WANT the RAINBOW? WELCOME the RAIN.

WANT the RAINBOW? WELCOME the RAIN.

Iron Skillet Roasted Mussels

Not for one moment do I begrudge water-deprived California a drop of moisture. After suffering through five years of drought, losing 102 million trees in its stricken forests, this state needed a miracle. Obviously Mother Nature heard the plea, tweeted Mt.Olympus and Zeus, the Greek god of clouds, rain, thunder and lightning answered the call. That’s my story. Sticking to it. As we know, however, sometimes Zeus, who rules the skies, goes overboard.

Salted Olive Crisps

Okay, okay, enough with the silliness. For me, 2017 will be remembered as the Winter of Rain. With apologies to the late Debbie Reynolds, may she rest in peace, I’ve gotten very weary of singing and dancing in it. To be clear, however, everyone living here is thrilled to see rain gauges rising. As am I.

The payoff is those winter showers brought April flowers, They’re spectacular. Unprecedented is the word used by wildflower experts. After 5 years of drought, the trees, however, cannot bounce back.

“The way I see it, if you want the rainbow, you gotta put up with the rain.” (Thanks, Dolly.)

Our feathered friends are happy – so much to eat and sing about. House Finch

Despite the inclement weather I chalked up another glorious winter. Wary of wasting a moment, that clock’s always ticking, and despite too much indoorness, I buddied up with Solitude. Christopher Knight, the now-outed hermit who lived for 27 years in the Maine wilderness, opined to his biographer, Michael Finkel, “There isn’t nearly enough nothing in the world anymore.”

The Stranger in the Woods: The Extraordinary Story of the Last True Hermit by Michael Finkel Penguin Random House photo

Whatever he meant by that, I decided to treat nothing as a luxury, building each day on that idea. It definitely worked for me. To my mind, I thrived. Honestly, that I could pull off four months of my definition of nothing so happily was eye-opening to me. But, twenty-seven years of it, kill me now! I am very ready to return home.

Last Saturday my food blogging colleague, Katie, and her husband, Marcel, and daughter Alaia, came for lunch, a 3-year tradition. I made a Herbed Parmesan Dutch Baby from Melissa Clark’s newest cookbook, Dinner, Changing the Game. More about Clark’s cookbook next time.

Before my signing off from Cali, last Saturday Katie Baillargeon, her husband, Marcel and almost-five Alaia, joined me for lunch. I first met Katie, a professor at the University of California at Santa Barbara, in 2012 when I joined French Fridays with Dorie. She also organized and is now our Cook the Book Friday’s administrator. This is the third winter we’ve broken bread together, a record-breaking 5 hour lunch despite my setting off the smoke alarm while making it. I was mortified. Surprisingly, the meal was salvaged and the haze lessened (in about 30 minutes), There is much to admire about this young family.

Alaia played on the beach, climbed trees and ate a grilled cheese sandwich.

This is my last post from Cambria. I’m in Death Valley for Easter and then will fly from Las Vegas to Atlanta to visit the Carter Presidential Library. It’s the 12th of the 13 presidential libraries I have seen. I regard these under recognized libraries as the uncrowned jewels of our historic heritage. Then, Colorado-bound.

According to the Locals, the most delicious strawberries are grown in Santa Margarita and are now available at our Cambria Farmer’s Market.

This week’s CooktheBookFridays recipe is Salted Olive Crisps, usually served with apéritifs before dinner. I’ve shared the recipe and my personal tips below. One of my most delicious meals this winter was Iron Skillet Roasted Mussels. So simple. So easy. If you own a cast iron skillet, be open to the possibilities.

Carizzo Plain National Monument is a region of 250,000 acres and is the largest native grassland remaining in California. The San Andreas fault cuts straight through it. The unique Soda Lake, pictured here, is shallow, white, and alkaline, with no external drainage.

IRON SKILLET ROASTED MUSSELS by Sharon Kramis & Julie Kramis Hearne, The Lodge Cast Iron Cookbook

Serves 4

INGREDIENTS:

1/2 cup white wine
1/4 cup (1/2 stick) unsalted butter
1 leek (white part only), rinsed well and chopped
1/4 teaspoon red pepper flakes
2 pounds mussels, scrubbed and debearded (discard any that won’t close)
3 tablespoons chopped fresh parsley
Salt and freshly ground black pepper

PREPARATION:

1. Combine the wine, butter, leek, and red pepper in a 10- to 12-inch cast iron skillet or 5-quart Dutch oven. Bring to a boil over medium-high heat.
2. Reduce the heat to medium. Add the mussels, and cover either with a lid or heavy tinfoil. Cook until the shells open and the mussels are plump, about 8 minutes. Discard any that won’t open.
3. Sprinkle the parsley over the top and season with a dash of salt and pepper. Serve right from the skillet or Dutch oven with a leafy green salad and sliced baguette or rustic country bread.

Meal is Over.

SALTED OLIVE CRISPS by David Lebovitz, My Paris Kitchen

Makes 40 Crisps

Get this recipe from the Accidental Locavore by clicking on this link.

TIPS:

1. Rather than the 30 minutes David suggested for baking the loaf mixture, I baked it for 45 minutes.
2. Because I wanted a bit more crisp, I put the finished slices under the broiler for 1 to 11/2 minutes.
3. These Salted Olive Crisps are better eaten immediately. Although they can be stored up to one week in an airtight container at room temperature, I needed to ‘crisp them again” at 325 degree heat for 3-5 minutes.
4. Like baking mandelbrot or biscotti, this is a labor intensive recipe that requires an olive that is not too damp and a very sharp bread knife. While I enjoyed making this once, it’s probably a recipe I won’t bake again.

CooktheBookFridays is an international group virtually cooking through David Lebovitz’s, My Paris Kitchen. To see what my colleagues baked this week, go here.

Beautiful coastal Tinytips, an annual wildflower, and our dead California coastal oaks. A heartbreaking site prevalent throughout the state.

#Everyonehasastory,  #Cookthebookfridays,

#Everyonehasastory, #Cookthebookfridays,

“Everyone has a story, the air is full of stories.” Isabelle Allende

COQ AU VIN (chicken in red wine sauce)

Do you realize January 2017 has packed its bag, left the house and won’t return? Already two days into February, it’s Groundhog Day. Punxutawney Phil saw his shadow. Looking ahead, (or, not,) Super Bowl Sunday, the Oscars and Presidents’ week-end are in the line-up. Oops, Valentine’s Day. Forget that at your peril.Like most of you, this Life of mine has never seen lazy days. Whatever time I have, I fill up 100%. If you’re honest, don’t we all?

I discovered a very large NAPA (Chinese) CABBAGE in my Talley Farms box this week. It was the size of a football.

SWEET and SOUR ROASTED NAPA CABBAGE WEDGES
(The cabbages you’ll find in the markets are smaller, a more appropriate size).

Just as when it snows in the Rockies, the rains have lightened the hearts of Central Coast residents. California still is water-deprived but there’s been relief. And, Mother Nature, responding to the slightest of care, is blooming and going green.

This Great White Egret is a frequent visitor to Estero Bluffs. When I saw him, he was just finishing “something.” He has a neck that would have madeAudrey Hepburn envious.

I stood quietly for 15 minutes before the egret flew off.

For birds it’s all about food and safety.

LANDING IN GREENER PASTURES

Last year, during my four months in Cali, I got a sense of this remarkable state. Thankful for the opportunity with a car that was willing, I traveled its length and breadth. If I qualify as a lifetime learner, that 7,500 mile journey was a graduate seminar.

LAST WEEK I PACKED A LUNCH AND SPENT SEVERAL HOURS AT THE SAN SIMEON BAY WHARF AND SS STATE BEACH PARK, BOTH ADJACENT TO THE HEARST PROPERTY AND ACROSS THE HIGHWAY FROM THE HEARST CASTLE.

AS I WALKED OUT ON THE WHARF, THIS CALIFORNIA GULL WAS PARKED ON THIS POST AND NOT ABOUT TO MOVE. I GOT RELATIVELY CLOSE. HE DIDN’T CARE. RIGHT BELOW THE GULL IS A SINK WHERE FISHERMEN CLEAN THEIR CATCH AND THE GULL WAS NOT ABOUT TO GIVE UP HIS SPOT.

HERE’S THE REASON …..A SHORT TIME LATER,THIS FISHERMAN, A REGULAR ON THE WHARF, ARRIVED. HE HAS STORIES TO TELL AND ROCKFISH TO CATCH. THE GULL WANTS THE REMAINS.

AS I WAS LEAVING THE PARK, I SPOTTED THIS ZEBRA NEAR THE HEARST PROPERTY FENCE LINE. THERE ARE STILL ABOUT 24 ZEBRAS THAT DESCENDED FROM THE HERD HEARST HAD FOR HIS EXOTIC ANIMALS ZOO. USUALLY THEY GRAZE UP IN THE HILLS. THIS GUY WAS 10′ FROM ME AND IS QUITE A BEAUTIFUL CREATURE.

This year, because of self-imposed deadlines for writing projects, I decided to wander in my own backyard. I was reminded by those daily adventures that everyone has a story. Granted, not all are cliffhangers but each carries a whiff of charm, mystery or ya-gotta-hear-this.

I’VE NEVER SEEN A BLUE-AND-WHITE COW, I NEVER HOPE TO SEE ONE BUT I CAN TELL YOU ANYHOW I’S RATHER SEE THAN BE ONE.

The key, for me, at least, is to slow down, look and listen. Two of those traits I’ve never mastered successfully! This winter I am blessed with the luxury of Time which, for me, is a gift, something to embrace and not squander. January was squander-free, every day filled with a gem or two for the memory bank.

SO SIMPLE. SO PERFECT.

It’s Cook-the-Book Fridays and this week’s recipe is french deliciousness, Coq au Vin. One of Julia Child’s signature dishes and included in her 1961 Mastering the Art of French Cooking, she often made it on her PBS cooking show. I served this braised stew with a baguette and Sweet and Sour Roasted Napa Cabbage Wedges (recipe below.)

SWEET and SOUR ROASTED NAPA CABBAGE WEDGES adapted from Cooking Light magazine.

Yield: Serves 4

INGREDIENTS

1 tablespoons olive oil
1 tablespoons cider vinegar
1 tablespoon brown sugar
1 teaspoon honey
1 teaspoon whole-grain Dijon mustard
1 teaspoon minced garlic
1/4 teaspoon salt
1/2 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper
1 head napa (Chinese) cabbage, cut lengthwise into quarters

Cooking spray

PREPARATION:

1. Place a large roasting pan in oven. Preheat oven and pan to 450°.

2. Combine first 7 ingredients in a small bowl.

3. Coat cut sides of cabbage with cooking spray. Place cabbage, cut sides down, on preheated pan. Bake 6 minutes. Turn cabbage onto other cut side; bake an additional 6 minutes. Remove pan from oven. Heat broiler to high. Brush cabbage liberally but evenly with honey mixture. Broil 3-5 minutes, until browned and caramelized.

COOK-the-BOOK-FRIDAYS is an international cooking group making its way virtually through David Lebovitz’s MY PARIS KITCHEN. See our group’s efforts here.

GO FISH:  BRANDADE de MORUE

GO FISH: BRANDADE de MORUE

This post is dedicated, with fondness, to Dr. David Yokum, who was a prominent thoracic surgeon and catfish guy.

Another french classic, Brandade de Morue translates to Salt Cod and Potato Puree and is delicious.

Being Iowa born and bred in the Fifties/Sixties meant odds are heavily weighted to a meat-and-potatoes palate. In the Corn State then there were approximately 200,000, 150-170 acre family farms. Each August at the Delaware County Fair, the 4-H kids would show off their prized livestock, compete for ribbons and eventually auction those animals off.

My neighbor raptor, a red-shouldered hawk, gets scrutinized by a visiting hummingbird.

My parents would purchase a porker and reserve a side of beef from prize-winning 4-H livestock. At our house we didn’t eat fish. Mom was a good cook and those were different times. I had no hankering for fish nor, when it became more available, was curious enough to try. Plus, Michael was a meat man.

Salted Codfish is difficult to find in some areas. I found mine at Whole Foods. It’s better to buy it boned, if possible.

Thanks to David Yokum, I fully embraced the piscine world. David and his lovely wife, Martha, lived in Arkansas but, being music aficionados, summered in Aspen. He and I bonded shortly after our moving to Colorado in the late Eighties. Seated together at a charity dinner at the historic Hotel Jerome we chit-chatted with ease.

This Great Blue Heron likes to loiter nearby where there is a good possibility of scoring food.

A waitress, carrying two heavy coffee pots, stopped at our table to offer refills. As she leaned in to pour coffee into David’s cup, the pot in her other hand leaned with her. She successfully executed a full-on “pour” down David’s neck. When I noticed and started to scream, David remained oblivious…..until that piping hot coffee began streaming down his back.

After 36 hours of cold water rinses and draining, this is what reconstituted cod looks like.

Yeah, it hurt. Yeah, it scalded his skin. And, yeah, that frightened waitress was horrified. Ever the southern gentleman, he quietly left the table, making no fuss, and tended to his surface wounds. Throughout the 2-3 minute ordeal, the only words he grumbled to me were, “And, this is a new suit!”

Pacific Harbor Seal

Friends forever! That summer we newbies received an invitation to the Yokum’s annual catfish party. Apparently a coveted invitation to receive, we were none too interested in accepting. Growing up near the muddy Mississippi River, what I knew about catfish was not appetizing. Whiskers (barbels). Bottom dwellers. Considered the garbage eaters of the fish world.

The Brandade de Morue consisting of potatoes and cod is simmered in boiling water for 25 minutes before being drained and whipped together. Seasonings and heavy cream are added before it’s all mixed and ready for 20 minutes in the oven.

What we didn’t know was our doctor friend owned a 7,500-acre farm with about 60 ponds covering 1,200 water acres, producing soybeans, rice and catfish. His catfish were farm-raised. Not farming I recognized. But, Michael and I decided to chance it. Our new friend, David, was amused.

These brown pelicans are doing a bit of grooming.

Hushpuppies, cole slaw and Arkansas farm-fried catfish. Tasty fare, not-to-be-missed. Although David and Michael are gone now, the memories built off that first encounter and the Yokum’s friendship are forever.

In France, Les Accras, salt cod fritters served with tartar sauce, are a popular happy hour snack.

After moving to Aspen and realizing its local availability, I eventually joined the fish brigade. Today I eat very little pork or beef. It’s an easy walk to the Butcher Block/City Market to buy fish. This week’s Cook the Book Friday’s recipes, Brandade de Morue and Accras (fritters) de Morue are a far swim from the Yokum’s catfish.

This solitary Long-billed Curlew is at work, searching for food.

I first sampled Brandade de Morue in Chef Marcus Samuelsson’s demo at Aspen’s Food & Wine Festival. During my immersion french studies at the Institute de Français in Villefranche-sur-Mer, it was served at Côte d’Azur bistros/brasseries. Brandade is a purée of reconstituted salted cod, potato and seasonings. It’s served very hot, browned on top, with a leafy salad and beer (my taste). Or, it’s an elegant appetizer. Or, as a snack, Accras de Morue, chilled balls of brandade, coated with fritter batter and fried.

Using my cookie scoop, I made 1-2″ balls from the brandade and then refrigerated them for 30 minutes. I made the fritter batter and dipped the chilled balls in the batter before frying them in canola oil. Like potato chips, you cannot eat just one!

Since making these recipes is a two-day process involving reconstituting the salty cod, I am not adding recipes. I relished making this, channeling the phenomenal Samuelsson, but in the future will leave it to others. If you DO want these recipes, I will gladly send them.

Cook the Book Fridays is an international group virtually making its way through David Lebovitz‘s My Paris Kitchen. To visit out site or join the group, please link here.

FLIPPING the SWITCH. LIGHTS on BRIGHT AGAIN.

FLIPPING the SWITCH. LIGHTS on BRIGHT AGAIN.

PUMPKIN SPICE BUNDT CAKE with BUTTERMILK FROSTING

PUMPKIN SPICE BUNDT CAKE with BUTTERMILK FROSTING

When Mama doesn’t blog, Mama doesn’t eat well. Without Friday deadlines and recipes to tackle, I’ve lost my way. The fridge looks forlorn. The pantry? Forgettaboutit. My solitary banana is brown and there are no overs to left. Eight weeks. Enough. Time to take the foot off the brake. Plus, I’ve missed you.

BUTTERNUT SQUASH CRUMBLE

BUTTERNUT SQUASH CRUMBLE

As you’re reading this post, I’m flying back to Colorado after a week in Washington D.C. I had the opportunity to spend 3 days at the newly-opened National Museum of African American History and Culture and stretched my trip to include other museums. My carefully scripted itinerary did not include being questioned by the Secret Service. That happened and was unnerving.

TACKED TO MANY D.C. POLES. DESPITE THE SPELLING ERROR,  IT MADE ME LAUGH.

TACKED TO MANY D.C. POLES. DESPITE THE SPELLING ERROR, IT MADE ME LAUGH.

THANKSGIVING FARE

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First, however, let’s add some sparkle to your holiday menus. The staff at The Gant worried I’d hit a bad patch and were quite relieved to see this Pumpkin Spice Bundt Cake with Buttermilk Icing walk through their door. Although Gourmet Magazine ceased publication in 2009, this spectacular Fall creation from a 2005 issue is mine forever.

Why not let David Lebovitz’s Cook the Book Friday’s recipe, Butternut Squash Crumble, be a part of your Thanksgiving this year. What first sounds like a dessert tilts toward savory. Roasted squash is infused with chicken stock and seasoned with thyme and shallots. The topping is a mixture of bread crumbs, Parmesan and sage, glued together by butter and eggs. Ditch your classic green bean casserole for this tasty dish with a sweet punch.

Look for the recipes and my tips at the end of this post.

THE NATIONAL MUSEUM OF AFRICAN AMERICAN HISTORY AND CULTURE

THE NATIONAL MUSEUM OF AFRICAN AMERICAN HISTORY AND CULTURE

A CAPITOL VISIT

COLORADO PIONEER AND FORMER SLAVE CLARA BROWN, ON DISPLAY NEXT TO A PRESERVED SLAVE CABIN. BORN ENSLAVED IN VIRGINIA, SHE MARRIED AT 18 AND HAD 4 CHILDREN BUT HER FAMILY WAS SOLD AND SEPARATED. WHEN SHE GAINED HER FREEDOM, SHE MOVED TO COLORADO AND WORKED AS A COOK, MIDWIFE AND LAUNDRESS. SHE WISELY INVESTED HER MONEY IN LAND AND MINES AND, LIKE MANY AFRICAN AMERICANS, SHE ALSO SEARCHED FOR HER FAMILY. AFTER MANY YEARS, SHE FOUND ONE DAUGHTER.

COLORADO PIONEER AND FORMER SLAVE CLARA BROWN, ON DISPLAY NEXT TO A PRESERVED SLAVE CABIN. BORN ENSLAVED IN VIRGINIA, SHE MARRIED AT 18 AND HAD 4 CHILDREN BUT HER FAMILY WAS SOLD AND SEPARATED. WHEN SHE GAINED HER FREEDOM, SHE MOVED TO COLORADO AND WORKED AS A COOK, MIDWIFE AND LAUNDRESS. SHE WISELY INVESTED HER MONEY IN LAND AND MINES AND, LIKE MANY AFRICAN AMERICANS, SHE ALSO SEARCHED FOR HER FAMILY. AFTER MANY YEARS, SHE FOUND ONE DAUGHTER.

In 1913 on the 50th anniversary of the Battle of Gettysburg, black civil war veterans lobbied for a museum to honor the African American journey. That dream gathered dust for decades until Congressmen John Lewis and Mickey Leland resurrected the idea in the 1980s. Winning approval from Congress was a prolonged and bruising battle. In 2003 an ebullient George W. Bush signed a bill creating the 19th Smithsonian museum. It opened in late September 2016 and cost $540 million with half of that coming from private donors.

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Designed by Tanzanian-born British architect, David Adjaye, the dazzling 400,000 square-foot bronze-colored building sits on a 5-acre site located directly across from the Washington Monument. (Adjaye also designed Denver’s Museum of Contemporary Art).

SOUTHERN RAILROAD CAR #1200 "for Coloreds." BECAUSE OF JIM CROW LAWS, RAILCARS WERE SEGREGATED IN MANY STATES UNTIL THE EARLY 1960S.

SOUTHERN RAILROAD CAR #1200 “for Coloreds.” BECAUSE OF JIM CROW LAWS, RAILCARS WERE SEGREGATED IN MANY STATES UNTIL THE EARLY 1960S.

Because no Smithsonian museum had ever been conceived without having its own permanent collection, Director Lonnie Bunch and his team collected the artifacts themselves. Using the “Antiques Roadshow” format to generate publicity in 15 American cities the museum now possesses 37,000 objects. Every Smithsonian museum is spectacular and the NMAAHC, the last to be built on the Mall, stands proudly with the others.

THE TERRIFYING KU KLUX KLAN ORIGINATED IN THE SOUTH IN 1865  IT IS STILL AN ACTIVE ORGANIZATION TODAY AND HAS INSERTED ITSELF INTO THE PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION. DAVID DUKE OF LOUISIANA, A FORMER IMPERIAL WIZARD OF THE KKK, IS CURRENTLY RUNNING FOR THE US SENATE.

THE TERRIFYING KU KLUX KLAN ORIGINATED IN THE SOUTH IN 1865 IT IS STILL AN ACTIVE ORGANIZATION TODAY AND HAS INSERTED ITSELF INTO THE PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION. DAVID DUKE OF LOUISIANA, A FORMER IMPERIAL WIZARD OF THE KKK, IS CURRENTLY RUNNING FOR THE US SENATE.

I also spent several hours at the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum which Michael and I first visited after it opened in 1993. Although not a member of the Smithsonian group, it is located nearby and recently was renovated. Walking through those doors is a sobering experience and, 23 years later, still not easy.

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THE SECRET SERVICE

It was on my way to the Holocaust Museum that I crossed paths with the Secret Service. Charged with protecting the President, Vice President and Treasury, ubiquitous is the watchword. On bikes. In cars. With German Shepherds. Manning security booths. Guarding entrances. I spotted an agent on her bike with a dog chatting with another agent guarding an entrance. A perfect photo, I thought.

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As you can see by my picture the minute I focused the camera, Man Agent turned and began walking towards me. I consciously decided NOT to say I was a blogger and just snapping a photo for an upcoming post. So when he asked me why I was taking pictures (I took only 1), that’s exactly what I blurted out! He lectured me on freedom, that it had costs! I replied that I was also on Team Freedom, would show him all my photos if he wished and I was not the enemy (which he already knew, of course). Still, it was unsettling, that gun and all. I remember thinking, “Well, if this goes south, I look good, am wearing a nice outfit and my pearls are real!”

And, Readers, don’t forget to VOTE.

WHEN LEAVING THE HOLOCAUST MUSEUM, VISITORS ARE GIVEN SOME FOOD FOR THOUGHT.

WHEN LEAVING THE HOLOCAUST MUSEUM, VISITORS ARE GIVEN SOME FOOD FOR THOUGHT.

BUTTERNUT SQUASH CRUMBLE by David Lebovitz, My Paris Kitchen

Serves 6-8

INGREDIENTS:

SQUASH FILLING

2 Tbs butter
2 Tbs olive oil
4 pounds. butternut squash, peeled, seeded, and diced into ¾-inch cubes
2 tsp minced fresh thyme leaves
Kosher salt and black pepper
½ cup peeled and thinly sliced shallots
1 cup chicken stock
2 Tbs finely chopped fresh flat-leaf parsley

TOPPING

¾ cup fresh or dried bread crumbs
½ cup coarse-ground yellow cornmeal
½ cup grated Parmesan cheese
1 Tbs minced fresh sage leaves
1 tsp granulated sugar
½ tsp kosher salt
4 Tbs unsalted butter, chilled and cubed
1 large egg, room temperature

DIRECTIONS:

1. Preheat your oven to 375 F. Grease a shallow 3-quart baking dish. Set aside.

2. To make the squash filling, heat 1 Tbs butter and 1 Tbs olive oil in a large skillet over medium-high heat. Add half the squash and half the thyme. Season with salt and pepper and sauté, stirring occasionally, until the squash pieces begin to brown on several sides.

3. Add half the shallots and cook another few minutes, until they’re softened. Add ½ cup stock and cook about 30 seconds, stirring, to reduce the stock a bit and heat everything through. Scrape the squash mixture into the prepared baking dish.

4. Wipe the pan clean and heat the remaining 1 tbs butter and olive oil in the pan over medium-high heat. Cook the rest of the squash and thyme the same way, seasoning it with salt and pepper and adding the remaining shallots and ½ cup stock, stirring.

5. Scrape the cooked squash mixture into the baking dish, stir in the parsley, then press the mixture into a relatively even layer. Cover the dish snugly with aluminum foil and bake for 30 minutes, until the squash is pretty soft, but not mushy when you poke it with a sharp paring knife.

THE ROASTED SQUASH IS WAITING FOR ITS TOPPING MIXTURE.

THE ROASTED SQUASH IS WAITING FOR ITS TOPPING MIXTURE.

6. While the squash bakes, make the topping. Combine the bread crumbs, cornmeal, Parmesan, sage, sugar, salt and black pepper in your food processor. Add the chilled butter and pulse until the mixture is crumbly and the butter is completely incorporated. Add the egg and pulse a few more times until the mixture just starts clumping together in bits.

AFTER REMOVING THE TINFOIL (SEE PHOTO ABOVE), SPREAD THE CRUMBLED MIXTURE ON TOP. IT'S READ FOR THE OVEN AGAIN TO BROWN THE CRUMBLE TOPPING.

AFTER REMOVING THE TINFOIL (SEE PHOTO ABOVE), SPREAD THE CRUMBLED MIXTURE ON TOP. IT’S READ FOR THE OVEN AGAIN TO BROWN THE CRUMBLE TOPPING.

7. Remove the squash from the oven, remove the aluminum foil, and cover evenly with the bread crumb topping. Decrease the oven temperature to 350 F and return the dish to the oven. Bake about 20 minutes, until the topping is golden brown, then serve.

PUMPKIN SPICE BUNDT CAKE with BUTTERMILK ICING  

Adapted from Gourmet Magazine, 2005  

Serves 12

Special equipment: a 10-inch nonstick bundt pan (3 quart)

CAKE

1 1/2 sticks (3/4 cup) unsalted butter, softened,
2 additional Tbs butter for greasing bundt pan*
2 1/4 cups all-purpose flour plus additional for dusting pan
2 additional Tbs flour for dusting pan*
2 teaspoons baking powder
1 teaspoon baking soda
2 teaspoon cinnamon
1 teaspoon ground allspice
1/2 teaspoon salt
1 1/4 cups canned solid-pack pumpkin PUREE from a 15-ounce can (not pie filling)
3/4 cup well-shaken buttermilk
1 teaspoon vanilla
1 1/4 cups granulated sugar
3 large eggs, room temperature

ICING

2 tablespoons plus 2 teaspoons well-shaken buttermilk
1 1/2 cups confectioners sugar

DIRECTIONS:

1. Put oven rack in middle position and preheat oven to 350°F.

2. Butter bundt pan generously, then dust with flour, knocking out excess.

3. Whisk together flour (2 1/4 cups), baking powder, baking soda, cinnamon, allspice, and salt in a bowl.

4. Whisk together pumpkin, 3/4 cup buttermilk, and vanilla in another bowl.

5. Beat butter (1 1/2 sticks) and granulated sugar in a large bowl with an electric mixer at medium-high speed until pale and fluffy, 3 to 5 minutes, then add eggs and beat 1 minute. Reduce speed to low and add flour and pumpkin mixtures alternately in batches, beginning and ending with flour mixture and mixing until batter is just smooth.

6. Spoon batter into pan, smoothing top, then bake until a wooden pick or skewer inserted in center of cake comes out clean, 45 to 50 minutes. Cool cake in pan on a rack 15 minutes, then invert rack over cake and re-invert cake onto rack. Cool 10 minutes more.

ICING DIRECTIONS:

1. While cake is cooling, whisk together buttermilk and confectioners sugar until smooth. Drizzle icing over warm cake, then cool cake completely. Icing will harden slightly.

TIPS:

Cake can be made 3 days ahead and kept in an airtight container at room temperature.

2. I use Pam with Flour spray instead of a butter/flour combination for a no-stick remedy. My cakes have always dropped from the pan beautifully.

3. Fill your bundt pan to 3/4 full. I used the 10-cup bundt pan suggested but if you use a smaller bundt pan, just make muffins with the extra mixture.

LUNCH at the OCCIDENTAL GRILL & SEAFOOD - YELLOWFIN TUNA with BENNE SEED CRUST.

LUNCH at the OCCIDENTAL GRILL & SEAFOOD – YELLOWFIN TUNA with BENNE SEED CRUST.

ELOISE of THE PLAZA HOTEL & ME

ELOISE of THE PLAZA HOTEL & ME

Cherry Tomato Crostini  with Herbed Goat Cheese

Cherry Tomato Crostini with Herbed Goat Cheese

As I walked to The Gant’s front office recently, I was followed by a young man and his son headed in the same direction. During that 3-4 minute walk, the little guy, probably 6, never stopped asking questions, one after another. Honestly, not one breath. How is that possible? At some point I glanced back, smiling. The Daddy caught my eye and said wearily, “All the time.”

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Last month CNN named The Gant among twenty of America’s most beautiful hotels. That honor, I decided, transformed me into the legitimate adult version of Eloise who lived at The Plaza Hotel. Of all lifestyle possibilities, my residing in a 144-condo resort hotel in Aspen was never a consideration nor was flying to the moon or summiting Everest. Be careful what you don’t wish for.

ROASTED TOMATO & FRESH MOZZARELLA PASTA by Chris Scheuer

ROASTED TOMATO & FRESH MOZZARELLA PASTA by Chris Scheuer

I never considered this a long-term solution. But after three years I’m parked, having quickly surmised to either embrace the nature of this hustle-bustle complex or move on. “Your brain doesn’t know how old it is,” observed Paul Nussbaum, president of Pittsburgh’s Brain Health Center. “What it wants to do is learn.”

Nearby The Gant, the Aspen Mountain gondola runs all summer.

Nearby The Gant, the Aspen Mountain gondola runs all summer.

Maybe wrapping my head around such a wacky lifestyle idea was asking too much learning from my brain. Every week I have new neighbors. There are weddings and conferences and events. The Gant is a big house full of happy people on vacation. Mr. Roger’s Neighborhood, it is not. For someone who values privacy and likes to be anchored, this is a stretch.

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While I haven’t set aside longtime personal perceptions, I have rearranged their possibilities. For example, last week a family of five, 3 boys with bikes, moved in next door. They were good kids but one night the racket was over-the-top. Not good, I thought, until I listened. “USA, USA, USA,” they hollered. More whoops. Michael Phelps & Co. were gold-digging in Rio. Their excitement knew no bounds. I flashed back to earlier noisy Olympic moments with my girls and poured a glass of wine.

David's tomatoes, ready and raring to be roasted

David’s tomatoes, ready and raring to be roasted

I came home in mid-July to find a humongous bear trap in my building’s parking lot. Since a bear had gotten too familiar with a paying guest, it needed to be captured and moved. (I still cheered for the bear.) I already knew it was collared, meaning it had been caught in the trap before. Fool me once. Shame on you. Fool me twice. Shame on me. The bear, not a fool, was a no-show.

Thinking that our lovable bear lives in nearby Aspen Grove Cemetery,  founded in 1889 and the resting place for Aspen's pioneers and war veterans.

Thinking that our lovable bear lives in nearby Aspen Grove Cemetery, founded in 1889 and the resting place for Aspen’s pioneers and war veterans.

Everyday I look for a Happy: The Grandpa who was paying his two pre-teen granddaughters each $100 to climb Aspen Mountain with him! ( Memo to Emma & Clara: No.); Entrepreneurs Peter (4) and Lily (3), pitching their lemonade stand at a prime Gant pathway yesterday, Mom shadowing the operation. Business was brisk. The money, Peter told me, is going to St. Jude’s ‘so kids can have operations.’ Love that Mom; And, Vice-President Biden and his family spent a week-end here this summer, a thrill for the staff and paying guests.

THIS IS A QUICK-and-EASY   SUPPER. FEW INGREDIENTS AND QUICKLY MADE.

THIS IS A QUICK-and-EASY
SUPPER. FEW INGREDIENTS AND QUICKLY MADE.

Eloise ends her story with, “Ooooooooooooooooooo I absolutely love The Plaza.”

Silly it may be, but “Ooooooooooooooooooo I absolutely love The Gant.”

Carved of Colorado Yule  Marble by Sculptor Gregory Tonozzi, this statute sits in Aspen Grove Cemetery.  This marble was also used for Lincoln's Memorial and the Tomb of the Unknowns in Washington DC. One of the finest white marbles in the world, it is still being shipped from nearby Marble to Europe and Asia.

Carved of Colorado Yule Marble by Sculptor Gregory Tonozzi, this statute sits in Aspen Grove Cemetery. This marble was also used for Lincoln’s Memorial and the Tomb of the Unknowns in Washington DC. One of the finest white marbles in the world, it is still being shipped from nearby Marble to Europe and Asia.

Life is about expectations and our CooktheBookFridays choice, CHERRY TOMATO CROSTINI with HERBED GOAT CHEESE, is a keeper. David’s roasted tomatoes are the prize this week. I made one batch for the crostini and another for Chris Scheuer’s ROASTED TOMATO AND FRESH MOZZARELLA PASTA. While fresh cherry or grape tomatoes are plentiful, Chris suggests always keeping some in the fridge for pizzas, salads, sandwiches, the possibilities are endless.

CHERRY TOMATO CROSTINI with HERBED GOAT CHEESE

MY PARIS KITCHEN by David Lebovitz

Serving Size: 4

INGREDIENTS:

(Note: I purchased herbed goat cheese.)

Roasted Cherry Tomatoes:

AFTER BEING ROASTED

AFTER BEING ROASTED

1 1/2 pounds cherry tomatoes, stemmed and halved
3 tablespoons olive oil
2 cloves garlic, peeled and thinly sliced
handful of whole, unchopped fresh herbs (any combination of rosemary or thyme sprigs, bay leaf and basil or sage leaves)
sea salt or kosher salt and freshly ground black pepper

Toasts:

4 thick slices bread, such as ciabatta, a country bread or a sourdough that is not too dense
olive oil
1 clove garlic, peeled
a few leaves of fresh basil, sage or flat leaf parsley to garnish

DIRECTIONS:

Roasted Tomatoes:

1.Preheat the oven to 350ºF.

2.Combine the cherry tomatoes, olive oil, sliced garlic and herbs in a baking dish or pan that will hold them all in a snug single layer.

3. Season with salt and pepper, mix well and spread them out in a single layer.

4. Roast the tomatoes in the oven for about 45 minutes, stirring once or perhaps twice during baking, until they’re wilted and their juices are starting to concentrate — and perhaps brown a bit — in the bottom of the baking dish or pan. (The baking time will depend on the material of the baking dish and type of cherry tomatoes used.) Ideally, you want the tomatoes to juice, and for the juices to thicken and concentrate.

5. Scrape the tomatoes and any juices into a bowl and let cool to room temperature.

6. They can sit up to 8 hours, and improve the longer they sit. When ready to serve, make the toasts.

Toasts:

1. Evenly brush the bread with olive oil.

2. Place them on a baking sheet in a preheated 350ºF oven and toast for about 5 minutes, until light golden brown.

3. Remove from the oven and when just cool enough to handle, rub the slices generously with the garlic clove.

4. Let cool to room temperature.

SERVE:

1. Thickly smear each piece of bread with the fresh herbed cheese.
Set each one on a plate.

2. Pluck out the herbs and spoon the tomatoes and their juices onto the slices of bread.

3. Coarsely chop the herbs for the garnish, and scatter them over the top of each portion.

ROASTED TOMATO AND FRESH MOZZARELLA PASTA

Note that I let this pasta cool down before adding the cheese. Therefore, it didn't melt. Either way, this pasta dish is delicious.

Note that I let this pasta cool down before adding the cheese. Therefore, it didn’t melt. Either way, this pasta dish is delicious.

adapted from Chris Scheuer, Cafe Sucre & Farine

Serves: 6-8 servings

INGREDIENTS:

1 pound tofette or ditalini pasta or your choice
4 ears fresh corn (in a pinch, use 15.25 oz. canned corn, drained)
12 ounces fresh mozzarella, cubed
3 tablespoons extra virgin olive oil (divided)
1 recipe Garlic and Herb Roasted Tomatoes (Link to Chris’ version here)
¼ cup finely chopped fresh basil
1 teaspoon kosher salt
freshly ground black pepper, to taste

INSTRUCTIONS:

1. Bring a medium large pot of water to a rolling boil. Add 1 tablespoon salt and pasta. Allow water to return to a boil, then cook pasta al dente according to package directions.

2. Reserve 1 cup of the pasta water, then drain well. Drizzle with 1 tablespoon extra virgin olive oil and stir to coat pasta with oil. (This will keep it from drying out until you’re ready to combine it with the other ingredients.) Set aside.

3. While pasta is cooking, cook the corn ears. When cool enough, cut kernels from cobs. Cover and set aside.

4. If you prefer the cheese not to melt quickly, allow pasta to cool for 10 minutes. Otherwise, immediately combine the hot pasta with about ⅔ of the tomatoes (reserve the rest) in a medium-large bowl (be sure to scrape out all the good oil and herbs from the roasting pan). Add corn, fresh mozzarella cubes, remaining olive oil, salt, pepper. Stir gently to combine. If the pasta is too thick, add 1/4-1/2 cup of pasta water to loosen it bit, if needed. (I added no pasta water.) Add ½ of the basil and stir gently one more time. Top with the remaining tomatoes and basil.

5. Serve hot or at room temperature.

TIP: Using 1 1/2- 2 pounds of cherry tomatoes in Lebovitz’s recipe is sufficient for this pasta dish. Chris’ recipe yields approximately 4 cups of the mixture depending on size.

COOKtheBOOKFRIDAYS is an international virtual cooking group making their way through David Lebovitz’s outstanding newest cookbook, My Paris Kitchen. To see what my colleagues baked this week, go here.

JUNE is BUSTIN’ OUT in the ROCKIES

JUNE is BUSTIN’ OUT in the ROCKIES

Rhubarb-Pistachio Bundt Cake with Rose Glaze

Rhubarb-Pistachio Bundt Cake with Rose Glaze

I need a Time Out to serve up some Joy.

POULET CRAPAUDINE FAÇON (CHICKEN LADY CHICKEN)

POULET CRAPAUDINE FAÇON (CHICKEN LADY CHICKEN)

While processing the waywardness of our planet this week, it’s not disrespectful, to my mind, to search for an alternative to hand-wringing and strain. Who wants anxiety and sadness to become constant companions. Although I’m not important in that important sort-of-way nor powerful nor do I possess great wealth, the onus is still on me to step up and be counted. I try hard to do that through the avenues opened to me.

The bears are wide awake and on-the-move. We already have bear tales to tell. Donna Chase photo.

The bears are wide awake and on-the-move. We already have bear tales to tell. Donna Chase photo.

Just as important, I think, is to embrace Life and wring out the best it can offer each 24 hour day. You’ll never get a replay. I learned that rather late in life. This week’s post and photos are my version of wrapping my arms around this wobbly world and calming my small slice of turf.

In June we volunteers check the trails for fallen trees and report back to the USFS. They send crews to clear the  pathways.  My friend, Donna Grauer and I thought these logs were a bit too much for us.

In June we volunteers check the trails for fallen trees and report back to the USFS. They send crews to clear the pathways. My friend, Donna Grauer, and I thought these logs were a bit too much for us.

In the Colorado High Country it’s Check-Clear-and-Clean-up time for volunteer forest rangers. We check the trails for missing signs and necessary safety materials, clear the trails of debris and fallen trees and clean up what winter’s cast off.

It's always special to spot a Calypso Orchid (Fairyslipper).  Because this orchid is in decline in North America, we always try to record our finding and take a photo.

It’s always special to spot a Calypso Orchid (Fairyslipper). Because this orchid is in decline in North America, we always try to record our finding and take a photo.

Our daily reports are beauties (we’re over-educated overachievers) with to-do directives for the USFS, noting also the flowers blooming and birds flying overhead. And, yes, we also offer suggestions and dispense some valuable advice (in our opinion). If we can nab a bear or moose photo to share, that’s icing on the PowerBar. What I wouldn’t give to watch our over-worked, underpaid professional Rangers as they sift through our lengthy reports!

My first-of-the-season patrol at the Maroon Bells with friend Jane Batagglia. We never take the grandeur of the Bells for granted.

My first-of-the-season patrol at the Maroon Bells with friend Jane Batagglia. We never take the grandeur of the Bells for granted.

There’s something about realizing your 13-year old granddaughter has your back that makes your heart skip a beat or two. This past winter I received this bracelet from Clara with a note, “Grandma, I made this paracord bracelet for you to wear when you’re a forest ranger this summer. Paracord is a durable nylon cord that can support up to 550 pounds. If you are ever in an emergency situation, just take this bracelet apart and you have 7-9 feet of paracord. Some of the many uses of this survival cord are: make a splint or tourniquet; shoe laces replacement; makeshift fishing line; create a pulley system; or, rappel down a rock face. Plus, paracord just looks cool. Love, Clara.”

I loved the thought of “looking cool” but rappelling down a rock face, not so much.

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The White River National Forest is the most visited one in the nation with ‘its 2.3 million acres, 11 ski resorts, eight Wilderness areas, 10 mountain peaks over 14,000 feet and 2,500 miles of trails.’

When we’re not outside, we’re inside, learning. Every June the Forest Conservancy, our organization that rides herd over us, offers free nature and orientation classes. Next Tuesday I’ll attend a full-day course on raptors taught by an expert from the Rocky Mountain Conservancy Field Institute. Later this month I’ll take a refresher First Aid/CPR class. Therefore, when I’m cleaning and adding antiseptic cream to a tourist who has slipped on the rocks, I’ll also be able to identify for him the Red-tailed Hawk flying overhead.

We Love Our Moose. Maroon Bells, Bernd Rosenow photo.

We Love Our Moose. Maroon Bells, Bernd Rosenow photo.

Bernd Rosenow photo.

Bernd Rosenow photo.

It’s also CooktheBookFridays. This week’s recipe, CHICKEN LADY CHICKEN, is a spatchcocked/butterflied chicken marinated for two days and browned on the top burner before baking in the oven. This is the recipe for those of us who don’t have an outside grill. Otherwise, throw this baby on your grill. Whether cooked out or in, this marinated wonder is delicious. I’ve added tips and how-to photos with the recipe.

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Rhubarb-Pistachio Bundt Cake with Rose Glaze has been my cake of choice this spring and will “pivot” into summer. ( Every politician is “pivoting” right now, why can’t I?) It’s a birthday cake, a teacake or why-not-bake-a-cake cake. Just so, so special. Not being a rosewater fan, I made changes as noted in the recipe. Serve it with pistachio or vanilla ice cream, whipped cream or plain Jane.

RHUBARB-PISTACHIO BUNDT CAKE WITH ROSE GLAZE adapted from Caren Rothman, Poppy’s Catering, Epicurious, MAY 2015

Serves 12–16

INGREDIENTS

CAKE:

3/4 cup (1 1/2 sticks) unsalted butter, room temperature, plus more for pan
2 1/4 cups all-purpose flour, plus more for pan
2 1/4 cups granulated sugar
1/2 teaspoon finely grated lemon zest
5 large eggs, room temperature
1 teaspoons rose water
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
1/2 teaspoon kosher salt
1/2 teaspoon baking powder
1/4 teaspoon baking soda
3/4 cup plain Greek yogurt (I use FAGE Total)
3/4 cup plus 2 tablespoons raw pistachios, toasted and chopped
12 ounces rhubarb (3-4 stalks), trimmed

ROSE GLAZE:

2 1/2 cups powdered sugar
2 tablespoons milk
1/2 teaspoon vanilla extract
1/8 teaspoon salt
1/8 teaspoon red food coloring
2 tablespoons raw pistachios, toasted and chopped

12-cup Bundt pan


DIRECTIONS:

CAKE:

1.Preheat oven to 350°F. Butter and flour bundt pan, tapping out excess flour.
2. Rub together granulated sugar and lemon zest with your fingers in a large bowl until fragrant. Using an electric mixer on medium speed, cream lemon sugar and 3/4 cup butter until light and fluffy, about 4 minutes. Add eggs 1 at a time, scraping down sides of bowl and beating well between each addition. Beat in rose water (I used only 1 teaspoon instead of 2) and vanilla extract on medium-low speed until just combined.
3.Whisk 2 1/4 cups flour, salt, baking powder, and baking soda in another large bowl. With mixer on low, add dry ingredients to lemon sugar mixture in 3 additions, alternating with yogurt in 2 additions, beginning and ending with dry ingredients, scraping down sides and bottom of bowl as needed. Fold in pistachios.
4.Cut rhubarb crosswise into 2 1/2″ pieces. Using a mandoline set to 1/4″ or a very sharp knife, slice rhubarb lengthwise, maintaining as much red skin on stalks as possible.

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5.Pour one-third of the batter into prepared pan and smooth surface. Add half of the rhubarb, nestling pieces side by side to form a thick ring on top of batter. Pour another third of the batter on top of rhubarb layer; smooth surface. Repeat with remaining rhubarb and batter.

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6.Bake cake until the surface is cracked and golden brown, springs back to the touch, and a tester inserted into the center comes out clean, 50–60 minutes. Let cake rest in pan 10 minutes, then turn out onto a cooling rack.

Rose Glaze:
7. Whisk powdered sugar, milk, vanilla extract, and salt in a medium bowl until well combined. Glaze should be pourable but stiff enough to hold its shape-it can be thickened with more powdered sugar or thinned with more milk if needed. (If you like the Rosewater flavoring, add 1 teaspoon.)
8. Using a spoon, drizzle rose glaze over cooled cake, holding the spoon a few inches above the cake.
9. Sprinkle remain chopped pistachio nuts on top.

DO AHEAD:

Cake can be baked, cooled, wrapped in plastic, and stored at room temperature up to 3 days. Glaze can be made and stored in an airtight container at room temperature up to 5 days.

CHICKEN LADY CHICKEN (POULET CRAPAUDINE FAÇON) by David Lebovitz, My Paris Kitchen

Serves 4

3 cloves garlic, peeled and minced
1 1/2 teaspoons sea salt or Kosher salt
2 tablespoons olive oil
2 tablespoons freshly squeezed lemon juice
2 tablespoons white wine
1 tablespoon soy sauce
2 1/2 teaspoons harissa, Sriracha, or Asian chile paste (I used Sriracha)
2 teaspoons Dijon or yellow mustard
2 teaspoons honey
1 (3-pound) chicken

1. Put the minced garlic and salt in a resealable plastic bag and crush it with the heel of your hand until it’s a paste. Add the olive oil, lemon juice, white wine, soy sauce, Sriracha, mustard, and honey to the bag, combining the ingredients well.
2. Have your 3-pound chicken spatchcocked or butterflied (the techniques are somewhat the same) at you grocery store or butcher unless you wish to do it yourself.

the spatchcocked (or butterflied) chicken

the spatchcocked (or butterflied) chicken

3. Loosen the skin from the breast and thigh meat and spoon some of the marinade under the skin. Put the chicken in the bag, close it securely, and use your hands to rub the ingredients into the chicken. Refrigerate it for 1 to 2 days, flipping the bag over a few times as it marinates.

Marinated Chicken

Marinated Chicken


4, To cook the chicken, preheat the oven to 400ºF. Heat a cast-iron skillet or grill pan over medium-high heat on the stovetop and place the chicken in it, breast side down. Drape a sheet of heavy-duty aluminum foil over the top and set a heavy weight on top of it. (David used a leftover weight.)

David used a leftover weight to weigh down his chicken while browning it on top of the stove.

David used a leftover weight to weigh down his chicken while browning it on top of the stove.

5. Cook the chicken until the skin is a deep golden brown, which usually takes about 10 minutes or so — check it often after the first 5 minutes. Once it’s browned, flip the chicken over, replace the weight, and let it cook for about 5 more minutes.
6. Remove the weight and the foil and place the chicken in the oven for 25 minutes, until it’s cooked through. To serve it French-style, cut the chicken into six pieces: two legs, two thighs, and cut each breast in half crosswise, leaving the wings attached.

This tastes better than store-bought rotisserie chicken. Serve with french fries and your favorite coleslaw for a wonderful summertime supper.

CooktheBookFridays is a virtual international group making their way through David Lebovitz’s My Paris Kitchen cookbook.To see what others have mixed up this week or to join our group (it’s fun), go here.