Day to Day Life: Week Twenty-Two

The last week looked a bit like this:

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DTD22-7Climbing roses in the rain. One of my favorite spring (or summer) scents.

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A cinnamon-sugar topped crumpet. A brilliant decision.

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A new cheesy, savory waffle experiment that I’m excited to share. It’s good for waffle pizzas, it’s great on its own, it’s DELICIOUS for chicken and waffles – Julie style. Coming atcha soon.

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My hairs needed a serious hippie deep conditioning. Did you know that adding coconut oil, eggs, apple cider vinegar, baking soda, tea tree oil and lavender oil to your head smells absolutely awful (though certainly better than chemicals that offer the same sort of treatment). The only redeeming factor (other than soft hairs on your head) is the height potential dried raw egg-crusted hair can offer.

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I love when the skies look like the oceans.

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This was another recipe experiment winning situation. Jamaican jerk seitan. The texture was so close to “real” meat it was ridiculous. The flavors? Spicy, sweet, robust, tasty. A combination of fresh peppers and sweet mango in the sauce was spot-on. Coming soonish.

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Frisbee-ing with this little boy has left me feeling really old for the last couple days. My body hurts in ways I didn’t know possible! Certainly not your every day workout.

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I am sad to announce the unexpected demise of my juicer. When that’s precisely what I discovered when I wanted to make a fresh watermelon-strawberry juice for this margarita with Meyer lemon, I opted for the next option – the food processor. May I not suggest it to you. While this cocktail was worth it, “juicing” in the food processor is RIDICULOUSLY messy.

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Fresh arugula, baby romaine, and the first radishes out of the garden. YUM.

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Homemade yogurt in the crockpot. I’m also excited to share this with you. It’s so good. And so inexpensive compared to buying the same organic product in the grocery store!

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Do yourself a favor and make these waffles. Do yourself another favor and check out one of my favorite blogs, where the recipe originally came from.

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Everything in the garden is growing so well right now. I’m excited about these little bush bean babies (and everything else planted).

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Can I leave you with this picture of my mama when she was younger than I am now? Because she lives in Oklahoma City and when the tornadoes hit last week and this week, its had me worried sick. And mostly I miss my mom. And love this photo.

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Malted Waffles

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I have a current obsession with homemade waffles. Last week it might have caused us to eat waffles for breakfast, lunch, and dinner… Even dessert. I’m not really sorry, so hopefully you aren’t waiting for my apologies. For a while, we only had a Belgian-style waffle iron (you know, the ones that make really deep, thick waffles). Truth be told, I could barely eat one Belgian waffle before being full. Then my mother-in-law let me have her thin-style waffle iron and things went downhill. Something about these thin waffles makes it where you can eat 2 or 3 (or 4 or 5 if you’re my husband) before you feel like you’ve possibly had too many waffles… It’s tricky business.

I enjoy savory waffles just as much as sweet waffles. I find myself constantly scouring the inter-webs for new recipes. Recently I came across this malted waffle recipe from Tracy Benjamin of the exquisite site, Shutterbean, while looking for recipes. I almost got out of bed to make them right that second. Instead I dreamt of them, then opted for a waffle breakfast.

The first time I heard of malt powder was when I making homemade bagels a few years ago. I get barley malt powder (which will sometimes say barely malt flour, not to be confused with malted milk powder)Barley malt is made from fermented grain, then dried and ground. The fermentation and drying process turns the grain’s starches into sugar, leaving a lightly golden-colored, slightly sweet powder. The beauty of malt powder in baked goods is the lovely brown and shiny color it allows, as well as a naturally tasteful sweetness.

These particular waffles are wonderfully crisp on the outside (I love waffles that don’t immediately go soggy once removed from the waffle iron!), but tender and flavorful on the inside. Topped with fresh berries and maple syrup, they cannot be beat for a delicious breakfast (or lunch… or dinner…).

 

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Malted Waffles

Recipe slightly adapted from Tracy Benjamin @ Shutterbean.com

Ingredients:

1 cup all-purpose flour
½ cup malt powder (I use this, since it’s available to me in bulk)
1 tbsp. firmly packed light brown sugar
1 tsp. baking soda
¾ tsp. baking powder
¼ tsp. salt
2 large eggs, at room temperature, separated
1¼ cups buttermilk
3 tbsp. unsalted butter, melted & cooled to room temperature

 

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Directions:

Preheat your oven to 250°F. Prepare waffle iron (preferably non-Belgian style) with cooking spray or brush liberally with oil.

Whisk the flour, malt powder, sugar, baking soda, baking powder and salt together in a large bowl.

In a separate bowl, whisk together the egg yolks, buttermilk and melted butter. In a separate bowl, whisk the egg whites until stiff peaks form.

Stir the yolk/buttermilk/butter mixture into your dry ingredients until combined. Lumps are okay. Fold the egg whites gently into the batter, being careful not to break up the airy egg whites too much.

Cook the waffles according to your manufacturer’s instructions. Place finished waffles on the rack of your preheated oven and continue to cook your waffles. You should have about 8 waffles. Serve with warm maple syrup, or your favorite waffle toppings.

 

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Little Pastas with Seitan, Herbs and Cheese

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On evenings like this, where the only sounds echoing through our downtown Ashland home comes from the downpour happening outside my open windows, there’s a peacefulness. Perhaps it’s the comfort I’ve always found in water. I could spend hours in the ocean, rain or shine. I’ve never minded rain (except when I was forced to wear the “yellow banana suit” as I so   lovingly   begrudgingly named the rain coat my mom had me wear to elementary school, back – way back – in the day).

Rainy days like the ones we’ve been having for the last couple days encourage me to think of comfort foods. I love the assurance of a good pasta meal. It isn’t even about the ease, or the convenience of throwing noodles into boiling water. Perhaps it’s the certainty of a filling dish of food, which can turn into a one bowl meal… Because rainy days also encourage lazy days, where the most a person may want to do is lay in bed under her down comforter, with a pile of books, laptop opened to her favorite blog feed reader, offering an occasional gesture of puppy love with a from-the-bed-back scratch to the dogs, who enjoy lazy days as well.

The steady rain we’ve been experiencing has also been welcomed by our garden. I’ve found endless supplies of fresh herbs and greens, strawberries making their spring time appearance, and everything else is doubling in size every day. Pasta and fresh herbs are a happy marriage of ingredients. Well, fresh herbs and most anything are delightful in my recipe-brain.

I discovered acini di pepe after my husband played a gig at Sweetwater Music Hall in Mill Valley, CA. His dinner consisted of something the menu called “pastina,” which were tiny little pastas, cooked with wild mushrooms, fresh vegetables, and cheese. It was delicious. The pasta was so small, but kept its shape and consistency, working almost like a risotto in the dish, allowing the fresh mushrooms and creamy sauce to shine through. I knew I wanted to find these little bead-like pastas when I got home. The following pastina features a creamy pesto sauce, ground seitan to add some protein to the dish, and lots of fresh herbs. I used Upton’s ground seitan, as I love the flavor it imparts, but feel free to use whatever you have available.

 

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Little Pastas with Seitan, Herbs and Cheese

Serves 3-4 adult folks.

Ingredients:

1½ cups acini di pepe pasta
1 tbsp. olive oil
5 cloves garlic, minced
8 oz. ground seitan
1 cup artichoke hearts, chopped
2 tbsp. fresh chives, chopped
¼ cup fresh basil, chopped
¼ cup fresh oregano, chopped
½ cup arugula, chopped
½ cup heavy cream
¾ cup milk
½ cup prepared pesto
¾ cup gorgonzola cheese, crumbled
¼ cup parmesan cheese, grated
salt and fresh ground pepper

 

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Directions:

Cook the pasta according to the package directions, in salted water.

While the pasta cooks, heat the oil in a medium-sized saucepan, over medium-high. Add the minced garlic, stirring around for a minute or two. Add the ground seitan, stirring to evenly distribute the garlic. Cook until the seitan is lightly golden brown (4-5 minutes).

Add the artichoke hearts, chopped chives, basil, oregano, and arugula to the seitan mixture. Cook for 2-3 minutes, then add the cream, milk, and pesto. Stir to evenly combine.

Add the cooked (and drained) pasta to your seitan mixture, stirring to evenly distribute everything. Mix in the cheeses, then salt and pepper to your liking. Cook over medium heat for 5-10 minutes, then serve, hot. Top with additional fresh herbs and/or freshly grated parmesan cheese if desired.

 

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Day to Day Life: Week 21

The last week looked a bit like this:

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Some weeks certainly require doughnuts.

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We dug out our front yard last fall and in the process, took out many of the poppies that have always bloomed in abundance this time of year… I was happy to discover that a good portion of the bright orange perennials came back this year… This is the first little guy of the season.

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My favorite girlfriend.

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I’ve got about 50 more tomato babies that eventually need transferring to the garden, or to be passed along to friends. All of the seeds we planted this year are from Leo’s tomatoes. I’m excited – these are Brandywine tomatoes – a variety we haven’t planted before.

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Early in the week, while my in-laws were still here, the three of us went out to lunch while C was working. I had heard of Jasper’s Cafe before and it seemed like a good opportunity to drop by the well known burger joint around here. While the menu consists of well over 40 types of burgers, including wild boar, elk, kangaroo, and kobe beef, I opted for the above Jamaican jerk chicken sandwich. It was perfectly spicy with complex flavors, balanced with mango. I got a chai milkshake to go along with my sandwich… I would certainly recommend Jasper’s to anyone looking for a good meal. I am looking forward to experimenting with a vegetarian version of this sandwich.

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This cocktail was a winning situation this week.

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Snow topped hillsides mid-week… because this is Ashland Oregon in the Spring and the weather never can decide what it wants…

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Just a bit of waffle math.

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Because waffles for dinner two nights in a row was necessary.

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Maybe chocolate waffles for dessert, too? With chocolate and peanut butter sauce? And fresh strawberries and bananas?

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The Spice and Tea Exchange recently opened in Ashland. It was a fun little place to explore.

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Personally picked strawberry loot.

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Lettuce bucket’s starting to produce some baby lettuces.

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Our roses are blooming like crazy these days.

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A thrown together meal that will come your way soon… I love unplanned meals that turn out better than expected.

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Green and white.

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Hide and seek. That was the sweetest strawberry yet.

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Breakfast for dinner. (Again.) (Still a win-win.)

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Strawberry Basil Gin Cocktail

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Can a person have a “drinking career?” I was about to start this off with, When I think about my drinking career… Then I realized drinking isn’t exactly a job nor how I’d ever hope to describe the majority of my day to day life. At the ripe old age of 27, I think about my adult beverage of choice decisions through the years:

Freshmen year of college, I lived on the honors all girl floor of our dormitory. My roommate and I housed really shitty beer and wine coolers in our fridge on occasion. When I moved off campus the following fall, I was 19. I would’ve liked to consider myself a beer snob, but really I was missing the good microbrews notorious to the West Coast and instead indulging in still-cheap-Canadian beer. The summer I turned 20, there were many poor college student margaritas and inexpensive beer, sweet wines, cheap Carlo Rossi sangria by the jug-full drank with bendy straws… 21 brought weird concoctions that included things like Hypnotic, nasty Malibu rum, too much cheap vodka, or a hell of a lot of Kahlua. I probably shouldn’t tell you I invented what I called “liquor soup” amongst my roommates, which certainly came served in a bowl without utensils. That same summer I turned 21, I had my first mojito. It was probably the downfall of my birthday bar hopping shenanigans. I vowed never to drink another mojito again… and I didn’t, for a number of years. The thought of mashed up mint leaves in my drinks made me cringe.

In the last half decade or so, I’ve found an appreciation for good microbrews (I love a good beer, especially after a long day or hot afternoon). I’ve also found an appreciation for good quality bourbon, tequila, vodka, and gin. Not together in a soup, but certainly on their own or in a good drink. When I saw this drink from Joy Wilson at Joy the Baker the other night, featuring smashed strawberries, basil, and lime, I immediately thought of the gin and tonics I found myself loving a few years ago. I decided gin would be an excellent accompaniment to this drink, along with fresh vanilla bean, which would add the tiny polka dots I so love about freshly scraped vanilla bean. The drink itself isn’t overly sweet, as the only sweetness is coming from the smashed strawberries. Reminiscent of a mojito, the smashed basil works nicely with the strawberries and gin. This recipe is easy enough to duplicate, or if you don’t feel like sharing, it makes enough for one.

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Strawberry Basil Gin Cocktail

Makes one drink.

Strawberry Basil Gin Cocktail with Vanilla Bean

Ingredients:

6-8 ripe strawberries
2 tbsp. fresh basil, chopped
½ a vanilla bean, scraped
2 oz. good quality gin
4 oz. tonic water
1 ripe lime, juiced
crushed ice

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Directions:

In a small bowl, combine the strawberries, basil, scraped vanilla bean, half of the lime juice, and mash together with a fork  until well combined.

Combine the mashed strawberry mixture, gin, tonic, remaining lime juice, and a good bit of crushed ice in a cocktail shaker. Shake until thoroughly mixed, then pour into a drinking glass. Top off with more crushed ice if needed, then drink immediately.

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Posted in Beverages, Booze, Gluten-Free, Vegan, Vegetarian | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , | 5 Comments

Sourdough Doughnuts with Vanilla Bean Glaze

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If I could eat fresh hot doughnuts every day without worrying about turning into a doughnut myself, I would absolutely do it. My birthday is in two weeks. I encourage each of you to send me your favorite doughnut. Perhaps by the dozen. (Not seriously/ completely seriously). The beauty of a homemade fried doughnut is that they can go from round raw dough to the fryer, to the glaze, then straight to your mouth. I got into baked doughnuts not too long ago, which are delicious, but an entirely different breed of doughnut.

Have you ever made yeast risen fried doughnuts? They take a little effort, certainly a bit of time, and absolutely love… but it’s all worth it. While my father in law was here, he made a request for homemade doughnuts. I don’t think he realized I had been making baked doughnuts for the last year; that isn’t what he pictured in his head. He wanted a plain, slightly glazed, hot, yeasted, fried doughnut. I can get into that.

When I decided to incorporate my sourdough starter into these doughnuts, I don’t think my father in law was thrilled. “You’re going to use that in the doughnuts?” he asked, after smelling the sourdough starter… Heck YES. I decided to balance the sourdough with vanilla almond milk (don’t you tell him that milk came from nuts and not a cow!) so the sourness wouldn’t be overwhelming. I let the dough rise in the fridge overnight (mostly because I didn’t want to get up at the crack of dawn the following day to make dough, let it rise, then cut and fry doughnuts), which worked out nicely. It meant half the work was done before bed, and the remaining work would take half as much time.

I love the speckled look of freshly scraped vanilla beans. Since the glaze for these doughnuts dries pretty translucent, the vanilla bean speckles absolutely show up. So you wind up with a melt-in-your-mouth soft doughnut with noticeable nutmeg and cinnamon flavor, topped with a beautiful glaze that invites you to dive right in. Do it.

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Sourdough Doughnuts with Vanilla Bean Glaze

Yields about 2 dozen doughnuts.

Ingredients:

For the doughnuts:
6 tbsp. granulated sugar
½ cup milk warmed to 85°-95°F (I used vanilla almond milk)
½ cup warm water (85°-95°F)
5 tsp. active yeast
¾ cup sourdough starter
4 large egg yolks
1 tsp. vanilla extract
1 tsp. ground cinnamon
¼ tsp. freshly grated nutmeg
1 tsp. salt
4¾ cups all-purpose flour
7-10 cups canola, vegetable, or sunflower oil for deep frying

For the glaze:
1 cup confectioner’s sugar, sifted
1 vanilla bean, scraped
1 tsp. pure vanilla extract
1 tsp. coconut oil, melted
2 tbsp. whole milk

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Directions:

In a large mixing bowl (the bowl of your stand mixer, if you have one), stir together the sugar, warm milk and warm water. Sprinkle in the yeast, until it’s submerged into the liquid. Let the mixture stand until foamy, 5-ish minutes. If your yeast doesn’t foam, toss it out and start again.

Add the sourdough starter, egg yolks, vanilla extract, cinnamon, nutmeg, salt, and two cups of the flour. Mix at low speed. Add the remaining flour, one cup at a time, until a soft dough forms. Increase the speed to medium-high and continue mixing for 3 – 4 minutes.

Scrape all of the dough into the center of the bowl, off the sides, then sprinkle lightly with flour. Cover tightly with plastic wrap and allow the dough to rise in a warm place until doubled in size (1 to 1½ hours). Or, at this point you can tightly wrap the bowl in plastic wrap and refrigerate the dough for 8-12 hours for a slow rise.

Once the dough has doubled in size, turn it out onto a lightly floured surface. Use a floured rolling pin to work the dough into a ½-inch thick round (about 18 inches in diameter). Cut out as many rounds as you can with a 2½ or 3 inch round cutter (or glass jar, drinking glass, etc.). Cut a hole in the center of each round with a 1-inch cutter (shot glass, jar lid, etc.). Transfer the doughnuts along with the cut out centers (doughnut holes!) to a large, lightly floured, baking sheet. Allow the doughnuts to sit at room temperature for 25-30 minutes (40-45 if the dough was refrigerated), until slightly puffed up. Don’t re-roll the scraps, although you can cut them into odd shapes for smaller, square-ish doughnuts.

Make the glaze by stirring together all the ingredients. If the glaze seems too thick, add more milk, one tablespoon at a time, until the glaze reaches your preferred consistency. Set aside until needed.

Heat enough oil in a large heavy-bottomed pot, to reach 2½ inches deep, until the oil reaches 350°F. Fry the doughnuts 2 or 3 at a time, turning them with tongs or a wire mesh skimmer, until golden brown on both sides. Transfer to paper towels to drain the excess oil, for about 1 minute, then dip the doughnut into your prepared glaze. Transfer the glazed doughnuts to a cooling rack, allowing the glaze to set for 5-10 minutes before serving. Eat while still warm for best results.

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Homemade Crab Cakes with a Spicy Sauce

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Sometime over the last two weeks, I dropped out of the blogosphere. Life happens. It moves. Time tucks itself into moments that don’t feel like they’re flying by while they’re escaping you right under your grimy garden-dirt coated fingers, or rushing beneath quick moving feet that run up and down the staircase approximately three hundred ninety-six times per day. I could spend my time worrying about where it all goes – those minutes throughout each day… and I do, sometimes, until my head is entirely frenzied and my breath gets lost somewhere between my mouth, lungs, stomach  and brain. (Maybe in that order, too.) The unpredictability of time and life has been weighing on my mind, on my body, in my heart, exhaustingly since yesterday.

Regardless, the days move forward. Time keeps escaping in front of me, beneath me. So I assume the only movement is forward. I apologize for being slightly MIA recently. We had my in-laws visiting this past week, until this morning. There was laughter, ridiculousness, good food, doughnuts, too many adult cocktails most days, photographs and certainly not enough hours in the day.

I’ve been meaning to share this recipe with you for weeks. Guess what? It’s just as good as it would’ve been had I posted it two weeks ago. : ) I haven’t had crab cakes many times, but the majority of the times I have, I’ve been spared the over-done breadcrumb-heavy version. I like a crab cake to be predominantly crab… and these don’t shy away from that. The sauce is wonderfully creamy, with a spicy kick… Since it’s incorporated into the crab cake mixture, the layer of flavors in the final product is simply delicious.

 

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Crab Cakes with a Spicy Sauce

Makes about 8 crab cakes, feeds 3-4 people.

Ingredients:

For the crab cake sauce:

¾ cup Vegenaise or mayonnaise
¼ cup sour cream (light is okay)
3 tbsp. fresh lemon juice (approx. 1 medium lemon)
¾ tsp. fish sauce
1-3 tsp. Sriracha
¾ tsp. ancho chili powder
¼ tsp. freshly ground black pepper
2 tsp. stoneground mustard

For the crab cakes:

3 tbsp. unsalted butter
2 stalks celery, minced
½ a small, sweet onion, diced small
1 clove garlic, minced
½ tsp. sea salt
¼ tsp. ground black pepper
1 pound fresh lump crabmeat, picked through for shells
¼ cup crab cake sauce
¼ cup Vegenaise or mayonnaise
1 tsp. worcestershire sauce
1 egg, lightly beaten
juice from half a lemon (1½ – 2 tsp.)
¼ cup freshly chopped chives
1½  cups panko style breadcrumbs
½ tsp. sea salt
½ tsp. ground black pepper
2 eggs
2 tbsp. water
canola, sunflower, grapeseed, or vegetable oil

Directions:

Prepare the crab cake sauce: in a medium sized bowl, whisk together all the ingredients for the sauce until well combined. Cover and refrigerate until needed.

Prepare the crab cakes: melt the butter in a medium pan, over medium heat. Add the celery, onion, and garlic. Season with the ½ teaspoon salt and ¼ tsp. pepper. Saute for about 5 minutes, until the vegetables are tender. Remove the pan from the heat and allow the mixture to cool for 5 minutes.

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In a medium sized mixing bowl, combine the ¼ cup of the crab cake sauce, ¼ cup Vegenaise or mayonnaise, worcestershire, one egg, lemon juice, and chives. Whisk to combine everything well. Add the cooled cooked vegetables into the mixture. Gently add the crabmeat, folding it in thoroughly, trying not to break it up too much. Gently fold in ¾ cup of the breadcrumbs, also taking care not to break up the crab. 

Place the mixture into the freezer for 30-45 minutes.

Once the 30-45 minutes have passed, combine the remaining panko breadcrumbs, half teaspoon salt, and half teaspoon pepper in a shallow pan. Mix to evenly combine. In another shallow pan, whisk together the two eggs and two tablespoons water. Heat enough oil in a large (preferably cast iron) saucepan to about ¼-inch deep, over medium-high heat, to about 360° F.

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Scoop the crab mixture into portions of about ⅓-cup each. Form each portion into patties that are about 1-inch thick. Dip the crab cakes into the egg wash, letting the excess drip off before dredging the patty in the breadcrumbs, covering the whole thing evenly. Gently place the breadcrumb-coated crab cake into the heated oil. Cook for 4 minutes, or until golden brown, then flip the crab cake and cook an additional 4 minutes, until golden brown. Remove the crab cakes from the oil, allowing them to drain on a paper towel lined dish for a minute or two.

Serve the crab cakes, hot, topped with the remaining crab cake sauce.

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Posted in Appetizer, Dinner, Lunch, Sauces, Seafood, Sides, Snacks | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , | 6 Comments

Day to Day Life: Week Twenty

For the first time in well over a year, a week has passed since I posted anything here. I have been b-u-s-y. My in-laws are here visiting.  A week or so before they arrived, we decided to do a full house revamping. Meaning getting rid of my husband’s music studio and turning it into a teenager’s room. Moving the 7 year old into a bigger bedroom. Putting in an office mainly for writing and music business. Adding yet another garden to the yard. Various painting jobs and many hours of cleaning and rearranging. Its been hectic. I have recipes for you, they just haven’t made it here yet. Soon. Sorry for the delay. In the meantime, there’s slight evidence of the chaos. The past week, in part:

 

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I am always so happy to receive photos of this little lady. My niece is almost one. That is completely crazy to me.  I still remember when she was born.

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A book mess.

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The welcoming committee. Roses out of the yard.

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I love storm threatening skies. They’re magical around here.

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Shenanigans.

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Can we discuss the hilarity of finding photos of your 17 year old self, when you decided to chop off all your hair… and over-pluck your eyebrows so they’re barely there? Let’s not, actually. Let’s discuss that udder.

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The last things to take out of Silas’s old room… Space.

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Jojos at 1 o’clock in the morning as sustenance to keep cleaning? Heck YES

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This is real life. Mass laundry piles… and leftover Thai food straight out of the box for lunch.

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Silas’s new space.

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Avocado smash bang.

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At least I’m taller than the 7 year old… for the next 3 or so more months.

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This week’s reading material when there is a second leftover to breathe.

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There will be sourdough doughnuts for a Sunday breakfast.

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Day to Day Life: Week Nineteen

The last week has been absolutely nuts… but it looked a little like this:
daytoday19IMG_8257_zpsbc61b828I actually made these almond butter dark chocolate fudge brownies to welcome our new neighbors… but they apparently went back to California before I could deliver them next door. Solution? Eat a whole 9×13 inch pan of brownies in two days… Duh.
IMG_8489_zps82ca47e7The makings of a white sangria with fresh strawberries, mangoes, meyer lemon, and lemon balm… So good.
IMG_8434_zpseaa02f2eRadish babies sprouting in the garden!

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Pogo bounce!

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Homemade crab cakes one night surely meant open face crab cake sammiches the next night… with arugula from the garden!

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Early in the week we had rain… splash!

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Manwich breakfast: local eggs, local bread, homegrown basil, veggie sausage. 

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Roasted broccoli to go on homemade pizza… SO DAMN GOOD. Off pizza and on pizza.

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I’ve got tomato babies.

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We are cleaning the house from top to bottom, rearranging rooms and all sorts of ridiculous business. I found this literary journal I had some poetry published in, in Australia. I remember being STOKED about the fact that it  arrived by sea mail. And was covered in kangaroo stamps as postage. I had forgotten about this entirely. I love when that happens.

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Brunch for a hungry lady.

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Country/Cowpoke Themed Spring Sing Assembly at Silas Henry’s school..

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A sad mustard failing.

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My mother-in-law loves fried shrimp… For Mother’s Day, I made her a fried shrimp debaucherous feast.

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Cheesecake was also necessary.

 

 

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Toasted Coconut Cardamom Rice Pudding with Blueberries

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In the last few weeks, I’ve grown a deep appreciation for leftovers and nearly empty refrigerators. I’m not even being sarcastic (gasp, I know). The sparseness remaining once all the newer groceries have been consumed can be motivation to try new recipes. When I found leftover rice the other day, I knew I wanted to make rice pudding. I don’t know about you, but I absolutely think rice pudding should be breakfast (or lunch, maybe dinner), rather than merely dessert. After all, when I cook oatmeal, I add many of the same ingredients. The butter, the milk, sugar, vanilla. Same-same.

I enjoy good rice pudding. In the distant past, I’ve looked for various recipes to attempt. There have been 3-hour-long cooked rice puddings, burnt stuck-to-the-bottom-of-the-pan puddings, still crunchy rice grain puddings, baked rice puddings… This week’s theme was SIMPLICITY. Thus the pre-cooked rice. And the majority of the cooking time requiring little to no work. The warming flavor and scent of fresh cardamom is intoxicating. When allowed time to flavor the milk that makes up the pudding, the cardamom creates a depth of flavor even when the pods have been removed.

This rice pudding is delicious immediately after it’s done cooking. It’s ridiculously tasty cold. You really cannot go wrong. Keep leftovers refrigerated for up to 3 days.

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Toasted Coconut Cardamom Rice Pudding with Blueberries

Serves 3-5 people

Ingredients:

1½ cups cooked long grain white rice
1 can (13.7 oz.) full fat coconut milk
⅓ cup granulated sugar
1 tbsp. unsalted butter
1 vanilla bean, scraped
1 tsp. pure vanilla extract
4 whole cardamom pods
1 egg, lightly beaten
¼ cup unsweetened coconut flakes
½ cup unsweetened dried blueberries

Directions:

Toast the coconut: place the coconut flakes in an even, single layer, in a pan. Turn the heat on to medium heat, occasionally stirring the coconut until it is nicely golden brown. Remove from heat and set aside to cool.

Make the pudding: in a medium saucepan, combine the coconut milk, sugar, butter, vanilla bean, vanilla extract, and cardamom pods. Stir to combine everything well. Turn the heat on to medium heat, allowing the mixture to cook for 10-15 minutes.

Add the rice to the liquid ingredients, stirring to combine everything well. Cook for 30-40 minutes over medium heat, uncovered, until the mixture thickens and most of the liquid has been absorbed by the rice.

Temper the egg by mixing about one quarter cup of the hot rice mixture into it, about a tablespoon at a time. Add the tempered egg into the rice pudding on the stove, stirring steadily. Cook for an addition 5-10 minutes.

Remove the cardamom pods from the pudding, then stir in the blueberries and toasted coconut. Serve hot, warm, or cold. Keep leftovers refrigerated for up to 3 days.

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Posted in Breakfast, Dessert, Gluten-Free, Kids, Snacks, Vegetarian | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment