Category Archives: Recipes & Food

This Is My Kind Of Farmers Market

This Is My Kind Of Farmers Market

 Late spring through summer and into fall, my kids and I make our weekly visit to our local farmers’ market.  It is my kind of Farmers Market, where amongst the vegetables and fruit,  meat, poultry, and fishmonger stands, there are no less than four stalls selling baked goods, and a coffee guy. Sometimes there are flowers, live music, and one of my daughters’ friends who sets up her own little stand making balloon animals for tips.  I feed my kids an early dinner of hot out of the oven-grilled pizza, and bring one home for my husband.    I wander over to the fresh taco stand to indulge in freshly made tacos that are out of this world.  I love supporting the local farmers, fishermen and bakers in our community, and having them bring the market to us every week.  There is something about being outdoors, shopping locally, and interacting with the community that makes this a ritual the kids and I hate to miss.  I confess to heading to the coffee guy for my iced coffee first, and buying more baked goods than vegetables on our weekly visit.  That’s just the kind of girl I am, don’t get me wrong, I love fruits and vegetables, I just love baked goods more.   I wouldn’t want our farmers’ market any other way!  Knowing the cold will soon settle in, and our ritual will come to an end, we savor each trip, and appreciate  the simple pleasures of the season.

 

Healthy & Refreshing Appetizer

Healthy & Refreshing Appetizer

My friend Julie brought this appetizer over for book club last week and I have served it twice since. It is a surprising combination of flavors that taste great. I love that it is so healthful, easy to assemble, and looks pretty to serve. Peach season runs from July to mid-September, and one of our favorite family activities is to take our kids to the farm up the road where we can pick them.  Mint grows like a weed once it’s planted, so the patch where I planted it in our yard provides more mint than I know what to do with. (Suggestions always welcome!)  It is the perfect time of year to serve this recipe.

Slice a Fresh Peach

Spread a spoon of spreadable goat cheese on each slice

Top with a fresh mint leaf

Enjoy!

 

 

 

 

Marcus Samuelsson’s Red Rooster NYC: Ethiopia-Sweden-America

Marcus Samuelsson’s Red Rooster NYC: Ethiopia-Sweden-America

Marcus Samuelsson’s story is amazing.

He was born in Ethiopia, and when he was only three his mother walked for days with her two children to get medical care to treat their tuberculosis. Sadly, his mother did not make it, but Marcus and his sister received the care they needed to recover. A year later they were adopted into a loving family and brought up in Sweden. It was the love of cooking that his Swedish grandmother instilled in him which he credits for guiding him to where he is today. He has risen to become a world-renowned chef and author of Yes, Chef; A Memoir in which he details his fascinating life.

Me with Chef Marcus Samuelsson at Red Rooster

While in New York City for the Blogher conference I had the pleasure to meet Chef Marcus Samuelsson and check out his acclaimed Red Rooster Restaurant in Harlem. He has created a vibrant atmosphere in which to serve what he describes as American comfort food with hints of his Swedish and African roots. While there, he greeted us with the same easy smile and warm welcoming manner with which he seemed to grace all those he encountered. He graciously took us on a tour downstairs to Ginny’s Supper Club , which is fashioned as a modern speakeasy and opened in 2012 as a tribute to the Harlem Renaissance. The food was amazing and the ambiance electric, so if you are looking for a cool night out, Red Rooster is where you want to go.

A drink called Yes, Chef

Clementine Granita Recipe; A Perfect Summer dessert

Clementine Granita Recipe; A Perfect Summer dessert

The other night for a dinner party I made this recipe and feel compelled to share it here since it is such a perfect summer treat.   I found this fabulous Clementine Granita recipe in Martha Stewart Magazine (December 2011 issue). I have made both a clementine version and blood orange version for Valentine’s Day, and it was a huge hit both times with the children and adults alike.   It is super refreshing and I am always thrilled to find a healthful but festive dessert to add to my repertoire.

 

12 Clementines

1/2 Cup Sugar

1/4 cup water

1/4 tsp Powdered Ginger (the Martha Stewart Recipe calls for 1/2 in peel of fresh ginger but I don’t tend to keep fresh ginger on hand so have only made this with powdered  so far)

1 T lemon juice

Slice the clementines in half, cut around the pulp and scoop it out, leaving the shell. Place the pulp and any juice in a bowl.

Wet the skins and roll in sugar, then place in the freezer to create tiny bowls for the Granita.

In a pot on the stove mix the water, sugar and ginger and bring to a boil. Cool.

 Blood Orange version

Blood Orange Version

Juice the pulp from the clementines, ideally enough for 2 cups, you may need to buy extra clementines to get this amount of juice. Add in sugar water mixture and lemon, and place in a bowl to freeze.

Once frozen (about 2-3 hours) Scoop the granita into the frozen skins, and keep them in the freezer until it is time to serve. Enjoy!

 

My Little Weed Patch Of A Garden

My Little Weed Patch Of A Garden

My little garden patch. Leo skeptically looks on.

Every year I plant a tiny “garden”. I have to call it a “garden” as opposed to garden because it is usually a pretty laughable attempt at horticulture.  I am determined to someday be a real gardener. Like many things in my life when I aspire to do something, I just start, and learn as I go along. (This blog is a good example, or see my upcoming triathlon post, that’s another hack activity!)  My desire to garden comes from a childhood with a father who was an avid gardener.  I grew up in a home where despite our diminutive 1/4-acre urban backyard we had concord grapevines climbing up the side of our garage.

My father and brother in beekeeping gear.

 

Raspberry bushes lined up in rows along the back fence, five active beehives that produced honey were tucked behind the garage, and rows of assorted vegetable  patches lined the rectangular perimeter of the grass.

My father passed away when I was thirteen, and though we helped him in the garden as children, clearly none of his practical gardening tips stuck with me.  I was given a love of vegetable gardens though, and a great appreciation for their products, as well as aspirations as an adult to grow my own food.  I clearly remember the satisfaction of plucking a plump raspberry off the vine and popping it into my mouth as a kid, or running out to pick a cucumber for my mother to use in that evenings dinner salad.

Me as a kid in the garden.

As a mother I want to pass on to my own children that understanding and appreciation for where food really comes from.  Thus, much to my husbands’ frustration, my garden attempts  have been going on since we got married and have had homes of our own.  Admittedly my gardens have never been pretty, and yes they do become overrun with weeds, but every year, from the tangled mess, I have had the deep satisfaction of picking at least a couple of cucumbers and tomatoes to make a salad with.  I use my rosemary picked from the garden on my roasted potatoes, and the basil in tomato mozzarella salad. The sage is sautéed with brown butter to top butternut squash ravioli, and the mint goes into our mojitos. So despite my fumbled attempts at a real garden so far, every year it  gives me some small satisfaction.

Our accidental green beans!!

This year we have green beans growing by folly, the  seeds were apparently in the dirt we filled out garden patch with last fall.  Just as we went to pull out the wild looking yellow flowered vines as weeds, my daughter exclaimed, “look they are green beans”!!  Sure enough they are!  We added a few tomato plants, some cucumbers of course, the sage has come back from last year, and despite my daughters attempt to eradicate them thinking they were weeds, a few scallions survived as well.  I added a jalapeno pepper plant for good measure, and would still like to add some cilantro and rosemary, but they were out of the plants at the store.

My 9 and 7 year olds were kind enough to help me plant.  I was quickly stripped of my gardening gloves and trowel, and as I found myself digging a hole with my bare hands while the two of them scuffled over a tomato plant, I was reminded of why I need to be patient with my gardening goals.   Now we just have to sit back and let things grow.  I swore I would keep my garden weed free this year, but I most likely won’t. Someday I will be one of those women in a big floppy hat and  button down men’s shirt happily digging in my cultivated garden for hours. Until our agrarian future sets in, the occasional harvest of homegrown tomatoes and cucumbers will have to do.

This year's garden attempt, wish me luck!

Any of you real gardeners out there have some advice for a novice?