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Wednesday, July 29, 2009

Summer Camping & Dena's Homefries

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I mentioned a while ago that hubby, the dog, and I went car-camping out in the gorgeousness that is the outdoors of Oregon. I'm finally just now getting around to writing about it!

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Because our beloved doggy is very old, very weak, and very sick, we decided to try it just for one night to see how he was able to handle it -- he'd never been camping before! He loved it and was a total trooper.

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So.... I had to plan meals and food only for a one-nighter, which was nice. We had bought ourselves a brand new big cooler that purports to keep the contents cold for up to 5 days (!!!), so I was able to factor that into my planning.

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My main goal with our camping food was to keep it as simple as possible. The food wasn't the focus of the trip, anyway, and, like I learned with the ballpark food, I knew the surrounding environment and peaceful atmosphere would add all the right flavorings to make it taste really darn good. Seriously: why does food taste so much better when you're camping?

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So here's what I planned, with simplicity and ease as my two main goals:


  • Day of Arrival Lunchtime: Turkey & Swiss Sandwiches with Root Veggie Chips

  • Dinner: Whole Wheat Pasta with Jarred Tomato Sauce and Pan-fried Vegetarian Italian Sausage

  • Breakfast: Scrambled Eggs and Dena's Famous Homefries (recipe below)

  • Day of Departure Lunchtime: Same as yesterday, but just as good!


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Some notes: I bought good, crusty bread that I sliced myself for the sandwiches -- not only does this bring the sandwiches up a notch, but you can also have some slices for dinner to go with your pasta, or for breakfast. Potentially you could toast them over your campfire on a stick.

I kept the sandwiches really simple and just brought mustard, onion, and tomato for them -- I forwent the lettuce so as to avoid soggy, wilty lettuce from the cooler. That totally worked for us, but of course do whatever works for you.

I used whole wheat macaroni for our pasta so that it was small and would cook in the small saucepan I wanted to bring. I did NOT want to lug around a giant pasta pot!

And yes, I used -- gasp! -- jarred tomato sauce. I was keeping it super simple, remember? I actually used Trader Joe's Rustico sauce, and it was surprisingly good! It's no homemade sauce, but it far exceeded our expectations. It was actually tasty, and not just camping-food-eating-outdoors-tasty. Two thumbs up from both me and hubby, who is...let's just say he's particular about his pasta sauce and I've never seen a jarred sauce that was up to par for him.

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Dena's Homefries


  • As many yukon gold potatoes as you'll need. For the two of us, it was about 6. We like a lotta homefries. Yum.

  • Half a red onion, chopped into medium-sized pieces

  • 2 cloves garlic, minced

  • EVOO (that's extra virgin olive oil for you non-Rachael Ray folks)

  • Plenty of salt and pepper to taste


Before you leave, par-boil your potatoes so they're halfway done. Cool them down, then pack in the cooler with all your other perishables.

After you wake up in the morning and have stretched and looked out on the river as soon as you step out of your tent, start water boiling for coffee and begin slicing your par-boiled potatoes into thin slices.

Chop your onion and your garlic. Set your cast-iron skillet on the stove or fire to pre-heat. Once it's at about medium-high, drizzle ~ 1.5 tbsp of your EVOO and let it heat til it shimmers. Add your onion and garlic and let it get fragrant. Then add the potatoes and cover. Let them cook for a while, check on them every so often, and stir every so often too, to make sure they're all getting equal time on the skillet bottom. You want them to get a little crispy brownness to them, but not so much that they're burnt.

Keep an eye on them and test them with a fork...you'll know when they're done. Once the potatoes are done, serve them up with plenty of salt and pepper alongside scrambled eggs and bread if you like. Eat by the McKenzie River in the sunshine. Life is good.

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Monday, July 27, 2009

Gettin' Ready for Tomato Season




It's 100 degrees here in Eugene today (!) and it is also the time of year when we have to start thinking about tomato season.

All the delicious recipes that are set to the back shelf, that I dream about in the middle of winter, are moved to the front of the queue -- happily and deliciously. I'm one of those people who eat fresh tomatoes only seasonally -- even though you can get "red" tomatoes in the grocery store year-round, there are many reasons not to eat them, including their utter tastelessness and mushy texture.

This great article in the San Francisco Chronicle will help anyone who wants to put tomatoes by for this winter -- something I have long wanted to do and may try to do this summer. Homemade, homegrown tomato sauce in January -- yum! (A great recession special idea, too, by the way.)

And here are some of my favorite recipes for real, honest-to-goodness vine-ripened summer tomatoes:


Our tomato plants have just started to tip into the Going-Crazy/Little-Shop-of-Horrors territory. Which means that soon, the many, many green tomatoes hanging on their vines should start to become red, delicious, and little bursts of summer in our mouths!

Can't wait!

Tuesday, July 21, 2009

Midsummer's Eve Ballgame

Last month, hubby and I went to see the season opener of the Eugene Emeralds, our local minor league baseball team. (I know, minor league baseball team -- how cool is that!)

It was so fun and so small-towny and so great all around. One very cool thing about the Eugene Em's, as we call them here, is that they play in the historic Civic Stadium -- it's 71 years old! And it really is as quaint as you would imagine, from the manual scoreboard to the location right in the middle of town.

We of course had ballpark food and beer for dinner. Now this was my first minor league game; I wasn't expecting anything special food-wise at all. Especially as my previous experience with ballgames had been Pacbell Park, home of the San Francisco Giants -- you seriously can get gourmet food there. And the garlic fries! To die for.

But I learned a little ballpark food lesson that night, I think: it's the heart of the ballpark and team that make the food taste good. Because the hot dog and fries that I ate were absolutely delicious.

So here's a little photo essay of our lovely evening, with a special focus on the FOOD, of course.


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The view from the footbridge walking over.

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They have these adorable little stands strewn about right outside.

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OH YEAH!

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This hot dog was so perfect.
I think it was the green grass, big lights, and cheers from the stands
that added just the right seasoning.

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Oh and did I mention?
We had GREAT seats -- right in front of first base.
Only $9 each. Can't beat that!

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With our Em's commemorative cup, of course.

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Life is good.

Go Em's!

Friday, July 3, 2009

A Quick Garlic Spear Pasta Recipe

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Here's a yummy pasta dish I cooked up last night, recipe requested by Katie* in a comment on my last post, who got garlic spears in her CSA and is wondering what the heck to do with them. (See? This is a full-service blog: you ask for it, we serve it right on up.)

A quick note about garlic spears/scapes: you really can use them as you would asparagus. They have a different flavor, of course, but they do well in any dish where you would use asparagus. Cook them for a little longer than you would asparagus, however: these guys take a little longer to get tender.


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Hubby feeling up the garlic spears



Garlic Spear (or Garlic Scape) Pasta with Prosciutto, Shallots, Pine Nuts, and Goat Cheese

  • 1 or 2 heads garlic spears, bottom inch or so trimmed, then chopped into ~ 1-inch or so long pieces, leaving the buds at the top intact. (But if the buds have looooong green parts coming off their tops, I chop that too.)
  • 1 shallot, finely diced
  • As much minced garlic as you and your family can handle (for us, that's a lot)
  • 3 thin slices prosciutto (you could easily omit this for a delicious vegetarian meal)
  • 1/3 cup pine nuts, lightly toasted in your toaster oven or in your pan -- just until they start to get fragrant
  • 1/2 cup to 1 cup good quality dry white wine
  • EVOO (extra-virgin olive oil)
  • Goat cheese if you'd like it a bit creamy; omit if you don't want a creamy-type pasta
  • 1 lb pasta of your choice (we always use organic whole wheat)


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While your pasta is cooking, heat your EVOO in your pan on medium-high heat until it starts to shimmer -- add your shallots and let them get fragrant. Then add your prosciutto and let it cook up til it's nearly crispy. Then add your garlic and let it get fragrant and nice and yellow-ish.

Add your white wine -- you'll get a moment of divine smells from the wine hitting the hot pan. Then toss in your garlic spears, give it a stir, and let it cook a bit. If you need a bit more wine to keep the pan just a little wet, go ahead and add it.

Let it simmer for about 5 minutes, then toss with your drained pasta, as much goat cheese as you like (I use about 1/2 cup for 1 lb of pasta), pine nuts, and top with a little grated parmesan and salt and pepper.

YUM!


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* Katie Kent, is that you?

Thursday, July 2, 2009

Menu Plan for the Week


Whoa, did this week get away from me or what? And how on earth is it that it's nearly the freaking 4th of July?!?!?!

Anyway.... here's what we've been and will be cooking up around here this week!

(Anything in pink with an asterisk* is from the Farmer's Market.)
  • Sunday: Sesame-Soy Soba Noodles (I told you we're a little obsessed with them!)
  • Monday: Grilled chicken, summer salad*, roasted baby butterball potatoes* (Hubby started his new job yesterday, so I grilled up some extra chicken for lunches throughout the week -- salad with some sliced chicken on top makes a great summertime workday lunch.)
  • Tuesday: Take-out from the Sundance Salad & Hot Food Bar because we had an evening meeting to go to
  • Wednesday: Quinoa Pilaf with broccoli* and summer squash*
  • Thursday: Garlic Spear* Pasta with crispy shallots, prosciutto, and pine nuts
  • Friday: Tamale Pie with leftover shredded chicken
  • Saturday: Happy 4th of July! We've been charged with bringing pasta salad to some dear friends' cook-out, so I'm going to go with tried and true and bring the soba noodles. Yum!
What about you? What do you have planned for the 4th?

Summer is so gorgeous and full-fledged here; it's neat to be able to celebrate the 4th of July like one imagines in one's head -- something you could never count on in the summer-foggy Bay Area. Yay Oregon!

I am soon to post some recipes from last week's yumminess, including camping food...stay tuned!

Wednesday, July 1, 2009

My Sesame-Soy Soba Noodles Are Famous!

Er, or something.

But my recipe did make it onto the New England Fine Living website, in their Healthy Summer Recipes section! Check it out:

http://www.nefineliving.com/Sesame-SoySoba-Noodles.html

It's true, I don't live in New England and I probably don't live what most would consider "fine living," but I live in Eugene, Oregon, which I think is like the west coast version of Burlington, Vermont, and I live just fine for me. :-)
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