Jump to content


Welcome to the eGullet Forums!

These forums are a service of the Society for Culinary Arts & Letters, a 501c3 nonprofit organization dedicated to advancement of the culinary arts. Anyone can read the forums, however if you would like to participate in active discussions please join the Society.

Photo

eG Foodblog: tejon - Pepper Steak and Power Tools

Foodblog

  • This topic is locked This topic is locked
209 replies to this topic

#1 tejon

tejon
  • participating member
  • 1,385 posts

Posted 02 March 2006 - 02:16 AM

Good morning! My name is Kathy, and I live with my husband and two small boys in Diamond Bar, California. I usually just tell people I live at the very edge of Los Angeles, which is completely correct, if only by a whopping three miles. Or I mention that I'm close to Disneyland, which is also true. I did a food blog last summer and enjoyed myself so much I had to do it again. This time around I'm older, wiser, and only slighty more insane.

This week will be all about (hopefully) controlled chaos in my kitchen and house. After years of planning, we have finally decided to move to Oregon. There are many reasons for the move, but the main thing is that we both feel more home there than here. It's an exciting time and a slightly crazy one as well. In an effort to get the house ready to sell, we're painting and installing new flooring and generally fixing and fluffing everything to hopefully get the most money possible in this already insanely high market. Hey, every last bit helps :wink:.

Getting everything done hasn't been easy, but I love a good challenge. I'll be finishing up the kitchen and putting in some last bits of tile. Since we're moving soon, I'm trying to use what's left in my pantry and freezer, so suggestions are more than welcome (ideas on what to do with three cups of cracklins, anyone?). I'll be making Pepper Steak and falafel and whatever else sounds appealing. Also grabbing something at In-N-Out before they become just another burger chain.

Pictures hopefully soon to follow. My Canon S400 is having issues, so today's first order of business after dropping the boys at school will be a trip to the camera store. Back again in a few hours!
Kathy

Cooking is like love. It should be entered into with abandon or not at all. - Harriet Van Horne

#2 kitchenmage

kitchenmage
  • participating member
  • 161 posts

Posted 02 March 2006 - 02:25 AM

screeches into empty room, waves

Hi Kathy!

Waiting for this to start will be tough, but I'll console myself with your earlier blog. Whereabouts in Oregon are you headed? (I'm just across the river in Wa.)

#3 tejon

tejon
  • participating member
  • 1,385 posts

Posted 02 March 2006 - 02:35 AM

...ah, but not *quite* empty!

We're probably going to end up around the Portland area, though Dan might have a good job nibble just across in Washington, so things could change. And housing is cheaper there, so we're considering Vancouver as well.

Right-before-bed snack of cinnamon toast and milk:
Posted Image

Edited by tejon, 02 March 2006 - 02:38 AM.

Kathy

Cooking is like love. It should be entered into with abandon or not at all. - Harriet Van Horne

#4 Lori in PA

Lori in PA
  • participating member
  • 701 posts

Posted 02 March 2006 - 03:36 AM

Hi, Kathy, I'm looking forward to spending the week with you. Cinnamon toast is one of my favorite wintertime just-before-bed snacks.
~ Lori in PA
My blog: http://inmykitchenin...e.blogspot.com/
My egullet blog: http://forums.egulle...topic=89647&hl=


"Cooking is not a chore, it is a joy."
- Julia Child

#5 Megan Blocker

Megan Blocker
  • eGullet Society staff emeritus
  • 3,040 posts

Posted 02 March 2006 - 07:52 AM

In-N-Out Burger!!!!! Woo-hoo!!!! :wink:

So glad to see you blogging, Kathy...I can't wait to see how you miraculously balance planning for the move and doing the blog. I think you're amazing. :biggrin:

Are you originally from the West Coast? Just wondering how you decided on Oregon, and how you ended up in Southern California...
"We had dry martinis; great wing-shaped glasses of perfumed fire, tangy as the early morning air." - Elaine Dundy, The Dud Avocado

Queenie Takes Manhattan
eG Foodblogs: 2006 - 2007

#6 racheld

racheld
  • participating member
  • 2,677 posts

Posted 02 March 2006 - 08:18 AM

Hooray, It's YOU!!! What fun---all these great bloggers all-in-a-row!!

Just don't say the "M" word too often---we've "M"-ed eleven times in the twenty years we've been married, always UP, I comfort myself, and we're now firmly settled for the past eight years. But it brings back all those newspapers and boxes and wrapping tape nightmares.

And you could take the cracklin's as part of your dowry to Oregon---kind of like carrying kitchen-seed for the new place. They seem to keep forever frozen, so just throw them in the truck last thing and bon voyage. (Munch a few on the trek and say they're pork jerky).

Good to hear from you again...looking forward to a great week.
Fairy tea has its own magic, for it never does run out;
And the flavour you imagine will come streaming from the spout.
Fairy Tea

My Blog--Thanksgiving and Goodwill

LAWN TEA

#7 tejon

tejon
  • participating member
  • 1,385 posts

Posted 02 March 2006 - 08:47 AM

Are you originally from the West Coast?  Just wondering how you decided on Oregon, and how you ended up in Southern California...

View Post


Actually, I was born in San Francisco and grew up in Los Angeles and Orange County. California native all the way back to my great Great Great Grandparents. Dan's a native as well, so our planned move has a lot of people shaking their heads in confusion. One of the main reasons is cost of living, especially housing. At the moment we're essentially trapped in a two bedroom townhouse with no way to move out at all unless we went deep into the desert - and away from jobs for Dan. A long time ago we made the decision for one of us to stay home while the children were small, and while financially that has made life a bit more challenging it's been a really good choice. Oregon is one of the areas that has many potential jobs for Dan, but more importantly it just feels right to both of us. We both love trees and green and even rain, and felt like we had come home when we visited. I have some family there and we have friends in Portland as well. Though mostly it just feels like where we should be.
Kathy

Cooking is like love. It should be entered into with abandon or not at all. - Harriet Van Horne

#8 tejon

tejon
  • participating member
  • 1,385 posts

Posted 02 March 2006 - 08:50 AM

Just don't say the "M" word too often---we've "M"-ed eleven times in the twenty years we've been married, always UP, I comfort myself, and we're now firmly settled for the past eight years.  But it brings back all those newspapers and boxes and wrapping tape nightmares.

And you could take the cracklin's as part of your dowry to Oregon---kind of like carrying kitchen-seed for the new place.  They seem to keep forever frozen, so just throw them in the truck last thing and bon voyage.  (Munch a few on the trek and say they're pork jerky).

View Post


This will be my twenty-fourth move :wacko:. Hoping this will be the LAST one - I'm really tired of boxes and labeling everything.

I love the idea of taking the cracklin's along. Much better than the "honorary can of Spam" we got as a wedding present and were told must stay in the pantry at all times. And they are pork jerky - the best kind imaginable! Mmmm...pork...
Kathy

Cooking is like love. It should be entered into with abandon or not at all. - Harriet Van Horne

#9 tejon

tejon
  • participating member
  • 1,385 posts

Posted 02 March 2006 - 09:11 AM

Just packed up lunch for my oldest, Ryan:

Posted Image

He takes pretty much the same lunch each day: pizza that I make ahead of time and reheat in the toaster oven, water, fruit leather from Trader Joe's, fruit or a vegetable, and a snack of some kind. Today it's goldfish, the wholesome snack that smiles back until you bite their heads off :wink:.

I'm off to school, then back momentarily so I can make up my youngest's lunch and eat something myself.
Kathy

Cooking is like love. It should be entered into with abandon or not at all. - Harriet Van Horne

#10 I_call_the_duck

I_call_the_duck
  • participating member
  • 1,243 posts

Posted 02 March 2006 - 09:28 AM

Sprucing and packing and blogging, oh my!

Kathy, I look forward to your adventures this week. If you're driving up to Oregon, them craklins will make a nice snack. :biggrin:
Karen C.

"Oh, suddenly life’s fun, suddenly there’s a reason to get up in the morning – it’s called bacon!" - Sookie St. James

Travelogue: Ten days in Tuscany

#11 ludja

ludja
  • participating member
  • 4,439 posts

Posted 02 March 2006 - 09:28 AM

...
I love the idea of taking the cracklin's along. Much better than the "honorary can of Spam" we got as a wedding present and were told must stay in the pantry at all times. And they are pork jerky - the best kind imaginable! Mmmm...pork...

View Post


If you decide to eat some before you leave, two favorite dishes of mine are scrambled eggs with cracklings (for any meal) or cracklin cornbread. These are both classic uses and oh so good.

Good luck with preparations for the move. I'm looking forward to your blog, including finding out more about the mystery teaser photos that Soba posted in Megan Blocker's foodblog...
"Under the dusty almond trees, ... stalls were set up which sold banana liquor, rolls, blood puddings, chopped fried meat, meat pies, sausage, yucca breads, crullers, buns, corn breads, puff pastes, longanizas, tripes, coconut nougats, rum toddies, along with all sorts of trifles, gewgaws, trinkets, and knickknacks, and cockfights and lottery tickets."

-- Gabriel Garcia Marquez, 1962 "Big Mama's Funeral"


#12 tejon

tejon
  • participating member
  • 1,385 posts

Posted 02 March 2006 - 10:23 AM

Quick shower for me (did I mention that I'm not in any way a morning person?), then it's time to make up my five year old's lunch. Arden asked for peanut butter sandwiches, chocolate milk, and Havarti cheese - comes out more like "Havadi" when he tries to say it :smile: - and I added in some more goldfish and a Fuji apple:

Posted Image

I grabbed some of the Havarti for myself, along with a swig of Orangina. Not bad together, actually.

Posted Image

Now I'm off to drop Arden at his preschool, then volunteer at Ryan's school for a while. I'll probably grab lunch on the way at some point, then I have to go over what we need to tile the bathroom this weekend.
Kathy

Cooking is like love. It should be entered into with abandon or not at all. - Harriet Van Horne

#13 tejon

tejon
  • participating member
  • 1,385 posts

Posted 02 March 2006 - 10:23 AM

Good luck with preparations for the move.  I'm looking forward to your blog, including finding out more about the mystery teaser photos that Soba posted in Megan Blocker's foodblog...

View Post


I'll explain those once I'm back this afternoon, I promise!
Kathy

Cooking is like love. It should be entered into with abandon or not at all. - Harriet Van Horne

#14 suzilightning

suzilightning
  • participating member
  • 2,592 posts

Posted 02 March 2006 - 10:34 AM

good luck packing and moving

take the cracklin's with you

double double in- n- out , please????????

enjoy the blogging ... and the sprucing up.... and .... everything.

any chance of an egullet work party? :wink:
The first zucchini I ever saw I killed it with a hoe.

Joe Gould
Monstrous Depravity (1963)

#15 Kouign Aman

Kouign Aman
  • participating member
  • 2,653 posts

Posted 02 March 2006 - 12:52 PM

I am very much looking forward to this blog, Kathy. I thoroughly enjoyed your last one. Good luck with the sprucing etc.

Will there be updated shots of the boys (or must I refer to them as pets, in order to get them included in the blog?)?
"You dont know everything in the world! You just know how to read!" -an ah-hah! moment for 6-yr old Miss O.

#16 tejon

tejon
  • participating member
  • 1,385 posts

Posted 02 March 2006 - 02:16 PM

Ryan's teacher had a lot of extra work for me to do today and I have to pick Arden up at 12:30, so lunch today had to be quick. Luckily for me, en route to preschool is a quite decent Vietnamese restaurant:
Posted Image

I usually go for this:
Posted Image

Sigh. Soup would take too long. So I opted for a bahn mi sandwich to go. I chose a "marinated, roasted pork", which was surprisingly heavy on meat and light on vegetables. The meat was tender with crisp edges, the bread was crisp on the outside and light and airy inside, and the cucumber and carrot added a nice crunch. There was enough nuoc cham and mayonnaise that I had to eat it like a Philly cheese steak - leaning forward so the savory drips didn't end up all over my clothes. The sandwich was HUGE, and at $3.19 it was a pretty sweet deal. I'll admit to licking my fingers when the last bite was done.
Posted Image
Kathy

Cooking is like love. It should be entered into with abandon or not at all. - Harriet Van Horne

#17 tejon

tejon
  • participating member
  • 1,385 posts

Posted 02 March 2006 - 02:28 PM

double double in- n- out , please????????

any chance of an egullet work party? :wink:

View Post


Dan has nobly volunteered to get a double double tomorrow. Talk about self sacrifice! And anyone who would like to help paint or tile is more than welcome at any time - I promise both food and drink and even free entertainment in the form of small children. :wink:
Kathy

Cooking is like love. It should be entered into with abandon or not at all. - Harriet Van Horne

#18 Chris Amirault

Chris Amirault
  • manager
  • 19,489 posts

Posted 02 March 2006 - 02:49 PM

Arden asked for peanut butter sandwiches, chocolate milk, and Havarti cheese - comes out more like "Havadi" when he tries to say it  :smile:

View Post

I don't get it. Ahden pronounces it right. It's not so hahd. Yeesh.

Blog on!
Chris Amirault
Manager, eG Forums.
camirault@eGstaff.org
eG Ethics Signatory
I took my potatoes down to be mashed
Then I made it over to that million dollar bash

#19 jamiemaw

jamiemaw
  • participating member
  • 2,173 posts

Posted 02 March 2006 - 03:06 PM

Your Canadian cousins are delighted that you're moving closer, to the land of moody rainforests and egalitarian thoughts, even if it's to the other Vancouver. Blog ever onward . . .
from the thinly veneered desk of:
Jamie Maw
Food Editor
Vancouver  magazine

www.vancouvermagazine.com
Foodblog: In the Belly of the Feast - Eating BC

"Profumo profondo della mia carne"

#20 tejon

tejon
  • participating member
  • 1,385 posts

Posted 02 March 2006 - 04:32 PM

I'm looking forward to your blog, including finding out more about the mystery teaser photos that Soba posted in Megan Blocker's foodblog...

View Post


I'm back from picking up the boys and lunch, so as you wish, ludja!

First, I'd like to introduce my spice and seasonings shelf. Don't try to find any kind of rhyme or reason there, as none exists. I bustle through the bottles and jars as I cook, seeking out this or that flavor as needed. Completely defies explanation of any kind, but it does seem to work. The cabinet goes much further back that it looks in the picture - the contents fill a banker box (as I've found in past moves).
Posted Image

This cabinet doesn't offer nearly enough space for everything I use regularly, so I have an overflow spice drawer where most of the spices I buy in bulk tend to live. I also keep chopsticks and metal skewers to one side. Anyone care to try their hand at guessing which spices are pictured? I used to label everything, but soon found I recognized all of these easily enough by sight, so didn't bother when I put all of these in new bottles.
Posted Image

On to the windmill.
Posted Image

This makes me laugh a little every time I see it. It rests at the corner of the strip mall where I go grocery shopping each week. Something about a windmill smack dab in the middle of California suburbia, next to a Ralph's and a bank, strikes me as endlessly funny. It's evidently a historical piece and it quite lovely as it spins whenever the wind blows. Here's the not as quaint Ralph's location directly across the parking lot:
Posted Image
Kathy

Cooking is like love. It should be entered into with abandon or not at all. - Harriet Van Horne

#21 Priscilla

Priscilla
  • participating member
  • 1,833 posts

Posted 02 March 2006 - 05:00 PM

I love the windmill! We must share a similar sense of humor, Kathy.

Hazarding a guess at the spices...
Top row, cloves, cayenne, black cardamom, ?
2nd row, sumac maybe, peppercorns, fennel seed, fennel ground
3rd, turmeric, black mustard, cumin ground, cumin whole

It is admirable, the care with which you prepare, (including packaging), the food for your lucky children.

What have we got in store, dinner-wise, between construction?

Priscilla
OCFoodNation.com
Taste of Orange County, Orange Coast Magazine
In the Daily Gullet
: Vegetables, in a Soup


#22 tejon

tejon
  • participating member
  • 1,385 posts

Posted 02 March 2006 - 05:20 PM

Hazarding a guess at the spices...
Top row, cloves, cayenne, black cardamom, ?

Cloves are correct. The last one is difficult to see - whole nutmeg.

2nd row, sumac maybe, peppercorns, fennel seed, fennel ground

Sumac it is! Good eye. Peppercorns and fennel seed are also correct, but that's not ground fennel.

3rd, turmeric, black mustard, cumin ground, cumin whole

All exactly right :smile:

It is admirable, the care with which you prepare, (including packaging), the food for your lucky children.
What have we got in store, dinner-wise, between construction?

View Post

Aw, thanks. It's really important to me to make sure they have good tasting, healthy food every day. Lets me nurture them a little when they're at school, which is nice for everyone.

Dinner tonight will be pepper steak, potatoes of some sort, and broccoli. Clearing out some really nice looking rib eye from the freezer.
Kathy

Cooking is like love. It should be entered into with abandon or not at all. - Harriet Van Horne

#23 snowangel

snowangel
  • eGullet Society staff emeritus
  • 8,140 posts

Posted 02 March 2006 - 05:21 PM

Spices. I'd guess that the first one in the top row is star anise and the last one is saffron. ANd, yes that red one that's first on the third row certainly looks like sumac!

I love the title of your blog, Kathy. I'm a power tool fanatic. I cherish the power tools that my family gives me for gifts.

And, good luck on selling the house. I'm sure it will sell, but when we sold our house (lived there for 18 years) almost 2 years ago, I noticed that most calls for a showing happen as the kids get home, are having a snack and spill something on the floor. It was the packing up the crap, the getting all of those DIY projects that we'd done to 95% done that were hard. THe killer was keeping the damned kitchen floor clean.

Edited to add: I missed the sumac by one row.
Susan Fahning aka "snowangel"

#24 tejon

tejon
  • participating member
  • 1,385 posts

Posted 02 March 2006 - 05:30 PM

After I picked Arden up from school, we went searching for good pita bread and vegetables. Ended up at a Halal store where I buy many of my spices and dried grains and dal.

Posted Image

My favorite part of the store - spices! Down below the mix boxes are bags of just about everything my little heart desires, all lined up in fragrant row after row. I love the heady smell of cloves and fennel and cumin that rises up as I sort through to find what I need.

Posted Image

Here's the ever friendly butcher who made sure I got a good picture as he waved:

Posted Image

Arden decided he needed to help me pick out the perfect lemon:

Posted Image
Kathy

Cooking is like love. It should be entered into with abandon or not at all. - Harriet Van Horne

#25 tejon

tejon
  • participating member
  • 1,385 posts

Posted 02 March 2006 - 05:39 PM

Spices.  I'd guess that the first one in the top row is star anise and the last one is saffron.  ANd, yes that red one that's first on the third row certainly looks like sumac!

The first one isn't star anise, though I wish I had that much on hand! The picture quality makes it hard to tell exactly what's inside. The last one can't really be seen at all, but it's whole nutmeg down in the bottom.

I love the title of your blog, Kathy.  I'm a power tool fanatic.  I cherish the power tools that my family gives me for gifts.

I love power tools, too. Actually, I love building and fixing things far more than is in any way typical for us female types. Sit me down with a saw and a hammer and something to work on and I'm happy as a clam. Thankfully, I married a Mechanical Engineer, so we just build things together :smile:. We also fight a bit over the Mikita :wink:.

And, good luck on selling the house.  I'm sure it will sell, but when we sold our house (lived there for 18 years) almost 2 years ago, I noticed that most calls for a showing happen as the kids get home, are having a snack and spill something on the floor.  It was the packing up the crap, the getting all of those DIY projects that we'd done to 95% done that were hard.  THe killer was keeping the damned kitchen floor clean.

I figure people will most likely want to see the house at the least opportune times. That's why we're putting so much effort into getting everything as clean and move in ready as possible - so a bit of mess won't make as much of a difference. The kitchen floor just got replaced exactly because what we had NEVER looked clean, no matter how much I scrubbed. The new tiles look great even when there are random crumbs here and there....not that that is ever the case here :rolleyes:

Edited by tejon, 02 March 2006 - 05:44 PM.

Kathy

Cooking is like love. It should be entered into with abandon or not at all. - Harriet Van Horne

#26 tejon

tejon
  • participating member
  • 1,385 posts

Posted 02 March 2006 - 06:26 PM

After shopping, Arden and I walked over to the Sweets and Spices store:
Posted Image

Posted Image

They have desserts, crunchy snacks available by the pound, pani puri and sev sold by the bag, and freshly made vegetarian dishes of all kinds. The dosas are excellent, though the bhel puri calls my name far more often. Today I grabbed a samosa filled with potatoes, peas, fennel seed, ginger, and chiles. Cilantro and tamarind chutneys studiously applied, of course.
Posted Image

Then we picked Ryan up from school. Snack time for the boys (whole wheat crackers, apple slices, peanut butter and juice), then homework. Ryan decided today's apple was worth a thumb's up :smile:.
Posted Image

Time to get dinner ready!

Edited by tejon, 02 March 2006 - 06:29 PM.

Kathy

Cooking is like love. It should be entered into with abandon or not at all. - Harriet Van Horne

#27 Timh

Timh
  • participating member
  • 638 posts

Posted 02 March 2006 - 06:43 PM

You've got good eats there. I find myself staring at the viet and Indian foods, and wishing i had some now.

#28 snowangel

snowangel
  • eGullet Society staff emeritus
  • 8,140 posts

Posted 02 March 2006 - 07:09 PM

Kathy, I have my very own Makita!

Back to the kitchen and selling the house. The day we sold the house was the day I decided to do the braised bacon from Zuni Cafe cookbook. I had to pull it out a bit early and stash it in the garage (cold in there in January!) as I cleaned up the spills. At the closing, the people mentioned that the smell of the house and garage was just divine. So, phooey on filling the house with smells of baking and cinnamon. Bacon did it for us!
Susan Fahning aka "snowangel"

#29 tryingsomethingnew

tryingsomethingnew
  • participating member
  • 50 posts

Posted 02 March 2006 - 07:10 PM

i see cloves!

#30 TongoRad

TongoRad
  • participating member
  • 654 posts

Posted 02 March 2006 - 07:39 PM

Great photos, Kathy. It would seem that you and I like the very same things so I am happy to tell you that you will LOVE Portland. I have friends who moved there in '91 and have visited many times- what a wonderful city! I wish your family the best as you resettle.

Per the spice drawer: am I correct that the only open item is Row 2, #4? My guess would be ground coriander just because you have to have that on hand at all times. Looks like it, too :wink:
aka Michael

Chi mangia bene, vive bene!

"...And bring us the finest food you've got, stuffed with the second finest."
"Excellent, sir. Lobster stuffed with tacos."





Also tagged with one or more of these keywords: Foodblog