Farmers Market Bounty

I spent two hours this morning standing at an information booth for our soon-to-be co-operative grocery store. Before I settled in to that job though I took a stroll through our lively and beautiful market.

I now have turnips, swiss chard, small potatoes, four bulbs of garlic, 2 butternut squash, and about an hour spent trolling the internet for recipes ideas.  Here’s what I came up with:

1. Huff Post article about butternut squash with an easy peel method!

{Naturally Ella}

2. Naturally Ella-butternut squash soup

3. Cookie + Kate-butternut tabbouleh

{NYT Cooking}

4. New York Times Cooking-swiss chard and potatoes au gratin (with gruyere cheese-ohh yes!) I love my NYT teacher subscription.

{well-plated by erin}

5. Well-plated by Erin-Slow cooker butternut squash pulled pork tacos-I’d change out the pulled pork to something else we would eat.

6. A classic family recipe from a Moosewood cookbook-black bean and sweet potato burritos that could be made with butternut squash instead. Just remembered how good they are!

Now that I’ve made myself really hungry I’m off to eat dinner at a friend’s. My recipe pull was heavy on squash but the swiss chard one is a keeper that I’m making tomorrow night for Sunday dinner. I don’t want the swiss chard to go all limp on me and the squash saves for a good long time.

Groovy Girl is turning into a kitchen staple. Last night, bored with my idea of leftovers, she took to a recipe site that takes your ingredient list and spits possible recipe choices back out. She found this recipe for chicken broccoli pasta and she made it all herself.  I avoided the chicken and thought the flavor of the recipe amazing.  Lemon-love lemons. Try Zakk’s Lemon Broccoli Pasta.

Enjoy!  This post is linked last minute to Beth Fish Reads Weekend Cooking post.

Summer Salsa Season

My mom brought me enough tomatoes to fill an entire kitchen counter.  My young nephew Jasper picked most of them for her and his count I think was 72 plump and vibrant red toms.  Last night I started the process of turning them into salsa.  They were so gorgeous though it was hard to not want to save them for mozzarella, basil salads or avocado, lettuce sandwiches; I compromised and saved 6.
The rest I plopped into boiling water then plunged into an ice bath before slipping the skins from the meat.

I used this great article from AllRecipes.com to remind me how to skin the tomatoes.

It was late last night and so the rest of the process will happen today.  Most of last week I had back-to-school classes that I had to attend because I’d switched districts. This week I have school everyday with meetings the first 3 days and students on Thursday.  I have MUCH to do but today I will spend most of it making the salsa that I love because the tomatoes don’t wait. And the fruit flies start to circulate.

Read more about my salsa-making adventures right here with cute photos of a younger short-haired Groovy Girl + the recipe!   Have a healthy week!

This post is linked to Beth Fish Reads weekly foodie meme, Weekend Cooking, and you should click there for many more interesting food related posts.  Cheers.

Weekend Cooking; Pesto and a canoe trip

I had an amazing day yesterday and wished I could have posted about it last night but I was too exhausted to type.  I got up early to mix up some bread dough for my family.  I’d made 10 loaves on Thursday and Friday for the market and my children are always a little unhappy as that bread bakes and they know it is not for them.  Now we  have two loaves for the week.

While I had the flour out I made a pan of Butterscotch Brownies-this is an old recipe that I love and you make it on the stove and then bake it-super easy. While the brownies were in the oven and the dough was rising I helped Groovy Girl get ready for her figure skating lesson at 9.  I dropped her at the arena and headed back home to make several batches of pesto for my freezer.  Don’t worry my husband picked her up after lessons were over!

My mom and I worked together, using the recipe from Everyday Italian by Giada DeLaurentis, and made five batches of pesto using fresh basil from her garden and the little I had left from my own.  The temperature is beginning to dip down at night and rather than have the basil freeze in the garden I want it to freeze in my Sub-Zero.

Here is Giada’s pesto recipe (72):


2 cups [packed] fresh basil leaves
1/4 cup toasted pine nuts
1 garlic clove
1/2 tsp sea salt, plus more to taste
1/4 tsp freshly ground black pepper, plus more to taste
About 2/3 cup extra-virgin olive oil
1/2 cup freshly grated Parmesan cheese


In a blender (I use the food processor), pulse the basil, nuts, garlic, salt and pepper until finely chopped.  With the blender still running, gradually add enough olive oil to form a smooth and thick consistency.  Transfer the pesto to a medium bowl and stir in the cheese.  Season the pesto with more salt and pepper, if it needs it.  The pesto can be made up to 2 days ahead.  Cover and refrigerate.

**If you are going to freeze your pesto for the long winter months as I did then skip the cheese step and don’t add as much olive oil.  Later when you grab it out of the freezer to use it you will add in the cheese and a little olive oil to your pasta.  Good Parmesan does not freeze well in the pesto.

Giada has a note following the recipe that shares her secret of using pasta water to help blend the pesto so it doesn’t glob up your pasta.  The trick is in saving a little of the pasta water back when draining your pasta.  I generally just take a large measuring cup and scoop out about a cup before I drain the pasta and before I add the pasta back to the pot I put the pesto in the pan to soften it up and then add small amounts of water as I mix the pasta into the pesto.  Viola; fabulous dinner!  My mom bought these handy little Tupperware freezer containers that stack perfectly.  Pine nuts are ridiculously expensive right now but we did  use pine nuts for these batches.  I have a spinach pesto I want to try from the same cookbook and I’m going to substitute walnuts for pine nuts, just to give it a try.

I am so happy to have this accomplished as I did not can pickles or make salsa this year.  When the snow starts to fly I will be ecstatic to pull out this freshly frozen treat, reminding me of the Spring to come.

Weekend Cooking is hosted by Candace at Beth Fish Reads.  Pop over and see what she and other’s are cooking up!
Now for the canoe trip:

The pesto making was the easy part of the day though as our afternoon was with a group of church friends paddling down a local river.  I expected to lazily float but the river was low and we ran into every snag and sandbar in the river.  We canoed for 4 hours and Teenage Boy made me paddle the whole way!  My shoulders are tired-truthfully every part of me is tired!  Once we landed at our destination I realized [hate it when the light bulb clicks on and it is BAD news] that I’d left the keys to the car parked by our landing in the vehicle parked where we’d put in the canoes!!   Uh No.  [I was just finishing up Anna and the French Kiss, can you blame me!?]

I whispered this new bit of information to Teenage Boy and he was ANNOYED.  Thankfully, everyone else, including my husband, was a bit more understanding.  Luckily we quickly rounded up someone to get us back to point B so we could get keys and canoe trailer.  The coolest part of the day was when a friend pointed out a young eagle in a tall, bare tree.  We floated right under it.  It was a glorious sight.

Have a peaceful week!