starting today…

52cookbooksgoals.  It seems like every blog I read or come across lately has been touting the same thing –  #oneword – to the extent that Z has made up his own one word that is somewhat less than shall we say, holy.  I thought a lot about one word coming into the last week of the year and there wasn’t really any one thing that just resonated with me.  Nothing that insinuated it’s way into my head and could be something that would stick for the entire year and be a filter with which I can put everything I do.   Either that makes me a jerk or just honest with myself. I have taken time over the holidays to update the look of my blog with a responsive magazine style theme, a winter header, and a few other tweaks and I have a few more things up my sleeve for that too as time goes on.  My outlook for 2014 is fresh.  I am hoping to be more present and continue my word from last year which was refine.  I think that word has happened and but it wasn’t necessarily intentional.

Alongside these personal goals I have had some good ideas for the blog too.  I have a pretty extensive bookcase of cookbooks, a lot of which have only been ogled and read but not taste tested.  So, I am going to cook from 52 cook books this year and see where it takes us.  Hopefully we can enlarge our borders.

fillmeupI’m also going to pickle or preserve an item a month – hopefully with something in season and hopefully some new recipes.  As usual, just small batches that do not stress me out.  A fleeting few jars of something delicious to both hoard and share.  Pickles, preserves and marmalades and jams. That should be both fun and delicious.

Less strictly kitcheny but things I am excited about?  Potential for travel, seeing new countries, places and people and also continuing to work on our cute house and maybe publishing some home tours here.  2014 is here!  Life is an adventure.

 

silent night

I guess after blogging every day for a month straight I just fell off the wagon.  I’ve thought about blogging in the last month and have had some adventures (good ones!) and opened up my trusty wordpress account but published nothing.  Now we are hurtling headlong into Christmas.  The gifts are bought (mostly) and the stockings hung (green velvet on a hook over the closet door since a fireplace would be folly in Orlando.)  No tree though.  I have a closet full of trees (8? 9?) and ornaments and haven’t managed to do it.   I did put up a tree or three at work but haven’t done it at home.  Kind of sad really.  I have been missing cool weather this year.  It was 80 degrees plus yesterday.  I miss my sister too. I can likely plan my way out of that with a trip for later in the winter.   It has been a season of terrible news.  Does it come in threes?  Quite a few people in and about my life have been struck down over the last year.  Yesterday was filled to the brim at work with an office parade of lights and with joy from Santa’s Marketing Department.  Everyone should work with a team like this and it is a privilege.  Last night Z and I wrapped carefully chosen gifts that will fly to Colorado today while the sun shines.  Yesterday I billed a project started 9 months ago for the 2014 Wycliffe Calendar.  (If you like beautiful global images and amazingly matched Scripture you should order one-they are stunning and they support the work of Bible translation worldwide!) I feel like somewhere yesterday I turned a corner and got my cheer back.  I was waiting for it.

 

dinner #18

craftedsundaydinnersunday dinner.  The fine establishment of churchgoers whereby someone puts in a roast or something and gets dressed and heads off to church.  You come home, family in tow, to a finished dinner.   So, the story used to go.  When I was a child, and maybe this isn’t normal, church was different.  Our (non)denomination was set up so that every Sunday there where two morning services and by this, I don’t mean that there were two services that were the same and the early birds went to one and the rest of the world went to the second one.  There was a ‘worship’ or ‘breaking of bread’ service where you would worship and take communion and also take the offering.  Kids would sit and read or color if they weren’t inclined to pay attention.  I played a lot of games of dots and tic tac toe with my sister and read Little House on the Prairie books.  Then there was the fellowship time (or halftime) where cookies, doughnuts and coffee flowed.  For quite a lot of years of my childhood my mom and dad set up the halftime events.  Sunday mornings we would arrive early to brew giant urns of coffee and put out cookies on plates.   The second service was a teaching service and the time when Sunday School happened for kids.  Our church was set up so that this was the one you would bring people to because it was a teaching service and nothing was asked of them from the standpoint of money.  An interesting setup and not one I have encountered since.  After the second service people would convivially decamp to Ivar’s or Skipper’s for fish & chips (Seattle) or to someone’s home to share Sunday dinner.  I never could get why dinner was at lunch but it was always called that.  There was usually some sort of roast and potatoes and rolls or a 70’s casserole like lasagna.  I miss those days and the hospitality that was so freely offered.

Today, church feels different, in ways I can’t put my finger on.  But a big one is how we leave and what we do with our Sunday afternoon.  We hustle out after the service to run errands, to Target, for a hair cut, to the vegetable stand.  Somewhere in the middle today I said, ‘I just want something really good to eat-something that someone took care to make.’ So Z offered up Cask & Larder.  I love their food-the Southern-ness of it all, the finely crafted and careful plates of interesting flavors.  So many tastes, textures and ideas all rolled up in one bite.  I think there is some amount of sadness and joy in South that comes forward in this cooking.  I can’t put my finger on it.  I had Nashville Hot Chicken-sweet and spicy sitting on top of pureed bread and boiled new potatoes with a heaving egg on some lightly dressed frisee.  A tiny dice of dill pickles on the chicken showing an eye for detail.  Z had a hushpuppy corn waffle with charred corn relish and melting pork belly.  It all speaks of what is here, using what they have, crafting the food into more than the sum of it’s parts.  This dinner was delicious but also a little bit sad.  I miss those days of visiting and eating with friends and families and joining new people in their homes-seeing their turf and sharing a meal.

critical thinking

in this day and age of super-connectivity we can share it all and we can also be shared at with the feelings and innermost thoughts of anyone who we have any kind of passing acquaintance with through shares, likes and retweets.  Everyone has become intimately familiar with how people feel about everything from the latest decision in US government to how people feel about their last drive in traffic to pumpkin spice lattes.  This isn’t rocket science and and probably isn’t an original thought but something I have been thinking about lately.  In our quest for a more connected world we have closed ranks and become critics, quick to voice our thoughts and our feelings whether or not anyone cares about them.  Oversharing to the point where people hide our posts for being ‘annoying’ or irrelevant. We are quick to pass judgement and share our feelings making it more difficult for people to form their own.sad_emerils

We spent the last week hosting friends from Colorado as they enjoyed some Orlando attractions.  We took in dinner at Tchoup Chop by Emeril, played Disney-style Mini Golf, went to Epcot and toured Winter Park by boat.  Overall, the shine felt like it was off the rose.  Have I done too much?  Eaten too well?  Been overstimulated to boredom?  The plating at Emeril’s was sloppy, food overcooked.  Disney-golf shabby and in need of refurbishment.  Epcot too crowded and the food not tight on the plate because they have to produce so much, so fast.  So, I ask, is it me and overly critical thinking?  Expectations too lofty?  I have to back out and say the time with friends was good and approach it from there-letting the relationships rule the day which is probably how it should be.  I have to let the experiences fade into the blue and hope that my expectations relax or I do.

 

there are obscenities in here.

cheezewizwell, sort of.  I made a burger last night and it was ridiculous bordering on obscene.  Here’s why.  I got an iSi thingie for my birthday.  I’m celebrating my birthday this week in general.  Lots of years I haven’t been all that excited about it.  In fact when I was turning thirty I had negative birthdays for a few years until my sister said it had to stop.  This year I can lean in to tell you that I’m just not that fussed about it.  It’s not a milestone year where I feel like I haven’t achieved something and in that, I’ve achieved everything.  I don’t have to worry about the haves or have nots, the I have it and you don’ts or the don’t you wish yous.  I’m just me and I’m pretty great.  Anyway, Z is a total joy to have buying me loot because he gets so excited about it that he can’t not give me whatever comes in the mail and a few days ago a household sized iSi cream dispenser and charges came to our doorstep.  So, what to do other than pull out Richard Blais’ cookbook, Try This At Home and make a modified cheddar cheese version of this Cheese Wizard to put on sherry braised onion and bacon burgers.  So, basically the long and short of it is I melted cheddar in heavy cream, chilled it and charged it with nitrous oxide into foam which I sprayed on a BURGER.  Obscene.  No one needs that-but it was fun and I’ll probably do it again and add cayenne so it is more like pimiento cheese because that would be awesome.  Happy birthday to me!