Friday, December 3, 2010

Vegan Thanksgiving

I have overheard a few in the Vegan world say that Thanksgiving was not for them.  Think about it though, there is alot more to the feast then the turkey!  It seems most college-aged kids pass through being Vegan and for some it sticks. So most all of us should have a few tricks up our sleeve to be the perfect Vegan host.   To be honest it tastes 95% as good and is 200% healthier.   Here is what I do:

Head to Trader Joes, Whole Foods or your nearest natural food store and stock up on Earth Balance (best ever butter substitute, even for baking your pie crust), vegetable or mushroom bullion and soy or almond milk.

Turkey/main course - Well, the turkey is out for the Vegan crew but if you make the stuffing as I describe below, save some and stuff some mushrooms and serve with the gravy below.    Just pop them in the oven for about 15 minutes dish up everything else.  I'  admit, I had more stuffed mushrooms then turkey this year.  They were that good.

Dressing - Use Earth Balance to saute the onion, add spices, craisens and wild rice (I used half rice half bread) with dairy free bread and vegetable bullion, you have a delicious  stuffing that everyone will like in the bird or out.

Mashed potatoes - Again use earth Balance and Soy Milk.  These aren't as rich as traditional potatoes but you can make up for the flavor by adding a crushed garlic and sauted shallots or leeks.

Gravy - I love gravy and this mushroom gravy is a mighty fine substitute for the gravy grandma used to make, and alot healthier.  I am sold:

Mushroom gravy

                3/4 cup white or button mushrooms, chopped
                1 small yellow or white onion, minced
                1/4 cup Earth Balance margarine
                2 1/2 cups vegetable broth
                2 tbsp soy sauce
                1/4 cup flour
                1 tbsp poultry seasoning (or 1/2 tsp each of sage, thyme and marjoram)
                salt and pepper to taste

Melt the margarine and then saute the onion and mushrooms.  Add broth and soy sauce.  Slowly add the flour, stirring, bring to a simmer or a low boil, then reduce heat.  Add spices and cook for 10 minutes or unitl thickened.
Sweet Potatoes - Forget that old marshmallow recipe and slice and roast  them in the oven with olive oil.

Vegetable - Easy

Cranberries - In my book, nothing is better then 2 cups of fresh cranberries boiled until they pop with 1 cup of sugar and 1 cup of water.  Add cinnamon or peppers for something different.  I can't believe anyone buys them in a can!

Bread and Herb Butter - Check the bread you purchase, it is surprising how often milk, whey or eggs are in the ingredients.  Baguette is usually a safe choice.  The day before I soften a half pound of Earth Balance (and I confess butter too for us heathens) then crush a clove of garlic and snip a teaspoon or two of thyme into it and spread it in a small pretty glass bowl.  The flavor is enhanced overnight.

Pumpkin Pie - There are several recipes on the internet but last year I just substituted 1 1/2 tsp each  of water/oil/baking powder for each egg and replaced about 3/4 of the amount of evaporated milk called for with soy milk and the pie tasted fine.   Any other pie (apple, pecan) would be festive too.

There you go.  No whining just thanksgiving!

Tuesday, November 23, 2010

Just Wait...


Sketch of our future backyard edible garden.

Where do ideas come from?  Not the easy ones - I am talking abut the answers for problems that get you stuck.  I know we have the answer to everything, but sometimes those answers are buried too deep or we are too distracted to pull them out.  I believe our greatness is buried in our subconscious.  If you get stuck, wait and the answer will come.  I guess that's what some call faith.

I have been stuck the last two months trying to figure out a design for my postage stamp-sized backyard.  My aim is to convert  lawn and traditional plantings into an edible landscape.  I have scoured dozens of books, looked online, talked to other gardeners, even hired a designer but non of the solutions felt right.  Yesterday I looked out my window and saw the answer.  It all hinged on the positioning of the walkway from the house to the garage.  The design just fell on the paper.

I love that.  Listen to your gut and if it doesn't feel right or you don't know the answer - just wait.

Russian Stew with Cherries


I found a great selection of dried beans at Seed Savers in Decorah Iowa.  Worth the trip.


My dad asked me once "why do you just eat white?" because I only made chicken and fish dishes.  Well, he would be happy that some read meat is sneaking back into my diet.  This one of my favorites, modified from the RealFood magazine by using beef instead of veal and using a higher proportion of beans and onions:

1 1/2 c dry navy or more interesting beans
1 1/2 lbs stew meat (original recipe called for veal, I used beef)
Olive oil
3 tbsp flour
1 large onion
1 can Morello or other sour cherries and juice
3/4 c Madeira or Port
Salt and pepper
1 nutmeg freshly ground or about 1/2 tsp dry
Fresh parsley

Soak the beans overnight and save to  boil the next morning for 1 hour, then drain and add to the meat cooked the night before.
Meanwhile, dredge the meat in flour and brown in olive oil.  Saute the onion and then add to meat with sherry, cherries with juice and spices.  Cook at least an hour and a half and then refrigerate overnight. The next day, add the cooked beans and warm slowly for an hour or so before serving .  Like most stews, the flavor is enhanced by preparing it a day ahead of serving.  We like it over pappardelle pasta noodles with crusty bread and a salad.

Tuesday, November 9, 2010

Thai Butternut Squash Soup

This soup is unique because you can taste every flavor.  It is delicious!

1 butternut squash peeled and cubed
2 c vegetable broth
1 can cocoanut milk
1/4 c finely chopped onion
1 tbsp brown sugar
1 tbsp soy sauce
1/2 tsp cayenne pepper
2 tbsp lime juice

1/2 c chopped cashews
1/2 finely chopped fresh basil
zest or 1 lime

Combine all but the last three ingredients>  Cover and simmer on low on the stove top for about 1 1/2 - 3 hours, stirring occasionally.   Mash the squash with a potato masher or immersion blender.  I strained out some of the "strings" of the squash pulp.  Mix the nuts, basil and lime zest and sprinkle on top before serving.  Tastes great with naan and a crispy salad.

Tuesday, October 19, 2010

Not So Spooky

It seems fitting to share this so close to Halloween.  This has been one of my favorite walks since I was about twelve.  I would visit my Grandma in Red Wing and sneak away with my camera to explore.  I'd walk up East Avenue...


...and into Oakwood Cemetery.


I took the same walk today... up the path...


...and into the woods, blanketed in leaves....


...aglow with color....


....beautiful color....


.....big landscapes like Barns Bluff surround...


....and delicate beauty of Maiden Hair Ferns below my feet...


....thoughts of angels....


....lovely day.  Not so spooky.



Friday, October 15, 2010

Mission Accomplished


Why does this feel like a masterpiece?  Over the past two-and-a-half weeks we have stripped 104 years of paint, sanded, patched, stained, re-sanded, re-stained, varnished, patched and painted.  It seemed like it would never end.  All this for a sixteen square-foot back entry to our house.  The previous owners did a skillful job refinishing the entire house - it is humbling to feel victorious over this tiny corner.  The  door, walls and trim were painted white - they now glow in their original wood finish and walls to match the kitchen.  If you visit, I doubt you will even know the difference.   To me however it is piece of art.

Thursday, October 14, 2010

Dahlias Gone Wild


Thanks to the previous owners of our house, we are rich with Dahlias!


With this warm weather, the flowers are really giving it a last hurrah.


There were so many last night, I made four arrangements for my house and gave six bouquets to my neighbors.  Wild!



The tough question now is which to save?  Dahlias hail from Mexico so in Minnesota we dig them up and overwinter them in sphagnum in a cool dark place.  I need to make room for vegetables next year so need to reduce the number of Dahlias from the twenty eight plants in my yard.  Which to choose - they are so beautiful!

Oh My Madeleines!

I did it!  My madeleines are better then any other I have tasted.

It irked me that I liked Starbucks Madeleine's better then those I attempted to make earlier - and theirs was better then others I had purchased at French bakeries in the U.S.   Leave it to Julia though, today I tried the recipe from Baking with Julia and hit the jackpot in the world of Madeline's.



3 tbsp unsalted butter, melted
1 1/4 c cake flour, sifted
3/4 c sugar
1/8 tsp salt
2 large eggs at room temperature
4 large egg yolks at room temperature
1 tsp vanilla

Sift the flour, add 1 tbsp of sugar and the salt and set aside on a sheet of waxed paper.   Put eggs and yolks along with 1 tbsp sugar in a ceramic bowl and mix by hand with beater from mixer.  Add the remaining sugar and wisk by hand.  Then whip the egg/sugar mixture on high speed for about 5 minutes until the mixture "makes a ribbon" that sits on top for 10 seconds before sinking.  Add the vanilla.  Next mix in about 1/3 of the flour mixture gently with a spatula.  Do not over fold!  Then gently add the next thirds the same way.  Carefully fold in the melted butter.  Immediately and carefully spoon the batter into the madeleine pans.  Bake about 10 minutes at 400.  I like the edges brown and crispy - the madeleines should bounce back to the touch.   Cool a bit before removing from pan.  The recipe says thy taste best the first day - and can be frozen for up to ten days.  I can tell you they taste great on day one!



You can get a used copy of Baking With Julia for $10-15.  This cookbook is so so so worth it.  Everything I have made from pie crust to croissants with these recipes have been the best ever.

Friday, September 24, 2010

Pure Potential





When asked why I would study botany and art - they must' have never looked up close at a flower....



I have several projects in the works and it makes be think of how the feeling of potential is almost better then the real thing.  Right now I am:
  • Ordering fabric to recover a sofa 
  • Meeting with landscapers next week to talk about  ideas to turn our postage-stamp backyard into a potager garden
  • About to strip a painted door to tie the basement steps to natural woodwork in our kitchen
  • Planning a trip to Washington DC in October with my 10-year old
  • Planning a reunion/birthday party for my 10 year old and his friends back in Milwaukee
  • Finishing a fall colored cardigan I started last spring
I guess this means summer is over, school is on and I am getting settled in the new house.  I will keep you posted as things progress - until I am basting in the pure thrill of the potential outcomes.

Sunday, August 22, 2010

Meditation


Lake Superior

I am in the middle of a 21-day Meditation Challenge.  A friend told me about this online guided meditation sponsored by the Chopra Center and suggested it is best if you participate with someone to share the experience.   I have truly enjoyed the practice.  I wake up each day looking forward to my "quiet spot" on the porch.  Comfortably sitting on my my fern print pillow in the summer breeze -  the world melts away for twenty minutes.

The experience has been relaxing.  It has been spiritual.  It has been thought provoking.

I truly like the idea of beginning my day with intention.  It brings focus.  One of the more challenging thoughts so far has been the idea of suspending judgement.  I feel I have become less judgemental over the years, and most would probably say I am a positive person -  but one of the meditations brought me to thinking of sending "love and understanding" when I catch myself judging (=negative thought.)  Suddenly I noticed I was judging alot.  Soon I found that sending these mental valentines really did make me feel different.  Better.  It worked.

If you are not up for 21 days or are already a master, you might enjoy the individual guided meditations also found on the Chopra center website.

Saturday, August 21, 2010

Peach Cake


It's August, and that means it is time to celebrate meteor showers, the last days of summer vacation and Colorado Peaches!

If you missed it last time, make sure and check out the Whole Peach Pie Recipe posted last September  - it is the BEST!  I would have to say this peach cake from my mom easily ranks second of all peach recipes.  When I first saw it, based on the ingredients alone I couldn't image why the cake was special - but it is.  The sour cream and cinnamon must be the secret.

1 c butter
2 c sugar
4 eggs
2 c flour
2 tsp baking powder
1/4 c sour cream
2 tsp vanilla
6-8 peaches - peeled and sliced
1 tsp cinnamon with 1 tsp sugar

Cream the butter and sugar, add eggs one at a time.  Sift the dry ingredients and add alternately with the sour cream and vanilla.  Mix but do not beat.  Spoon in to a greased 9x13 pan.  Top with peaches and sprinkle with cinnamon and sugar.  Bake at 350 for 45-50 minutes.  This cake astes great with a bit of whipped cream on top.

I am thinking of other peach recipes that might be good - peach salsa???  If a good peach recipe - send it my way!

Thursday, August 19, 2010

The Best of Red Wing..So Far



We have hit the two month mark.  I can say that calling Red Wing home has come easily.  Our house is beautiful.  Living on the edge of downtown makes it possible to walk everywhere.  Our neighbors are friendly.

For what it is worth, here is my take in the best of Red Wing:

Antiques - I tend to like shops with more furniture but the Pottery Place Antiques (three floors, more then a hundred vendors) is simply amazing.  There was so much though, I was overwhelmed and didn't get a thing.
Bread - Hands down Jenny Lind Bakery has the best baked goods and I think the top lunch in town.
Eating out?  -   I have already mentioned Jenny Lind for breakfast or lunch.  If a nice dinner is in mind, it is worth the half hour drive along Lake Pepin to the Harbor View Restaurant in Pepin WI.  I haven't tried it yet but I hear the Pizza Farm in Stockholm on Tuesdays is worth the wait.
Front porch - I can't explain it, but there is something so peaceful sitting on the front porch.  I have lived on beautiful lakes and been able to walk the beach of lake Michigan from my front doors - a porch isn't quite the same but I find the same peace.  I have been meditating on the porch most mornings - I guess it is my new temple!
Groceries - Buckanen's is a fab grocery store with fresh salmon and more, New French Bakery baguette, fine condiments and cheese, filo, and they even ordered my favorite Greek God's yogurt for me.  Add to that a delightful Farmers Market on Saturday morning and vendors on the street every day of the week and we are eating well.  The Riverbend Food Co-op is opening this fall.
Music, music, music - We have free concerts in the park on  summer Wednesdays.  The 100+ year old Sheldon Auditorium has a variety of concerts fall, winter and spring.  Hobgoblin Music is just ten minutes down the road and has amazing folk concerts along with a barn full of stringed instruments.  Just a half hour away in Zumbrota, The Crossings at Carnegie is a impressive art center with items for sale, classes and amazingly well known artists in concert each week.
Trails - We have three favorites.  I love the three mile loop uphill walk along East Avenue into Oakwood Cemetery with it's beautiful Oak Trees.  I can't believe I had never been up Barns Bluff as it is a pleasing goat prairie overlooking the Mississippi - a gradual mile-and-a-half uphill loop.  The Cannon River Trail is a flat 20 or 40 mile round trip bike ride from Red Wing, graced with Trout Scream Cafe (read: good ice cream) at the 10 mile mark in Welch.  I can't wait to see how the cross country skiing is.  We already have downhill ski passes for Welch Village.
Urbanity - Give me an hour and I can be at the Minneapolis airport, Trader Joe's or most any other shopping experience in Minneapolis/St Paul.  And no worries, Red Wing has a Target, so one needn't spend a whole day shopping for basics.
Well Being - There are two Aveda salons and I was pretty pleased with the services at Indigo.  I had a fantastic Shiatsu massage at Body Kneads and I look forward to Yoga classes this fall.  The YMCA has alot to offer as well.

I will try to begin posting a little more frequently - and follow up with photos and details of the places mentioned above.  Moving always makes one hold their breath a bit.  I am beginning to exhale.

Tuesday, July 13, 2010

Home Sweet Home

Well, let's make a go of it again.  Most boxes are unpacked, most pictures hung, I have weeded and mulched the garden and memorized my new zipcode -  so it is safe to call it home, right?

Welcome to my new home.  Here is a mini tour:


Come on in.  This photo was taken on moving day - I didn't even have time to brush my hair!


We love our porches!  The perfect place to read the paper in the morning - and I am so glad to read the Star Tribune again.  The perfect place to eat dinner.  The perfect place to talk by candlelight after dark.


Beautiful oak inside, carefully restored by the previous owners who received a historic preservation award for their work.


Leaded glass....


....sends beautiful light everywhere!


And the Dining Room.

I will add more later to share our yard and neighborhood.

Wednesday, May 12, 2010

Come Visit in Red Wing - Updated May 12

I know, I know...where have I been?  Selling houses, buying houses, packing boxes, buying pianos, selling pianos.  Oh the fun of moving.  A month from today our home will be in Red Wing Minnesota.  If you choose to come visit, here are some of the fun things just down the street from our new home.  Amazing choices for a small town, don't you think?

June 12  - Celtic Music Festival at Hobgoblin Music
June 12 - John Gorka at the Crossings at Carnegie
June 20  - Fathers Day Car show
June 25Lucy Kaplansky
June 21-26  - Plen Air Arts Festival
June 23  - Back (Blues) at Concerts in the Park at 7:00
June 30  - Jarfalla (Swedish) at Concerts in the Park at 7:00
July 1John McCutcheon
July 7  - Generation II (Big Band) at Concerts in the Park at 7:00
July 10 Prudence Johnson & Dan Chouinard
July 11  - Red Wing Arts Association Annual Garden Tour
July 17 - Michael Johnson at the Crossings at Carnegie in Zumrota at 8:00
July 21  - Three Mississippi ( Bluegrass) at Concerts in the Park 7:00
August 6Billy McLaughlin at The Crossings at Carnegie in Zumbota at 8:00
August 11  - Slippery Elm (Blues and Accoustic)
August 6-8 – River City Days (Taste of Red Wing and Arts and Crafts)
August 7  - Blues at the Barn at Hobgoblin Music
August 20Becky Schlegel & Brian Fesler at The Crossings at Carnegie in Zumbota at 8:00
August 27Bill & Kate Isles w/April Verch at The Crossings at Carnegie in Zumbota at 8:00
September 18Ellis at The Crossings at Carnegie in Zumbota at 7:30
October 2 - Willy Porter at The Crossings at Carnegie in Zumbota at 7:30
October 8 - Tannahill Weavers at The Crossings at Carnegie in Zumbota at 7:30
October 9-10  - Red Wing Festival of the Arts
October 10 - Meg Hutchinson at The Crossings at Carnegie in Zumbota at 7:30

I can't be sure the boxes will all be unpacked, but at least you will have a place to stay.

Saturday, February 27, 2010

Vegan Ravioli to Die For


Ali and I made a five-star  dinner this evening using recipes from a great website she discovered -  Vegan Dad:


We made the pasta with the hand crank Atlas pasta maker I got for a wedding present nearly thirty years ago.  After we mixed the faux-ricotta filling, we put a teaspoon across sheets of pasta dough and covered it with another and cut with the Ravioli cutter I got in Long Island last fall.  We roasted peppers in the oven and combined with the other ingredients for an exceptional sauce.  If you haven't had cashew cream (just cashews and water pulsed in a food processor) try it, you won't believe what a grand cream substitute it is!



Thursday, February 25, 2010

I Think We Can Go Back

Yes, I have time traveled - here a  farm of my Swedish ancestors.  

My brother Greg just sent me a February 20, 2010 Wall Street Journal article: Finding Our Way Home.  It tells us that returning to childhood homes can often be disappointing.  You can't go back, but how about a little time travel?  I admit that my desire to move to my paternal Grandmothers hometown in Red Wing, Minnesota includes a bit of nostalgia.

Childhood memories of fresh cinnamon bread, Memorial Day parades and sitting on the porch, bathed and in our pajamas on balmy summer evenings are still part of my romantic notion of the way life should be.  As a teenager I would take the train from Minneapolis on my own and walk down East Avenue to visit Grandma B.  Those visits lead me a sense of independence and adventure that I still enjoy.   Grandma showed me how to bake, knit, crochet and shared stories of the her childhood in the bluffs of Wabasha.  Her home was simple but immaculate, and her closets of crocheted and embroidered linens and the shelf of teacups very felt elegant to me.

The Journal article says that knocking on the door is a line that few people cross.  Well I did.  About twenty years after my Grandma died, I knocked on her (old) door and the owners very graciously let me tour their home.  It had been updated, but the space and even smells sent me to that wonderful place of childhood and back to my Grandmother.

About that same time, a high school friend called me to say she had bought my childhood home in Minneapolis.    I visited her and had a similar experience.  I was delighted that my darkroom was still being used  - as a darkroom!  The karma of childhood was there in my bedroom, the sunporch, the living room.

I asked a third time and toured the original home of my Swedish relative Adolph Berling near Stockholm Wisconsin.  The rounded window stucco farmhouse had been "updated" with shag carpeting and design flaws of the twentieth century - but the windows, the light, the original wainscoting made it easy to imagine the Berglings in 1868.  I wish I had been bold enough say "If you ever want to sell..."  I didn't and a few years later I drove by to find that charming little farmhouse had been replaced by a prefabricated home.  Tragedy.

A few years later, I traveled to Sweden to look for Adolph's and other relatives homes.  Pure coincidence lead me to an eighth cousin walking a dirt road. In another town, my curiosity lead me to be invited into the original farm house that Kerstin Persdotter left to come to this country.

When in Halifax Nova Scotia, I encouraged my husband to find his Grandmothers house.  He was hesitant because he was afraid it "would be a slum."  We were delighted to find the apartment had been restored and converted to a condominium.

Call me nostolgic and sentimental, I don't care.  I like time traveling.  I for one will keep going home.

Friday, January 29, 2010

Out the Window


So sorry, I have been away.  Between Christmas, visiting, being visited, dancing with the notion and then action to buy one house and sell another, I have lost track of time.  I have not drawn a picture, knit, or written a story since mid-December, but life has been full and with purpose.  I am anxious to get back to a quiet routine, though I know it may be a while.  Until then.... I do love this photo, take from a window at a Bed and Breakfast in Red Wing, Minnesota.  The beginning of a journey.