As if the 100 degree heat index wasn't signal enough, it's clear from the abundance at the farmers' market that summer has arrived in the Bend. My most recent CSA batch came with some new produce for the season--cucumbers, zucchini, carrots, green beans, and onions. The tomatoes have really taken off in our community garden, and I spied an almost fully grown zucchini today, along with a couple small peppers and yellow squash. (I promise I'll get a photo up! Unfortunately, my camera and computer have had a slight tiff and are refusing to speak to each other at the moment.) A friend's little brother even discovered some wild black raspberries growing nearby when he was visiting. I think I've managed to beat the birds to them, so far.
Last week a few of us went to the Blueberry Ranch, a local joint that advertises itself as the largest organic blueberry farm in the Midwest. We each picked a bucket or so, with most of them winding up in the freezer, if not muffins, cobbler, or pie. Nothing says delicious like having a stock of blueberries a few feet away!
Look forward to an upcoming post about replicating the Szechuan Green Beans and Honey Chicken at one of our best local restaurants, J. W. Chen's, known affectionately to those in my program as "Mrs. Chen's" or "Madame Chen's." (I wonder why no one has suggested Frau Chen's, yet?) In the meantime, here are a few of my favorite recipes from around the interwebs.
Forty-Four Clove Garlic Soup
Bourbon Chicken
Wheat Bread with Flax Seed (There seems to be a typo--I increase the wheat flour to 2 1/4 cups.)
Nancy Silverton's Deep Dish Apple Pie (Do not be deceived by the nature of the website. I actually own the cookbook from which this is taken, though I've only tried two recipes so far. This has to be one of the most complicated desserts I've ever made, as well as the most intense apple pie I've ever eaten. It's certainly worth making...maybe once a year.)
I mentioned earlier the politics, esthetics, and ethics of food. But to speak of the pleasure of eating is to go beyond those categories. Eating with the fullest pleasure — pleasure, that is, that does not depend on ignorance — is perhaps the profoundest enactment of our connection with the world. In this pleasure we experience and celebrate our dependence and our gratitude, for we are living from mystery, from creatures we did not make and powers we cannot comprehend. ~Wendell Berry
Monday, July 18, 2011
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