Tuesday, September 23, 2008

Bug Budies Honey Harvest !


It always amazes me when you have these lifelong visions for something. Then one day they come true, that feeling is truly untouchable!






Recently I had one of those powerful days when Jim and I set out to harvest our honey. We were happily accompanied by close family and all of us were on the same page of joy and gratitude. We set off to uncle Harry's where our bees have been enjoying the summer sun and abundance of wild flowers.

All suited up we lit the smoker and headed to the hives. For the first time holding a jar of stink (bee gone), a product that we used to remove the bees from the honey supper that we were intending to take. The removal of bees from a honey super may be done by shaking the bees off, using a feather or brush, a bee escape, or something like "bee gone" that sticks. We put drops of the "bee gone" on a piece of fabric that went over the honey super and waited for the bees to go down into the bottom of the hive. After 5-10 minutes we took the honey super off, covered up the hive, and took the honey super to the truck. Bees were still buzzing around us in confusing and shock but we drove off and headed home.


We used a brand new global bread knife to remove the capping's from the frames. Spinning only capped honey because uncapped honey has a high water content and could ferment.

Our hand crank extractor fits two frames at a time. All of us enjoyed hand cranking out the sweet smelling honey. As it spins you can see honey hitting the inside of the extractor like rain drops. Hard to believe that it adds up to be much but we ended up harvesting 20 pounds. Not much in the bee keeping world but for our first year we were thrilled!


When all the honey spinning was finished we celebrated the abundance of family and honey with Champagne, "Black Current Honey Wine"
made by our dear mentor beekeeper, Todd at Honey Gardens (www.honeygardens.com) in Ferrisburgh VT, and a big pot of Choucroute, with Red Hen Bread (www.redhenbaking.com/).
Plus lots of French Mustard! We toasted to all of the many people that graciously guided us along the way.

All of this outside, dining next to one of Jim's rockin' bond fires.

Choucroute is a famous Alsatian recipe for preparing sauerkraut with sausages and other salted meats, and often potatoes. Riesling is added with juniper berries, caraway seeds, and bay leaves. It simmers for 40 minutes and is served hot with crusty bread! This is a great recipe to make for a crowd and is best served on cold nights.


Grateful for this opportunity to share our story with you.

Bee well and keep in touch!

Courtney

Wednesday, September 10, 2008

End of Summer



This is a picture that was taken last week in one of my cooking classes. My class and I went to my favorite local market across from the Inn called Sweet Clover Market. We shopped for ingredients to create a spontaneous lunch back at the Inn.
This is a salad made with local ingredients; ripe peaches, tomatoes, blackberries picked by a friend, Maple Brook Farm fresh mozzarella, baby basil from the Inn's garden, and 30 year old balsamic vinegar. It was so beautiful and a lovely marriage of flavors.

I have been very much inspired this summer to take advantage of the flavorful and gorgeous local bounty. For the first time I participated in a large garden, we grew scallions, cucumbers, herbs, carrots, beets, celery, and kale. I had so much fun in the garden from planting the rows of seeds in the pouring rain to weeding on a hot sunny day. Growing your own food is extremely rewarding and I enjoy being close to nature in that healthful way, not to mention the flavors are so much better than the grocery store alternatives. By growing some of the food we consume we are helping out the environment by not having our food travel from far away.



Here in Vermont the blueberries are almost gone and apple season has blessed our tables. It is harvest season and the farmers markets are full of all kinds of squash variates, winter greens, tomatoes, potatoes, colorful rainbow carrots, and the last of the peaches. Fall raspberries are here and over the next week I plan to pick 10-15 pounds that will end up in our freezer for winter smoothies, galettes, and pancakes.

Enjoy the Apple Galette recipe!



Thank you to all of my readers for your time.
Be well and keep in touch!




Apple Cranberry Galette

Serves 6

Dough:
1 cup all purpose flour
Pinch of salt
2 teaspoons sugar
4 ounces butter, cold cut into chunks
4 ounces cream cheese, cold cut into chunks

1. Add flour, salt, and sugar into the food processor mixing bowl with metal blade. While the machine is running add butter and cream cheese. Stop food processor when dough comes together on one side of the bowl. Do not over mix!
2. Form into a ball (There should still be streaks of cream cheese) and chill for 2 hours to overnight.
*You may freeze dough for 6 months. Always defrost overnight in the refrigerator.

Filling:
4 tart baking apples, peeled and sliced thick
2 tablespoons flour
¼ teaspoon allspice
¼ teaspoon cinnamon
Pinch of salt
1/3 cup fresh cranberries
1/3 cup sugar

1 tablespoon cold unsalted butter, diced
Extra sugar for sprinkling
2 tablespoon heavy cream


1. Preheat oven to 400º.
2. Stir together apples, flour, allspice, cinnamon, salt, cranberries, and sugar in a large bowl until combined.
3. Roll dough out to a 12inch circle. Carefully move pie dough onto baking sheet, then spoon apple mixture onto center of dough, leaving a 2-inch border around edge.
4. Fold edge of dough over filling, pleating dough.
5. Then dot filling with butter pieces. Lightly brush dough with heavy cream and sprinkle with sugar.
6. Bake until apple filling is bubbling and pastry is golden, 30 to 35 minutes. Cool slightly on baking sheet. Serve Galette warm with ice cream.

Tuesday, June 24, 2008

The Flow of Harvest!



Happy summer, food lovers! What a great time to enjoy the flowing seasonal harvest. Let's see we have already said, 'see you around' to ramps, fiddle head ferns, and spring mushrooms. Speaking of mushrooms, all of the rain we are having in Vermont is bringing us a raging mushroom season! Fava beans, snap peas, scapes (Garlic scapes are the flower/seed stalk that shoots up from the garlic bulb), lettuce, spinach, and kale all seem to be blessing our tables. We have a vegetable garden that just gave us a generous amount of scapes. The scape harvest was turned into pesto with almonds, Romano cheese, honey, and basil that went in between fresh pasta sheets, to make the best summer ravioli I ever had.




It seems every year on my birthday I get a very special present, strawberry season! This year was extra special, my first sweet and juicy bite was on one sunny Sunday morning. I started this year's strawberry celebration with plain eating, then jumped right into strawberry cardamom pancakes and hazelnut strawberry cake.
My sister and I went berry-picking at Pomaykala farm in Grand Isle Vermont. We came home with 24 pounds. I have found that some of the best strawberries come from this hard-working Vermont farm. The berries are big, red, and super sweet! Strawberries like these are not found in supermarkets! Explore your own town and enjoy finding some local farms to support.
I have stored most of the berries nicely tucked away for winter pancakes and margaritas.





Happy Summer boating, BBQing, and summer sports!

Saturday, June 21, 2008

Bug Buddies



Well it is official, Jim and I are bug buddies and proud to bee!
June 9th at sunset we drove about 1 1/2 hours to Orwell VT, where we picked up hundreds of bees from Singing Cedars Apiaries. Two nucleus colonies to be exact which is 4 frames full of bees and the important queen bee. This will give us two bee hives.


We enjoyed our ride home on Vermont's winding back roads telling stories, full of excitement for our new friends the bees.

At 9:00 we safely brought the bees home to our beautiful oasis. The setting is full of wild flowers, wandering deer, happy singing birds, and a fine red barn off in the distance. We filled the smoker with dried pine needle and sparked it up. By smoking the bees they gorge themselves on honey — a survival instinct in case they must vacate the hive and recreate it elsewhere. This gorging has a tendency to pacify the bees. We then carefully arranged the bees on an old refurbished farm trailer. After the bees were all setup we sat in the truck smiling at our accomplishment and enjoyed the fire flies sparkling in the twilight!




Bee well and keep in touch with yourself!

Saturday, April 26, 2008

Greek Easter



Sunday April 27th is Greek Easter also know as the Orthodox Easter. For my family this has always been a day of laughter, traditional Greek foods, and togetherness. We meet at the Parthenon restaurant in Chicago's very own Greek town. The usual suspects are my godmother, mother and at least five of my closest funny friends. The celebration starts about two o'clock and ends at 9:00, if we are lucky. Over the years we have created many unforgettable memories, these include restaurant hopping, backgammon, and lots of red egg cracking. The Greek Easter feast is amazing!


When we arrive, we request our favorite table and waiter. We begin with wine, toasted Greek bread, and fine Greek olive oil for dipping. Then we start ordering the best hot and cold mezas (small plates), these include saganaki (flaming cheese with brandy), the good large olives (gotten only by special reguest or you will have tiny oilves), tzatziki, Lima beans cooked with tomatoes and garlic, and cold rice stuffed grape leaves with lemon wedges. After some laughs we will move to the Greek salad with lots of feta cheese, onions, and cucumbers. One of my favorite parts of the meal involves the lamb. A delicious spring lamb cooked on the front window rotisserie, is paraded around the restaurant with sparklers almost every hour. I always order the lamb, the shoulder of course, my sides of choice are okra and rice with red sauce. With joy we finish the meal with baklava and Greek coffee.


Greek coffee is a strong brew, served with foam on top (Kai-maki) and the coffee grounds on the bottom. My talented godmother reads the exciting ground coffee fortunes in our small coffee cups. With a tiny little bit of coffee and lots of coffee grinds still left in your cup, put your coffee cup holder on top of your coffee cup, make three horizontal circles with your cup, and then with a quick movement turn the coffee cup with the cup holder upside down. This will slowly bring down the coffee grinds along the coffee cup down to the coffee holder, but in the meantime will form all the patterns that the coffee grind reader needs to tell you about your future. After wallowing in my fortunes of success and great love, I walk over to the best Greek bakery, (Pan Hellenic Pastry Shop - 322 S. Halsted Street (312) 454-1886) and stock up on my favorite cookies, the Melomakarona, pronounced meh-loh-mah-KAH-ro-nah . Oh so good!
Below is my personal Baklava recipe that you must make soon! I enjoy using olive oil insted of butter in the phyllo layers. Kalo Pashcha! or "Beautiful Easter (to you)!

Be well and keep in touch!

Baklava

Preheat: 325º
Prep time: 30 minutes
Cook time: 1 hour
Makes: One 10” by 13” rectangular baking dish

Syrup
1 cup Honey
1 1/3 cups Water
½ Lemon, lightly squeezed and placed in syrup mixture
2 Cloves, whole (plus extra for topping)
2 tablespoons Ouzo (optional)
1 orange Zested

Filling
1 pound Walnuts
1 1/2 teaspoons Cinnamon, ground
3 tablespoons Sugar

Pastry
1 pound Filo dough, thawed overnight in the refrigerator
½ pound (2 sticks) Unsalted butter, melted or 1 cup olive oil

1. Cook syrup:
-Combine all syrup ingredients except the ouzo in a medium saucepan, bring to a boil.
-Reduce heat and simmer until thickened, about 15 minutes.
-Remove from heat, add ouzo and allow to cool.
-Remove lemon and cloves.

2. Create filling:
-Place all ingredients in a food processor fitted with a metal blade.
-Pulse several times until nuts are finely chopped.

3. Assemble baklava:
-Butter a 10” by 13” rectangular baking dish.
-Unfold filo from package and cut dough in half (each half sheet should then fit in baking dish).
-Layer 2 sheets of filo into dish, keeping unused filo covered with a slightly damp towel.
-Brush layer with melted butter.
-Continue until 10 sheets have been used.
-Spread 1/3rd of the filling over the top.
-Continue making 2 more 10 sheet layers, similar to above, placing nuts between the layers and on top.
-Drizzle top with remaining butter.

4. Bake:
-Trim away excess filo from edges of pan as necessary and cut into small squares or diamonds before baking. Pierce each diamond with a whole clove.
-Bake until pastry is golden brown and crispy, about 1 hour.
-Remove and let cool for 30 minutes.

5. Finish and serve:
-Pour cooled syrup over warm pastry and allow to soak in.
-Cool and serve at room temperature.

Monday, February 18, 2008

Frolic and Fun!

Sledding is fun!













Winter is not over yet. It is still winter in beautiful Vermont and there is still plenty of time to frolic around in the snow. Build a bonfire, go sledding, drink Long Trail's Hibernator beer, and make moose stew; this is my idea of a great time!

I am sharing a recipe that will keep you warm through the end of winter. Vietnamese Pho (pronounced fuh), the broth smells beefy, laced with ginger, star anise and freshly chopped onions and cilantro. A bowl of pho, Vietnam's treasured beef noodle soup will take the chill off on a cold Vermont night. The rice noodles are velvety and fresh, the edges of the rare beef curl up expectantly in the hot broth. Reach for a piece of lime to squeeze into the broth, a handful of cool, crisp bean sprouts, a few sprigs of herbs and fresh chilies. Pho is complete, nutritious, infinitely delicious and we could eat it morning, noon and night, day after day. Slurp up the flavor, eat it while it's piping hot, and warm up.















Pho

6 cups beef broth
4 (1/4-inch thick) sliced ginger
2 whole star anise
1 tablespoon black peppercorns
1 cinnamon stick
2 clove garlic, smashed
1/2 pound piece boneless beef sirloin, trimmed of any fat
3 ounces dried flat rice stick noodles
1/4 cup Asian fish sauce
1 tablespoon honey
1/8 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper
Salt as needed
1 cup fresh bean sprouts, rinsed and drained
1/8 cup minced scallions
1/4 cup fresh cilantro sprigs, washed and finely chopped
1 small thin fresh red or green Asian chili, sliced very thin
1/2 cup fresh basil leaves
Lime wedges for garnish

In a 2 quart saucepan bring broth, ginger, star anise, black peppercorns, cinnamon, and garlic to a boil. Reduce heat and simmer for 15 minutes.
With a very sharp knife cut sirloin across the grain into very thin slices.
Bring a medium pot of water to a boil. Add rice stick noodles and cook 6-8 minutes. Drain noodles in a colander. Set aside.
Strain broth into saucepan and bring to a boil. Stir in fish sauce, honey, salt and pepper. (Add more sugar for sweeter taste, or more fish sauce for saltier taste. Keep soup broth hot on the stove).
Add sirloin and sprouts and cook 30 to 45 seconds, or until sirloin changes color. Skim any froth from soup.
To serve, divide noodles into 4 bowls. Ladle soup over noodles. Sprinkle scallions, cilantro, chilies and basil over soup and serve with lime wedges.

Mr. Barkley came out to play!


















Where are the marshmallows?

















Thursday, February 7, 2008

The Secret Ingredient Is ...Love


Have you ever tasted that special ingredient love? I often here about people adding it to recipes and have even seen it written on labels of different foods as an ingredient. Have you added it? I have, and I also remember the memorable meals with love added. This Valentines Day add some love to your romantic meal for your special one. I know it will be well received and remembered!



Below is the menu for my Valentine's Day Dinner for two:



Mussels with Provencal


Honey Lavender Roasted Vermont Raised Chicken

Wilted Spinach with Black Pepper and Local Goat Cheese

Wild Rice with Rosemary Roasted Sweet Potatoes


Hazelnut Chocolate Lava Cakes



Chocolate Hazelnut Lave Cakes

Serves 6


lots of love
5 ounces bittersweet or semisweet chocolate, chopped
10 tablespoons (5 ounces) unsalted butter
3 large eggs
3 large egg yolks
1 teaspoon vanilla
1 cup sugar
½ cup all-purpose flour
½ cup ground hazelnuts

Preheat oven to 425º. Butter six ramekins.
Melt chocolate and butter in heavy sauce pan over low heat. Set aside to cool slightly.
Whisk whole eggs, egg yolks, and vanilla extract. Add sugar and mix well. Then fold in chocolate mixture, love, flour and hazelnuts.
Pour batter into the ramekins, dividing equally.
Bake cakes oven until the sides are set but the center remains soft and runny, about 14 minutes. Remove from oven and let rest 2 minutes.
Run small knife around cakes to loosen. Immediately turn cakes out onto plates and serve hot with favorite garnish.

Monday, January 28, 2008

Warm and Cozy By The Wood Stove

Here in Vermont we create amazing
connections to land and food year round! We see red currents on a bush in our yard and turn them into wonderful wine that we share with family and friends. We hunt, and our freezers become full of amazing cuts of venison and moose, which we then share with family and friends.

Recently I had the pleasure of enjoying venison back straps wrapped in crisp maple-smoked Vermont bacon as a treat before dinner. Unforgettable indeed! In the summer we grow spicy garlic --with roots back to Germany-- that we savor in the cold winter months. The local bakery makes wood-fired artisan bread that is truly the best vehicle, for slow-roasted caramelized garlic. We find cheeses made in small batches by hard-working Vermonters in our independently-owned grocery stores. Winter also supplies us with local chicken, raised in a natural, stress-free environment as nature intended. By the wood stove, we are keeping it all sweet with community and of course our local maple syrup and wild honey.

These are just some of the many ways we are staying local in Vermont this divine winter season!
Explore your own town and see what special foods you find.

Be well and keep in touch,
Courtney

http://butterandcheese.net/
http://www.ontherisebakery.net/
http://www.sweetclovermarket.com/
http://www.mistyknollfarms.com/

Tuesday, January 1, 2008

Chef Idol for the week?



Submit your favorite recipe. Each week Star 92.9 along with myself will select the top 5 recipes. Then it’s up to you, the listeners, to decide which recipe is worthy of being the Chef Idol for the week. Starting Saturday January 19th, 2008, check back to this page to vote for your favorite then watch as Lana and I cook up the winning recipe online. The winning recipe will receive a free Chef Inn Training class to sharpen their cooking skills alongside Chef Courtney.Don’t forget about the big finale, as the winning recipes from each week will square off in a head to head challenge, where you decide the next Chef Idol. The Chef Idol will be treated to a culinary getaway in their own backyard at the Inn at Essex.


Wednesday, December 26, 2007

Christmas Season in Vermont!



I am filled with gratitude for this wonderful holiday season. Thank you to everyone for the endless gifts of love and laughter!
From the festive holiday work party at Peter's with Jim's surprise guest, Caesar Salad, to Christmas Eve drinks with the sweetest Dave and Nancy who gifted me BBQ ribs for Christmas because they know a chef is always hungry. Then on a snowy Christmas Eve off to the Anderson's in Charlotte VT where we played Santa and drank Sarah's divine glug that not only had cardamon pods and orange peel but caramelized sugar as well.

The next morning was filled with presents, joy, excitement, and more culinary creations from Chef Sarah.


After assisting (refilling beverages) on the just built Ice House/Igloo, Sarah and I made the Christmas dinner feast while enjoying the sunset over the Adirondack's! We seared and roasted local beef tenderloin, sauteed winter greens with garlic and glug, roasted pearl onions and tiny potatoes , then may favorite, Ginger Bread which had the usual suspects like cloves, molasses, cinnamon, but what about mustard powder, coffee, and black pepper. Yes indeed and did it taste so out of this world, especially with Orange Hard Sauce. After all that I drove back to Mallets Bay so full of gratitude.
Thank you to all that made this a holiday I will always remember.