Tuesday, August 30, 2011

Harvey at the Farm

 I'm back in Roseville to finish the book, but here's a shot of the Farmers with Harvey.
Harvey socializes with the chickens.

Sunday, August 28, 2011

Doing the Can Can

With all the writing and traveling I've been doing, I haven't had time for a blog post in a while, so this is sort of a mishmash. But here's our catchup...

Earlier this month, Rick revved up his chainsaw and chopped down the apple tree. It was full of fire blight, and had to come out.
And I stuck some lettuce seeds in this big flat. They're coming up really nicely now. And now we can figure out which is which!
While I was in Roseville, I caught up with my sister at the Yardhouse.
And asked the waiter to take a pic of us both.
When I got home, I had a nice surprise. Rick re-did the bathroom floor while I was gone. It looks great!
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What Rick Ate
Rick took a few pix to reassure me that he wasn't starving while I was gone.

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Yesterday, while I sat home and wrote, Rick, RickyC, and Buddy fired up the stoves.
And started canning produce.
They picked a bunch of beans to make dilly beans.
And cooked up a big pot of tomato sauce, with green peppers, onion, and garlic.
Rick brought over his clever home-made chile roaster and roasted up a bunch of peppers from his garden as well as what was ripe at the farm.
Buddy was relaxing when I stopped by, but he had chopped all the onion and garlic.
Lots of onion and garlic.
The naked ladies are totally in full bloom.
I picked this from out backyard, then picked out the tomatoes to save for us.
And sent this over to become Salsa Verde. Tons of tomatillos and serrano chiles.
Here's the result of their labor: 3 cans of Salsa Verde from our produce, and 5 more from farm produce, 4 pints of dilly beans, 2 of roasted peppers, and 8 pints of tomato sauce. What a bunch of food!
Ok... back to work... /sigh.

Sunday, August 21, 2011

Roseville Still

So I'm still here in Roseville. I'm making good progress, but I'm not finished yet. Fortunately it hasn't been all work. The Prima folks took me out to lunch at the Yardhouse.
Me and Harvey that is.
Todd goofs around with Harvey.
Thursday I went down to Tom and Nancy's. Here we're hanging out before dinner.
Dinner was great!
Harvey liked it too.
Tom and Nancy's yard is so nice.
So I went back Saturday night because Tom was in Seattle playing with the Snotdogs. Nancy and I got to have a whole evening to just ourselves. We went out to this great Greek place.
With this sweet little old man playing organ.
We drink! We eat! We have a total blast!
I love this shot of Nancy and her painting.
I even had a duck mug.

Tuesday, August 16, 2011

Roseville

So I'm here in Roseville, at Prima to write a guide. It's an adventure! And I'm actually having a lot of fun.
This is the secret inner author room, only accessed by a special, magical passcard.
Here's my secondary workspace, set up for breakfast. The only reason you only see two electronic devices on the table is because I'm using my phone to take the pix.
On my way across the street to the bar, I found a duck... Yes, a plastic duck decoy was lying in the road. I snagged him. And took him to the bar. An author and a duck walk in a bar...
At the time, that pictured looked just fine... probably because I was blurry. Here's Harvey in all his glory. More about this later.

Friday, August 5, 2011

August--Or not...

It's oddly cool for August. We're not complaining; we LIKE 80 degree temperatures, but it's still disconcerting. Only the cherry tomatoes are ripening so far. We've gotten a few big ones, but nothing to speak of. Now that I have my kitchen back, I made the first BLT and the first zucchini bread of the season yesterday.

I've been super busy, so I haven't been able to do much. We did get the arbor put up.
And started moving the bricks over to the farm from our house.
Buddy worked on the apple tree. It has to come out entirely.
The naked ladies have put up flower stalks and are even showing a hint of color.
And the pumpkins are thriving. Remember those tiny starts from a couple posts ago? Well look at em now!
Yesterday we had Karen and Glen over to the farm. Glen had made this wonderful balsamic vinegar reduction, and I'd used some on the frittata I made last weekend. To garnish the frittata, I put a basil leaf and a cherry tomato. Realizing I was halfway to a tiny caprese salad, I added a crumble of feta cheese, and drizzed it with the balsamic reduction. OMG. Flavor bomb! It was so good, I wanted to share this with Karen and Glen.

I also had a slightly oversize zucchini, so I made zucchini bread with my usual recipe and served it with cream cheese. I had extra eggs, so I made deviled eggs too. Rick and Catherine brought filled celery and Ricky's homemade pickles. Karen and Glen brought smoked salmon spread and cheese and crackers. It was an amazing farm-fresh feast.

I foolishly didn't take any pictures, which is too bad because all the food looked beautiful. So I'll just report it recipe style.

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Caprecitas
Large intact basil leaves
Squares of fresh mozzarella, no larger than half inch
Fresh picked tiny cherry tomatoes, such as Sungold
Balsamic vinegar reduction

Lay the basil leaves out on the serving platter, curve upward. Place a square of mozzarella and a cherry tomato on each leaf. Carefully drip a drop or two of balsamic reduction on each. Pinch the tips of the basil leaves together to make a pouch and pop the whole thing in your mouth for a burst of flavor.

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Pesto Shells
Large shell pasta
Basil
Red Walnuts
Garlic (more than lots!)
Good olive oil
Pinch of salt
Tomatoes
Feta or mozzarella cheese or both
Balsamic reduction

Heat oven to 325.
Start a large pan of water boiling for the pasta.
Toast the red walnuts in a slow oven until they smell done (15 mins?) then let cool.
Boil the pasta for about 15 minutes or until just al dente. You want them still pretty firm. Drain and submerge in a bowl of water in the refrigerator to chill.
Peel tons of garlic and place in a small food processor with a good dollop of olive oil and a pinch of salt and grind up. Add a handful of walnuts, a bit at at time and munch those up. At the end, add a handful of basil leaves (the ones that were too little for the previous recipe), and whirl briefly.

You can stop here and assemble later. Don't let the shells dry out, and don't refrigerate the pesto. At the farm, assemble each shell with a dollop of pesto, a cherry tomato, a square of cheese, and a drizzle of balsamic reduction.

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Balsamic reduction
Buy a large container of good quality balsamic vinegar (check Costco) and cook over a slow simmer until reduced by half or so.