A few weeks ago I made candles with Tricia (and watched the Scripps National Spelling Bee). She had these colorful little "tasting dishes," which didn't really serve much of a purpose, and she had the great idea to make candles with them. We chose a nice bright blue color and honeysuckle scent. They came out really well!!! Some of the best yet... Then this girl just dumped me like a jump for no reason with no warning. Lame.
How to make stuff -- and make stuff better -- in my world: recipes, projects, and overall self-improvement.
Sunday, June 23, 2013
Man Breakfast
Man Breakfast! |
A couple weeks ago I had these pork chops I needed to cook, and I woke up in need of a Man Breakfast, so I came up with this. I sliced and sauteed a red pepper in some olive oil while I coated the pork chops with flour and Old Bay seasoning. I fried up the pork chops and then cooked a couple dippy eggs in the pan. It tasted amazing.
Cookout with Av and Mick
word to your mother |
Avniel decided to drive out to Pittsburgh for a visit this weekend and we ended up assembling an epic cookout feast Saturday night. We got fresh sausage -- 1 pound each of hot Italian and spicy Sicilian -- sweet red peppers, and old style whole grain dijon mustard from Donatelli's in Bloomfield. At the grocery store we picked up all natural chicken thighs, yellow squash, green peppers, and a sweet red onion. I had asparagus, zucchini, and potatoes from the Bloomfield farmer's market, and we used cilantro, oregano, and mint (for mojitos) from the garden.
I skewered and brushed the potatoes with olive oil and Old Bay seasoning:
Av chopped the onion, green peppers, and squash into large kabob chunks and tossed them with olive oil, coarse sea salt, fresh ground rainbow peppercorn medley, and fresh herbs from the garden. I used my Amazing Sauce on the chicken.
I sliced the zucchini lengthwise and just brushed it with olive oil, salt, and pepper.
I grilled the asparagus in foil with olive oil, salt, and pepper, and just cooked the sweet red pepper plain and whole on the top rack of the grill. The chicken of course I cooked slowly, turning and re-applying sauce half a dozen times.
I made more mojitos with the mint from the garden.
Candles Burning
Friday, June 21, 2013
Solo Cookout for Game 7
Last night I cooked out alone for Game 7 of the NBA Finals. I loaded up at the Bloomfield Farmer's Market. I made my amazing chicken sauce to grill with bone-in thighs. I made my grilled broccoli recipe with goat cheese, which tasted spectacular. Plus I grilled asparagus and potatoes as well. Tremendous. I timed everything perfectly. I got the chicken on the grill during the second quarter of the game. By the time half time started I put the veggies on, and as the second half got underway, everything finished cooking. Absolutely perfect. I had a couple of fine Newcastle brown ales while I cooked.
My chicken sauce requires four ingredients: something spicy, something thick and viscous, something spreadable and/or sticky, and something sweet. Use these in roughly equal parts. For this one I used soy sauce, siracha, dijon mustard, and brown sugar. I brushed the asparagus with grape seed oil, course salt, and ground black pepper. I coated the potatoes with Old Bay seasoning and a little oil. And I tossed the broccoli with balsamic vinegar, grapeseed oil, salt, and pepper.
I use high heat on the left side and a lower flame underneath the food on the right side. Once something cooks, I move it over to the hot side to get a little char (if desired).
I sprinkled goat cheese on the broccoli. Amazing.
Cook the chicken slowly. It should take about 45 minutes for bone in thighs. Keep turning it over and spreading more sauce, over and over. You'll want to straight up lick the sauce by the time you finish cooking...
Enjoy....
Thursday, June 20, 2013
Jesus Christ
The food I'm about to cook and eat is going to be so fucking good I might eat it and just kill myself. Oh my god...
JoeSoGarden Update -- Poppin' Off
The garden has really exploded over the last month. I need to reign in the tomatoes before they destroy the onions. The broccoli has sprouted nice, large, dense heads. The carrot row looks like a little forest, and the triangle plot got some transplants and a row of yellow and pink flowers. I've made mojitos twice with the mint. The cilantro has turned into coriander and the basil looks fantastic. Take a look!
broccoli head |
broccoli plants |
carrots |
onions, crushed by tomato plants! |
cilantro, grown from seeds, very easy and fast |
basil |
cilantro from seedling that flowered into coriander (I guess?) |
need to figure out how to handle those tomato plants in the middle/right... |
the other little plot with some flowering plants |
broccoli transplants from the other side ... need a splash of water |
this will have yellow and orange flowers in the fall |
mint for mojitos |
Labels:
backyard,
backyard garden,
basil,
bloomfield,
broccoli,
carrots,
cilantro,
flowers,
garden,
gardening,
joesogarden,
mint,
onions,
oregano,
pittsburgh,
tomato plant,
tomatoes,
urban garden,
vegetable garden,
vegetables
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