Zoodles for Zupper and the Montana August Singularity

Zoodles = zucchini noodles, i.e. zucchini shredded/spiralized into “noodles”.

There are various implements available to “noodle” a zucchini. I tried a $6.00 spiralizer and got what I paid for …junk that fell apart at the first zucchini.

I did not want to buy a medium-largish thing…

….then, I saw a post about a julienne peeler.

THAT was that. I found one on Amazon and ordered…

The peeler and the zoodles.

The “scraps” I saved and chopped and blended with the sauce.

Zoodles: actually, I used a summer squash and some sweet red pepper – sautéed the lot in olive oil …briefly until all was tender.

A bit of chipotle-tomato-ground beef sauce and fresh grated parmesan on top…with a side of toasted bread.

Zoodles for Zupper!

Weather-wise…

My kind of weather.

NOAA will not cotton to the term, but it is the Montana August Singularity. A weather singularity is a weather phenomenon that regularly happens around a certain date.

Search (Google, Bing or your favorite search engine) “Montana August Singularity”.

Yep.

It is true – more often than not the 20 years I’ve lived here.

Pffht – NOAA! ( I emailed them and commented and ZERO reply or acknowledgement )

Stuffed shells and other weekend stories

Saturday was wonderfully cool, clear and beautiful…

BUT.

At the construction site to our East there was grading and ??? and hauling of dirt.

It was noisy outside.

Bear, Auggie and I stayed mostly inside.

It was warm enough to close the house and run the A/C and so have none of the heavy equipment noise.

And early Saturday morning, I prepped a mix of swiss chard/onion/garlic and other spices, a ricotta-egg-parmesan mix and cooked some jumbo pasta shells.

Auggie had his usual.

But I had stuffed shells.

With Marcella Hazan’s tomato sauce. (tomatoes, butter, salt and an onion…slow simmered for 45 minutes, then remove the onion – HEAVEN!)

Jumbo pasta shells filled with the ricotta-chard mix, nestled on a bit of the tomato sauce, drizzled with the tomato sauce, baked and then under the broiler with some fresh grated parmesan.

Major deliciousness!

Meanwhile, some progress on the plumbing issue – washing machine drain – a temporary solution is in place with a permanent solution to be determined before Winter.

And I uncovered a bit of firewood that is ready to be split – it has been covered for 2 years and I was a little leery about what else might be living under the tarp… nothing scary and the wood looks good!

After 3 or maybe 4 weeks of procrastinating, I took up all of the little rugs, dust mopped, vacuumed and EVEN damp mopped the floors. And I dusted. It is relatively clean in the house!

…Speaking of Winter. We are now half-way through Summer. In Montana, that is getting close to Fall: another 7-10 days and the visitor traffic will diminish substantially. It might still get warm-hot but daylight is decreasing/dark time is increasing…it gets more and more difficult to be uncomfortably hot for more than a short bit of the afternoon. The light at the end of the summer tunnel is in sight. Hoo..I say HOO-RAH!

Crustless Quiche

4 eggs
3/4 cup milk
3/4 cup heavy cream
1 Tablespoon flour
2 Tablespoons melted butter
Pinch of salt
Pinch of nutmeg
2 cups cheese: I used 1 cup Monterrey Jack, 1 cup cheddar and a little pecorino

Beat all the ingredients – through cheese – together with a whisk until blended. Butter a pie dish and scatter a mixture of the cheese over the bottom of the pie dish. I then added 1 zucchini (grated), 1/2 small sweet onion sliced thin and some roasted red pepper diced. Pour egg mixture over top. Sprinkle nutmeg. Bake at 375 degrees for 40 minutes until the custard is firm, puffy & slightly brown.

Good out of the oven and even better cold the next day.

Beating the heat

As I write this, it is actually cooler: 79F vs 89F.

But, it is VERY smoky from wildfires in Washington, Oregon and British Columbia.

VERY smoky as in today, in addition to looking smoky, it smelled smoky.

And I pray for those who have lost homes (100 in Washington) and also for the wildland firefighters. I still often think about the 19 Granite Mountain Hotshots that lost their lives last year. …and the families they left behind. Wildland firefighting is super dangerous business.

Blech.

But part of Western Summers.

At my house, we must live and deal.

Several things to beat the heat:

Agua Fresca. Fresh Water. With some fruit and a teeny-tiny bit of sweetener. For my purposes agave nectar.

My current favorite: cantaloupe, lime juice and red raspberries.

It is like Hawaiian Punch, the light version.

I usually fill 1/3 of a mug with the fresca and top with my own sweet carbonated well water.

Srsly good and refreshing!

Early May, I started making my own popsicles.

Yum, but recently, I saw something about Zipzicle bags…kind of Ziploc bags but thin and tall with the zip at the top of the tall.

I bought some to try.

Kind of fun.

And easy.

And I can think of other ways to use these: bits of sauce…think chipotle peppers in adobo sauce for one.

The company also sells neoprene sleeves for the popsicles so that one does not freeze one’s fingers while eating the ice treat.

SO much fun!

And last, but certainly not least.

I’ve been drinking my cold brew ( Cold Brew ) for weeks.

It turns out that chocolate ice cream in place of the maple syrup and cocoa, makes a VERY delicious iced mocha.

Beating the heat!

’tis the season…for cold brew!

I know – not hot compared to most parts of the country! It does cool overnight and as the temp goes up, the dewpoint goes down and humidity is typically in the mid-twenties, i.e. feels like no humidity, but not as dry as the southwest.

But all is relative and I, like my Mama “run hot”, so humidity or not – upper 80’s/low 90’s is HOT.

The A/C has been out and on since July 3. Well, it is on late morning through late evening.

It IS the season for cold brew coffee!

Years ago, as in more than 20 – when I lived in Los Angeles, California and spent most work days on the UCLA campus – I often walked to a nearby coffee shop early afternoon and bought what they called an iced mocha. It was frothy, but not slushy. The coffee was strong enough to stand up to the milk and slight bit of chocolate. It was not super sweet. I thought it was perfect and up until several years ago when Pioneer Woman published her iced coffee method ( Perfect Iced Coffee ) – I’ve not had anything that came close to that iced mocha.

That post also introduced me to Café Bustelo Espresso. Although I do sometimes make this hot in the Chemex, I mostly use it to do the cold brew. The ratio I like for the cold brew is 1 oz. coffee to 4 cups water.

I usually make the brew in a largish pitcher: 3 oz coffee with 6 cups water, stir and let it sit at least overnight but I like to start it one morning and filter it the next.

Then… 8 oz cold brew, 2 oz milk*, a scant tsp of maple syrup, a splash of vanilla extract and 4 ice cubes go in the VitaMix.

The 4 ice cubes…well, I found that if I add more than 4, I get granita instead a drink – 4 is the perfect number to get a frothy mix.

For an iced mocha, I add 1 tablespoon of Hershey’s dark with the other ingredients.

It’s good – the first time I made this, I thought immediately of the Iced Mochas of days gone by. I don’t like the heat and cannot help myself counting the days until Fall, but a little cold brew in my day keeps me slightly less grumpy :) !!

***Update So, since posting this I’ve made a “spicy” iced mocha: Above with the cocoa plus 1/8 tsp cayenne pepper and 1/8 tsp nutmeg. Also forgot to note that in all of the mixes, I add a pinch of salt. Sounds funny, but a pinch of salt in most things amps the flavors.

***The milk – I don’t use a lot of milk unless I’m making cheese and the local dairy’s smallest whole milk container is 1/2 gallon which I just do not use before it goes bad. I started using the Peak Dry Whole milk 2 winters ago and it is wonderful. I mix up slightly less than 2 cups (350 ml) and store in a mason jar – perfect for my use for several days.