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Mind in the Butter

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Eva Louise

Team Supremo and Tagliatelle Tartufo

December 8, 2012 by Eva Louise Leave a Comment

milanosupremoTeam Supremo* has gone international with a weekend trip to Italy to celebrate Marina’s birthday! We were ambitious and woke up early today for a 3-hour bus tour of the gorgeous city of Milano with a final stop to view Da Vinci’s Last Supper. Famished and freezing our little brioches off, this was a great segway into lunch. We stopped in a precious little, well…Italian restaurant. After a champagne toast, we shared a caprese salad, tagliatelle con tartufo nero, and a nice bottle of chianti (OK, fine…we also had an insanely rich ricotta and artichoke crepe). One cannolo and two macchiatos later it was time for shopping and a nap. Can we fast forward to dinner? I can’t wait.

*the unfortunate nickname Marina and I gave ourselves 5 years ago in college.

Filed Under: Life & Travel Tagged With: art, food, friends, Italy, Milan, pasta, salad, tourism, travel, truffles, wine

Superwoman’s Salmon, Fennel and Mushroom Pot Pie

November 26, 2012 by Eva Louise Leave a Comment

 

Coho Salmon, Fennel, and Mushroom Pot Pie with Truffle Cream

Ray and I woke up early, had a delicious breakfast and headed to the Metropolitan Museum to see the Warhol and Protoshop exhibits, amongst a thousand other amazing works of art.  After three lovely hours of photographs, paintings, vases and tombs, I managed to do three loads of laundry at the laundromat (with Ray’s help), mend our ripped duvet, go to the grocery store, workout for an hour and then bake what I’ve been craving for weeks–a salmon pot pie, just in time for half time of the Giants game. Flaky and rich, this pot pie blew the traditional chicken-carrot-pea-celery combo straight out of the water. I call it “Superwoman’s pot pie” because I’m having one of those Sunday evenings where I can’t stop high-fiving myself because I was so awesome and productive all day.

High-fives aside, I juiced this dish up by tucking a teaspoon of truffle butter under the hood of puff pastry before serving.  Since I’m amazing at following recipes (not), I used the Food Network’s  here.

I tried to be cute and put pastry fish on the top, but after being in the 400 degree oven it looks like two of them got a little fresh…

Filed Under: Dinner, Seafood Tagged With: dinner, fish, food, salmon, seafood, truffle, vegetables

Bosc Pear and Goat Cheese Tart

November 22, 2012 by Eva Louise Leave a Comment

Sometimes we spend so much time obsessing about the main course, we forget  about the appetizer.  Last night, Mom was busy baking her homemade lasagna. Starving, I scrounged around and found a quart of gorgeous Bosc pears and 3 (yes, 3) logs of goat cheese, so I made myself useful and put together a simple goat cheese and pear tart. Here’s what I did:

  • I rolled out a sheet of puff pastry (thawed) and placed it on a cookie sheet.
  • Crumbled a log of goat cheese on the bottom of the pastry dough, then placed thinly sliced pear slices on top.
  • I drizzled it with raw honey and popped it in the oven at 400 for 25-30 mins.
  • I made the crust extra brown by brushing with an egg wash before placing in oven.
  • I let it cool 5 mins before transferring to cutting board, drizzled again with honey and served.

Filed Under: Appetizers & Snacks, Entertaining Tagged With: appetizer, cheese, dressert, food, fruit, pear, puff pastry

Button Soup

November 21, 2012 by Eva Louise 1 Comment

Piping hot matzoh ball soup, fresh challah with salted Irish butter…Mom would be pleased!

Last weekend my sister came over; we pulled out my big stock pot and spent the whole day (punctuated by cookies breaks and catnaps) leisurely making our mom’s good ol’ Jewish Matzoh Ball Soup.  We jokingly call it “button soup” after a short story we used to read: An old woman traveling takes shelter at a poor and grumpy old man’s house. She ends up making the old ungrateful bastard man a scrumptious soup with a button as it’s first and most important ingredient.  Like button soup, matzoh ball soup is a peasant soup, simple and modest in it’s composition, making nothing more comforting. It’s a great time to share this recipe especially with the turkey surplus we’re all about to experience.

Mom’s recipe ( adapted from her Grandma and Aunt):

Matzoh Ball Soup

I learned how to make this soup as I have many dishes from my Grandma Ida and my Aunt Josie.  Having said this, these recipes are never exact, never measured rather “eye-balled” and approximated.  So, this is my way of saying, I too add a little of this and a bit more of that ….and so will you.  The most important ingredient is that you make it with love!  Here is the best I can do without showing you.

For a Large Pot of Soup:

  • A whole kosher chicken, rinsed off and patted dry, or alternately pieces of chicken with bones 6 to 9 leg/ thigh combos (boneless breasts would be too dry and stringy)
  • ** Two different ways:   I put in 8 cups of Swanson chicken broth and 8 cups of College Inn Chicken Broth into the pot bring to a simmer, add the whole chicken breast side down.  Add enough water or more broth, if necessary, to cover chicken and come up to fill ¾ full of your soup pot. ** (Of course Grandma Ida just used water, especially with the kosher chicken as it is already salted, hence the reason I am having you rinse and pat it) but you would then need to add chicken bouillon, probably 2 tablespoons or to taste.  I like my way better, I must admit.
  •  Add to pot with the chicken in it:

-2-3 rough chopped medium sized yellow onions
-2    sliced and peeled parsnips
-3-4 stalks peeled and cut up celery
-4-5 peeled and sliced carrots
-3-4 crushed garlic or a couple more if you have a cold

  • Don’t add yet, Set aside:   4-5 Tablespoons of very well washed parsley (no sand, uh!) well chopped, to add in the last 15 minutes.  Pretty much for color.
  • Cover and simmer for probably 2 to 2 ½ hours.  Check on it, stir every once in a while and test along the way.  Skim off any creepy stuff that may or may not float to the top and discard….of course.
  • At the end you can remove the chicken, cool it, disassemble, cut it up and add back into soup.
  • Serve with either wide egg noodles already prepared separately or Matzo balls…Yum!!

Filed Under: Dinner, Soups & Stews Tagged With: chicken, dinner, family, food, Jewish, matzoh ball soup, matzoh balls, mom, soup, vegetables, vegetarian

A Day in the Life of the Orchard Queen!

October 27, 2012 by Eva Louise 2 Comments

A Saturday under the apple trees…

This weekend I went north to Massachusetts for a proper fall getaway. The family and I woke up early late and headed to Honey Pot Hill Orchard.  Only one of the most delicious places to be this time of year, Honey Pot is a hybrid orchard-farm where you can feed pigs, goats, sheep and bunnies, go on a hayride, pick apples, sip cider, eat apple cider donuts, AND brave the largest hedge maze in North America.  We had the pleasure of getting a personal, VIP  tour by Honey Pot’s best employee…my Mom!

We started the day off by meeting all of Mom’s co-workers!

Then we stopped by the break room.  Everyone there is always eating donuts…

Apple Cider Donuts with Cinnamon and Sugar

We didn’t want to distract everyone from their work, so we pitched in!…

Apple Picking!

We worked up quite an appetite, so unfortunately this happened:

We needed desperately to walk off our chili dogs, so we headed up the hill to “North America’s Largest Hedge Maze”:

…it took 7 years to grow!

Thanks for a great day at the office, Mom! xo

Filed Under: Life & Travel Tagged With: animals, apples, fall, family, food, fun, orchard, travel

Dinner Party Meal Planning

October 8, 2012 by Eva Louise 2 Comments

I’ve had several friends ask me about determining portion size for dinner parties, an essential part of hosting a successful one. I sketched the drawing above as a simple snapshot of the “trifecta” I use when meal planning for large parties. It’s totally unscientific but I think it’s really helpful.  The idea is simple — dinner is made up of 3 parts: starch, veggie, protein. Once you pick your recipes remember these rules before heading to the grocery store:

  • 1 cup of dry starch (risotto, rice, polenta etc.) = 4 servings. If you are using potatoes: 1 russet for 2 people, 2-3 red potatoes for 1 person, 3-4 fingerlings for 1 person.
  • 1 cup of veggie = 1 serving. 1 zucchini= 2 servings, 1 bunch of asparagus = 4 servings. One carton or head of lettuce =4 people for simple salad, 6 people if you drag it through the garden
  • 6 oz/ 1 fist of protein= 1 serving. I think I learned this from Richard Simmons so I can’t take credit, but idea is to serve 6 oz. (size when uncooked) of protein which is about the size of your fist. The butcher or fish guy can easily help with this too since they normally weigh everything for you.  I could recommend rounding to the next 1/2 lb for good measure. So, for a 6 person dinner party: 6 people x 6 oz = 36 oz or 2.25lbs —> ask the counter for 2.5lbs. For shrimp and scallops: 4 scallops=1 serving, 4 colossal shrimp= 1 serving, 6 jumbo shrimp= 1 serving
  • Add an “Elijah” serving e.g. always add 1 more person to the meal planning for leftovers/in case something burns/someone arrives who didn’t RSVP (gasp!).

I’ve kept the post short so you can print and post onto the fridge or add to your recipe book for easy reference. This is how I meal plan but would love to hear other tips and tricks!

Filed Under: Dinner, Entertaining, Sides Tagged With: entertaining, food, meal planning

Family Goes West: Pike Place Market

October 7, 2012 by Eva Louise 1 Comment

This weekend I’m back on the West Coast with the family (the only place I  seem to be able to blog these days!…) for a quick trip to Seattle.  We’re here to reunite with our long-lost-but-now-found family. Amidst nametags, handshakes, hugs and kisses from our new cousins, the five of us luckily found time for a routine stop at Pike Place Market. Truly one of my favorite places on this planet, I get to sniff and paw at sachets of lavender, cranberry beans, alien-like romesco cauliflower, beeswax candles, salty oysters and rub my face on teddy bears made from alpaca hair (that happened).                                                                                                                                                                                                                                 Aside from exploring at each of the market’s stalls, it’s family custom to cross the street to the Hom Bow stand for the sweet steamed pork buns…Cheers!

Oh, and no family trip would be complete without a sibling sunset photoshoot…love you, guys xox

Filed Under: Life & Travel Tagged With: food, market, pike place market, seattle, travel, west coast

Tofino Time: Clamming leads to Clam and Smoked Salmon Chowder

August 21, 2012 by Eva Louise 3 Comments

OK, how many things can the Fowlers yank from the water, throw in a pot and then eat? Let me tell you… a lot. To top off our foraging extravaganza this trip, we woke for an early morning low tide and dug for clams on the tidal flats.

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Mom was kind enough to make an amazing  clam and smoked salmon chowder when we returned with our bounty.  I have no clue what really goes into Mom’s chowder, but the truth is, I don’t want to know, I just want to eat it.

Mom’s Clam and Smoked Salmon Chowder

My brother shot this short but equally illustrative video of all of us digging away on the flats– A 1:33 minute taste of what it’s like in the life of a Foraging Fowler:

Filed Under: Life & Travel Tagged With: clams, food, salmon, soup

Tofino Time: What’d you do with all those chanterelles?

August 17, 2012 by Eva Louise 1 Comment

After picking a heap of chanterelles the other morning, I was sort of at a loss on what to do with them (although thank you to my friends for the inspiration!). But then, two amazing things happened 1) we went for a beach hike and found mussels, (Lie. Dad yanked them off the rocks while Emily and I napped on a log); 2) we went to an amazing ocean front farm and bought fresh goat cheese. With those deliciously serendipitous run-ins, I decided on Mussels with Fennel, Tomatoes and Chanterelles in White Wine and a simple Goat Cheese and Chanterelle Tart (recipe from old post, here).

Filed Under: Appetizers & Snacks, Life & Travel, Salads & Vegetables, Sides Tagged With: appetizer, cheese, mushrooms, mussels, seafood, tart

Tofino Time: Foraging for Chanterelles

August 14, 2012 by Eva Louise 3 Comments

There is nothing like chanterelle mushroom picking here in the Pacific Northwest. The thrill! the chase! associated with this gorgeous, gold-fluted fungus really cannot be replicated.  So today, equipped with plastic bags and scissors, the family and I set out to capture these curly-cupped creatures.  After picking at three locations, we returned with a hefty bounty of about one kilo. Now I just have to figure out what to do with all these mushrooms….

Filed Under: Life & Travel Tagged With: foraging, mushrooms, tofino, travel

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Welcome

I’m Eva Louise and welcome to Mind in the Butter! This is my food bloggy, showcasing my favorite dishes and recipes often inspired by and cooked for my loved ones. My goal with this blog is to eventually document every single dish I make so when I’m old and stale, I will be able to remember and celebrate memories from my favorite place…the kitchen!

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