September 22, 2005

And then it was winter...

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I know now, beyond a shadow of a doubt, that summer is officially over in Edmonton. The sun didn't rise until 7:20 this morning and it set by 7:30 pm. It's chilly enough in the mornings now that I can see my breath. My tomatoes have hardly had a chance to ripen. They might never know what it feels like to be red and juicy, poor, green darlings. The grass is frosty early in the morning and the tile floor in our bathroom is cold. Our windows are starting to show condensation. Despite all this irrefutible evidence that winter is well and truly on its way, I have the crazy ability to harbour an absurdly naive hope of another warm spell.

I am afraid I can harbour that hope no longer, for, over the last week, I have experienced the truest, most dependable sign of the inevitability of winter.

I have start having rather more frequent urges to take my chocolate in (hot) liquid form rather than in bar form. Winter. Is. Here.

Over the years, my hot chocolate-making has evolved froma a fairly standard routine into one of deliberation and decadence. There is an art to creating this creamy, thick and rich brown liquid. It is certainly not the powdered Cadbury's mix with frustratingly tiny nuggets of dessicated marshmallow of my childhood. It's more of an Italian hot chocolate of the sort you might find at Brunetti's on Lygon Street in Carlton, the "Little Italy" of Melbourne. Rich and thick, just like George W.

To achieve this positively presidential hot chocolate, I gently simmer a mixture of 2/3 milk and 1/3 cream in a heavy-bottomed saucepan, in which I've floated some spices. Sometimes I use cinnamon bark, or cardamom pods. Sometimes peppercorns and a clove or two. Sometimes all of them.

This time to a total 3 cups of liquid, I added a few cloves, a small wedge of cinnamon bark and about 3 inches of peel (pith removed) from a lovely organic satsuma orange. Into the mixture I whisked 2/3 cup of organic sugar (half white, half brown), a coarsely chopped large (375gm) block of Green & Black's organic dark chocolate and a 1/4 cup of organic dutch process cocoa powder. I whisked gently for a few minutes, adjusting the sugar and the cocoa. The addition of the cocoa is not so much for flavour (although it does add some), as it is for the deep rich colour it imparts and the fact that, if you simmer it in the hot milk for a few minutes, it provides a slight thickening and makes the cocoa all the more creamy.

I fished out the bits of spice and peel and served this very hot. It's not a quaffing cocoa, rather a sipping and reading cocoa. Perfect for a late autumn afternoon spent half dozing on the couch with the (cutest) kittens (in the whole wide world) and a good book.

As for the good book, I highly recommend A Complicated Kindness by Miriam Toews. It's the perfect book for an afternoon like this one.

July 14, 2005

Better than beer

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Cakes and I revived an old tradition a few weeks ago. We made ginger beer. This is something I used to make back in university, somewhere around 1992 or 1993. I used to bring this over to a friend's house and a whole bunch of us would get pissed on it on a regular basis!

This fizzy, spicy, alcoholic drink is dead easy to make and is just about the tastiest thing you can drink on a hot summer day. It absolutely goes down like kool aid. Don't say I didn't warn you.

You do need a few beer-making things to do this, but you can buy this stuff at pretty much any grocery or pharmacy these days and it's not all that expensive either. Despite the length of the instructions here, it really is a totally easy thing to do. If you've never made beer or wine before, maybe you've got a friend who has done it and can help walk you through it. Once you get through the first time, you will really be amazed at how easy it is.

The equipment you'll need includes:

  • a primary fermenter (a 30 litre food-grade plastic bucket with a lid really. I had a friend who used a big tupperware container which seemed to work okay for her)
  • a floating dairy thermometer
  • a secondary fermenter (another big plastic (or glass) thingy - sometimes called a carboy)
  • a fermentation lock (a little plastic thingy that allows the carbonation to escape so your secondary doesn't explode, but doesn't allow nasty bugs and airborne nasties to get into your beer.)
  • some clear PVC (food-grade) hose
  • a big spoon
  • a big stockpot or canning pot
  • 23 old 1 litre pop bottles (or fancy new ones that can be bought at the beer-making shop); and
  • fresh plastic caps (you can buy them where you buy your fermenter)
  • sieve
  • bottle filler attachment and racking cane (both optional but highly recommended, and both are cheap too)

The equipment won't cost you more than $50. Better still, try to borrow some. Chances are you've got an uncle or a friend who used to make their own beer or wine (or still does) and you can nick their stuff for a few weeks. If you're lloking for a more detailed explanation of some of the equipment I listed, try reading this. For a much better explanation of how to use the combination of the PVC tube and racking cane for siphoning, click here. The instructions below assume you are just using the PVC tube on its own, without the racking cane. The bottle filler goes on the end of the tube opposite the end the racking cane is attached to.

The ingredients you will need:

  • 2.5 to 3 lbs fresh ginger
  • juice of 3 lemons
  • peel of one lemon, pith carefully removed
  • 23 litres water
  • 19 cups (approx 4 kilograms) corn sugar (get this at the same place you get your brewing equipment)
  • 1 pkt brewers yeast (get this at the same place you get your brewing equipment)

Sterilize the primary fermenter (including its lid), thermometer, spoon and sieve by washing them with a solution made up of bleach (1 cup bleach to 4 gallons water). Make sure you read the label on your bleach to ensure it contains at least 4% Sodium Hypochlorite. You can also use Diversol (you can purchase pink-coloured Sodium Hypochlorite powder at beer making supply shops) at a ratio of 1.5 teaspoons per 1 litre of water. I find the best way to do the sterilizing is to fill the primary fermenter 3/4 full with tepid water, add the appropriate amount of bleach or Diversol and chuck the rest of the stuff into it. Use a clean cloth or your hands to ensure the whole of the inside of the primary is washed with the solution. Dump the solution out and give the equipment a quick rinse with a pitcher-full of boiled plain water.

Now your equipment is sterilized and you're ready to brew.

Boil 23 litres water in stockpot on stove. If your pot is too small, you can do it in batches. To the boiling water add ginger (roughly sliced, but not peeled), lemon juice, lemon peel and sugar. Allow to simmer for 30 minutes. Taste a small amount to see if the ginger taste is strong enough for you. If not, you can add a bit more sliced ginger or simmer longer, or both.

Pour mixture into sterilized primary through the sieve (to get out the ginger and lemon), pop the floating thermometer in and put the lid on. You may want to select a five or six pieces of ginger from the seive and chuck those back into the primary. Let the primary sit, losely covered, for 6 or 8 hours and check the temperature. When the temperature is within the range stated on the yeast packet (usually from 68F to 70F), sprinkle the yeast over the top, remove the thermometer and put the lid back on. Let it sit for a week.

After seven days, use the PVC hose to siphon the liquid off into the secondary fermenter. Make sure you sterilize the secondary, the hose and the fermentation lock before you use them by following the same method described above. As you have no primary to mix the solution in, I would just use the (very clean!) bathub, or a large Sterilite (Tupperware) container placed in the bathtub. Place the primary on the counter top or other elevated surface and place the sterilized secondary close by on the floor. Place a 2 litre container (a water pitcher will work) within reaching distance.

To get the hose to work as a siphon, submerge the sterilized hose in a sinkful of water so the hose fills up and no air bubbles are trapped in it. Put your thumbs over both ends. Put one end into the primary, holding it against the edge so the end doesn't go right to the bottom (it should never touch the bottom, you'll be leaving about an inch of fluid in there so as not to suck up the detritus that's settled there). Keep your thumb firmly over the other end. Put the 2-litre container on the floor beside the secondary and drop remaining end of the hose into it. The water should start to flow from the hose. When the water is finished and the beer starts coming out, submerge your hand, put your thumb back over the end of the hose and move it to the secondary.

Remove your thumb to let the beer flow into the secondary. When the level of beer in the primary gets to within an inch of the bottom, pull the hose out . Pop the fermentation lock on the secondary and fill it to the line with the same water you sterilized the equipment in. Let it sit for a week.

After seven days, use the same siphon technique to siphon the beer back into the (cleaned and sterilized) primary and stir in 3/4 cup of corn sugar that has been dissolved in 1 cup of boiled water. This extra sugar will help the beer to carbonate in the bottle.

Siphon the beer into the bottles (sterilized) and cap them immediately. A bottle filler attachment is absolutely priceless here, you just lift it off the bottom of the bottle and the flow of beer stops, enabling you to switch to a new bottle without getting beer everywhere.

Leave the beer to finish fermenting for 2 to 3 weeks in the basement. When they are sufficiently carbonated, the bottles should feel hard when you squeeze them.

Chill your ginger beer and try not to drink it all up in the first week.

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June 20, 2005

I drink I'm thunk: The true story of a girl and a chocolate martini

Kitties_and_martini_070 Chocolate and alcohol.

Apparently mix very well thank you.

As Cakes was off doing secret boy stuff for most of Saturday, I was left to my own devices. I only have one word to say on the matter: Shopping.

I popped in at Condon Barr, a local restaurant supply store I have been meaning to visit for, oh, about 12 months now. I pounced on and purchased, totally impulsively, six gorgeous little double-handled soup bowls. They are now sitting prettily in my glass fronted cupboard. Expect a soup recipe soon.

I supplemented the soup bowls with a few other trinkets, but after 20 minutes, I ran out of stuff to look at. Condon Barr's selection of small wares is well…small. Most of the space is taken up by industrial restaurant dishwashers and other big metal stuff that I find boring.

I was just about on my way to the cash register and out the door when a kind lady stopped me to ask if I would like a chocolate martini. Really. I recalled that this was the weekend of their advertised "bar wares sale". Apparently, their promotion involved plying their customers with full-size, yummy, yummy chocolate martinis. The martini was very good. And chocolaty. And alcoholic. At 1 pm on a Saturday afternoon. Maybe these people are Australian.

Because I had just drunk at least 2 ounces of alcohol, and hadn't eaten a thing all day, I thought I'd better stick around and see whether I would be okay to drive. Big mistake. So there I was: unchaperoned, slightly drunk, a wallet full of plastic, and trapped, for at least 20 minutes, in a store selling kitchen thingies. Predictably, the small collection of items in my shopping basket swelled. I bought things I didn't know I needed. I bought things I didn't recognize and probably won't ever be able to figure out how to use.

Note to self: Hide bill from Cakes and swear no more drunken shopping.

The martinis were divine though. Try them. You'll see. Just don't do any shopping for at least an hour after drinking one, lest you find yourself kitted out with a Peruvian frog-leg skinner or 6-foot pink fiberglass whisk.

Condon Barr's Illegal Chocolate Please-Buy-More-Random-Kitchen-Gadgetry Martinis

Serves 2

  • 3 oz. chilled vodka
  • 1.5 oz chilled clear crème de cacao
  • 1/4 oz Cointreau
  • 2 chunks milk chocolate (CB used Hershey's Kisses, but I think Hershey's Kisses are foul… although, it is at the bottom of a martini, and I don't recall any hesitation on my part in eating the kiss after drinking the booze!)

I may well be drunk every single day until the end of the spanky new bottle of clear creme de cacao in my cupboard...

P.S. As I've had a bit to drink I feel comfortable pointing out that there was a fancy article about me in a fancy newspaper on June 15th. Shhhh.

Have another martini, darls.Kitties_and_martini_071

May 16, 2005

Citrus champagne cocktail

Tomatoes_and_cheese_153_1 I was so very very very excited about the citrus theme for Sugar High Friday #8 and I got a little carried away in the grocery store as a result. I bought pomelos, gorgeous juicy tangerines, meyer lemons and  a whole bag of wee darling key limes!

And that was before I had any clue as to what I would do with them!

Sunday was such a sunny gorgeous day, I thought it only fitting that we have a gorgeous fruity drink to have with our wood fire grilled steaks (Cakes built a fire pit in our backyard on Sunday afternoon! YAY! I am such a lucky girl).

I squeezed a few limes tangerines and lemons into a pitcher, tossed in some sugar syrup, lychee juice and citrus vodka, as well as a half bottle of Australian Domaine Chandon sparkling wine.

It was zingy and refreshing and just what the Dr. ordered!

February 25, 2005

Apple Fizz

Grits_007 Last fall Cakes and I spent a terribly romantic long weekend at the Jasper Park Lodge. We went for long walks in the woods, ate beautiful food, ran around the lake and were terribly sappy all weekend long.  One afternoon, after a walk around the gorgeous clear lake, we stopped in the Lodge, took up a spot by the fireplace and had the most divine non-alcoholic drink ever made by man. It was an Apple Fizz. It is also crazy-easy to make. It would suit a summer evening or an autumn afternoon. It has definitely become our fancy-pants non-alcoholic beverage of choice. It manages to be a bit warm and spicy, cooly fruity and refreshing all at once. It is divine.

2/3 Ginger Beer (not gingerale)

1/3 unfiltered organic apple juice

dash grenadine

Pour the first two ingredients in the glass and give it a little stir. Carefully pour the grenadine in so that the syrup sinks to form a pink layer at the bottom of the glass. Serve with a straw.

That's it.

February 09, 2005

Bloody Big Batch of Bloody Marys

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For no good reason, other than my deep-seated and irrational hatred of tomato juice, I have no photos of this recipe, so here's a gratuitous nighttime glimpse into the display window at Lucullus culinary antique shop in the French Quarter of New Orleans. Even the tiniest little silver spoons are around $100 here, so I just looked and lusted.

Due to my hatred of tomato juice, both you and I will have to take the word of my husband, Cakes, and our friends Joan, Kevin and Randall Saizan, Host Extraordinaire for it that these bloody marys are the best ever.

500 ml Absolut Vodka

1 Cup ketchup

1 Cup lemon juice

8 dashes Tabasco sauce

1 Small Bottle Lea & Perrins Worchestershire sauce

V-8 Vegetable Juice to make 4 litres

1 teaspoon garlic powder

1 teaspoon cayenne pepper

1 teaspoon black pepper

1 teaspoon paprika

1 teaspoon grated lemon peel

Mixx all together and chill.

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