The Lusty Month of May

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IMG_2184{The May 1st Friday afternoon Thank-God-It’s-FINALLY-Spring ice cream social at the theatre!}

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IMG_2163{A very early morning airport trip to drop off some honeymoonin’ friends, a gorgeous and fragrant stroll through Highland Park, and a huge, relaxing, and delicious breakfast accompanied by a latte and a good book at Harvest Cafe – all before my morning dental appointment. There is, in fact, life – and very, very beautiful life, it turns out – before 9am!}

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IMG_2161{A new favorite recipe, here}

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Guaranteed to Make You Smile

In honor of Pi(e) day, on 3.14.15, I celebrated by making a rich chocolate chess pie topped with a rosemary-infused sea salt caramel (recipe here) to take over to a friend’s house that evening. It was completely fantastic. I’d never had to pre-bake a pie crust before (pie-weights are a thing? a bag of dried lentils it is!) and needed to look up tips online for how to do it. I didn’t master the crust pre-bake to my satisfaction the first time out, but this pie was so divine that I’m sure I’ll be making this pie again and again, so I’ll have ample opportunities to practice in the future. I also enjoyed a chicken pot pie for lunch. I’d say Pi(e) day was a tasty success.

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Very early in the morning on March 18th Rochester was graced by a gorgeous (and fairly rare) northern lights display over Lake Ontario – about an 8 minute drive from our house. Of course, I had no idea this would be coming so I slept soundly through the whole light show. I love the aurora borealis, and the last time I saw them vividly was in Iceland many years ago. I would have camped out all night on Durand Beach had I know something this phenomenal was coming! Needless to say, I immediately signed up for “aurora alerts” through a northern lights forecasting website so I’ll be in the know the next time we get a magnetic storm with enough strength to send some of those colorful waves our direction. Gorgeous, isn’t it? It’s almost hard to believe that something this stunning was right in my backyard! {Photo credit: Patty Singer via 13WHAM Facebook}

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 And, obviously, if you haven’t already seen these two precious video clips of an armadillo playing with his toy and a chipmunk enjoying fresh linens, you have mandatory plans for the next few minutes. I think it goes without saying that the “armadillos as pets” Google search happened approximately 4 seconds after I first watched the clip. My wheels are turning with ways in which I can acquire an armadillo pronto…

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lMJ1tdzXjso

Have a great Monday!

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Truffle Monday

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So, not everyday, but at least on Monday.

Last week three of my friends, within 1-hour of each other, all sent me a link to a local Living Social deal for a truffle making workshop. Clearly, this means my friends love me and know I’m always up for an adventure…and some chocolate. But once we dug a little deeper and discovered that the class was only a demonstration and not an actual on-your-feet baking class, we decided to make a go of it ourselves.

Becca and I made earl gray orange vanilla truffles (word of advise: use 2 tea bags and you gotta double the cream), cayenne pepper truffles, and southern comfort truffles.

(You might need a tissue; I can see you drooling through my monitor)

We also considered these salted caramel whiskey truffles and grand marnier truffles. Alas, those must come another day!

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We learned that making truffles is time consuming, crazy messy, and really isn’t nearly as easy as it looks or sounds in terms of getting the texture of the ganache just right for ball rolling, but they are so delicious!

Especially those southern comfort truffles, which are simply dreamy!

Anyone have a to-die-for truffle recipe to share with us?

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Cupcakes & Chili

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I’ve gotten several recipe requests for the Lemon Lavender Cupcakes I made over the weekend. And so, here it is. Enjoy :)

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Cupcakes

  • ½ cup sugar
  • ½ tsp. lavender buds
  • ½ cup butter (room temperature)
  • 2 eggs
  • 1 cup flour
  • 1 tsp. baking powder
  • ½ tsp salt
  • ¼ cup milk or half-and-half
  • ½ tsp. pure vanilla extract
  • Yellow gel food coloring (optional)

Filling

  • ¼ cup lemon curd

Frosting

  • 4 oz. cream cheese (room temperature)
  • 2 Tbsp. butter (room temperature)
  • ¼ tsp. vanilla extract
  • 2 Tbsp. lavender simple syrup (1 Tbsp. lavender buds, ¼ cup sugar, ½ cup water)
  • 1 and ½ cups powdered sugar
  • Purple gel food coloring (optional)

Toppings

  • Lavender buds
  • Lemon zest
  • Yellow or purple sugar, edible glitter, or edible pearls

Directions

  1. Preheat the oven to 350°F; line a 12-count muffin pan with 9 paper liners. (Recipe yields 9 cupcakes)
  2. Put the sugar and lavender flowers in a food processor. Process briefly to combine.
  3. Tip the lavender sugar into a bowl with the butter. Beat together until pale and fluffy.
  4. Beat the eggs into the butter, one at a time, then sift in the flour and fold gently.
  5. Add salt and baking powder. Stir in the milk and vanilla.
  6. Spoon the mixture into the muffin cups. Bake for 18 minutes. Cool on wire rack.
  7. Use a paring knife to remove a “plug” from your cupcakes. Fill holes with lemon curd.
  8. To make simple syrup – In a small sauce pan, combine sugar and water and bring to a simmer until sugar is dissolved. Add lavender and simmer on low heat for 3 minutes. Strain liquid into a small bowl to remove lavender and let cool completely.
  9. To make frosting – Beat butter and cream cheese until well combined. Beat in vanilla and 1 Tbsp. simple syrup. Beat in powdered sugar, one half cup at a time. Add 1 more Tbsp. simple syrup and gel food coloring, if using.
  10. Frost cupcakes and sprinkle with toppings.

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We also went to a chili and beer tasting cookoff, which was an exceptionally delicious dinner. We sampled 5 or 6 beers and all 17 chilis, catagorized as mild, medium, and hot – with cheese, sour cream, onion, bread and butter, and cornbread. Oh, man. Talk about good eatin’. Ted and I took notes so we could properly judge and cast our ballots. Clearly, we were invested. If you haven’t been to a chili cookoff recently, I’d highly recommend it.

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Lemon Lavender Winter Cupcakes

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Lavender sugar cupcakes, filled with sweet and tangy lemon curd, and topped with lavender simple syrup infused cream cheese frosting

…for the win.

 

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Sweet & Savory Spheres

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January’s office potluck theme: Balls. We are nothing if not a festive bunch.

Lunch included meatballs, loaded mashed potato balls, pizza balls, turkey zucchini feta balls, caprese balls (tomato and mozzarella), Ebleskiver balls (Danish apple-filled pancake spheres), melon balls, olives, buckeyes, and oreo truffle balls.

It was a lunch of champions.

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For February’s potluck we’re thinking Superbowl. Not quite as original, but definitely tasty!

Any theme suggestions for upcoming potlucks?

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Stratas and Frittatas

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photo 5{a lunch to envy}

Every month at Geva we all gather in the kitchen and library for an office potluck. Clearly, theatre people don’t mess around when it comes to good food or great conversation. In the past several months we’ve done a soup bar, Mexican potluck, autumn themed, comfort food, and several others. For December, we decided on everyone’s favorite meal – Breakfast for Lunch!

Talk about a raging success.

We had about 15-18 people participate and it was heavenly! And we all needed naps within ten short minutes of returning to our desks/workstations.

There were homemade crepes with fresh strawberries, chocolate syrup and whipped cream, clementines and raspberries, hard-boiled eggs, crispy bacon, vegetarian omelet cups, bacon and cheese omelet cups, sausage strata, veggie strata, spinach and feta frittata, a goat cheese Quiche, hash brown casserole, home fries, pulpy orange juice, hot tea, fruit salad, strawberry upside down cake, sticky buns, fresh-baked lemon cream cheese bread, orange cherry scones, and vanilla bean scones. Everything was completely excellent and we all got to catch up on some very much-needed girl time and laughter in the midst of a very busy holiday season, personally and theatrically. Amazing food and awesome coworkers…this is a win-win situation if ever I saw one.

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We’re already looking forward to our January/New Years potluck, with a great theme…balls. Yup, balls. Every food item contributed must be in the shape of a ball – we’re talking Oreo truffles, meatballs, etc. The world is a ball of possibilities! And a clever little homage to the sweet and shiny silver ball ornaments many people associate with New Year’s. I can’t wait to see what goodies show up for this one!

One thing’s for sure, these potlucks (and these coworkers) are the bomb!

Does your office do a potluck? Do you have any clever theme ideas for our monthly 2014 potlucks?

 

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On a Lovely Thanksgiving Thursday

Thanksgiving has always been one of my most favorite holidays – fall, food, family, friends, football, relaxation, and the fact that it’s a day of celebration and reflection for a very worthy, uplifting cause.

I woke up and started the day off at mass. I absolutely love going to church on Thanksgiving morning – taking that one hour to simply sit and reflect, to appreciate all the wonderful blessings we have been given over our lifetime and the past year in particular, and to say a few prayers in gratitude for the people and things that mean the most to us. I really, really love starting Thanksgiving in such a peaceful, beautiful, positive, community-driven, appreciative way.

The rest of the day consisted of tuning into the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade for an hour or so while baking single-serving cranberry apple and strawberry rhubarb pies in mini mason jars (which we can freeze then cook – all in the jars – whenever a pie craving hits), watching our Green Bay Packers get slaughtered in the annual Thanksgiving Day football game against the Detroit Lions (which was just awful, although not unexpected, unfortunately), a magnificent Thanksgiving meal at Mario’s Restaurant in Pittsford (they do an absolutely phenomenal Thanksgiving spread, and spending all that time and money to cook a huge Thanksgiving meal really doesn’t make much sense when it’s just the two of us – all that great food plus no prep and no dishes sounds like a relaxing, winning plan to me!), calling to chat with all our far-away family to send our love, watching a Charlie Brown Thanksgiving and a Garfield Thanksgiving, and playing a round of Wheel of Fortune on the Wii.

It was a beautiful, relaxing, delicious, and romantic day of gratitude. We always miss spending time with our families during the holidays, and we look forward to future holidays when we can be with them in person to celebrate (and eat my mom’s amazing broccoli cheese casserole), but sometimes it’s really nice to spend our holidays as a couple, just the two of us, relaxing and creating our own traditions.

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** For the pies, simply purchase a pack of one dozen short mini mason jars, mix up a batch of your favorite pie dough and a few different batches of your favorite pie fillings, roll out your dough, press a small amount of dough into the bottom and sides of each jar, fill to the top with pie filling, add more dough at the top to cover the filling (lattice, full coverage, cookie cutter shapes, or, alternatively, a crumble topping), and seal each jar with a lid. You can pop the jars right into the freezer. Whenever you are ready to bake a few pies, take the lids off, place the jars on a baking sheet with a lip to prevent any sugary spill-over from junking up your oven, place pies and baking sheet in the oven, then preheat the oven to 375. Once at temperature, bake for 50-60 minutes. If baking fresh, keep the lid off, place jars on a lipped baking sheet, preheat oven to 375, then put pies and baking sheet in the oven and bake for 45-50 minutes.

** Check out the menu for Mario’s Thanksgiving spread here. Also, I was so excited for dessert that, in a rare moment, I completely forgot to take a picture of my dessert plate! My favorites dishes of the evening were the lamb, candied yams served in an orange half, spinach artichoke dip, sour cream and leek mashed potatoes, brussel sprouts with garlic and pancetta, cranberry sauce, seared salmon, stuffed mushroom caps, deviled eggs, butternut squash ravioli with sweet cream sauce, mussels and clams, cheesecake, chocolate fountain, and endless champagne. It sounds like I just named 3/4 of the menu, but I assure you, I did not. But really, everything was delicious.

I hope you all were able to enjoy a lovely Thanksgiving, celebrating what you are grateful for with those who mean the most to you!

 

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End of Summer Recipes to Sink Your Teeth Into

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Lara tested, Lara approved. Which means nothing to you other than I liked ’em, and if you’ve got similiar tastes, you might like ’em too.

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This healthy and flavorful salad of lettuce, roasted whole baby beets, crumbled goat cheese, sliced shallots, chopped peaches, walnuts, and slivers of fresh lime basil. Peaches are in season big time right now and they are out of this world (so, obviously, I put them in everything). Used up quite a few CSA share veggies in this puppy as well. So good by itself there’s no dressing required!

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This delicious yellow watermelon margarita (in my favorite Texas chili pepper hand blown margarita glasses, of course!) rimmed with lime and sugar. Pretty sure I could drink an entire pitcher of these by myself.

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{photo courtesy of this blog, because my dark-nighttime-kitchen shot of this meal looked nowhere near as appetizing as this dish really is}

This easy, healthy, and punchy shrimp pasta with lemon, garlic, spinach, tomatoes, and fresh herbs.

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{photo courtesy of this blog because I haven’t taken pictures of the ones I made yet}

These super cheap, super easy, super quick, no bake, utterly divine black and white Oreo truffle balls I made for our second book club meeting for The Night Circus. I dressed ’em up with a topping of sparkly black sprinkles and placed them in white and black lace cupcake holders. Always a crowd pleaser.

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{photo courtesy of this blog because, again, not my photo because I was too hungry to take a picture of it before I devoured it}

This tasty cilantro, lime, cayenne, and Parmesan roasted corn on the cob, which is a perfect side to pretty much any meal. And sweet corn season here is so good!! There’s so much delicious corn being grown around these parts, I can’t even contain myself. It’s fantastic plain too.

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This watermelon peach salad with lime basil because it’s fresh, unexpected, delicious, and I had all the ingredients on hand and it just sounded so darn good! And, of course, can’t let a good seasonal peach, watermelon, or bunch of lime basil go to waste!

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{photo courtesy of this blog because I forgot to take pictures of my jars before they made their way into fridge storage}

This pickled veggie slaw (I dressed up the flavor by adding a squirt of sriracha and a large hanful of chopped cilantro to the vinegar mix), which is awesome for using up lots of different veggies (you can seriously use almost any julienned veggie in it), and tastes excellent as a salad topping, on sandwiches, for a snack…it’s good stuff.

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And finally, there was this free chocolate tasting Ted and I went to at Hedonist Artisan Chocolates two Fridays ago. It was for a collection of chocolate truffles designed and made by a Hedonist chocolate intern (um, best job ever?) and English major that “celebrated the marriage of culinary and literary with five pun-derful and exclusive flavors.” I adored them all, but the one with cumin really stood out and packed a punch, and the one with peach was pretty bold too. Definitely a great flavor experience!

What have you been cooking lately?

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Down on the Farm

Carrots

Cabbage

Sunday morning I was up with the sun and in my car by 7 a.m. driving an hour east past orchards lined with hundreds and hundreds of trees dangling lush, ripe peaches (and equally as many roadside stands selling the very same fresh-picked peaches) into the beautiful farmland of upstate New York to spend my morning on a peaceful farm weeding and harvesting in the rich earth and bright sun.

My friend Becca and I are part of a CSA (Community Supported Agriculture) group that brings us fresh vegetables from the family owned and operated Peacework Organic Farm every week from May to November. We split a full share of produce every week that we pick up at Abundance Co-Op near the theatre, and in return for these large bundles of fresh veggies, we pay a small sum of money to the farm (guaranteeing the farm a reliable income), and agree to work a few distribution shifts (weighing, bundling, and handing out the produce to the other CSA members), and a few farm shifts (weeding, harvesting, cleaning, hauling the produce from the farm to the distribution site, or whatever else the farmer and his wife need help with that week).

While the thought of rising at 6:15 on a Sunday morning (you know, like hardworking farmers do every.single.day. rain or shine) wasn’t particularly appealing, I had been really looking forward to the farm work for the past several months.

I think it’s nice to be reminded where your food comes from. It’s good to remember that your food doesn’t just appear at the grocery store or in a stall at the farmers market, but that the farm, the earth it comes from, is carefully plotted out, the soil is prepared, seeds are planted, meticulous and timely care is given to things like sunlight, rain, pests, nutrients, diseases, weeding, weather, seasons, etc., and food is picked, inspected, cleaned, bundled and packaged – all before it ever even gets to you. Even the smallest carrot or leaf of lettuce that you can eat in one bite and be done with forever was a long time in the making.

And at small farms like the one we support, all that work is done by hand. By people. By families. And these people work outside twelve hours a day, every single day, in gorgeous weather and in atrocious weather. They worry about too much rain, too little rain, a bad crop of seeds, woodchucks, weeds choking the beets, and what happens when Late Blight infests their entire tomato crop that they have to destroy in order to keep it from spreading – if it will reach the potatoes before they can kill it and what impact that will have on them financially. Their hands touch our food – to plant it, to weed around it, to pull it out of the ground, and to clean it with cold spring-fed water.

It was nice to reconnect to the earth, and directly to the people, who feed us. It was gratifying to get down and dirty for four hours with the farmer, his wife, their hired hand, two mousing dogs, and a handful of other CSA members early on a Sunday morning out in the boonies to share in the hard work and good stories of the muddy boots, dirty jeans, sunburned arms, sweaty faces, big hearts, wise brains, and kind smiles that make sure we have food every week. I was happy and humbled to learn about the farm and to pick our food, so I can always remember where and who it comes from, and to be grateful for it.

And it was fun too. Our group started with cutting big, beautiful, colorful, fragrant stems of basil (6 varieties – regular, lemon, lime, purple opal, cinnamon, and thai) and grouping them into good-sized bundles for all the members to receive in their shares this week. Then we moved on to harvesting potatoes – on our knees beside a long trench of dirt, digging deep into the ground to find yellow potatoes. I could have dug for potatoes all day! It was glorious! I loved it! I felt like a truffle pig searching for truffles and I enjoyed every second of it, with dirt caked onto my knees, up to my elbows and on my hairline, and a small twinge of joy every time I unearthed another potato to add to the three five-gallon buckets full of potatoes I harvested. When the potatoes were gathered it was time to weed around the parsley and pull weeds as tall as I am (no joke) from the rows of beets. At noon we washed off in refreshing, cold water from the spring-fed spigot (which tasted and felt heavenly!) by the vegetable washing and storage shed, and loaded up the cars with the produce for the drive back to Rochester. Truly, it was awesome and I’m excited for another opportunity to work on the farm, when the chance comes around.

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*Sorry for the lack of personal pictures, but a working farm is not the place for iPhones. It was beautiful out there and I wish I could share it with you. The produce shots of the cabbage and carrots at the top are from Peacework Organic Farm and the gvocsa webpage, and the truffle pig is a pretty accurate representation of how awesome I felt trufflin’ for potatoes. Also, truffle pigs are the best. Love it!

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