Archive for the ‘American’ Category
Eating Local in the Northwest
Open your fridge. Can you tell the exact history of where one item came from? Eating local doesn’t seem like a hard challenge until you start thinking about it. Last Sunday night, a group of us got together and cooked a meal that was made almost entirely with local ingredients. The best part of it all was that we didn’t intentionally mean to have a dinner made completely of locally sourced ingredients, but once we realized we had the beginnings of one, we made it our goal to get as a close as we could to a completely local dinner.
When you start learning where your food really comes from, you learn how much labor, transportation and energy and resources go into everything you eat. Eating local doesn’t just mean you help out the farmers, gardeners and butchers in your area, you are also saving other costs that add up, including energy, gas, storage and other hidden resources used to get those items off a truck and onto a shiny display. Challenge yourself to make it a personal goal to eat one thing at one meal a day that is sourced locally, not only will you feel good, believe me, it will taste better!
The Menu
Locally Caught Salmon with Lemon, Herb Butter: The salmon was caught locally by my friend Neil. Oregano, thyme and dill all from Washington state. Our splurge was the lemon, salt and pepper and olive oil, purchased from the grocery store.
All Blue Potato Salad with Fresh Dill: The all blue potatoes came from a farm that I was apprenticing at, about 20 miles away. Fresh dill and a sweet onion came from the Ballard Farmer’s market that morning. Our splurge was purchased Dijon mustard, mayonnaise and salt and pepper.
Summer Corn and Tomato Salad: The corn, basil and sweet onion came from the farmers market. The tomatoes were grown in my garden. Our splurge was olive oil, red onion and salt and pepper.
Winter Greens with Garlic and Lemon: The Swiss chard, kale and collard greens were all from the Ballard farmer’s market, our splurge was olive oil, lemon, garlic- (although it should have been bought at the farmer’s market), and Parmesan Reggiano.
Katy’s Blackberry Pie with Lemon Verbena Infused Fresh Whip Cream: The blackberries were purchased at the farmer’s market, the whip cream was from a Washington state organic creamery and the lemon verbena was from my friend Katy’s lemon verbena plant. Our splurge: organic pie crust from PCC, lemon juice, purchased spices.
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| Categories: | American • Baked Goods • Cooking tips • Fish & Seafood • Organic • Salads • Uncategorized • Vegetarian • Veggies • desserts | 5 Comments |
| Tags: | all blue potatoes • blackberry pie • corn salad • eating local • eating local in the northwest • salmon • winter greens |
Tailgating

- In America, we have rituals about tailgating. We’re superstitious, sentimental and even a bit crazy come game day. Your slow cooked chili, chicken wings or bacon-woven bratwursts are just as important as the colors you are wearing. Tailgating season isn’t recognized as a series of national holidays with greeting cards and days off, but perhaps there should be?
Check out some of our favorite get-your-tailgate-on recipes below:

Tailgating Recipe Links
Date Night Doins
Grillin Fools
Tailgating.com
Above Photo by Veeliam
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| Categories: | American • potluck | 2 Comments |
| Tags: |
Lights Camera Action
We are counting down the days to FoodSnap! an all-day food photography and food styling event happening this Friday, September 18th at George Town Studios in Seattle, Washington. The event has sold out, but you can follow along with us on Twitter the day of the event and stay tuned for a FoodSnap! round up blog post with highlighted tips and secrets we will have learned from the pros that you can implement at home with a simple point and shoot camera.
Here’s the list of food photographers and food stylists who will be sharing with us their magic bag of tricks!
Lou Manna
Lara Ferroni
Rina Jordan
Barry Wong
Charity Burggraaf
Kevin Fry
Tyler Rebman
Danielle Leavell
Jonathan Shmidt
Kathryn Barnard
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| Categories: | American • Author • Events • Photography • Technique | 4 Comments |
| Tags: | food photography • food styling • foodsnap • loou Manna |
Pork Belly with Wild Huckleberry Sauce
This weekend I had the epitome of a “staycation.” No plans except to sleep in, cook good food and watch the second season of Mad Men with Mark. On Sunday night we decided to open up a great bottle of syrah and slow cook a pork belly with a homemade huckleberry sauce. We had gone to the Sunday farmers market earlier in the morning and purchased a pint of foraged huckleberries from Christina Choi at Foraged and Found Edibles. The berries were plump and glistening, looking like violet caviar, simply perfect for a thick piece of pork belly.
We roasted some golden beets and Ozette potatoes we had purchased from another vendor to add to our pork belly. After searing the pork belly on all sides, I removed it from the heat and set it aside. Next I added 1/4 cup of finely chopped shallots and sauteed them over medium-high heat with a good pinch of salt and pepper. I deglazed with some balsamic vinegar and syrah wine. Next I added 1 cup of wild huckleberries, 1/2 sprig of fresh rosemary, two fresh sage leaves, a fresh oregano sprig, two garlic cloves that were smashed only slightly and a sprinkling of brown sugar.
I brought the pan to a simmer and let the sauce work it’s magic for a couple minutes. Next I added the seared pork belly back to the sauce, covered it and let it cook at 300 F for almost two hours, turning the meat half way through cooking. Once the meat was more than fork-tender, I removed the pan from the oven and onto a plate. I covered the pork in the sauce and sprinkled on another handful of the uncooked huckleberries for color and a nice tang to balance flavors.
The result was rich, juicy and over the top indulgent; absolutely perfect for a weekend all to ourselves.
For the whole recipe for Pork Belly with Wild Huckleberry Sauce go here:

Can’t get enough of pork belly, check out these other recipes:
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| Categories: | American • Cooking tips • Entertaining • Meat & Poultry • Sauces • condiments • wine | 2 Comments |
| Tags: | huckleberries • pork • pork belly • staycation • syrah |
Savoring Summer over Labor Day Weekend

It’s a change in the seasons. Labor Day weekend is upon us. Families are packing up the car for one last road trip, final camp out or mini-vacation before comfortably settling into school and work routines. Are you planning to go out with a bang and savor all that there is left of summer? Or are you already thinking of cool harvest nights and (gasp!) thumbing through holiday cookbooks!?
I say fire up the grill and roast those weenies with gusto! Hit the trail with a summery picnic and relish every last bit of summer that you can, because before you know it, you’ll be pulling out the sweaters from the winter clothes box and wishing for sweet summer sun. Of course for all you die-hard grillers who choose to grill in the snow, wind and rain, the changing of the weather doesn’t mean then end of grilling, it only means one thing- it must be tailgate season! Here are some recipes to take with you camping, to make for lounging in the hammock or for the back yard barbecue.
Laying in a Hammock all Weekend


What are you planning to cook this weekend? We’d love to hear about it! Here’s what some other folks are preparing for this Labor Day weekend:
Martha Stewart’s Perfect Grilled Veggie Kebabs
Above photo by Cape Cod Cyclist
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| Categories: | American • Beverages • Holiday • Uncategorized | Leave a Comment |
| Tags: | barbecue recipe • camping food • end of summer • Labor Day food • Labor Day Recipes |
Back to Brown Baggin it Hot Ideas for Back to School Lunches

If it was one thing my mom dreaded more than anything else, it was making school lunches. Not like it was a terribly difficult or demanding chore, it was just one of those things that always needed to be done, like washing dishes or vacuuming the carpet. I think the real issue wasn’t the act of making the lunch, it was the effort of deciding what to put in it. You see, my mother can’t stand to make the same recipe twice, therefore making a school lunch day after day was quite the challenge. Sometimes I’d get into a food rut, like everyone does and only request cheese sandwiches or a thermos of chicken noodle soup and perhaps that was the best thing I could have done for her- take her creativity out of the equation. To me though, there was nothing better than opening a mysterious, crinkly brown bag from my backpack and find a sweet note attached to a handmade sandwich or something silly, like a candy gummy rat or a finger puppet resting just inside to brighten my school day.
Now that school is back in session, it doesn’t have to be peanut butter and jelly every day; here are some delicious and creative ideas to surprise your little student.
* Create a mini veggie platter in a reusable container and a small container of ranch dressing.
* Create small, cucumber and cream cheese tea sandwiches without crust, or cut into shapes.
* Cook and chill pot stickers and pack them with raw sweet pepper and cucumber slices.
* Use small cookie cutters to make fun shapes into sandwich bread.
More Fun Ideas
Other Fun School Lunch Ideas
Cool School Lunches from MomsMenu.com
Pack a Lunch with Punch by Veg Cooking
Ideas for a Greener Lunch by iLunchbox
Above Photo by Lara604
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| Categories: | American • Cooking tips • Travel • Uncategorized • for Kids • quick and easy | Leave a Comment |
| Tags: | Back to school • bagged lunch • creative brown bag lunches • for Kids • lunch box recipes • School lunch ideas |
National Day of Action Join Slow Food USA

This Labor Day, you can make a difference by taking part in the National Day of Action. This Monday, September 7th, people from all over the U.S. will gather together at “Eat In” potlucks and talk about the National School Lunch Program and the Child Nutrition Act.
This movement is an effort by Slow Food USA to call attention to our nation’s current school lunch program and its direct influence on the health of our country’s youth. Each school day, 30 million children take part in the National School Lunch Program, governed by the U.S. Congress, but the program is lacking precisely what it is suppose to provide- real food. According to Slow Food USA, one in four children is overweight or obese and one in three will develop diabetes in their lifetime! It’s time to take action now!
Currently, our schools continue to nourish students with heavily processed food on a daily basis and sadly, for many children it is their one guaranteed meal they can count on each day. Every four to five years, the Child Nutrition Act comes up for reauthorization in Congress and the deadline is here.
Want to Help, Learn More or Get Involved? Here’s How!
Slow Food USA National Day of Action
Above Photo by: Bookgrl
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| Categories: | American • Hunger • potluck | 1 Comment |
| Tags: | Back to school • Labor Day • National Day of Action • National School Lunch Program • School Lunch |
10 Things to Make with Zucchini
The annual “Leave a Zucchini on Your Neighbor’s Porch Day” was August 8th, and even if you happened to sneak several large squash into mailboxes, friend’s purses or onto co-worker’s chairs that day, the likelihood that you still have more zucchini than you know what to do with is pretty high. We figured you were not alone, so we have found 10 great recipes from Foodista and five more from food bloggers to help you get your creative juices flowing…oooh there’s one I forgot Zucchini Juice!
1. Raw Zucchini Pasta
2. Zucchini Pasta with Sausage
3. Stuffed Zucchini Boats
4. Zucchini Cookies
5.Savory Zucchini Pancakes
6. Zucchini Bread
7. Zucchini Parmesan
8. Green Curry with Zucchini
9. Zucchini Dip
10. Vegan Veggie Burrito
5 More Great Zucchini Recipes From Bloggers
All Things Nice Stuffed Zucchini Blossoms
Home Joys- Zucchini Crust Pizza
Cooks United Zucchini Fritters
Chocolate and Zucchini Zucchini and Mushroom Crumble
Kalyn’s Kitchen Zucchini Carpaccio
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| Categories: | American • Baked Goods • Chocolate • Cooking tips • Pasta & Grains • Uncategorized • Vegetarian • Veggies • condiments • desserts • quick and easy | Leave a Comment |
| Tags: | vegan • Vegetarian • Zucchini recipes |
Night School Begins
It’s not surprising that a food renaissance should naturally bring with it a drink renaissance. For several years now, a bar or restaurant’s signature cocktail has become more than an over-priced martini with a fancy name at the top of the drink list, a bar’s signature cocktail is now as important as the day’s menu specials and just as creative. Today’s liquid infusions are methodical recipes crafted by professionals. Just like chefs experimenting with reductions, bartenders/mixologists are creating just as much of a stir when it comes to developing flavors.
At 5:50 and again at 8:00 p.m. tonight at the Sorrento Hotel, Ryan Magarian, one of America’s top mixologists will be measuring, mixing and shaking things up for a very lucky audience of 12 for an ongoing cocktail class series aptly called Drinking Lessons, a Night School event inspired by Seattle artist Michael Hebb. If you can’t fly or drive into Seattle to sit at Sorrento’s 100-year old bar and watch and learn from the nation’s best cocktail creators, you can follow each Night School bartender at www.foodista.com/nightschool and see photos, interviews and get recipes in real-time via Foodista.
If you are planning to be in the Seattle area and want to get your hands onto some Night School tickets, email the Sorrento at nightschool@hotelsorrento.com
Above Photo: Mixologist Ryan Margarian
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| Categories: | American • Beverages • Uncategorized • cocktails | 1 Comment |
| Tags: | cocktails • drinking lessons • mixologists • night school • sorrento |
Wild Arugula Salad With Soft Boiled Duck Egg

Just this last weekend, I catered a party with one of my close chef friends, Kristen Schumacher. For me, there is nothing more fun than geeking out over cook books while planning a dinner party menu, especially when your co-chef is also a fan of local and seasonal cooking and not afraid of experimentation. In the summer months, ingredient options seem endless and with a little bit of inspiration, ordinary ingredients can be transformed into delicious dishes. Given the small size of the group, (nine) and a good budget, we were able to focus on ingredients and take extra care for plating. For the salad course we tossed arugula and finely chiffonade sorrel with a honey citrus vinaigrette and topped each salad with shaved pecorino, chive blossoms and a soft-boiled duck egg sprinkled with black Hawaiian sea salt. Since a soft-boiled duck egg is one of my favorite foods, I couldn’t wait to share this dish with you all.
Here was the rest of the menu:
Appetizers
Dragon Roll (sushi of unagi, cucumber, seaweed, avocado and toasted sesame seeds)
Herbed Goat Cheese Stuffed Peppadew Peppers
Amuse Bouche
Balsamic Pork Belly Skewers with Caramelized Figs
Salad
Arugula and Sorrel Salad with Soft Boiled Duck Egg Sprinkled with Black Hawaiian Sea Salt
Shaved Pecorino Cheese, Chive Blossoms, Honey Citrus Vinaigrette
Intermezzo
Mango sorbet with Kaffir Lime and Mint Simple Syrup topped with Borage Flowers
Main
Marinated Grilled Flank Steak with Basil Chimchurri
Heirloom Tomatoes, herb mash
Dessert
Grilled Pound Cake with Mike and Gene’s Berry Farm Sauce
Grilled stone fruit, local cream freshly whipped
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| Categories: | American • Cooking tips • Entertaining • Salads • Sauces • Technique • Uncategorized • desserts • eggs | 1 Comment |
| Tags: | Dinner party • duck eggs • summer menu |














































