Scallion pancakes, morning walk

Sunday, I made these Chinese Scallion Pancakes for the first time. I made 1/2 the recipe to try it out. Then I made another 1/2 recipe to see how they kept – frozen and refrigerated.

This morning I made a double recipe and most of them made it into the freezer!

I woke up, rested, ready to go…at 4:45 a.m.

Bear and I had a quick down the driveway walk in the dark, then back inside and I started a pot of beans, the coffee, put my Dutch Oven in the oven to heat for crusty bread and then mixed and kneaded the dough for the pancakes.

The simple flour and water mix gets kneaded until smooth and then rests for 30 minutes.

The genius of this recipe – in my opinion! – is that the scallions, some salt and olive oil are brushed on the rolled out pancake. Then you roll the circle up like a cigar…roll it around itself like a snail, squash it and roll it into a circle once more which means that the onions and seasoning are inside the pancake.

I’m thinking of many different flavor combos that would be scrumptious using this same technique…herbs like chives or basil or oregano, some garlic and cumin. Maybe a slightly cheese-y version with some parmesan and smoked paprika.

The pancakes get lightly fried in a bit more olive oil so end up a little crispy, a littly chewy and full of flavor. The Woks of Life post also includes a garlic dipping sauce. And by the way, the The Woks of Life blog is not only a lot of fun, with some great recipes but they (it is the entire family writing the blog!) include some pages de-mystifying ingredients and utensils used in their Chinese recipes.

I’ve eaten the pancakes as snacks with the dipping sauce, as a “bread” with a Chinese chicken salad, and this morning with some goat cheese, beans and a drizzle of the dipping sauce. I like them!

As I was working in the kitchen, the sky lightened to the East. I love watching the range of colors as the sun works its way over the mountains of the Continental Divide.

One moment it was a deep blue and the next I was surprised to see fog. The temperature at just before 5 a.m. was 55, but it dropped to 49 as the sun rose – close enough to the morning dewpoint to make fog.

Bear and I took our full morning walk in the misty woods.

The yellow jackets had been buzzing the kitchen windows earlier, but as the fog dropped down, they apparently went back to their nests and we walked in foggy quiet.

Headed back toward the house, the sun found its way though the mist, hitting the house like a spotlight.

Scallion pancakes, morning walk: Tuesday.

Put the lime in the coconut, then you feel better

I made coconut cupcakes this morning.

And a bit of coconut cake with batter that didn’t fit in the dozen count cupcake pan I have.

Then, Bear and I headed out and about in the Jeep with the goal of finding a spot to park Wild Thing…maybe next weekend…for an overnight.

This time of year…blech…too MANY persons are about.

It is hot…or hottish depending on your perspective. Today, it was hazy like it was on its way to hot.

Me…I am cranky.

I turned to Bear and said: “Bear, the best place to be is home! Home is quiet and cool and shady. Let us go home!”.

We went home.

And I think Bear agrees with me.

He scooped out a cool spot on Beardog Hill – AWAY from the cilantro :) !!

Me…I sat on the front porch and looked through the woods at the beautiful blue sky. And I listened to the quiet.

Bob selected a cool, quiet shady spot also.

I guess we are a cool, shady, quiet kind of family.

Maybe we will stay home for a bit in the shady quiet of our own woods.

And have coconut cupcakes and cake with coconut-lime frosting.

Lime and coconut and woods and shade – it makes us feel better.

Friday snippets

We’ve been enjoying some not too hot, beautiful days with cool nights so good for sleeping and crisp mornings that take us outside for several hours before my work day starts.

This morning, it was 42F to start out the morning.

I had a gorgeous Copper River Red Salmon filet thawed.

Braised salmon with fresh herbs. A bit of this was breakfast for Bear, Bob and I and the rest into the frig for salmon tacos and stir fry over the weekend.

The herbs!!

They continue to flourish gangbusters…

My baby cilantro grew up.

Two weeks ago, I gardened. Really!! I braved the hot sun for an entire 10 minutes to clear a patch of soil on Beardog hill.

And then…and THEN!!! – I PLANTED SEEDS. Yes!! Cilantro seeds.

And now there is baby cilantro on Beardog Hill.

If the resident Beardog stays off this little patch, I may have a summer’s worth of cilantro and more.

This is an experiment.

Meanwhile, the aforementioned Beardog chose a softer place for naptime than yesteray’s concrete.

And so did Bob. And Bob’s ears are already improving again.

It was an excellent and productive work week which culminated in meeting a project deadline at high noon today. Hoo-rah!

A Friday pizza was in order.

Pizza on the grill.

Friday snippets.

A berry good day

Six quarts of strawberries, just picked by my neighborhood farmer!

I roasted some with a bit of vanilla bean paste. The vanilla revs up the strawberry flavor and the result is a wonderful compote/syrup. It would take just a bit of pectin to jell this…maybe just a kiwi. Did you know kiwi has pectin and if you add it to strawberries, they jell? Well, it is true, but I wanted more of a syrup which is a good thing as I didn’t have any kiwi!

So pretty and now sitting in my refrigerator to be drizzled over yogurt and maybe a Sunday morning waffle.

And though it is not of jam or jelly consistency, that did not stop me from drizzling a bit on this morning’s toast with goat cheese.

So.

After the roasting, I still had plenty of berries. Some I froze, but some I mixed with some rhubarb and made a variation of Magda’s Rhubarb Ice Cream recipe.

I was very intrigued by the technique of making the ice cream without a machine since I don’t have an ice cream machine. Basically, I become the machine…doing the churning and air incorporating by whisking and/or blending the mix every 30 minutes until it gets to a soft serve consistency.

I think a key to this working is also to use metal bowl and utensils – all kept very cold.

That’s what I did.

Aaack!! – blurry, but you can kind of sort of see the texture coming together. This is the third “stir”.

One more and then I left it alone for 2 more hours to harden to regular ice cream consistency.

It worked! The texture is perfect.

This recipe was heavy cream (a lot of fat and not much going for it nutritionally ), fruit and sugar. I want to try the technique with a custard based recipe and see what happens.

But, no complaints about this version for an occasional treat.

For my variation, I roasted some rhubarb, strawberries and vanilla bean paste, reduced the sugar from the above linked recipe and I did not do the crumble addition.

Even Bob agrees that it was a berry good day!

That gyros meat

First off… I used Dax Phillips’ Gyros Meat recipe. I made about 1/4 of his recipe. (my gyros cooking post) I need to buy a proper meat mallet – I used my rolling pin – but oh, I was very happy with the result. I was surprised at the tenderness of these lean cuts and I think I can even improve by a more indirect low and slow grilling after the initial sear. But, the seasonings and method – RIGHT on the money!

First up was what I know as a pita gyros:

Good golly, Miss Molly!! – this was good. I made a Greek style grilled pita in a cast iron pan – stovetop with a bit of olive oil/butter. I used a cucumber dip recipe from a Greek cookbook sent to me by “Auntie Margaret and Uncle Tasos” – DIRECT from Greece! – and a few sweet grape tomatoes.

A “gyros” pizza.

And finally, all of the gyros sandwich ingredients over a baked potato.

I dipped into the meat a number of times for snacks and then these three full meals. Not bad for a half pound of lamb, a half pound of beef and a total of $6.00 for organic, humanely raised meat!