Carrot Zucchini Muffins
Posted: November 14, 2012 Filed under: Farm to Table – sustainable food/locavore/organics, Table Talk: Rachel – posts by Rachel | Tags: Carrot, healthy, ice cream is healthy if you eat it with vegetables, kitchen preserve, MRSA, muffins, zucchini Leave a comment »Things have been slow around our kitchen lately. After a whirlwind of canning victory (oh the applesauce! glorious applesauce!), our lives switched over to MRSA-mode and there they’ve stayed for a week and a half.
We did make these muffins, though, and they’re pretty darned good (says the person who ate over half of them). I found the recipe at Kitchen Preserve, a website I’ve got a crush on because it brought these muffins into my life and because one of the sidebar categories is gin.
I’m pretty sure we need a gin category around these parts. Yes?
Just so you know, I used steel cut oats because we were out of old fashioned rolled and I think they gave the muffins a nice heft.
I also ate one of these muffins with a scoop (and by scoop I mean the remains of a carton) of butter pecan ice cream with salted caramel. That was umm…awesome. And kind of nutritious, right? WIN WIN, PEOPLE.
What are you all eating these days?
I Can Can!
Posted: November 9, 2012 Filed under: Farm to Table – sustainable food/locavore/organics, Table Talk: Rachel – posts by Rachel | Tags: canning, Cinnamon, hippie shit, homemade applesauce, stockpiling for the apocalypse Leave a comment »
My hippie aspirations began in high school, grown out of an admiration for the few hippie kids in my prep school world and their promise of acceptance for weird kids like me. The hippie kids were nice, you see, down for dance parties and staring up at stars while we lay on our backs in backroad fields. They liked music and weed and they shared in my questioning of the norms of our insulated lives. I never quite became a hippie, though, never quite fit in just right in any group. But the kindnesses those kids showed me at the height of my awkward years–the kindnesses they have continued to show me as we’ve grown into adults and largely stemmed away from each other–have always stuck with me. I’ve carried a bit of hippie in my heart, I guess, a sliver of self that leans towards earth and relishes sun. It’s this sliver that’s left me itching to can, that propelled my hands forward to grab ten pounds of apples at the grocery this weekend when they were local and organic and only 89 cents a pound.
I mean, 89 cents you guys. That NEVER happens around here. And though I’ve been making applesauce ever since Max was born, it’s never really saved us any money. It has afforded us organic fruit, though, from local farms, and nothing but apples and cinnamon going down our throats. It’s been worth it, for sure, but I’ve only ever made small batches because the labor of peeling apples and such for virtually no savings just never inspires me to make epic amounts of sauce. Until now. 89 cents meant we were grabbing canning lids on our way to the check out. It also meant that John and Maxine were forced to spend their afternoon hunched over the kitchen sink, washing and peeling apples for me to slice and toss into our two biggest pots. A cinnamon stick or two was added to each pot and an inch of water drizzled down to the bottom. A fold of wax paper on top and some periodic stirring finished the applesauce off.
I should admit that I neglected to make sure our stock pot was big enough to can in. I mean, we don’t have any special canning equipment or anything. I’m sure it’s useful and all, but I just can’t wrap my mind around buying special equipment to store food the way my great great grandmother did. You know? The math just doesn’t add up for me. I was determined, though, and after giving myself a bit of a pep talk, I poured the cooled applesauce into the cooled sanitized jars and then set them into 140 F water (thanks to the candy thermometer my mom gave me of her dad’s), bringing the water to a slow boil for 15 minutes before removing the jars to our butcher block to sit without touching each other overnight. I tapped each lid this morning and none of them gave, meaning perfect seals all around. And now when I open our pantry I see a row of jars filled with applesauce. In total we got 8 jars out of 10 pounds of apples, meaning we made 8 jars of applesauce–good, organic, local, cinnamon-y applesauce–for less than ten dollars.
And that, ladies and gentleman, is what we-who-carry-hippie-bits-in-our-hearts call a VICTORY!
PS: I promise to tell you if we get botulism. Really, I do.
Well Wishes
Posted: October 31, 2012 Filed under: Farm to Table – sustainable food/locavore/organics, Table Talk: Rachel – posts by Rachel | Tags: backyard eating, basil, buttercrunch lettuce, hurricane sandy, parsley, radishes, urban farming Leave a comment »
We are sending everyone out there well wishes and thoughts of sunshine, hoping you and yours are safe and well and on the lucky side of Sandy. The photo above was snapped Sunday night, fresh from the garden and before I’d rinsed everything under the faucet. I always feel grateful when we eat from our garden, always marvel at how rich backyard produce is even when compared to the local organic stuff at our local grocery. I felt luckier, though, as I stood hunched over the earth Sunday night, the sun shooting radiant streaks of color through the clear California sky as it set. The warm breeze held no hint of rain, swirled gently and lazily as it meandered around the yard. I thought of my mom and my brother and my dad, of the trees that encircle their house and the rising winds creeping towards their home, of all of you out there bracing yourselves for the unknown and stocking your pantry shelves for the worst. I hoped you would all fair well, and am hoping you all still are.
Happy Halloween!
What We Ate
Posted: October 10, 2012 Filed under: Farm to Table – sustainable food/locavore/organics, Table Talk: Rachel – posts by Rachel, Uncategorized | Tags: Chez Panisse, chicken salad, Dinner: A Love Story, family dinner, genova delicatessen, Jenny Rosenstrach, mom, pesto, ricotta cheesecake, sweet potato chicken pot pie 1 Comment »This weekend my mom came to visit. For the first time since my 21st birthday, I had my mama all to myself. I shared her with Maxine, of course, but it was wonderful to chat during naps and linger over dinners and giggle while we carved pumpkins.
We made pesto chicken salad with some of the best pesto on the planet (from our local Genova Delicatessen). We tossed pumpkin seeds in cinnamon and nutmeg, chili powder and sea salt, and roasted them in the oven. We even marinated feta–soaking it in olive oil with bay leaves and cracked pepper corns and rosemary from our backyard garden and a bit of thyme–though we never got around to eating it.
My mom was determined to make granola (ok, we actually insist that she make it every time she visits). I had just collected the ingredients for my own batch, though, so I suggested she work with what I had on hand. Maddeningly, hers still turned out better than mine ever does. The nerve!
John made us this fresh ricotta cheesecake from our Chez Panisse cookbook, dotted with marsala-soaked raisins and pine nuts. Someday I’ll share the recipe with all of you. You can begin thanking me now, though. That cake is so good we ate it for dinner one night.
And for our first dinner together, John made us Jenny Rosenstrach’s Sweet Potato Chicken Pot Pie. It’s the second time we’ve had it on our table, and it’s definitely earned a permanent spot in our dinner rotation.
As is always the case when my mom visits, I am reminded that it is not only the food before me that makes a great meal, but the company, too. Watching my mom play games with Max while she ate, swapping jokes and asking each other questions, could make any meal into perfect sustenance.
Thanks for coming, Mom. I love you.
Eat Real Oakland
Posted: September 26, 2012 Filed under: Farm to Table – sustainable food/locavore/organics, Table Talk: Rachel – posts by Rachel | Tags: Eat Real festival, Fat Bastard, Memoir, Oakland, sandwiches Leave a comment »On Friday I left work early, armed with a stack of flyers announcing this really cool writing workshop on food memoir that I’ve coordinated at my job and that my mom will be flying out to attend with me. I headed down to Jack London Square for the Eat Real festival, confident that there would be a bounty of folks who loved food and writing and, as such, would be excited to join the workshop on October 6th. Read the rest of this entry »
This Moment
Posted: September 21, 2012 Filed under: Farm to Table – sustainable food/locavore/organics, Table Talk: Rachel – posts by Rachel, This Moment | Tags: carrots, kid help, radishes, SouleMama, This Moment, winter garden Leave a comment »
A Friday ritual. A single photo – no words – capturing a moment from the week. Pause, savor, remember.
Winter Garden
Posted: September 12, 2012 Filed under: Farm to Table – sustainable food/locavore/organics, Table Talk: Rachel – posts by Rachel | Tags: bell peppers, butter crunch lettuce, California living, carrots, cayenne peppers, Easter radishes, white onion, winter gardening Leave a comment »There are approximately ten trillion things I love about where we live.
I love the bay breeze and the blue skies (there isn’t a blue sky like a California blue sky, I swear), the length of the tomato season and the allegiance to progressive politics that can be found at (nearly) every juncture. I love the beautiful tree with unpalatably sour grapefruits in our backyard, the taqueria up the street from our house, and the reclaimed vacant lots brimming with urban gardens. I could go on. I could go on, and on, and on. In the eight (8!) years since I moved here, this small pocket of California has become my skin–sun-soaked and rain-drenched and home. Read the rest of this entry »
This Moment
Posted: August 17, 2012 Filed under: Farm to Table – sustainable food/locavore/organics, Table Talk: Rachel – posts by Rachel, This Moment | Tags: portobello mushrooms, SouleMama, This Moment, vegetarian dinner 2 Comments »Lamb Burgers and School
Posted: August 15, 2012 Filed under: Farm to Table – sustainable food/locavore/organics, Table Talk: Rachel – posts by Rachel | Tags: first day of school, food, garden mint, good partner, growing up, homemade french fries, lamb, lamb burgers, parenting 1 Comment »I was going to write about lamb burgers and homemade french fries, about tangy yogurt dappled with garden mint and the wonders of having a partner who will come home from work and set out to the grocery store to make me exactly what I want for dinner.
I was going to show you this picture, and I was probably going to gloat a bit.
This moment
Posted: July 27, 2012 Filed under: Farm to Table – sustainable food/locavore/organics, Table Talk: Rachel – posts by Rachel, This Moment | Tags: bay area living, fruit trees, grapefruit, This Moment Leave a comment »A Friday ritual. A single photo – no words – capturing a moment from the week. Pause, savor, remember.
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