Chocolate Croissants at home

We like shopping at Trader Joe’s and after my husband’s cousin told us about this, we had to buy it! These 4 little croissants are packed up in a box and frozen. You take them home and let them proof overnight. These puff balls were 1/3 the size you see here. Seriously.

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Here’s what they looked like after baking. You can’t see it, but there was a river of butter winding its way off the pan. That’s a hint to how they tasted.

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The downside is, there’s so much fat in these little babies that we probably won’t buy them too often. They were almost too rich, but they’re sooooo tasty. Maybe if we have guests…

Mother’s Day 2009

Breakfast in bed has become tradition in our house. No, I did not eat all that bacon. We all ate in bed, so, yes, the sheets were taken off immediately after breakfast.

Breakfast in Bed...mmm, Bacon

Toast, bacon, an ambrosia-ish salad, raspberry jam, Kerrygold butter (so good), a blob of Delice de Bourgogne cheese (even more delicious), Burnside Estate (black tea) from TeaLula and Ollie-friendly blueberry granola.  Eastman outdid himself this time.

Scrambled Eggs with Cajun Seasoning

Cajun-seasoned scrambled eggs were hiding under the plate o’ bacon.

New Books to Read

So excited to start reading these books!! But, best of all, Abby made a most beautiful stained “glass” picture of a flower and did a survey on Mom.

Another Cajun Cooking Session: Red Beans and Rice

If I haven’t made it known by now, I love cajun and creole cuisine. I’ve been trying out gumbo recipes, and red beans and rice recipes. My husband makes a really nice jambalaya, non-tomato based (creole). Ah, comfort food.  So far, here is the recipe for red beans and rice that has worked out the best for us.  It’s similar to Tom Fitzmorris’s recipe in his cookbook.

Serves 4-6. Cook time: 3 hours

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1 lb. dried red beans

**Rinse, sort through beans. Soak beans overnight in cold water. Drain in the morning and add new water. Drain when you’re ready to cook.**

1 lb. bacon (used smoked rib bacon from a local deli), cut into small pieces

6 cloves of garlic, minced (practically 1/2 a med-lg. garlic head)

3 ribs of celery, chopped

1 small-medium pepper (red, yellow, green – your choice), chopped

1 medium sweet onion, chopped

1 bay leaf

1 tsp. dried savory

1/2 tsp. freshly ground black pepper

1 tsp. Frank’s hot sauce

1 or 2 small smoked pork hocks

Optional: smoked sausage (kielbasa)

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Fry the bacon in a large pot or Dutch oven (I love our red Le Creuset, except I didn’t use it here) until crisp. Save for later. In the rendered fat, saute garlic, celery, pepper, and onion until it begins to caramelize. Add the drained red beans and 12 cups of water. Bring to a boil, then lower to simmer. Add savory, pepper, bay leaf and hot sauce. Add smoked pork hocks. Simmer uncovered for 2 hours, stir occasionally.

Cooking down the liquid

After 2 hours, ladle out some beans and mash them up, then return the beans to the pot. Stir around, and I let the beans cook for one more hour. If you want the dish to be more creamy, spoon out more. Add more water if the beans get too thick. Salt and pepper to taste.

Ladle the red beans over cooked white rice (not sticky Asian rice, but firm “piece-y” long grain). Garnish with the crisp bacon and a little parsley if you have some. We like to also serve smoked sausage along with the red beans and rice.

Lunch for Tomorrow

Filipino Food websites

It’s interesting, of all cuisines in Asia, I think the cuisine of my peeps, Filipino, might be one of the more unknown. It’s definitely not publicized much. I mean, you don’t see many Filipino chefs with cookbooks in the United States, do you? Maybe not so much in Chicago. (Yet another possibility to go public with my family cookbook idea. But that’s for another time.) There aren’t Filipino dishes featured on Food Network. No Iron Chef Filipino.

Some people immerse themselves in their heritage by studying artwork, architecture (which I love), cultural history. I’m enamored with this idea of researching the history of Filipino FOOD. I only know that there is a lot of Chinese and Spanish influence in the dishes. I’m curious, too, being a foodie, why are the dishes cooked the way that they are (more technique of cooking like braising when I might roast), use of spices (or lack of), but that’s going pretty deep into food theory, I think. I’m not sure I could name five quintessential Filipino dishes. There are so many islands, local flavors… but then, I wonder, why it isn’t as defined as oh, the Chinese? There’s Szechuan, Hunan, Fujian, Cantonese, Mandarin… they are very defined. So what is Filipino cuisine? I’m on an adventure to find out…

Here are some websites I’ve found in the last few days. I’ll be reading more I’m sure. When? In between diaper changes and preparing meals.

http://www.filipino-food-lovers.com

http://www.filipinofoodrecipes.net

http://overseaspinoycooking.blogspot.com

http://www.pinoylifestyles.com

Update: pics of my chicken afritada… the kids ate it up.

Chicken AfritadaPlated Chicken Afritada

Happy Easter

Easter traditions…

Dying Eggs

…dying eggs (a few days before), candy, Easter egg hunt outside (although Ollie was not very interested this time around).

Easter Fun

He was much more interested in playing with his uncle’s iPhone.

Easter Fabric Napkins

Dressing up the table (there are tons of tutorials online for sewing fabric napkins and making mitered corners).

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Dressing up for Easter mass and having family come and eat lunch: Ham, homemade mac n’ cheese, biscuits, salad, apple pancake, Filipino egg rolls and yummy cakes for dessert.  It was a good day.

Gifts from the East

My sister-in-law and her fiance went on a wonderful Philippines and Southeast Asia trip and came back with goodies for us. We love her to bits!

Fabric from Singapore picked out by my husband’s cousin… the possibilities are endless.

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This is a tiled mirror from Bali. I think they haggled with a street vendor for it. Love the turtle-shell tiles!

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I’ll have to look up some Balinese recipes to use the curry powders… hot, hotter and on fire!

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Thanks for the gifts!

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