Archive for the ‘food’ Category

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[Insert obligatory statement about not posting for a while]

September 24, 2011

So life has continued at a rather quick pace since I last posted anything here.  Routines have been created – wake up around 7am, shower, breakfast, run to catch the 7:53 bus, transfer, get into the office somewhere between 8:30 and 8:40, drink coffee or tea, desk time, meetings, chatting, planning, lunch, desk time, desk time leave work around 5pm (or sometimes earlier, since I make it in half an hour early), catch the bus, wait in exasperation for my second bus (and if the weather is nice give up and walk home), get home around 6:15 or so, make dinner/eat dinner, get sleepy, chat with Alex, read the internets, read my books, hang out with housemates, sleep.

As for the work itself, I am enjoying it for the most part.  I think it helps that I don’t really miss my old job (the people yes, the job not really).  I like the routine of riding buses (I am reading so many more books now, especially with discovering how well it works to read library books on my iPod) and working in an office with adults.  Sometimes it can get frustrating when the end objectives don’t always seem clear, but I really like my fellow VISTAs and I am excited about our goals.

If you check out my Flickr stream from time to time, you can see that I have been up to some fun things including a train ride around Mt. Rainier with Alex’s family, gone to a church related young adult potluck, numerous happy hours with co-workers and new friends, made blackberry jam, granola and a carrot cake for Alex’s birthday, a celebratory after party with co-workers for the United Way Day of Caring, a weekend at Alex’s grandparents’ lake cabin with friends. So in case you missed them, here are some pictures from the past few weeks:

Heading to potluck on a bridge over Aurora Ave

Downtown Seattle from Fremont

Alex turns 27

Alex and his birthday carrot cake

Happy Hour sunset

Taken from the back deck at Captain Blacks on Capital Hill

Mandi and Elissa get their groove on

Dance party

Stephen, Elissa and Mandi

Stephen, Elissa (my fellow VISTAS) and Mandi (co-worker) at the after party for the Day of Caring

View of downtown Seattle from the stadium

Beautiful Seattle

The gang

Alex and his friends from high school at the lake cabin

Alex and I

Alex and I standing in front of a train

Three generations of Petersons

Alex, his father and his grandfather - on a train

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The High Cost of Botulism

June 23, 2011

The title of this post is mainly there to serve as both an example of the kind of conversations that happen when I spend time around my brothers and also as my attempt to claim the phrase for when I finally start that emo ska punk band (in which I would obviously play the viola).

Anyways, while it already feels like a quite a long time ago (thanks in part to two early morning trips to O’Hare aiport and a fun time hosting an old friend from high school), I figured I should talk a little bit about the awesomeness that was this past weekend.

Brought about Charletta’s long anticipated graduation with a Masters in Marriage and Family Counseling, this weekend included both a full complement of my immediate family and the presence of Charletta’s parents.  In other words, it was a grand ole time.  Highlights include hanging out with Jonathan for most of the day on Friday, during which we bought (and ate) fancy cheese, walked around downtown, and finally got drinks at the Signature Lounge.

Jonathan

Jonathan shows off his angelic side

Chicago haze

Chicago summer haze, at it's best

Other really fun times included a celebratory pizza dinner hosted by the Charletta’s parents at a local Italian restaurant and getting to can 8qts of strawberry jam with my Mom.

Charletta's parents in the middle

Charletta's parents are the ones in the middle

Saturday afternoon jam session

Not only is this jam yummy, but it actually set, instead of just forming yummy strawberry sauce

But of course the highlight was getting to see Charletta finish a long (and arduous) life stage called grad school.  Congrats Charletta, welcome to the Masters side of the family!

Jonathan, Tim, Charletta, Mom, Abby and Dad

Charletta and her rockin' robes

*Bonus Shots* A side by side analysis of two champion nappers:

Dad sneaks a quick napLina joins him

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Coffee in Seattle

May 28, 2011

Well I successfully arrived in Seattle late last night (or on my internal clock, very early this morning). Friday was quite a long day due to it being the last day for seniors at the high school, but other than a request for a last period dance party in the library (sorry, but no, seeing as 3/4 of the school still has work to do) and some firecrackers set off outside the library, it was actually a pretty calm day. Then of course I hurried home and did last minute packing and caught a ride to the downtown Evanston bus depot where I took the bus to the airport. There I had some mild anxiety because a) the bus took 80 minutes as opposed to the 60 that I was expecting b) I hadn’t realized that one still had to take a tram in from the drop off spot to the actual terminal c) I didn’t know which terminal to go to because United serves two separate ones. But thankfully I wasn’t checking bags, so after a brisk walk/run between terminals I got my boarding pass, got through security and got to my gate with 1/2 hour to spare. The flight went well and I had a window seat, which always makes me happy. I also noticed that we never actually moved beyond at least a faint sunset (at least not until we began the descent into Seattle) in the far west. Now, I don’t know exactly why this is, seeing as we landed around 11pm Seattle time, but perhaps we were so high up that we could see significantly further west? Either way it was beautiful and oddly comforting. Plus I was rewarded with a gorgeous view of the lights of downtown Seattle as we banked south towards the airport. Such a beautiful city!
Now of course I am sitting in a coffee shop (suitable Saturday morning activity anywhere, but especially here in the city of coffee) with David. Alex is off volunteering at his ESL class and I tagged along with David to his favorite local Top Pot, which features rather incredible “hand-forged” donuts. I have been to others of this local chain on previous trips.

Seriously this Top Pot doughnut was the size of my head, or at least my face.

From my Seattle trip last August: Although not pictured, David is off to the left and that is Becca sitting across from me waiting for the deliciousness!

But this time I got a raspberry bismark, which was both delicious and full of powdery explosions.  Well now I am probably going to go test my geographic knowledge on Sporcle (thanks to Alex and Becca, this is my new obsession) or some such other random internet-y thing.  Unfortunately I still haven’t heard back from THE JOB, but seeing as a three day weekend has now commenced, I am going to do my best to forget about until Tuesday morning at the earliest.

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Good things

April 13, 2011

1. Spring Break was so lovely – I could probably write more, but right now I will just say it was a solidly good time as evidenced by these pictures.

Joanna and Tim

Visits with good friends!

Goofballs

Being goofy on sunny afternoons

Cinnamon Rolls

Baking super sugary butter filled rolls of yum

Very prim and proper

Catching up with old friends in new apartments

Seagulls drafting the ferry

Ferry rides at sunset

Alex waits for me to set up the shot

And last but not least spending time with this handsome fellow!

2. I have a cat again – Well, not a particularly new cat, but I am once again living with Lina (formerly known as biscuit/kitty/thumps/cleo/etc) who couldn’t move right away with Jess into her new digs.  So far it is kind of fun to have a cat to snuggle with again, however as I learned last night it is less fun with said snuggle beast decides to noisily investigate one’s closet at midnight.

Cat on a dirty wooden floor

This also means a chance to re-introduce the "pissed kitty" category on this blog.

3. I am talking to Alex tonight – Yay for Skype (or more specifically Google Video Chat)

4. My job interview went well – I know I am going up against at least 20 candidates and have absolutely no idea how the interviewer felt about me (at least in comparison to others), so I am keeping my expectations very very low.  But on the good side, I should know one way or another by next week.

5. Downton Abbey is my new favorite thing – My favorite character is a tie between the dowager countess (Maggie Smith, of course) and the valet with a limp. If you have Netflix or Amazon Prime, you should be able to view this BBC mini-series online. If not rent it, you won’t be disappointed.

DowntonAbbey01

Basic plot line is the dual story of an rich aristocracy family and the servants who care for them living in Britain during the early 1900s. The season opens with the sinking of the Titanic and closes with the start of World War I, unfortunately season 2 isn't showing for at least another year.

6. Spring, or at least the sun seems to be here – There is something down right giddifying (and yes I just made that word up) about fresh green shoots.  I always forget how much I love spring, right up until it turns every thing green and all of a sudden my mood improves by at least 50 aesthetic points.

new growth

7. Anticipating baking chocolate raspberry birthday cake – Conveniently my housemates have birthdays every once in while, which I tend to see as excuse to whip up butter, flour and sugar into cake form.  So fun!

She does such neat work!

I won't be baking a cake this size (and I won't have Becca to help 😦 ) but I am going to use this same amazing instant fudge frosting.

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Some photos before Spring Break

March 31, 2011

So as you can see if you look back at my post from last weekend, I have had a pretty productive week so far.  While there are still a few items left, I am hoping that tonight and tomorrow will finish them all off, because I can’t wait to head out to rainy, 50 degree Seattle (fortunately the main attractions of that lovely city is not the weather :), or I feel I would end up being sadly disappointed).  But before I head out, I wanted to share a few photos that haven’t been brought to your attention.  First off all, a week ago last Tuesday, I made one of my favorite meals in a long time: Roasted Sweet Potatoes, Baked Dijon Tillapia and Roasted Asparagus with Lemon and Sea Salt.
Sweet Potatoes getting a bath

Slicing off the ends of the Asparagus

Honey Dijon Tilapia with Pecan crustAnd to top it off, we all enjoyed some nice crisp Hard Cider.

Finished Tuesday night dinnerThen this past Sunday, I had a wonderful time driving down to Lafayette with my cousin Emily to visit Jonathan and see the musical Spamalot.  The whole day was a lot of fun, but in the end I think my favorite part was spending 6 hours catching up with Emily.  Back at the beginning of 2011, Emily and I decided to make this year, “The Year of Actually Seeing Each Other, Because We Live in the Same City, Dangit!” and so far we are off to a really good start with our fourth time hanging out and it isn’t even April yet.

"See, I am very smart and know lots of physics, that is why I am blindly punching numbers on this calculator!"
There goes the enormous concrete statue
Emily also took a turn
Pretty points against blue sky
The Three Amigos

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Good moments from the holidays (so far)

December 24, 2010

– driving home to Goshen with Becca listening to loads of Christmas music and get a glimpse of blue sky right as we approached Goshen

– watching the candle dance at the Assembly bread & soup Christmas Eve service (I have been in this dance countless times and watched it even more, but I don’t get tired of the simple melody, the circle steps and the whole congregation lit by candlelight)

– trying to bake another batch of chocolate caramel cookies with sea salt that I had made earlier this week with Becca and ending up with a molten field of chocolate dough and rivers of caramel that despite their complete lack of cookie-ness are quite tasty

– seeing a Great Blue Heron from about 15 feet away on a pre-dawn walk  with my Mom

– completing one puzzle, two games of tichu with family and the various prep work (cranberry sauce, stuffing, etc) required for our Christmas dinner tomorrow

– indulging my great weakness for Christmas music by falling for Amazon’s 99 Christmas classics for 2 dollars deal (and then forcing my family to listen to it with me)

– working with my Mom to successfully sew a pair of mittens out of old wool sweaters.

– seeing all the assorted “kids” from Assembly who have since grown up and away and seem to be frighteningly adult now

– hand delivered Christmas packages

– the very traditional snowman the neighbors made in their lawn.

I hope you all are enjoying the holidays and I wish you the merriest of Christmases!

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day 23 – Guest Post from Becca

November 23, 2010

As you may note, today’s post is not actually the expected “Cooking with Abby” but instead a guest post from Becca, one of my dearest and oldest (in terms of length of friendship, not age) friends.  But seeing as a certain day of major cooking festivities is coming up on Thursday, I thought I would switch my order around and do a Cooking with Abby post then.  Plus as you will see, this post may come in handy for all your pre-festivity pie baking because, trust me, this girl knows her pies!

Pie Crust 101

I have been baking since elementary school.  I don’t remember what my first project was, or even why I began baking in the first place.  What I do remember are lovely afternoons in the kitchen experimenting with new recipes, my first measuring spoon set (brightly colored spoons that came with a kid’s cookbook), the wrath of my parents when they discovered the inevitable mess I would made in the kitchen, and, of course the finished products (or “goop” as my dad calls it).  I had a number of  successes, and even more flops–the pancakes that were so bad they got fed to the dog (my thoughtful and amazing Grandpa also forced some down), the cake with Pepto Bismal-colored frosting, and of course the Jessica Fields Marshmallow Cloud Cookie disaster (ask Abby about that one)–to name a few.

I have always loved making pie.  I love trying new fillings and learning different techniques for making the perfect pie crust.  The first pie I ever attempted was an unmitigated disaster.  I was probably about 9 years old, and I decided that it would be a good idea to make a pie in the middle of July on one of the hottest, most humid days of the year.  Several attempts at getting the rolled out dough into the pie pan proved fruitless.  Frustrated, I gave up and went swimming, leaving my poor mother to finish the pie for me.

Since that day, I have made more pies, most with more success than that first one.  I made a pie the other evening, and Abby asked me to share the crust recipe.  The recipe is from Pie, by Ken Haedrich.  I highly recommend this book for anyone interested in pie making.  There are 50 pages devoted to apple pies alone!

When in comes to pie crust, I am firmly in the all-butter camp.  Using shortening does make for a flakier crust, but butter gives a much better flavor.  If you have access to it/are not a vegetarian/ are not grossed out by it, lard actually makes the best crust, giving both amazing flavor and texture.

A caveat:  Don’t be discouraged by the length of this recipe, I was just super detailed.  Making pie crust really is pretty easy once you get the hang of it!

Single-crust all butter pie dough (with the double crust measurements in parentheses):

Ingredients:

1 1/2 cups all purpose flour (2 3/4 cups)
1 1/2 t sugar (1T)
1/2 t salt (1t)
1/2 cup cold unsalted butter, cut into 1/4” pieces (1 cup)
About 1/4 cup ice water (about 1/2 cup)

Directions:

You can make your pie dough by hand, in a food processor, or with an electric mixer.  The following are directions for mixing by hand.  Whichever method you use, the trick is not to overwork the dough.  Work it as little as possible to prevent activating the gluten in the flour, resulting in a chewy, elasticy crust.

Begin by mixing the flour, sugar, and salt together in a bowl.  Add half the butter, and cut in with a pastry blender or two forks.  The pieces can be fairly large.  (This is a trick I learned from my middle school teacher Mrs. Gleim.  I’m not sure if there’s any merit to it, but she swore that cutting in half the fat, then the other half gives a flakier crust.)  Cut in the rest of the butter.  The pieces should now be about “pea-sized”–basically, you don’t want the pieces of butter too small, because it’s the pockets of unincorporated fat in pie crust that add to the flakiness.

Next, slowly add the water.  This is the tricky part.  You want to add just enough water so that the dough just begins to stick together, but not so much that it becomes sticky.  I usually add about half the water, toss the dough with a fork, then continue to add the water in a slow stream with one hand while tossing the dough with the other.  When you have added enough water, pack the dough into a ball and wrap it in plastic wrap (If you are making a double crust, make two balls, one slightly larger than the other).  Place the dough in the refrigerator for at least an hour.

When you are ready to roll out the crust, take the dough from the refrigerator (if it’s been in the fridge for more than an hour, let the dough sit on the counter for 5-10 minutes to soften a bit before rolling it out).  If you wish, you can roll out the dough on silpat or waxed paper for an easier transition to the pie plate, but I usually just roll it out on the counter because I’m lazy and/or I forget about it until it’s too late.

Liberally flour your work surface.  Place the ball of dough in the middle.  Flour the top of the dough, as well as your rolling pin.  Flatten the dough a bit with the rolling pin, then begin rolling out the dough.  Begin in the middle, and work your way out to the edge in one motion.  Do not roll back and forth.  Always start in the center and work outward, then go back to the center to get a consistent thickness (another Mrs. Gleim trick).  After the first few rolls, pick up the pastry, add more flour to the counter, and place it back down.  Do this a couple of times until it becomes too big to pick up to prevent it from sticking to the counter.

When your crust is all rolled out, you need to get it into the shell.  If you are using waxed paper, pick up the paper, invert it over the shell, and gradually peel it off.  What I usually do is gently pull up half the crust and fold it over the other half.  Then I take half of that and fold it over (so it is folded into fourths).  I then pick up the dough from the counter, place it in the pie pan, and unfold it.  This usually works for me, but you may have your own way that you prefer.

Pat the dough into the pan.  if it tears, you can fix it with a bit of water.  There should be about 1/2”-1” overhang around the edge of the pan.  Trim this overhang with a knife so that it is about 1/2” all the way around.  Next tuck this overhang under itself, so that it is even with the edge of the pie pan.  Bring the edge of the pie crust up off the pie plate so it is standing up.  Flute the crust by placing your left thumb and forefinger on the inside of the crust while pushing the crust inward with your right forefinger.  When this is done, chill your crust.  If you are making a single crust pie, chill in the freezer for 15-20 minutes.  If you are making a double crust pie, chill in the fridge for 15-20 minutes.

If you are baking your filling in the shell, make the filling, place it in the shell, and cook according to your recipe.  If you are making a cream pie, or another pie that requires a prebaked shell, read on.

Get a sheet of aluminum foil (preferably not heavy-duty) and line the inside of your shell, with the excess foil flaring out like wings.  Get some rice or dry beans and fill the shell the entire way up (you can save these and use them over and over).  This is to prevent the pie shell from shrinking.  Bake the shell at 400 degrees for 15 minutes.  Slowly lift the foil with the weights out of the shell (you can usually do this with your bare hands because the aluminum will cool when it hits room temperature).  Take a fork and prick the shell on the bottom 7 or 8 times.

Lower the oven temperature to 375 degrees and further bake the shell 10-12 minutes for a partially prebaked shell and 15-17 minutes longer for a fully prebaked shell (depending on what the recipe calls for).  Check the shell occasionally to make sure it isn’t puffing.  If it is, prick the area with a fork.  When you take the pie out of the oven, a partially prebaked shell should be just starting to brown, while a fully baked shell should be golden brown.

When the pastry is cool, fill with you desired filling and enjoy!!

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day 21 – Photo Sunday and catch-up

November 21, 2010

Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, part 1 (technically SPOILER ALERT, but if you have read the book you won’t find anything surprising about what I am saying)

First of all, I should say I am what you might call a big Harry Potter fan, while I don’t think the books are perfect by any means, they have also been a huge part of my reading for the past 10 years.  I am a part of the Harry Potter generation and therefore my viewpoint on the movie is definitely biased.  That said, I really loved this film!  Going into it I hadn’t heard really great reviews of the movie, many complained about the first part that dragged on and the repetition of the familiar tropes of Harry feeling bad about the people around him dying.  So I didn’t entirely know what to think going into it and I had no idea how they were going to come to a satisfying conclusion half-way through the book.  After seeing the movie, I have come to realization that those very things I was worried about going into the film, turned out to be some of my favorite things about the movie.

First, yes the first part of the movie does drag on for a while, but that is kind of the point.  This is a huge turning point for Harry, Ron and Hermione, no longer are they under the protection of Hogwarts, with the routine and direction it provided.  They are for the first time, really truly on their own and with a gigantic task ahead of them.  No wonder they mope about for a while, unsure of what to do next and so scaried, they are after all still teenagers (and young ones at that).  For the first time I felt like the movie actually gave time to the small quiet moments that helped capture the true heroism of the trio in keeping on going even when no hope or adults stand ready to save them.  This also ties into the idea of the continual theme of Harry being a bit deadly to those around him, I think it was Ron who has this great line in the movie that points out that these people haven’t died FOR Harry or even because of him, they have died for the bigger cause and the bigger fight that Harry is just one part of.  So yes, bad things continue to happen to Harry in this movie, but now in the context of a Voldermort in the flesh and in control of the Ministry of Magic, the fight has become much bigger than just a teenage boy with a scar on his forehead.

Second, I ended up loving the way they choose to end the movie [okay some of this might qualify as SPOILER ALERT], but ending with the heroic effort by Dobby the house elf to rescue his friend Harry Potter from the clutches of Bellatrix Lestrange.  Dobby fulfills his mission, only to be killed by Bellatrix in a final knife throw and he dies in the arms of Harry.  One of the most poignant parts of the book both for its eloquence (Harry honors his friend by burying him by hand) and important in that it gives Harry and his friend a chance to grieve many of the deaths they have already experienced by haven’t had time to remember.  Choosing to end the first part of the movies this way seemed very fitting and I left the theater both satisfied and very excited about July 2011.  All in all, this picture captures my review of the movie.

Baking a Cake

During our 6 hour baking fest yesterday, Becca and I were reminiscing about how much we used to bake together.  We have known each other since we were 10, so that is around 17 years of friendship and a lot of baking!  This was probably our most ambition project yet (at least together, Becca has conquered wedding cakes before!), but I thought it would be fun to bake a cake for our church’s thank you celebration today instead of just buying a half a sheet cake from Sams.  So I found two of my tried and true favorites from over on Smitten Kitchen.  While exhausting, it ended up being so much fun and both Becca and I felt that we work so well together, neither of us could have done it alone.  There are lots of pictures of the process over here, but this is what the finished product looked like in all its homemade charm.  Bonus to anyone who tries to guess how many lbs of butter went into the combined cake and frosting 🙂

Teaching

My supervising librarian told me to make sure I documented my lessons, so this past friday when I got to run the library and teach 4 classes, the sub took pictures of me.  As you can see I kept the kids in rapt attention with my fascinating lesson on the new and shiny online catalog 🙂  I have to say I kind of love 6th graders, still interested enough that they can get pretty excited by the general concept of learning new things, still craving adult approval and encouragement, and capable of slightly higher orders of thinking than 1st graders.  Overall both of my student teaching experiences have been only helped encourage me in pursuing a career in education.

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day 20 – another placeholder post

November 20, 2010

I know, I know the purpose of blogging everyday for a month is not to fill your blog with meaningless little one-liners (that aren’t even funny), but between baking a giant cake (96 Tbs of butter = feeding cake to a whole church) and heading off to see Harry Potter 7: Part 1, I have only now had a chance to get to this here blogging thing.  But to make up for yesterday and today I promise a giant catch-up post tomorrow in which there will be a review of teaching (spoiler alert – it went really well!), lots of cake-baking pictures, possible review of Harry Potter movie and who knows maybe some other rambling.  But anyways I have to say I don’t feel too guilty about not posting anything more significant, because at least right now it means I am having too much fun experiencing life to have much time to record it.

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day 16 – Cooking with Abby

November 16, 2010

Tonight I looked to Smitten Kitchen for inspiration and tried her Spicy Squash Salad with Lentils and Goat Cheese.  However I of course modified the heck out of it and threw in some extra garlic, curry and parsley to the spice mixture and then when I realized that it actually served 6 only as an appetizer I threw in some quinoa with the lentils.

That I think was the undoing of the texture part of the dish which ended up resembling a casserole more than a salad due to my overcooking of the quinoa and lentils.

But as my housemates assured me it tasted pretty darn yummy and the flavors are a great combination – roasted spiced butternut squash with smooth tangy goat cheese!

Then to round off the meal I microwaved some green beans with almonds and mushrooms and Penny cut up a fresh pineapple, all in a all a good meal.