By | January 30, 2012

homemade crepes

We were invited to a brunch where the hostess made crêpe after crêpe in a 20-year old cast iron pan while we sipped juice from her orange tree and snuck spoonfuls of nutella.  Her crêpes were perfectly round and an even, buttery brown.  We all acted like it was no big deal but inside I was panicking.

stacked crepes

The nonchalance, the fruit tree, the ability to flip lacy pancakes while chatting!  All things I lack.  I follow these recipes, make the crepes ahead- they’re easier to flip than pancakes-  and stack them between parchment paper for rolling and reheating.

Crepe with sweet cheese and blueberry sauce

There you have it.  The secret to making crêpes for a crowd.  Start early and have plenty of parchment on hand.  Sure, no one will be blown away by your epic coolness, but no one will get cranky hungry and double dip in the nutella jar either.

Stuff, roll and reheat in a warm oven or microwave. Freeze leftover crepes for up to a month.

xoxoSarah

Topics: Kitchen | 1 Comment

By | January 27, 2012

Last Saturday Drew and I wrapped up our chores for the day just as the sun was setting out our living room window. On a whim I squeezed some satsuma tangerines for Satsuma Bourbon Sours to match the citrus streaked sky.

Dining room sunset

Satsumas at Sunset

Satsuma Sours

Satsuma Sour in Glass

Sunset

January Sunset

Satsuma Bourbon Sour

serves 2

4 oz freshly squeezed Satsuma or tangerine juice

1 oz meyer lemon juice

2 oz Bourbon

splash of Clementine soda

Shake over ice in a martini shaker and serve chilled. Sunset not required.

xo,
Lydia

Topics: Kitchen | 3 Comments

By | January 13, 2012

Our fruit bowl is overflowing with satsuma tangerines from our organic box delivery this morning. What do I do with them all?

 

Tangerine Gimlet

via

 

Juice them up and make A Communal Table’s Tangerine Gimlet?

Zest them into this Olive Oil Cake with Tangerines, Rosemary & Pine Nuts?

Poached salmon with tangerine-lemon Hollandaise?

Maybe make some Tangerine Sherbet?

They would be great on a beet salad

 

Any favorites I’m missing?

xo,
Lydia

Topics: Kitchen | 1 Comment

By | January 11, 2012

basic green soup

The kitchen has its own dirty word.  I’m sure you’re familiar with it, have said it or felt it hanging in the air.

Waste.

Please say you are as guilty as I am.  That you’ve tossed a rotting piece of fruit you forgot was in there.  Or shoved wet, wilted greens deep into the trash so you wouldn’t see them and feel bad about not taking the time to saute them.

It’s the greens that get me.  They are so hearty and alive until they just aren’t anymore.

No more. Rescue your greens!  Do it quickly before they turn.   Freeze them or make a quick frittata, green smoothie 1, green smoothie 2 or this basic green soup.  Creator Anna Thomas calls the best tasting medicine in the world.

Forget “eat to live or live to eat.”  Liven it up with a Parmesan snowfall and a drizzle of good olive oil and you’re doing both.  Not to mention keeping  your mouth clean.

Do you have any tips for saving greens?

xoSarah

 

 

 

Topics: Kitchen, Library | 3 Comments

By | January 9, 2012

Lauren Conrad 7 Days to Skinny Jeans

Friends I found a pretty cute blog/website last week with a fantastic diet and exercise plan to get back in your skinny jeans after the holidays. The problem is this is Lauren Conrad’s site (aka LC) so I was a TAD embarrassed to share it with you all. Back in the day I watched her show Laguna Beach and didn’t care for her personality, moping around her parent’s beach mansion while the other girls said funny things like “my car is dunzo” and “Steven and I would have such cute babies, they would be like so tan.”

Laguna Beach TV show

But it’s been almost 10 years since that show and Lauren has blossomed into a major entrepreneur with a few fashion lines, multiple bestselling books and a community of followers on her website. So I respect her now, I guess.

Irregardless of who she is I think her 7 Day to Skinny Jeans Plan is a smart and sensible diet and exercise plan. Great ideas for healthy meal ideas and exercise options to keep you on track with your slim down goals and maintain your figure all year.

Check out her full plan here. Below are the breakfast and snack ideas which I thought were the most helpful.

LC’s Breakfast Options

Greek yogurt topped with walnuts, a handful of berries (or sliced banana) and a light drizzle of agave nectar

Steel cut oatmeal with 2 tablespoons of dried apricots, 2 tablespoons of slivered almonds and a splash of almond milk

Veggie omelet with a slice of whole grain toast (Click here for my favorite omelet recipe!)

Breakfast smoothie

Half an avocado stuffed with cottage cheese and a side of sliced tomato

Ezekiel toast topped with 2 sliced up hardboiled eggs served with half of a grapefruit

Breakfast Quinoa (Make a big batch and eat it for breakfast for a few days. It’s delicious!)

LC’s Snacks

1 medium apple with 1 tablespoon of peanut butter

1 cup of red grapes and a low fat string cheese

¼ cup of almonds

½ cup of bran cereal (or Grape Nuts) with milk and a few berries

Raw veggies with 3 generous tablespoons of hummus

1 hardboiled egg with a few whole-grain crackers

Celery with a tablespoon of almond butter and a few raisins

Lauren Conrad

She even has a book club. Maybe her site is to younger girls what GOOP is to me?

xo,
LEH

Topics: Kitchen, Library | 4 Comments

By | December 19, 2011

christmas ornaments

We’re off, dear readers!  Lydia & Drew are traveling today to see family in Northern California and I’m clearing out the kitchen and packing up my parka to spend Christmas with Angus’s family near Happy Valley, Pennsylvania.  On the agenda: lounging by the fire, baking, cooking, hiking, reading, watching our breath (it’s never cold enough here), gift-giving and napping.  Definitely napping.

heart ornament

We’ll also be remembering you with love and gratitude.  Thank you for the time you spend with us and for your every email and comments.  Our days wouldn’t be the same without them.  Here’s wishing you a holiday full of sparkling lights, shiny ribbons, lots of love and your very favorite foods.

xoxosl

P.S. We’ll be back next week.  In the meantime you can always catch us on Twitter.

Topics: Kitchen | 7 Comments

By | December 15, 2011

Last year my Mom and I did a major Christmas cookie decorating session and then gave them as gifts in glassine bags. Even Drew got involved in the fun. It’s a process these cookies but they turn out beautifully.

Sugar Cookies

Make sugar cookie dough, roll it out and cut with seasonal cookie cutters. Bake and allow to cool completely.

Royal Icing in many colors

Make a huge batch of royal icing and separate it into small bowls. Add gel food coloring to get the best shades and hues (ours were a tad electric, we over did it on the gel.)

Wet cookies

Decorate your cookies with icing, sugar and assorted candies. Allow them to lay flat and dry completely.

Christmas Cookies

As the icing dries it turns from shining to matte.

Snowflakes

Snowmen Cookies

Snowmen and women

Santa Cookies

Santa and Mrs. Claus

Christmas Tree Cookies

Christmas Trees.

Which are your favs?

xo,

LEH

Topics: Kitchen | 4 Comments

By | December 14, 2011

You know how everyone and their mother (us included) recommend you read a recipe in its entirety before starting?  Well, I did skim Five and Spice’s Cinnamon Sugar Breakfast Puffers recipe.  I knew what ingredients I needed and what steps I had to take.  But I didn’t bother with the headnote and I didn’t think through the recipe.  Five and Spice, I’m sorry.  You and your puffers deserve better.

Adding in brown butter

I knew enough to set aside time for browning melted butter to give the batter a nuttier flavor.

And Anjali preheated the oven and buttered the muffin tin.  But here, my friends, is where confusion set in.  The word puffer, to me, suggests sweet rounds of light, eggy dough ballooning with hot air, but a muffin tin does not a round doughnut make.   To make matters worse, the batter, although sweet and buttery with a little hit of citrus in the form of Meyer lemon zest, was too dense to inspire confidence.  Would it even puff?   Doubtful.  Best-case scenario, it might attempt to rise and emerge a thick half-muffin.

We soldiered on: melting the butter and prepping the cinnamon sugar for dunking.  18 minutes in the oven and, as we suspected, out came 12 stunted muffins.  Having come so far, we went ahead and dunked them hot in the butter and rolled them in cinnamon sugar until our fingers were greasy and gritty with warm sweetness.  That part was fun.

Baked cinnamon sugar doughnuts

Dismayed by their hunky appearance, I chewed on a test puffer without paying it much attention.  In fact, I did so while running out to the garage to grab a juicer for making OJ.  It was there in the yard, hands full of equipment, mouth full of puffer and with, I’m sure, a little cinnamon on my chin, that I actually got it.  Maybe your grandmother didn’t bring you fresh-baked spice doughnuts wrapped in steam-damp cellophane from the local Jewel, but mine did and I know you would have loved them too.  There are 15 years of food memories to cross, so I can’t be sure, but these little cake bombs of cinnamon sugar joy taste stunningly familiar.

Word to the wise: don’t tear up thinking of your grandmother when you’ve got cinnamon sugar sticking to your fingers.

In the headnote I failed to read, Five and Spice describes these as “a hybrid of spice cake, muffins, and cinnamon sugar donut holes.”  Accurate and totally tantalizing.  So forget the puff part and eat these sturdy darlings hot with coffee or tea.  You’ll love them.  Recipe found here.

xoxosl

Topics: Kitchen | 5 Comments

By | December 12, 2011

For most of high school I dated a sweet guy from an Italian family. Both his parents were INCREDIBLE cooks and they taught me so much about, cooking, entertaining, fashion, dining out and most of all family bonding. I learned many life lessons from the Votanos like never put cheese on seafood pasta, baggie jeans are NOT the height of style and to gift Panettone bread at the holidays. The first Christmas David and I were dating his mom sent me home one December afternoon with a huge blue box wrapped in cellophane tied with a big ribbon.

Panettone

 

My mom and I examined the box with curiosity and finally opened the package which revealed a tall domed bread studded with dried fruit. The first taste was confusing, lightly sweet and studded with raisins and bits of candied orange peel with a distinctive smell of orange and butter. I was skeptical ( I was 14 ok). Then my mom toasted us some slices for breakfast the next morning and the mysteries of the Panettone revealed themselves to me. Toasting turned the edges crisp and flaky and the inside to a fluffy gooey texture, like that of a fresh glazed donut.

 

Panettone French Toast

17 years later I cheer when I see the tall trapezoid boxes with rounded edges stacked in the markets after Thanksgiving. I resist buying one until mid-December when I toast a slice of Panettone for my birthday breakfast. With each bite I savor the dueling textures and my high school memories. When I go to my mom’s house for the holidays I always know a Panettone awaits for us to share in the morning over tea.

 

Panettone French Toast + Syrup

This year I decided to go beyond the simple toasting of the bread and whip up some Panettone french toast. Drew couldn’t resist a few bites (even though he has been Gluten-Free for 7 years) and proclaimed it “the best ever, even better than a bear claw.” We ate it huddled over one plate drizzled with maple syrup and marveling over the custardy texture. I can’t think of a better holiday morning breakfast.  Do try it friends. Your new holiday tradition awaits. Or give one as a gift as the Votanos did and open your loved ones up to a new world of flavor.

 

Panettone French Toast bite

Panettone French Toast

serves 4-6

6 thick slices of Panettone (1 inch, half moon slices)

2 organic large eggs

1 cup organic whole  milk

2 tablespoons organic unsalted butter

Maple syrup or powdered sugar for serving

Preheat your oven to 200 degrees. Cut your Panettone loaf in half vertically with a serrated knife and lay one half flat side down on the cutting board. Trim off the brown parts of both ends of the bread and slice the loaf into 6 half moon shaped slices. Whisk 2 eggs into 1 cup of milk in a large flat dish. Melt 1 tablespoon of butter in a non-stick pan over medium-low heat. Soak 3 slices of bread in the custard for 15 seconds on each side. Gently place the custard soaked slices into the melted butter and fry for 2-3 minutes on each side. Be sure to adjust the heat down if they are burning. Once nicely browned, flip the bread and fry on the other side. Cook until the bread has a firm texture and puffs up slightly. Remove to a baking sheet and keep warm in a low 200 degree oven while you repeat the process with the remaining slices. Serve immediately with maple syrup or powdered sugar.

 

xo,

LEH

Topics: Kitchen | 7 Comments

By | December 9, 2011

meyer lemon tart recipe

Made this for Thanksgiving and it’s now a given that I’ll make it every Thanksgiving from here on out.  It’s that foolproof and a perfect combo of sunny Meyer lemon sweetness and rich shortbread crust.  Lemon and butter, smooth and crumbly.  Clearly a winner.

meyer lemon

If you’ve never seen a Meyer lemon, here you go.  They are smaller, rounder and sweeter than regular lemons with a smoother skin and a much softer body.  Takes very little muscle to give ‘em a good squeeze.  A gentle person’s lemon!

According to Wikipedia (I know, I know), chefs from Chez Panisse were the first to cook with Meyer lemons and Martha, knowing a good thing when she tasted it, promptly introduced them to the mainstream by using them in her recipes when no one else was doing so.  It’s fitting then, that this recipe is taken straight from her November issue of Living but isn’t an original Martha.  It comes from pastry chef Lindsey Remolif Shere’s Chez Panisse Desserts.  Hey, Martha finds what works and sticks with it.

One more gossipy tidbit about Martha and lemons.  Rosie O’Donnell asked Martha what she missed most from the outside world while she was incarcerated.  Precise as always, Martha responded, “the flavor of lemons.”  Make of that what you will, but they do taste and smell awfully nice.

xoxosl

Meyer Lemon Tart

Serves 8

Ingredients

For the crust:

1 cup AP flour

2 tablespoons sugar

pinch salt

1/4 teaspoon finely-grated Meyer lemon zest

1 stick cold, unsalted butter, cut into pieces

1 tablespoon water

1/2 teaspoon pure vanilla extract

For the lemon curd:

2 large eggs plus 3 large egg yolks

1/4 cup plus 2 tablespoons sugar

1/4 teaspoon cornstarch

3 tablespoons finely grated Meyer lemon zest plus 1/3 cup fresh Meyer lemon juice (from about 3 lemons)

6 tablespoons unsalted butter. cut into small pieces

Directions

Preheat the oven to 375 degrees.

Make the crust: Whisk together flour, sugar, 1/2 teaspoon salt and the lemon zest in a large bowl. Cut in butter with a pastry cutter or your fingers until the dough begins to hold together.

Stir together water and vanilla, then mix into dough.  Shape dough into a disk and wrap in plastic wrap.  Refrigerate for 30 minutes.

Using your fingers, press the cold dough evenly into the bottom and up the sides of a 9-inch fluted tart pan with a removeable bottom.  Freeze for 30 minutes.

Bake tart shell until golden, about 25 minutes.  Cool completely.

Meanwhile, make the lemon curd.  Whisk together eggs, egg yolks, sugar and cornstarch in a medium saucepan.  Whisk in lemon juice and zest.  Cook over medium-low heat, stirring constantly until thick enough to coat the back of a wooden spoon, about 7 minutes.  Remove from heat and whisk in butter, 1 piece at a time.

Pour filling into cooled tart shell.  Bake until filling is browned, slightly puffed and set, about 30 minutes.  Let cool completely.  Tart can be refrigerated for up to 3 days.

Topics: Kitchen | 3 Comments