Showing posts with label giveaway. Show all posts
Showing posts with label giveaway. Show all posts

Friday, April 11, 2014

Color-Punch Slaw at Anthology



Color. It's where it's at.

Especially with everything spring finally exploding in the great outdoors.

My newest story at Anthology is a vibrant, toothsome recipe that requires absolutely no cooking. There's a good bit of chopping and a little stirring, but I know your muscles need a little workout so that you can be your warm-weather best…. ;) I hope you like it. It really is delicious, one of my steady go-to's that pleases every single time.








It is just as savory-sweet-crunchy-juicy as it looks. To try the slaw for yourself, click here for the full details. Let me know how you love it!  :-)

And don't forget I still have a giveaway on offer!! There's so much to enjoy in Sweet Paul's book, so visit this page for the details if you want a shot at the goods.

Happy weekend everyone!

Friday, April 4, 2014

Chef in the Garden and a Sweet Paul Giveaway!






Spring is here. Things are at last changing. The profusion of blooms of all kinds is happening. If you follow me on Instagram, you have seen me get punchy over flowerstrees, and anything else which as been showing itself spring. Yesterday I had the unique opportunity to accompany one of my farmer friends for a field trip, as he dropped off goods to chefs at the best restaurants in town. Everywhere the day took us, there were redbuds, dogwoods, forsythia, and cherry blossoms clamoring for glory.

But I digress. I am doing a *very special* giveaway. Scroll down for a chance at the amazing goodies… 

These images are the path of a longer-term project. Jim and I photographed a unique farm-to-chef-to-table event last year which epitomized what it means to be part of Community. The fact that it was chock-full of sublime flavors and a total blast didn't hurt any. The story just got printed for this month's Birmingham Magazine, and it looks beautiful.

Will and Liz from Heron Hollow Farm - you've seen them here and here - provided one of their pigs for the roast. The five-course meal included all kinds of veg and foraged treats from the kind gents at Mt Laurel Farm, the incredibly pastoral setting for the event. Due to its first-time success, they are repeating this event, with the next Chef in the Garden dinner on May 3rd. Just in time for beautiful spring produce! Click here for tickets!

I am falling in love with all that it means to get to know my farmers.













There are so many more photographs from that beautiful experience. Order a copy of the magazine here to see it in print! As I said earlier there is a larger project underway, so with any luck you will have a chance to see the spectrum of amazing images all together. I'll keep you posted!

And now for the giveaway!!! 

My friend Sweet Paul, *just* released his wonderful new book, Eat & Make: Charming Recipes + Kitchen Crafts You Will Love, and he has offered a SIGNED COPY to one lucky reader of this blog. We have had a great time making beautiful work together over the years, and so I know firsthand how much love he poured into the making of this book. I hope you will enjoy it every bit as much as he had fun producing it.


In order to qualify for the giveaway, follow me in my daily fun over at Instagram. Then leave a comment here: tell me what fun or delicious thing you are especially looking forward to as we finally revel in spring. Please include a link for contact should you win! Due to mailing rates, this giveaway is only eligible to residents in the continental United States, though I LOVE ALL my readers! Cut-off to qualify is April 20th, at 11:59 EST. I will announce the winner the week following…. so stay tuned!!!

Very soon I'll post more great projects that are now complete. I feel incredibly grateful for the community sprouting up everywhere and the gorgeous stories I am taking part in to tell. Have a beautiful weekend!

Monday, June 17, 2013

Springtime Travels and My New Life


It's not often I post a photo of myself. But, with so many different things going on all at once, I wanted to share just how happy I've been. This photo pretty much sums it up. 

With experiences stockpiling, I'm a bit frustrated that I haven't had the time (or energy after days adjusting to my new, full schedule) to sit and compose a wondrous tale for each of the vignettes I am going to share. So be it. I am happy as we settle in to our new lives in the South, and feel like I am living as if on a long vacation. We hope to keep it that way. 

Here is a bit of some meanderings from the past month or two - 



Gorgeous blooms - some of the first of the season, during our ill-timed but wonderful trip to Portland and Seattle in April - at The Meadow on Mississippi Street. This fell smack in the middle of us packing up ten years of a life in NY to move to Birmingham, and we both joked more than once about wishing we'd been more efficient and brought some stuff to pack while on this trip. Ha.

We found many great finds in the short time we stayed in Portland and felt genuinely welcomed by all of the people we met. Must. Return. Soon. 

For you New Yorkers with a hankering for a ridiculous artisanal chocolate selection, slabs of Himalayan pink salt, as well as numerous other bottled salts, don't miss their location in the West Village! It is a well-curated collection of good-living essentials....






We loved the Rebuilding Center. As I wandered the aisles, I had to remind myself I was taking a plane home *and* packing up far more of the very stuff collected in my years, and I certainly did NOT need more stuff at this moment. But, the vast collections of reclaimed, recycled just-about-everything at super reasonable prices made me wish a place like this existed in my own neighborhood.... One of the trucks parked outside said it best:

This place has its sights on the future of materials usage, as well as how we think about physical resources in general. Kudos to you guys for helping pave the way (literally) to innovative building practices. 


There was Por Que No? taqueria:  inventive, conscientious, and every bit delicious, and also the great vegetarian food truck Wolf & Bears, which had I been less hungry, you would see just how fresh and yummy their falafel and sauces were. Go! Eat well while supporting smart, local businesses. 

What is the best way to round things out? Topping off the experience with ice cream. (You knew I was going to say that.) For that, we hunted down Salt & Straw, and boy are we happy we did. 



With a hip space, excellent, friendly service, and dynamite flavors, you cannot go wrong. We chose the arbequina olive oil ice cream, and coffee & bourbon - damn good to the last lick.

In some ways all of this served as the backdrop to a pinnacle experience we were fortunate to have, that at an eco-homestead nestled in a quiet and beautiful neighborhood in the northwest. The Attunement Guest House had everything we needed and so much more. The radiant heat in the bathroom (I covet thee), the beautiful laying hens who supplied eggs for our breakfasts, the front "lawn" of spring onions, kale, and chard (available for harvest to go with those eggs), the newly constructed sun ray trellis which would nurture fig and kiwi trees.... and then there was our hostess, Joelle herself. She was a ray of sunlight and definitely a kindred spirit. I wish we'd had more time to soak up all the details and moments with her (and her awesome housemates). Another thing to come back for...































































The breakfast shoot was unplanned. I think we were so wowed by the abundant, fresh food and feeling just so welcomed, that we both reached for our cameras to document our experience. Not the most eloquent subject - a humble veggie omelette - but the making it (and eating it!) was sheer bliss. I hope you experience some of that in the photos. For the recipe, scroll down....

Along the streets in both Portland and Seattle, everywhere was an explosion of blooms. I gasped aloud at least 7 or 8 times at the layers and abundance (there goes that word again) of all of the trees and plantings. Everywhere was so pretty, so considered.























































































There's more to this story, but it's long enough. I don't want to tire you out! I've mapped out more of my meanderings, so please stay tuned. I will be making more regular appearances once again, now having settled in to my new life in Birmingham.

Also, as per last post pre-move, Mira Zaki has won the giveaway. Congratulations Mira! I will be shipping your books out this week. Thanks so much for your patience.

Chard and Spring Onion Omelette
Serves 3

6 free range eggs
2 good bunches of swiss chard (you can also use kale, or broccoli rabe), rinsed and coarsely chopped
1/2 cup grated sharp cheddar cheese
2 spring onions, trimmed and finely chopped
1 tbsp fresh soft herbs (like parsley, dill, cilantro, thyme, etc.), coarsely chopped
freshly cracked pepper
a good knob of pasture-raised butter, divided in two
a good pinch of Himalayan pink salt (you can use regular sea salt, if that is what is available)

Scramble eggs in a bowl and season with a bit of pink salt and pepper. In a large skillet, heat the butter over medium-high heat. When it begins to bubble and become brown, add in the onions. Sauté for a couple minutes, then add in the chopped chard. Allow the chard (or whichever green you have chosen) to wilt in the pan, stirring to combine. Remove from pan and empty mixture into a sieve set over a bowl, allowing any leftover juices to drip out. Save liquid for stock or another use.

In same skillet, heat another pat of the butter until it sizzles, swirl around pan, then pour in the egg mixture and reduce heat to low. Tilt the pan every so often, using a rubber spatula to push egg away from the edge of the pan and allow the still-liquid part to seep over to the edge. Repeat, moving around the circumference of the pan, until no more liquid egginess remains. Once the omelette surface is solid enough to handle (and remain whole), use a long spatula to free it from the pan bottom, and with a *very confident* strong jerk, flip the omelette over, landing the omelette face-down into the pan. Scoot it center with the spatula if it didn't quite make it (many tries are necessary to perfect flipping a large omelette, so don't worry about tears the first series of tries). Scatter cheese across the surface, followed by the onion-chard mixture. With the spatula, fold one half of the omelette over and gently press the top down using the spatula butt. Remove from heat, cut into wedges and serve, garnished with herbs, sea salt and cracked pepper.