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Everything posted by Ann_T
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@Tropicalsenior, those look so good. I would love to make something like that, but without the sweetness. Do they freeze well? Today's bake. This dough was started with a Levain and the dough went into the fridge Saturday night and taken out last night and left on the counter overnight. Baked this morning.
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Moe's breakfast. I made soup Friday night for dinner and Moe wanted it for breakfast yesterday and again today with toasted sourdough baguette.
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I hadn't fed my starters in a while. Maybe 6 or 8 weeks. So I fed them both yesterday, one with my regular bread flour and the other with the Organic Rye that I always use to feed. I used 55g of the discard from the rye fed starter and added it to 55g of water and 142g of my bread flour with a tiny pinch of salt and made a Levain. And I made a second Levain using 142g of flour, pinch of salt, 1g of yeast and 15g of the white starter. Left both starters and levains out on the counter while I was at work. The starters more than doubled, and both levains were very active. Especially the one with the g of yeast and the tiny bit of discard. Blew the top off of the container. I made two batches of dough last night. Added the sourdough levain to 1000g of flour, 30g of salt and 680 g of water. And the Yeast based levain was also added to , 1000g of flour, 30g of salt and 680g of water. After the last stretch and folds the yeast based dough went into the fridge and the sourdough batch was left out on the counter overnight and was ready to use by 3:30 AM this morning. Divided and preshaped. Finished shaping. And left to proof. Baked 8 sourdough baguettes. Sliced one while still warm for Moe's breakfast. Started another levain this morning with 1g of yeast and 15g of the white starter and tonight I'll make another batch of dough to go into the fridge and will pull out the batch that is in the fridge and will bake that one tomorrow morning.
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And tastes change. I never cared for clams which Moe loved. But one time we were in a restaurant in Oregon and Moe ordered clams and I tried them and I have loved them ever since. Was never a fan of tarragon, but one of my favourite salads has a tarragon dressing. Someone I know from another cooking forum mentioned years ago the "7 Year Rule". Which was basically to try something you never liked because you might be surprised that you now like it. Still hate carrots.
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Well I love your attitude when it comes to feeding those that you love. I hated having to eat what was put in front of me as a kid. First of all my mom was an lousy cook and secondly meal time should be enjoyable for everyone and not a big fight over being forced to eat something one doesn't like. I'm not talking about being a picky eater either. I hate carrots to this day. We had a rule that Matthew had to taste something new before saying he didn't like it. And if he didn't like something he didn't have to eat it. It was easy to cook something that Moe and I liked and and something for Matt, and usually the sides were something everyone liked. I vowed I would never make dinner time a battle, forcing someone to eat a food they disliked. Life is too short.
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Cooked the rice last night and made Chicken Fried Rice this morning. Moe is having it for breakfast and I'm going to take some to work for lunch.
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@MaryIsobel Happy Birthday to your husband. I grilled a rack of lamb for dinner tonight. Used the melon baller to cut out potatoes to make Parisienne potatoes and we had rutabaga and steamed green beans as sides. I also made Moe his favourite mint sauce with mint from our garden. It is a simple fresh mint sauce with mint, red wine vinegar, a little honey, salt, pepper and a little garlic. This tastes better than in looks with the mint sauce.
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It has already been cured. We will probably use up this batch of garlic in 4 to 6 weeks. So I will just keep it in a basket lightly covered. I'll buy more between now and September , enough I hope to get through to late January/February. A friend, who is a chef, said that she actually freezes heads of garlic. That the cloves separate and peel easily right out of the freezer so I might try freezing a few to see how that works.
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I have three favourite seasons and they are Garlic Season, Tomato Season and Corn Season. There are a few local farm stands in the Cowichan Valley and in the Victoria area. The Flatlander's Farm with farm stand is five minutes from our place. I stopped by the Farm to buy garlic today. Russian Red garlic that is the most perfect garlic I have ever seen. Also bought fresh picked green beans, a zucchini and fresh eggs. I have a rack of lamb that I'm going to grill tonight and I'm thinking the green beans will be one of the sides.
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Haven't seen any local corn here yet. Or any from the mainland. Will watch for it though.
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Everything is definitely green here. All winter actually, except for the few days that we might get snow. But tomatoes really need a lot of heat. Even the corn out here isn't as good as corn from Ontario and is ready much later. One of the reasons I love it out here is that it is green year around except in the summer when you would expect it to be. With the water restrictions on from lack of rain, the grass every where is basically brown and dry. First rain though it will be green again. A hot summer is what I miss the most about Ontario. That and the wonderful restaurants in Toronto. But people here start to complain when the temperature gets over 70°F. So I will take the mild summer to not have to deal with a long cold winter.
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We actually have cool springs and can often have frost after the May long weekend. Doesn't often get warm here until later in June. And can start raining and not stop by the end of August. This year so far had been good for the tomato plants. Places like Windsor, Ontario and the surrounding area have an extended spring and an extended fall so perfect tomato growing . Moe grew up in Windsor.
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Tomatoes don't grow as well here on the west coast. Not like Ontario. Tomatoes love hot days and nights. So growing tomatoes here is always a hit and miss. So far this summer has been warmer and the evenings haven't cooled off as much so our tomatoes are doing better. Other than these Early girls, it will still be a while before we start harvesting the other varieties we planted. Usually later in August and into September.
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I'm not big on breakfast, but I do love toast and tomatoes. Especially when the tomatoes are from our garden and the toast is slices of homemade baguette. These are Early Girl tomatoes.
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@DuvelLove your dad's smile. Moe's breakfast this morning. Toasted Cheddar Ciabatta bacon sandwich. Ciabatta was baked this morning. And yesterday's breakfast Soft boiled (steamed) eggs with toast fingers.
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I had made three batches of dough Tuesday morning and two went into the fridge immediately after the last stretch and fold. One batch (600g flour) was left out and used to make a couple of pizzas. The larger batch (1000g flour) came out of the fridge Tuesday night and left on the counter overnight and I baked Baguettes and a round Wednesday morning. The third batch (600g flour) remained in the fridge until Friday when Matt took it out, divided it in half, used one half for pizza and put the other half immediately back into the fridge. Wasn't sure after five days whether this dough would still have some life left in it, but I took it out of the fridge last night before bed and by 4:00 AM this morning it had more than doubled. So, I stretched it out, added some shredded cheddar and shaped it into a ciabatta loaf. I figured I had nothing to lose. And besides I always tell everyone that bread dough is very forgiving and really difficult to screw up. I think this little Ciabatta proves the point. Made Moe a bacon sandwich on toasted ciabatta for breakfast.
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Thankfully I always have some baguettes in the freezer. It has cooled off enough to bake. Started a batch of dough last night and left out on the counter until 3:30 this morning. Last baguette out of the oven before 6 AM. Baked six baguettes. Edited to add Crumb Photo
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Last night's dinner. Same day dough made yesterday morning by 9:00 AM and it was ready to use by 5:00 PM I baked two small in the Ooni. Both with the same toppings of Italian sausage and Kalamata olives.
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Nothing like having fries for dinner and again for breakfast. But what is a Club House Sandwich without homemade fries. Still had the other chicken breast left from the chicken I roasted yesterday so I made a toasted Club House this morning for Moe and I to share.
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I would rather my toast be slightly burnt than what I call anemic. Love lots of butter dripping into the crevasses. Hot toast, melted butter.
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@FeChef, there is no real recipe. Just season your bird the way you normally would and roast at 500°F. Remove the chicken from the pan , and either put the pan back in the oven to brown the juices or do the same on top of the stove. The fat will separate from the browned bits. If needed, add a little more fat (butter) and then flour to make a roux. Add chicken broth and season with salt, pepper and sage and or thyme. Or whatever herbs you would normally use. Pictorial I did for the blog way back when.......https://thibeaultstable.com/2014/11/22/roast-chicken-and-how-to-make-gravy/