Dark Days : frittata

I was a little bit creativity-challenged for the Week 6 dinner for the Dark Days Challenge, so I made a frittata. I used the mixed kale from this week’s CSA delivery, my favorite local pastured eggs, garlic from the store, dried mushroom salt from last winter’s CSA, and shallots from our summer CSA that are still kicking around. Sauté the shallots, garlic, and greens together with olive oil; lightly beat the eggs with seasoned salt and freshly ground pepper; add the veggies to the eggs; return everything to the pan with some more olive oil; cook on the stovetop until nearly firm, and then finish off under the broiler.


Most of the ingredients.


Kales.


Greens, shallots, and garlic sautéeing.


Dinner: half a frittata each.

I had the best intentions of serving the frittata with roasted turnips and/or cornbread and/or salad greens, but I didn’t plan ahead so none of that was ready when the frittata was and I was too tired and hungry to make it happen. So we just each ate half a fritatta and called it dinner. Imagine it with roasted turnips, salad, and cornbread: I’m sure that would have been a lovely meal! As it was, the frittata was pretty darn tasty, so I’m not complaining. There’s always next time.

Dark Days : frittata

Dark Days : venison stew, Moroccan-style

One of my favorite types of meals is the one-bowl meal. Dal and rice, curry and rice, chili over baked potato: anything that can be served up as a nice hearty meal in a single bowl will do me just fine. One of our favorites is the Moroccan-style stew from Simply In Season; while we started off using ground turkey, over the past couple of years it’s become one of the ways I use our annual venison allotment. Yes, I said venison. I know that when I was growing up I would have gladly gnawed off my own arm before eating deer, and certainly never forgiven someone I knew who actually shot a deer themselves and foisted it upon me. What can I say: things change. More than just me eating meat again, what’s changed is that venison is lean and free, thanks to the generosity of my partner’s boss who is always looking for ways to share the bounty (and not piss off his own partner by filling up their freezer with too much deer). In the past we’ve taken maybe ten pounds of ground venison at most over the course of a season and used it in the Christmas pies and a few batches of this stew. This year I said I could take about forty pounds, since I now have a chest freezer. Expecting a bunch of vacuum-packed lumps of meat, I was fairly disconcerted to be presented with a sack of ground meat held closed with a binder clip. I dutifully packed it away into quart-sized freezer bags, and then did it again the next day with the second sack. I tried to just be thankful I wasn’t the one to have to carry it on the metro and move on. Thank goodness for latex gloves!


The venison as it arrived at our house.

Since all of our greens went bad last week, I was a bit stymied for the Week 5 meal for the Dark Days Challenge, and decided to fall back on this stew, which is something of a staple here. I figure you don’t get much more local than deer shot by someone you know and transported in a sack via light rail, right? I also had turnips and stewed tomatoes from our CSA and was willing to have a sweet potato (Japanese purple variety) stand in for a potato. Everything else is not local (although the canned beans are Eden brand which is local to Michigan which is where I used to live, so that kind of sort of qualifies). And, I already had the ingredients in my house, and using up things already in the pantry is fairly sustainable. (I know, it’s a stretch: I will do better next week.)


Vegetables for the stew, sweet potato not included.


The last of the summer’s tomatoes from the freezer.


The stew stewing, minus chickpeas and raisins.

The stew was really good, and the sweet potato added a funny (in a good way) flavor. It was a sweet juicy little surprise lurking in the savory stew; I think the potato is better in terms of the integrity of the overall dish, but the sweet potato was yummy and I’ll gladly use one again if that’s all I have on hand. I look forward to the best part of one dish meals (since we do have a dishwasher): having it for lunch again the next day!


Week 5: venison stew dinner.

Dark Days : venison stew, Moroccan-style

food : taking stock of the fridge


One week of greens, before they all go bad from neglect.

Between the holidays (those would be my birthday and Christmas, of course) and a sick baby, produce piled up in the fridge and we lost all of the greens. Thankfully we have a composter, so they don’t go totally to waste when that happens; as with the fallen cakes and partly flourless cookies, I fear that keeping up with the CSA will be another thing that falls victim to the needs of the new little person in the house. Of course, not having any greens put the kibosh on my plan to make a greens fritatta for this week’s Dark Days Challenge meal. I am going to fall back on a favorite (Moroccan-style venison stew) and draw upon the freezer reserves in order to use what we do have.

The rest of what I have in the fridge is (until Thursday) is now:

  • sweet potatoes (still three varieties, and not really in the fridge)
  • one acorn squash
  • shallots (I am planning to just buy some probably-not-local green beans to go with these, honestly)
  • radishes (which I don’t like at all)
  • sai sai (which is a sort of big radish thing that I am struggling to come up with a use for)
  • turnips
  • two leeks
  • apples
  • lemons and an orange
  • carrots

food : taking stock of the fridge

what a year 2010 was!

I don’t think I’ve ever had a single year as full of ups and downs and major life changes. I became a mother. I had a home birth. I had to stay overnight in the hospital once for my own illness and again for the baby’s. I had surgery and had to go to the hospital in the middle of the night twice for pregnancy-related scares. I lost my grandfather, and missed his funeral due to the aforementioned hospital stay. I missed my grandmother’s 80th birthday party due to the pregnancy, and my aunt’s wedding due to the arrival of our son. Each of these things deserves their own post, if not a whole dedicated blog, but the list will have to do. In looking at the tally, the downs seem to outweigh the ups. Really, though, becoming a parent outweighs everything and all the complications and scares and sadness pale in comparison to the wonderful thrill of bringing a new person into the world. We’ve certainly been tired, but I haven’t had this much fun in years.

I don’t expect 2011 to be quite so turbulent: I’m looking forward to the small ups and downs of transitioning from parenting a baby to parenting a toddler. I have no greater wish for the new year than to have the people I love be happy, healthy, safe, and secure. And last but not least, much laughter. Happy New Year!

what a year 2010 was!

new camera


Test photo: our dining room Buddha.

By hoarding my personal money like one of my young cousins and pooling all of my birthday and Christmas cash, I was able to buy the new camera that I’ve been lusting after! (At least no one had to drive me to the mall to do so.) I’ve wanted a digital SLR for years, and finally took the plunge. After getting over a few new-toy hurdles (such as running out to the store since there was no memory card in the box, the adult equivalent of “batteries not included”), I took a series of test photos and proclaimed the camera to be “really nice” and to have “a much better flash than the old one.” To which my partner replied, I SHOULD HOPE SO. Did I mention it was pricey? Yes, but it’s so nice to have a real camera back in my hands: I had no idea how much I missed looking through a view finder. (And yes, I realize it’s odd to illustrate a post about rewarding your material cravings with a picture of a buddha, but what can I say? It’s pretty! And, the camera will feed my creativity, which is an important part of my core self and brings me happiness. Or something.)


Test photo: Ellie the elephant, part of our newly-accessorized living room.

In addition to the better flash system, the big improvement of the new automatic settings (for my purposes) of this camera over my little point-and-shoot one (which is and was a good solid little camera in a fully-metal body that served me well on an AIDS ride and numerous vacations; it’s not the camera’s fault that I deleted all the Maine photos before we got it home!) is the ability to take decent photos of small things up close and personal. Yes it’s dorky, but I can’t wait to be able to get better pictures of everything growing in the garden come spring. I don’t have any truly artsy photography plans at the moment, I just plan to take the same pictures I’ve been taking and have them turn out better. Food photos that don’t all look shiny (for example). Photos of the interior of our house without the colors all washed out. Pictures of the baby where he doesn’t look like a red-eyed demon. I’m confident that as I use the camera more, more shots will occur to me. I’m less confident that my brain will be alert enough anytime soon to go back to manual shooting with any degree of success, but there’s plenty of time for that.

new camera