2019

Thnx for the Little Things

When all of the big things in life seem a bit overwhelming, focusing on the little wonders of life is perfect.

 

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Thanks for funny, beautiful little Acorn Woodpeckers.¹

 

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Thanks for the colorful little fall blooms of asters.²

 

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And thanks for the last few little heads of garlic left from the past winter’s home-grown crop.³

¹Acorn Woodpeckers: Today’s Andy’s Corner is an absolute must-see/must-read; Andy’s humorous-nature-filmmaking skills have been reinvigorated!  This article and the photos about the acorn woodpeckers – from KQED, our local NPR station – is fabulous.  These little feathered charmers are coming in groups every day to our birdbath; it’s impossible not to laugh at their vocalizations and antics.  Plus, how can you not love a group of birds where the fathers help incubate the eggs – and males and females, young and old, all line up as a family to help feed the babies.

Here’s their range, should you be looking for them:

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²Asters: Who would have thought that you could plant a New England aster (novae-angliae) in Glen Ellen, CA, and have it thrive – especially in a drought-tolerant garden!  I love them.  Just when the flower beds are all “meh” at the end of the summer, the asters start to open.  Now – in late September – just as the asters ‘Winston Churchills’ and ‘Mönch’ (which are aster frikartii) are finishing up, the ‘Purple Dome’ asters are beginning to bloom in our partly-shaded garden.  Just be sure to plant lots – so you get the full color impact throughout your fall garden.

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Aster ‘Purple Dome’ and echinacea “Supreme Canteloupe’ blooming in our September garden

³Garlic: We’ve planted a garden almost every year of our 52 years together.  Yet we’d never planted garlic until last year, after Sandy and Stacey, our “egg lady” friends and neighbors, recommended it.  We planted a Creole hardneck variety (you know if it’s Creole, it’s got to be good!) in October, during the first week of a waning moon, as Sandy suggested.  And we worried all winter that they weren’t doing well.  The leaves seemed weak and limp and pale.  When April came and we wanted to begin to get our summer crops in, it was difficult to not just pull them all out and chalk it up to a bad experience.  But good sense prevailed and we left them until almost June.  Then – when about half of the leaves had started to turn brown, we pulled them, hung them to dry, and have had THE most special garlic to use in our cooking all summer long.

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Garlic leaves showing just enough brown to consider pulling them out to begin the drying process

Even if you don’t have home-grown garlic, buy a few heads at your market (organic, if you can find them) and try this garlic-loaded, delicious riff on a James Beard recipe.

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20 Clove Garlic Chicken

 

20 Clove Garlic Chicken

Use this as a base recipe and vary it according to what you’ve got on hand and how much time you’ve got.  You might brown some chopped onion and celery before adding the chicken.  You can add a teaspoon or so of dried tarragon or dried thyme – or a tablespoon of minced fresh herbs.

  • 1/3 c vegetable oil
  • 1 T butter
  • 6 small chicken thighs (around 1 1/2 pounds)
  • 1 1/4 tsp salt
  • 1/2 tsp pepper
  • 20 cloves of garlic (I rinse them – just because)
  • 1/2 -1 c white wine – or dry vermouth or chicken stock (you may need to add a bit more; check after about 1/2 hour in the oven; you want just enough moisture left to add a little garlicky juice to your rice)
  • Rice for serving

Preheat the oven to 350 degrees.

Heat the oil  and butter in a large Dutch oven (I used my Staub 7 qt so I could brown all 6 thighs at once – but you can you a smaller one and brown in two batches) over medium high heat.  Add the chicken thighs, skin side down, sprinkle with the salt and pepper and brown for about 4 minutes – or until the skin is golden brown.  Turn off the heat; turn the thighs over; tuck the garlic in among the thighs, then pour the white wine over it all.

Cover the Dutch oven and bake for 1 hour.

Serve the chicken with the juices and the garlic over rice.  You can squeeze the garlic out of its skin and eat it with the rice and chicken – or just ignore it, since it already done its job flavoring the chicken.

Recipe brought to you by BigLittleMeals.com and Andy and Ann.

 

 

Resurrecting the Kitchen Table

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Our vintage oak kitchen table and 4 matching chairs – all in great shape – are for sale on CraigsList.  The set has been up on that site for weeks.  It’s not expensive – yet no one seems to want it.

Our table is just the right size for a family of four.  If you want an intimate little dinner party, you can add the two leaves and comfortably seat eight.

The fact that no one seems to want the set makes me a little sad – or maybe nostalgic.  Nostalgic for by-gone times when families would need that table to all sit down for dinner and maybe even for breakfast.  And the family would talk and the family would listen.  And they would enjoy home-cooked food.  And I get nostalgic remembering casual little dinner parties while acknowledging how infrequent they are now.

Andy too gets nostalgic when he thinks back to his childhood days around his family’s kitchen table, but his nostalgia isn’t always about the food.

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Joy Harjo, Poet Laureate of the U.S.

The current Poet Laureate of the United States, Joy Harjo, the first Native American to hold that position, wrote a poem about kitchen tables back in 1994.  I wonder if she would write the same thoughts today.

Joy Harjo Poem Box

I hope Harjo’s lovely poem inspires you to sit longer at the table.

P.S:  At the same time as I was writing this blog, the table finally sold.  The new owners have 5-year-old twins.  We so hope the table will be a spot where they learn “what it means to be human,” that it will be “a house in the rain,” and that they enjoy “the gifts of earth” at it.

And here’s a simple family-pleasing home-cooked meal for 4-8 at that special spot.  It will give the cooks ample time and energy to enjoy their food –  and to visit.

Baked Penne and Maybe Sausage Pasta

Add some spinach to it, as suggested in the recipe notes.  Substitute mushrooms and zucchini for the sausage if you want to go meatless.  Both elders and young’uns will love it.

Greek (or Maybe Italian) Chopped Salad

You can make this super-quick by omitting a couple of ingredients.  No red bell pepper? Too lazy to dice celery?  Don’t like parsley?  Omit them all – and it will still be a great salad.

Super Simple Shortbread

Instead of serving the shortbread with fresh fruit – if there’s no great fruit to be had, try this Orange Curd recipe from my Baton Rouge friend Katie.  It’s SOoooooo good.

 

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Orange Curd – aka Orange Butter Filling – used as a filling and frosting for a cake

Orange Curd

This comes from an old Softasilk recipe – and was called Orange Butter Filling – after all, “curd” isn’t a real appealing word.  So don’t hesitate to fill and frost a layer cake with it, as well as use it as a sauce for shortbread and/or with strawberries.

  • 1 c sugar
  • 4 1/2 T cornstarch
  • 1/2 tsp salt
  • 1 1/2 c freshly-squeezed orange juice
  • 1/2 c water
  • 4 beaten egg yolks
  • 1/2 c butter
  • 1 T grated orange rind

Mix the sugar, cornstarch and salt in a saucepan.  Stir in the orange juice and water.  Bring to a boil over low heat, stirring constantly.  Remove from heat.   Very (very) gradually stir half of the hot mixture into the beaten egg yolks.  Then add the remaining hot mixture.   Boil everything 1 minute, stirring constantly.  Remove from the heat and whisk in the butter and orange rind.  Cool.

Stored in the refrigerator, the curd will keep for at least a week.

Recipe brought to you by BigLittleMeals.com and Andy and Ann.

 

Chewy

When I see the name Mary Roach, I have trouble not confusing her with Terre (pronounced Terry) Roche of the Roche Sisters.  In the ’80’s in Baton Rouge we’d sing along to “We are Maggie and Terre and Suzzy” as that song from their album “The Roches” blasted from our Vietnam-era g-normous speakers.  Our kids are still mortified about the lip-sync we encouraged them to perform to “The Death of Suzzy Roach” at a church function. Unitarians are such open-minded people! 🙂

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But today I’m more interested in Mary Roach.

Amongst Roach’s always-fascinating book titles (Stiff, Bonk, Spook) is Gulp, written in 2013 about human’s gastrointestinal tracts – or – as Roach refers to it – the alimentary canal.  An excerpt from the book published in the NYTimes talks – colorfully – about the specifics of chewing and swallowing.

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Elsewhere in her book Roach describes the (quirky? quacky?) beliefs of Horace Fletcher, aka The Great Masticator.  Fletcher, who died in 1919, preached that chewing…and chewing…and chewing was necessary for good health.  He believed that his mastication system (chewing at least 100 times before swallowing) could cure alcoholism, anemia, appendicitis, colitis, and insanity.  He also had some interesting thoughts on excrement, but we won’t go there. Look it up yourself 🙂

“Nature will castigate those who don’t masticate” is a Fletcher quote.

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Mmmmm.  How to become young at 60 sounds like a must-read to me…though it’s post-facto.

Even if Fletcher’s chewing notions seem a bit much, there is clear evidence that chewing has many positives.

In this WebMD article – Chewing your Way to Healthier Eating – the author writes:

Believe it or not, the simple act of chewing can reduce your calorie intake. It works by increasing the satisfaction you get from meals, thus helping to tide you over between meals.

Having to chew a lot may also indicate you’re not eating an ultra-processed food, and that’s clearly something to avoid.  According to an NPR report – People ate much faster — both in terms of grams per minute and calories per minute — on the ultra-processed diet. Hall says it might be that, because the ultra-processed foods tended to be softer and easier to chew, people devoured them more quickly, so they didn’t give their gastrointestinal tracts enough time to signal to their brains that they were full and ended up overeating.

Which all brings me to yesterday’s lunch at Friedman’s Home Improvement Store in Sonoma.  I had a hot dog.  It’s the first hot dog I’ve had in probably 3 years.  It was so incredibly soft.  Soft squishy white bun; soft, borderline-mushy hot dog;  juicy, soft, plastic-packaged cooked relish.

I didn’t exactly savor it – but I ate it quickly – and Andy and I were off to do our plant-shopping in Friedman’s nursery.

(An aside:  in Gulp, Mary Roach says hot dogs make the top 3 in the list of “killer foods” – those most often associated with choking to death.  I definitely would have chewed longer and harder had I known that yesterday.)

(Another aside: in Andy’s Corner Andy explains why he can’t see a hotdog without thinking of Ignatius Riley from A Confederacy of Dunces.)

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Mary Roach warns us

In the same way that a dark, silent room will eventually drive you to hallucinate, the mind rebels against bland, single-texture foods, edibles that do not engage the oral device.

But – thanks to my neighbor and Bestie, Deb, I’ve got a wonderfully crunchy, chewy granola recipe to share.  It’s not too sweet – as so many store-bought granolas are.   And it will most definitely engage your oral device.

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Deb’s Granola (ready to serve with plain Greek yogurt and fresh peaches.  Yum!)

Deb's Granola

I adapted this ever-so-slightly from my neighbor Deb.

  • 5 c rolled oats (not instant)
  • 4 c chopped nuts and seeds (suggested: sunflower seeds, pecans, walnuts, pumpkin seeds, slivered almonds, flax seeds, cashews)
  • 1/2 tsp kosher salt
  • 3/4 c honey, warmed
  • 1/4 c vegetable oil
  • 1 c raisins (optional)
  • 1/2 c unsweetened flaked coconut

Mix the oats, nuts and seeds, and salt in a large bowl. Add the honey and oil and mix well.

Spread the mixture on ungreased cookie sheets and bake at 325 degrees for 30-40 minutes, stirring occasionally – until the entire batch is golden brown.

Allow the mixture to cool, stirring from time to time.  When it is almost cool, add the raisins and unsweetened coconut and mix well.

The granola keeps well stored in an airtight container in a cool place and may also be frozen.

Recipe brought to you by Deb and BigLittleMeals.com and Andy and Ann.

 

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