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September 26, 2010
September 19, 2010
Sorry for the inconvenience but I’m updating my blog to make Facebook and the blog match up. Make it easier for people to find me! For those of you who subscribe you will have to resubscribe. For those of you who are viewing this page, please visit the new site www.stuffurface.wordpress.com
Thank you so much everyone!!!
September 9, 2010
Guacamole and Mediterranean Salsa
Posted by Amanda under Appetizers, Condiments, Summer, Veggies1 Comment
My first “official” gig in which I wasn’t making food for an event I was planning myself. I was asked to make a few dips for a party of about 40 people.
I was a little scared at first, not knowing how much food to estimate or how much time I would need to make that amount of food. How to keep the guacamole from turning color. Things that I did not ever put too much worry into. I guess when you are making food for someone else’s event it is just more stressful. Probably questions everyone asks when they first start making large quantities of food for OTHER people! It was not as bad as I anticipated! Whew!
It was a fun and exciting new challenge and hope I get the opportunity to do this more often! I love to feed people’s bellies so this was a privilege for me!
Here is what I made:
Guacamole – this recipe is on my site already, but I’ve updated it with a photo
Next was Mediterranean Salsa which in a previous blog I promised quite some time ago…sorry for the delay! This recipe doesn’t make enough for 40 it makes enough for probably a crowd of 15 or so.
Mediterranean Salsa
1 lb. tomatoes, seeded and diced
1 English (seedless) cucumber, diced
1 bunch of parsley, finely chopped
2 sprigs of mint, finely chopped
3 green onions, thinly sliced in rounds
juice of 1/2 lemon
1 clove of garlic
3T olive oil
1/8 tsp salt
1/4 c. feta cheese
Toss the first 4 ingredients in a large bowl.
In a separate bowl, mix lemon juice, minced garlic, olive oil and salt. Pour over tomato and cucumber mixture and toss.
Serve with Pita chips or toasted Lavash Chips.
August 28, 2010
(above is my Spicy Pastrami)
With kids returning to school comes the pressure of packed lunch ideas. Maybe you’re not a parent but need ideas for your own packed lunch. Besides, bringing your own lunch to work is a much healthier option than going out to eat everyday, and it saves money. If you are like me, if my weekly lunch menu is not planned, I end up making more PB&Js and plain cheese and turkey sandwiches then I would like. Things get boring!
Below is a chart of my most favorite sandwich ingredients. This way everything is laid out in front of me and I don’t have to think up ingredients off the top of my head. It even helps me get a little more creative with flavor combos. Walk around your produce section to come up with your own list, or add to mine. Think about your leftovers – grilled steak, chicken, pork, grilled fish, slice those up and make a sandwich the next day.
Having a chart can help remind kids of options they may not otherwise think up. Let them add their favorites to the list. At the beginning of each week make sure to choose a few sandwiches for the week and make sure you have the ingredients for those. I use lists for everything at home and work, so it only made sense to come up with a list for lunches! (Another idea is to also keep a list of items kids can chose from for sides and snacks to complete their lunch).
| Bread | Meat | cheese | Veggies | Spreads/Toppings |
| Whole Wheat Cibatta Rolls Rye Pumpernickel Artisan French Sourdough Pita Naan Lavash Tortillas |
Turkey Ham Bacon Salami Chicken Steak pastrami |
cheddar havarti swiss smoked cheddar gouda smoked gouda goat cheese brie blue cheese feta mozzarella |
peppercinis jalepenos bell peppers cucumbers olives arugula endive lettuce sprouts tomato onion coleslaw broccoli slaw avocado chilies pickles |
Pesto Mayo Sun-dried tomato spread Goat cheese spread olive tapenade stone ground mustard red wine vinegar balsamic vinegar olive oil parmesan cheese fresh or dried herbs OTHER: |
My daughter’s favorite is peanut butter, marshmallow cream, and strawberry on whole wheat bread.
As for the spreads here are a few really easy and great tasting spreads for your sandwiches:
Pesto Mayo
½ cup mayonnaise
¼ cup prepared or homemade pesto
Mix ingredients together in a bowl.
Jalapeno Aioli
1 whole jalapeno, stem cut off
½ cup mayo
¼ cup sour cream
½ bunch cilantro
salt and pepper
Place jalapenos in a food processor or blender until coarsely chopped. Add the rest of the ingredients and process until all combined.
Sun-dried Tomato Spread
½ cup mayonnaise
¼ cup goat cheese (goat cheese can be substituted with cream cheese or another soft cheese)
¼ cup Sun-dried tomatoes
Place ingredients in a food processor (or blender) and process until smooth.
Goat Cheese Spread
½ cup soft goat cheese (Chevre)
3 mint leaves
¼ c parsley
½ lemon jucied
1/8 tsp honey
In a food processor (or blender) mix all ingredients together until the mixture is smooth.
August 18, 2010
Such an amazing, exciting thing has happened! I can now call myself a published food writer! So I have one article under my belt – but there are more to come! The Nevada Appeal has brought me on as one of the food section contributors. As simple as it may sound to some, this is truly an exciting new opportunity for me and means so much more to me. This could be the boost I needed to really get myself out there and into the world of food which so consumes me! Anyone who knows me, know’s how passionate I am (and maybe a little crazy) about food, making food, learning about food, and feeding people food! So I am very thankful for this opportunity. I am especially thankful Charlie Abowd and Linda Murrone for presenting the opportunity and making it happen! GREATLY appreciated!
Here is a link to what the article looks like in print!
August 15, 2010
August 9, 2010
In the spirit of eating what’s in season and eating local…meet this muffin. Blackberries are in season right now, and the ones I got from the farmers market were so juicy and sweet, they melt in your mouth. Since my good friend and I were making blackberry infused vodka, I decided the theme of the week would be blackberries. Except for the crumb topping (which is optional) these muffins don’t have any oil or butter, and are low on sugar. But they taste amazing! I used greek yogurt and apple sauce so there is a lot flavor and moisture which you would get from butter or oil.
CRUMB TOPPING
1/2 c. all-purpose flour
1/2 c. brown sugar
1/4 c. old fashioned oatmeal
1 t. cinnamon
1/2 stick butter
Mix together with your fingertips until crumbly. Set aside.
MUFFINS
2 c. all-purpose flour
1 T. baking powder
1/2 t. salt
2 large eggs
1 c. Greek yogurt
2/3 c. sugar
1/2 c. of applesauce
2 t. vanilla
3/4 cup white peaches, peeled and diced
3/4 cup blackberries, large ones quartered
Preheat oven to 400 degrees F.
Whisk flour, baking powder, and salt together in a large bowl. Whisk eggs, yogurt, sugar, applesauce and vanilla together in a separate bowl.
Add the dry ingredients into the wet just enough to get all the dry ingredients moist. Just like pancakes don’t overmix! You still have fruit to fold in, that will help incorporate the batter the rest of the way.
Using a spatula fold in the fruit. I use a small ice cream scoop when making muffins, cupcakes, or cookies, which helps with consistency. Scoop batter into muffin cups.
Top with crumb topping.
Bake 17-20 minutes. Use a toothpick to check whether the muffins are done.
The photo above is a photo of a muffin in a parchment paper cup – a Martha Stewart method…kinda cool and a great idea when you run out of muffin/cupcake cups…which happens to me often. They work well too with the crumbly topping – it holds the topping in better – no mess!
I hope you enjoy these, they are so good and really considerably healthy. They would work with frozen fruit as well. Even mix it up and try with apples and cinnamon, or orange and cranberry. Any other combination you can think, be creative!
August 8, 2010
UPDATE: Success! The Blackberry Lavendar vodka turned out SO good. I added the blackberries and vanilla bean for two days, strained the vodka keeping the vanilla bean and adding fresh berries for another two days. Came out beautiful!
For those of you who follow, you’ll know a while back I tried making Mango Lavendar Vodka and it did not turn out! I’m certain it was the vodka quality so this time I am using Skyy Vodka, a good medium in the vodka world. (Recipe is at the bottom of this post)
A few things I’ve learned and read along my few trials in infusing vodka:
VODKA – while lots of sites will tell you that any vodka really will do – it won’t! If you cannot sip it because it smells of rubbing alcohol and burns when it goes down – DON’T USE IT! However, there is no need to choose a top shelf spendy vodka either. So choose something you like because if you start with nasty vodka, infusing flavors won’t fix that!
INGREDIENTS (I follow the same rules for ingredients as I would cooking or baking with the ingredients, such as which parts of the produce I use and how I prep it for best flavor)
FRUIT – start by cleaning your fruit. If you have berries, crush them a little in your hands. If you’re using citrus use the skin and fruit (you use the peel in cooking definitely want to use it to infuse, the peels contain most of the flavor). Any fruits like apples, plums, pears etc… peel the fruits then cut in small pieces. For chilies, slice into strips and keep the seeds if you want the heat. It would be my recommendation NOT to use frozen, dried, canned, jarred ingredients, use the freshest ingredients for the best flavor and infusion. These other items may be packed with preservatives and if sitting in liquid already may be filled with liquid and not very good for infusing good flavors. Frozen fruits may be used, but as a last resort, just not as good as fresh. Just like cooking/baking the better ingredients, the better the product!
HERBS – to get the most flavor just tear the herbs and rub them in your hands just a little to release the oils.
THE PROCESS – The more subtle flavors (vanilla , apples, pears, melon, cucumbers) may take a week or two to infuse well enough on their own. The stronger flavors (berries, peaches, plums, citrus) may only take a few days to infuse.
PREP – remove skins, rinds, seeds, and pits. Then dice the fruit into 1 inch pieces to expose lots of the flesh to help infuse the vodka. If you use berries crush them in your hands a little (strawberries can be cut).Keep the skins on any citrus fruits (or any veggies in which the skin harbors much of the flavor) and thinly slice the citrus fruits. Think of big chunks of fruit and vegetables rather than a fine dice or puree.
FILLING – Using a glass jar with an airtight lid, such as one of those jars with a spigot used for lemonade and tea. (I got these cool glass jars with an air tight lid and little chalkboard label on the jar at World Market – $4.99) Also, The Container Store is a cool website.) Place your ingredients in the jar. Now you don’t want the ingredients to fill the jar, I would start with a modest amount of ingredients. It doesn’t take equal amounts of fruit or veggies as vodka. Check out my photo below to give you a good idea. You can adjust this after you’ve tried it a few times. Now add the vodka I used 750ml bottle.
Cover the air tight jar and put it in a nice dark room temperature place (under the sink, in a pantry, in a hall closet, somewhere dark where sun will not get to it).
Each day taste test your vodka – ingredients all infuse at different rates. Once your infusion is complete, you will need to strain the vodka to get all the little pieces of fruit, herbs, veggies, etc. out of the vodka. Place a coffee filter in a strainer and pour the vodka through it into a bowl or container. Then you can add it to a pretty container or back into the vodka bottle…your choice!
Alright, I know that all sounds like lots of information, but it’s really easy and all about trial and error with some helpful ground rules! So here we go with the recipe for the Blackberry Lavendar (Shawnee decided this flavor and I’m hoping that it will come out – since the mango lavendar did not! Here we go….)
1 pint of blackberries
750ml Skyy Vodka
1/2 vanilla bean
1tsp lavender
We purchased FRESH blackberries from the farmer’s market this weekend to make this vodka. Let me tell you these berries were so good! They melted in your mouth – amazing! Great time for blackberries!
I washed 1 pint of berries then crushed them all a little between my fingers before adding them to the jar.
I cut one vanilla bean in half and sliced it down the middle then stirred it up with the blackberries. Then I added the vodka placed the lid on the jar and placed it in my pantry.
UPDATE: I will added the lavender after the berries were all moved, and only left it in two days. Lavender can be strong and I don’t want that to over power the vodka and come off perfume like. The vanilla really shines in this vodka, it compliments blackberry so well.
(See also my vanilla extract recipe – that is pretty much infusing vodka too)
I will keep you all posted this week on the progress of our Vodka!


