Cooking is fun. Eating is funner. I cook, photograph and write these recipes.
Everything I post on this blog I make from scratch using fresh wholesome ingredients.. I've been cooking since I was a little kid.
My recipes are based on trial and error, along with studying cookbooks, family recipes, blogs and cooking shows.
Some of the veggies and herbs I use are grown in my garden. Yay sustainability!
I'm working on making my yard into an edible landscape. It's really fun to go out in the garden and pick your veggies for dinner!
I packed socks and underwear so far. I’m going to freeze to death.
I have a little gift for Jon’s daughter.
I have the wildflower...
Here’s to perpetually filled beers, preferably of Michigan origin
Front Garden Edible Landscape Project
This is a big, beautiful vegetable and fruit garden I planted in my friend’s front yard....
Ladies and Gentlemen: Jon Stewart on our tax code… (from last night’s Daily Show)
Researchers from the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health’s Weight Management Center...
more lentil burgers
A healthy way to start the day at the Chopard Lounge in Cannes. Photography by Jamie Beck.
Funny Food is here today in Our Global Kitchen crafting silly snacks, like this “Plum-Alisa,” from 10:30 am to 1 pm.
From Funny Food, by...
So I’ve just spent half an hour happily chucking handfuls of wildflower seed into every spare...
We had a grand time this last weekend. Pictured above is a lovely pescadería by the name of Baja Fish in San Pedro. I like this kind of hole in the...
4 posts tagged organic vegetables
Seed saving is very important, especially since the Big Ag / Big Food creeps are trying to own patents on all the seeds in the world by genetically modifying them. Diabolical!
These are seeds I saved from a Broccoli Raab plant that bolted in my garden last month. Bolting means sending up a flower stalk. For cold loving plants like Broccoli Raab, warmer temps signal them to bolt and set seeds for the next generation. It’s a Darwinian thing.
It’s easy to save seeds. You simply let your plants complete their life cycle when they’re done producing food. Instead of yanking the spent plants out of your garden, let a few of your favorite ones set flowers, and then set seed pods. These small flowers will attract beneficial insects to your garden, which is a bonus of this process. Allow the seed pods to dry on the plant and then crunch them open. Inside are the seeds for next years crop. I put mine through a mesh strainer to strain away the bigger parts of the chaff.
Package them up, save some for your next years garden and share the rest. We win!!
Here are some of the fruits and veggies in the front garden. The chard is beautiful as a landscape plant and we cook with it a lot. The slugs and snails find it quite delicious. One of these nights I’ll have to go out there with a flashlight and catch them in the act. I promise not to make escargot.
I have lots of tomatoes growing in my garden right now and they seem to be ready to harvest all at once. Here’s a really easy and delicious way to use a bunch of tomatoes. Oven roasting brings out the sweetness of the tomatoes and onion. You can freeze the leftover sauce to use in a lasagna or a pot of chili.
If you don’t have garden tomatoes, this recipe is great with store bought plum tomatoes.
Cut tomatoes in half and put them in a shallow roasting pan. I use a glass, ceramic or enamel pan for this sauce and avoid metal.
Slice a sweet onion or shallot and add it to the pan. Smash open a few cloves of garlic, no need to chop or peel.
Drizzle about 1/4 cup olive oil over the tomatoes, garlic & onions and toss the whole thing with salt and pepper.
Bake at 350 till bubbly. Squeeze the garlic from the peels.
Serve over pasta with fresh basil and cheese.
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