Archive for the ‘condiments’ Category
What do You Spread on Toast
Are you a peanut butter person? Cream cheese? Honey? Strictly butter and jam? Vegemite or Marmite? Or are you a decadent Nuttella lover?
I find this all so interesting. It’s different for everyone depending on where in the world you grew up. Myself? I tend to stick to butter and raspberry jam. But on occasion, like this morning, if there is a ripe avocado around, I’ll spread that on my toast and sprinkle it with a little salt. Toast is such a humble breakfast but you can make it quite extraordinary with what you put on it.
What do you do?
Do you Make Your Own Toast Spread? Here are a Couple Ideas:
Above image by Ms. Tea
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| Categories: | breakfast • condiments | 9 Comments |
| Tags: | apple butter • breakfast • fig jam • toast |
Veggie Beef Tahini Pita
Most people say that the way to a man’s heart is through his stomach. Barnaby apparently thought it was the other way around as he’s been feeding me delicious meal after meal for nearly nine years. Not that I would have packed it up and headed out if he didn’t feed me so well, for he had me at “paella” (the first dish he cooked for me).
One of the first I’ll-throw-something-together dinners he made me on a rainy Friday evening was this beef filled pita with lemony tahini, tomatoes, avocado and sprouts. An oh so tasty sandwich that combines the flavors of the Middle East with a bit of Berkeley (I always associate sprouts with the famous hippie city!), all wrapped up in a whole wheat pita. Great with an ice cold beer and a good movie.
Click below for the full recipe:
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| Categories: | Meat & Poultry • Middle Eastern • condiments | 2 Comments |
| Tags: | avocado • beef • easy • easy dinner • sandwich • sesame tahini • sprouts • tahini • tomato |
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 |
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 |
Grilled Skirt Steak with Lemon Scallion Butter Sauce
I love a good sauce on my steak. A vinegary chimichurri, a freshly made pesto, even just a simple drizzle of truffle oil or citrus juice to finish it off. Last night we had a Sunday steak dinner that could not have been more lovely. We sailed up to Port Madison, a charming little spot on the northern edge of Bainbridge Island, and dropped anchor. We fired up the grill, threw our skirt steak on, opened a nice bottle of wine, and sat back to watch the sunset…
Though our delicious Thundering Hooves grass fed beef needed minimal seasoning, we mixed up a nice Lemon Scallion Butter Sauce to even further brighten up the flavors of the meat. We sautéed garlic, scallions, and the zest of a lemon in a bit of olive oil. Once the flavors had sufficiently infused the oil we blended in some butter, then spooned the tasty sauce on top of the steak (it would also be wonderful on grilled chicken or fish).
Darn it anyway that Monday came around! At 6:30 a.m. this morning we pulled anchor and set sail back to Seattle and the Foodista offices. (Note to self: get wireless Internet so we can work from boat).
Here’s our sauce recipe:
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| Categories: | Meat & Poultry • Sauces • Uncategorized • condiments | Leave a Comment |
| Tags: | beef • butter • citurs • grass fed beef • lemon butter • lemon sauce • Lemons • sauce • skirt steak • thundering hooves |
Butter Never Had it So Good

Not too long ago Mark cooked live lobsters for the first time and because it was such a special occasion, it called for special butter. Of course there is nothing more delicious than lobster dipped into sweet hot butter, but what if you kicked it up a notch? After boiling the lobsters he split them in half, placed them on the barbecue for just a couple minutes and brushed them with chipotle butter. They were quite the treat. I can imagine this butter on grilled corn on the cob, added to steamed clams or even spread on a baked potato.
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| Categories: | Fish & Seafood • Sauces • Shellfish • Uncategorized • condiments • quick and easy | 2 Comments |
| Tags: | grilling • lobster butter • seasoned butter |
A Quick Pickle
Sometimes you don’t want to wait six weeks for the sweet tangy brine of your homemade pickles. That’s when you make a quick pickle. My personal favorite are pickled shallots. In less than two hours, you have yourself a sweet and crunchy condiment for your next burger or sandwich or a marriage made in heaven tossed with a fresh cucumber salad.
Other quick pickle recipes to check out:
Quickly Pickled Green Beans By Pickle This.com
Quick Pickled Asparagus By Group Recipes
Quick Pickled Red Onions by Molly Wizenberg
Above Photo by feministjulie
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| Categories: | Salads • Technique • Uncategorized • Vegetarian • Veggies • condiments • quick and easy | 1 Comment |
| Tags: | condimnet • pickled • pickled shallots • preserves • relish |
Lemon Dijon Vinaigrette

I was perusing through some of Julia Child’s great cookbooks last night and came upon her recipe for Basic Vinaigrette Dressing. I’ll let you in on a little secret: I’m horrible at making salad dressing. If it extends beyond a good oil, a splash of lemon juice, and some salt, I’m afraid I tend to fail miserably. Inevitably it comes out too vinegary or just simply lacking in flavor. Salad dressing should be easy, right!? I can create a beautiful cassoulet, a lovely osso bucco, delicate homemade pasta, even fresh sushi. But a simple salad dressing? Not my forté. I usually pass the task on to Barnaby.
So, I’m turning a new leaf (pardon the salad pun), grabbing the oil and vinegar bottles by the <er> horns, and approaching this salad dressing business with a new attitude.
I..will..master..the..vinaigrette!
Who better than to show me the way than our friend Julia Child. I followed her Basic Vinaigrette recipe and minced scallions, mixed in some Dijon mustard, a pinch of salt, some vinegar and lemon juice, a really good olive oil, and a few healthy cracks of fresh black pepper. I gave it all a little vroom! vroom! with the immersion blender and voilà, the perfect vinaigrette. Like Julia says, you can always add more vinegar or lemon but you can’t take it out. I spooned some into the salad bowl, added my just-snipped-from-the-garden baby lettuces, and gave it all a toss. A bit of lemon zest gave it a fresh snap of flavor.
I think Julia would have been proud.
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| Categories: | Author • Chefs • Cookbooks • Cooking tips • French • Salads • Sauces • condiments | 5 Comments |
| Tags: | Dijon • julia child • lemon • salad dressing • Salads • vinaigrette |
ahR Shucks

I’m from New York City, my mother and grandmother were born in Rockville, Maryland. They always told me to never eat oysters in a month without an R (May, June, July, and August). Originally one of the most prolific oyster producing regions in the world, East coast water temperatures vary dramatically from winter to summer. I now live in Seattle, where water temperatures are always cold and people eat oysters year round, but I still hear that bit of folkloric advice from time to time even here. When it comes to food and folklore, I’ve found that folklore is usually spot on, which got me wondering if there’s more to this. My thinking was that it all had to do with modern refrigeration. Turns out the issue is more complex.
Last night I volunteered to do a bit of oyster shucking at an event for the Northwest Women’s Law Center. The oysters were provided by “Oyster Bill” Whitbeck, the market manager for Taylor Shellfish. Bill is one of the world’s leading authorities on oysters and co-author of The Joy of Oysters. Since we were about to shuck and serve 17 dozen oysters in July, I asked Bill about the whole “R” thing and offered my theory about water temperature. Bill smiled big and said “Oh that old wive’s tale! I get that question all the time.” He then went on to explain that, while refrigeration and water temperature used to be a part of the reason people didn’t eat oysters in the summer, the most important reason is because that’s when oysters spawn. In fact, a law was passed in 1762 in Connecticut prohibiting consumption during those months as a way of combatting the already declining oyster population. Today, it’s still important what type of oyster you choose to eat for each season. Last night we were shucking Pacific Oysters (crassostrea gigas) and Kumamoto (crassostrea skimea) Oysters.
Originally from the warmer waters of Japan, these two varieties are at just the right point in their breeding cycle (just before spawning) during the summer months here in Washington. During spawning, oysters use up much of their stored glycogen (a natural sugar) and lose their firmness. Still perfectly safe, they are just not as tasty. So, if you have been depriving yourself…stop it! Go get some oysters and enjoy! Do be sure to keep them very cold on ice. Also try my Yuzu Shiso Granita as a topping, it was very popular among our guests.
Oh and don’t forget the wine pairing! Jameson Fink, local wine steward and blogger at Sparkling Vouvray, brought a great set of whites for us to try. My favorite was an Austrian Grüner Veltliner.
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| Categories: | Cooking tips • Fish & Seafood • Shellfish • condiments | 3 Comments |
| Tags: | Folklore • Oyster Biology • oysters • Shiso • Summer • yuzu |
Quick and Easy Olive Tapenade
One of the easiest and most flavorful appetizers you can make is olive tapenade. The olive tapenade that is common on appetizer menus today does not often reflect the classic Provencal dish from which the name applies. Tapenade comes from the word tapeno, which is French for caper. Besides olives, classic tapenade contains anchovies, capers and lemon juice and it is served as a spread for toasted baguette slices. In America, most people think of olive tapenade as a puree of strongly flavored kalamata olives, olive oil, garlic and herbs. Regardless of its translation, tapenade is now a word that is attached to many dips that don’t contain capers or even olives. Whichever recipe you choose to make, olive tapenade is great for entertaining in hot weather since it doesn’t require cooking and since olives are jarred, olive tapenade is a great year-round dip to make. It’s great for sandwiches, used as a pizza sauce or simply as a dip for a veggie tray.
Here is a list of four tapenade recipes we like on Foodista.
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| Categories: | Entertaining • French • Uncategorized • condiments • quick and easy | 1 Comment |
| Tags: | appetizers • dip • olive tapenade • olives |
Red Onion Salsa
I used to be nearly “spicy intolerant” – meaning, I could barely look at a jalapeno pepper without my eyes watering. Now I crave spicy foods and dump chipotle salsa in copious quantities on my food.
There’s a Mexican expression, “Si no pica, no es comida,” which translates to “If it doesn’t burn, it isn’t food.” We’re in Mexico and we always ask for the “salsa picante” because the stuff they usually put out for tourists is mild at best. This time, in front of us was placed a salsa I’d never had before – one made entirely of red onion and no tomatoes.
And lots of habanero! We’re talking lips-melt-off-your-face hot! But it was refreshingly good in all its spicy bad assness.
I’ve not been able to find a recipe, but have done my best to deconstruct it. The onions were slightly pickled by lime juice, which married well with the spiciness of the habanero. If you want a little less heat substitute jalapenos instead.
Click here for the recipe.

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| Categories: | Cooking tips • Mexican • Travel • Veggies • condiments | Leave a Comment |
| Tags: | onion salsa • red onion salsa • salsa • salsa picante • Spicy |
Italian Panini

Photo: pink_fish13
I return home from work (hungry), check the mailbox and find my newest issue of Gourmet magazine. There on the cover is a delicious grilled sandwich bulging with juicy ham, its bread toasted to crisp perfection. When I flip through the pages (which, by the way, reading a food mag is never a good idea to do when you are hungry) I am reminded of the sandwiches we used to get in Siena, Italy. After school my girlfriends and I would head to Bar Centrali for panini and cokes (okay, sometimes wine). When I first arrived in Italy I could barely speak a lick of Italian, but I quickly mastered the art of ordering my “panino.”
“Prosciutto crudo, fontini é fungi con salsa rosa é salsa verde, per favore!”
Raw cured ham, fontina cheese, mushrooms with red and green sauce grilled to perfection on a big fancy panini grill. I’m still not really sure what the red and green sauces were (tomato- and pesto-esque), but they were divine in their mystery. Best of all, I felt oh so Italian when I placed the order! I ate that same sandwich almost daily for six months straight. Whether I ate the same version because I was so in love with it (completely) or just scared to learn a new string of ingredients (probably) I’ll never quite know (or admit).
Oh, so young, so naive! If I were there again I’d be ordering a different panino each day. Choosing from amongst the cured meats and cheeses that hung over the bar.
I’ve never been able to reproduce that same panino, and I don’t think I actually want to, as the memory of that one great panino would somehow be sullied. I will always miss that sandwich, though not nearly as much as I miss the time spent with my wonderful girlfriends. Nothing comes close to either.
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| Categories: | Cheese • Italian • condiments | 2 Comments |
| Tags: | Bar Centrale • fontina • grilled sandwich • Italy • panini • panino • prosciutto • prosciutto crudo • sandwich • siena |
Grainy Stout Mustard
About 25 years ago my family went on a glorious ski trip to the Italian Alps, our hotel room nestled at the base of the stunningly spectacular Matterhorn. We heard you could ski across the border into Switzerland, so my brother and I, being the daring teens that we were, took the various lifts and gondole up to the top of the mountain and swooshed our way, miles and miles down the other side, into the charming little town of Zermatt. We plunked our skies into the snow and entered a cozy little tavern where the wooden floors were dented from years of ski boot traffic and the tables and benches were smooth and shiny. Being under 21 we enjoyed the freedom of sipping fine European beer and nibbling on bratwursts in a quaint Alpine beer haus. Needless to say, many trees were visited on the trip back up and over the mountains.
There’s a new German-style tavern in our West Seattle neighborhood called Prost! that reminded me of that little pub visited years ago in the Alps. In addition to Prost!’s fabulous beers (Franziskaner being my favorite) they have a selection of “brats and wursts” that are, in a word, outstanding. We sampled the Landjager, a German dry and smoked sausage, that was served with both a spicy and a grainy mustard. I don’t know which I liked better: the sausage or the mustard!
Reminiscing over that memorable trip and consuming the good beer and sausage at Prost! prompted me to make my own mustard at home.
Grainy Stout Mustard
Adapted from a recipe found in Saveur, January 2009
12 ounces stout beer
1 ½ cups brown mustard seeds
1 cup red wine vinegar
1 tablespoon Kosher salt
1 teaspoon ground black pepper
¼ teaspoon ground cinnamon
¼ teaspoon ground cloves
¼ teaspoon ground nutmeg
¼ teaspoon ground allspice
Combine all ingredients in a non-reactive mixing bowl. Cover with plastic wrap and let sit at room temperature for 24-48 hours. Transfer mixture to a blender or food processor. Process until seeds are coarsely ground and the mixture becomes thick. Ready for use immediately or store refrigerated in jars for up to 6 months.
More on Grainy Stout Mustard:
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| Categories: | German • condiments | 6 Comments |
| Tags: | bratwurst • condiments • Food • foodista • German • grainy mustard • grainy stout mustard • mustard • Prost! • pub food • sausage |








































