Monday, May 28, 2012

kitchen update


Mother's day flowers and paint job by Jeff.
Drawings by Anastasia, Zelda, and Linden covering hood wire boxes.
Light by late May.



time lapse

4.30
5.23

in other news




While I'm doing five posts all at once, I may as well mention the chard, the radishes, the rhubarb.  You, spring!  You and your pink vegetables.  I mean, seriously.  I die of pure aesthetic joy.  And then I get to eat it.

stinky pee



For a while there, my pee was really stinky!  Gloriously noxious.  I always feel extra vigorous during the peak of asparagus season, like I must be getting some extra special vitamins to make my pee so rank so many times a day.

More to the point, this was the first year we cut - and ate - our own asparagus.  Really fun.  And since only a few were ready at a time, you had to buy some every time you had a chance so there would be enough for everyone.  We ate them grilled, steamed, rolled in the cast iron til crinkled and black, dipped in the molten yolk of fried eggs, in risotto, in salad with blue cheese, wrapped in salami while lazing on a blanket at the park, even raw, snapped right out of the dirt.

That was a while ago.  Most of them are headed happily to fern state now, and I am plotting how to fill in the holes with more and more crowns (or seed?) and maybe how to do a living mulch with that lovely - and rampant - chartreuse sedum that is everywhere here.

It would have been better if I had mentioned the asparagus a while ago, when we were actually eating them.  It would have been better if I hadn't eaten nearly all of that chocolate cake myself.  But that's not how it went down.  So sue me.

pasta+salad=pasta salad



This is an old Gay Riley technique, newly named by Patrick.  It's pasta salad.  You make pasta in one of many good ways.  You grow arugula (preferably together with garden cress), cut small if possible, wash, dry, and mix.  Delicious with a strong red sauce, or a sort of putanesca like I did the other week (with the last bag of frozen slow cooked tomatoes and oil cured olives and capers), and of course (if like me you are also cleaning out the freezer) seamless with the rest of last fall's pesto and a few toasted pine nuts.  I am also looking forward to a version with caramelized spring onions and feta.  Don't be a fool, add extra oil and salt.