Monday, March 17, 2014

March 16, 2014 Breakfast – ham and cheese and miatake mushroom omelet Dinner- at Cynthia and Ricardo’s house. Roasted Chicken and vegetables and sautéed kale and Glögg poached pears

March 16, 2014 Breakfast – ham and cheese and miatake mushroom omelet    Dinner- at Cynthia and Ricardo’s house.  Roasted Chicken and vegetables and sautéed kale and Glögg poached pears

We slept late and when we got up Suzette said she wanted a ham and cheese and mushroom omelet for breakfast, so I cut up about ½ lb. of the PPI smoked ham, chopped about 3 oz. red onion and 2 oz. of red bell pepper and cleaned the 2 or 3 oz. of miatake mushrooms I had bought at TaLin about two weeks ago (about $3.00 for 4 oz.).  The Miatakes are beautiful delicate trumpet shaped mushrooms.

Suzette began sautéing the bell pepper and onion and then added the ham and mushrooms and then grated gruyere cheese.  I diced up an avocado to garnish the omelet and we were ready to eat.  After breakfast we worked in the yard and covered one of the raised beds to allow the earth the heat so we can plant seeds.  

Two of the beds are already sprouting with volunteer lettuce and wintered over onions, celery and lovage.
Cynthia and Ricardo rode over yesterday and we discussed getting together tonight for dinner.  When I asked what we could bring, Cynthia said wine and a dessert.  She was going to cook chicken.

At breakfast I asked Suzette if she thought the Wellington Chardonnay would be okay with the chicken dinner because I like a chardonnay with chicken if it is not too oaky and she agreed and said, “Yes”.

I went to the basement and put the Chardonnay into the fridge and looked for cheap brandy and a sweet wine for the poached pears and found a Camino Real Late harvest Merlot that seemed to fit the ticket and an old bottle of California brandy.  I then peeled and sliced the six bosc pears I had bought at pro’s Ranch Market last week ($.69/lb.) and put them in a large sauce pan and added about equal parts of the brandy, ruby port and the Camino Real Merlot and about ¼ cup sugar and four cardamom pods and I stick of cinnamon and about 12 cloves and the peel of one orange and simmer the pears for about thirty minutes until they changed from white to a dull brownish purple.

I then turned off the heat and let the pot sit on the stove to coalesce the flavors.  Suzette returned with two dozen heads of cauliflower that needed to be cleaned and have their flowerets de-stemmed.  I cleaned about one dozen of the cauliflowers for about an hour and then rode to Rio Bravo, while Suzette finished the cleaning job.

Then I showered and we got our stuff together and went over to Cynthia and Ricardo’s house.  When we arrived they had set their kitchen table with a lovely assortment of appetizers; hummus, crackers, a 1 lb. block of cream cheese with a peach and chili jam, green olive and a large plate of canapés made with slices of pumpkin sage bread from Bosque Bakery, with a dab of cream cheese and a slice of smoked salmon and another dab of cream cheese and a garnish of sliced green onions and a few capers (beautiful and delicious).  

Ricardo opened a bottle of La Garnja Cava from Spain that I had never had before and suspect was bought at Trader Joe’s (they did not know where it came from and said it was brought as a gift).

After we finished the cava, we decided it was time to eat dinner.  Cynthia took a roasting pan full of roasted chicken thighs out of the oven and put it on the table with another large baking dish full of roasted carrots, potatoes, onions and yellow squash and then put a smaller pyrex baking dish with sautéed curly kale and onions and tossed a salad with salad dressing and I opened and poured the chardonnay and we were ready to eat.  We passed the bowls around family style and took a bit of each dish.
 
I loved the chardonnay with dinner.  It reminded me of a good French Burgundy, light flavorful without much vanilla malolactic fermentation or oakiness.  Ricardo put it nicely when he said, “This wine has good minerality.”   I think of minerality as being a goodly amount of tannins with which I agree.  The Wellington made a pleasant tasting chardonnay.  Again Wellington surprised with its strong wine making skills.           

For dessert I heated the poached pears and served them over scoops of Blue Bell Vanilla Bean Ice Cream.   It was a bit of Swedish Christmas cheer with a bowl of ice cream and poached pears.

Ricardo retired shortly after dinner at around 8:30 p.m. so he could get a night’s sleep before having to get up and get to the Rail Runner station for a 6:15 a.m. ride to Santa Fe for his new job as a set designer for the “Manhattan” T.V. series set in Los Alamos, so we said goodnight and departed for an early night’s rest also.

I awakened at around 1:30 and watched “Ides of March” by George Clooney with Bryan Gosling, which was an interesting view of politics as we now experience it.    


Bon Appétit

Saturday, March 15, 2014

March 14, 2014 New Recipe - Mac and Cheese and steamed asparagus

I took Robert Mueller to lunch today at Azuma and we had the usual Chirachi Donbori to celebrate the closing of a sale of a property I have an interest in. 

Tonight Suzette made the best Mac and Cheese I have ever tasted.  

While I was detained in a meeting out of the house until approximately 6:00 p.m., Suzette used several PPI ingredients to make a delicious version of Mac and Cheese.  She chopped up about 1 lb. of PPI blueberry glazed smoked ham (Costco) and sautéed the ham with ½ chopped red onion, while she boiled about ½ pound of cassarecca pasta . 

Then she made a Béchamel sauce and added grated French Gruyere, Irish Cheddar and Italian Romano Pecorino cheese (Costco) to the Béchamel sauce to make a Mornay Sauce. 
She then combined the Mornay Sauce and the sautéed ham and the boiled pasta in a large soufflé dish and topped it with more grated cheese and baked it in the oven for about 45 minutes or until the top of the cheese melted and browned a bit and began to bubble.

When I arrived home she steamed a handful of asparagus and I fetched a bottle of 2012 Chateau St. Michelle Washington State Pinot Gris and we fired up the fireplace and had a wonderful meal by the fireplace as a cold rain fell outside.

We enjoyed the slightly sweet pinot Gris with the saltiness of the ham and the creamy cheesiness of the Mac and Cheese.

I ate a piece of the fallen cloud cake for dessert with a scoop of lemon curd after dinner and decided to throw the rest away, because it is unpleasantly laden with a cornstarch and egg yolk flavor.


Bon Appétit  

Thursday, March 13, 2014

March 13, 2014 Penne Pasta with sautéed Salmon, Kale, tomato and sweet potato and asparagus

March 13, 2014 Penne Pasta with sautéed Salmon, Kale, tomato and sweet potato and asparagus

I had bought a slightly over one pound filet of fresh farm raised salmon at Albertson’s on Tuesday ($5.99/lb.).

Tonight I mentioned fish tacos and Suzette said great, but later I suggested pasta and salmon and Suzette liked that idea better.   So she started boiling water and boiling penne pasta.

I chopped up three scallions with a stalk of garlic and its greens and about two oz. of red onion.  Then I chopped up a large tomato and ½ of a PPI baked sweet potato, which we like with salmon and then I washed and dried the salmon filet.  The salmon filet looked too large for us for one meal and we decided to cut it in half and use one-half tonight for the pasta dish and keep the other half for fish tacos tomorrow night.

I then chopped the asparagus and put it with the sweet potato and salmon chunks.

Suzette said she wanted to add fresh kale to the dish, so she went to the garden and plucked about ten leaves of kale and de-stemmed it and chopped it up.

Suzette said she needed some wine to make the dish so I fetched a bottle of Dry Creek Russian River 2012 Sauvignon Blanc from the basement.

Then Suzette started heating the large skillet and added butter and olive oil and first sautéed the onions and garlic.  Then she added the tomato chunks and sautéed those a bit.  Finally she added the kale, salmon, sweet potato and asparagus and ¼ cup of wine and covered the skillet and let the ingredients steam and cook slowly.  After another ten minutes everything was integrated into one harmonious dish.





I trimmed and started the two artichokes I had bought at Pro’s Ranch Market today ($.99/lb.) boiling, while Suzette cooked the one dish dinner.

We enjoyed the sautéed pasta and salmon dish with the Dry Creek Sauvignon Blanc, which is one of my favorite California Sauvignon Blancs (Costco $10.99).  It is light and has a similar elegance as French Sancerre.

Spumoni with a dash of Limoncello after dinner made the Italian effect complete.


Bon Appétit                

March 12, 2014 Thai Vegan Restaurant

March 12, 2014 Thai Vegan Restaurant

I went to Thai Vegan with Rahim today for lunch.  I was amazed by the beautifully prepared and presented food.  The restaurant uses vegetable meat substitutes.  I ordered Pad Thai with chicken chunks that were sautéed to taste like sautéed meat, but were vegetarian.  I was amazed by how gluttonous the noodles were.  



I have never eaten such a gluttonous noodle dish. There was also a beautiful salad served with the Pad Thai and two small egg rolls and a dipping sauce.   When Rahim ordered a power salad with Peanut Sauce, I ordered peanut sauce as the dressing for my salad and found it to be wonderful.  I highly recommend Thai Vegan. 

You will love it even if you are a meat eater.    

The atmosphere of the restaurant was also lovely with Thai crafts and paintings. 


I was busy with a meeting and unable to cook dinner with Suzette but did bring in the pot of Cioppino and heated a bowl of it and ate a few bites before the meeting.

Suzette finished my bowl and ate another and then after my meeting I ate the last two bowls of soup with a piece of toasted bread and then some ice cream after dinner.


Bon Appétit 

Wednesday, March 12, 2014

March 11, 2014 Dinner – Grilled Rib Steak with baked potato and steamed broccoli

For all of you Netflixers, I saw a pretty good movie last night on cable, “The Painted Veil” with Edward Norton and Naomi Watts.  Actually it is the best performance by Naomi Watts, I have ever seen.  A Somerset Maugham novel directed by John Curran beautifully set in rural China of the late forties.

Last night Suzette was suffering from a cold, so we ate bowls of PPI Cioppino refreshed with chopped fresh kale and garlic greens from our garden.

Today, I did not leave the house except to go to the garden to pick fresh tarragon and garlic greens for my dijonaise dressing for my salad at lunch, until 5:30, when I decided to go to Albertson’s to buy Rib steaks for $5.97/lb.  I also bought asparagus for $.98/lb., a pound of fresh farm raised salmon for $5.99/lb., a 1 lb. carton of sour cream for $1.25 and Blue Bell ice Cream for $3.88/half gallon.   It is hard to see how they earn much profit off me.

Before I left home, I washed and pierced holes in three Idaho Russet potatoes and put them on a cookie sheet in a 400˚ oven for 1 hour.

When I returned Suzette was home and the timer on the oven showed 11 minutes.

I asked Suzette if steak and a baked potato would be okay and did she want broccoli or asparagus for the vegetable.   She said broccoli and started the grill, while I de-stemmed flowerlets from a stalk of broccoli ($.69/lb. at Pro’s Ranch Market).  We selected one of the thicker 1 inch thick steaks to grill.

I had PPI dijonaise dressing from lunch and ½ of a large slicing tomato (Sprouts $.99/lb.) and she said it would be nice to have sliced tomatoes.  So I sliced the large ½ tomato into about ten slices and laid them on a salad plate and drizzled them with the dijonaise dressing.

Then we sliced three white and three shitake mushrooms and sautéed them in butter and olive oil with 2 Tbsp. of garlic greens and three fresh sprigs of tarragon and doused them with Red Vermouth and viola, we were ready to plate up.  Suzette made crosshatched slits in the potatoes and squeezed the potatoes open and put a slice of butter into each.  I ran to the garden and picked five stalks of chives and came back and chopped them finely and put sour cream on the potatoes and some of the mushrooms and forgot to garnish with the chives, because we got into a hurry to eat.
  
Since it was sitting on our kitchen table we decided to drink the 2010 Le Colombier DomaineCuvee ‘G” that Doug and Crystal so graciously brought us on Sunday.
  
As it turned out this 50% Grenache 50% syrah wine from Appelation Controlée Vacqueyras in the Southern Rhone did not measure up to the other more interesting Southern Rhone reds we have drunk lately.  I guess we were spoiled by the Chateau Beaucastel at the Winter Wine Festival in Taos in January and even the Kermit Lynch Côtes de Rhône we drank at Joseph’s last week.  The wine tasted like the wine had suffered some oxidation and had a slightly bitter taste.  It definitely lacked that brightness that I suspect Mouvédre and Cinsaut grapes provide.

For those who are confused about the grape varieties used in Rhone wines, which includes me, here is a chart that explains all the different appellations and their main, alternative and supplemental grape varieties. Use of other grapes is prohibited by law.

Grape varieties[edit]
Different grape varieties are allowed in the different Rhône appellations; a few appellations are single variety appellations, while the regional Côtes du Rhône appellation allow 21 different varieties. In most cases, Northern Rhône appellations allow many fewer varieties than those of Southern Rhône. In many appellation regulations, a division is made into main grape varieties (indicated by "M"), supplementary varieties (indicated by "S"), and accessory varieties (indicated by "(A)").
Variety
Northern crus
Condrieu,[9] Château-Grillet[10]
Cornas[11]
Côte-Rôtie[12]
Hermitage,[13] Crozes-Hermitage[14]
Saint-Joseph[15]
Saint-Péray[16]
Red
White
Red
White
(A)
max 15%
M
0-100%
(A)
max 10%
M
0-100%
M
0-100%
(A)
max 15%
M
0-100%
(A)
max 10%
M
0-100%
M
0-100%
M
100%
M
min 80%
M
min 85%
M
min 90%
M
100%
(A)
max 20%

Variety
Regional appellations
Southern crus
Côtes du Rhône[17]
Côtes du Rhône Villages[18]
Beaumes de Venise[19]
Châteauneuf-du-Pape[20]
Gigondas[21]
Lirac[22]
Muscat de Beaumes de Venise[23]
Rasteau[24]
Tavel[25]
Vacqueyras[26]
Red and rosé
White
Red
Rosé
White
Red and rosé
White
Red
Rosé
White
(A)
M
(A)
M
(A)
M
(A)
M
(A)
M
(A)
(A)
M
Brun Argenté (locally called Camarèse or Vaccarèse)
(A)
(A)
(A)
(A)
M
(A)
(A)
(A)
(A)
(A)
(A)
(A)
(A)
(A)
(A)
(A)
(A)
(A)
(A)
(A)
(A)
(A)
(A)
(A)
M
(A)
M
(A)
M
(A)
M
(A)
M
(A)
M
(A)
M
(A)
M
(A)
M
(A)
(A)
M
(A)
(A)
(A)
M
(A)
(A)
M
(A)
(A)
(A)
(A)
(A)
(A)
M
(A)
(A)
(A)
(A)
(A)
M
(A)
M
(A)
M
(A)
M
M
M
(A)
(A)
M
(A)
(A)
(A)
M
(A)
M
M
(A)
(A)
M
M
M
M
M
M
M
M
M
M
M
(A)
M
(A)
M
(A)
(A)
(A)
(A)
(A)
(A)
(A)
M
(A)
(A)
S
S
S
(A)
M
S
M
(A)
M
S
M
(A)
(A)
(A)
(A)
M
(A)
(A)
(A)
(A)
M
M
M
(A)
(A)
(A)
(A)
(A)
M
(A)
(A)
(A)
(A)
M
M
M
(A)
(A)
(A)
(A)
M
(A)
(A)
M
(A)
(A)
(A)
M
(A)
M
(A)
M
(A)
(A)
(A)
(A)
(A)
(A)
M
S
S
S
S
M
S
M
(A)
M
S
M
(A)
(A)
(A)
(A)
M
(A)
(A)
(A)
(A)
(A)
(A)
(A)
(A)
(A)
(A)
(A)
(A)
(A)
(A)
M
(A)
M
(A)
(A)
(A)
(A)
(A)
(A)
(A)
M
 
 Try to read down the page because the columns are all in order but just stretched down the page.
Anyway, more is usually better in Southern Rhone.  For example, there are thirteen varieties mandated for Chateauneuf du Pape and Chateau Beaucastel uses all thirteen in its wine.

The fresh tarragon, kale and garlic greens we are picking in the garden are exciting indicators of the abundance of fresh ingredients to come and encourage us to plant lots of vegetables this summer.


Bon Appétit