Monday, December 2, 2013

Soft-Boiled Eggs and Crock Pot Bread for Breakfast



This was a springtime breakfast with Zach.  It dirties up a lot of dishes to have a Turkish-style breakfast, but it is definitely our favorite.  Part of why we like them is because they are very relaxed, since we can only do Turkish breakfast when we both have the morning off.



We had cucumbers from our garden, tomatoes from the store, soft-boiled eggs, what appears to be hummus (maybe?), apple butter and strawberry jam, and some green-tomato pickles that seem to have plenty of turmeric in them.  And, of course, Turkish tea.  Zach was also making some "espresso" in our aeropress.



These eggs turned out pretty well.  The bread we ate was baked in a crock pot, something I'd wanted to try for a while.  The results were underwhelming.  I used this method http://busymomsmenuplan.blogspot.com/2012/07/how-to-make-homemade-bread-in-crock-pot.html and whole wheat dough.  

I remember looking at many different recipes to decide what to do, so I may have used a combination of methods.  The idea is pretty simple: put dough in crock pot, cover, bake.  It took quite a bit longer than the recipe said, and it was NEVER going to get a nice crisp crust like the pictures led me to believe.  It still didn't look browned AT ALL at 3 hours, but I took it out anyway.  The result was a heavy (whole wheat) bread that was fine, but nothing exciting.  I will probably try again.

Anyway, I'm sure it was a lovely breakfast, and that we drank way too much Turkish tea, and I probably had a slight headache later from all the sugar.

Friday, November 22, 2013

Steak Dinner

People are always asking me cooking questions: how much to make, how long to cook it, etc.  This is all well and good until they ask me about cooking meat. I may know a little more than the average person about cooking meat, but that is mostly because of a cooking-methods class I took (so many years ago by now!).  I almost never cook plain meat, like, for example, a steak.

As far as I can remember, I have eaten five beef steaks in my life.  There may have been one or two more, but I'm not positive.  The first was at a Girl Scout camp thing when I was maybe 10 or 11.  The second was when I was dating Evan, and we had surf and turf at a restaurant for a business Christmas party.  The third was a steak dinner I made for Evan when he visited me (that steak was way overcooked!).  The fourth was when Zach and I had a free meal/night at a hotel for a Christmas present from brother and sister-in-law.  And this brings us to the fifth and most recent.

We went to Zach's grandparents' "farm" (aka "cabin" (house) and tons of land), and they were getting ready to grill some steaks when it was time for us to leave.  They sent two frozen steaks along with us, and a few days later, we had our fancy dinner.

Medium-rare (let's be honest, they turned out to be medium) steak with mushrooms and onions, baked sweet potato with cinnamon butter, and roasted asparagus.  And a frond of dill for decoration.

Zach's brother has been learning the art of vinification and had given us two bottles of "amber red" recently.

Jeremiah wine!
One must (obviously) follow a steak dinner with dessert.  We had cheesecake and decaf coffee.

Served on our fancy Turkish tea set

 The cheesecake was far from homemade, alas.  Zach wanted cheesecake on our vacation, and the only spring-form pan I have is huge.  We realized it would be cheaper (and less caloric) to buy a small one instead of make a huge one.  We put homemade rhubarb preserves on top, so I guess it's slightly homemade.  And you can't ignore those amazing homemade chocolate swirls on the plate.  Nothing says fancy like chocolate swirls!

So, there's the story of our steak dinner.  I'm going to try to mix some new meals in with the old ones, so that I'm not always looking at ancient, blurry photos, trying to guess what we were eating back in the day (there are a lot of meals that involve whole wheat pasta and spinach salads.  A lot.).


Thursday, November 21, 2013

Not Much to Say About This One




 Whole wheat linguini with yellow peppers, mushrooms, zucchini, and greens.  Tomato salad with onions, cucumbers, and balsamic.



Monday, November 11, 2013

Choose Your Own Adventure

This picture makes me crave iced tea.  It may also make me crave the other things in this picture, if only I could figure out what they are.




Whole wheat penne with:

a) chicken thigh with Cajun spices
b) chicken breast with Cajun spices
c) pork chop with Cajun spices
d) chicken thigh with generic Susannah spices (probably paprika, garlic, black pepper, salt, thyme)
e) chicken breast with generic Susannah spices
f) pork chop with generic Susannah spices
g) none of the above


I'm going to go with d or g.



Spinach salad with:

a) onions, gorgonzola, and dill
b) onions, feta, and dill
c) onions, weird pieces of apples or something, and dill
d) none of the above.

Probably a, perhaps in a lemon dressing.  I'm not sure why the dill is there; it throws me off a little and makes me wonder what I might have put with the chicken/pork/other.

All I know for sure, is that I probably should have added a soft-boiled egg somewhere.


Entering the Era of the Soft-Boiled Egg

Once upon a time, there was a couple who really liked to eat eggs.  In particular, ones with runny yolks.  One day, they realized that they had never soft boiled an egg, which seemed unbelievable at first, given their love for runny-yolked eggs.  Once they had tried the first one, they continued to have soft-boiled eggs added to many of their meals.  They took blurry pictures of these meals, and posted them to a blog months later, after they had pretty much forgotten what the meals were.

This is one such meal:




It appears to be a spinach salad with chick peas, tomatoes, and probably onions.  And a nice, glistening, soft egg on top.  Next to the egg, there appears to be a pale rectangle of some sort.  Feta?  Chicken?

And next to the salad, there is what is likely an Uzbek hot dog without the hot dog: chewy white bread warmed in the microwave, slathered in mayonnaise and spicy ketchup, and filled with Korean carrot salad (left over from the Russian party)  (<-- I made a link!).

Mmm, that "hot dog" was good.  The salad was also, though if I recall correctly, this egg was more medium-boiled.  It took a few tries to get the timing right.

Friday, October 25, 2013

Russian Dinner 2013

Every winter, I throw a Russian dinner party.  When Russians have dinner parties, they have LOTS of little salad plates all over the table with a large variety of "salads" (mostly mayonnaise based).  These are the 2013 Russian party salads (and other foods):

Cabbage salad with dill.  The only healthy salad.

On the left is what I call Korean Potato Salad, with a caramelized onion and garlic vinaigrette.  On the right is a crab and rice salad with corn.

Piroshki, stuffed with pork and onions, are the star of the show whether I want them to be or not.

The salad on the left is Frantsuskiy ("French") Salad.  The sections on the outside are julienned carrots, cabbage, cucumbers, beets, shoestring french fries, and seasoned beef.  In the middle is a dollop (sounds better than "glob") of mayonnaise.  After it makes an appearance on the table, it gets mixed all together into a tasty purple salad with surprising bites of fry and warm beef.  It's a Fath family favorite.
The salad on the right is a Korean carrot salad.
 Obviously there would be at least two Korean salads at a Russian party. :o)

This is one of the weirder Russian salads.  It's called Mimosa Salad, named after the delicate yellow and white flower rather than the brunch beverage.  There is a layer of mashed tuna (it should be sardines) encased in a mount of potato/boiled egg white/onion mixture, and garnished with grated egg yolk.  This party was soon after that meteor hit Russia somewhere, so I used an extra egg yolk to look like a meteor (see the blurry little "craters?") and dill fronds to look like little trees bent over from the meteor.  Weirdos.

Another Fath favorite!  We call these "El Dorado Tomatoes," named after the restaurant where we had them.  Imagine this goodness: a thick slice of tomato, topped with a layer of garlicky mayo, topped with a layer of white cheese, topped with a single pea as a garnish.  Does it get any better than that?

The most classic Russian salad: Olivye.  Potatoes, eggs, carrots, pickles, dill, and, of course, mayonnaise. 
Layered honey cake (medovnik) for dessert!  Long ago I started a post on the making of this cake, but never finished it.  It will come eventually.

Look at those lovely layers!

In past years, I made an entree as well, but eventually learned that everyone really just wants to eat lots of salads and piroshki.  For the 2014 party, however, I am planning to unlearn that lesson and make borscht as well.  Is that how you spell borscht?

More posts coming!

My adoring fan base is demanding more posts! Stay tuned.....

Monday, February 18, 2013

Corn Tortillas

Every time I see a tortilla press somewhere (Mexican grocery stores, thrift stores, etc...), I want to buy it.  I am normally not a fan of one-use kitchen gadgets, but for some reason the tortilla press always calls my name.

At some point, I decided that if I ever started making corn tortillas regularly, I could justify having a press.  That was many years ago, and I never once made any tortillas.

Until now.

Connie, one of our interns this year, wanted to make some enchiladas for lunch.  She put corn tortillas on the grocery list, but I decided that the time had come for me to make them!

Instead of the tortillas, I bought this:



The recipe on the bag said 2 c. of the masa, 1/8 tsp. salt, and 1 1/4 c. water.  Mix together, divide it into 16 little balls.  Cover the yet unused balls with a damp cloth while you roll them out.

Normally you would use a tortilla press (http://www.amazon.com/IMUSA-VICTORIA-85008-Tortilla-Pre-Cured-8-Inch/dp/B00164T384/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1361195884&sr=8-1&keywords=tortilla+press) and press the little balls into tortillas (between two sheets of plastic wrap).  I expiremented with a few different ways of properly flattening them, and decided this way worked the best for me:

 


Put the dough between two sheets of plastic wrap and flatten evenly with something heavy and flat-bottomed.  I used a frying pan.  This is how it ended up:



Too thick.  I then used a rolling pin to slowly press it out further.  I thought that starting with a rolling pin might also work, but it didn't.  The combination of the two pressing methods definitely worked the best for me.

You need to be gentle with this dough.  Unlike a wheat flour dough that stretches as you roll it out, this dough will just flatten into nothingness if you press to hard.  And if you roll too quickly, the edges of the dough ended up really ragged.  Slowly and gently, roll out the dough from all angles until the dough is very thin, somewhere between the thickness of a dime and a penny:


Next, cook them in a medium-hot, ungreased skillet.  It took about a minute on each side for me.  They turn a more opaque white when cooked.



They tasted soooo good.  And were simple enough that I might actually start making them regularly and will then be able to buy a press!

Note: I made three batches of dough.  The first batch was too dry, and the edges of the tortillas cracked a lot when I rolled them out.  The next to batches had more like 1 1/2 cups of water in them and worked a lot better.  Start with the 1 1/4 c. and try rolling out one ball.  If it seems too dry, a bit of water to the rest of the batch and try again.

Friday, February 8, 2013

Making Yogurt

Making your own yogurt is fairly easy, and can save you a LOT of money if you eat yogurt a lot.  A gallon of milk generally goes for $2.50-$3.00 around here, and makes the equivalent of about ten and a half of those little 6-oz/ yogurt cups that you buy (for probably $6-7), or two of the 32-oz. tubs (around $6).

I was first inspired to make yogurt by my 2012 intern, Megan.  Since then, a lot of other have been asking me about it, and I refer them to various blogs and online instructions that I have found.  With all of the information out there, however, everyone just asks me how I do it, what works for me.  And this is it:


First, you need to heat your milk.  I use a homemade double boiler with several inches of water in the lower pan:


If you don't have two pans that fit inside each other, you can use a metal bowl in place of the upper pan.  It it important that the two pans (or whatever you use) fit tightly together so the heat doesn't escape out the sides.  If there are large gaps, use foil to close them.  Or just heat your milk in the microwave.  Some people do the whole yogurt-making process in a crockpot, but I have never tried that, as I make a LOT of yogurt at a time.



I usually make somewhere between 1-3 gallons of yogurt at a time.  The smallest amount I have made is half a gallon.   Whole milk will make a thicker yogurt, skim milk will make a thinner yogurt; anything will work.  For this batch, I used half a gallon of whole and one gallon of 2%.  For home, I usually use skim or 1%, but for work I make it a little richer sometimes.

Heat your milk, covered, to 180 degrees.  Some people say you need to (to change the proteins in the milk to something that will solidify better), some people say you only need to heat it to 110 degrees.  Whatever the case, I heat it to 180.  Ideally, you would use a thermometer to check the temperature, but I have found that it is ready when it looks like this:



Lousy cell phone camera.  You can sort of see little bubbles on the milk.  When those little bubbles are across the whole surface of the milk, it is ready.  It is not boiling, just has little bubbles everywhere.

Next, remove the upper pan from heat, and cool it quickly to around 110 degrees.  I put mine in a sink full of cold/ice water:


If you are using as much milk as I do, you may need to stir the milk and/or change the water once or twice during the cooling process.

Once again, you would ideally have a thermometer so you would know what the milk is at 110, but if you don't, cool the milk until it is still warm, but you can hold a (clean) finger in the center of the milk comfortably.

Next, you inoculate (I love that word!) it with yogurt cultures.  I use one cup of yogurt per gallon of milk, some people use less.  Once you have made a batch of yogurt, just use some of that for your next batch.  Now, yogurt cultures do die after about two weeks, so if it has been much longer that that since you made your last batch, you might want to buy some new yogurt.

What kind of yogurt should to buy?  This is what I usually start with:



You can buy smaller single-serve yogurts also.  The important things to remember is that it needs to be plain, it needs to contain active cultures (it will say on the package somewhere), and it needs to not be past its expiration date by the time you will use it.  Some people say not to use lowfat yogurt, but I will use it as long as there aren't lots of weird ingredients like gelatin and other thickeners.  If the ingredients are basically just "milk" and "active cultures (of some sort), I will use it, whether it is nonfat, greek, all natural, or whatever.



To inoculate it, put the yogurt in a bowl and add a little of the warm milk to it.  Whisk away any lumps, then add it to the rest of the milk, whisking well.  If you used a lowfat/nonfat milk, you could add some dry milk powder to it if you want your yogurt to be a little thicker.  Some people will add gelatin, but I prefer not to.

Next, you need to incubate your yogurt.  You could leave it in the pan, you could pour it into clean glass jars, or whatever you want.  The milk now needs to stay at 110 degrees for a while to allow the little yogurt bacterias to multiply properly.  There are various ways to do this:
  • many ovens will be 110 degrees just with the pilot light on.  My oven at work is like that.  But you should find out for sure with an oven thermometer.
  • turn your oven on low, then turn it off.  Wrap your yogurt containers in towels (I use an old comforter when I make it at home!) and put it in the warm oven.
  • wrap the containers in towels and place in a cooler.
Again, some people use crock pots for the whole process, but I have never looked into it and therefore don't know the instructions for that.  I have always used the pilot light method or the towels/oven method.



If there is any chance that someone might come in and turn on the oven without checking inside first, put up a warning sign so they will leave your yogurt alone!

The yogurt needs to incubate for at least 4 hours, or up to about 20 hours, depending on how tart you like it.  I usually leave mine for 12-16 hours.

When you take it out of the oven, the yogurt will be solid, probably with a little yellow whey on the top. 



For it to thicken the rest of the way, the yogurt needs to be thoroughly chilled.  Just chill it in whatever container you used to incubate.

After it is chilled, it is ready to eat!  You could flavor it at this point, too (vanilla and sugar, strawberry jam, honey, etc.).

Pancake Toss at P. Graham Dunn

This is the last food-related picture on my phone.  Now I just need to start a blog for pictures of Maggie :o)

When many of us Faths were at Grandma and Grandpa's for Thanksgiving, there was a $1 All-You-Can-Eat-Catch-Your-Own-Pancake breakfast.



You go in, pay your dollar, and get a plate.  And then they start tossing pancakes at you!  The ones that fall on the ground get scooped up and fed to pigs later.

Then you go through a buffet line to get sausage links, butter, syrup (and blueberry syrup), orange juice, and coffee.  Oh man, I drank a lot of coffee and ate way too many pancakes.  And we did this two days in a row.  I don't usually have blood sugar issues, but a few hours after these pancakes, I thought I was going to die!

Wednesday, February 6, 2013

Another Mystery Photo

I found this picture on my phone.  It looks exciting, and I am trying hard to remember the occasion.


Clues:

It was probably not too long after we started moving stuff into our house, because the china cabinet isn't in the background.

I am remembering the food: lentil stew (North African spices), pickled onion salad, pita.  And olives. 

Oh, those were the olives that Lydia gave me for Christmas, so it must have been late December/early January, because olives never last too long in our house.

That might be yogurt in the foreground, and it is probably homemade yogurt, which means that Megan (my 2012 intern) had arrived, so it must be early January.

I'm guessing the strawberries are from an Aldi dumpster.

Mmm, Turkish tea.  This must be lunch, since us old folks don't drink caffeine in the evening very often.



Well, I am thinking the occasion was simply that we were both home and it was lunch time.  Not very exciting, but I do remember that the lentils were REALLY good with those onions....

Lunchables

Denise (intern 2012) loves Lunchables, and when she heard that we never had them growing up, she bought me one.

 


They tasted sort of like cold bread with sweet, chemically tomato sauce.  Mmm mmm mmmm :o)

Thanksgiving Dinner at Pam's

We had a Thanksgiving dinner with Zach's siblings, his mom, her husband, and some of their friends.  Pam had to work a ton the day before, so I went over to their house the morning of the feast to help out.  I took these photos primarily to make Zach hungry so he would hurry up and come over:

Five-Spice Pumpkin Cake with Cream Cheese Frosting

Pretty table

Cider and Sage Butter Turkey

Amazing bread recipe via Anna's Pinterest (recipe at http://www.simplysogood.com/2010/03/crusty-bread.html)
We also made Rosemary-Garlic Scalloped Potatoes, Sweet Potato Stuffing with Sausage, and a broccoli dish with bacon, vinegar, and toasted almonds.

BLT Sandwich and Hearty Winter Soup

When I told Zach I was doing this blog thing with all of the food pictures from my phone, he sent me this picture from his phone:
 
Our table looks much nicer with fancy wedding gifts on it: placemats, silverware caddy, pepper grinder
This is one of Zach's favorite meals that I have ever made.  Also, one of the more American meals I have ever made of my own free will.  Not that he doesn't like the normal foreign fare, he just really liked this sandwich.

I had the day off and had this waiting for him when he got back from work.  A BLT made from homemade bread, tomatoes from our garden, thick-sliced bacon, sriracha aioli, and some sort of lettuce (duh).  And Hearty Winter Soup made from butternut squash from our garden, potatoes, chicken (freezer--past manager's special), smoked sausage (current manager's special), and corn.  And iced tea, because you can't have such an American lunch without iced tea.

Wedding Cake

This was our wedding cake, made by my friend Cassandra.  This picture doesn't do it justice:
 
Henna designs


It was a ginger-orange cake, and there were also chocolate-espresso sheet cakes at our wedding.  They were gooooooooood.

Turkish Breakfast

Nothing is better than Turkish breakfast on a warm summer morning.  Remember, these are old pictures from my phone.
 

Menu:

Bread (Italian bread from Kroger is the closest to Turkish bread that I've found)
Feta Cheese
Olives
Sliced Tomatoes
Sliced Cucumbers
Yogurt
Sliced Avocados (not a normal part of Turkish breakfast)
Jam
Turkish Tea

Green Tomato Canning

We had way too many green tomatoes at the end of gardening season.  I wanted to make/can green tomato salsa and chutney, and had a hard time finding recipes for the kind of salsa that I wanted.  Though I usually don't use recipes for anything, when it comes to canning I am much more careful.  So I ended up combining a bunch of different recipes to make sure I had the acid levels, salt levels, and processing times right.  I think it turned out okay.  I gave little jars of these away for Christmas gifts.

(in my messy office)
 I started off with the same base for both: green tomatoes, onions, jalapenos, garlic, salt.  Cooked together, cooled then pureed.

For the salsa, I added to the base:
Cilantro
Lime juice
Citric Acid
Cumin

For the chutney, I added to the base:
Cilantro
Coriander
Tamarind paste
Cider Vinegar
Raisins

I wish I had written down amounts for next year.  I guess I will have to figure it all out again.  One thing for sure: I will never can regular salsa again.  This is so much easier, and I like it a lot more.

Food Photo "Mystery"

I found this food picture on my phone and couldn't remember what it was for:


I looked at it more closely.  Okay, what is in this picture...some sort of fresh salsa, maybe a mango salsa.....rice and beans....coffee....why is there a cup of coffee at the stove?

Aha, this must have been taken to make Nathanael come over.  My brother will come over to our house if there are rice and beans and/or coffee.  End of story.  He forgets that Zach will make him do work.  All he remembers is the food and the coffee.

Eggs Cooked in Avocado Rings

We saw Zakarian make eggs cooked in rings of avocado on Next Iron Chef last season and decided to try it:


Egg in avocado ring, egg in pepper ring, toast, apple butter, avocado slices, sauteed pepper slices, fruit salad, coffee
You slice the avocado, leaving the skin on.  I think I got two slices out of one large avocado (because, let's face it, avocados are too expensive for each of us to have one to ourselves).  You put them in a pan and crack eggs into the holes.  Then end.  Pretty simple.  Cover them while they cook so that the top of the egg is done and you don't have to try to flip them.

Since I had a ton of yellow peppers on hand (Meijer manager's special), I did the same thing with some peppers....thick slices, crack eggs, cover while cooking.

They look really great on the plate, but to be honest, this wasn't my favorite.  Raw avocado is infinitely better than cooked avocado, in my opinion.  The peppers were good, though.

Sauteed Baby Kale for Lunch


Oh man, this was so good:


We had a surprising variety of fresh vegetables around, including a container of baby kale that I had found on manager's special and hadn't used soon enough to make a salad out of it.  Just a tiny bit wilty.

So, for lunch the other day, I caramelized half an onion, added a julienned carrot, half a sliced red pepper, some grape tomatoes, and garlic; I sauteed those for about a minute.  Then I added the kale and cooked for less than a minute.  Meanwhile, I cooked eggs (started in cold water, boiled 4 minutes....whites hard, yolks runny) and toasted some bagel pieces for croutons (we were out of bread).

SOOOOOOO good.  The bitterness of the kale with the sweetness of the peppers and the richness of the yolks......

Tuesday, February 5, 2013

Perspectives V and Mesir Wat Recipe

Ethiopian food for the fifth Perspectives meal.

 
 
Injera with Mesir Wat (lentil stew) and Spinach-Sweet Potato Wat...I should probably not mix languages so often in recipe titles.  I am assuming mesir might mean lentil, though in my mind it should refer to corn (Uzbek?  Turkish?)
The camera on my phone is clearly not the greatest...

Injera is a spongey, sourdough flatbread made of flour from a grain called teff.  I have expiremented a little with making injera, with no real luck as of yet, so I meanwhile continue to buy it from an Ethiopian store nearby http://www.yelp.com/biz/addisu-bakery-and-carryout-columbus.

The Mesir Wat recipe is also (based on the one) in the RIC cookbook http://www.yelp.com/biz/addisu-bakery-and-carryout-columbus.



MESIR WAT
  • 3 onions, chopped
  • 1/4 c. oil
  • 2 cloves garlic, minced
  • 1 T. ginger, peeled and minced
  • 1 1/2 T. paprika
  • 1/2 tsp. cumin
  • 1/4 tsp. ground cloves
  • 1/2 tsp. turmeric
  • 1/4 tsp. black pepper
  • 1/2-2 tsp. cayenne pepper, spice to taste
  • 2 tomatoes, diced
  • 3 c. water or vegetable broth, plus extra as needed
  • 2 c. split red lentils, rinsed well
  • salt to taste
In a large stock pot, heat oil and cook the onions on medium/medium-high heat for several minutes, stirring frequently, until they begin to soften and turn translucent.  Add the spices and allow the ingredients to simmer together for a few minutes.  Add the tomatoes, lentils, and water and bring to a boil.  Turn the heat to low-medium and simmer about 30 minutes or until lentils are completely tender.  Add more water as needed so that it does not dry out.  Salt to taste.  Should be like a medium stiff porridge.

Som Tam Recipe

Som Tam (Som Thaam, Som Taam, etc...) is a green papaya salad that I made for a Perspectives meal, and it is gooooood.

The recipe is (based on the one) in the RIC cookbook
http://rosedalemennonitemissions.org/w2/getInvolved/cookbook.html,
and was submitted by my 2011 intern, Samantha Yoder.





SOM THAAM
 
  • 1/4 c. peanuts
  • 1 T. oil
  • 3 cloves garlic, crushed
  • 1 lg. pepper, chopped
  • 6 fresh green beans, cut into 1/2" lengths
  • 1 sm. tomato, chopped
  • 1 carrot, grated
  • 1 green papaya, peeled, seeds removed, and shredded or julienned
  • Juice from one lime
  • 2 T. fish sauce
  • 1 T. sugar
Fry peanuts in oil.  Cool.  Mix all remaining ingredients together and muddle, either with a mortar and pestle, or in a large bowl with a heavy spoon.  Mixture will be soft and juicy, but not completely smooth.
 
 
 
Since I made it for 40 people, I bought pre-julienned papaya from a Laotian store nearby.  The lady there saw all of the papaya I was buying (along with a 25-lbs. bag of sticky rice) and asked if I was making chicken wings to go with them.  Apparently in Laos, you eat chicken wings with sticky rice and som tam.  Sounds good to me!

Perspectives Meals

First of all, I'm not sure if I need an apostrophe in the title.  I think Perspectives is simply a proper noun in this case, and I can say Perspectives Meals like I can say RIC Meals.
 
If I had thought about this earlier, I would have taken pictures of all of the meals for the Perspectives participants....
 
A group of 65ish people attend a Perspectives class at the RIC every Tuesday evening (January-April) this year, and 35ish of them eat dinner beforehand.  I choose the menu based on what part of the world the speaker has been to.  Here are the weeks that have already passed:
 

 
 
Week I Menu (Turkey):
 
Guvech (baked stew of chicken, eggplant, zucchini, peppers, potatoes, and carrots, with lots of red pepper paste and garlic)
Rice Pilaf
Mediterranean-Style Salad (Romaine, tomatoes, cucumbers, and red onions, with olive oil, red wine vinegar, and oregano)

 
 
Week II Menu (Afghanistan):
Qabili Palau (rice pilaf with chicken, carrots, onions, and raisins--and cinnamon, coriander, cumin, all spice, and cloves)
Tomato-Cucumber-Radish Salad (with red onions, lime juice, and cilantro)

 
 

Week III Menu (Identifying with the Poor):
Black Beans
Steamed Rice
Bananas

 
 
Week IV Menu (Thailand):
 
Sticky Rice
Laab Turkey-Beef (ground meat with green onions, mint, cilantro, lime, and brown rice powder)
Som Tam (pounded green papaya, carrots, green beans, and peanuts with fish sauce, lime, and sugar)
 
 
 
 
 

Saturday Breakfast at Home


With our work schedules, Zach and I rarely get to sleep in and have breakfast together, much less on a Saturday. 
 
We had an abundance of sweet potatoes that needed to be used quickly (can anyone say "Aldi Dumpster?"), and avocados had been on sale at Meijer recently.
 
I took this picture partially because avocados always look cool, and partially to make Connie (a 2013 intern) jealous.
 

Menu:

Sweet Potato Hash with Caramalized Onions
Fried Eggs
Sliced Avocados
Whole Wheat Toast with Apple Butter
Coffee (probably)

New Year's Day Brunch with the Persons

The Persons stopped by our house for a night and a morning and rang in the new year with us.  The next morning, we made brunch.
 
 
 
Featuring the coconut syrup that my sister-in-law (Miranda) got me for Christmas
 
 
Menu:
 
French Toast
Pineapple-Ginger Syrup (we had nothing fresh in the house with which to make a fruit topping, so I used canned pineapple and FINALLY used my new microplane to grate in some ginger.  That thing was well worth the wait!!)
Coconut Syrup (really good mixed with the pineapple)
Bourbon-Vanilla Syrup (the basic homemade syrup with bourbon and vanilla in it instead of maple)
Ahmad Cardamom Black Tea
Some Random Fruit Tea


Here is a picture of Miranda in the Renaissance Festival costume that we sewed/made for her at the last minute in the fall sometime:

 
 
Note to self: dying synthetics with coffee is not the greatest idea you have ever had.
 

Turkish Meal with the Interns

Now I am going to start uploading pictures from my phone.
 
 
Remember these guys? 
 
2012 Interns, finally at our house during their last week of internship.  We had a Turkish feast, a "drinks tasting," made cranberry-popcorn chains, and decorated our Christmas tree.
 
 
 

Jess, Janae, DENISE!, Jared, Ryan, Megan, and Zach
 
 
Our menu was:
 
Turkish Tea (duh)
Manti (little meat dumpling things in garlic yogurt, drizzled with paprika-cumin oil)
Mercimekli Kofte (lentil....patties)
Kisir (Turkish version of tabouli, eaten out of little lettuce cups)
Haydari (my version this time: strained yogurt with dill, garlic, and toasted pine nuts)
Patlican Salatasi (my version this time: fried eggplant cubes, red peppers, garlic, parsley in a tomato-ey sauce)
 
 
Goodness, I can't even remember.  This was too long ago.  There may have been some sort of spinach-feta borek.  I would have made them (Megan loved them) unless something prevented it.  There also may have been hummus and/or baba ganoush.