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The other day, I made a large pot of mint tea with the mint from my container garden.

Photo: 2010 K. Blocksdorf

I didn’t want to waste the leftover tea, which had cooled. So I added lemon juice and sugar and mixed up a pitcher of mint-lemon tea. The result was delicious and I’ve been asked to make it again, which is a usually a good sign here.

The first pitcher I made with bottled lemon juice concentrate and sugar, the second I used lemonade concentrate. I far preferred the first batch, as I found the concentrate was too strong, overwhelming the mint. I want to get out to the market and get some fresh lemons so I can make real lemonade.

I’d like to take credit for this idea, but apparently it’s been around for a while. It actually has a name: Nane Limon, which I guess is Turkish for lemon mint tea….

I wouldn’t worry overly much about hunting down a recipe. I used a big handful of fresh mint and left it in the hot water until it cooled. I pulled the leaves out and then stirred in lemon juice and sugar to taste. Chill and serve with ice of course. A splash of gin or vodka might be nice too.

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From 365 Days of Photos 2010

Long before I had ever heard of the Julie/Julia Project, I set out to bake my way through Bernard Clayton’s New Complete Book of Breads. I’d borrowed the book from the library so many times it probably spent more time on my shelf than the their’s. When I finally bought the book, thanks to a gift card I received, I decided to try every recipe in the book. When I try a recipe, I date it and add any comments. There’s no deadline, but I try things as I’m inspired to—usually about once a week.

Some have been real hits, like the Lemon Honey Whole Wheat bread. Other’s like the German Sour Cream Twists were a one-time-only trial. (We decided that the taste didn’t justify the richness of ingredients.) The Brioche dough is a joy. As the basis for Petite Pain Au Chocolate, or baked into a cylindrical loaf destined to become the best French toast on the planet, it is worth the effort. Today I tried the Hamburger Buns. They turned out perfectly, sprinkled with flax seeds in lieu of the poppy or sesame seeds in the recipe.

This book covers almost every type of bread, yeast raised or otherwise, including crackers, soda biscuits and quick breads. There’s even instructions on how to build a outdoor bread oven, which has me eyeing up various corners of the yard for the perfect location. The instructions cover mixer, hand kneading or food processor processes.

I admit two things I don’t like about many of the recipes. I don’t care to use ‘quick rise’ yeast. The workaround for this is of course is to proof the yeast in the liquid (or portion thereof). And consistently, my comments have included “too salty”. I usually reduce the salt to one teaspoon per three cups of flour called for. For instance, today’s hamburger buns called for one tablespoon of salt, but I added slightly less than two teaspoons with excellent results. groundhogdaycake

And it’s Groundhog Day!

The groundhog saw his shadow—which means six weeks more winter. Around here, we’d be lucky to have only six weeks more winter. But nevertheless, good news or bad, we have the annual Groundhog Day cake.  It’s also Candlemas and traditionally time to take down the Christmas greenery.

DOWN with the rosemary and bays,
Down with the mistletoe ;
Instead of holly, now up-raise
The greener box (for show).

William Henry Husk, Songs of the Nativity (London: John Camden Hotten, 1868)

So while the sparkle of the Christmas season may be long gone, today is a good excuse to light some candles and enjoy!

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I used to bake all of my family’s bread, and we still rarely buy baked goods. Bread has to be one of the most satisfying things to make, and it’s perfect if you have a busy schedule because it rarely needs more than fifteen minutes attention at a time.

Long before the movie Julie & Julia I started baking my way through Bernard Clayton’s New Complete Book of Bread. I certainly don’t bake something every day as Julie in the movie did, but I do record when I first try a recipe and any comments. These are German Sour Cream Twists. They were immediately thrown in the deep freezer because they are so rich, with one cup of sour cream and a half cup each of butter and shortening, plus eggs and egg yolks, we’ll all have clogged arteries by the week’s end if we eat them quickly.

Clayton’s book is wonderful. If you’re new to bread baking the instructions are very clear and the book begins with simple but very satisfying recipes. My only qualm with many of the recipes  is that they are too salty. I usually adjust so that I’m using one teaspoon of salt per three cups of flour. Of course, the yeast needs salt to make it behave and you’ll have flat tasting bread without, so it can’t be left out completely. (Clayton does include a few salt-less recipes.)

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I Hate Cooking

Do you think learning to cook is an optional skill? Many people will announce “I don’t like to cook.” But, guess what, if you want to be healthier, save money and live in an eco-friendly manner you’re going to have to spend some time in the kitchen. A small amount of time spent planning and preparing your food has big payoffs: better flavour, better nutrition and lower costs to name a few.

Cooking got a bad image when advertisers started to lure consumers away from the fresh produce aisles into the shadowy inner nutritional ghetto of the average food store.

Photo 2009 J.I.R.B. From
Blog Images

Women entering the workforce had less time to spend in the kitchen and with no one else to pitch in, food companies promised quick and easy. We could “have it all” and have dinner on the table by 6pm by opening a package and waving a spoon like a magic wand.

It didn’t take much to convince us that it wasn’t cool to take pride in putting a home cooked meal on the table. Let someone else do the dirty work. Chopping became tedious, stirring and sautéing the unfortunate domain of the second class citizen. Why peel, dice and boil, when you can just add water? Whisking and rinsing just aren’t sexy we’re told. The road to a glamorous, you-can-have-it-all lifestyle doesn’t run through the average kitchen.

Is cooking an optional skill, easily handed over to those who promise convenience in a box? Or is it a life skill? We’ve been tempted by clever copy and colourful packaging that promises big, but costs big too—in dollars, waistlines and environmental impact. Has cooking become an optional skill? Not if you care about the health of your body, your bank account and the earth.

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If you live in the Barrie area and like shopping bulk, you’re going to love Foodies. Foodies is on Bayfield Street between the LCBO and Shoppers Drugmart. Lots of easy to access parking here. The store is spacious, bright and easy to maneuver. There’s a great selection of baking ingredients, and all the basics are covered. If you’re intrigued by salts, you’ll find an interesting variety to choose from.

In addition to the ‘good stuff’ there’s plenty of sinful treats. I didn’t look too closely at these since I was after baking essentials. But bins were full of gummies, chocolates, trail mixes and other candy and confections.

The spice selection should have everything a cook could want. If you’re accustomed to buying pricey little spice bottles at the grocery store, you’ll be surprised by the economy of buying in bulk and filling your own bottles. The prices over-all were comparable to other local bulk food stores.

When I was in I was offered free samples of coffee–their house blend and one other. I don’t drink coffee, but was more than pleased to try out their store made granola cereal. I tried “Hold the Nuts.” That’s granola? Wow!

The only disappointment was that they didn’t carry maraschino cherries. (I promised to bake my son a cherry angel food cake for finishing his first full week of work.) They had glace cherries and fruit-but not maraschino. Hey Foodies, you’re only twenty minutes from a maraschino cherry bottler! And that’s a pretty common desert baking need. They also didn’t have molasses, peanut butter, syrups or other bulk liquid ingredients. But as I was browsing the bottled goods I found everything from putenesca sauce to gourmet olives.

I love the ziplock bags, the paper carry bag (re-useable or recyclable
if you forget to bring your own shopping bag). No rattley little metal
carts here, but cool tote-able plastic bundle buggies to accumulate
your goodies in. I have to mention the wall art by a Foodies employee/artist. Very cool. Makes shopping bulk that much more interesting.

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