August 5, 2008 · Written by Jennifer
Another week of fresh food and fun at the farm. This week we have sweet corn, tomatoes, eggplant, summer squash, onions and garlic. Freshly dug, absolutely delicious red potatoes, chard, maybe some green beans, lots of carrots (with juicing and other specials), broccoli, cabbage, arugula, parsley, basil including lemon basil, sweet gypsy, italian frying and other sweet peppers, anaheim (my home town), poblano, serrano and many other mild and hot chiles and of course STRAWBERRIES.
I think we’re having a special on STRAWBERRIES as I am being told there are a lot of them today.
We also have a few eggs and the chili jams, honey from the field, chipotles and other dried chiles.
Hope to see you.
EASY RECIPE OF THE WEEK is my baked Ratatouille:
Onion, garlic, eggplant, zummer squash, chile and sweet pepper, basil, and maybe parsley, tomatoes.
Chop everything up and put into a baking dish with some olive oil. Bake at about 375, stirring every so often, until everything is tender and juicy, about an hour or so. I cover it for part of the time and then uncover. Parmesan on top. That’s it! note: sauteing onions first is nice.
Thanks,
Evie Truxaw
TierraVegetables.com
Tierra Vegetables Farm Stand (directions)
April 27, 2008 · Written by Jennifer
This posting is for my sister Nat. She’s been asking me for this recipe ever since she visited in early May. My cousin Nik sent me a recipe chain pyramid thing to which I haven’t replied yet either, but I plan to.
Margaret (a former colleague) once made this salad for one of those potluck things you do at work. You have to balance the ingredients based on the number of people you are making the salad for.
- Fresh tomatoes. I use either cherry tomatoes, grape tomatoes, or just small vine tomatoes.
- Some fresh mozzarella balls. I usually get a bucket from Costco, but when everybody was here, we just got a half pint at Safeway. The mozzarella balls are usually preserved in olive oil and spices.
- Fresh basil.
- Salt and pepper to taste.
Quarter the tomatoes. Half the mozzarella balls. Chop the fresh basil. Mix in a bowl. Add salt and pepper to taste. Very simple. Very tasty. Very fresh.
Obviously, this recipe goes very well with crab-stuffed chicken breasts grilled on the BBQ, that grilled asparagus (how did we do that?), and a glass of Alan’s 2004 Bush-Field Pinot Noir. It tastes even better when you have friends and family enjoying it with you.
[Originally posted 26 May 2006 on YukonJen.com]
April 19, 2008 · Written by Jennifer
My aunt and my sisters have been visiting me in California. We had an awesome time! Mainly though, we ate. We ate. We drank. Then we ate some more. My sister asked me for the salad recipes I made. I said I would post them on my blog. So–ben, voila!–here is one:
One head of butter lettuce. Tear into bite-sized pieces and wash in a fancy-dancy salad spinner. Spin until the lettuce is dizzy (or you are dizzy, or you can’t tell the difference because you have been drinking the bottle of wine you opened half an hour ago and you have an empty stomach. Remember, you haven’t eaten. You are just starting to make the salad!).
Retrieve glass bowl from where ever the glass bowl is stored in your kitchen. If it is your kitchen, you know where the glass salad bowls are. If you are in your sister’s kitchen, you will have to investigate each cupboard and drawer to find out where they are stored. Depending on the size of the kitchen, this particular task might take a few minutes.
Ok. Glass bowl. Dizzy lettuce. Put the lettuce in the bowl. Pat down so the lettuce is densely layered on the bottom of the bowl and it starts to regroup.
Open a can of corn niblets. This was the first time I used white corn niblets. I normally use yellow corn niblets. Well. You decide what you like better: white corn, yellow corn. Doesn’t make a difference. More likely than not, you are going to have one of them in your cupboard.
Rinse and drain the can of corn niblets and layer them on top of the dizzy lettuce in the bowl. Not a bad combination so far.
Chop a large tomato into cubes. Should I say: cube a large tomato? Well. Whatever the language, you get the idea: one large tomato is now in chunks. Layer the tomato chunks onto the corn niblets.
Find the can of tuna in your cupboard. Staple ingredient: tuna. Open the can, drain the liquid. Put the tuna in a bowl to chop it up with a fork so that it is now flaky. I like to add minced onions–just a wee bit of onions, minced into a pulpy mess–for flavour. Mix the onions with the flaky tuna. Layer the minced onions and flaky tuna onto the tomato, corn, and lettuce in the bowl. Hmmmm…now you have dizzy lettuce and flaky tuna in one bowl. Maybe you should have another drink of wine.
Ok. So now you should have lettuce, corn, tomato, onion and tuna all layered in the glass bowl. You can actually use any kind of bowl. I just like glass bowls because you can see the layers and it makes it more of an interesting conversation piece. Especially, if by now, you are on the second bottle of wine and you still haven’t eaten. You can decorate the top of the salad with boiled eggs sliced in half. Be artistic. Be creative. There are no rules.
The dressing takes some trial and error before you figure it out. I learned how to make this basic dressing when I lived in France and it has been in my recipe repertoire ever since. Scoop some Dijon mustard into a small mixing bowl. Once around the edge with olive oil. Well–maybe another round just so there is enough. Start mixing in circular motions. Add vinegar to the mix. Keep mixing until the oil, mustard, and vinegar have blended. Use the vinegar to modify the consistency of the dressing. If you’ve added too much vinegar, add some more oil, or mustard until you get the right balance. This is where the trial and error comes in. Too much mustard and it will make your nose sting. Too much vinegar and it will make your mouth pucker. Too much oil and–well, you’ll figure it out.
You can pour the dressing directly onto the salad and serve or just keep it in the bowl so each individual can put the right amount on their portion. The idea with the layered salad is that it becomes a tossed salad as soon as people start digging in.
That’s it. Bon Appetit! Dig in!
Don’t forget: Finish the wine.
[Originally published 10 May 2006 on YukonJen.com]
March 5, 2008 · Written by Jennifer
I had dinner with my friend KatieBird the other day. We were talking about cooking and eating and food in general (one of my favourite topics–of course!). She mentioned that her husband likes variety–trying something new all the time. She said she’s completely happy plugging along eating the same thing–well–because it works.
I said I had a few recipes on my blog. I also said I would put up a few more. I like salads. Here’s a recipe for smoked trout salad.
1 filet of smoked trout. I buy my smoked trout at the local fancy grocery store in a rush, or at Costco when I’ve actually planned it out. My parents, on the other hand would probably go out and catch the trout themselves. They would probably go camping at Fox Lake, Little Atlin Lake, Tagish Lake or any one of the those completely accessible lakes within camping distance of their house. Then, they would probably bring it home and smoke it themselves. My parents are retired, by the way. They have time to go out and catch the trouts and bring them home to smoke them.
1 head of butter lettuce. I also get this at the grocery store. My Mum and Dad grow their own. No surprise there. Mum has an award-winning garden. My Dad recently built her raised garden beds–because they are easier to garden in. But of course she grows her own. Did I mention my parents are retired?
Some purple onion for colour and flavour. Slice it as thinly as possible. Razor-thin strips. Just for that hint of onion flavour.
About one cup of dried cranberries. I get these at Costco in bulk because I LOOOVVEEE dried cranberries. My Mum would go pick them herself from Wolf Creek Campground or somewhere just by her house. I don’t know if she would dry them though. Oh–who am I kidding? Of course she would. She would also grow her own onions.
I like glass bowls for my salads. I don’t know why, I just do. Find a creative-looking glass bowl in your cupboard. Tear up the butter lettuce into bite-sized pieces. It makes it nicer to eat. Flake the filet of trout over top. Sprinkle the cranberries. Top with the slivers of onion.
Now for the dressing. It’s the same dressing I use for French Tuna, Tomato, and Corn Salad. I don’t think my Mum makes her own mustard. But she may–I don’t actually know. Did I mention my parents are retired?
[Originally posted 27 July 2006 on YukonJen.com]
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