Macoun Apples
We were in search of Macoun apples, one of my fall favorites, so once again we headed to one of our favorite local orchards. How lucky we are in so many ways.
Catering
We were in search of Macoun apples, one of my fall favorites, so once again we headed to one of our favorite local orchards. How lucky we are in so many ways.
We are lucky to live where we do. I honestly think about that everyday. The other morning the kids and I headed to Hicks our local orchard to pick fat blueberries.
The first warm night we headed into the woods for a picnic supper, only a laundry basket was more our style. Adam says that Vermonters are like turtles, they crawl out of hiding to sun themselves on a log the first warm day. That is exactly what we did, seeking sunlight on the deck of an old empty hunting camp far up in the woods.
Laundry Basket Dinner:
Salad Greens With Cucumber, Tamari Almonds, Chick Peas and Miso Dressing
Grilled Flat Bread with jar sauce
PB&Js
Seltzer and various bad for you drinks
Snap Peas
Snickers
Pull Ups, Wipes and a great book.
{this moment} – A Friday “today” ritual. A single photo – no words – capturing a moment from the week. A simple, special, extraordinary moment. A moment I want to pause, savor and remember. Idea borrowed from http://www.soulemama.com/
Just a few snaps from a beautiful weekend spent in the sunshine with family and friends. It really doesn’t get any better.
Some of our near and dear friends have a sugar house down the road. Here is a glimpse inside.
Bittersweet. At this point my body is tired. Cranky with distance. It has been a long whirlwind winter. That is truly is how I feel. Winter in Vermont can only be described as long cold nights, short cold days and upon reflecting, over in the …
2 cans artichoke hearts, drained with liquid reserved, 1 can left whole, once can rough chopped
3 pounds sunchokes, scrubbed, peeled with a vegetable peeler and cut into 1-2 inch pieces
1 pound red potatoes, scrubbed, peeled with a vegetable peeler and cut into 1-2 inch pieces
2 onions, medium dice
2 leeks, cleaned and cut into ½ inch half circles
3 large cloves garlic, 2 minced and 1 reserved
3 tablespoons extra virgin olive oil
1 pint heavy cream
Salt
Fresh pepper
Sherry
Sherry vinegar
Hot sauce
Sweat the leek, onion and 1 ½ teaspoons salt in the olive oil in a large pot over medium heat until tender, about 5-7 minutes. Add the 2 cloves of minced garlic and sweat a minute more being careful not to brown the garlic. Turn the heat to high and deglaze with about an ounce of sherry. Add the potatoes, sunchokes, 1 can of whole artichoke hearts, another 1 and ½ teaspoons of salt and the reserved artichoke liquid. Add enough vegetable stock or water to just barely cover. Put the lid on the pot and bring to a boil. Once boiling turn down heat to medium low, stir occasionally and simmer until the sunchokes and potatoes are very tender. Once tender, use an immersion blender or blender to purée the soup. Stir in the heavy cream, second can of artichoke hearts (roughly chopped), a dash of the hot sauce (not enough to make it hot, just enough to add depth, about 3-4 shakes), and a splash of the sherry. Grate in the last clove of garlic and stir to combine. Check the seasoning for salt and pepper, adjust as needed. Once the soup is seasoned, add a splash of sherry vinegar (about 1 tablespoon) to balance things out.
So these are pretty much the worst pictures of me, taken by me, at 8am in 5*F weather at the start of a 6 mile loop. That’s my running group and I love them. Women from all over Southern Vermont, of all ages, shapes and …