Steamed Artichoke

Trimmed artichoke ready to be steamed

Sitting around the kitchen table with my family eating steamed artichokes is absolutely one of my favorite childhood memories.  From what I can tell and have heard, this is very much a “California thing” and since that is where I was born, I guess it makes sense!  These are such a fun, sociable treat for a dinner with friends and I highly encourage you to learn how to steam artichokes if you don’t already know how.  Most people are familiar with the canned or bottled artichoke hearts you might find on the Jason’s Deli salad bar, but that’s nothing compared with a steamed artichoke.

Artichokes are very healthy and they contain cynarin, which supposedly lowers cholesterol and is good for the liver and gallbladder.  Steaming, rather than boiling, uses little water so the artichoke retains more of its nutrients.
Here’s how it’s done…

Start with a beautiful (preferably organic) green artichoke.  Cut off the top inch, cut the excess stem, and then proceed to trim the tough tips off of all the leaves, pulling off smaller outer leaves at the bottom.  Rinse and clean the artichoke under cold water.  Place, tips up, in salted water (add a lemon wedge if desired to help keep the green color) for steaming and let steam for 30-40 minutes or so.  Let strain upside down.

Ready to be steamed!

You will know your artichoke is ready when the base is tender and the leaves pull off easily.  You will be scraping the petals on your teeth so if it scrapes easily, you are ready.  To eat, pull off a petal, dip in aioli and scrape soft side down along teeth.  Discard leftover petal.

Steamed artichoke with aioli

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The Best Food, The Best Friends and Family

Well, damn, it’s almost a week later and I’m finally getting around to posting about my Thanksgiving!  I am very excited about it because it’s the first time that I have ever hosted Thanksgiving at my place and I knew I wanted it to be a culinary treat for my friends and family, who probably don’t know what a foodie is or don’t care (except my brother, he’s as bad as I am now.)

Thanksgiving Cheese Tray

Cheese Tray with Descriptive "Sails"

I wanted to do this for them because cooking and entertaining is how I show people that I care and am grateful for having them in my life.  What better day of the year to show this than on Thanksgiving Day.

My dogs being taunted by my dad who was wholeheartedly enjoying the cheeses and wine!

My dogs being taunted by my dad who was wholeheartedly enjoying the cheeses and wine!

Besides that, my family was never much of a food family.  We ate (duh), we had family dinners and I was allowed to get creative in the kitchen every now and then, but when it came down to it, my dad made good steak and mashed potatoes and my mom made good beef stroganoff.  And that’s about it.  Iceberg salad = story of my childhood.

Water infused with Basil and Pomegranate

It wasn’t until I got to college at University of Virginia in Charlottesville, VA, a great place for food, that I started experiencing new foods and flavors and grew to love the art of the culinary world.  I started trying to recreate the food I ate at Escafe, C&O, Blue Light Grille and Cafe Europa and the rest is, as they say, history.  Now, I am obsessed with good food, my oldest younger brother Jon loves to cook and is a fantastic baker (which is great, because I’m not a huge fan of being that precise and I get to occasionally benefit by eating his cheesecake, his wife’s pasta or just binging during D.C. restaurant week with him and his wife, Jaime.)  My youngest brother is, I believe, starting to understand the craft of food-making and my mom has even started getting into it since she joined a monthly supper club a couple of years ago.  Yay!  New traditions!

Individual Mushroom and Leek Stuffing Muffins and Beet and Gorgonzola Salad

So, for this year’s Thanksgiving and since I don’t eat meat and don’t particularly enjoy dead carcasses roaming around my house, I wanted to make a menu (on my own) so delicious that none of my 9 guests realized that there was no turkey on the table.  Everything was sourced locally or organic or in some cases both and nothing came out of a can or a jar (except the olives).

My brother and I cooking in my tiny apartment kitchen.

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Soup Season

I love summer more than anything.  To me it spells fun and it means deliciously fresh, light, healthy food.  It means lots of pink bubbly, heirloom tomatoes, bing cherries, soft shell crabs, watermelon shooters, ripe avocados and Napa wines.  But when the breeze turns a little crisp and the leaves begin to dry out and turn the vibrant red and gold colors of a striking sunset, I can’t help but get a little bit giddy.

The fresh fruits and vegetables of autumn are some of my favorites of the entire year.  Here are some of my go-to choices of the season:

Apples:  I love apple crisp, apple pie, baked apples, candied apples and apple toast.  Wait, apple toast, you say?  Yes.  I love apple toast.  One of my favorite things to make for breakfast in autumn is apple toast.  I make it with a live grain bread (usually from Food for Life) or locally made , toasted with farm fresh butter and then topped with slices of locally grown red apples and sharp cheddar cheese.  Just toast the bread, top it with apples and cheese and throw it in the toaster oven.  Delicious, hearty and full of autumn deliciousness!

Blackberries:  I love blackberries almost as much as strawberries.  If I’m using jam, it’s always blackberry and if I making a cobbler, it is going to be a blackberry one!  In fact, I learned the easiest and most delicious cobber recipe from my ex boyfriend’s grandmother and 7 year old cousin.  They taught me around Thanksgiving after we spent the afternoon picking the blackberries ourselves from their backyard in Southside Richmond.  I picked so many blackberries that day, my boyfriend’s grandfather collecting them in a large basket he carried with his back hunched over.  Alas, I am no longer dating said boyfriend and his sweet grandfather has since passed, but those kinds of memories are what the love of food is all about, aren’t they?

Fresh figs:  One of my favorite foods of all time is the fresh fig.  I was born in Southern California and one of my first childhood memories surrounds our fig tree in our backyard.  We didn’t live in the greatest area of Los Angeles at the time, but we had a fenced in backyard and I had a white-painted circular iron bench that was surrounding a large fig tree.  I sat out there day after day, picking figs of the branches and sitting under my tree, biting through the green exterior and into the crimson center to taste a brilliantly sweet gift from earth.  One after the other, I would sit there for long periods of time just eating these precious fresh figs.  After my family moved us to the East Coast, these mainstays of my childhood diet became odd rarities to be cherished when found.  Recently, at the South of the James Farmer’s Market, I bought a fig tree.  Yes, I live in an apartment in Carytown, in the city of Richmond, with nowhere to plant such a tree.  But it lives, leaves growing proudly and soaking up the rain, in a pot on my back stoop.  Every time I pass it on the way out the door, I can’t help but smile as I become nostalgic for the times of many, many autumns ago.

Brussels Sprouts:  The one vegetable about 99% of us hated as children has grown a bit of a cult following in this town.  I love “sprouts” with a passion, as do many of my friends, and there is oft debate on Twitter about which Richmond restaurants make the best sprouts.  (Obviously, the answer is Avalon, but I digress.)  Grill them, roast them, braise them, broil them.  It’s hard to go wrong with good sprouts.  I’ll be trying many different recipes as soon as my favorite farmer, Farmer Russell, grows his so I can buy them in bulk.  I plan on being his best customer so I hope he’s ready.

Mushrooms and Onions:  They are good on everything.  Yep.  ’Nuff said.

Beets:  I like to buy them from the farmer’s market and make them myself, but some people aren’t up to the hassle and I can’t blame them.  It’s a lot of work.  However, if you are, throw them in a salad with either chevre or gorganzola, some mache, toasted pecans and a light honey dijon vinaigrette.  Heaven.