But I promise a delicious recipe is on its way very soon -- perfect for hot summer night dinners. You know, where you can't bear the thought of eating something overly warm?
Here's your hint:

Have a great weekend!
What's for dinner? What's on our plates?
A blog about food, cooking, and eating -- and the comforts and challenges that come with it.





While you're out vanilla bean shopping to make your own homemade vanilla extract, you may as well pick up an extra bean to make some homemade ice cream, especially now that summer is well on its way. Might be a great Memorial Day weekend treat!
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*Plus a bonus recipe for vanilla sugar!You need 9 vanilla beans. You can get these at a specialty store as they are cheaper and better quality than what you can buy at the grocery store. FYI decent beans are expensive -- approximately $1.25 to $2 a bean. I like the Bourbon/Madagascar the best.
Cut only the ends off of 3 beans, snip the next 3 beans into 1/2 inch pieces with kitchen scissors, and split the last 3 beans in half. Add all of the vanilla beans to the vodka. (Dena's note: if you're using your own fancy bottle to, say, make this as a gift, put the beans into the fancy bottle first, then pour the vodka into the bottle over the beans.)
Let it sit in a cool, dark place for 6-9 months and you'll have all the vanilla you'll need for a year. The vanilla leaches into the vodka, creating an extract. I start a new bottle when I'm halfway through the old one. (Dena's note: Did I mention he is an amazing pastry chef who bakes up a storm?)
* Bonus recipe: Once you use all of the extract, take the beans out of the bottle and cover them with sugar. This will create a mild vanilla sugar. For stronger sugar, use a fresh bean.

Still Tasty.
How do you make a menu for the week?"Seeing this post in my inbox today reminded me that I've been meaning to create weekly meal plans for...oh, I dunno, a few years now. It seems way more necessary now that we've got the kidlet and want to spend less on impromptu "missing ingredient trips". Getting started seems a little overwhelming, though."Clearly I was wrong -- and I should be the first to know this, because when I first started meal planning six years ago, I had no idea where to begin! It was agonizing. I turned to my friends and got ideas from them, and eventually was able to do it all on my own.

Here's what we're eating for the week. Someone asked me recently how I can manage to plan out what we're eating for the week here at Casa Dena, and I had to tell them the truth: I can't imagine not doing it.