I guess I owe you all a very belated Merry Christmas and Happy New Year!

If you read my last post, you’ll know that I’ve been some what of a nomad since the end of November.  Being the homebody that I am, I did surprisingly well bouncing from couch to couch and guest bed to guest bed.  I got some much needed time in Portland, got a slice of what it would be like to live waaay down in McMinnville (crashed at the historic mansion of a fancy wine maker for a couple nights with my friend Tracy), and discovered that it’s actually quite nice to simplify and only use what can fit into my car.  My wardrobe decreased from a closet full and an eight drawer dresser, to a duffel bag and a laundry basket.  Honestly, I can’t even remember what all I have in storage.

It’s been just over a week since I temporarily moved into a big ol’ B&B in the Dundee Hills.  I feel like a needle in a haystack being a single girl in a huuuuge house.  I’ve hunkered down in the tree-house like room dubbed the “North American Room”.  It’s the most calm room in the house with neutral fabrics, lots of windows, and a cozy bed tucked into the corner.

The rest of the rooms are heavily decorated with bold floral drapes, patterned wall paper, and Persian area rugs.  If you like that style, come on over and take your pick of any room you want!  For me, I’ll stay in my tree house.

For my readers who aren’t in the Pacific NW, you may have heard that we got a dusting of snow last week.  I awoke to find a winter wonderland outside my window and decided to use that as my excuse to sleep in a little bit and mosey into work a little late and blame it on the snow.

Later that night, my friend Tayler texted me to ask what my plans were for the evening.  I was in the mood for something warm, comforting, and coconutty so I offered to make dinner and she offered to bring wine.  It’s nice to go vegan every once in a while, so I pulled this recipe from my Pinterest board and started salivating.

Tayler brought over the most perfect wine for this dish: Pistoleta from Quady North Vineyards in Jacksonville, Oregon.  There are some DELICIOUS wines coming out of Southern Oregon and this one is no exception.  It’s a Marsanne/Rousanne/Viognier blend (a Southern Rhone Blend) that was perfectly tropically and acidic to enjoy with a slightly spicy, slightly citrusy, slightly nutty dish.  An off-dry Riesling or Gewurztraminer will pair nice as well.

Enjoy!

Coconut Braised Spinach with Chickpeas
Serves 4-6
(Adapted from The Kitchn)

Ingredients:
2 tsp coconut oil or ghee
1 large yellow onion, diced
4 cloves of garlic, minced
1 tbsp grated ginger
zest and juice from 1 lemon
1/2 cup sundried tomatoes, chopped
dash of red pepper flakes (more or less depending on how much spice you like)
2 15-oz cans chickpeas, drained and rinsed
1 lb spinach leaves
1 15-oz can coconut milk
1 tsp ground ginger
salt/pepper to taste

To serve:
Baked sweet potatoes
Toasted unsweetened coconut flakes
Cilantro

Heat the oil or ghee in a large, deep Dutch oven or heavy pot over medium-high heat. Add the onion and cook for about 5 minutes, or until the onion is beginning to brown. Add the garlic, ginger, sun-dried tomatoes, lemon zest and red pepper, if using. Cook for 3 minutes, stirring frequently.

Add the chickpeas and cook over high heat for a few minutes or until the chickpeas are beginning to turn golden and they are coated with the onion and garlic mixture.

Toss in the spinach, one handful at a time. This will take about 5 minutes; stir in a handful or two and wait for it to wilt down and make room in the pot before adding the next handful. When all the spinach has been stirred in, pour in the coconut milk and stir in the salt, ground ginger, and lemon juice. Bring to a simmer then turn down the heat and cook for 10 minutes or until the chickpeas are warm through. Taste and add more salt and lemon juice, if necessary.

Serve hot over roasted sweet potatoes, with cilantro leaves and toasted unsweetened coconut to garnish.

 

Might as well make this a wordless Friday.  Just saw this photo from an Outstanding in the Field dinner in Wales and couldn’t help but share it.  It’s making me excited for fall.  I mean, just LOOK at those colors!

Ahhhhhh long weekends.  Nothing like an extra day off to rest, relax, enjoy the end of summer, be with good friends, and of course eat good food!  I spent yesterday up at my friend Tyler’s cabin on Mt. Hood.  Rustic it was, and perfect.  Woodsy cabin with a small kitchen, picnic table and fire pit out back, and the cutest set of mismatched dishes you’ve ever seen.

11 friends (plus baby) gathered for nothing but a restful afternoon under the canopy of the tall Doug Firs, next to a rambling creek.  We were all in charge of bringing up a dish to share and a couple bottles of wine.  Since I had a hefty CSA allotment to eat through, I brought up a bunch of veggies and just went to town in the kitchen right when we got there.  Amongst the lunch spread was a watermelon/arugula/mint salad, corn with fresh cherry tomatoes and mozzarella, asian style coleslaw with peanuts, tomato and avocado salad, steak and burgers, and these little flavor-packed eggplant bites with prosciutto:

I knew I had some eggplant coming in my CSA box and needed some inspiration.  Good thing I had a customer come into the tasting room who taugh culinary arts at a community college in Calgary for 20+ years!  He gave me this recipe and it was about as easy and delicious as they come.

Eggplant Proscuitto Bites

Ingredients:

A couple eggplants
Thin sliced proscuitto
Medium soft cheese of your choice (I found this seriously delicious Honey Gouda Goat cheese at Trader Joe’s that was perfect.  It’s a seasonal cheese so go get some ASAP!)
Olive oil
Balsamic vinegar

Method:
Heat up your grill (or broiler if you don’t have a grill).

Slice eggplant long ways so you have planks rather than rounds and place in shallow bowl or baking dish.  Drizzle olive oil and balsamic vinegar and let sit for up to 30 minutes.

Top marinated egglant with 1-2 slices of prosciutto and a slice of cheese.

Place on grill until cheese in melted and eggplant is cooked.  (Or place in oven under broiler until cheese is bubbling and eggplant is cooked)

Devour and impress!

I’m in a world of gardeners and farmers.  More than ever, I long for a green space, a plot of dirt, a lush patch of land with the fruits of my labor.  I live in a bright, airy loft with high ceilings…but no yard.  It’s great in many ways, but it’s missing something very important.  I have friends, however, that have yards and love to grow things.  Nadine, from the CSA is my main outlet when I need to feel my green thumb.  She hooks. me. up.  Seriously, I can dig in the dirt with her and enjoy the veggies.  And my friend Tayler, the adorable Awkward Olive brought over some of her bounty to combine with Nadine’s bounty and oh the magic we made.  We’ve only cooked together one time, but I’m preemptively assuming we’ll do it again.  And again.

Neither of us had any idea what was going to go in our belly’s last night, but we flipped through Farmer John’s Cookbook: The Real Dirt on Vegetables and found a recipe that had just the right ingredients based on what we had from the garden.  So without further ado, I present to you:

Baked Beet-and-Carrot Burgers with Wild Rice and Sunflower Seeds
Yields 8 patties

Ingredients:

1/2 cup toasted sesame seeds (I suggest toasting them yourself)
1 cup toasted sunflower seeds (same)
2 cups peeled and grated raw beets (1-2 medium beets)
2 cups grated carrots (about 4)
1/2 cup minced onion
2 farm fresh eggs, lightly beaten
1 cup cooked wild rice (quinoa would be awesome also)
1/2 cup veggie or canola oil
1/2 chopped fresh herbs (we used a mix of parsley, rosemary, thyme, sage, and basil)
3 tbsp flour
2-3 tbsp soy sauce or tamari
2 cloves of garlic, minced
1/8-1/4 tsp cayenne pepper
Butter or oil to coat baking sheet

Optional toppings: hummus (my personal favorite), avocado, radish relish, etc.

Method:

-Preheat oven to 350º.  Lightly coat baking sheet with butter.
-Mix everything together in a large bowl until well combined.
-Shape mixture into 8 patties (don’t be afraid of red hands!) and arrange them on baking sheet.
-Bake patties until brown and crispy around the edges, 20 minutes or so.  You may need to flip them over half way thru to get them to crisp up on both sides.
-Be amazed and how tasty tasty these are!

I want also to highlight the gorgeous salad we eat with a bunch of garden goodies on it: fresh greens with dragon’s tongue beans, fresh cucumbers, hard boiled eggs, and Tayler’s homemade croutons!  This whole meal was so hearty, healthy, and solid.  Hooray for local, seasonal, delicious food with local (hopefully not so seasonal), like-minded friends!

 

Summertime in Oregon means green.  It means sunshine and golden hues.  It means growth and warmth and beauty.  For me, it means taking the long way home.  I moved out to wine country in November, right when everything was closing up for the winter.  I’ve been waiting for this season for months and now I’m soaking it all in.

There are so many beautiful back roads lined with vineyards, fields, gardens, orchards and views of the valley.  Country life is a lot slower than city life and I’m hardly ever in a hurry to make it home.  I’ve learn in my life that it’s not all about the destination, but that the journey is just as important.

There is beauty in the journey and the detours that we might miss if we’re always in a hurry to get from point A to point B.  Every time I take the long way, I’m making it my challenge to find something beautiful that I would not have seen on the straight path home.  Stay tuned for the journey.

Here are some of the latest beauties:

Field on Wilsonville Rd 3 miles from my house. I feel so serene here.

Who doesn't love a red barn with a golden glow?

So warm. Imagine me on a blanket in this field wearing a straw cowgirl hat. PERFECT!

Waxing Crescent Moon.

The perfect blue.

Alloro Vineyard at sunset. Felt like Italy.

What are these little white flowers? I've been seeing fields of them everywhere. This is on Lebeau Rd in Sherwood.

Loved these dandelions! I took Wilsonville Rd home from Portland yesterday because it was a beautiful afternoon and 99W thru Tigard just felt wrong.

Make a wish!

 

My mom and I started drooling over the pictures from Outstanding in the Field last year and have been so excited to be part of one this year.  OITF is a traveling farm dinner that goes around the country (and to Europe this year!) and sets up the most beautiful tables in the most beautiful places.  They sources all their meat, produce, and wine from local farms, chefs, and vintners and it’s not uncommon to be sitting next to the farmer who raised the pig that you’re eating.  Might seem weird, but it’s awesome if you think about it!  The pig had a name and lived in a green pasture instead of being crammed in pens and walking around in its own…well, you know.  You never know, I just may pick up my life for a season and travel with OITF next season.  It’s seriously in the works ;)

It was so much fun to enjoy this event in Oregon with my parents, but also with Clare Carver and Brian Marcy of Big Table Farm.  The are salt of the earth people and know how to savor life on a farm and enjoy the fruits of their labor.  Give me a pink farm house in the middle of canyon over a chic downtown loft anyday.

Ok people, drool on.  But keep in mind that my camera ran out of batteries before the food even came.  At least I got to enjoy the meal without distraction.

And because this here bloggy has a foodie theme, here’s the menu for y’all:

Ayres Creek chickpeas, crudité, parsley purée
Square Peg pork terrine, toast, mustard seed
Bay shrimp, basil, green garlic aioli
2009 Riesling, Big Table Farm, Brooks Estate Vineyard

Amy’s greens & veggies, Clare’s eggs, Brian’s Vinaigrette
2009 Pinot Noir, Big Table Farm, Cattrall Brothers Vineyard

Ayres Creek Frumento, Big Table Farm spiced hen, grilled squash and chilies
2009 Pinot Noir, Big Table Farm, Willamette Valley

Square Peg Farm while hog; hams in hay, buoy smoked sausage & belly, roasted herbed loins, liver mousse.
Ayres Creek zolfino beans & wild greens
2009 Pinot Noir, Big Table Farm, Resonance Vineyard

Brown butter shortbread, Viridian Farms strawberries, raspberries, and cream.
2008 Syrah, Big Table Farm, White Hawk Vineyard, Santa Barbara

(Wish I could take credit for the photos, but I can’t.  Found most of them on We Heart It or The Brides Cafe)

Ever since moving down to Oregon wine country, door after door has been opening for me.  I found the greatest apartment with high ceilings and huge south facing windows (which the sun is gloriously shining through right now). I landed a great weekend job at Red Hills Market, which fits me to a t and is a place I whole-heartedly believe in.  I’ve been shown great support and encouragement for all my friends and family.  And I’ve met some kindred spirits and charismatic people.  And that’s a big deal for me, considering I’m one of the most relational people out there.  I haven’t been lonely for a moment since I moved out here.

One of the most exciting doors that has opened lately is an opportunity to really plug into this local community.  When Red Hills Market opened a couple weekends ago,  I made a latte for Nadine, a local gal who runs the Dundee Dirtbox CSA.  See, a CSA is a Community Supported Agriculture with members who get a box of locally grown and seasonal produce every week.  My friend Lindsay and I had talked about joining one and splitting the box every week but we didn’t get past simply talking about it.  When I met Nadine, we got to talking about her CSA and my love for cooking seasonally and locally and this here food blog that I’ve started.  She got really excited, and I got really excited, and we ended up talking about trading veggies for recipes and blogging.  She needed something to help her customers figure out what to do with all the produce and herbs in their box every week, and I wanted to find a way to get more season veggies in my kitchen.  It was serendipity, as Nadine says.

Yesterday, I took a mental health day off of work and ended up seeing Nadine that morning at Red Hills and spending the day with her going around to all her farm plots, moving hay bales into a little barn, and eating lunch on her porch in the sunshine (it was DELICIOUS!).  It was one of the most life-giving days I’ve had in a while.  I’m ecstatic about the potential doors this could open, the people I will and have already met, the delicious food that I’ll get to make, and the big summer dinners that will gather friends from all walks of life.

Be sure to follow the Dundee Dirtbox CSA blog, as Nadine and I both contribute.  She’ll keep you up to date on what’s happening around the farm, and I’ll give you something to make for breakfast, lunch, and dinner.

www.dundeedirtbox.wordpress.com

Your mouth might not water with this post, but your hunger for the Great Outdoors might start growling.  I spent Friday and Saturday in the Mt. Hood wilderness with my dear friends Crystal and Michael Lary.  They rented the Clear Lake Lookout Tower and invited me to come along.  We clipped in to some cross country skis, loaded our packs with snow clothes, books, food and wine, and headed out early Friday morning to relax for the weekend.

And relax we did.  Once we got up to the tower, we sat around in our sweats, drank red wine, snacked on Trader Joe’s goodies, played Gin Rummy, read poems and Portland Mercury Reader Valentine’s and journal entries from past guests of the tower, took naps, and worried about absolutely nothing.

I didn’t shower for days.  Didn’t do my hair.  Didn’t wash my face.  Didn’t put on a layer of makeup.  Didn’t stare at my closest wondering what outfit would look good.  I didn’t even look at my reflection the entire time I was up there.  And I felt sexy every minute of it.

I feel sexier covered in Mother Nature and fleece than I do covered in makeup and trendy clothes.

There is something to be said about not being concerned with reflection, appearance, or other people.  I felt better about myself this weekend than I have in months.  I was able to get back to my roots, to nature, to my bare bones face and body, and it brought such freedom and peace.  I know I had some zits on my chin caused by some dairy I ate but I didn’t see them so I didn’t care.  I know my hair was disheveled because of my headband but so was Crystal’s and we didn’t care.  I know my skin glowed pasty white when we sat in front of the sun-warmed window but I paid no attention.  It was so liberating and so wonderful.  I’ll take a weekend in a lookout tower over a resort vacation any day.

Heading up to Clear Lake Butte

Cold weather makes for runny noses.  Good thing Crystal’s glove has a nose wiper!  They’ve thought of everything!

The snow sparkle made the most beautiful winter wonderland.

Our home for the night!  Just wait til you see the view from the top…

Not bad huh?  Mt. Hood and Clear Lake to the north…

And Mt. Jefferson to the south.  And some David Hill Farmhouse Red, compliments of some club members at the winery I’ve been working at.  Thanks Carrie and Patrick!  We loved it :)

Talk about a romantic candle lit dinner ;)   We ate til our hearts content then played some good old games.  Crystal is a whiz at Hangman and Michael is cunning at Gin Rimmy.  He sure was pushing my buttons during the game.

All good things have to end right?  Goodbye Clear Lake!  We’ll see you again.  A long, steady uphill trek on the way out.

That beer in ounces was probably more than Crystal’s body weight in pounds!  XC skiing is hard work so we treated ourselves to beer and burgers at Calamity Jane’s in Sandy.  I haven’t hard a burger is FOREVER and it was SO worth it.

Long story short, I felt sexy on Valentine’s Day weekend and I’m taking that with me through the week.

(I am humbled to admit that the Food Lovers Cleanse became an afterthought last week.  I didn’t have the time, energy, or money to keep up so I just put the kibosh on it.  So much for all the hype, huh?)

Let me paint a picture for you:

January.  Grey.  Wet.  Dark. MISERABLE.  Depressing.  Cold.  Least favorite month of the year.  I’ve been working on weekends, commuting into Portland 6 days a week, trying to find any reprieve I can and rest in the meantime.  Everyone in Oregon feels the weight on January and it shows.  I blame January for every Trail Blazers loss too.

Let me paint you another picture:

I live 10 minutes from the Dundee Hills of Oregon wine country.  It usually looks like this in January:

But on Saturday, it looked more like this:

It was just the sunny day we needed.  I had the south-facing windows open in my apartment with Amos Lee’s new song “Windows Are Rolled Down” stuck in my head and a smile on my face (that smile was partially due to the fact that I was vacuuming the baseboards and being instantly gratified.  I am SO my mother’s daughter).  I decided to take a short drive up to Erath Winery to pick up some Pinot Gris (for my recipe swap) and some Pinot Blanc (for my own enjoyment).  As I was driving through these hills, I turned on the radio and Amos Lee’s song went from being just a song stuck in my head to actually playing on the radio.  It was the perfect moment with the windows indeed rolled down driving through my Heaven on Earth.  If you live in the Portland area and have never been out to Dundee, get in your car this weekend and go up to Erath, visit my friends who work in the tasting room, enjoy the view, and drink damn good wine.  You’ll thank me…and yourself.

The rest of the day was filled with a cat nap in my big cozy chair with the sun on my face, two of my favorite girlfriends, Michelle and Julia , wine flights at R.Stuart on 3rd Street in McMinnville, flirting with the cute cook at Thistle, and a lovely dinner with them at my place.  I need to have more Saturday’s off.

Sunday was just as pleasant.  I love my day of rest and wish everyday were as great as Sundays.  Usually, it’s church, Trader Joe’s, Whole Foods, Fred Meyer, then back home to cook and rest for the day.  But yesterday, I spend the bulk of my day in Lindsay’s kitchen.  We drank mimosas, ate beet and quinoa pancakes (I’m sure she’ll post those on her blog, but you can follow that link in the meantime), watched the E! red carpet interviews for the SAG Awards, and baked to our little heart’s content.  I can’t reveal too much of what we baked since it’s for our recipe swap that we’ll all post next Monday, but I can give you a little teaser:

And I have to show your our beet pancakes…since they were bright pink!

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