What is one to do with varied interests and blogs about woodworking, food, and random funnyness? Once in a while the universe opens up and proves that even as scattered as we think our lives and interests are, that everything is (once in a while) truly interconnected. (and we get to kill 3 blogs with one stone. Except this stone is a piece of wine soaked, charred oak.

I was listening to a back log of food podcasts from Don Genova - a Canadian writer/broadcast journalist/podcaster I enjoy (his voice reminds me of a cross between Rick Steves, and my friend Mike - which is entertaining, and very listenable in itself)… where he visited a French cooperage (one woodworking profession that is still relevant today, but mostly forgotten) and got to talk to the Nth generation running it about how the wood effects the wine, and the differences between American and French oak, etc…


Forget steam bending. Fire bending!
More photos of the process on Don’s blog even more (gorgeous) photos and slideshow at Francois Freres site. Bear with it, as the English link seems broken.

It was cool to hear about all the proper woodworking that goes into their barrels, brining in new oak trees from the forest of central france, cutting and drying the wood for a couple years, and from there only using wood as a fuel source to heat shape and char (carmelize) the insides of the barrels. 

Anyhow, this got to me thinking,… that while tastes surely change and evolve over time… historically I never liked “oaky” wines, (and hence Scotch) for the buttery, vanilla etc… flavors that the oak imparts…. Little did I realize that as I got more and more into woodworking (and my wife and I learned more about wines thanks to a side venture of hers this past year) My prejudice against “oakiness” has changed. Just this week I was ripping down a dozen oak treads, and savoring the rich buttery aroma of the wood, almost drooling over what would best go with. (Brie surely, crabcakes, no Lobster. Salmon! mmm)

These little passions of ours invade, and enhance our lives in many ways!
Now where’s that 12 year old doublewood Scotch I’ve been saving…

It’s the day after Christmas, and I’ve already started a little pre-season gardening! Aeroponic parsley, dill, basil, chives, mint, purple basil and cilantro. I’ve made my own “neverending” bottle of vanilla. Organic vanilla beans covered with vodka - steep for 4 weeks, then replenish the alcohol as it get used - another very cool Christmas food find (that I shared with my mom and sister). I’ve also rearranged the kitchen, purged a bit, and begun paring down some - gearing up for a more ruthless clean out.

A friend of mine has a fantastic, and large pantry, with more books than you’ll find in any cooking section of any bookstore. Seriously. But since food and writing is his bread and butter, it makes perfect sense - yet no less inspiring, and intimidating to behold.

What is almost equally intimidating (to me) is the few shelves of cookbooks I have, and the sad fact that most have hardly been cracked. Apparently I don’t NEED them - Thanks Web 2.0! Some were gifted, others were too good not to bring home, (I have more still on my Christmas list). Many have not set foot in the kitchen. This is about to change.

It’s a new season, and for me that is a renewed interest in cooking… but with January, (resolutions) right around the corner, it’s hard to get excited about restraint. Oh, I want to make soups and stews, all kinds of great seasonal dishes. Never did make all the cookies I wanted for Christmas, and the time is right to enjoy the beer I made this fall. But it is finally time (again) I got myself down (closer) to my fighting weight. One helpful push is a contest at work - I decided I’m going to win!

I’m proposing losing dozens of inches in the coming months - off the bookshelf. Last year I sold my back issues of Cooks Illustrated when I signed up for an online subscription. Now I’m taking this thinking to a new level - I’ll pick a book, seek out 3 recipes that interest me and cook them in a week or so. If I have three winners, I have a keeper (and the confidence to try more). If I don’t like em, then odds are the rest of the book isn’t exactly to my taste, and will pass it on, and move on to the next book.

The goal - a streamlined kitchen, and a much less cluttered house. A house full of only the things I love and need. Will new books come into the house? Surely. I’ll try to break them right in, and I’ll have a tougher litmus test before I begin to create new piles of clutter.

If you DON’T love them, set them free!

Christmas sure came up fast this year - just as fast as the snowfall. (More accumulation in one week than all of last winter). But unlike Christmasses past, with visits to grandparents the weekend before, back to work, Christmas Eve here, Christmas Day there, there and there.., and back to work in the morning (still hung-over from all the punch and cookies) we’ve got parties a plenty for the next four days straight. All Christmas all the time. And what’s better is no going from place to place on any given day, and plenty of time to sleep in to gear up for rounds two, three and four (as best as ones five-year-old will allow).

Maximum fun, family and food, minimum drive time.

May you (and not just your cup) runneth over with Christmas spirit!

No sooner do I hash out a redesign at this (and my other) blogs, that blogging seems to take a backseat. What have I been doing? Well culinarily, not much.

I mean, I am virtually swimming in beer. And excess breeds indifference,… (so naturally, I’m on a coffee kick. Coffee coffee coffee - but his time, not in beer) But - I did find some great 3-4 ounce glasses, I bought 24 of them for a song (don’t you just love a bargain?) and am planning to have a couple beer flights (mini tastings) at the coming family gatherings. After weighing the collective opinion of my beer-drinking friends and family, I’ll know better what to make (and gift) in the coming year. For now, I’ve put the kegs on vacation. I have cases and cases of ales, stouts, dopplebocks, IPA and pilsners OH MY! taking up precious kitchen space.

Right before Turkey, work (the day job) found me doing some overnights in Quechee, VT. I love that town, and we frequented a local brew pub - just across the river. The first night there we were serenaded by a Birthday Party of theatre types (I”ll let you paint your own picture of colorful 20 somethings - each trying to outsing, and out talk the next)… but, unlike the family chain restaurants, this bunch could belt out a great rendition of Happy Birthday. I enjoyed a Russian Imperial Stout with my fish and chips - huge portions for the price - and really, really good.

On a return visit I had a beer flight of six or seven? samples - basically everything on tap. Liked the lighter beers then. The Cream Ale, and Canadian especially.

Back across the river, we went to Firestone’s - Brick oven flatbread pizzas (inspired two return visits!) Their clam chowder was about the best I’ve ever had - odd, being so far from the ocean (for a New Englander). My beer of choice there, wasn’t the local microbrew… but rather Bass Ale - perfect with a Margarita pizza, 3 mushroom and chicken, or whatever the special was the first day. mmmm

I was going to take some of my homemade stout and make the same Guiness Gingerbread I did last year, and try my hand at the Guinness bread in my “recipes to try” page. Long days, and road trips have kept me out of the kitchen for the most part. I’m only going to do two Christmas cookies this year. (Two great big ones!) Both new favorites of mine as of last Christmas (and both thanks to Food Network)  - Chocolate Peanut-Butter Biscotti - salty, a little sweet, and surprisingly good with coffee, and a variation of AB’s Chocolate Peppermint Pinwheels - heretofore called Chocolate Bailey’s Pinwheels. Skip the peppermint, go green, go Irish! -A splash in regular chocolate chip cookies wouldn’t be a bad idea either.  For years we’d dine on Mom’s Chocolate Brownie Bailey’s Pie for Christmas Breakfast, but I digress.

My latest food find, also thanks to being on the road, and the fantastic Co-op in Lebanon, NH - was really a food re-find. One thing that’s great about my local Trader Joe’s is they can get all sorts of neat things - and packaged under their own brand, come pretty cheap.

I happened to find out that their private-label brand of yogurt is locally made Stonyfield, which is all-natural, organic and totally what we’d be buying if we shopped at a different store. I can also guess with considerable certainly that some of their pizzas are made by Amy’s, which we used to get for a dollar or two more elsewhere. But they also carried bags of Coffee Candy, two bucks for dozens and dozens of little coffee hard candies. I was nearly addicted to those puppies. Kept a full candy dish on my desk at work. It never stayed full for long (I had help), but they were cheap, and easy to come by… until they didn’t sell them anymore after a year or so. Poor seller? They have another line of coffee candy, a name brand, a little chewy and, IMHO gross. An internet search found a bag of my mystery ones on Amazon for, big bucks. I wasn’t 100% sure they were the right product, and at that price, they had better arrive on velvet cushions and recite Shakespeare and Douglass Adams! Gevalia also offered them up in one of their gift baskets, in one, and only one catalog. Oh well, it was a good thing while it lasted… BUT THEN, I found tins of them at the Coop, with all sorts of other Stocking stuffers. Bali’s Best - from Fusiongourmet.com - oh how I love thee. Santa could bring me nothing but a stocking full of your rich coffee deliciousness,… (and I promise not to get addicted!)

This year, I’m all about simplifing the kitchen. Two cookies, lots of coffee (in candy and regular form) and one birthday cake - two flavors in the form of Blue’s paw print (yes, That Blue) Blue frosting on a chocolate paw, and 4 yellow toes - with a #5 candle in case you were wondering.

I always seem to blog when things are cooking, and never when they’re done.

One quick post to follow up on my soup fest last week (some blogged about, others just linked on the recipe page).

The Split pea was good. I think I’ll skip the potatoes next time.

The “Good soup for the sick” (essentially garlic, beans and little else) delicious! (and hopefully the large chunks of garlic will keep whatever my little one is coming down with away from me.

I already knew the Bermuda Fish Chowder would be delicious. It was.

Same with the Apple & Butternut Squash soup. Mmmmm..

Now which to pick for supper?

A quick look through the kitchen - and spilling over into the dining room - you’ll either think we’re stocking up for a party, or a long cold winter. We’ve got about two dozen random bottles of wine. (we need a bigger wine rack) Unopened bottles left over from recent wine parties - my wife’s soon to be done hosting in-home wine tastings (order online now!) - and others we bought intentionally (and a few more hard to find ones coming in the mail)… which will take us almost to the halfway point of sampling the wines of 100 different grapes… Now it’s getting challenging to come across new ones, but a fun challenge to look forward to. Meanwhile I’m still making beer. (and drinking LOTS of coffee!)

The interesting thing about a home brewing hobby is that you spend lots of time waiting to sample the fruits of your labor… and while you’re waiting for one batch, you can start a new one (or in my case, two at a time!). Unfortunately, If you’re waiting, you’re not drinking, and if you’re not drinking you can have either a shortage of empty bottles, or space to stock everything.

Yesterday I had a bottling dilemma. I had two mini kegs worth of beer to bottle (4 Gallons), and only enough empties for about 1/4 of it all. Apparently I’m making faster than I can, or care to drink it. Some just need a little more time in the bottle… but you can’t tell the yeast in the kegs to slow down. And you can’t download empty bottles off the internet. Yet.

Lucky for me, I remembered a few cases of empties in the basement. Left over from a first, and only, attempt at one of the local “you brew” establishments several years ago with dad. We ended up with a good Sam Adams knock off. Plenty to share, and enough left to grow tired of.

Currently I have eleven 22 oz bottles of Pilothouse Pilsner, which sounds good and I think I’ll be able to share these with Dad and others, (he just doesn’t go for the darker, or “chewy” beers, stouts, etc…) I also have twelve 22 oz bottles of a stout-like German Dopplebock, which will be mine! all mine! Both should be ready to enjoy in time for Thanksgiving.

Meanwhile the Pumpkin Lager has developed nicely, wasn’t drinkable after a couple weeks in the bottle, three more weeks was the ticket. Perhaps it was the full moon - or Halloween’s arrival that brought out all the pumpkiny goodness. I wouldn’t exactly call it “pumpkin pie in a bottle” as they do, but I’m encouraged enough to try the pumpkin porter next fall.

Next to that, I still have a full batch of Caribbean Lime Lager - which hopefully is ready to go. I should have tried it yesterday - we went a little overkill with the first fire of the year - and it was HOT in here.

I gave up on the coffee beer, but I might try this one… Eye Opener Sumatra Stout. A stout where you add an espresso shot during bottling, rather than coffee grounds to the wert. Still, I kept a few bottles to cook with. Ditto the Apple Ale

Looking back, both Stouts I’ve made to date were good (St Patricks, Sticky Wickett) - must have been, theres none left. I’m making another with liquid yeast this time. Will be interesting to compare that to the dopplebock. Gonna have some nice warm beers to enjoy this winter!

I’m also attempting a Pale Ale with Liquid Yeast. The pale ale was hands down the most drinakable I’ve made to date - also the first. The Porter was fine, The American Devil IPA was good, the Belgian Wheat and Red went down the drain (the kits were old… but there was no harm in trying) plus I needed the bottles for the next batches!

All told, not a bad year of beer. Lots of ups, few downs… and at current count I have the equivalent of 69 12-ounce bottles (in 12 ounces bottles and 1 liter bottles) in four flavors, with 23 bottles waiting… and two full kegs (4 gallons - or about 48 bottles) just starting out… Way more beer than Dad and I made way back when, but with ample variety to keep things from getting stale.

I do think I’ll be taking a break from brewing after this… 139 full bottles (a few 12 oz, the rest are mostly 22 oz or 1 liter each) won’t leave much room left in the fridge for, well, anything.

First off, Thanks Lynne!

Several years back, I had a subscription to Saveur. Beautiful magazine… kind of Travelogue meets food. One issue in particular really got me excited about cooking white beans, rustic Italian style. I tried several of their recipes, for Riboletta, and others from super simple to more involved… and none of them came out well. Nothing like watching gallons of food, and a lost weekend go in the trash - while the place smells great, but you’re HUNGRY!

The articles had me hooked, and really wanting to like these recipes, but they just didn’t work. I couldn’t tell if the recipes were good or bad, because the beans never cooked! I double checked everything, don’t think I missed a step… Even after cooking the riboletta (meaning, literally reboiled) - for two days, this delicious sounding soup just didn’t work! ARGH!

Discouraged, I gave up on the entire magazine. Friends of mine had good things to say about the magazine, but I didn’t want to hear it. Sure I wanted to like it, but it just wouldn’t let me. Vegetarian Times and Cooks Illustrated treated me much better.

Fast forward several years (and lots of successful, and other mediocre meals later) to the latest radio show/podcast for The Splendid Table… one brief little bit about cooking beans, I think it was an answer to a callers question, with a note to avoid overcooking them by adding the acid (lemon juice, tomatoes, whatever) when the beans are done. They’ll stop cooking - as in they won’t get any softer - good advice for me today, as I make a nice garlicy cranberry bean soup (a “good soup for the sick”) … I also picked up a couple pounds of dried cannelloni to try something new with.

And then the realization just dawned on me… I can go back to those old recipes… and make sure I add the tomatoey bits at the appropriate time! Mmmm bread, tomatoes, garlic and beans with just a drizzle of extra virgin olive oil. Bread soup here I come!

While I was making two soups today (Butternut squash/apple soup from my wedding, and Bermuda fish chowder from last years anniversary cruise), I also tried to pull off two loaves of bread. I must say I did (I think I did) multi-task fairly well, (was never frantic or rushed) getting all my vegetables prepped while the squash roasted and managed to use no more than 3 burners at a time (and keep the sink somewhat manageable).

The bread is my new favorite - the multigrain bread recipe from Cooks Illustrated*, and since last fall, I started making more wholesome variations to it, inspired in part by the Tomato Basil bread at Paneras, I added some tomato juice to replace the water. This was my favorite sandwich bread. Also fantastic under a poached egg. Increasing the juice content, the following three have cooked up well, but called for ever increasing amounts of flour. Today I decided to forgo all the additional flour and just see what happened…. Have you ever seen a loaf rise up nicely, with a nice crisp top, (cooked to over 190 degrees) and have a sticky bottom and sides?

It’s possible I was distracted and missed a step, perhaps I should have decided to “see what happened” if I just stuck to the recipe (with minor substitiutions) and damned the consequences. The dough was pretty much like beer bread, perhaps stickier, and thought it would cook up fine, which it mostly did. Tastes great. but must be toasted. Good for sandwiches it is not.

The recipe is essentially this:

1 1/2 cups of whole grain cereal mix, with boiling water added (2.5 cups), left to “cook” until the temp comes down under 100 degrees (and won’t kill the yeast). A little honey or maple syrup is added, butter and yeast. Mixed in with about 5 cups of flour. let it rest, knead, rise twice, divide it into 2 pans and proof until doubled in size. then Bake until 200, rest (and try not to devour before it cools down to room temp).

At the suggestion of our Food TV Patron Saint Alton Brown, who advised 190 degrees (because of carry over) I’ve been shooting for that mark, as 200+ will yield a dry, if not hard loaf. At times I’ve used oatmeal in place of whole grain cereal, and that (and/or), coupled with the tomato juice (or something akin to V8) seems to come out stickier than with water. I’ve tried reducing the liquid, but save for the first, sparing addition of vegetable juice cocktail (the organic medly from Whole Foods), I’ve had such a sticky dough and added loads of flour.

My idea was to slip in a little bit of vegetables and nutrition without doubling up on the carbs. I might as well make sandwiches out of pumpkin bread - or the apple bread I made the day before (trading in applesauce for the canned pumpkin - mmm… makes good french toast too!)

If I wasn’t so far behind on all the food blogs I’ve bookmarked, perhaps my little ones suggestion of adding chocolate chips wouldn’t have seemed off the mark.

aha - in trying to put in a couple links…. I see my initial post of this recipe last january tells my I was a bit off with the temperatures I used - as stated above. That may explain the sticky loaf out of the oven… but what about the extra sticky dough going in. That I still question. I guess I haven’t come very far since this attempt.

Any thoughts?

Huge Kudos to my uncle & co!

“…What I do know is that this is the best wine to come out of the Crushpad operation yet, and a stunning debut for a new label.” - Read the entire review over at vinography.com - then do yourself (or a loved one) a favor - and order a bottle, or three to enjoy this holiday season!

(well - 52 weeks to the day) 

Bartender - 1 Dark n’ Stormy please!

on second thought… make it 36, to go.

Backstory?

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