grilled chicken and oven-roasted asparagus . . . pizza!

Donn, a colleague from work, gave me an incredible bunch of fresh asparagus. I oven-roasted it for the first meal, and then I made a pizza with the rest of it–added in some grilled chicken and Fontina and white cheddar cheese. Oh, I also simmered some tomato sauce on the stove for four hours. Plus, I used some of my Tartine Country White bread dough from the freezer. It was a wee bit too crusty for this particular app! Another memorable Sunday supper. (It was difficult to eat! Plus, we had to call up Dwight’s excavating skills in order to extricate the pizza from the pan!!!!)

spring omelet

Saturday evening Mom shared some fresh asparagus when I stopped by for a visit. So, Sunday morning’s omelet was a beauty: lightly steamed asparagus, chives from the kitchen garden, and grated Fontina cheese. My guess is that this one just wouldn’t be acceptable to a French chef. I will have to check with Francoise.

That sucker didn’t even need any salt or pepper. And now, for your viewing pleasure:

thanksgiving prep

Our Thanksgiving meal this year featured much food from the family garden: sweet potatoes, potatoes, brussels sprouts, butternut squash, rosemary. Let’s not forget the pickled eggs, courtesy of mom’s chickens.

christmas eve soup

As an experiment I am concocting a new dish for Christmas Eve dinner with my family. Because we have church services at 7 p.m., the plan was to keep it simple and make some sort of a soup. As I was deciding what ingredients to include, I noticed that, quite by accident, the colors of my vegetables were traditional Christmas colors. I immediately decided to limit my color palette to these colors. Can you identify my ingredients?


My red ingredient is sweet red bell pepper. Green veggies include broccoli, brussels sprouts, and the white colors come from cauliflower, leek, fennel, and garlic. These are all tossed together with olive oil, herbs de provence, and salt and pepper, and then roasted in the oven for one hour at 350 degrees. (Next time, however, I will roast until the pepper skins are crackled–for easier removal.) Below you can see the oven-roasted vegetables.


I could have just used the food processor to chop everything, but I decided to do things as slowly as possible–very uncharacteristic of me–so I hand chopped the veggies and then put them in the food processor.


I added four containers of homemade turkey broth, which I had frozen in margarine containers–they hold about one cup.


Below is the pot of soup so far. I plan to set this outside in the garage overnight. Then I will continue “building” the soup. I’ve read that layering the ingredients in several steps creates a much more complex flavor. I am hoping that these subtleties will be . . . not so subtle!


Here is my dilemma: what else to add to this recipe? I am planning for this to be a cream soup, so I will be adding that, as well as some cheese. What kind of cheese? Well, in keeping with the color scheme, it needs to be white. I have parmesan and gruyere. But it seems to me that these flavors might conflict with those of the oven-roasted olive oil base.

Another consideration is thickening. Of course, the veggies themselves will provide that function, as I have pureed them. Since there will be cream, I’m going to make a little roux out of butter and flour to assist in the thickening–or maybe not.

Also, I am tempted to add in some roasted turkey that I have in the freezer, but Colin says no. Hmmmmmm. He must have watched the same FoodTV show that I did regarding the warning that too many ingredients make the soup’s flavors . . . “murky.”

comfort food

Fair warning: this dish has an obscene number of calories per serving. And, in case you’re wondering, Bill and I finished this 9×13 pan within 18 hours. Everything is from scratch and . . . I used heavy cream for the sauce. Yep.

Here are the ingredients in order from most to least: cream, potatoes, ham, sharp cheddar, leek, butter, pepper/salt.

bring on the beans!

Well, the first green beans are ready. These pictures are of part of my parents’ garden. As you can see, there are a lot of tomatoes. I’m not quite sure what will happen when they are ripe!


In the picture below, is a row of beets.


Here’s a view of about half of the garden. This area is all new this year. In the background, you can see the wooden tomato cages that Dwight made out of scrap wood.


More beans–these are pole beans and they will be ready to eat after the others are finished. Sweet potatoes are in the foreground.

here comes the bride

My cousin’s daughter is getting married soon, so my mom and Kathy hosted a wonderful shower for about 26 people. As you can see, they really outdid themselves when it came to preparing the food.

Of course, there were pictures of the guests, but the tarts and strawberries granted immediate permission for me to post their likenesses on the internet!


pie!–special request of the bride-to-be