Cowboy Caviar

Early September is one of my favorite times to visit a farmer’s market. Every stand has piles of beautiful produce spilling from one end of a table to another. Tomatoes, peppers, eggplant, corn- gardens are pushing out the last of their produce in a final attempt to ripen before the chill of fall arrives. (more…)

Summer Blowout Recipes

For the first time in many years I am not sad to see summer go. In fact I hope that this summer packs its bags and hits the road never to be seen again. The last three months have been an agonizing blur of stress, worry, and more stress. So, goodbye summer and hello fall! For those of you who have happily spent the summer soaking up sunshine, swimming, and cooking on the grill here are a few favorites from past years when I too sent summer off with a bang instead of the boot.

Coconut Mango Swirl Ice Cream – Creamy, cold, tropical perfection. I miss my ice cream maker!

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Herbed Butterflied Grilled Chicken – This just might be grilled chicken nirvana. Packed with flavor and incredibly moist, you will fight over the leftovers. (more…)

Korean Barbecue Portabello Mushrooms

In the frenzy of packing up everything we own Mr. B had the good judgement to insist on leaving his grill out on the deck. He figured that the deck was high above the potential water line and that a ceramic grill could survive just about anything. In what is now the strangest summer of my life I am happy for Mr. B’s foresight- because with a grill at least it still feels like summer. (more…)

Sweet Corn and Crab Chowder with Ham

One of the benefits of living in the Midwest is that from July through September you can find corn on almost every street corner. Pickup trucks pulled along the side of the road advertise “1 Dozen Ears – $5″. If you stop you will surely be offered a taste of the sweetest corn summer has to offer. Each year we look forward to eating our weight in gold kernels, enjoying corn simply steamed, grilled with lime juice, and even putting some up for the winter in the form of maque choux. (more…)

Garden Gazpacho

As I write this the sky is grey and half the cottonwood leaves have given up, leaving their limbed perch and floating downward to rest on the ground. Yet the garden has not quite relinquished summer to the cooler nights and northern winds. A last round of tomatoes and peppers are hanging on the vines, soaking up scattered sunshine and the final warm days of the year. While the sweaters are calling from the back of my closet I’m not quite ready to trade my flip flops for fuzzy slippers. In a last hurrah of summer I am taking the tomatoes and peppers and turning them into the quintessential summer soup- gazpacho. (more…)

How to Make Dill Pickles

What happens when a clueless gardener plants 8 cucumber plants in one season? Pickles. Lots and lots of pickles. It was a beginner’s mistake really. Last year I tried growing cucumbers but my soil was poor, the sunlight lacking, and I only watered the plants occasionally. It should come as no surprise that my efforts yielded nothing but a few pretty yellow flowers on sickly vines. This year we vowed to fix our shortcomings and grow something other than weeds. I raised tiny cucumber plants from seed and then planted all eight of them into rich sunny soil. As the plants grew I hoped they would produce enough cucumbers to make a few dozen jars of pickles. Ha! 50 pounds of cucumbers later and I was starting to see pickles in my sleep. (more…)

Mulberry Pie

Mulberry Pie

Summer is the perfect season for foraging. Meandering through the woods and along streams in search of edible wild fruits and berries is best done when the days are long and the breezes are gentle. Unfortunately Summer is also the perfect season for mosquitos, ticks, and poison ivy, but let’s not spoil the idyllic image of waltzing through the woods for all those who live in a concrete jungle. It’s lovely, really it is! (more…)

Black Raspberry Chocolate Chunk Ice Cream

Black Raspberry Chocolate Chunk Ice Cream

Summer in the Midwest is in full bloom. Gardens explode with green leaves and ripening produce, afternoon thunderstorms rumble across the plains, and warm evenings cooled by a bowl of homemade ice cream abound.

Black Raspberry Chocolate Chunk Ice Cream

Our summer weekends have been packed with activity- camping, fishing, visiting relatives, and tackling outdoor projects. However each summer I still fight to carve out time for a few lazy afternoons where we float in a river, nap on the deck, or take a long bike ride through the woods. (more…)

Bourbon Bacon Baked Beans

Bourbon Bacon Baked Beans

Bourbon, bacon, beans (with a little coffee and pineapple); how can you go wrong? You can’t. Especially when the recipe was developed by Michael Mina for Esquire magazine’s “Recipes for Men” series. After experiencing the indulgent bliss of Michael Mina’s lobster pot pie over Christmas I knew that this would be the perfect over-the-top pairing for our Apple Bourbon Smoked Pork Chops.

Bourbon Bacon Baked Beans

A one-pot recipe simple enough for men who rarely venture beyond the grill to prepare with confidence, these beans slowly simmer into a winning combination of flavors and textures. It is a venture best left for the weekend as the beans need to soak overnight and then require 4-6 hours of unattended cooking time, but the results are guaranteed to please a hungry holiday crowd. Tiny bits of bacon and pineapple punctuate the round smoothness of navy beans while notes of coffee and bourbon spike the sauce with an addictive earthy sweetness. If you are one to murmur sighs of pleasure while eating an excellent bowl of baked beans, consider yourself warned, you may want to eat a bowl of these alone!

Happy 4th of July! (And a brief public service announcement)

When I was in high school our family and friends would gather together on the biggest lawn available for a huge 4th of July potluck. Once darkness descended, bellies full, we would sit on the grass while the guys shot off countless large and small fireworks well into the night. The fireworks were shot towards the beach from a long cement driveway. One year, a large twisting firework fell over just as it ignited. Instead of shooting vertically into the air the firework zoomed horizontally into the crowd. Just missing the face of my younger brother, it hit me in a blaze of light, glancing off my left shoulder and then slowly fizzling out in the grass. Shocked, I looked down at smoke coming from my shirt. Thankfully the West Coast is still quite cold on the 4th of July, and I was wearing a thick hooded sweatshirt layered over a t-shirt. The firework burned a coaster-sized hole through my sweatshirt, melted the t-shirt underneath, and singed the hood as it skipped off into the lawn. Amazingly my skin and face were unharmed. From that day on I keep a very healthy distance from fireworks and hope that this year you will do the same!

Bourbon Bacon Baked Beans (Printable Recipe)

Serves 6-8

Note: Next time I would reduce the brown sugar to 1/2 cup as the beans were on the sweet side for my tastes. However I think most people would be very happy with the full amount of sweetness.

Ingredients:

16 oz. dry navy beans

3 cups water

1/2 lb. bacon, chopped

1 yellow onion, minced

2 Tablespoons tomato paste

2 Tablespoons molasses

1 teaspoon dry mustard

1/2 cup chili sauce

1/2 cup bourbon

1/2 cup strong coffee

1 cup fresh pineapple, chopped to a pulp

1 cup brown sugar

Salt to taste

Black pepper to taste

Pinch chile flakes

Directions:

Place the beans in a large bowl and add enough water to cover them by 1 inch. Soak the beans overnight. In the morning pour off the water and rinse the beans under cold running water.

Place a large soup pot (8 quarts) over medium heat. Add the bacon and cook, stirring occasionally until the bacon starts to brown. Next add the onions, and saute until they are translucent, about 5 minutes. Add in the tomato paste, stirring for one minute. Then add the beans and all remaining ingredients (except the salt, which will prevent the beans from softening if added too early). Reduce the heat to low, and cook the beans for 4-6 hours, or until the beans are soft. If the mixture begins to stick to the bottom of the pot, add a little water. Once the beans are soft, season to taste with salt. (The beans will taste dull unless you add enough salt, so do not be shy with the salt.) Cook the beans for another hour, adding water if necessary to maintain the desired consistency. If the beans are too wet at the end of the hour, raise the heat to medium, and simmer the beans until they reach your desired thickness. Taste the beans again and adjust the salt as needed. Serve warm.

Chilled White Bean Soup with Pesto

Chilled White Bean and Pesto Soup

If you have been reading along for some time then you are fully aware of my long standing love affair with soup. If you are new here, well, consider yourself warned. The soup never stops! Fall, Winter, Spring, and Summer- every season is good season for soup. Now admittedly, Summer brings on a few challenges for even the most stalwart soup lover. When the mercury rises and humidity wilts your hair into limp submission the last thing anyone wants is a hot bowl of soup. But wait! How about a bowl of cold soup?

Making the Chilled White Bean Soup with Pesto

For some reason you can’t take just any warm soup and serve it cold with much success. Cold minestrone? Cold pho? Cold crab bisque? Um yeah, no thanks. But if you break out a chilled gazpacho, a frigid melon puree, or an icy borscht, then you might get a few takers. This recipe for a chilled white bean soup with pesto, uses the best of a hearty winter soup (beans and potatoes) and swaps a sweater for a sun dress by adding a swirl of fresh pesto on top. The use of an easy homemade vegetable stock enhances the overall soup lending a subtle vegetable flavor to every bite. By keeping the potatoes in small chunks the soup maintains a substantial texture and will feel like a meal despite the fact that it only has 125 calories per half-cup serving. If the heat has you looking for relief and your soup pot is feeling neglected, then a chilled white bean soup topped with vibrant pesto may be just what you need.

Chilled White Bean Soup with Pesto (Printable Recipe)

Adapted from: Canyon Ranch Cooking, Bringing the Spa Home by Jeanne Jones

(If you are looking for a healthy and inspiring cookbook this one is my favorite!)

Serves 8 (With 1/2 cup servings)

Ingredients:

Soup

3/4 cup dried white beans, soaked overnight in water, rinsed, and drained

2 1/2 teaspoons canola oil

3 Tablespoons chopped onion

2 garlic cloves, chopped

1 small leek, white part only, chopped

7 cups vegetable stock (homemade recipe here)

2 medium potatoes, peeled and diced (about two cups)

1/2 teaspoon chopped fresh thyme

1 teaspoon sodium-reduced soy sauce

pinch freshly ground black pepper

Pesto

2 cups packed fresh basil leaves (plus a few more for garnish)

2 garlic cloves

2 1/2 teaspoons extra-virgin olive oil

1 teaspoon chopped shallot

1 1/2 Tablespoons water

Directions:

Make the Soup

Place a large soup pot over medium heat. Add the oil, onion, garlic, and leek. Cook stirring frequently until the onion is soft and translucent, about 3 minutes. Do not burn or brown the onions. Add the beans and the vegetable stock to the pot and bring the liquid to a simmer. Cook, maintaining a gentle simmer, until the beans are tender, about 1 1/2 hours. Once the beans are tender, add the potatoes, thyme, soy sauce, and pepper to the pot. Continue to cook the soup for 30 minutes, or until the potatoes are soft.

When the potatoes are cooked through, transfer 3/4 cup of the soup to a blender and puree until smooth. Add the puree back into the soup pot and stir to combine. Remove the pot from the heat, and let the soup come to room temperature before placing it in the fridge to chill, covered.

Make the Pesto

Place all of the pesto ingredients into a food processor and blend until the pesto is smooth. Transfer the pesto to a small bowl, cover with plastic wrap, and keep in the fridge until ready to use

Assemble the Soup

Once the soup is cold, ladle 1/2 cup of soup in to a bowl and top with 2 teaspoons of pesto. Garnish with a basil leaf.

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