Truffles, Figs and Chicks

Do anything, but let it produce joy – H.Miller

Another Year Younger Tuesday, September 8, 2009

DSCF6512

If i keep saying that, it will be true right? I always love birthdays, no matter where you are in life, having a birthday always makes me feel special. Yesterday was no exception. I spent the morning with Mieke making friendship bracelets, watching sponge bob and drinking cocoa. in the afternoon, i went to see Julie and Julia with my girlfriends and we LOVED IT! it was so much fun to watch it with friends who love to eat and cook as much as i do and Julia Child is really incredible. I hope someone writes a movie just for her some day. she certainly deserves it.

After the movie, we were all starving (big shock) and went to eat at Andinas, my second favorite restaurant in Portland. Andinas is a delicious peruvian restaurant my friend Heather introduced me to after her visit to Peru. Most items are made with Quinoa in some magical fashion, or yuca or fresh seafood, like crab and shrimp stuffed avocados… We stuffed ourselves with such goodness. We ordered several dishes tapas style and picked at what we wanted to eat. i love to eat this way!

I do have a picture of me with the girls coming but in the meantime, here is a sampling of our meal :) of course

we have quinoa stuffed peppers with cheese and jamon.

pepper

Next we have succulent beef, raisin and spice stuffed empanadas with lime juice. the pastry was sooo light and flaky

empinada

this is my favorite…cheese stuff yuca with cheese crack sauce. i LOVE these things!

yuca

we had several other dishes but i was too excited to take pictures i guess.

I did get a picture of dessert. How absolutely beautiful is this?

3 Creme Brulees; orange, cinnamon and caramel.

DSCF6510dessert 

this is a collection of all the desserts we ordered. So lovely. i will have to remember the chocolate and fruit puree on the plate idea. that was fantastic!

the desserts are a goat cheese custard with lemon cake and a mango canoli with mango lemongrass sorbet. YUMM!!

desserts

 

Bon Appetit!

 

Eating My Way Across Greece…Part 1 Thursday, September 3, 2009

This blog post is long overdue but it has taken me this long to go through most of my 788 pictures and figure out how to present my trip here. Of course i begin with my favorite topic: FOOD! My first several days were spent on the magical island of Crete. I am pretty sure i could live there on my own little farm with my goat and chickens and olive trees. After milking the goats and preparing the day’s cheese, i could venture into town for my morning shot of Raki with a pastry and Greek lesson with the locals. Then work in the garden before the afternoon heat sent me down to the sea for a dip and a late lunch of stuffed vine leaves and fresh tomatoes. Sigh…a girl can have dreams right?

pim

After Crete we spent 5 days in Santorini which were consumed with breath-taking views, hiking into volcanoes and wine tasting. There was also a great deal of shopping to do. Our trip ended in Athens; a gorgeous city merging the ancient with the modern and nestled around the Acropolis.  

Greece is a cornucopia of food bliss and ironically the originator of the cornucopia itself!  From my first day in Crete i was in awe of the fresh local produce available for consumption around every corner. Most people have heard about the Mediterranean diet and its amazing health benefits.  I had the pleasure of experiencing it first hand.

capers

Everything you hear is true. The olives, capers, tomatoes, peppers, oil, melons and cheese are all bursting with flavor and color. Many of our meals were cooked at home after spending the morning in a local town picking up produce from local farmers in the market squares. Buying our food from the people who produced it, gave me the greatest sense of pleasure and glee.

In my humblest opinion, Crete was the greatest example of local food done well. There is a passion for the land by the people who live there and a strong desire to keep tradition and heritage intact. But i will detail that in another posting.

For now i present my plethora of  food images…why did i do this before lunch! i am starving now!

WELCOME TO SARAH’s FOODS OF CRETE!

my first meal after becoming coherent from a long travel day was in the harbor town of Chania on the northwest side of Crete. The town was lovely and this restaurant epitomizes the magic of wandering around on the back streets of town. If you ever make it to Crete check out Steki Taverna…the food was excellent!

restaurant

salad this was my first salad. the feta was soft, almost like a salty chevre and the capers were bursting with flavor!

feta_filo this was my FAVORITE thing ever! a slab of feta was wrapped in light crisp filo fried in olive oil, drizzled with thyme honey and sprinkled with sesame seeds. it was served hot and salty. SO GOOD

the following day we ventured into the village of Argyroupoli to sample their avocado products and see this town that is build on the side of a mountain and surrounded by waterfalls. so beautiful and about 20 degrees cooler! I could imagine what it was like there a thousand years ago…less tavernas but same water and trails and smiling faces i hope

table

trout Our lovely Taverna owner was plucking fresh trout for lunch. As the meal progressed it became apparent that anyone could take a try with the net but the children had a real knack for it. these fish were fried and served whole with yogurt sauce, capers and lemon.

zuch_leaves we dined on the traditional Crete rusk bread (read really dry wheat rolls) covered in  fresh mashed tomatoes and fresh feta. we also had rice and herb stuffed zucchini blossoms. SO FRESH!

For dessert we had fresh melon kept cool in a local stream. i wish i had caught a shot of this melon, it was sooooo red and juicy and cold. the tavernas just throw half a cut melon on a plate, stick forks in it and place it in the center of the table…that is what i call good eats!

melon note the fig tree growing out of the same stream bed. fig trees would grow out of the roof of your car if you let them! they were everywhere.

i opted not to go for the roasted lamb roasting over the open fires about 1 inch from the side of the road.  yup i know…big weenie.

meat

on our way home we stopped in the town of  Georgioupolis to pick up dinner and cheap beach towels for 2e.

While in the grocery store, I was quite mesmerized with this little contraption! Why oh why do we not have these at every market in town? i have discovered another reason to live on Crete. Just grab a container and select your spigot of choice for local red, local white or local retsina….mmmm retsina. thank you thank you thank you for your Retsina wines. Who cant love wine that is made with the tears of wood nymphs?  huh, I wonder what is in the top barrel? i missed that one.

wine

The markets in Iraklion were incredible. we were able to get all of our produce for dinner and breakfast for the next couple of days.

market market2 the grapes were so juicy!market3 look at all the bean options!

this woman in her typical black garb was my very favorite. if i had more time…I would have loved to meet her. She brought her own cart to the market. in her cart were fresh eggs, live snails, zucchini blossoms, figs, tomatoes, pears, garlic, oil and wine in recycled water bottles and a variety of herbs. When we came back later in the day, she had packed up and gone home. I hope because she had sold all of her items. I wanted her to take me home and teach me to cook!

lady_market

that night, i made a ragout of eggplant, tomato, onion and oregano, fresh figs with a local semi hard sheep’s milk cheese and these bitty little pears that packed so much flavor i am still craving them, and a fresh Greek salad with feta…of course! 

dinnerathome

dinner we dined on the patio of our villa as the cool evening breeze came in over the sea. it was pretty much perfect. we were also working our way through the vast quantities of local Cretan whites.

after an incredible “slow” day in the Amari Valley (which i will blog about extensively) i discovered that the wild vine growing near the pool with the 1 inch spikes was a wild caper plant!! i was so excited that i sat with it for a good long time poking and tasting and sniffing. it really did smell like caper berries!

wild_caper

in crete they eat the buds and the leaves. I have seen pickled caper berries in the states but i didnt see anyone eat one in Crete and after i opened it, i wasnt going to venture either.

caper_berry they are like tiny ripe watermelon. Can we eat them??

At this point i am taking a giant leap to the north and mycontinued quest for food in Santorini.

I discovered quickly that food is not the main focus of Santorini, it is a place for lovers and sun worshippers and shoppers. Although it was quite gorgeous, i only had 2 meals that stand out and one of them was simply because the view would have made a 4 star Michelin meal pale. So i will begin with what i loved best, the wine!

 grapes The grapes on santorini grow close to the ground in small clumps to collect the morning dew from the sea and hold it safe through the hottest parts of the day.

we were lucky enough to tour a local winery called Gavala Vineyards. Gavalas has been producing wines here for 300 years!! lucky for us we were the only people there that day and were given a tasting of 5 delightful wines including a Vinsanto dessert wine that i brought home. I am very much looking forward to the occasion i get to enjoy this!

wine_cellar 

stomping they still use the old grape stomping vats to produce their wines which pour through the lower right tube into hte basin with a basket to capture the seeds and skins…which of course then become Raki! ohhh Raki…but that is a tale for another time

suvlaki this was my first great meal in Santorini; Pork Souvlaki with a roasted broccoli and cauliflower salad and lemons…everything had lemons. YUM!

I will leave off this wild food extravaganza with a gorgeous sunset over Thirasia Island and a pair of wineglasses full of local Santorini white. if i squint, i can almost pretend i am still there.

sunset

 

the market from a fresh pair of eyes Monday, April 27, 2009

You have heard the old adage that to look at something through the eyes of a child is like looking at it for the first time…or something like that. I think you can be a child at any age and to see something for hte first time and get so excited about it, can make anyone pause and enjoy the ride. My friend Lynette gets as excited as i do!

I had to link to my friend Lynette’s blog because we went to the farmer’s Market yesterday and it was her first visit. her pictures are beautiful. I swear the tomatoes look like they are made of glass or wax, they cant be real!

Anyway Enjoy!

Lynette’s Blog

 

French Cooking and Princesses Sunday, February 1, 2009

i started my weekend on Friday evening with a cooking class entitled Winter in Provence at Sur La Table. This was by far the best class i have ever had there. My teacher. Chef Tselani Richmond, was lovely and began the class by speaking french beautifully to a bunch of wide-eyed obviously non-french speaking students who were all eager to dive in.  Chef had been trained in Paris and Le Cordon Bleu where she worked in some of the finest kitchens and fell in love with her now husband! sigh… paris. I am hoping to get her for a private cooking class with my girls. i would have her plan the meal!
chef
here was our menu:

Tarte a la Moutarde (mustard tart)
Salad d’endives aux poires et au blue (endive salad with blue cheese and pears)
Port_braised Duck with Dried Cherries (this one wasnt in french but oh my god)
Langues de Chat (cat tongues)((not some weird french delicasy jut biscuits)
Chocolat Mousse (YOU KNOW)

The duck was incredible! i cant wait to make it again. It took 24 hours to make so you know it has to be good and fall off the bone

i got to work on the Cat tongues. these were little almond butter biscuits that were baked, taken out and sprinkled with maldon salt and powdered praline, then rebaked until crisp.  they were awesome! i will make them again too! If you want any of the recipes above let me know! i will pass then along to you.

cat-tongues

On Saturday, i woke up at 7 to bake my sweet Mieke a birthday cake! The theme this year was Princess of course and i knew it had to be purple, include gems, jewels, tiaras and magic fairy dust. i knew this because about 3 months ago, Mieke drew me her cake exactly how she envisioned it.
cake

At her party all of the girls arrived in their finest princess attire and were so darn cute i thought i would fall over. I should also add that all but one little girl is attending the Japanese immersion school and sang the alphabet for me in japanese. It was amazing! We had a great time, played games, ate cake, opened presents and danced to Abba of course. It was also exhausting! Mieke is one lucky little girl.

princesses presents table4aprincess

i left the party and headed to a wedding. The bride and groom looked SO HAPPY and SO IN LOVE. it was really wonderful to witness. i am so happy for Jessica and Tim. I also took 1 whole picture at the event and this is it! i think it is a really great picture of us and we look pretty happy too :)

me_nina

 

Good Clean and FAIR Friday, November 21, 2008

 

3048689400_44e6c78024

Last night i attended a very complicated, fascinating lecture about fair trade and Oregon Farms.
Slow Food finds it important to focus on 3 things when it comes to food

Good; we need to eat good food. Good for us, good tasting
Clean; we need to eat food that isnt packed full of toxins, poisons and hormones
That leaves us with Fair; we should know where our food is coming from and know that the people who are bringing us this food are being treated fairly with fair labor laws and wages.

I say should  because the conversation is so complicated and ground-breaking. We have heard of fair-trade coffee and chocolate. Now we are talking about fair trade broccoli and strawberries.
There are farmers who are still paying their workers $2 an hour to spend 12 hours a day bent over with no health care and no way to protect themselves. 
There are also farmers out there who are working alongside their workers 12 -16 hours a day, finding ways to protect their worker’s bodies from the grueling labor and paying their workers the same wage they themselves are making.

Jeff Falen from Persephone Farms stated that if we are willing to pay 20-30% more for our produce then we already do, he could afford to pay his farm workers $12 an hour and give them health care benefits. Many of us are already willing to pay more for organic produce, would we also be willing to pay for Fair Trade Organic produce?  We are in an obvious economic slide. This doesnt make the conversation any easier. Many people in this country cant afford organic apples and can buy big red apples at a huge shopping center for half the price. So does it matter that those apples were grown in China where we have no information about good, clean or fair practices? For many people, they dont want to think about it or worry about it. But if  it does matter to you, think about what you are eating and how it got to your table and the people who brought it there, perhaps people who live less then 20 miles away from you.

I think it is a worthy addition to our already packed brains. When you think about the complcations of just this one train of thought, it is so overwhelming but then i read this quote and i thought DAMN! This isnt so complicated,

“I am only one, but i am one. I cannot do everything, but i can do something.
And i will not let what i cannot do interfere with what i can do” – Edward Everett Hale

There are going to be at least 2 more lectures about this topic here in Portland. If you want to learn more, go HERE

 

Meat-centric and Not Ashamed Tuesday, November 4, 2008

Filed under: Cooking madness, Places I Need to Eat — stellamacaroni @ 4:38 pm
Tags: ,

breakfast

I just love that word now; meat-centric. I am pretty sure an undernourished and angry vegetarian would create such a word. Someone told me that there are people trying to ban foie gras from local restaurants, which has successfully been done in Chicago, and criticize my favorite restaurant Beast because they serve too much meat. TOO MUCH MEAT. I think that is the funniest thing i have ever heard! The place is called Beast! They may create delicate flower blossoms stuffed with goat cheese and curried carrot soup topped with roasted pumpkin seeds but it will never be complete without a plate of their succulent perfectly prepared pork! There are 100’s of incredible vegetarian restaurants in Portland. Leave the meat to us crazy carnivores. GO BEAST! You have my 100% support to be as meat-centric as you want to be and i will cross your door every day if i win the lottery, promise. mmmmmm Beast

 

Falling Down Monday, September 29, 2008

Filed under: People I Love, Places I Need to Eat, The Queen Bee Cooking Club — stellamacaroni @ 9:21 am
Tags: ,

Friday night my girl friends and i got to check out a new restaurant and celebrate a birthday! The place was called 50 plates. It was perfectly pearl district in style but as we drank our champagne, we ate southern  sliders with pulled pork or fried chicken served in a waffle bun with syrup. the best part was that our bill included 4 spatulas with frosting on them, just enough for a lick. Kaatje thought that was disgusting so i ate hers too. The staff was pretty lame and slow but they make their own sparkle water!! We got like 4 bottles of it through dinner and it was free…seriously that is worth the trip alone…that and the chocolate spatula.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

On the flip side, i took Mieke to the zoo this weekend! I have a love/hate relationship with the zoo but when you have a little one with you, the love part is so much more predominate.

We got to see the baby elephant!

He is sooooo tiny and sweet and fuzzy. He is also quite attached to him mama now (thank god!) and it was so worth the hour long wait in line to see him. The weather was gorgeous, the animals were funny and the company was charming as always.

 

 

Dining, French Style in Perigord Monday, July 14, 2008

…Deep Breath

I have been trying to figure out how to Blog about my recent trip to France without overwhelming you and myself in the process. I think i have opted for the categorized view…it may still overwhelm but here it goes.

First topic, is of course close to my heart; FOOD!

Now i will briefly begin at the end of my trip and work my way back to the start. On my flight home i sat next to a gentleman who grew up in Manhattan and has traveled between there and France to visit family for many years. He mentioned one thing that has really resonated in my brain. When you travel to France you can get just about any kind of food your heart desires, it has grown into a culturally diverse metropolis that has excellent Sushi as well as Ethiopian food. However, good cheap “french” food is hard if not impossible to come by. French food by its very definition is rich on both the palate and the wallet. Of course for the unconcerned you can get the very best of french cuisine on the streets of Paris for a small fortune, or you can follow my route and head to the country. AMEN! (psst go for option 2)

I began my culinary adventures in France twice. The first was when we got lost in the hills of the Perigord Region and had to stop for a stretch and directions. I went for the directions while my travel companions headed to the loo. I entered a gorgeous little cafe, perched on the edge of the Vezere River, that expelled aromas which had me lapping up my own drool.


 

After getting the entire kitchen and wait staff involved in the quest, we made lots of hand gestures and drew a little map  and with my first official Au revoir Mademoiselle, I was off. I even had to suppress a giddy yelp as i raced back to the car. Honestly i had that feeling that if my trip had to end right then and there, i would be sated. Little did i know how much i would be missing.

A short time later we found our hotel and settled in. We were staying on a working farm called Auberge-Veyret  between Les Eyzies, Sarlat and Montignac-Lascaux above the river that looked across the valley at farmland and a chateau or 2. It was rather lovely and i am pretty sure i could live there forever.  More about the farm at another time, this is a focus on the food, oh god the food!

 Right before i left for France i got to eat at Beast. I had the best meal of my life that evening. I was in for a lovely surprise. My meals on the farm were perfect from beginning to end. The owners did not speak a work of English and of the 3 empty glasses in front of us, we used them for all the wrong beverages. The lovely owner, also our wait staff, didnt bat an eye as she presented us with our choice of aperitif; their own walnut liquor or their own muscato, our choice…um both please? So briefly, if that is possible, i will describe my meal because sadly, i was so tired and excited i forgot my camera for this meal…this was all served family style on platters large enough for a family of 6…we ate it all as i recall.

First Course
Cream of Fava Bean and Bacon Soup ( good lord i dream about this soup)
Fresh Whole Grain Bread with Fresh Butter
Second Course
Fresh Melon with Prosciutto (from their farm of course)
Third Course
Veal Cutlets in Port
Heaping plate of Green Beans
Legume Gratin
Fourth Course
Fresh greens with a light mustard vinaigrette
Fifth Course
Cheese Course of course
Fresh Farm Cheese wtih 4 preserves; melon, cassis, berry and fig. (my only picture!)
Sixth Course
Dessert…we were so overwhelmed that we let before dessert this night (we didnt make that mistake twice)

So if you have read this far with out pictures, you must have some interest in good food, or you love me.  I can only say at this point that every single thing we ate was straight from their earth, the meats, cheeses, wines, vegetables were all so fresh, plucked that day fresh and was so obviously prepared with the pride you could only get from preparing your own bounty and love for good food.

To just make it all that much better, we woke up the next day, had a lovely breakfast and after wandering around the countryside for the day, we got to come back for another incredible meal! this time we had Creamed Tomato Soup, Roast Duck L’Orange and huge wedges of their own Porc Pate stuffed Foie Gras. my my my. We learned which glasses to drink out of and we even stayed for dessert…I had a Berry Mousse with Orange Blossom extract. it is really incredible and i have no excuse, but happy delirium..i forgot my camera again! Now that has to be a good meal.

The following morning, i walked through the little town and felt like i had stepped back about 300 years. The buildings were all Limestone and looked like they had stood the test of all time. In one open doorway someone was cooking at the hearth and along the side of another home was a gorgeous garden.

I was waiting for peter rabbit to step from behind one of the massive cabbage heads. I think the secret here has to be goose poop.

Along with their LOVE for the liver of fat water fowl, this region is also notoriously known for its love of the walnut. There is walnut bread, oil, cheese, ice-cream and on and on. Instead of olive oil, they use walnut oil. and can i get an amen! i bought a small bottle of walnut oil for home and all i need is a straw. I can barely walk past the bottle without a taste. It is just that good. Think about roasted walnuts plucked from your own trees and then smush them into oil, that is what you get. pure and simple. I have been eating it on Arugula from my garden with a slice of goat cheese and drizzled with walnut oil and a pinch of sea salt. There is nothing like it. If you come over, i will give you samples…if you come soon!

 As we left Foie Gras Country, my heart was a little sad but my stomach bid adieu gratefully. I have two things to say here. 1) there are no small portions in Perigord and 2) they are not skinny little people, they are genuine, solid, hard working, skin dark from the sun, people..they are my kind of people. They know how to eat and they like to share.

 

The Magic and Wonder of Beast Monday, June 16, 2008

Last Friday night 3 of my most favorite girlfriends and I went to dinner at Beast in honor of my mom. I had heard about it and knew i was in for a treat with the prefix 6 course menu and wine pairings. I felt like i had been in a rut though. Portland has SO MANY amazing restaurants that i was getting snotty about my food and nothing had made me swoon in a long time. Apparently i didntneed to worry so much. Beast made me swoon with every single bite! I have never had such a meal so perfect in my life. This is why i love food so much.

I had also just finished a book called Julie and Julia in which the author spent a year recreating every single recipe in Julia Child’s masterpiece; Mastering the Art of French Cuisine. There are huge chapters in there about Aspics and organ meats galore. She tackled them and made sense of them, and if figured if she can cook aspic from a calf hoof and set it with a cold piece of foie gras, i could try anything.

Here is the Menu from Beast for Friday June 13th.
I think that the theme for this menu should be “Things That Melt in Your Mouth”"

First Course

Spring Carrot Soup with Fava Bean and Herb Salsa Verde
 - this soup was so divine that it melted into your taste buds before it left the spoon. and the fresh fava beans were just a tiny bit salty so they added the perfect accent. this is what soup should be

Second Course

CHARCUTERIE PLATE
i must preface this section by saying that this was the portion of the menu that i was terrified of. I HATE organ meat. I think it is one of the most disgusting things we eat and i dont understand why people think it is a delicacy…well until i ate here. Now i am a bit less afraid and also know that when done properly, it is mana from heaven. I am still salivating for the damn bon bons.

Foie Gras Bon-Bon
  – HOLY HELL! this little morsel was made with Vanilla Bean and Cognac. It had the texture of a chocolate truffle center and was so dense and delicate. None of the flavors were hidden. My friend Sami wasnt into it so i ate hers too. i want to eat this every single day of my life. Some dream of lounging on a chaise wearing silk and eating a box of chocolate bon bons, I will eat these, in a cardboard box next to the detroit train station if i must.
Chicken Liver Mousse with Seville Orange Marmalade
  – maybe you didnt know but I have never been a fan of the organ meats So this this little bite was a shock. It also melted in your mouth and didnt have  that horrid I am a liver after bite. Sami loved it until i told her what it was. It is amazing how our memories can affect us more then our taste buds. Case in point would be the following,
Steak Tartare with Quail Egg Toast
  -
The Steak melted in my mouth but i still cant do the raw yolk. I know everyone tells me it is just like a complimentary sauce but i have never been a fan of the yolk. This was the only thing on the entire menu i didnt lick off the plate. in fact i very systematically cut it away from the steak portion of the toast without breaking the yolk and tried to pawn it off on everyone else.
Pork and Liver Pate with Cherries and Pistachios
  – This was lovely. It reminded me of a really fancy but delicate sausage with all the nuts and fruit in it.

Rose Petal and Champagne Sorbet
-
perfect timing to cleanse the pallet after all that rich meat. and so simple

Third Course

Riesling Braised Carlton Farms Pork Cheek
Porcini and Morel Turnover
Baby Nantes Carrots with Spring Herbs
  –
What can i say? I am a pork loving fool. I cant get enough of it and when you braise it in Riesling…They gave us these serious steak knives but the meat just fell apart and melted in your mouth. The turnover was a buttery bit of heaven with perfectly diced cubes of fresh mushroom and the carrots were still crisp.

Fourth Course

Arugula Salad with Crushed Strawberries & Aged Balsamic Vinaigrette
with Shaved Humbolt Fog Goat Cheese

- we each got a pile of spicy arugula lightly dressed and topped with the lightest of goat cheeses. I LOVE arugula

Fifth Course

Selection of Cheeses with Poached Apricot, Candied Hazelnuts, Date, Salt and Pepper Shortbreads and Wildflower Honey
  – yes indeed, it DID just keep getting better. The Poached Apricot tasted exactly like my mom’s apricot pie (which i now need to make) and the cheeses were really strong!
we could have ended it here and been perfectly content but no, we had to persevere. I say that with glee

Sixth Course

Chocolate Covered Coconut Chiffon Petite Four
with Salted Caramel Ice-Cream
  – oh yes, it was as lovely as it sounds. This was served with a red dessert wine that complimented the salty chocolate and caramel goodness. It also wasnt as heavy as i had imagined. It was plenty rich, but wasnt the entire meal??

So that was it. it was, in my humble opinion, perfection. I have never had a prefix menu that paid such close attention to each detail. There was not one weak course. The wine pairings were perfect and so thoughtfully planned out. I went home and plotted what i had to sell so i could eat here each week.

 

The Farmer’s Market is OPEN FOR BUSINESS!! Monday, April 14, 2008

SATURDAY MORNING 8:30am

I have been excited about the Farmer’s Market opening all winter! I couldnt wait to wander through the stalls looking at all the amazing produce the farmers in my area had spent all winter tending. I was not disapointed! I got to the market when it opened at 830. It was PACKED. As i tried to find a parking spot i saw so many people walking like bits of metal to a magnet, carrying their cloth shopping bags and pulling wagons, in anticipation for the bounty.

First i needed to walk through and see what was there…and get coffee! PLEASE! I only had a small amount of cash and was in search of 2 things really…besides the coffee. I wanted Fiddlehead Ferns and Wild Garlic.  First coffee (does it seem obvious?) 

OK after coffee i started to take some pictures of the mountains of beets and greens, and mushrooms and  it was such a beautiful morning. I stopped at a pastry tent and had an Asparagus, Roasted Tomato and Blue Cheese Tart. Then i found my fiddleheads and GASP, TRUFFLES. i think the smell led me there. $3 for 1/20th of an OZ. i had to be careful here. i had spent 2/3 of my cash and still wanted to find onions. but what the hell, the woman told me it was one of the best years for truffles she has seen in years.  I got a small truffle delicately wrapped pillowed in rice and a plastic bag.  

I settled down to eat my tart and people watch for a minute. I had my fiddleheads and my truffle and i spotted a huge bunch of red radishes that i had to have $1.50 for the bunch of them. Worth every penny.

Sadly i was out of money and time on the parking meter so i headed home. The small bounty sat waiting in my fridge while i focused on other tasks.

SUNDAY MORNING CAME AT LAST.

I had the day to myself. No responsibilities. i spent a good portion of the day weeding, playing with chicks and plotting my meal in my head.

i also had a gallon of lucious farm fresh milk in the fridge and needed to make some cheese. FETA.

So, i decided upon fresh egg pasta with sauteed Fiddlehead Ferns and Asparagus and a pork chop.
I got busy making the pasta and laying out the sheets to dry so i could cut them up. I decided to invite my friends Denise and Johnny over for dinner and i wanted someone to taste these ferns with me! They were ready to dig in! I love them!

As i was making my pasta it dawned on me, 4 eggs go into a batch of fresh egg pasta…4 chickens will lay 4 eggs a day (we hope). This means technically i could make fresh pasta every single day and only buy the flour! Yes, these things get me so excited i have to use the exclamation point.

The pasta was great, the fiddleheads were very earthy, a bit like spinach. but the coils were slimy. i would like to try them again sometime… and as Denise so generously pointed out. “I like them, but a little fiddlehead goes a long way”. Again, i love her.

I also got my Feta in the fridge and was asleep by 11…body exhuasted!

MONDAY HAS ARRIVED

oh so early and COLD! it has rained. My 3 days of sunshine are gone, back to work for me. BUT secretly i know, at home waiting for me are four fuzzy chicks who have much to tell me about their day, half a bottle of my favorite white wine, a small bowl of fresh egg pasta and 1 dark earthy nugget of a truffle. Ahhh Bliss.