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

Candied Orange and Lemon Peels…mmmm

Over the weekend, a friend brought over the most beautiful lemons from her parents’ lemon tree. Note, we’re in Illinois. Her parents’ tree is in Arizona. She was sharing because her folks had a bumper crop this spring. My friend was greeted by 3 dozen lemons… what to do, but share! She mentioned juicing the lemons and freezing the juice in ice cube trays. Then she mentioned saving the peels to candy them. Aha! Lemon, citrus, orange, citrus… helloooo?! I thought it’d be delicious, AND I was planning on making some candied orange peel this week. I’m experimenting with frozen peels; thawing them first and then continuing with the typical recipe.

Just type “candied orange peel” in your favorite search engine and there are tons! They’re all basically the same. Mine isn’t that different.

  • Peels from 4 – 6 oranges (this time around, I also had 2 lemons): The peels were in sliced sections and the pith (white) was already trimmed. You want very little pith, but I still leave a but. I sliced these into 1/4″ strips. The lemon peels were smaller.

Using a 3-1/2 qt. pot, I filled it with about 4 cups of water. This should be enough to cover the peels. Heat until boiling, then add the peels. Blanch the peels for about 3-4 minutes. Turn off heat, drain/remove the peels (I just used a slotted spoon not a colander), discard water and repeat. You will blanch the peels 3 or 4 times. This is to soften the peels, but more importantly, to remove the bitterness. It sort of cooks out, cooks down any pith, too.

After 1st blanch

After 1st blanch

  • 4 cups water
  • 3 cups granulated sugar
  • Extra granulated sugar in a separate container for dipping

In your clean, empty pot, combine the water and sugar. Heat until you get a rolling boil. You can use a candy thermometer, and heat until 210 degrees. Add peels, boil for a couple minutes, and then lower heat to a simmer. Continue to simmer peels for 45-60 minutes, or until peels are translucent. (I’ve read recipes where they only simmer for 30 min.)

Remove peels after they are to your liking and dry on a cooling rack. While still warm, dip the peels in sugar and lay out on the racks to dry. I like to leave them out overnight. The next day you can take the dry candied peels and dip or drizzle with chocolate!

Don’t discard the simple syrup that is in your pot. Keep in the refrigerator and use for iced tea! Delicious!

(Note: The fresher the fruit, the softer the peel. I like thicker skin, but just make sure to blanch less if the peel is really young.)

Crazy Cake

I read about this in an old Bon Appetit magazine. The author of the article was recalling how her aunts argued over whose chocolate (crazy) cake was better. Why called “crazy” cake? Because of the way it’s made. No eggs, few ingredients that can be found in the pantry, mixed by hand in the pan that you’re baking it in… I LOVE this because it is so SIMPLE!

  • 1-1/2 c. flour
  • 1 c. sugar
  • 1 tsp. baking soda
  • 3 tbsp. cocoa
  • 6 tbsp. vegetable oil
  • 1 tbsp. white vinegar (I’ve used black cherry balsamic, but it’s a little pricey and the flavor doesn’t shine through like I thought it would)
  • 1 tsp. vanilla
  • 1 c. warm water

Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Sift dry ingredients together in 8 x 8 baking pan. Make 3 depressions/wells and fill with liquids. Pour in water and mix with fork until most lumps are gone. DO NOT beat. Bake for 30 minutes, or check center with toothpick until it comes out clean. If you’re really confident with your baking, the cake is done when the center should spring up if you push slightly with your finger.  Frost the cake with your favorite flavor icing… I like vanilla.

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!

Growing up foodie

Looking back at some posts, I don’t know that I’ve written specifically about our penchant for cooking, entertaining, and food. Good food. Good ingredients help. We like a good restaurant, fancy or not, kid-friendly or super posh, and good deals are a favorite. Ha. It’s no secret, we enjoy it all. I wonder if part of it is from my husband’s stint at a seafood restaurant during high school. Or maybe it’s my fascination with The Food Network which I’ve watched from the beginning. I’d watch and think, “Hey, I could make that.” Much like crafting, eh? I’m thankful I’m not any heavier than I am with what I eat!

Before kids, I used to have this weird idea that our children would have mature palates and speak like Sylvester the Cat’s son… “Fah-ther, why must we eat the bird?” Remember that? But instead they would say, “Mother… I would like grilled brie on baguette for lunch.” or “Father, please pass the smoked salmon.”

Over the weekend, we shopped at our local Trader Joe’s and watching our kids in the store is probably indicative of how our foodie habits influence them. Our girl does enjoy salmon, cheddar cheese and apples, dark chocolate. Then there’s the boy. He made his way to the cheese section. I love that he went for brie first! But in the end we bought some parmesan… he likes eating that too.

Shopping for cheese

Shopping at Trader Joe's

The boy likes tea, too. He’s my tea buddy at TeaLula’s tea bar. His favorites are fruity flavored ones with lots of sugar cubes, but I try to keep it to one cube per cup, if that. Tea and scones. Ollie says, “Ah-yee (Ollie) cone, cone now, eat cone. Dink tea.” Pictures by Ollie. Mom, Miss Sheila and his beloved “cones”.

TeaLula and Sheila DudaScones at TeaLula

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