Monthly Archives: January 2010

One More Little Peep…

A good friend of mine (and co-worker) started up his own band about a year ago by the name of Tether Horse, and they just released their first album about a month ago that you should all check out and buy! The song below, “Thick Like Molasses”, is the first song they have made into a music video, and I got a chance to partake in the party by showing up in a pair of big, thick glasses. I’d never been in a video shoot before and it was a heck of a lot of fun (keep watching for the bloopers). There were many laughs and moments of making a fool out of myself. It turned out so well! Hopefully this will help them go big so please spread the word and support! And of course, enjoy!!!

Cranberry Coconut Pumpkin Bisque

It’s rare that I repeat a recipe more than once. Unless it’s really, really good. Or a staple. I mean, there are so so many out there to try with so little time. You have to pick and choose. That being said, I’ve made this pumpkin soup TWICE within the past month, so that’s saying a lot. The inspiration for this recipe came from studying for finals in a coffee shop/cafe one day a few months back, as it was available on their board as “the soup of the day”. It sounded way too enticing to pass up (me and my pumpkin obsession), so of course I had to try it. I typically don’t really go for pureed soups very often. I like to have something to chew on in a soup. Not down for baby food. But I do love a nice bowl of curried butternut squash soup anytime it’s available, and pumpkin anything is usually never a disappointment. I have to say, it was eye-rollingly delicious. I was amazed. And it seemed so simple to make, too! Creamy coconut milk with pumpkin puree, studded with several dried cranberries and a few subtle spices. Within the next hour after lunch time, I overheard some disappointed hungry people being turned away because it had sold out due to its popularity.

A few weeks later I went on a Google quest to try and find a pureed pumpkin coconut concoction that sounded similar to the tastes of what I tried, and I pretty much got it spot on (plus or minus a few of my own adjustments). I tried to use as many coconut related ingredients as possible, like coconut oil and coconut butter. I used a lot of this the first time I made it, and it tasted best that time. Fairly simple and insanely good. It makes a fairly good amount and I just reheat it, add some unsweetened shredded coconut, dried cranberries, and a ton fresh cilantro, and have it for lunch and/or dinner over the course of the next few days. Oh, and it can vegan too very easily! Just use water or veggie broth in place for the chicken broth. It’s that simple. Let me know of any alterations you may make to it, I’d love some new ideas!

Cranberry Coconut Pumpkin Bisque
Makes about 6 servings
2 tbsp. coconut oil
1 cup chopped yellow onion
1-2 chopped garlic cloves
3 cups canned solid pack pumpkin (the big 32 oz can does the trick)
2 cups chicken broth or water
2 tbsp. brown sugar
1/2 tsp. allspice
1/2 tsp. ground cayenne
1/2 tsp. cinnamon
1/8 tsp. nutmeg
1 1/2 cups canned, unsweetened organic coconut milk
(additions I incorporate into individual servings)
1 tablespoon unsweetened shredded coconut
1 tablespoon dried cranberries
a few sprigs of fresh cilantro
Melt oil in a large, heavy stockpot over medium heat.
Add onion and garlic and saute until golden brown, about 8 minutes.
Add pumpkin, broth, sugar, allspice, cayenne, cinnamon, and nutmeg. Bring to a boil. Reduce heat, cover and simmer for 30 minutes.
Working in batches, puree the soup in a blender until smooth and return to pot.
Bring soup to a simmer, thinning with coconut milk until it is the desired thickness and taste.
Season to taste with salt and pepper.
Mix in and garnish with some unsweetened shredded coconut, a tablespoon of dried cranberries, and some fresh cilantro.
And with that, it will probably be a little more quiet around here in the next few weeks ahead. A whirlwind of a month (and year) is ahead. I head up to the Ayurveda program starting this Friday, my 21st birthday is this Sunday, and I’m going to Vegas next week for a few days. I’m sure I’ll be back with plenty to talk about!
Be well and Namaste.

Dream Space & Design Sponge

Designed by Piet Hein Eek.
(More pics available here.)

Get a load of this log cabin designed into a recording studio! Out in the middle of the woods! What a location. Looks like it could fit into the Where The Wild Things Are movie set perfectly (the backdrop of the trees and light leeks peeking through). Sleek, stylish, modern, and simple. Genius. My dream is to take this idea and make it into a slightly bigger house. I love the rustic and natural look of the stacked logs. Now this is bringing back memories of how I used to play around with log cabin kits back when I was young. Subliminal messages creeping into my conscience? Either way, it is simply gorgeous to me and I am definitely saving this beauty of an inspiration for future reference.

Speaking of movie sets and design as inspiration fusing into daily living, art, and decor, Fantastic Mr. Fox has been showcased on Design Sponge for the warm, homey feeling it vibrates in the miniature dollhouses and holes the foxes and other animals live in. What they’ve done is genius. I don’t know how they found all of these great items (thank you Amy M.), but they match perfectly. Especially since I would kill to live a (semi) simple life like those foxes in their awesome tree house. I want to live in that movie. Maybe if I had a million dollars and could afford all of this awesome stuff, I would be able to create a sequel/a real life human version. I’ll take one of everything below, in addition to the log cabin, thanks. In the meantime, I’ll just drool over the pictures everyday and smile.





Check out that bandit mask, turntable, coffee table, gold ring, and earrings! Holy crap!
All you need now is some of that spiced cider and a roasted chicken...

San Francisco & the Fancy Food Show

Basically it was just like trick-or-treating for adults. The Fancy Food Show, that is. Seriously, I haven’t been that overstimulated, inspired, or excited about food in a really long time until this past Sunday when I ventured up to the city and sampled things from bacon chocolate chip pancakes to white chocolate lavender hot chocolate to coconut curry ice cream to rosewater gin. I really was in foodie heaven. My goodness. It definitely exceeded beyond my expectation, although in reality I didn’t really know what to expect.

There were two main halls, a North and a South, approximately equal to the size of two Costco’s combined, and I surprisingly managed to get through both within a good four hours. Seriously, they had everything under the sun. You could sample cookies, cupcakes, truffles, beer, wine, tea, mustards, candy (you could sample every kind of gummy from Haribo or jelly bean, for example), yogurt, cheese (holy crap, THE CHEESE! Cowgirl Creamery, anyone?!? I now have a new favorite–Cypress Grove’s Truffle Tremor), pizzas, pastas, pate (no thanks), any kind of nut oil, BBQ sauces, salts, marinades, seafood, chips, nuts, soups, jams, honey, nut butters, frozen food, Indian, French, Italian, Mediterranean food, organic food, gluten-free and vegan food, seriously, THEY HAD EVERYTHING. There were entire rows for just certain types of “ethnic” foods: German, Italian, Indian, French, Spanish, Canadian. I jumped right into the cheese section but didn’t spend enough time there because I didn’t know how long it would take me to get through the whole show and I still needed to sample a billion other things. I was on the hunt for baking mixes, baking chocolates, flours, pastry cups, gluten-free products for the store, and was personally searching for anything and everything peanut butter and pumpkin related, of course. I can’t even recall half of the things I ate but I’ll do my best… (also, taking pictures was strictly prohibited otherwise I would show my experience that way so this is all I can do… next year I’m signing up as a photographer, fo reals)
-Ok, even though I don’t order chocolate, I am IN LOVE with this chocolate company, Eclipse Chocolate. Everything they have available is amazing and delicious. Different and ingenious ingredients and food combinations, like macadamia ginger, gingerbread crumb, blackberry sage, mango masala, coconut lime, sweet basil-mint, kyoto green tea chocolate bars. They also make these exotic “rocky road” combinations, like vanilla bean with marshmallow, caramelized white chocolate, pretzels, and sea salt (which I ate a few too many of). Apparently they also have lavender sea-salted caramels. Way to steal my heart, right? I’m going to bug the chocolate buyer about this guy. Seriously, probably one of my favorites from the entire show.
-Peanut Butter & Co. is coming out with 3 new baking mixes, hopefully within the next month or so. I wasn’t able to sample any of them, but they sound wonderful and promising: peanut butter swirl brownies, old fashioned peanut butter cookies, and chocolate peanut butter cupcakes. That’s all I gotta say about that.
-These hearty breakfast pitas studded with dried fruits like cranberries and oranges, or apples and cinnamon are also a great idea.
-Scone mixes (lemon ginger, lavender white chocolate, pumpkin spice) from a company that’s actually local, located on the west side of SC! Even better.
-These decadent chocolates and truffles that look almost too pretty to eat. Seriously, I didn’t even want to eat one, I just stared at the sample tray forever.
-All natural gluten-free flours like sweet potato, purple corn, mesquite, and chestnut flours, just to name a few. There were mesquite macaroon samples and I was very impressed with the hint of mesquite, it was a very nice touch to the coconut. I am SUPER excited about these, I think they would sell extremely well. At least I know that I will buy them. The textures, smells, and quality of all of them are great. Check out their blog for recipes like sweet potato rosemary biscuits and chocolate mesquite cake! Yeah, I want these flours. BADLY.
-Vanilla Fig and other tea cake mixes, along with a Chocolate Chipotle Brownie mix from the Invisible Chef caught my eye.
-All-natural peanut butter bonbons = heaven.
-Vosges scored five stars with me, all around. I went back to their booth about three times. It was great because I was able to sample things that I’ve been seeing in grocery stores and wanting to try for a while now but because they are a bit pricey, hadn’t been able to. Their bacon and chocolate products, for example, are ingenious. There’s the bacon chocolate bar, of course, but, ok, the bacon chocolate chip pancake mix, which sounds a bit odd, I know, was incredible! And I’m not a big meat eater/bacon fan. I was impressed. The sweet/salty/savory combo, topped with some maple syrup, it’s basically 3 breakfast items combined into one. It’s great, like if you go out to breakfast at a diner or greasy spoon and can’t decide whether or not to get pancakes saturated with syrup because you really want the carbs and sugar, or bacon because you want the fat and salt and grease, YOU CAN GET BOTH. COMBINED INTO ONE. It’s that simple! And with chocolate chips! GENIUS, I’m telling you, GENIUS! This chocolate bar, which I’d never seen before, is another one on my list of favorites: the Calindia, full of cardamom, walnuts, and dried plums in a dark chocolate. My kind of combo. Plus, check out these amazing truffles, peanut butter bonbons, mango bombalinas, ice creams, and hot cocoa mixes. I will definitely be purchasing that Naga coconut curry ice cream sometime in the future. I don’t care if it’s 7 dollars, it’s so worth it.
Goodness, I can’t even think of anything else right now. Bacon was a really big deal this year, kind of expected. It’s been a part of the foodie trend for the past year or so, ever since the bacon chocolate bar came out. I tried a bacon maple marshmallow, not bad, but not that great either. Here’s a sample of the loot I trucked home with me:
Lots of nut butter samples, chocolates, chips, buttons, and magazines.
Goodness, it was so much fun. And I got paid to do it! Definitely a great opportunity that I am so thankful for. I love my job! I’d happily do this again, any day. In fact, I’ll even sign myself up to go again next year even if I’m not in charge of the baking section (ie. in school full time), and I’d encourage all of you to try to make it to one of these shows, whether it’s in New York, or in San Francisco. There are only two a year. So. Freaking. Rad. I went back for about an hour after lunch on Monday before I left the city and just ate tons of chocolate. Best sugar high ever.
I also ended up eating at this restaurant and pub called Thirsty Bear in the SOMA district (following friends that wanted beer) and it was decent. They serve tapas, paella, and other mediterranean dishes, but I don’t think I’d ever go there again for the food. For breakfast, we got up early and had our sights on Dottie’s True Blue Cafe, but they were randomly closed! Out of all the days! So bummed. Next time, for sure. So we ended up roaming the streets in the rain for pretty much anything with the time we had, and went to Lori’s Diner. Another miss. The spinach egg’s benedict had waaayyyy too much yellow sauce and was probably the worst eggs benedict I’ve ever had. Probably a good place to go for a burger and milkshake, alongside that 50′s greasy spoon dining experience, but I’ve definitely had better.

It got better though. Monday morning I went on an adventure in the storm (well, it was beginning to pour at that point) to the Ferry Building and admired all of the boutiques, cafes, delis, grocery shops, bakeries, and restaurants. Such a cool place, I always love it there.






Then I made my way back to 3rd street to get into the MoMa‘s free admission day, because they were celebrating their 75th anniversary! So in luck. I was completely soaked from the rain and the wind walking to and fro, and even though I had on my galoshes, there could have been fish swimming in there. It was all good though, all I could do was laugh. I finally dried up toward the end when I had the most amazing pumpkin ravioli dish and chai latte in the museum cafe (see further down). That cured me.


Okay, this struck me immediately with familiarity. Sonic Youth’s Daydream Nation album cover, yo! Although there was no mention of it on the talker. Is it or is it not the same picture? It has to be…

This redwood tree is 68 feet in circumference! Can you believe it?! I can’t.



Give me this chair, please.

PUMPKIN RAVIOLI! WITH A SURPRISE!
Died and gone to heaven. Seriously. I love the museum’s cafe Cafe Museo SO SO much, they have the best food. I wanted everything. I had the pumpkin ravioli stuffed with pumpkin, mascarpone cheese, and sage, served with sauteed kale (cavelo nero) hidden beneath the ravioli, in a parsnip cream sauce with acorn squash chips. HELLO! AMAZING!! I want to recreate this… plus they have great chai lattes. You can’t go wrong.
All in all, I had a fantastic time in the city and thoroughly enjoyed myself. I even drove to Berkeley on the quest for indian nose rings but didn’t have any luck (most shops were closed and hard to locate) so I’m resorting to eBay and having one shipped to me instead. I’ve been wanting to purchase one for soooo long and I finally did it. Real 14 karat gold and diamonds. It’s gorgeous. Birthday present to myself!
Speaking of birthdays, I ordered myself my own birthday cake this afternoon. Black China Bakery’s gonna rock me out a vegan chocolate peanut butter cake with an awesome design on the top (it’s a secret!). I’ll be showing pictures, of course. For a minute I thought of baking my own cake, but then I realized that’s kind of lame and plus I wouldn’t be able to even if I wanted because I’ll be up in the mountains learning about ayurveda. Anyway, I saw this awesome owl cake on MyOwlBarn yesterday and this just makes me even more inspired and excited about the cake decorating class I’ll be taking this semester. I want to rock out something like this someday!

Chocolate Fig Bars

So I’ve had this baking book for over a good year now and hadn’t made anything out of it until this last Christmas. The recipes are awesome! From ginger scones, vanilla-spiced chai, dairy-free pumpkin pie, cinnamon-cardamom snickerdoodles, and mexican sweet potato pudding, it would be impossible to find something that didn’t sound good. There are recipes for main courses as well like hempseed-crusted tofu with agave-mustard sauce, chicken satay, and gado gado salad. Obviously those are not sweets, but the book is based on different kinds of sweeteners and alternatives to regular granulated white sugar. The introduction discusses the nutritional and chemical aspects of sugar, gives a brief history of sugar, and thorough explanations of almost every kind of sugar out there–ethnic sugars (jaggery, panela), raw sugars (sucanat, turbinado), moist brown sugars (demerara, muscovado), liquid sugars (molasses, cane syrup), and sweeteners from non-sugarcane sources (agave syrup, honey, maple, etc). It’s pretty great actually, in fact I should really study up on those especially since I order those kinds of sugars for the baking section now and knowledge = power and all of that good stuff. I like knowing what I’m talking about.
Anyway, I’ve had a few recipes bookmarked, especially this chocolate fig bar recipe, but never seemed to have all of the ingredients when I wanted to make it and wasn’t motivated to go out and buy everything. But I had some leftover heavy cream from making those (semi-disastrous) white chocolate truffles so I had no excuse at that point. I pretty much love anything involving figs so this was a must-make. Honestly, it was a little time consuming (finely chopping nearly 2 cups of dried figs took me probably fifteen minutes) and took a little longer than a typical vegan bar recipe but I wanted to give out these treats to friends and family for the holidays so it was all worth it. Everyone loved them. So I’d do it all again. (I just wish I’d taken a better picture of one cut into a square so you could see the pretty layers but they were gone so fast that I forgot!)
Chocolate Fig Bars
Makes 32 small bars — From Sweet! From Agave to Turbinado, Home Baking with Every Kind of Natural Sugar and Sweetener

For the ganache:
1/2 cup heavy cream
1 cup (6 oz) semisweet chocolate chips
3 tablespoons orange-flavored liqueur, such as Grand Marnier
1 tablespoon unsalted butter, at room temp

For the dough:
1 cup unbleached all-purpose flour
1/2 teaspoon baking powder
1/2 teaspoon fine sea salt
3 cups old-fashioned rolled oats
12 tablespoons (1 1/2 sticks) unsalted butter, at room temp, plus more for pan
1 cup light brown sugar, packed
1 egg
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
2 1/4 cups finely chopped dried figs

1. Position a rack in the center of the oven and preheat to 350 degrees F. Lightly butter a 9 x 13-inch baking pan.

2. To make the ganache, bring the cream to a simmer in the medium-size saucepan over low heat. Remove from the heat and add the chocolate chips. Let stand until the chips soften, about 3 minutes. Stir until the chocolate is melted. Add the liqueur and butter, and stir until the butter melts. Let cool, stirring occasionally, until tepid and pourable, about 20 minutes.

3. Whisk together the flour, baking powder, and salt in a bowl. Mix in 2 cups of the rolled oats.

4. Beat the butter and brown sugar in a medium-size bowl with an electric mixer at high speed until the mixture is light in color and texture, about 3 minutes. Beat in the egg, then the vanilla. Reduce the mixer speed to low. Add the flour mixture and mix just until the dough barely comes together–it should not be absolutely smooth.

5. Press three-quarters of the dough evenly over the bottom of the baking pan. Sprinkle the chopped figs into the pan. Pour the ganache over the figs and use a metal spatula to spread it as evenly as possible.

6. Combine the remaining dough with the remaining 1 cup of oats in a medium-size bowl, and work together with your fingers until crumbly. Scatter the streusel over the chocolate and figs.

7. Bake until the streusel is golden brown, 30 to 35 minutes. Let cool in the pan on a wire cake rack. Cut evenly into thirty-two bars. (The bars can be stored in an airtight container at room temperature for up to 3 days.) These are also really great with fig gelato, if you can find some!

Optional Variations!
-Apricot and Bittersweet Chocolate Bars: Omit the semisweet chocolate chips and substitute 2 1/4 cups of chopped dried apricots for the figs and 6 ounces of finely chopped bittersweet chocolate (60-70%).
-Cherry and White Chocolate Bars: Omit the semisweet chocolate chips and substitute 2 1/2 cups dried cherries for the figs and 6 ounces white chocolate chips. If the white chocolate chips are stubborn and don’t melt, place the saucepan in a skillet of hot water and let stand until they cooperate.
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