I left the blogging world behind for a time. There were other things going on in my life. Things that needed to get sorted out. Priorities decided upon. One of those priorities, a major one, is writing. While I have exchanged my CNA position at the VA hospital for a new one there as a cardiac telemetry technician (an improvement in nearly all ways), I plan on eventually making my living as a writer. That means it is high time to jump back into the blogging multiverse. I'm hatching plans (shhh - it's all very hush-hush - if I tell you more I'll have to kill you, and all that...) while working on an outline for a cookbook and an urban fantasy/horror novel. I know that's an odd pair of projects, and I suspect that food will seep into that novel. Other potential projects include gathering my poetry into book form, and a book about martial arts/culture. Did I mention I'll be helping my wife put her words onto (digital) paper, too? Oi. It's going to be busy, but fun.
This blog has stood dormant for some time. I'll be dusting things off, re-organizing, and fleshing it out. I've already added some links, off to the right, and eliminated a couple I knew were no longer working. The picture on the header is of an Uzbek pomegranate-and-onion salad I made a while back. Quite tasty, that. My wife and I have plans to enter the Pillsbury Bake-Off Contest and the Sutter Home Build a Better Burger Contest this summer. We've got a couple ideas for burgers, already, and need to start testing them in the next couple of weeks, but we have to wait for the 4th of July to find out what the lists of mandatory ingredients are for the Bake-Off, before we can make firm plans there. In the meantime, we are going to attend our first Portland Preservation Society meeting next week. Other things in the works will be reviews of some recent cookbook acquisitions and profiles of some of the international food shopping options in our area. I hope to see you here.
Steven's Kitchen
Delicious. Affordable. Easy. Global.
Monday, June 24, 2013
The Portland Preservation Society...
The Oregonian, the greater Portland area newspaper, recently published an article, "Fare Trade: Portland Preservation Society gathers once a month to swap prize preserves", about the Portland Preservation Society, which was celebrating it's first anniversary recently. Founded by Brooke Weeber and some friends, the group members meet monthly to swap jars of homemade preserved goods of all shapes, sizes and varieties. It's free to go - people bring up to five jars of whatever they put up, to trade - and looks like great fun to my wife and I. The next meeting is at 7PM, July 3, at Union/Pine, 525 S.E. Pine St. We have lots of ideas for what we want to take to the meetings, in months to come. Hopefully, we'll get a good crop of quinces from our tree this year. I'd like to make another batch of paradise jelly, as well as some other Middle Eastern preserves I've got recipes for. I'm thinking we'll cook up a pot of Peach Chutney with Dried Cherries and Rosewater for next week. Recipe and pictures will appear later in the week, with news (and pics, hopefully) about the meeting next week.
Thursday, October 4, 2012
Back in the Saddle Again.
For some time, my wife and I have been busy with quite a few other issues, and we really weren't writing all that much, while our cooking had become pretty much a bare bones affair. Things have gotten better, and I find myself returning to both kitchen and computer with renewed vigor. Enough that I am researching a cookbook idea and the process of developing a book proposal. The next couple of years should be pretty interesting and busy around my home...more, much more, to follow!
Chocolate Adventure Contest 2012!
It is upon us again. Time for Scharffen Berger's annual Chocolate Adventure Contest! Last year it was cupcakes. I entered three recipes, but didn't win. Pretty sure I didn't go far enough outside the box, though my co-workers at the hospital certainly enjoyed my efforts. This year's theme is sandwich cookies, so I am again consulting with my wife, Gina, in an effort to come up with the best ideas we can. Time will tell.
Saturday, January 28, 2012
Chili Powder...
I'm making fajitas and frijoles borrachos tomorrow. I decided to make myself a batch of homemade chili powder instead of buying a commercial brand. I went the easy route with ground spices. I did put the oregano in a grinder, since I was only able to buy the whole dried leaves. This makes a large batch. It can easily be cut by half, or even to a fourth of the recipe, if you don't use a lot of chili powder. A hot chile such as Cayenne can be added to the mix if you want the heat. I prefer to leave the heat out of most of my spice blends and add it as desired to whatever I am cooking. Heat can be added easily - it's much more difficult to remove it.
Steven's Chili Powder
8 tablespoons Pasilla or Ancho chile powder
4 tablespoons New Mexico chile powder
4 tablespoons garlic powder
4 tablespoons ground cumin
2 tablespoons ground Mexican oregano
Steven's Chili Powder
8 tablespoons Pasilla or Ancho chile powder
4 tablespoons New Mexico chile powder
4 tablespoons garlic powder
4 tablespoons ground cumin
2 tablespoons ground Mexican oregano
- Mix all the spices together thoroughly in a bowl.
- Store in an airtight container, in a cool, dry place.
- If the New Mexico chile powder is unavailable, California chile powder or paprika can be substituted. Similarly, conventional oregano (Italian/Greek) can be substituted, though the flavor will be different.
- Makes almost two cups of chili powder.
Saturday, January 14, 2012
A New Year...
2011 was...challenging. Lots of ill health, melodrama (family, friends, and work alike) and not a lot of time or inclination for blogging. Its done and gone now, though. Can I get an 'Amen'?!
Time to start putting fingers to keyboard again. I've seen my cooking really evolving, simplifying, these last couple of years. We were watching something on the Food Network (what else?) when one of the chefs said something about how a lot of new chefs would come up with these zillion-ingredient, ultra-complicated recipes...because they could, more or less. That burned. Not that I'm a chef, but I feel I am a pretty good home cook, and...I was guilty. Some recipes require quite a few ingredients, especially SE Asian, Indian, and Middle Eastern/North African/Central Asian food, where lengthy ingredient lists can be pretty common. So I have begun simplifying my cooking. In all honesty, its improved my cooking quite a bit.
Our son has been down in SoCal keeping my mother company through the holidays, which are tough on her since the loss of my father. That usually just leaves my wife and I for meals. With all the stressors weave been experiencing we haven't done very much full scale cooking. Tonight, though, was another story. I had been thinking of making some Arroz con Pollo, the good old fashioned chicken and rice, and looked at a couple of recipes (one Mexican, one California Rancho). I kinda' tinkered at first, then ended up making bigger changes. I'm calling the final product Arroz con Pollo y Verduras. Or Rice with Chicken and Vegetables. Nowhere will you find canned green chiles and Monterey jack cheese. Instead, I made a coating for the chicken of extra-virgin olive oil, garlic, salt, herbs and spices. Dumped the marinated chicken into a hot skillet and let it develop a wonderful crusty, caramelized surface. Next came lots of vegetables - chunks of onion, bell pepper, carrot, celery and cauliflower. Sear those, toss 'em in the big pot with the chicken. Deglaze the skillet with some white wine. Dump that in along with some basmati rice, chicken stock, a few tomatoes and their juices, a couple of fresh bay leaves. Let it all cook until the juices have been absorbed. OMG good! Better than I had hoped for. The secret, I believe was a little chile heat and the bit of malt vinegar I added to the reducing wine. The dish had the faintest tang from the vinegar and a slow, mellow heat that built up. I made a ton for the two of us, so I am happy when I think that we have a ziploc bag-full in both fridge and freezer...
Time to start putting fingers to keyboard again. I've seen my cooking really evolving, simplifying, these last couple of years. We were watching something on the Food Network (what else?) when one of the chefs said something about how a lot of new chefs would come up with these zillion-ingredient, ultra-complicated recipes...because they could, more or less. That burned. Not that I'm a chef, but I feel I am a pretty good home cook, and...I was guilty. Some recipes require quite a few ingredients, especially SE Asian, Indian, and Middle Eastern/North African/Central Asian food, where lengthy ingredient lists can be pretty common. So I have begun simplifying my cooking. In all honesty, its improved my cooking quite a bit.
Our son has been down in SoCal keeping my mother company through the holidays, which are tough on her since the loss of my father. That usually just leaves my wife and I for meals. With all the stressors weave been experiencing we haven't done very much full scale cooking. Tonight, though, was another story. I had been thinking of making some Arroz con Pollo, the good old fashioned chicken and rice, and looked at a couple of recipes (one Mexican, one California Rancho). I kinda' tinkered at first, then ended up making bigger changes. I'm calling the final product Arroz con Pollo y Verduras. Or Rice with Chicken and Vegetables. Nowhere will you find canned green chiles and Monterey jack cheese. Instead, I made a coating for the chicken of extra-virgin olive oil, garlic, salt, herbs and spices. Dumped the marinated chicken into a hot skillet and let it develop a wonderful crusty, caramelized surface. Next came lots of vegetables - chunks of onion, bell pepper, carrot, celery and cauliflower. Sear those, toss 'em in the big pot with the chicken. Deglaze the skillet with some white wine. Dump that in along with some basmati rice, chicken stock, a few tomatoes and their juices, a couple of fresh bay leaves. Let it all cook until the juices have been absorbed. OMG good! Better than I had hoped for. The secret, I believe was a little chile heat and the bit of malt vinegar I added to the reducing wine. The dish had the faintest tang from the vinegar and a slow, mellow heat that built up. I made a ton for the two of us, so I am happy when I think that we have a ziploc bag-full in both fridge and freezer...
Monday, February 21, 2011
I've Been Quite Remiss...
...in posting on any of my blogs. We were quite busy these last few months, though. Since I last wrote on here my father passed away; our son went south to spend some time with my mother, so she wouldn't be alone for the holidays (including what would have been my parents' 49th anniversary in mid-December); we moved from Woodland, Washington (YES! AT LAST!) to Beaverton, Oregon; my wife and I have wrestled with several injuries and illnesses; I moved from the ICU at the Portland VA Hospital up to the Surgical Ward; and a partridge in a pear tree...
Things are finally sorting themselves out. The move was very costly, but has put us in a better position: its a much better house, but costs less per month, and shortened my commute from about 70 miles roundtrip to about 24 miles (or 13 if I carpool with a friend in her car). Additionally, my VA Disability payments increased and my health care is now completely covered. We're closer to friends, and the things we like here in the Portland area. We love the house and the property (its on about two-third's of an acre, with mature fruit trees, shade trees and conifers, as well as some (overgrown) woodland landscaping. The lilacs and rhododendrons should be pretty this year. The shift at work has reduced the wear-and-tear on my back, while making me more active, so I have lost close to 20 pounds in about 3 months.
I did find time to enter the 2010 Chocolate Adventure Contest with three separate entries, so I am eagerly (and impatiently) awaiting word on the winners, which is coming soon (I think...lol). We've been cooking, and exploring local food haunts. I enjoy writing, and have realized the lifestyle I'd like to have has that as an important facet, so will be much more active on my blogs from here on out.
Things are finally sorting themselves out. The move was very costly, but has put us in a better position: its a much better house, but costs less per month, and shortened my commute from about 70 miles roundtrip to about 24 miles (or 13 if I carpool with a friend in her car). Additionally, my VA Disability payments increased and my health care is now completely covered. We're closer to friends, and the things we like here in the Portland area. We love the house and the property (its on about two-third's of an acre, with mature fruit trees, shade trees and conifers, as well as some (overgrown) woodland landscaping. The lilacs and rhododendrons should be pretty this year. The shift at work has reduced the wear-and-tear on my back, while making me more active, so I have lost close to 20 pounds in about 3 months.
I did find time to enter the 2010 Chocolate Adventure Contest with three separate entries, so I am eagerly (and impatiently) awaiting word on the winners, which is coming soon (I think...lol). We've been cooking, and exploring local food haunts. I enjoy writing, and have realized the lifestyle I'd like to have has that as an important facet, so will be much more active on my blogs from here on out.
Thursday, November 25, 2010
The Rest of the Previous Post...
For some reason, my comments were deleted when I posted the link for the Chocolate Adventure Contest. I entered a couple of years ago in a last minute, spur-of-the-moment decision that unleased a weekend of insanity on my home. Actually had some contact with one of the judges afterwards, who indicated I'd narrowly missed out on placing with the semi-finalists. I was pretty pleased, all things considered. It was my first contest. Had good intentions last year, but let time get away from me. This year, with the cupcake theme, I've been consulting with my wife, Gina. She's more of a baker than I am. I've got three working recipes. Just have to get ingredients together and start baking. I'm going to be tormenting my coworkers with a lot of cupcakes in December, I suspect. Contests are fun, and what do most people have to lose. Might get lucky and win some prizes...
Blackberry Lemonade...
...is really tasty! Ran across a recipe for it a couple of days ago. We had a jar of fresh squeezed lemon juice (from a SoCal friend's lemon tree...she shipped us a box earlier this year) in the freezer and some blackberries, and I just had to make some. Thoroughly muddled blackberries, water, lemon juice and simple syrup, mint optional. Yummm...
Wednesday, November 24, 2010
I Realized the Other Day...
...while viewing the changes a friend had just made in her blog's layout that this blog didn't really feel like it fit me that well anymore. I wanted to use it. Meant to. And yet I wasn't. So I've decided to change things. The whole "Sun Bear" thing just doesn't work for me. It'll just be my kitchen from now on. I love to eat and cook food from all over the world. I'll be wandering far-and-wide here, I hope, looking into food that interests me. Feel free to come along, to drop by and break bread with me. We'll explore foods both familiar and new. Food is something that we can all share with one another. Food defies man's foolish boundaries...
Sunday, September 26, 2010
Who Would Have Thought...
...a well-browned two-egg omelet with onions, pickled banana peppers, some hot sauce, and garlic-and-chive hummus all rolled up in a flour tortilla would make such a tasty sandwich?
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)