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Thursday, October 29, 2009

What Is Your Favorite Thanksgiving Dish?


Now that we're less than a month out (I am so excited; Thanksgiving is my FAVORITE holiday), I've been starting to ponder Thanksgiving food and my favorite dishes.

Which made me wonder: what are YOUR favorites?

Mine are (in no particular order):
  1. Cranberry sauce
  2. Mashed potatoes or potato side dish of any sort
  3. Stuffing that hasn't been cooked inside a turkey, preferably with cranberries and apricots in it. And definitely WITHOUT oysters -- blech.
  4. Brussel sprouts
  5. Green beans
There's more, but then I'd be listing the whole meal and that wouldn't make the dishes especially favorite, now would it?

Post a comment with the dishes you most look forward to on Thanksgiving. And including recipes for them gets you extra super bonus points! Also let me know if you wouldn't mind my sharing your recipe here; this is a recipe exchange, after all.  :-)

Tuesday, October 27, 2009

I <3 Goats

In the peripherally about food category, I give you this awesomeness (check out the before and after photos!):

Goat Renting to get rid of invasive blackberry.

Um...it's so cool I can't stand it. Not only am I obsessed with goats on a general level (I have already picked out the breed I want to own someday, and believe me am I bummed we can't have one here at our new house), we have now have proof of their total gloriousness as envinronmentally-friendly weedkillers. Not only do they provide companionship, laughter (because have you ever hung with a goat? They're really funny little creatures), milk, and the best cheese ever, they also rock when it comes to getting rid of really-hard-to-get-rid-of weeds in a totally safe, no-environmental-impact way. GOATS ROCK.

A pic of an Oberhasli goat. They look like little deer. And they're very sweet-tempered.

Whenever I do get my goats (you gotta have at least two, otherwise they get lonely; also, did you know they come when called?), I'll happily rent them out to whomever would like to get rid of the very-invasive-in-Oregon Himalayan blackberry or whatever else. And then I'll make delicious, finger-licking cheese out of their milk.

Which reminds me, I have got to post photos from my cheese-making class! It rocked my world.

Off to dream of cheese and calling little goat kids by name....

Monday, October 26, 2009

New Washer?

Okay so technically this doesn't directly have to do with food. However, Mama Needs a New Washer. I am so over leaning on our washer for the last 10 minutes of its cycle to get it to spin and just be done!

And we do use our washer to wash napkins, dishtowels, and other such items with which we cook and eat, so it's kinda apropos to this blog, right? Ha.

Anyway -- go here to enter for a chance to win a $200 Best Buy gift card! By blogging this, I get an extra entry to win. So excuse the self-serving post. ;-)

If I win, we'll be looking at washers....

Thursday, October 22, 2009

Food Poem of the Month


I've not posted poetry about food regularly, but I just may make a habit out of it; I've loved the poems I have found so much.

I came across this one in Tuesday's Writer's Almanac and couldn't resist sharing with you; its descriptions of eating an artichoke are so sensual, so real, so prickly and so delicious, so true.

Pass the melted butter, please!


The First Artichoke

by Diane Lockward

Though everyone said no one could grow
artichokes in New Jersey, my father
planted the seeds and they grew one magnificent
artichoke, late-season, long after the squash,
tomatoes, and zucchini.

It was the derelict in my father's garden,
little Buddha of a vegetable, pinecone gone awry.
It was as strange as a bony-plated armadillo.

My mother prepared the artichoke as if preparing
a miracle. She snipped the bronzy winter-kissed tips
mashed breadcrumbs, oregano, parmesan, garlic,
and lemon, stuffed the mush between the leaves,
baked, then placed the artichoke on the table.
This, she said, was food we could eat with our fingers.

When I hesitated, my father spoke of beautiful Cynara,
who'd loved her mother more than she'd loved Zeus.
In anger, the god transformed her
into an artichoke. And in 1949 Marilyn Monroe
had been crowned California's first Artichoke Queen.

I peeled off a leaf like my father did,
dipped it in melted butter, and with my teeth
scraped and sucked the nut-flavored slimy stuff.
We piled up the inedible parts, skeletons
of leaves and purple prickles.

Piece by piece, the artichoke came apart,
the way we would in 1959, the year the flowerbuds
of the artichokes in my father's garden bloomed
without him, their blossoms seven inches wide
and violet-blue as bruises.

But first we had that miracle on our table.
We peeled and peeled, a vegetable striptease,
and worked our way deeper and deeper,
down to the small filet of delectable heart.

Tuesday, October 20, 2009

Quickie Pollan Post

We just moved into our amazing new house, and we are totally in love with it and our new neighborhood. And we're still kind of in shock that we get to live here, as homeowners.

So on that note -- picture me surrounded by boxes trying to figure out where the dutch oven is -- I am going to post another quickie post, and I can't wait to get back to regular blogging. For those of you still reading, thanks for sticking with me.

_____________________________

Two new items of Michael Pollan (or, as they like to call him on my favorite Jewish Ethical Eating website, Rebbe Pollan) interest this week!

The first is a little New York Times interactive article I came across on Facebook, which I adore:

Michael Pollan's Reader's Food Rules

My favorite? "If you are not hungry enough to eat an apple, then you are not hungry." Genius. Some friends also commented that when apples are not in season, they substitute "lentils" or "a peach," and it still works like a charm.

The second is the recent publication of The Omnivore's Dilemma for kids! As Pollan himself put it, this edition is "aimed at middle and high schoolers. It's shorter and more streamlined, but also has some new material and a wealth of visuals -- photographs, charts, graphs, etc."

I am so ordering it from my library now. And this will definitely go on my list for good ideas for books for kids 13-18.

(Sidenote: if you decide to buy it, I hope you'll support your local bookstore or one of the big independent booksellers like Powell's.)

Saturday, October 3, 2009

Top Chef Prediction

I'm going to go out on a limb and make my prediction for the winner of this season of Top Chef (which is pretty good this time around, I think). My pick is the same person I thought it would be from the very first episode, actually.







That's right: I think she's going to be the second female Top Chef, ever.

I do think she's going to face some fierce competition from Kevin and both Voltaggio brothers (especially Bryan). In fact, I predict those 4 will be the Final Four if Michael Voltaggio doesn't get in his own way.

But I think she's going to win it all. Go Jennifer!

What about you? Any predictions?



P.S. We're in the midst of packing and getting ready to move into our new house THAT WE OWN in 2 weeks. (!!!) So thanks for your understanding regarding the light posting here both in the past and until we get settled.
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