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Category Archives: Food

A Fresh Summer Snack

Tomato season is just about upon us. We’ve had cherry tomatoes tumbling off our trellises for days now, and the markets are just seeing the first influx of heirlooms and big boys that I don’t bother growing at home anymore. Let someone else deal with all that fuss – I’m content to purchase and pay for someone else to do the work. 

The easiest and best way to enjoy a tomato may be this classic combo of mozzarella, basil and balsamic vinegar, with a dash of olive oil and some freshly-ground pepper for good measure. It is the taste of summer, and not terribly bad for you either. Easy deliciousness for when the weather zaps all energy and fighting spirit. It can make for a light lunch, or a precursor to a heavier dinner. The possibilities are endless, unlike summer, which is decidedly all too brief.

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The Humble & Majestic BLT

Summer fare doesn’t come much better or brighter than a simple BLT sandwich. I made this one myself, after Andy cooked the bacon, and I didn’t toast it (much to Andy’s chagrin) because I knew it would be devoured so quickly I didn’t want the roof of my mouth to get all scratched up from the toast. Yes, that’s how my mind works. Comfort over quality, even when it’s going to get macerated and swallowed up anyway.

We don’t mess around with the BLT around here – maybe we’ll go California on its ass with some avocado once in a a great while, but for the most part we keep it simple, which keeps it good. Sometimes I’ll strip it down even further and just do a bacon, tomato and mayo sandwich. Who needs all that healthy lettuce when bacon is involved? If you’re going to do bacon, do the damn thing right. 

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Summer Scallops

One of our favorite summer dinners is a simple plate of grilled scallops with a few vegetables. These were brought to us from our dear friend Ali, fresh from the Atlantic, and we froze half of the batch to bring them out for just such an afternoon. Andy put them together using just olive oil, salt and pepper – and I quickly sautéed some sugar snap peas in olive oil and butter, sprinkling some sea salt and black pepper on them as they cooked. A spicy addition of some Moroccan-flavored carrots and potatoes rounded out the plate, and voila – a simple but oh-so-good summer dinner. 

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My New Sweet Obsession

I absolutely love a sweet treat after lunch or dinner, and that damn Trader Joe’s has plenty of options on that front. (Too many, quite frankly, and it takes a bit of discipline to avoid getting hooked on some delicious thing that’s only found there.) Case in point is the Ube Tea Cookie as seen here. These bite-size beauties incorporate the purple ube tuber (shout-out to the Philippines!) and some sugar and shortbread for a powdered puff of delicious sweetness. 

These are little enough to have a few at a time and not be a total glutton (assuming you can keep it to a few) and they are perfect for an afternoon snack with some tea. 

And while they are sweet, they are not too sweet, even with that glorious coating of powdered sugar. The older I get, the more I like my sweet-treats on the not-too-sweet side, which makes these little cookies practically perfect. 

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Summer Mac Salad

Macaroni salad has always been the stuff of summer in our house. This is the time of the year when Andy whips up a batch to have on had for lunches or gatherings, or if I’m extra lucky just on an unremarkable afternoon when the weather is fine and you want something that is both vibrant and nostalgic. I don’t usually have the patience to do all the chopping and cooling that makes a macaroni salad great, but Andy has such gifts. This particular bowl was especially good – Andy claims it’s a new relish he’s found – and whatever the reasons or secrets behind it, I was grateful for its goodness. 

He fired up the grill for some burgers and hot dogs to go with it, and there was no finer dinner to be had at any cost. The road to summer is at hand, and it begins with a simple salad. 

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The Portuguese Egg Tart

Behold the magnificent Pastéis de Nata!

These Portuguese egg tarts are one of the most delicious things our wayward world has to offer. Our friend Ali brings them whenever she visits, which makes her visits even more special than they already are – lending a festive aspect of the extraordinary to those fabulous weekends. She just accompanied JoAnn for a get-away here and brought a box, and we’ve been enjoying them every day since. She advised to sprinkle some cinnamon on them, then heat them for a bit, and that makes all the difference. A little but of rustic decadence that is good for breakfast, ideal for a midday snack, and perfect for a dessert after dinner – in other words, we eat these at all times of the day until we’ve gone through an entire box. Thank you, Ali! 

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A Cake of Lavender & Love

This homemade beauty was crafted by Andy in honor of JoAnn’s 50th birthday celebration, which continues just as this is being posted. Josie, Ali and Peaches will soon be en route to our little abode, where I’ve assembled a trio of her favorite appetizers and a weekend of comfort and casual glory. Andy’s cake is made of a vanilla base, accented by lavender frosting and a raspberry filling. Our home will be filled with all sorts of good things this weekend, and if the weather’s still a little chilly, at least there will be warmth in our hearts. 

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For Anyone With the Munchies…

Feast your digits on the following links, which will each bring you to some delectable treat – some savory, some sweet – in the grand tradition of food porn exploited for 4/20. The world has gotten far too serious, and some the food posts of today are here to lighten your spirit and weigh down your load. 

Let’s begin with this simple apple crisp, redolent of fall and coziness. Not out of place on an early spring evening either.. 

Keeping with the cozy theme, my classic candied yams recipe. These pair wondrously with ham, so for all those with some Easter dinner leftovers, this side’s for you. 

Edible heirlooms – a reminder of fresh summer days. 

Sinful scallops for the seafood lover in you. 

A Sunday omelette by Andy

Black Bean & Quinoa Salad With Cilantro Lime Vinaigrette – the name says it all.

Don’t be mad at me about these brownies – I didn’t name them.

Cornbread croutons are no joke

Beat the heat: Tom Yum soup

Chicken and olives and oranges, oh my! 

A perennial favorite at all times of the year: kimchi fried rice topped with a pair of fried eggs

What the actual pho?

A basic pot salad.

Pulling some pork.

The famous (and now infamous) Ko Jello Mold

That banana trifle allegedly from Magnolia Bakery.

Those hot hues of the Pennsylvania Dutch

And finally, a bit of shakshuka splendor.

Enjoy your day! 

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Dream Bread

Like many kids, my favorite part of an Italian meal at certain restaurants was the garlic bread that started the dinner. At the Armory Grill in Amsterdam, NY, they offered an opening salvo of extra deliciousness in a spinach garlic bread – something I have not had or seen since. It was buttery and garlicky, and the spinach was just lightly distributed among the folds of the dough. I could have devoured the entire bowl of it, though every piece was equitably doled out because we all loved it so much. 

Since those childhood days, I’ve often thought about that spinach bread. It has haunted me happily for four decades, yet for some reason I never thought of trying to re-create it. Having conquered my fear of yeast, and rolling out dough, it might be time. Suzie has been encouraging me to try it out, and it is definitely a worthy goal. This effort came close – I added butter to the olive oil and garlic before wilting the spinach, then sprinkled some Italian seasoning and mozzarella cheese. The bread best open in the oven, but the taste was good. I think the cheese was too much. Next time I’ll simplify it and see if the spinach and butter and garlic is enough. 

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Cinnamon Roll Start

Check the date, have some newly-legal fun, and come back to visit this page during the day as I’ve decided to populate the posts with food stuff. That means if you’re having a case of the munchies, you might find some inspiration here. (Later on I’ll describe an amazing spinach bread I’m trying to find after forty years of being haunted by its deliciousness.) 

For the morning, here’s a batch of cinnamon rolls I made for work this week. Using the dough recipe from these lemon cardamom rolls, I switched out the citrus for cinnamon, and the cardamom for chopped pecans. For the frosting, I used butter and crisco as the base eliminating the cream cheese entirely. It was a magical transformation, and a hit for all who tried it. 

Come back in a bit for that spinach bread search and another food hit… and smoke ’em if you’ve got ’em.

Happy 4/20!! 

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Andy’s Big Balls

Nestled amid all that glorious sauce and spaghetti is one enormous meatball, at least three inches in diameter, and just waiting to be devoured by my lucky mouth. If there’s one thing that Andy knows how to cook (and there are actually many) it’s the meatball. Despite their size, these always turn out tender enough to slice easily through with a fork. Their flavor is wondrous, yet I’m told the ingredients are simple enough. (Perhaps you can cajole him into sharing the secret with you. I’m content to have him continue making them so I’d rather not know.)

While I enjoyed spaghetti and meatballs as a kid, it wasn’t something I ever ordered or cooked for myself as an adult. Andy’s meatballs changed that, because these are an art form. 

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Dazzler of the Day: Pati Jinich

She is one of my favorite chefs, and that might come down to a single, simple, epic recipe: the Señor Breakfast Sandwich. It’s become a staple on weekends when breakfast/brunch is the most important thing happening. Pati Jinich has a number of epic recipes, many of which I’ve tried – and all have been happy successes (which can’t be said for some of my kitchen endeavors). As host of ‘Pati’s Mexican Table’ she offers a glimpse of a multi-cultural world that enriches the brain-numbing drivel on every other television channel. Today she earns the Dazzler of the Day because her personality and spirit are as inspiring as her recipes – she just makes everyone feel a little happier. We need that more than ever. Check out her website, and more foolproof recipes, here. 

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The Humble and Magnificent Quahog

Whenever JoAnn visits, she usually brings a couple of quahogs fresh from the Cape because she knows how much I enjoy them. In our landlocked upstate New York desert, we don’t get the privileges of quahogs or other sea delicacies, not that there’s anything very delicate about the quahog, which is basically a stuffed clam.

Odd as it might seem to some, I’ve never been a big fan of stuffing things, at least when it comes to food. There was something too precious about it – removing food and then mixing it up just to put it back in the original location. I can’t be bothered. Twice-baked potatoes, stuffed peppers, stuffed mushrooms – it’s all too fussy, and fussy = finished.

Over the years, however, I’ve come around to enjoy the stuffing – not in the doing but in the consuming – and the quahog is part of what brought me back into the stuffed fray. Andy also does a delicious stuffed pepper, and our friend Dolores makes a mean twice-baked potato.

I’m embracing the stuff now.

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Tough to Chew, Tough to Swallow

Just when I think I’m ready to venture off on some culinary tangent, the kitchen reminds me I know little to nothing of its ways and whims. Having made a relative success of some recent forays into Moroccan tagines, I got overly-confident and carried away when I tried to do a beef version. Conjured mostly from the frazzled workings of my brain, I thought I could do it right, but this made-up recipe left the beef tough and difficult to chew. I will need to work on that. 

Such semi-failures (it tasted good, flavor-wise, and the next day it was decidedly less tough) are a regular part of my cooking journey, and likely will be whenever I branch off from the tried and true recipes and methods as presented by the experts. It’s still fun to try, and the act of cooking can be an act of love when you learn to find joy in the process. 

A perfect past-time for a winter day.

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The Simple Things

When the world has gone mad – and by all indications it has – it’s a good time to go quiet and focus on what is immediately at hand. It’s a form of mindfulness that, for me, puts the present moment (and whatever small task or action you are doing) into your brain, thus eliminating the empty space that worry and stress and doubt might otherwise occupy. In this manner, mindfulness can become a constant form of meditation throughout the day.

A couple of days ago, I set my evening focus on the pictured dish of linguini with red clam sauce, which Andy had lovingly made for a Friday in Lent. I thought of the care and preparation that went into it, the way he increased the recipe so as to send a batch to my parents, the repeated tasting he did to make sure it was progressing as it should (I always forget to taste what I’m making, which is basic Cooking 101 and why I’ve never truly excelled at it), and the delicate way he draped the pasta onto the plate so I could get a photo of it for this very post. 

From there, I focused on the visual feast before me – all delectable scarlet against cream with accents of fresh green, all backed by a plate of Robin’s egg blue. Watching the gentle ribbons of steam unfurl upward, and noticing the chip that seems to now be part of every plate we own, I took it all in, without judgment or annoyance (even the chip) before moving onto the scent. One eats using all the senses, and scent is one of my favorites. The earthen wheat-based coziness of the linguini melded with the spicy tomato into a familiar cocktail called dinner, and I paused, as much to appreciate the fragrance as to let it cool. A side of garlic bread completed the culinary cologne – all these gourmand fragrances coming out lately are no accident. 

Finally, there was the indulgence of eating – the way the fork felt in my hand, the way the plate was warm to the touch, the way the pasta wound around the fork – and finally the way it tickled my tongue, gave way between my teeth, and traveled into my stomach. All the magnificent taste sensations, all in the most mundane actions for human survival. The simple act of eating dinner, when performed mindfully, can be a soul-enriching experience, offering moments of gratitude and appreciation, and occupying the mind with the goodness of what’s presently happening. Does it make the reality of the world go away? Not at all. Soon enough, the news cycle re-entered consciousness, the social media nonsense continued its endless scroll, and the concerns of elderly parents re-emerged, but the mind was slightly more at ease, and a little more equipped to handle them.

That said, I won’t pretend I’m always this mindful, as much as it’s a goal. Take this chocolate chip cookie from Stacks Coffeehouse in downtown Albany. The other day I popped in for a quick lunch break and just scarfed it down, without being the least bit mindful. I was hungry, and it was sweet. End of story. 

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