
Saturday, October 29, 2005
House Warming

Monday, October 10, 2005
Thanksgiving Turkey and Stuffing

Wednesday, October 05, 2005
Crap, Crap, Crap!
I could go on and on about how I loath the sign 'washrooms are for paying customers only'. I mean really what is the etiquette here? Do you order the coffee and then ask for the key? Because you would have to leave it at the counter to use the facilities. Do you ask for the key, use washroom and come back and order? And really, if you have to buy another drink it sort of defeats the purpose of finding a place with a washroom clean enough to use.
I digress.......
As a rule I hate every member of society that fines you for petty infractions. Like traffic police with 5 minutes over on the meter. I think tow truck drivers are vultures.
I guess I am just having a bad day, I think it's Pizza night.
Sunday, October 02, 2005
Mastering the Art of Julia Child
In the hunt for food this past week, I came home with a rabbit.
Yup, I bagged that varmint in the meat cooler at the grocery store.
Don't jump all over me about Thumper. It was just a cartoon and when was the last time you heard about "Mad Bunny Disease" or "Hare Flu"?
I then deftly carved it up into pieces with my handy poultry shears (which ironically I sometimes search for uses for). Then I searched for a recipe..... And settled on 'Lapin au Saupiquet' or 'Rabbit Marinated in Vinegar and Herbs, and Stewed in Red Wine' from volume Two of Mastering the Art of French Cooking by Julia Child and Simone Beck.
I inherited three Julia Child cookbooks from 'the husband's' family. My sister in law chucked them into a pile for me, Mastering the Art of French Cooking Volume One and Two & Julia Child and Company. For good measure she also threw in 'La Rousse Gastronomique' and two massive enameled cast iron lidded casseroles for which cooking anything from Julia Child is a must. She might have been trying to tell me something, herself a very good cook.
I started to marinate the rabbit on Friday night thinking, "How hard can this be as its just a stew?"
Saturday in the 'Globe and Mail', as if a sign from God, was an article on Julie Powell. Julie Powell is the woman who decided to cook every recipe in the Mastering the Art of French Cooking in one year and document it on her blog, http://blogs.salon.com/0001399/2002/08/25.html. Julie now has a book deal!
The rest of Saturday morning I read excerpts from Julie's Blog and also checked out The American History Museum exhibit on Julia Child's kitchen on the web . It is a really great exhibit with all kinds of info. I read the history of Paul and Julia Child (I think they were spies?) . I admired her vintage Garland Range (It can hold two Turkeys). I was surprised to learn that Paul Child designed and picked the colours for the kitchen and reported these finding to 'the husband'.
I felt as one with the J's and set about to work at around 5:30,
1. Large Bowl for the Marinade
2. Pot for Blanching the Bacon for Lardoons ( which I had forgotten and had to run back to the store)
3. Large frying pan for, onions and bacon, browning rabbit and then for reducing the marinade and wine ( Funny enough the wine I used was 'French Rabbit', I kid you not!)
4. Casserole for the Rabbit
5. Pot two for the Prunes.
6. Large measuring cup for stock
7. Tongs, slotted spoon and assorted spatulas.
8. Pot three for Mashed Potatoes
9. Potato ricer
10. Small frypan for the croutons
By the time I had marinated, blanched, browned, tossed, boiled, simmered, stewed, riced and served the kitchen was a disaster and coming up on 9:00.
The rabbit was beautiful served with croutons on mashed potatoes . Julia Child suggests sauted zucchini but 'the husband', who cleans up, appreciated one less pan to a green vegetable so it was green salad on the side.
Later cuddled up as we drifted off to sleep, 'the husband' who designed and chose the colours for our kitchen asked, "Did Paul Child clean up after Julia's creations?' I said that he had and asked why. He countered, "He designed it so he would know where everything went back to on the pegboard walls after the big cleanup, smart guy". I think so too.
Cooking Julia is hard work, the cleanup is harder but worth the benefits. My hat is off to Julie Powell.
Saturday, October 01, 2005
Italian (with a capital I) Plums
Sunday, September 25, 2005
Back in the land of Reality, and bad food


Saturday, August 20, 2005
Adventures in Cooking
I have no gift for languages. But I humour myself that I can read any menu~ and after all cooking is universal.
So surfing the net last week when I went into Molisana's website and translated a recipe from it, I howled with laughter as it came back . Thanks to the free translation at http://www.babblefish.com/ Clear as MUD! ( is was free after all) The orginal recipe is :
http://www.lamolisana.it/cgi-bin/webdriver?MIval=index&idPasta=55&idFamiglia=3&idRicetta=58&lingua=ITAL
Gnocchetti gratinati al caciocavallo
- 350 g of gnocchetti ( I thought Gnocci, easy enough, small potato dumplings and bought them pre-made)
- 2 segments of garlic ( 2 cloves of garlic)
- 50 g of them them ( uh, who is them, di mandorle? So I put in 4 chopped fresh Italian tomatoes skinned and deseeded)
- basil ( 1/4 - 1/2 cup chopped fine, my best guess and I have tones in the backyard)
- 60 g of oil (about 1/4 cup)
- 180 g of caciocavallo ( 3 oz grated, it said grainati, so it had to be a cheese, it is the sort of snowman shaped little top blob with a big bottom blob cheese )
- black pepper ( got it)
- they knows ( yah right, original its sale, its salt.)
Fluttered the garlic, them them, a tuft abounding of basil, the oil, knows them and abounding black pepper. Fairies to cook the gnocchetti in boiling water and cut to thin scaglie the caciocavallo. Conduit the pasta with the sauce already gotten ready, you it it in a heat resistant one to layers with the scaglie of cheese and passed all in oven to 200' for 5 minutes. You serve immediately.
Turns out that them them or 50 g di mandorle are actually almonds and Gnocchetto is actually a pasta shaped like 'flexible conduit'. I didn't find out until today. I have no idea who the Italian fairies are who cook the pasta are but the angels hummed a little with my version.
Preheat oven at 400'. Cook Gnocci in boiling salted water until they float, drain and place in a oven proof casserole. Heat oil, sauted chopped garlic until golden, add tomatoes and basil until softened. Remove from heat and salt and pepper to taste pour over the cooked Gnocci. Add grated cheese and stir and pop in oven for about 5 minutes.
Serve as a side, or as substantial enough as a main course with salad and bread.
Saturday, August 13, 2005
Sharing toys
Wednesday, August 10, 2005
Pasta Puttanesca
Thursday, August 04, 2005
The Potluck Lunch

Monday, August 01, 2005
Easy Last Night of Long Weekend Dinner Part 2
Hey there is limited room here!!!
So tonight, something quick and easy, and in honour of AKKINS declaring bankruptcy, like it was ever going to last. Pass the bread please.
Shrimp with Fettucine
1 frozen pack of tiger shrimp ( hey its Toronto, no fresh shrimp within a million miles)
1 teaspoon of Old Bay ( and or 1/2 teaspoon of red chili flakes)
6 oz of fettucine ( that cooks in 3 minutes)
3 tablespoons of olive oil
1 tablespoon of chopped garlic or garlic puree
1/3 cup brandy ( or sherry or for that matter white wine)
Salt and pepper
2 tablepoons chopped Italian parley
Parmesean Cheese
Have everthing ready as this is a quick recipe.
Thaw and peel shrimp.
Bring a pot of water big enough for the fettucine to boil, add salt and olive oil if desired. Heat olive oil in a separate pan big enough to hold the pasta.
Add pasta to the boiling water, add garlic to the olive oil.
Dust the shrimp with Old Bay or chili and add to the olive oil. Add brandy and bring to a boil.
Pasta at this point should be 'al dente' drain and add to the shrimp. Cover and let meld for one minute.
Sprinkle with parley, serve with cheese, crusty bread, green salad and a dry rose.
Easy Last Night of Long Weekend Dinner Part 1
I was the domestic diva this weekend. I think I was inspired by the Vanity Fair article on Martha Stewart and no slouch either, Tamara Mellon.
I brushed off the mental task list of what needed to be accomplished, stroked out a few (sometimes it seems life is too short to whiten the tile grout in the bathroom) , and set down to making curtains.
We, ( the 'husband' and I) had debated which colour to paint the kitchen. We always have as a matter of fact. When we first painted, years ago, we painstakingly chose which white and which blue to paint. Ecstatic we got to work with our final selection. What we found was we were painting it the exact same colours as the previous owner. Plan B, Off white, everywhere.
In May we went to a flea market, as the 'husband' walked around muttering under his breath, JUNK , I was in heaven. I love the hunt and the kill of bagging 'the unusual' or 'the bargain'. Not a whole lot of success but, but I did manage to pick up a piece of 'Bark Cloth'. It had the most perfect shade of blue that I wanted for the kitchen and bonus it would serve as the window covering. It was funky, eclectic, fun and most importantly cheap!
The extra doors for the kitchen showed up this last week and I decided that I should finally get the damn curtains made.
Not only did I make the kitchen curtains, I washed, pressed and mended the other window coverings in the house. I finally tore down the horrible master bedroom coverings which started out as a another extremely good bargain........But I was just learning to sew then. They had ended up costing me a fortune and I still hated them .
I did also cook this weekend,
I had the blotched chicken recipe that did not work on Saturday. It included 'TWO' cups of cream so I was most bitter.
I did slow roasted ribs on the barbecue with a rub, smoked with apple chips. Very good but, frankly, a lot more work then popping them in the oven with a good sauce.
Wednesday, July 27, 2005
A Tale of Two chickens, Part two
In 2002, I was in France for two weeks.
Never having traveled to France before I was totally prepared with a 16 page excel spreadsheet of places, museums, shops and sites in Paris alone. No slouch, I colour coded and sorted them by areas of Paris. I thought I could 'do' Paris, it just required a bit of planning and research. My sister would be proud.
We did have a hotel in Paris for one week, and a final hotel in the Chantilly area for the night before our departure home. The 'husband' wanted to freewheel through the countryside armed only with extremely bad French and a Michelin map.
This next trip we have reservations for everything, only because, its really better that way for me. I spent all day worried about finding a next hotel, or if we found a good one I just wanted to stay permanently.
As for Paris, I need to brush off those pages as sans le 'husband' my next birthday with 'les girlfriends' and we will be using all those shops he made me walk right by.
So, getting to the point of the other chicken.
Senlis, where we stayed the night before leaving France, is where the book 'Clementine in the Kitchen' starts. I will go back there someday.
As Samuel Chamberlain describes the town before WWII and imagines how it is changing during the war, I wished I paid better attention while I was there. I do remember the charming Catherdral with its lovely war monuments. Particularly, one for a very young priest killed during the war.
The second chicken is from this book and is based on Poulet Cintra. But having no Cintra Port and etc....
I might as well call this Boozey Chicken, but you can feel the artery's hardening as you eat it. But my god it was good and frankly 'French tasting'.
4 chicken Thighs
1/8 cup of butter
1/8 cup of olive oil
1 whole shallot chopped
1 teaspoon of chopped garlic
1/4 cup of sherry
1/4 cup of white wine
1/8 cup of framboise wine ( which I had, waiting for a purpose)
1/8 cup of brandy
1/2 cup of heavy cream
2 egg yolks
Melt butter and oil together, add chopped shallot and garlic and brown chicken until golden brown.
Add all the booze, bring to a boil. Then very carefully with the lid to the pot always on hand and with no overhanging cupboards, seriously, light with a match or I use a barbecue lighter. Baby let it burn, ( and trust me it will burn a bit longer then you would imagine)
Allow to simmer and reduce by half turning the chicken twice and regular intervals. It should take about 35 minutes
Remove chicken to a plate.
Mix the cream and eggs and pour into the sauce, whisking constantly until thickened and careful not to bring it to a boil. Pour over the chicken.
I served with Green beans and a green salad. Oh and bread for the sauce!
Tuesday, July 26, 2005
A Tale of Two Chickens, part one
I have finished reading, 'French Leave' by John Burton Race and 'Clementine in the Kitchen' by Samuel Chamberlain.
It is amazing to me that two books written 55 years apart can have so many things in common.
John Burton Race, a two star Michelin Chef based in England, embarked on a year long odyssey of Franco Culinary flavors in 'French Leave'. I had watched the TV program but found the family parts to be utterly annoying.
Reading the 125 page book 'French Leave' I can hear his annoying voice, luckily, the recipes do not come with any sound. The recipes are pages 126 to 211.
I imagine myself, in France this fall, gorging myself on the truffles, breads, sauces and vinaigrette that he has so courteously detailed with exacting recipes.
Clementine in the kitchen, is utterly charming. Clementine is the French cook of an expatriate American family living north of Paris in the 1930's. The story is told by the father of the Beck family. Samuel Chamberlain describes the quaint town of Senlis before the war and how the relationship with 'Clementine' is formed.
Leaving France, the story continues with the family returning to the USA and resettling in Marblehead Mass.
Both books have recipes, what a bonus.
Here are first of the two that I have fiddled with.
My Poulet Basque. ( Serves two)
2 chicken legs with thighs chopped into 4( or 4 thighs, or four legs for that matter)
Olive Oil ( to coat the pan nicely and brown the chicken )
2 Shallots Peeled and Chopped
1 1/2 teaspoons of garlic puree ( really just a good shot)
1/2 cup jarred roasted red pepper chopped
1 dried chili deseeded
fresh thyme
bay leaf
2/3 cup of white wine
2/3 cup of canned chopped plum tomatoes
2 tablespoons white wine vinegar
1 1/4 cup of chicken broth
1/2 cup sliced black olives
Preheat oven to 425
Brown chicken in olive oil a deep oven proof casserole or deep fry pan, set aside.
Put the shallots, garlic, peppers, thyme, bay leaf and wine into the same pan, bring to a boil and reduce by about half.
Add tomatoes, chicken stock and olives and bring back to a boil. Pour in the vinegar and boil off. Put the chicken back in, cover and pop in the oven for about 35 minutes. I take the lid off for the last ten minutes so the chicken browned.
Fish out the bay leaf and the dried chili, if you can find them.
I served with a 'Rice and Beans' mix from Sobeys, a dash of Sour Cream and a green salad.
It might have been Basque (I have been to Spain and I kind of liked the music) but it reminded me of the Southwest. As a matter of fact I used the dried chili from the Riesta that I bought in Santa Fe.
I love souvenirs that you can cook with.
Leftovers, if so fortunate, can be rolled into a tortilla with cheese and lettuce for a snack or lunch the next day.
Sunday, July 24, 2005
Lovely Lamb Chops
This has been a crazy busy week.
The lovely Beverly was here visiting from the west and we had dinner together with Auntie Mary. In caravan we went westward towards Mississauga, to be greeted with warm beer and an equally warm house. Energy conservation is alive and well in the west , of well almost anywhere.
Lovely dinner of which included something I think I have never had in my life, sauerkraut.
Did I run home to make it, sadly no, it has been a busy week.
Lambchops, aside from that obnoxious Sherri person had always been a mystery to me as a sweet luscious meat. Because as I was growing up they were always incinerated burnt offerings with a putrid green jelly.
Grilled slowly on the barbecue until firm and slightly pink, heaven. Tonight served with marinated roasted red peppers and Mosihes vinaigrette coleslaw. YUMMY
Lambchops my Way
Olive oil,
Juice of one half Lemon
Rosemary
Garlic Puree (I have run out of the jarred and am now on to the tube)
Salt and Pepper
Marinate for 30 Minutes at room temp and grill on barbecue
_
Sunday, July 17, 2005
Martha Stewart
Friday, July 15, 2005
Food combos
Yesterday I hosted a learning session for about 25 people and it went fairly well. But the heat is almost unbearable. On the way back to the office I stopped and got a Vanilla Frappacino from Starbucks. Which I slurped all the way along the DVP southbound back into the city. I really like the bottled Starbucks Latte's because of the afternoon perk they give. But as I slurped the frozen concoction which I picked up at the Starbucks store, a strange childhood experience overtook me, ICECREAM HEADACHE!!
But as it is still freaking hot. So last nights dinner was a strange combination. Burgers and sushi cucumber rolls! Homemade burgers, yummy, store bought sushi. The 'husband' ate no sushi preferring to stick with Frito's. Leading me to pose the question, could there be a more perfect combination in food then, Frito's and Cold Beer?
Homemade Burgers
Package of lean ground beef
1 Egg
1 good handful of bread crumbs
dash of Lea and Perrins
teaspoon of garlic
teaspoon of barbecue rub ( it really keeps them juicy)
Mix together form into patties and fire up the grill!
Wednesday, July 13, 2005
What to cook when its hot.

Tuesday, July 12, 2005
Things I want!! In no particular order
1. An Aga Stove,
2. A bigger kitchen for the Aga Stove
3. A bigger house for the bigger kitchen
4. A Mandolin ( not the musical type, for finely slicing 'cerlerac' and other obnoxiously hard vegetable's)
5. To take a course at the Cordon Bleu cooking school
5. To take a course at the CIA ( Culinary institute of America)
6. To locate a copy of ' The Food Lovers guide to France' by Patricia Wells ( out of print )
7. A Hermes Kelly Bag, ( nothing to do with cooking but I want one anyway........Do you think Oprah would send me one of her old ones?)
8. Sweet, Salty, Spicy, Sour ( a cookbook)
9. Someone to catalogue all my scraps of recipes and put them into some sort of order.
10. A day of unlimited shopping at the Dean and Deluca
Sunday, July 10, 2005
Saturday, July 09, 2005
Friday, July 08, 2005
Welcome to my Blog
Welcome to Crazy in the Kitchen, lots of fun here. I would like to introduce myself. I am a 39 year old married woman in Toronto. No kiddies or Pets, too much work. I am trying to teach myself French as I am going to the Dordogne region in September.
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