Saturday, September 12, 2009

Time for dem pears again, hon

I finally tasted the creme de cassis, and darn if it isn't good! Got that confirmed by a couple of "tasters" of the kir royales that I made, who agreed that not only was it good, but it was doing a good job of covering up some rather miserable bubbly someone had given us as a freebie (thankfully, that was after we'd had some good champagne). Note to self: always use decent sparkling wine!

Since the kitchen I have is considerably smaller than the doctor's in Sonoma, and not very conducive to hot water canning, I decided to continue with the alcohol-based preserving. The marketeer gave me some beautiful pears she and the lawyer had picked last weekend, so I mixed some Red Bartletts and Boscs in a lovely, big Italian jar I bought recently, and added vanilla, sugar, and about 5 cups of vodka. Since it needs to sit for at least 3 months (preferrably 4), it'll probably be New Year's before we can try the resulting liquor. Just when we'll need it!

Monday, September 7, 2009

Here figgy figgy!


Figs ruled Labor Day weekend: both the preserved and the fresh variety. We started by making fig chutney, a rich concoction updated from a Victorian cookbook. Amazing when served with a triple cream like St. Andre or maybe a really runny Camembert!

I'd found a recipe for grilled figs on the NY Times Bitten blog, and the doctor and I decided we should try 'em Saturday evening. I picked the grape leaves, tied the little bundles up with a rosemary skewer, and boy were they a thing of beauty! We ate them with chicken and some sausage, and relished the creamy goat cheese with the fig, drizzling some of the leftover fig chutney "sauce" over the top of the grilled figs. Yum!

The garden is looking fabulous, and we also spent time working on peaches and tomatoes, returning again to the fabulous 1948 tomato preserve recipe we'd tried last year. The doctor modified the peach conserve recipe and used white peaches and lemon. Quite happy to know there will be plenty more tomatoes before the season is out, so we can keep trying more recipes, including putting up some salsa.