Saturday, March 19, 2016

Baked Bunny Bao (Contains No Actual Bunnies)


Snow in the forecast Sunday into Monday, so March's balmy lamb is going out with teeth and claw.  Yet, my lilac tentatively opens its leaves, the hyacinth bloom in the shelter of the spruce, the daffodil fill out their buds before bursting into lionine heads.  Chickweed and dead nettle flowers feed the early pollinators.  I leave them in the garden, except in the raised beds at school where we've planted beets and transplanted strawberries.  Snow or no snow, spring is coming!


Here's an annual favorite of mine.  I've been growing arugula and pea micro greens, which I will add to the "bunny bed" when I make this next week.  My two barred Plymouth Rocks are laying again, and I hope the white Araucana will bless us with her blue eggs.  




It's been a lot of things at once in my life, good and bad, at work and at home, and with friends.  I've been overwhelmed.  Yet, the sun shines and tomorrow and tomorrow and tomorrow comes.  I may put off planting today, but I will go outside.  Time is precious.  Every day should be lived alive.

Order my cookbook here.

Friday, December 11, 2015

Busy, Busy, and Need to Bake!!!



It's that time of year when gatherings and obligations multiply and it's hard to find time for it all.  Here's two quick recipes and your chance to get 25% off my cook book with FREE shipping!  Go here and use promo code DECSHIP25 until December 13th.





Gluten-Free/Vegetarian
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Yule Dates
Taste of Pakistan
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Prep: 15 minutes Makes about 50

10 oz. pitted dates, room temperature
4 oz. local creamy goat cheese
1/4 cup finely chopped walnuts
2 tbs. finely chopped dried cranberries
1 tsp. finely chopped fresh rosemary


Mix all ingredients except dates thoroughly. Hold date firmly and make a shallow cut down length of narrow side. Gently pry open and fill with cheese mixture, using one side of a butter knife. Repeat with remaining dates. Garnish plate with a sprig of rosemary and fresh or dried cranberries.



Vegetarian
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Rosemary Rounds
Taste of Earth
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Prep: 5 minutes Cook: 20 minutes Makes 48 cookies

1/2 cup softened, unsalted butter
1/2 cup dark brown sugar
1/2 cup finely chopped walnuts
1 tsp. minced fresh rosemary
1 tsp. vanilla extract
1 tsp. lemon juice
1 1/2 cups unbleached flour

Pre-heat oven to 300ºF. Cream together butter and sugar. Mix in remaining ingredients in order listed. Press dough into greased mini-muffin tins, filling half-way. Cook 18-20 minutes, or until just golden. Cool and carefully remove from tins. Store in air-tight container.


Wednesday, December 2, 2015

Cookbook Signing at the Winter Market

It's here!  Around the World in 100 Miles will be available THIS SATURDAY December 5th, 2015 at the Pawtucket Winter Market in the Hope Artiste Village, 1005 Main St, Pawtucket, RI 02860.  I will be there with food samples and copies of the book from 9-1.  Stop in and say hi, and use the book to do your shopping for delicious dinners, appetizers, and sweet treats this holiday season, using local New England foods.

My book is also available (unsigned) through Lulu and Amazon.
See you there!!!

Sunday, October 25, 2015

Gluten-Free Stuffing and More!


Thanksgiving is coming!  I'll be doing a FREE workshop MONDAY on cooking with local ingredients, including TWO gluten-free stuffings!  Reduce your carbon footprint, save money, improve your health, save the world with these world-cuising recipes using New England-sourced ingredients.  There will be samples of pumpkin polenta, stuffed squash, apple parsnip soup, firecracker cabbage rolls, and Jamaican ginger apple carrot bread.  Plus, you get to try acorns!

Monday, October 26th
6 p.m.
Harmony Public Library
195 Putnam Pike, Harmony, RI 02829
(401) 949-2850

Monday, October 19, 2015

Free Food Workshop

World Cuisine with Local Ingredients:

Love to eat around the world?  Master Gardener, cook, and author Melissa Guillet will take you through four seasonal fall recipes featuring local ingredients.  Get a taste of Jamaica in a gingery bread, try the firecracker flavor of China, indulge in an Irish apple and parsnip soup, and rediscover pumpkin with Italian polenta.  Recipes will be available to take home.  Don't miss this unique event!

Monday, October 26th
6 p.m.
Harmony Public Library 
195 Putnam Pike, Harmony, RI 02829
(401) 949-2850

Saturday, October 10, 2015

Weevils, Acorns, and Wild Harvests



Er...What IS THIS on my house?  It's tiny.  It's weird.  It's got this snout and heart-shaped feet.  It is WEEVIL!!!!

What is a weevil?!!

Curculio glandium is a beetle with a long snout called a rostrum.  There are boll weevils, potato weevils, acorn weevils...  This is an acorn weevil, and in this mast year for acorns, it is very happy.  It will bore into acorn shells to feast, as well as lay eggs.  The eggs are laid after the female bores a hole into the acorn's center, then the nut heals over the hole.  By the time the acorn falls from the tree, the tiny larva is ready to bore its way out and dig as deep as a foot underground to live up to five years before pupating into an adult.  More info here and here.

Weevils aren't the only ones who eat acorns.  So dgray squirrels, blue jays, black bears, chipmunks, ruffed grouse, deer mice, and people.  I have two oaks in my yard and plan to harvest some of those acorns for some yummy pancakes and brown bread.  There are approximately 58 species of oak trees in the United States, with white and bur varieties producing the biggest acorns.  A single tree can yield over 29,000 acorns in a good year.  But acorns don't come ready to eat...

Acorns are high in tannins, which naturally occur in many plants, including grapes.  Tannins are bitter-tasting and too much will interfere with kidney function.  Red and black oak have the highest tannins, white oak the least.  Not coincidentally, red and black oak acorns take two years to sprout, thus storing well for animals, while white oaks sprout quickly and being sweeter, are quickly eaten up by animals fattening up before winter.  But all are edible with this process: water soaking.

The squirrels figured this out by burying acorns for later and letting the rains soak and resoak them.  By the time winter arrives, they are a lot more tasty!  Native Americans stored them in baskets they weighted down in rivers and streams, letting the current do its work over several weeks.  Today, we can boil the nuts and change out the water.  First, crack the shells with nutcrackers, discarding nuts with holes, rot, or visible larva.  Place in a large pot with clean water.  Bring to boil.  The tannins will turn the water black.  Drain the water and replace with fresh water.  Repeat boiling and draining until the water stays clear.  The acorns are now ready for roasting.  Roast in oven at 375 until aromatic.  They have a taste similar to hazelnuts.

Once roasted, they can be ground as flour, added to batters, or baked into bread.  Here's the recipe from my new cookbook, Around the World in 100 Miles:

Wild Option
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Mercy Brown Bread
Taste of Old New England
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Prep: 10 minutes Cook: 2 hours Makes 3 loaves

1 cup processed acorns (see page 134) or raw hazelnuts
1 cup buttermilk
1 cup plain yogurt
1/2 cup molasses
1 cup fresh cranberries
1 cup unbleached flour
1 cup whole wheat flour
2 tsp. baking powder
1/2 tsp. salt
1 tsp. cinnamon

Combine nuts and buttermilk and run through food processor to make a thick paste. Mix paste with yogurt and molasses. Stir in washed and picked over cranberries, removing stems and soft berries first. In a separate bowl, whisk together flours, baking soda, salt, and cinnamon. Gradually stir flour mixture into wet mixture. Grease three coffee cans and divide batter between them. Seal cans with foil and rubber bands.


Place cans in large stock pot with at least two inches of water. Cover and bring to gentle boil. Steam breads two hours, adding more water as necessary. Allow to cool before removing foil. Slice and serve.


Friday, August 14, 2015

Make Room for Mushrooms!

Once upon a time, I found a 12 lb. hen of the woods mushroom.


Some of the mushroom got dried in an oven overnight.  It made REALLY strong stock later.


Some got frozen and was quite useful later.


And some got cooked right away in this Italian dish.


Cacciatore means "catch all" and often used whatever was at hand, but always mushrooms.  The origin story goes like this: The man went out to hunt in the woods in late summer.  He found no game, but brought home mushrooms from his search.  The woman then took one of their chickens and whatever vegetables were on hand to make this meal, perfect for when the hot summer days have finally yielded to cool breezes and bumper tomatoes are canned.  It is hearty and needs a robust pasta to stand up to it, such as rigatoni.    This one also has baby bella mushrooms.  Button, chicken, or oyster mushrooms would work as well.



Gluten-Free/Vegan Option/Wild Option
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Cacciatore Catch-All
Taste of Italy
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Prep: 15 minutes  Cook: 45 minutes  Serves 4

2 lbs. local chicken parts (optional)
2 tbs. olive oil
1/2 red onion, diced
1 red or green bell pepper, coarsely chopped
4 cloves garlic, minced
2 cups peeled tomatoes* (Roma and/or cherry)
2 cups sliced wild puffball mushrooms** (or white button)
1 cup of “catch-all”: washed and chopped zucchini, summer
    squash, eggplant, or what-have-you
1 tbs. dried oregano (or 2 tbs. fresh)
1/2 tsp. salt 
1/4 tsp. white pepper
1/2 cup red wine (from freezer cubes?)

“Cacciatore” means hunter in Italian and often features wild mushrooms** (assuming the hunter did not want to come home empty-handed).  This recipe is a great way to use up odds and ends from canning.  Consider measurement of vegetables approximate.  Leftovers can even be added to an omelet, frittata, or soup.  

Heat olive oil on medium-high in Dutch oven or large skillet with cover.  If using chicken, brown meat five minutes each side and set aside.  Add onions, garlic, and bell pepper to pan.  Cook two minutes, or until onions soften.  Add tomatoes, mushrooms, and remaining vegetables.  Season with salt, pepper, and oregano.   Add wine and bring to boil.  Reduce heat to simmer.  Add chicken and cover.  Cook 30 minutes, or until chicken reaches 165ºF and vegetables are soft.  Serve with crusty bread, pasta, or rice.


* When canning tomatoes, skins are removed by blanching.  This is done by dropping whole tomatoes in boiling water about one minute, then into ice water one minute, to easily peel skin.  I’ve used the leftover seeds and juice from canning harissa sauce with plum tomatoes.  You could also use already canned tomatoes or just chop fresh tomatoes and leave skins on. 

** Do not attempt to gather wild mushrooms without a certified guide.  Puffballs (Calvatia gigantea) should be the size of two fists or larger and white throughout.  Discolored puffballs are not safe to eat and will not taste good.  Immature amanita can be mistaken for puffballs, thus the need to look for larger mushrooms.  (Puffballs can grow quite large and have even been mistaken for Styrofoam trash in littered woodlands!)  Cutting the mushroom may reveal more: A “U” shape indicates the immature cap of the poisonous amanita, but may not always be visible.  Alcohol intensifies reaction to any poisonous mushroom.  Don’t risk it!!!  The author and publisher assume no liability for injury, poisoning, illness, or death from consuming wild mushrooms or plants.  Leave it to the experts: Puffballs may be available at some farmers’ markets or high-end food stores.