Saturday, December 31, 2011
Happy New Year From Positano!
Friday, December 30, 2011
Continuation…
nor a beginning…
but a going on
with all the wisdom that experience can instill in us.
~Hal Borland, Outdoor writer
Thursday, December 29, 2011
The In Between Time
This time of year is one to savour - the gap between all that frantic rushing around, cleaning, cooking and never ending shopping and before the arrival of an unchartered year, full of hope and promise. Hibernation is the order of the day with studying seed catalogues and reading high on the agenda along with other gentle seasonal pursuits such as playing Scrabble.
The weather here over the Christmas weekend was extraordinarily warm - on Boxing Day we sat with the window open and no heating on until darkness fell. A complete contrast to the sub zero temperatures of the 2010 festive season when snow lay on the ground. The following day saw me more than ready to venture out and about - to be doing rather than sitting. Top of the list on the jobs to be done was to remove the old foliage from the hellebores. This is one of those tasks where there seems to be much debate as to the whether to and if so when to do it. The leaves are evergreen so you could leave them on but can they become rather tatty. They are also rather large and floppy and can obscure the flowers. There is also the risk if you leave them on, of them carrying leaf spot disease throughout the winter, which could affect the flowers when they open. As to when some books recommend autumn and others early winter. It is one of those jobs best done though before the flowers buds start to open so you limit the risk of cutting them off, which if ever done brings out loud shrieks from both flower and pruner. I think that I would not have liked to do this job any later this year. Now all that remains to do is a bit of tidying up as well as give the plants a mulch. I have been saving a bag of worm compost in readiness for this but yesterday was too windy and cold to venture out whilst today is not looking any more promising so far. Oh well back to having my head stuck in a book until conditions are more favourable.
P.S. We made a last trip of the year to the garden centre yesterday morning and what should come home with me but another hellebore.
Wednesday, December 28, 2011
How to Caramelize Onions
Ingredients
- 2 tbs olive oil
- 3 large red or brown onions, sliced
- 2 tbs brown sugar
- 1-2 tbs balsamic vinegar
Directions
- Heat oil in a large frypan over low heat. Add the onions and a good pinch of salt and cook very slowly for 15-20 minutes, stirring occasionally to prevent them from catching. Don't be tempted to turn the heat up, as you don't want the onions to burn.
- When onions are softened and tinged golden, add sugar and balsamic - this will start the caramelisation process. Cook onion over low heat for a further 5-10 minutes, stirring occasionally, until sticky and caramelised. Use immediately, or store in the fridge, in a sterilised jar or plastic container, and use when required.
Fridge Mount for your Apple iPad 2
Tea Kids Collection
Let your napkin speak for you
Tuesday, December 27, 2011
Onion Rings
- Adjust oven racks to lower- and upper-middle positions. Preheat the oven to 450F. Place ¼ cup of the flour in a shallow baking dish. Beat the egg and buttermilk together in a bowl. Whisk the remaining flour, cayenne, salt and pepper into the buttermilk mixture. Combine the saltines and potato chips in a food processor and pulse until finely ground. Place half of the crumb mixture in a second shallow baking dish; reserve the other half.
- Working one at a time, dredge each onion ring in flour, shaking off the excess. Dip the onion rings in the buttermilk mixture, allowing the excess to drip back into the bowl, and then dredge in the crumb coating, turning to coat evenly. When the crumb mixture is low, add the reserved crumb mixture to the dish to coat the remaining onion rings. Transfer the coated rings to a large plate or platter.
- Pour 3 tablespoons of the oil onto each of 2 rimmed baking sheets. Place the baking sheets in the oven and heat just until smoking, about 8 minutes. Tilt the heated sheets to coat evenly with the oil.
- Lay the onion rings out in a single layer on the oiled baking sheets. Bake, flipping the onion rings and rotating the pans halfway through baking, until golden brown on both sides, about 15 minutes total. Transfer to a paper towel-lined rack briefly before serving.
Honor Pre-Fall 2012
Portrait Stamps
Margarita Georgiadis
Monday, December 26, 2011
Music, Movies and Memories - Mimi Naja & Parker Smith
Members of Mimi's Girlband from Junior High |
Wits End 2000 |
Alicia is a true friend. Still up at midnight waiting for the show to begin |
Once the music started, the dancing began |
Sweet Hannah |
My husband added photos instead of gift tags to the presents this year |
Jojo
Sunday, December 25, 2011
Surfer Girl
Saturday, December 24, 2011
A Chocolate Christmas gift for you…
While the chocolate hazelnut Nutella
cake is cooling
And our traditional Christmas Eve fondue Bourguignon is awaiting…with umpteen delectable sauces
I thought I would gift you with the most wonderful recipe.
It truly tastes like it is from a European Bakery
Fine chocolate, cognac, hazelnuts…
D I V I N E
Nutella Cake with Chocolate Hazelnut Ganache
Adapted from Nigella Lawson
Cake:
6 large eggs, separated
pinch salt
1/2 cup unsalted butter, softened
1 13-ounce container Nutella
1 tablespoon cognac or brandy
1/2 cup finely ground hazelnuts
4 ounces semi-sweet chocolate, melted and
cooled
Ganache:
4 ounces whole hazelnuts
1/2 cup heavy cream
1 tablespoon cognac
4 ounces semi-sweet chocolate
Preheat oven to 350 degrees; butter a 9-inch springform pan. In a large bowl (preferably metal),
whisk the egg whites and salt until stiff. In another bowl, cream the butter and Nutella, then add
the cognac, egg yolks, and ground hazelnuts. Fold in melted chocolate.
Add a blob of beaten egg whites to the chocolate batter, and mix gently until well-combined. Fold in the remaining whites, one-third at a time, very gently but thoroughly. Pour into springform and bake for 40 minutes. Test for doneness by inserting tester, which should come out mostly clean; lightly pressing finger into top to check for a slight bouncing-back; and observing edges beginning to separate from pan. Let cool completely, in pan, on a rack.
Toast the hazelnuts in a dry skillet, or toaster oven shaking them around frequently. Do it for about 4 minutes, or until they are lightly browned, then let cool completely. If hazelnuts came with skins on, put them in a towel after toasting and rub around; this will remove most of the skins.
Chop chocolate, and add to sauce pan with half and half and booze over medium-low heat. Once chocolate is melted and components are combined, whisk until mixture reaches desired thickness, then cool. Remove rim of cake pan and pour cooled ganache over, spreading lightly to create a smooth, shiny surface, and apply hazelnuts all over.
Rich and heavenly…what Christmas is all about!
To all of my blog readers and friends.May your
Christmas or Hanukkah include some chocolate
and LOTS of LOVE.
Love Me.
Last two images from google…mine is not ready to pour the ganache on yet...slurp.