Monday, with more energy than usual.

The first day of the week is always the day that I decide to start something that I've been putting off. I love to walk, but got somewhat out of the habit for the past couple of weeks due to rain and potty training. So this Monday morning, I decided that I have to be a walker once again. I must admit that it in some ways was due to the 5 pounds I realized I gained when I decided to weigh myself while visiting my parents for the weekend. They had a scale in the downstairs bathroom, and it was somehow able to call my name. (The only scale I have here in my home is inaccurate and buried in the back of the hall closet - where it will stay secured indefinitely.)

Normally, I'm not too hung up on weight...but I thought some of my clothes seemed a little snug. After that blasted scale called me out, I spent the rest of the day counting how many non-essential morsels I ate while happily helping my Mother in her kitchen. She made two different kinds of bars...what was I supposed to do? I chose to eat what I pleased (and it was worth it) and then decided bright and early on Monday morning, things were going to change.

SO, today after breakfast, boy and I took a walk to the "big park" which entitles me to at least 4 miles of calorie burning bliss. I obsessively wear a pedometer and am proud to report that it was 4.65 miles on today's route. We were back home by 11, and he actually was in bed for a much needed nap by noon. I took advantage of such a windfall by scrubbing the bathroom, washing my neglected kitchen floor and starting the laundry.

It was 2 o'clock and the kid was still asleep, so after a quick call to my Mom to see if I could use outdated Sure-Jell, I decided to make some freezer jam with the organic strawberries I got from the Amish during my visit home. I wasn't sure I could complete my task before the boy awoke, but don't you know that it takes absolutely no time and not much effort to make freezer jam? I swear that no one in America would dare dream of using overly processed, artificially sweetened (or by contrast needlessly expensive organic) preserves if he/she could manage the simplistic directions inside the Sure-Jell box. I figure my 6+ jar endeavor cost me about 6 bucks, and is infinitely more rewarding than purchasing.




The mismatched beauties resting nicely for 24 hours before freezing.





Excess strawberries, mixed with sugar and added to plain yogurt for consumption tomorrow.

I was also excited that my husband was making his own supper, so I could have whatever my heart desired...I chose quiche from Mollie Katzen's pretty simplistic method in The Enchanted Broccoli Forrest. I used farmer's cheese, goat cheese, zucchini, onion and mushroom. I haven't made a pie dinner for quite a while, and I really enjoyed it. I like it even more that I know all of the leftovers are mine. Fortunately I come from the stock that wastes nothing and eats until it's gone...seldom do I tire of eating the same thing day after day - unless that cooking bug really hits me hard, and that usually happens more in the indoor-bound winters.


I used the time the quiche was baking to wash up and considered the fact that I have no idea where I got my pressure cooking pot that I use for fudge, cooking pasta, (pressure cooking, of course...the one day a year I get a taste for the beer/yogurt chicken cooked under pressure - but that's another story), and generally everything else that doesn't fit into the sometimes too large All-Clad stockpot which is on the kitchen workhorse list.




I love the Magic Seal label.


The bottom of the pot. Mysterious numbers in a pleasing typeset.


All in all, not too bad for a Monday. I love that walking gives me energy and appetite, and now that I can proudly say my son is potty trained, I can stay on schedule once again. Soon my clothes will fit, and all will be right as rain.

Inspiration from inspirations...


While reading sfgirlbybay's blog a few days ago, I was inspired by her inspiration boards - and others that she posted from flickr. I love her site; I'm always struck by how her photos are so gentle and serene. Check her out at: http://sfgirlbybay.com/
For some time, I have had a similar changing "board" in my kitchen where I spend the bulk of my time. I thought today was as good a day as any to revamp a little, and maybe copy a little of the serene-ness of sfgirlbybay.





My favorite timer. I love that it is so loud when it ticks that when I'm baking early in the morning, I have to hide it in the cupboard.



After a few minutes of this photographing, I got a little carried away and photographed my lunch...grilled swiss cheese, piquant peppers, peas and pickled green beans from Laura.



I hope everyone else is as inspired as I am by sfgirlbybay...and thanks again to HGTV's Small Space Big Style which led me to discover her by accident.

A Cake a day is all it takes to be happy...(or in which Dorie Greenspan officially makes the Obsession list)

My best friend has a birthday tomorrow, so let's make CAKE! (Sasa, if you're reading, stop now so it will be a surprise.) I've said it before and I'll say it again that Dorie Greenspan really can do no wrong. She makes as mean a pancake as the real deal: This is the Devil's Food Whiteout Cake from her Baking book I made today.

The batter, too beautiful not to photograph.


The beater, before I unabashedly ate all the remaining batter clinging to it, washed it, and lovingly put it away. I eat batter, that way I know the cake is great. No, I am not afraid of raw eggs; see the egg post for details. And, this was one of the best batters I ever ate.


Dorie said the top may crack and the middle may dome, but this was the most perfect bake job I ever did, and on the first try!

The finished cake...I'll have to make one for myself, perhaps for Father's Day.

I know it was a novel idea for Julie Powell to attack and conquer Julia Child's Mastering the Art of French Cooking, and in no way do I belittle her, but I do believe that I may have to make every single recipe in Dorie's book. The only problem is that small detail of health. I must say that I'd rather have a little butter than fake, salty and processed alternatives, but I don't know if my physique such as it is could handle a steady diet of sweets. I'll have to be content to find occasions to bake these miraculous recipes.

Stay tuned, next up will be her Armagnac cake - the one she was fired for, but deemed that it was totally worth it.



Meanwhile, the cake cooled and boy and I walked to the little pond near our house to observe tadpoles, throw rocks and collect these thistles to put on the counter. I doubt anyone else who may have been observing me would have felt the pangs of guilt for collecting wild flowering things, but they were so pretty and plentiful that I couldn't resist.


It really is the smallest things that make my days truly great, just spending the bulk of the day seeing the world again through 2 year old eyes is unspeakably wonderful. And days I get to bake cakes are truly my icing, fantastic edible art that makes others (hopefully) as happy as well.

Happiest of Birthdays and many more to come!!!

Everything looks better through a glass cake dome...

Case in Point: this very non-assuming Morning Cake that I made last week is one of my favorite obsessions, but alas, does not look overly interesting until posing beneath a glass cake dome.

My son enjoys Maurice Sendak's In the Night Kitchen, which is fast becoming one of my favorite books of all time. If I ever get to open my dream bake shop, I do believe I will frame most of the pages for the walls. We both greatly enjoy chanting:

Milk in the batter

Milk in the batter

We bake cake and

Nothing's

the matter!

Which is what led to us making this Morning Cake (actually named Lydia's Winter Fruit Cake) from Marcella Hazan. I love a morning when you can have cake with the coffee, and I love even more when I get to bake this the day I want to eat it. Usually I have to freeze 2/3 or more to pull out when company arrives, and it does very well coming straight out of its frozen slumber and hopping into the toaster. Very rarely do I put butter on anything, I save butter for restaurants with good bread, but this I deem as worthy in my own house. I feel I deserve it, since there are 3 whole pieces of fruit in it...and no fat but a couple T's of olive oil - how I LOVE the Italians...

I took a Wilton Cake Decorating class this last month (my last class was Monday), and should have prepared myself for the hydrogenated shortening horror that I should have assumed would be a major part of such an endeavor, but somehow overlooked it while envisioning myself making flowers and borders.

Of course my food snobbery prevailed, and I made all my

frostings with Spectrum's Organic Shortening. I figured if it was good enough for my tamales last Christmas, it would be doing wonders for this. I was right in the taste department anyway, there was no greasy feeling on the roof of your mouth when you ate this, it just is crazy sweet. This was my best attempt at the rose with my Organic non-hydrogenated palm shortening, and as you can see, I have some work to do.

My most favorite thing about this cake is beneath the surface however, because I tried another of Dorie Greenspan's recipes for White Cake (Actually called Perfect Party Cake, and rightly so, in her Baking book). I usually am not a fan of White Cakes, truth be told, I avoid them at all costs. But this one was worth every one of the 8 T's of butter; it was firm, lemony and cut into perfect slices, and had I used her frosting instead of the Wilton Class Frosting (consisting of a fair amount of that shortening...) I'm sure I would have eaten the whole thing by now.

It too looks better beneath the glass... you can hardly tell that I was so frustrated in piping this frosting that I had to stand up and take a deep breath before continuing.

Today was my first day of guerrilla potty training for my almost 3 already son. I am personally

embarrassed that he freaks out and usually cries anytime I mention trying to get out of diapers. I felt most of the day like I have a new puppy...but after 3 stars on the potty chart hanging on the refrigerator and maybe 25 mini M&M's I think he is starting to get the picture.

Still, today I managed to make this awesome bread, my first success with Artisan Bread in Five Minutes a Day's approach to loaf pan breads. This was their Oatmeal Bread which also had oat and wheat bran, whole wheat and white flour. It was so nice and soft that I kept poking my fingers into the top every time I walked past it while it was cooling. If you are interested in making bread the easy way (no offense, Nancy Silverton...), this is the best book to show you how. And it has the best immediate satisfaction. I was obsessed with this last December, and I still am getting excited about it.

Finally, since we were sticking close to home due to the guerrilla training, we spent a fair amount of time in the basement, where boy-o has his trains set up, and I have all of the wool, yarn, sewing, paper, beads, giftwrap, mat board and workshop stuff that wouldn' t fit in my kitchen. Note to self: Someday I want my kitchen to just be one big workshop, i,e. Pole Shed (with style, of course).

I ordered Stitch n'Bitch: The Knitter's Handbook from Amazon last week for a class I plan to take at a yarn shop soon (and because I'm rather tired of renting knitting books from the library and then having to remember to return them on time). There was a pattern for a knitting needle case that I made today out of some fabric samples from the upholstery shop my uncle runs in Northern Wisconsin, and some of the fabric I had lying around. I was so happy with how it turned out, now I just need more needles to fill it.

But my inherited aluminums look great for now.