{Wine Wednesday} Pear, prosciutto and asiago pasta

WineWednesday

2013-9-18 WineWithout further ado, here is tonight’s dinner: pear, prosciutto and asiago pasta, paired with this bottle of ‘the ghost in the machine’ riesling.

This combination is one of our favorites and when this time of year rolls around we’ll pick up a few pears, make some pasta and go to town. In the past we’ve blended up all of the ingredients and made raviolis (recipe here).

Instead of raviolis this time, we opted for a deconstructed version with a browned butter, shallot and pear sauce with prosciutto and homemade fettuccine, topped with some grated rosemary asiago cheese.

I browned the shallots and butter first (separately) and then added the diced Bartlett pears and diced prosciutto and let them cook down just a tad. I used to add prosciutto at the beginning of all dishes, with the garlic and onions, but then Brandon showed me his preferred way and I started instead adding it just before serving, sometimes waiting until the heat is turned off and using the heat from the dish to warm it up just a bit.

Man was this good! All of the flavors complimented one another so well and I love almost anything with homemade pasta. Try this for yourself and enjoy!

Yummmy!!

Yummmy!!

{Gone Pinning} In season now: Chanterelles!!

GonePinning

I mentioned all of the things that Labor Day symbolizes for me in my post on Sunday, but I forgot to mention something very, very important: it also signifies the start of chanterelle season.

Brandon and I are quite the mushroom-lovers and chanterelles are some of our favorites. We’re Costco shoppers and when my parents or sister find them there, we’ll often buy a package for each other. They’re just that good and their season doesn’t last that long. It also seems like they’re at Costco (for $9.99/lb) for an even shorter amount of time.

2013-9-8-ChantI bought theses chanterelles the other night and cooked up the full pound. We paired them with grilled chicken and my favorite kale salad (we use pine nuts instead of bread crumbs), so I went with a traditional and simple seasoning strategy: butter, salt and lemon-thyme. First, I cleaned up the mushrooms a little more by brushing them off. (Sometimes some tree needles, foliage and dirt are left behind…) Next, I sauteed them with a wee bit of olive oil and two tablespoons of unsalted butter over medium-low heat. Cooking these mushrooms is definitely a ‘low and slow’ operation. I continued cooking them, stirring occassionally, for about 20 minutes. I added the thyme and salt (and another tablespoon of butter– Shhh! Don’t tell Brandon. He’s healthier than to eat that much butter…) about 15 minutes in, to really finish the dish. Once they were the perfect texture and flavor, they were plated and thoroughly enjoyed.

I’m headed to get more chanterelles soon and these recipes caught my eye. Check out all of my recipes to try on my Pinterest “Falling into Fall” board. Go get some chanterelles for yourself and have a happy weekend!

Truffle taglietelle with chanterelle mushrooms:

Truffle Tag

Beef tenderloin stuffed with lobster and chanterelle mushrooms:

2013-9 Beef chant

Chanterelle mushroom omelette:

2013-9 Chant omelette

And our dinner, which will be pinned once I hit publish:

Megan's Island chanterelle dinner

Pizza, Pizza: I can almost taste it!

I’d like to thank Mother Nature for this blast of 80+ degree days this past week: it’s been essential for the progress we’ve made on our backyard oven. (Of course, it would’ve been nice for the rain to have stayed away last week when I was off of work…)

Here it is:
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Seattle’s nice weather is supposed to continue into the weekend and we’re ready to finish this baby off!

Unfortunately, there are still a few more steps once we’ve finished the brick work. Next, and somewhat weather-dependent, we have to waterproof the whole oven and caulk the major seams and then start building our curing fires.

In advance of the curing fires, we picked up some apple wood last weekend in Central Washington.

Yes, we pulled across the highway for a trunk full of apple wood. Wouldn't you?

Yes, we pulled across the highway for a trunk full of apple wood. Wouldn’t you?

So sometime very soon… It’ll be time for pizza!!

Pizza, pizza: We’ve got a ceiling!

We’ve been busy planning for our big backyard debut party this weekend (menus! decorations!) but managed to make some progress on the backyard pizza oven. What do you think?

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We took out the first round of supports and… It held! I was pretty nervous about it. In fact, I freaked out a bit about not having a “keystone.” As it turns out, you don’t need a keystone if you’re using grout. (Thanks, Dad.)

We got inside the oven (so did one of the cats) and chiseled off some of our grout drips. We filled in the seams on the first bend of the arch and then added the remaining two rows. Ta da!

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Clearly the oven is on my mind: I designed the entryway in my dreams last night – along with something about Sesame Street, which I haven’t thought about or seen in at least 10 years. I think it was that the letter of the day is “s.” Somebody analyze that and let know. Maybe it means that I need to enjoy a “S”yrah tonight? Anyway, I took some remaining measurements before I left for work and will continue designing it in my head today.

We’ll buy bricks tomorrow after work and hopefully get the firebricks covered by Friday and the forecasted rain. Hopefully it rains just enough to refresh the plants, but not so much that it ruins the backyard’s debut party on Saturday!

Happy wine Wednesday!

Pizza, pizza: We’re making progress…

IMG_5121In anticipation of the great work and progress that Brandon and I are going to make on the pizza oven this weekend, I’d like to give us a hearty pat on the back! (We’re already making great progress and I’m excited to share it with you guys soon!)

Here’s the update:

We’ve bought the materials and Brandon’s Dad came up to Seattle to visit us this weekend, complete with his masonry skills and brick cutter. We’ve got a plan and the weather has been cooperating, meaning we’re making great progress on our backyard wood-fired oven project. We won’t be ready to make pizzas for tonight’s True Blood party, or for our party next week, but soon!

We’ve also been testing different dough and sauce recipes — it’s a tough job, but someone has to do it– and have settled on winners!

Our favorite dough comes from Forno Bravo, our favorite everything-to-do-with-building-a-pizza-oven website:

Authentic Vera Pizza Napoletana Dough Recipe

Ingredients

  • 500gr (4 cups) Molino Caputo Tipo 00 flour
  • 325gr (1.5 cups) water (65% hydration)
  • 10gr (2 tsp) salt
  • 3gr (1/2 tsp) active dry yeast

We highly recommend cooking by weight. It is fast, and easy to get the exact hydration (water to flour ratio) and dough ball size you want.

Personally, I do not use recipes or a mixing cup when I cook dinner for the family, but pizza and bread dough is different. Being exact counts, and nothing works better than a digital scale.

Mix the dough in a stand mixer, by hand or in a bread machine. If you are using a stand mixer, mix it slowly for two minutes, faster for 5 minutes, and slow again for 2 minutes.

Cover the dough and let it rise for 1 1/2 – 2 hours, or until double. Punch it down and push out the air bubbles. Form the dough into a large ball, then cut it into three 275 gr equal pieces.

To make your pizza balls, shape each piece of dough into a ball. Gently roll your dough into a ball, then stretch the top of the ball down and around the rest of the ball, until the outer layer wraps around the other side. Pinch the two ends together to make a smooth ball with a tight outer “skin.” Set your ball seam-side down where it can rest. Dust your pizza balls with flour, and store them under a damp towel, in a proofing tray, or under plastic wrap. This will prevent the outside of the ball from drying out and creating a crust, and becoming difficult to work with. The top of the pizza ball should be soft and silky.

Your pizza balls will need to rest for about an hour to become soft and elastic, so that they can be easily stretched into a thin crust pizza.

If you won’t need your dough for more than an hour, refrigerate it until you are ready to start.

If you won’t have an hour to let your dough rest, read our Dough in a Hurry strategy. By cutting back each phase of dough preparation by the right amount, you can make great pizza or focaccia dough in as little as an hour.

We normally don’t measure when following recipes either, but Brandon busts out my Little Britches Bakery postal scale for dough measurements. He means business! (I so want to make fun, but I can’t, since the dough is that good!)

And our favorite sauce recipe, also from Forno Bravo: 

Smashed Tomato Sauce 
1 can (28 oz) San Marzano tomatoes 
1/4 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper 
1/2 teaspoon of salt 
1 teaspoon of oregano 

Options 
1 teaspoon dried basil or 2 tablespoons of fresh basil 
1 tablespoon garlic powder 
2 tablespoons red wine vinegar or lemon juice 
1 tablespoon olive oil – done forget to swirl excellent extra virgin olive oil on your pizza right before you put it in the oven

 Watch the Forno Bravo Pizza Sauce Video on YouTube.

I love to provide recipes, but I also love to provide facts. Here is the latest infographic I found on pizza. I have no idea how truthful or valid it is, but it makes me hungry for pizza, so it’s ok in my book… Happy pizza eating and I’ll be back soon with some photos from our weekend of building!

2013-8 Pizza infographic

{Gone Pinning} True Blood finale

GonePinning

Our ‘Gone Pinning’ feature is back! This week we’re focused on vampires. Yes, vampires. Brandon and I discovered True Blood four years ago and burned through DVDs until we were current– like an episode each night. Ever since, we subscribe to HBO during the summer, so we can watch our favorite vampires in real-time. (Note: I have watched but not read the Twilight series and it doesn’t even compare to the vampires in True Blood…)

The season six True Blood finale is coming up this weekend (HBO, Sunday, 9 p.m. pacific) and we’re having some friends over for a viewing party. Since we’re on a pizza kick, we’ll be making pizzas from scratch (not very vampire-y) and a vampire/True Blood inspired dessert. We will, of course, be serving “True Blood” but ours isn’t carbonated and instead will be red wine. (We went to NYC for our honeymoon and happened upon the HBO store. What did we get? Two bottles of the “real” True Blood. (It’s like blood orange soda in a red plastic container, but we’re keeping it sealed. Plus it was cheap. I was a week into being married to an accountant!!)

First, let it be known that I checked this book out from the library this past spring. I had intended to throw a True Blood season premiere party, but, alas, life got in the way and that didn’t happen. Hence the season finale party. There are some fun recipes, but we’re not planning on going fully all out for Sunday.

TB Cookbook

And then there is dessert. Ah, dessert. Looking on Pinterest, there are so many ideas! This dessert is currently “winning” and I think I’ll make it. How perfect is it, right?!

Cupcake

I love decorations and perusing the options on Pinterest totally made me want to really plan a full-fledged vampire party. We’ll likely end up doing a mini hybrid of some of these ideas, but they were so amazing,I had to share. (Click on the images for their Pinterest links.)

Decor2

Decor3

Decor4

Decor5

Check out my inspiration board on Pinterest. I love Pinterest. Not on it yet? Do it. But beware of the time-suck you’re about to enter. (It’s so good, it’s bad!)

I’ve got a few other ideas up my sleeve (got to keep those guests guessing!) so check back for photos soon… hopefully next week. And make sure you tune in and catch our favorite vampires on HBO on Sunday evening!!

Winning at The Whale Wins

Chef Renee EricksonI’ve been meaning to write this post for awhile (I’m a broken record, I know) but this article spurred me into action.

A few months back Brandon and I joined some good friends of ours at an Alaska Airlines culinary cocktail/signature cardholder event at The Whale Wins, a hot new restaurant in Seattle. I had heard great things about the place and this event was the perfect opportunity to try it out.

We didn’t know it at the time (because neither did the judges) but we were sitting at the ninth “Best New Restaurant of 2013 in the COUNTRY,” as named by Bon Appetit on August 13. (!!!!!)

IMG_4703Anyway, this cardholder event was AWESOME! Renee Erickson, the head chef at the Whale Wins (and Boat Street Cafe, The Walrus and the Carpenter and Narwhal) was our host for the evening and spoke to the group of about 75 individuals (this private event occupied the entire restaurant) about the concepts behind her cooking and how the dishes we were to eat that night came about. All of the cooking at The Whale Wins is done in a huge, beautiful wood-fired oven and served at room temperature. It’s an interesting concept and one that we try out, often accidentally.  Much of her inspiration came from London.

This was our menu for the evening:

THE WHALE WINS
Culinary Cocktail Event

FIRST
Fave beans, ricotta and mint on toast
Egg salad and tarragon on toast
Chicken liver mousse and Boat St. pickled plums on toast

SECOND
Fire roasted hama hama clams with mustard greens, cilantro and cream
Merguez sausage with shaved fennel salad, chickpeas and spiced yogurt
Oven roasted Washington wild king salmon with cucumber, sea bean and chive butter
Potatoes with herb butter
Turnips and radishes roasted with brown butter and preserved lemon
Columbia City baked bread and butter

THIRD
Almond cake with poached cherries and rhubarb

Dark 'n Stormy cocktailAnd our cocktails for the evening:

Guiding Light with Big Gin, Lillet, orange blossom water and St. George Absinthe
Dark ‘n Stormy with house made ginger beer, dark rum, lime and bitters
R&R Cocktail with fresh rhubarb, Reposado tequila, lemon and sparkling wine

We were served the first course at our seats, an open-air dining space in the front of the restaurant. The second course was buffet-style at the main counter near the wood-fired oven. The Chef was talking to folks as they dished up and Brandon and I took the opportunity to talk about the oven. She was very conversational and we felt totally cool for being able to talk to her and actually say something educated. (We had been studying up on our own wood-fired oven.)

IMG_4694After we were done with the second course, we headed over to the bar where we were taught how to make the Dark ‘n Stormy, by bartender extraordinaire, Anna Wallace, from the Walrus and the Carpenter. All of the ingredients were provided and we mixed our drinks and enjoyed them, over the third course of almond cake.

Now you can make your own Dark ‘n Stormy:

2 oz Gosling’s black seal rum
1/2 oz lime
3 oz ginger brew

Build over ice. Garnish with mint and 2 dashes of aromatic bitters. And, enjoy! 

Man, what a night! Have you been to The Whale Wins? Have you been to a fun dinner with a chef before? Tell me about it in the comments!

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What a crazy few weeks…

Fans, I’m very sorry for my absentee-ism with blogging lately. Not only have I been pretty busy, but I’ve discovered another obsession: Game of Thrones. So, with all of my free time, I find myself glued to the TV, unable to multitask and write a gem for you to read. I know you’ve missed me. I’m sorry!

It’s been a crazy couple of weeks. What have we done? Let me tell you!

We went raspberry picking

We picked a whopping 13 lbs of berries (and finished them in one week! A new record!) I’m working on a post all about our picking experience. In the meantime, head on down to Harvold Farms while it’s still raspberry season. Blueberry season also just kicked off, if they are your berry of choice. Our favorite spot to pick blueberries is Bybee Farms in North Bend. It’s worth the drive!

2013-7-30 Rasberries

2013-7-30 PizzaWe made pizzas … and finished the pizza oven plans

The oven planning has been daunting, so we put it off and opted instead to try out some pizza dough, sauce and topping recipes!

Our pizza gorging re-inspired us and we finished the plans for the wood-fired oven. Next step: ordering the supplies and getting our mortar on. We’ve got to do quite a bit of the work before the weather Seattle is famous for is upon us. So, it’s time to get this show on the road.

I’ve been really busy with my other job: Little Britches Bakery

2013-7-30 LBB

Something amazing has happened and my side biz, Little Britches Bakery (non-edible baby gifts) has taken off! We had a crazy amount of orders in the past couple of weeks and even did an interview with the Mercer Island Reporter on the royal baby. (Mercer Island = Megan’s Island)  I’ll post the article once it’s published, but here’s a sneak peak at the scene. Also? We’re giving away the royal diaper cake “fit for a king.” If this is something you’re interested in, enter to win via the giveaway button on the Little Britches Bakery Facebook page.

We had our house painted

2013-7-30 Painting2

It took Cesar, our painter, 10 hours a day for five days. I’m so, so, so glad that we opted to hire someone to paint it as opposed to taking on that task ourselves. It would’ve taken us so much longer.  We did pre-paint each individual piece of siding before it went up but now the house has a final, professional coat.  Related, I did have the ‘opportunity’ to paint some siding inside the house. After some very precarious ladder maneuvers, “the inside is outside” theme of our entry way has an updated look.  I’m glad I never have to paint siding again (or at least in the near future…)!  

Re-did the foyer

More painting! I painted the indoor siding (it’s a unique house) and the door and moved around some furniture that we already had. I have one more project to start and finish and then the new foyer will be ready to share.

2013-7-30 Painting

Those are the highlights and what a few weeks it’s been!  After a ladies weekend in Walla Walla this weekend, I’ll be back to blogging more regularly. Thanks for being a loyal reader and let me know what fun projects you’ve been up to in the comments below!

Gone Pinning: Raspberries!

GonePinning

Last year's crop

Last year’s crop

Brandon and I have big plans of enjoying summer and raspberry picking this weekend. The raspberry season just opened up on July 5 and we’re going to head down to Harvold Farms, the u-pick spot we visited last year. In just 30 minutes we were able to pick 6.5 lbs of berries. (And that’s with the ‘one in my bucket, one in my mouth’ technique!)

In anticipation of having that many (or more!) raspberries again, I dedicated some quality time to picking out some really tasty raspberry recipes for our anticipated bounty.

Without further ado, here are the best of the best raspberry recipes that the internet has to offer…

How to freeze raspberries: We'll probably need this!

How to freeze raspberries: We’ll probably need this!

Lemon ricotta pancakes with lemon curd and fresh raspberries

Lemon ricotta pancakes with lemon curd and fresh raspberries

Raspberry fruit leather

Raspberry fruit leather

And then I discovered the Driscoll’s recipe database. O-M-G were there some delicious-looking recipes! I was so gaga for them that Brandon laughed at me. Seriously. Lucky for him, I’m totally going to make these! Find all of the Driscoll’s raspberry recipes here. They also have an extensive database for strawberries, blueberries and blackberries.

Raspberry Chambord Dream

Raspberry Chambord Dream

Pink Raspberry Ombre Cake

Pink Raspberry Ombre Cake

This is one that I started really drooling over:

Warm raspberry brie

Warm raspberry brie

Caribbean shrimp rasberry avocado salad

Caribbean shrimp raspberry avocado salad

Bourbon Raspberry Rub Steak with Raspberry Mango Salsa

Bourbon Raspberry Rub Steak with Raspberry Mango Salsa

Please report back if you make any of these recipes yourself.  Enjoy!

{Wine Wednesday} Wine + popcorn

WineWednesday

These are a few of my favorite things: wine and popcorn. Imagine my surprise when my dear friend sent this article to me: “Entrepreneurs launch popcorn infused with wine” from the Daily Mail.

Pinot Noir Chocolate Drizzle and Sauvignon Blanc Kettle wine popcorn

Pinot Noir Chocolate Drizzle and Sauvignon Blanc Kettle wine popcorn

From the article: ‘The lemony Kim Crawford Sauvignon Blanc Lemon is bright and zesty, bursting with flavour and pairing beautifully with the wine, while the indulgent Kim Crawford Pinot Noir Chocolate Drizzle uses the classic pairing of wine with chocolate to harness the wine’s flavours into an indulgent treat.”

A one-gallon tin retails at $35, which is a little rich for my blood. I looked on Pinterest for directions to make wine popcorn myself, and unfortunately my search came up with nothing. I think I’ll stick to making my own popcorn and pairing it with wine, rather than eating a combination of the two.

Speaking of popcorn, do you pop your own? We do. Brandon and I got this stove-top popcorn popper for our wedding and we LOVE it. If you love popcorn, you definitely need this! Along with some white truffle oil sea salt, our favorite toppings. A popper like this makes popping popcorn really fun,  is healthier, saves money in the long run, and allows you make the fun flavors you want.  When was the last time that you saw truffle popcorn in a microwave pack?

Happy Wine Wednesday! Celebrate with some popcorn and wine — paired!