Showing posts with label self. Show all posts
Showing posts with label self. Show all posts

Monday, April 4, 2016

Kid Chef Cookbook, Available Now! And, a Seasonal Knockout Meal




To celebrate the launch of my book, Kid Chef, here is a little video for one of the recipes - shakshuka! My cookbook is now available at booksellers nationwide. You can also order it on Amazon, at a can't-be-beat rate. I feel like such a proud mama!! We had a lot of fun shooting this little movie, so much so that we'll be making more soon… ;)

I could not have done it without my incredible team at Sonoma Press. Thank you Meg, for giving me the space to create a work which has become so much greater than the sum of its parts! Now, the book will go out into the world like a kid on her first day at school. I hope she will find a vast and welcoming community as she finds her way!

There is much in the pages of my book, laid-out as part culinary school and part recipes. Anyone who is passionate about food, young or old, will find Kid Chef a valuable resource to turn to again and again. Whether you find pieces such as "9 Steps That Will Make you a Good Cook" helpful or inspiring, or declare recipes like the colorful Fresh Fish Tacos (strong steady in my home) your new love, Kid Chef has something for everyone.

As the Kid Chef community grows, use the hashtag #kidchefcookbook to share your stories on Facebook and Instagram. See you all soon!

…………………………………………

In other news, here is recent delectable seasonal fare -





Seared Lamb and Alliums for 2

2 lamb steaks, patted dry with absorbent paper
1/2 bunch scallions, ends trimmed, rinsed, and patted dry
1/2 bunch ramps, ends trimmed, rinsed, and patted dry
1/4 tsp sumac
kosher salt and freshly cracked pepper
good olive oil
red wine or leftover pickle juice for deglazing*

*I had leftover spiced ramp pickle juice from last season, which made a nice pairing

Note: to sear effectively, you may set off your smoke detector - take precaution and deactivate it in advance, as well as open a nearby window for better ventilation.

Remove lamb from refrigerator at least 20 minutes before cooking to allow to come to room temp. Season both sides of the lamb with s+p and sumac. Set aside.

In a screaming-hot pan set over medium-high heat, swirl olive oil to coat and add the alliums. Sear, turning once they have softened a bit and begin to brown in spots. Turn occasionally so that all surfaces get contact with the hot pan surface. Total sear time will be 3-4 minutes. Transfer scallions and ramps to a serving platter.

In the same pan, add another glug of oil, swirl, and sear meat 4-5 minutes over medium-high heat. Press on the meat directly around the bones for even browning. Turn to second side. For medium doneness, which retains its juiciness but isn't as much work to chew, sear meat on second side for an additional 4-5 minutes.

Transfer lamb to serving platter and pour deglazing liquid into pan. It should bubble like crazy - as it does, free any browned bits stuck to the pan by scraping the surface, letting the liquid reduce by half. This should take only a minute with the pan this hot.

Pour reduction over all, and eat at once.

Thursday, February 25, 2016

My Cookbook: Kid Chef, Available for Pre-Order Now! Plus Special Occasion+Weeknight Recipes, and My Latest with NYT

Blackberry+currant baked-in variation of the Kid Chef brownies

I have been absent. Almost 5 months ago now, I moved long distance, back to the north - a whole story unto itself. And while doing so, I wrote a book. And cooked, styled, and photographed it. Kid Chef: Healthy Recipes & Culinary Skills for the New Cook in the Kitchen, is a fully-fledged thing, about to make its debut in the world. And it's available for pre-order now! Order your copy, here.

I am incredibly proud of what this cookbook has become in the months my editors and I have spent, poring over details, asking questions, refining page-after-page-after-page. It is going to be one of those cookbooks that serves as a real resource for kids and grownups alike, packed with accessible and fantastically delicious recipes. I cannot wait to see what you think.

I am offering the first 300 people who pre-order, signed prints like these, these, and these. Please email me or DM me on Instagram your address, and I'll send them your way! Thank you so very much.

The colorful crunch salad

A sweet moment for sweet peeps

The making-of shot of a long-time favorite….

I cannot believe the enormity of creating the book is now behind me. That reality, and the question, "what'll I do now?" is settling in…but, this is just the beginning! Because, kids and adults everywhere will soon know about Kid Chef and be able to use it in their own lives. Wooohoooo!!!

Please share your family's stories cooking from Kid Chef, by using the hashtag #kidchefcookbook on Instagram, Twitter, and Facebook. As the community unfolds, we'll have lots of sharing and connecting to do!

…………………………………………

In regular day-to-day eating, I spontaneously come up with food to feast on and post it regularly to Instagram. It happens so frequently it is difficult to carve time to post each and every recipe here, especially when I often feel like I'm "just throwing things together."

Repeatedly asked what kind of food I like to cook, I have a hard time defining it because I just want to eat fresh, great food. Does that make sense? The Feedfeed gang requested a few recipes, and because they were either particularly delicious or simple to make, I wanted to be sure to share them. 


With so much beautiful cauliflower in the markets this past autumn, I made quite a number of cauliflower-centric recipes.

One day I had a small epiphany while searching for something new and easy to produce that would deliver big flavor. I definitely found it with this seared cauliflower steak.


I made these pizzas over Valentine's weekend, using a combination of cooked-in-advance and store-bought elements. 

The various toppings made a verifiably *wow* pair of pies, with just little prep work to do before popping the pizzas into the oven. Worth doing on a regular basis for anyone with a busy schedule and foodie interests!


One of my favorite ways to eat is to wilt a giant bunch of greens, and either pick from it over the following days, or eat the whole pile at once.

Flecked with deeply flavorful aromatics, this kind of eating is not only simple and fast, but also truly delicious, and of course, good for your health. This version was an almost-midnight creation, thrown together on a night shortly after we moved, when I needed veggie sustenance.

Barely-done brownies
Makes 6-8

Ingredients
4 free-range eggs
1 1/3 cup light brown sugar
1 cup AP flour
1 ½ sticks pastured butter, cut into cubes
12 oz good semi-sweet dark chocolate, such as Callebaut, chopped
Seeds removed from ½ a fresh pomegranate, for topping

Preheat oven to 350°. Using a double boiler, melt half the chocolate and all the butter. Be careful and maintain just a bare simmer so the water doesn't bubble up into the top saucepan, or it will ruin the chocolate. Once melted, remove pan from hot water bath, wipe the bottom of the chocolate pan with a dry dish towel to ensure no drips, stir butter-chocolate mixture together and set aside.

Line an 8-inch square or rectangular baking dish with parchment long enough that paper extends beyond edges by at least 2 inches on all sides.

In a large bowl, use a fork or hand mixer to thoroughly combine the eggs, sugar, and flour. Add the slightly cooled melted chocolate mixture and the remaining portion of chopped chocolate, stirring to combine all.

Pour mixture into pan. Bake for 30 minutes or until a skewer comes out almost clean. If you agitate  the pan the center should jiggle just a a bit. Cool brownies on a wire rack for 10 minutes in the pan, then use the parchment tabs on either side to lift pastry out.


Cut brownies into squares and scatter pomegranate seeds on top. Enjoy the delicious combo of still-molten chocolate & tart, juicy pomegranate....

Sautéed collards with lemon and aleppo pepper

1 bunch organic collards or other dark leafy greens, stems cut from leaves and finely chopped, leaves coarsely chopped
2-3 cloves garlic, finely grated on a microplane
zest and juice from 1 organic lemon
1/2 tsp aleppo pepper, or to taste
olive oil, for sautéing
sea salt

Heat a large cast-iron skillet over medium heat. When hot, drizzle enough olive oil to coat the pan. Add collard stems and sauté for 3-5 minutes, stirring occasionally.

Add the chopped leaves and stir to combine. Sauté for 3 minutes, stirring occasionally, then add the garlic and stir again. Season the mixture with salt, the aleppo, and lemon juice and stir. Once the leaf membranes have softened, remove from heat and taste; adjust seasoning if needed.

Transfer to plates or a serving platter and eat immediately.


Seared cauliflower steaks with pink peppercorns and crème fraîche

1/2 head cauliflower, cut into slices 1/2-inch thick
olive oil, for pan frying
sea salt
pink peppercorns, to taste
crème fraîche, for dipping

Heat a large cast-iron skillet over medium-high heat. When it is hot, drizzle enough oil to coat the pan. Arrange cauliflower cross-sections to fit, and sear, rotating the pan or cauliflower slices for even browning, and adding more oil as needed. A good crust needs about 8 minutes or so overall, on each side.

Lower heat if needed, and using tongs and/or a thin spatula, turn to the second side, keeping the florets as intact as possible. Repeat with the second side and the remainder of the slices, transferring the cooked steaks to a serving platter or plates.

To serve, sprinkle with sea salt and scatter pink peppercorns, gently crushing them between your fingers as you season. Serve alongside a dollop or two of crème fraîche and dig in. 


Valentines' pizzas 

You can combine the elements in any way you like, or swap out with locally available ingredients. Here is what I did:

store-bought whole wheat pizza dough, divided and formed into balls on a well-floured work surface, cut ends tucked underneath, and rested under a damp tea towel for 30 minutes

for the meat pizza
5-7 slices prosciutto, torn
1 cup King trumpet mushrooms, sliced and sautéed
1 cup chopped, cooked leeks
1/2 cup shredded Fontina cheese
quills from one rosemary sprig

for the veg pizza
3 tbsp roasted tomatoes in olive oil
5 Chinese chives, cut into 2-inch segments
1 cup King trumpet mushrooms, sliced and sautéed
3 roasted artichokes, cut into cross-sections
1/3 cup shredded Fontina cheese
1/3 cup finely shredded Parmigiano-Reggianno

red pepper flakes, to taste

Place a pizza stone on the middle rack and preheat oven to the highest setting for 45 minutes.

On a well-floured overturned baking sheet, shape dough into at least a 12-inch round, or thereabouts. Do so by making an indent with your fingertips - lined up together - 1/4-inch from the edge, all the way around. Gently stretch the dough between your hands. Make sure the entire surface is about the same thickness and lay it onto the baking sheet.

Layer toppings, beginning with the leeks, followed by mushrooms, then the meat, fresh rosemary, and lastly, the cheese. I have successfully transferred the uncooked pizza to the screaming hot stone in the oven, but for a less stressful experience (and if you do not own a pizza peel), I recommend using potholders and bringing the stone out, swiftly and carefully sliding the pizza onto it by pulling its edge while tilting the baking sheet to help it slide, and then quickly replacing pizza-on-stone back into the oven.

Cook for 10 minutes, or until crust is golden and charred in spots, and cheese is melted and bubbling. Remove pizza from the oven, cut into wedges, sprinkle with red pepper flakes, and eat at once.

Repeat the same for the veg pizza: layer first the roasted tomatoes, then the mushrooms, followed by artichokes and chives, and finally, the cheeses, and cook it as you did the first.


……………………………………

In other recent projects, I always love producing with my team at the New York Times. These stories have been out for a bit, but they are no less delicious than when I made them.

This was a beautiful Page 1 story: another fantastic preparation for the humble cauliflower…. It was so good, I've added it to my repertoire.




I also produced this piece, which goes to show you that blogging, wherever you are, and sharing delicious recipes, pays off. This recipe is from a wee town in Mississippi, and now, it is a famous crock pot roast. I made many tasty meals from this project. 


Lots of goodies all-around. I am so happy 2016 is off to this bright start and I cannot wait to see what's around the corner. Good food, no doubt. ;)

Have a delicious weekend, dear ones!

My Cookbook: Kid Chef, Available for Pre-Order Now! Plus Special Occasion+Weeknight Recipes, and My Latest with NYT

Blackberry+currant baked-in version of the brownies in my cookbook

I have been absent. Almost 5 months ago now, I moved long distance, back to the north - a whole story unto itself. And while doing so, I wrote a book. And cooked, styled, and photographed it. Kid Chef: Healthy Recipes & Culinary Skills for the New Cook in the Kitchen, is a fully-fledged thing, about to make its debut in the world. And it's available for pre-order now! Order your copy, here.

I am incredibly proud of what this cookbook has become in the months my editors and I have spent, poring over details, asking questions, refining page-after-page-after-page. It is going to be one of those cookbooks that serves as a real resource for kids and grownups alike, packed with accessible and fantastically delicious recipes. I cannot wait to see what you think.

I am offering the first 300 people who pre-order, signed prints like these, these, and these. Please email me or DM me on Instagram your address, and I'll send them your way! Thank you so very much.

The colorful crunch salad

A sweet moment for sweet peeps

The making-of shot of a long-time favorite….

I cannot believe the enormity of creating the book is now behind me. That reality, and the question, "what'll I do now?" is settling in…but, this is just the beginning! Because, kids and adults everywhere will soon know about Kid Chef and be able to use it in their own lives. Wooohoooo!!!

Please share your family's stories cooking from Kid Chef, by using the hashtag #kidchefcookbook on Instagram, Twitter, and Facebook. As the community unfolds, we'll have lots of sharing and connecting to do!

…………………………………………

In regular day-to-day eating, I spontaneously come up with food to feast on and post it regularly to Instagram. It happens so frequently it is difficult to carve time to post each and every recipe here, especially when I often feel like I'm "just throwing things together."

Repeatedly asked what kind of food I like to cook, I have a hard time defining it because I just want to eat fresh, great food. Does that make sense? The Feedfeed gang requested a few recipes, and because they were either particularly delicious or simple to make, I wanted to be sure to share them. 


With so much beautiful cauliflower in the markets this past autumn, I made quite a number of cauliflower-centric recipes.

One day I had a small epiphany while searching for something new and easy to produce that would deliver big flavor. I definitely found it with this seared cauliflower steak.


I made these pizzas over Valentine's weekend, using a combination of cooked-in-advance and store-bought elements. 

The various toppings made a verifiably *wow* pair of pies, with just little prep work to do before popping the pizzas into the oven. Worth doing on a regular basis for anyone with a busy schedule and foodie interests!


One of my favorite ways to eat is to wilt a giant bunch of greens, and either pick from it over the following days, or eat the whole pile at once.

Flecked with deeply flavorful aromatics, this kind of eating is not only simple and fast, but also truly delicious, and of course, good for your health. This version was an almost-midnight creation, thrown together on a night shortly after we moved, when I needed veggie sustenance.


Sautéed collards with lemon and aleppo pepper

1 bunch organic collards or other dark leafy greens, stems cut from leaves and finely chopped, leaves coarsely chopped
2-3 cloves garlic, finely grated on a microplane
zest and juice from 1 organic lemon
1/2 tsp aleppo pepper, or to taste
olive oil, for sautéing
sea salt

Heat a large cast-iron skillet over medium heat. When hot, drizzle enough olive oil to coat the pan. Add collard stems and sauté for 3-5 minutes, stirring occasionally.

Add the chopped leaves and stir to combine. Sauté for 3 minutes, stirring occasionally, then add the garlic and stir again. Season the mixture with salt, the aleppo, and lemon juice and stir. Once the leaf membranes have softened, remove from heat and taste; adjust seasoning if needed.

Transfer to plates or a serving platter and eat immediately.


Seared cauliflower steaks with pink peppercorns and crème fraîche

1/2 head cauliflower, cut into slices 1/2-inch thick
olive oil, for pan frying
sea salt
pink peppercorns, to taste
crème fraîche, for dipping

Heat a large cast-iron skillet over medium-high heat. When it is hot, drizzle enough oil to coat the pan. Arrange cauliflower cross-sections to fit, and sear, rotating the pan or cauliflower slices for even browning, and adding more oil as needed. A good crust needs about 8 minutes or so overall, on each side.

Lower heat if needed, and using tongs and/or a thin spatula, turn to the second side, keeping the florets as intact as possible. Repeat with the second side and the remainder of the slices, transferring the cooked steaks to a serving platter or plates.

To serve, sprinkle with sea salt and scatter pink peppercorns, gently crushing them between your fingers as you season. Serve alongside a dollop or two of crème fraîche and dig in. 


Valentines' pizzas 

You can combine the elements in any way you like, or swap out with locally available ingredients. Here is what I did:

store-bought whole wheat pizza dough, divided and formed into balls on a well-floured work surface, cut ends tucked underneath, and rested under a damp tea towel for 30 minutes

for the meat pizza
5-7 slices prosciutto, torn
1 cup King trumpet mushrooms, sliced and sautéed
1 cup chopped, cooked leeks
1/2 cup shredded Fontina cheese
quills from one rosemary sprig

for the veg pizza
3 tbsp roasted tomatoes in olive oil
5 Chinese chives, cut into 2-inch segments
1 cup King trumpet mushrooms, sliced and sautéed
3 roasted artichokes, cut into cross-sections
1/3 cup shredded Fontina cheese
1/3 cup finely shredded Parmigiano-Reggianno

red pepper flakes, to taste

Place a pizza stone on the middle rack and preheat oven to the highest setting for 45 minutes.

On a well-floured overturned baking sheet, shape dough into at least a 12-inch round, or thereabouts. Do so by making an indent with your fingertips - lined up together - 1/4-inch from the edge, all the way around. Gently stretch the dough between your hands. Make sure the entire surface is about the same thickness and lay it onto the baking sheet.

Layer toppings, beginning with the leeks, followed by mushrooms, then the meat, fresh rosemary, and lastly, the cheese. I have successfully transferred the uncooked pizza to the screaming hot stone in the oven, but for a less stressful experience (and if you do not own a pizza peel), I recommend using potholders and bringing the stone out, swiftly and carefully sliding the pizza onto it by pulling its edge while tilting the baking sheet to help it slide, and then quickly replacing pizza-on-stone back into the oven.

Cook for 10 minutes, or until crust is golden and charred in spots, and cheese is melted and bubbling. Remove pizza from the oven, cut into wedges, sprinkle with red pepper flakes, and eat at once.

Repeat the same for the veg pizza: layer first the roasted tomatoes, then the mushrooms, followed by artichokes and chives, and finally, the cheeses, and cook it as you did the first.


……………………………………

In other recent projects, I always love producing with my team at the New York Times. These stories have been out for a bit, but they are no less delicious than when I made them.

This was a beautiful Page 1 story: another fantastic preparation for the humble cauliflower…. It was so good, I've added it to my repertoire.




I also produced this piece, which goes to show you that blogging, wherever you are, and sharing delicious recipes, pays off. This recipe is from a wee town in Mississippi, and now, it is a famous crock pot roast. I made many tasty meals from this project. 


Lots of goodies all-around. I am so happy 2016 is off to this bright start and I cannot wait to see what's around the corner. Good food, no doubt. ;)

Have a delicious weekend, dear ones!

Sunday, November 9, 2014

A Most Custardy Quiche


I did not see this coming.

That somehow, Food52 - where I am a contributor to Halfway to Dinner and Heirloom Recipes, including delicious stories such as this, this, this, this, and this (and a fab new one on the way….) - would share my little ole Saturday evening quiche with the Instagram Universe.

And then I would be demanded (well maybe not demanded) to share the recipe. It isn't a story I made for the camera. I just made it for my mouth, trying to use up a surplus of goodies in the fridge.

Good thing you all have asked for this recipe though, because it is SO GOOD. Once you have the groundwork laid, you can sub out the fillings of your choice. I had done roasted squash before (albeit with kabocha instead of delicata), and used pan fried speck instead of caramelized onions. Both are wonderful, so either works just as nicely.

I also happened to have handfuls of garlic chives available and so I thought, why not?


Here it is -

Roasted squash, caramelized onion, and garlic chive quiche
Serves 6-8

for the filling-
5 eggs - use only pasture-raised eggs if at all possible - the custard will be so much more dynamic
3 or 4 egg yolks, depending on how rich you're willing to go (same as above)
1 1/2 cups delicata or other pumpkin squash, halved, insides scraped out, and coarsely chopped
1 onion, peeled and chopped
1 cup heavy cream - use pastured milk, as it will be more flavorful
1/3 cup whole milk
1/2 tsp freshly grated nutmeg
5 sprigs fresh thyme, leaves removed from stems
2 tbsp garlic chives, finely chopped - regular chives, or roasted garlic cloves work just as well
good olive oil 
sea salt and freshly cracked pepper to taste

for the dough - I adapted the Four and Twenty Blackbirds cornmeal crust, which was deeelicious
1 cup unbleached all-purpose flour
¼ cup stone-ground cornmeal
½ teaspoon kosher salt
1 teaspoons granulated sugar
¼ pound (1 stick) cold unsalted butter, cut into ½-inch pieces
½ cup cold water
2 tablespoons cider vinegar
a few ice cubes
Pulse the flour, cornmeal, salt, and sugar together in the bowl of a food processor. Add butter and pulse briefly to coat.  Pulse at 5 second intervals until mostly pea-size pieces of butter remain (a few larger pieces are okay; be careful not to overblend). 
Combine the water, cider vinegar, and ice in a measuring cup or small bowl. Sprinkle 2 tablespoons of the ice water mixture over the flour mixture, and pulse until it is fully incorporated. Add more of the ice water mixture, 1 to 2 tablespoons at a time, and pulse until the dough comes together in a ball, with some dry bits remaining.
Squeeze and pinch with your fingertips to bring the dough together, sprinkling dry bits with more small drops of the ice water mixture, if necessary, to combine. Shape the dough into a flat disc, wrap in plastic, and refrigerate for at least 1 hour, preferably overnight, to give the crust time to mellow. Wrapped tightly, the dough can be refrigerated for 3 days or frozen for 1 month.
Bring disk out of fridge and remove plastic. On a lightly floured work surface, roll the dough  to 1/4-inch thick, turning 1/4 turn with each go of the rolling pin for evenness. Drape into an 8-inch springform pan, freeing dough from edge as you press it down with the back of your finger, flush to base of pan. 

Use any particularly high or thick points to patch thin areas or mend cracks. Prick all over with a fork and chill in the refrigerator.

Sauté the onion over medium low heat in a cast iron skillet, using good glug or two of olive oil. Stirring occasionally, you don't want the onions to brown, rather to sweat them and then allow them to slowly give way to the pan. This is a 20 minute or so process of occasionally stirring and then going about the rest of the work. If you don't have that time, many groceries carry onion jam or a package of caramelized onions in the specialty department. 

Meanwhile, roast delicata (or other squash) tossed in olive oil and seasoned with sea salt and freshly cracked pepper on the stovetop or in the oven. For the oven, I do about 40 minutes at 325 (F) until the bottoms are dark but the flesh is still soft, or in a cast iron skillet over medium heat for the same result. This can be done a day or two in advance and refrigerated until needed.

If you did the above in advance, preheat oven to 400 degrees (F). Place a sheet of parchment over dough and weight with baking weights, beans, or rice. Blind bake for 15 minutes, or according to your oven. Check after 10 minutes and see that the dough is not wet or particularly soft. Remove weights and paper and bake for a further 10 minutes or until crust is golden. Remove from oven, lower oven to 300 degrees.

Whisk together eggs, cream, nutmeg, thyme, garlic chives, salt, and pepper in a large bowl. Add the squash and onions, and pour mixture into pastry. Top with grind or two of pepper and bake for 30 minutes, or until custard has *just* set. There should be the slightest jiggle in the center when agitated. Cool inside the oven with the door ajar for 10 minutes or so, and then fully cool on a wire rack. 

Release spring collar from around pastry. Use two spatulas or palette knives to transfer quiche to a serving platter. Serve with a shaved brussels sprouts dressed in lemon juice or with a mixed green salad, and enjoy!


If you are new to my blog, I am so pleased this is our first meeting! Welcome. Please have a look around and if you feel like it, leave a comment or reach out and say hello!

To that end, you also need to know about my latest giveaway, which is still happening. Scroll down to the giveaway part and enter - there's still a week left!

I'm in the middle of five (!) fantastic food projects and working my way through the fridge, bit by bit. Tough life. If you already follow me on Instagram, you'll see plenty more of the fun I have in the coming days…. More wonderful, delicious things soon… XO ;) 

Friday, August 29, 2014

Twelve Months with Anthology

I am brought to reflection on various milestones this year, and this one adds to the list of sweet accomplishments added to my day-to-day. Yay for this anniversary! 

I picked these figs from trees heavy with fruit one evening before going on set, with the fermented fragrance of more, too quickly ripening to all be plucked, heavy around me. So many different types of fig trees to wander through. It was my quiet weeknight rendez-vous as I prepped this story, at the urban teaching farm known here as the Jones Valley Teaching Farm. It's only 10 or so blocks away from my home, and what a beautiful series of gardens they have.  



To mark the occasion of this anniversary, I've made a delectable fig-bourbon vanilla-almond brittle-pistachio honey-gingersnap ice cream cake. Perfect for the still-hot weather here, and a fun bite worthy of most any celebration. I hope you love it. Full story and recipe now at Anthology.







Pennants to add to the celebratory note….

The cake melts, but that's part of the fun! The mess of those delicious layers….This simply means you have to invite friends over to gorge with you, or get savvy at parceling out and freezing the leftovers.




To revisit the last twelve months of Anthology stories, here are some of my favorite images and their respective recipes….


The gorgeous - and still very relevant - panzanella salad.




One of the three salads for summer staples I created, from this story.


The extraordinarily satisfying strawberry-rhubarb crostadas to herald in spring.


Simple and colorful: my kind of daily eating. This crunchy and flavorsome slaw is where it's at. 



A ridiculously easy and delicious apple flognarde. What else matters when you have this?




That amazing layer cake I did because people like layer cakes. And because this was basically my wedding cake and I wanted more of it.



The savory meat pies to keep you comfy. Warm buttery crust and herby meat filling. What better way to bear down and cope with winter?



A favorite of mine: savory slow-cooked lamb shanks and melted onions. I get hungry just reading those words aloud….



Classic apple tarts tatin. Half the work of pie and just as pleasing as if all the effort was exerted. Dig in.


Best-ever cheesecake, made with muscadines. Newly to the south, I discovered an easy way to make a mark with these brightly sweet southern orbs.


And for my first post, this as-awesome-as-ever pesto-not-pesto. Nutty, savory, addictive. You'll pretty much want to put this on everything. 

Do you have a favorite? Please let me know! As I breathe life into the second year of posts, I want to hear from you which recipes and stories have really stood out, and why. Thank you.

And thank you all for following these adventures. I couldn't do it without your enthusiasm, your hunger for details, the back-stories, and wanting to see a peek into the what's next. And as to what is next, there are a bunch of beautiful things getting cooked up.... 

If you haven't seen the new Anthology Journal, here is an excerpt with my grandmother's heirloom recipe story. You can find a copy for yourself by clicking here

Happy eating. Make something delicious for yourselves! xxx