Skip to content

Single-serving orange-rum (or not) hot cocoa

Hot cocoa is yet another thing I kind of forgot about when I lived in a warmer place. I like hot cocoa more than well enough, but it was never something that crossed my mind or presented itself as something functional, in the way that it does living here. Many nights over the past few months I’ve found myself wanting something sweet, something a bit boozy, and more than anything something warm, usually around 8:45 p.m., and when I realized that a quickly-prepared mug of cocoa could perfectly meet all three of those wants, it began crossing my mind on a fairly regular basis.

Hot_cocoa

Read more

Weekend Links, Feb. 3

Green_yellow

Fruit bowl yesterday morning.

We’re diverging from our normal bourbon and rye choices to find something new and delicious, and this list of good budget ryes is super helpful.

I find the ever-evolving news on a new Farm Bill is consistently overwhelming, but I do know for sure that this is bad.

And in other frustrating food policy news, newly released documents show that the FDA figured out years ago that antibiotics in meat are harmful to humans.

What it’s like to be a cook for an Antarctic research station.

A handy reminder of what types of onions to use for what types of preparations.

I’m always trying to wrap my mind around what type of olive oil to buy, and this hits some of the points that make me concerned. (And it’s pretty cute.) (Thanks, Lori, for sending me this!)

This “20 things I learned from traveling around the world” looks pretty similar to what mine would be, if I ever wrote one. (Most of which boil down to: 1. You and your country/culture/experience/life are not the center of the universe, and 2. travel is likely the hardest thing you’ll ever do, but it’s not that hard to make it happen. Really.)

Ugh. Just ugh. Just. Ugh. 

Meal plan this week:

  • Wild rice pilaf with roasted sweet potatoes and sage, topped with poached eggs
  • Thawed bolognese and pasta
  • Gratin of white beans, rigatoni, pesto, and ricotta. (Which reminds me that I really need to update my ricotta post to reflect the way I’m making it these days.)
  • Tater tot hotdish from scratch (aside from the tater tots) to match with Fargo movie night on Thursday
  • Breakfasts: granola, not sure what else
  • Lunches: wild rice soup, leftovers, going out
  • Desserts: peanut butter chocolate chunk cookies (recipe hopefully posted this week), ricotta-orange cake (testing a new recipe that I’m pretty excited about)
  • We also bought a few grapefruits at the store today and I’m pretty excited about making salty dogs.

When I can get it

Our daily schedule here in Madison is in some ways quite different than the one we had in California, and one of the unfortunate differences is that six days of the week I’m out of the house within 15 minutes of waking up, packing a breakfast that needs to sit for two hours at room temperature before I eat it. For the most part this means nothing warm, nothing toasted, nothing prepared much at all, which eliminates much of what I like to eat in the mornings. I get by with granola and milk or baked goods or peanut butter sandwiches, but I really miss my breakfasts of fresh bread with butter and honey, or eggs and toast, or steaming hot oats with fruit and cold milk, and not having a chance to be in the house in the mornings has been leaving me feeling a little burned out on these cold and blustery days.

But that one morning each week when I have time to eat at home in the morning is something I look forward to all week. It’s not an elaborate breakfast but generally the most simple that I want the most; something fitting for a leisurely morning at the dining room table with a cup of coffee or a few shots of espresso or some sweet, milky tea, with the curtains open to let the light in and plenty of time for Brett and I to sit at one end of the table together and quietly eat and read or write or work on whatever needs our attention. On these cold winter days in particular, my quiet and slow mornings are a very needed opportunity to recover from the rest of the week.

Toast_cheese

Egg_caramelizedonion_toast

This isn’t so much a recipe to write about as it is a way of thinking of these meals – as long as there’s eggs and bread (or tortillas, or barely-sweet scones, or some other good base) in the house, the other bits and pieces we pull together have a knack of making exactly the meal I needed. There’s a lot you can put between a slice of bread and a cooked egg, and in my experience almost all options are good ones. In this case it was caramelized onions and the last scraps of a block of Otter Creek Summer Cheddar, boosting up our favorite eggs from Pecatonica Valley Farm and slices of Batch Bakehouse‘s cracked wheat loaf, all followed by more slices of bread spread with cold butter and drizzled generously with vanilla-infused honey. I played some of my favorite studying albums from college, and we sat at the table for the rest of the morning, quietly working and catching up on reading. We managed to spread it out until it was time to transition into a quick lunch of leftovers before I headed to a work event, and the pace of the morning kept me sane through a scurrying afternoon and evening.

I never thought of myself as a person who enjoyed a slow, quiet morning – always wanting to get a jump start on the work and activity for the day – and perhaps if all of them were this way I wouldn’t appreciate it nearly so much, but for now, the ones I have are exactly what I need.

Weekend Links, Jan. 27

Snow_window

Front porch view.

Feeling a bit candle-lit-at-both-ends at the moment, which is ironic considering Polar Vortex #2 is headed our way. Haven’t been reading much this week, but here are a few things to note:

Beans, beans, beans! I talk all about cooking with dried beans over at The Kitchen Gallery’s blog.

And here’s where I realize that all of the other links I want to post this week are related to booze. Welp, winter …

This (which we tried on Friday and was absolutely beautiful and very good) has us wondering what would happen if we shook other favorite cocktails with a whole egg … stay tuned for our findings!

A few “weird” drinking traditions from around the world.

Apparently I’m not the only one who sometimes stares at a tap system and wonders how it all works under the counter.

This reminded me how long it’s been since I’ve had a salty dog, one of my favorite drinks. Guess that’s what happens when you don’t live in a place with local winter citrus …

I’ll be teaching and can’t attend, unfortunately, but this Madison cocktail shakedown looks amazing. (Again, full disclosure: I work for REAP, which will be receiving donations from the event.)

This week’s meal plan Between a few busy weeknights, teaching a class on Thursday, and going out of town for a conference, there isn’t much to plan. We’re mostly trying to eat through all the leftovers in the freezer (or should I say “freezer,” since much of it is actually frozen in a cooler on our back porch).

  • Roasted sweet potatoes and quinoa
  • Defrosted venison bourguignon, meatballs in tomato sauce, braised red cabbage
  • Lunches: leftovers, going out
  • Breakfasts: defrosted banana chocolate chip bread, bread with honey and butter, yogurt with defrosted applesauce

Sauerkraut and sausage stew with dumplings

If I were to grade our adaptation to this whole winter thing, I’d give us a pretty solid A-. We’ve outfitted ourselves fairly well, aside from decent gloves and sufficient quantities of wool socks, and our busy schedules have distracted us from the fact that we can’t go outside. We send each other and our friends pictures of our snowy faces and red cheeks and frozen neighborhood, and I’ve even learned how to at least partially participate when the people around me want to discuss the weather (a conversation topic I’ve never really understood). Warm beverages and heated rooms and a good fuzzy blanket have an entirely new appeal, and I’ve found myself actually loving the shock of cold air on my face when I bundle up and go out.

And while I spent most of our time in Southern California figuring out how to get as much winter-weather cooking into a few weeks of merely chilly weather, I’m now faced with the expanse of stews and roasts and hot toddies and everything else I’d been looking forward to in moving here.  

Sauerkraut_sausage_stew_3 Read more