sleep. Something we take for granted until it eludes us, but a great gift when we have it.

Oh yes! After shopping, I took in the movie, _Precious_. A must see. Heart-breaking, thought-provoking, but also bursting with the human spirit for survival.

Tuesday, December 22, 2009

Day 38 - Phooey 2

Good comment about the mushrooms, Georg! Thank you! Nope, I don't season them before sauteeing, and only damply wipe the crud off. So I'm not sure what accounted for success this time. However, I have another 1 and 1/2 packages of mushrooms in the frig, so there will be further experimentation. I'll be reporting here. Come to think of it, you have to wipe beef dry before browning, so maybe the same holds true for mushrooms -- that they need to be thoroughly dried off before hitting the oil. Maybe my mushrooms WERE drier than usual after cleaning this time and I just didn't realize it.

Anyway, I'm definitely feeling better today, but still not great. I slept until 10 a.m., which maybe helped beat back the bad bugs. Had a terrific breakfast of warmed-up pizza. One of my guilty pleasures. Dinner was snacks, which we often indulge in over the holidays. Such things as thinly-sliced salami, brie, crackers, dates, mandarin oranges, and goat cheese. I like to play with my food. I LOVE finger food. These "winter picnics" always seem the height of luxury to me. We usually do it up big time on New Year's Eve, adding treats like shrimp, smoked salmon, and chocolate-covered espresso beans. Ah, bliss.

The only other thing to report is that we now have $5,000 to help pay for all the additional repairs we had to make on our Los Osos in order to sell it. Like a new leach field.... The buyer has entirely backed out and has left his deposit behind. I would rather have sold the house by now, but will settle for being rid of this guy. Our landscaper will be doing some repair work to the front garden, bringing it at least close to its former glory. Then the house will truly be in near-perfect condition for a REAL buyer! And we will have all the misery totally behind us. So, I guess that's a good thing.

I also started work on moving into/unpacking the rest of the upstairs now that the downstairs is pretty much under control. January 1 for totally moved in (mostly) or bust!

Monday, December 21, 2009

Day 37 - Phooey

Phooey. I have a cold. I'm in the tired, head-achy, ache-all-over phase. I hope it doesn't get any worse than that. Apparently there is also an infected salivary gland in the mix, too -- something which I am oddly prone to for some strange reason. I always get the weird stuff.

Nonetheless, the tyranny of Christmas goes on. We got about 50 Christmas cards out in the mail today. All in one day from start to finish.

I made poached eggs on an English muffin for breakfast. Had Randy bring me a burger and soda for lunch. Dinner was take-out pizza and eggnog. So much for healthy cooking and eating.

Tomorrow, my dear, is another day.

Sunday, December 20, 2009

Day 36 - Mushrooms and Winter Squash

Sauteed Mushrooms - pg. 313
Roasted Butternut Squash - pg. 324

You would think that at my age I would be able to simply saute mushrooms successfully. I've done it at least 200 times. But mine usually end up soggy, awash in a sea of mushroom juice. This morning I was making myself a somewhat fancy brunch: thick-cut smoked bacon with scrambled eggs. Since I'd found some at a fabulous marked-down price at the supermarket earlier this week, I decided to add a few (7, to be specific) sliced mushrooms to the eggs. As long as it was in the pan after cooking the bacon, I threw the mushrooms into the bacon fat to saute. Whatever it was (the pan? the heat? the bacon grease? just a few slices in the pan?), the mushrooms sauteed perfectly to a golden brown, nice and dry, just greasy and delicious. I proceeded to scramble the eggs right in the same pan after adding a little butter for total decadence. So at least once in my life I've successfully sauteed mushrooms.

I'm taking it easy today, having detected a somewhat scratchy throat last night. It figures that after 3 weeks of travel, it was probably the flight home from Miami that did me in. Airplanes, especially in winter, are like epidemic wards. Give me a long flight and you'll usually give me a cold. Well, with luck and good behavior, I might be able to fight it off.

Nevertheless, we went to a movie this afternoon. "Invictus" with Morgan Freeman playing Nelson Mandela. I suppose that after playing God a couple times, there's nowhere up to go but to play Mr. Mandela. It's a well-crafted (except for some overlong, under-explained rugby scenes), feel-good movie, perfect for the holidays. I know I can't watch "It's a Wonderful Life" one more time.... But I don't mind at all basking for a couple hours in the public persona of Mr. Mandela.

Randy made a simple, tasty pasta dish with the last of the Costco roasted chicken. That chicken yielded 3 or 4 meals! And was tasty, too. I followed Alice's recommendations for making Roasted Butternut Squash, although I used herbs de provence rather than sage. I also used a locally grown heirloom squash, Sucrine du Berry, grown and sold by Dragon Spring Farm in Cambria. Sucrine du Berry is from France, is larger, and has a darker interior color (much like a good carrot) than our well-known butternut, although it's from the same group of squash and has the same shape. I cooked 2 pounds of the stuff, so there will be plenty of leftovers. It was very good, although I probably overdid the herbs. I'm not sure it was really necessary to cut it into 1/4" dice, either. That's a lot of cutting!

So happy to be back to cooking! Who knew it would be so?

26 recipes down; 279 recipes to go

Saturday, December 19, 2009

Home

We've been home for almost exactly 1 week. Time enough to:

unpack

do many, many loads of laundry

nearly catch up on mail and email

clean the house thoroughly, especially of cat fur

unpack everything downstairs except art, including 50 boxes of books in the library

resupply with groceries

run numerous errands

get a Christmas tree and decorate it

get my body's clock back on Pacific Standard Time

and whatever else I've been doing all week.

The cruise was fun and relaxing. We're not the social butterflies that one really needs to be to get the most out of these kinds of cruises, but we enjoyed the port stops, especially in the Canary Islands, met some good people and ate lots of good food. I especially appreciated the 7 at-sea days of pure relaxation. I was actually able to do a little beading, lots of reading, and watched several movies.

Randy's knee, it turns out, has a torn meniscus in 2 places, rather than just 1 place. He has scheduled surgery for February 4 in the hope that it will improve between now and then. Yeah. Right.

The sale of our Los Osos house has fallen through although the would-be buyer is now being difficult about wrapping things up so we can get on with another sale. Figures.

The cats are well. Other than Randy's knee, we are well. I can't believe we've done all this traveling this month without either one of us catching a virus of one sort or another. Must be some kind of record.

Since my goal is to be entirely unpacked and organized in our new house by January 1, I hit the ground running when we returned, unpacking the entire library in the first 2 days we were home. My studio is a mass/mess of boxes, but the storage closet upstairs will get cleaned out and straightened up first since that's where all the Christmas decorations are stored. I have hope. I haven't gotten back into the swing of my cooking project yet, but we did get to farmers' market this morning so I'm stocked again with veggies, including 2 kinds of heirloom winter squash that I'm anxious to try.

Poached eggs have been my thing this week. On the cruise ship there was a lovely lady chef who made fancy poached egg dishes at breakfast time. Fancy as in, well, my favorite had caviar on top! Unfortunately I didn't home in on her cooking station until the very end of the cruise after being enticed by several rounds of eggs benedict in the main dining room. At least I vowed to learn to poach eggs, something I've never before done in my entire life. I bought 2 of those versatile silicon egg-poaching cups earlier this week. I know that's cheating a little, but these are my baby steps. By my 3rd breakfast of poached eggs on English muffin this week I had the technique and timing down to my satisfaction. You want to "grease" the cups with butter before adding the eggs. My cooktop has a "simmer" setting on 2 of the burners, which is actually just a little cooler than what I consider a true simmer. Nine minutes, maybe 8.5, seems to be the perfect time at a simmer. This with the lid on the saucepan so the tops of the eggs cook, too. Of course I'll also take a stab at poaching eggs the hard way, but even Julia Childs uses those little perforated poaching baskets and even does a little pre-boil in-the-shell, so who am I to expect miracles of myself? On the other hand, Julia also makes those fancy decorated poached eggs in aspic.... Well, that's another chapter altogether.

Onward and upward and back to real life. Refreshed, renewed, cleaned, unpacked and organized.