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Engaging stories of love, joy, comfort and friendship with proven scrumptious, healthy recipes, we celebrate LOVE as the secret ingredient for wonderful food!

Carrot Ginger Soup – Perfect to Start New Year’s Eve Dinner

December 31, 2013 by Mary 26 Comments

Carrot ginger soup chunks cooking in a blue Le Creuset pot.Carrot ginger soup finished in a Le Creuset pot.Having to cook “clean” – low fat – for my son has forced me to get creative and explore new territory I might not otherwise have tried, and this Carrot Ginger Soup is one of those dishes.

I made this to start our Christmas dinner and it was so good that I’m making it again today to start our New Year’s Eve dinner tonight. I think it will be perfect. Our kids have all gone back to Manhattan and we are having dear friends and my brother and his wife for an intimate dinner party here in the country.

My brother is bringing caviar and champagne (I’m so excited!) as well as the red wine for dinner. (He is our expert wine pairer for this blog and has even started his own blog, www.wineandfoodpairings.net, so check it out when you have a chance.) Margaret is bringing an appetizer and I want to do a lovely but simple dinner that will allow me to be out of the kitchen and in front of the fire, partying!

So we will start with this clean tasting and delicious soup. I plan to garnishing it with a little chopped cilantro and a few toasted pepita seeds. The original recipe is from the Hay Day Country Market Cookbook and I have made it many times in the past. Prior to this trauma with our son, I would have made this with chicken broth, using 4 tbs. of butter and garnished it with crème fraiche. See how low fat it became with 2 tbs. of butter, 1 tbs. of olive oil, vegetable broth and no crème fraiche? And, no loss of flavor to boot, I think we all should be eating this way! So much better for you.

I also only used 1 ounce of fresh ginger as we wanted it mellow on the spice for Zach. If you want it spicier, use 2 ounces. We are going to splurge on the main course with spice grilled rib steaks, BUT I’m pairing them with steamed snow pea pods with shiitake mushrooms and only the mushrooms will have a bit of butter, and potatoes Anna with only a tablespoon of butter, because I make it in a skillet on the stove top. Christmas cookies for dessert, along with some fresh blackberries and mango sorbet for my gluten-free sister-in-law, will finish off this year.

What do you plan to make?

Happy New Year to you all – wishing you great health, peace, wealth and LOVE!!

GINGER CARROT SOUP – serves 6

1 Tbs. olive oil
2 Tbs. unsalted butter
1 – 2 oz. piece of fresh ginger, peeled and minced
2 lbs. of fresh carrots, scrubbed and chopped into 1” pieces
1 cup of dry white wine
5 cups of vegetable stock – homemade or low sodium boxed
½ tsp. salt or to taste
Fresh ground black pepper to taste
Chopped fresh cilantro leaves for garnish
Toasted and salted pepita seeds for garnish

Warm the olive oil and melt the butter in it. Add the minced ginger and sauté on low heat for about 3 minutes until fragrant. Do not brown. Add the carrots and stir for 1 – 2 minutes. Add the wine and turn heat to medium high. Let the wine come to a simmer, after 1 or 2 minutes add the vegetable stock. Bring to a boil then reduce to a simmer, partially covered and cook until the carrots are very soft, about 30 – 45  minutes. Remove from the heat and let cool for at least 10 minutes, longer is even better.

Puree the soup with an immersion blender. Season with salt and pepper. Serve hot, garnished with chopped cilantro and a few toasted and salted pepita seeds, if desired.

 

Filed Under: Desserts, Dinner Tagged With: Carrot Ginger Soup, carrots, first course suggestions for New Year's Eve, ginger, low calorie soups, New Year's Eve Dinner, vegetarian soups

New Holiday Small Plates e-Cookbook is Out!

December 18, 2013 by Mary Frances 6 Comments

Holiday e-Cookbook is out!Hot off the press (or oven), our new holiday small plates e-cookbook is out: Secrets for Holiday Small Plates, Savory and Sweet. Since small plates are all the rage, I wanted to put together this collection of ten really great recipes. This is a perfect little cookbook for an easy cocktail party and makes an awesome stocking stuffer gift!

After all, the holidays should be about getting together, having time to relax, visiting with friends and relatives, and enjoying your own party. These recipes will allow you to do that, eliminating the stress. You can see all the recipes if you click on the ad on the right side of this blog. The cookbook is a 30 page, interactive downloadable PDF that will work on your tablet, phone or computer. And I must say, it is beautifully designed by our wonderful designers here.

So make your party stress free and you will enjoy more!

And please let me know how you like it.

With LOVE, Mary Frances

Filed Under: Appetizers, Desserts, Products for sale Tagged With: Christmas appetizers, Christmas cookies, cocktail party e-cookbook, holiday cookies, holiday small plates, savory plates for the holidays, sweets for the holidays

Made-in-the-Pan Chocolate Cake

October 30, 2013 by Mary Frances 20 Comments

This past weekend, I made two desserts, as I was having two dinner parties. Our friends were coming to dinner on Saturday night in the country and both boys and their girlfriends were coming to dinner on Sunday in the city. Additionally, my husband was going to visit his 94-year-old mother in Baltimore on Monday and needed to take sweets to her. It’s what she craves and I aim to please. So on Saturday I made both desserts.

One was a favorite Christmas cookie in our family that I just cut into larger squares for dessert. Our boys were saying, “Mommm, a little early don’t you think?” And then one of the girlfriends said at the dinner table, “OMG, these are so good, I could eat these until I vomit!” Now how’s that for a compliment? She said she ate two for breakfast the next morning and then wanted the recipe. That was for the Hello Dolly Squares. And then the other dessert I made was this amazing recipe from Mollie Katzen for her Made-in-the-Pan Chocolate Cake. I heard her speak a few weeks ago at a Hudson Union Society event and someone in the audience brought up this recipe, which she then talked about and read aloud.
One piece of Made-in-the-Pan chocolate cake with vanilla ice cream and fresh raspberries.

It is so quick, easy and truly amazing that it works. It is even vegan!!! – which I personally don’t care about, but if you do, then this is for you!

The key is to mix the dry ingredients incredibly well with a whisk. Use a clear glass pan and pick it up to inspect the bottom and sides to make sure you don’t see any globs of white flour or dark cocoa still lingering around. Then when you add the liquids, slowly stir and whisk and scrape and scrape and whisk until all is combined and smooth. No lumps allowed!! Simple, delicious, and no extra bowls to clean. This is a super moist cake that tastes like a lot more work. You can pull this off with ease on any weeknight for surprise guests. Just make sure you always have cocoa around.

MADE-IN-THE-PAN CHOCOLATE CAKE – serves 9

1 1/4 cups unbleached white flour
1/3 cup unsweetened cocoa
1 cup sugar
1/2 tsp. salt
3/4 tsp. baking soda
1 cup water
1/3 cup canola or vegetable oil
1 tsp. vanilla extract
1 tsp. cider vinegar or white vinegar

Preheat oven to 325°F. Have ready an 8-inch-square glass baking pan. Put flour, cocoa, sugar, salt and baking soda into the pan. Mix it together thoroughly with a whisk and spatula making sure all is blended together and no white flour clumps are visible. Lift up the pan and check to make sure all is blended on the bottom and especially in the corners.

Add water, oil, vanilla extract and vinegar. Stir slowly with a whisk in small circles to blend. As it becomes a batter, mash, scrape, and stir with whisk and spatula until smooth, particularly scraping and blending from the corners of the pan.

Scrape the sides with a rubber spatula, and spread it evenly. Clean the edges, then bake for 30 minutes.

Cool completely in the pan, on a rack.  Dust with some powdered sugar (there is no need for frosting) and cut into squares.

I served it with LOVE, a dollop of ice cream and a few raspberries for a really pretty and super easy dessert.

Filed Under: Desserts Tagged With: coconut, easy chocolate desserts, graham crackers, Hello Dolly Squares, Made in the pan chocolate cake, Mollie Katzen, pecans, raspberries, vanilla ice cream

Lovely Lemon Bars

September 27, 2013 by Mary Frances 25 Comments

Lemon bars on a off white china plate with a fresh strawberry.

Lovely lemon bars you will LOVE!

I adore lemon bars. My mother used to make them for us when we were kids. I loved having them in my lunch bag. I loved the powdered sugar on top and the buttery crust on the bottom. I loved the fact that it was a rectangle. (The graphic designer in me at an early age.) And I loved licking the last bit of powdered sugar off of the Saran wrap.

When we moved into our NYC apartment six years ago, my friend Leslie and her husband Rainer came to visit. Leslie and I went to high school together in Webster Groves, Missouri. And now we both live here. Her last name started with Pa and mine started with Pi so our lockers were right next to one another for our four years at Nerinx Hall. The nuns liked that type of organization.

Leslie brought the cookbook from Tartine, the famous pastry shop in San Francisco, as a housewarming gift. It is a beautiful book filled with the richest recipes for sweet and savory specialties. We’re talking mucho butter. She wrote on the opening page, “…when things get a little crazy living in crowded New York … just remember to enjoy one of the desserts in this book – and you will return to a mellow state as “DESSERTS” is actually “STRESSED” in  reverse!”

Now I really don’t like to cook with a lot of butter. I consider myself a clean and healthy cook, which I really am. (Do I sound like I’m trying to justify myself here? Yes I am!)

But you see, every once in while, you can splurge. And this is a recipe to splurge on. This is a heightened, no, magnified version of my mother’s lemon bars. An adult lemon bar. A sinful lemon bar. These have the richest, buttery crust with the addition of pine nuts for a surprising delightful crunch. The lemon filling is so so lemony. No fooling around here. This is one serious, OMG lemon bar.

Just give these a go. Add your own LOVE and you will have everyone drooling. Truly!
Lemon bars on a off white china plate with a fresh strawberry in an overhead shot.

LEMON BARS ON BROWN BUTTER SHORTBREAD – makes 12 bars – from the Tartine cookbook

CRUST FOR LEMON BARS
½ cup of confectioner’s sugar
1½ cups of all-purpose flour
¾ cup of unsalted butter, at room temperature
½ cup of pine nuts (optional)

FILLING FOR LEMON BARS
½ cup of all-purpose flour
2 1/4 cups of sugar
1 cup + 2 tbs. of lemon juice
Lemon zest, grated from 1 lemon
6 large whole eggs
1 large egg yolk
1 pinch of salt
confectioner’s sugar for topping (optional)

Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Butter a 9-by-13-inch baking pan.

MAKE THE CRUST
Sift the confectioner’s sugar into the bowl of a stand mixer fitted with the paddle attachment. Add the flour and stir to mix. Add the butter, and pine nuts (if using) and beat on low speed. Beat just until a smooth dough forms.

Transfer the dough to the prepared pan and press evenly into the bottom and ½ inch up the sides of the pan. It should be about ¼ inch thick. Even out the crust by using the flat bottom of any type of cup, pressing down firmly. Line the crust with parchment paper and fill with pie weights, dry rice or peas. Bake for 25 – 35 minutes. Make sure the color is a deep golden brown color. Rotate the pan if the crust appears to be baking unevenly.

MAKE THE FILLING
While baking the crust, make the filling. Sift the flour into a mixing bowl. Add the sugar and whisk until blended. Add the lemon juice and zest and stir to dissolve sugar. In a separate mixing bowl, whisk the eggs and egg yolk with the salt. (This breaks down the protein.) Add the eggs to the lemon juice mixture and whisk until well mixed.

When the crust is ready, pull out the oven rack that is holding the baked crust. Remove the weights and put pan back on the oven rack. Pour the filling directly into the hot pan – it is easiest to do so when the pan can slide right back into the oven.

If the crust has come out of the oven and cooled down before you have finished making the filling, put it back in for a few minutes so that it is hot when the custard is poured into it.

Reduce the oven temperature to 300 degrees. Bake for 30 – 40 minutes just until the center of the custard is no longer wobbly.

Let cool completely on a wire rack, then cover and chill well before cutting. Use a sharp knife and cut it into 12 squares. You can serve with confectioner’s sugar dusted on top of the squares. They will keep in an airtight container or well covered in the baking dish in the refrigerator for up to 4 days. I have also wrapped each one individually in plastic wrap and carefully placed 4 of them in a large Ziploc bag and frozen them to serve at a later date. Thaw in the refrigerator and touch up the powdered sugar and serve. No one will know you made them weeks ago.

 

Filed Under: Desserts Tagged With: lemon bars, Nerinx Hall High School, Tartine cookbook, Tartine pastry shop, Webster Groves MO

Richart chocolate tasting!

June 28, 2013 by Mary Frances 19 Comments

Richart mobile

Just recently, I had the good fortune to be contacted by Richart chocolates, wondering if I would be interested in meeting with them to do a chocolate and macaron tasting!

What?? Are you kidding? Do you think I even thought twice about that? Not on your life!

Hey – I really like this job!! I could do this all the time!

Richart truffles in a row.

Our inspiration for the design of the marketing pieces below.

The funny thing is, they found this blog, liked what they saw, and contacted me out of the blue. What they didn’t know is that we have a long history with them. You see, we received one of their boxed set of truffles from a vendor as a holiday gift probably 15 years ago. We loved them! Not only were they delicious, they had these very interesting graphic designs on the top of each truffle representing the various flavors inside and they came in this box with three drawers. They were beautiful, wonderfully packaged and tasted great! Now you know my day job is brand design, which includes graphic and package design. At the time we received this gift, we were working on a brand design and marketing program for a very high-end wealth management firm. We drew inspiration from these designs on the chocolates to create cover designs for the marketing pieces for this firm, using several hits of black ink and varnish on black paper. To this day, this piece still looks exquisite, inspired by Richart chocolates!

Marketing and sales pieces for wealth management firm, KLS Professional Advisors, a division of Boston Private.

So the week before last, Madeline Johnson (public relations), Michel Richart (second generation – he says his son is now his boss back in France) and Benjamin Auzimour (U.S. CEO) all came to visit with their treats.

First off, they still make amazing chocolates. These new ones have a liquid bubble center with different flavors such as roasted hazelnut, black and green teas, vanilla with a hint of peppermint, raspberry, citrus and rose caramel, orange with a hint of mint, and “far east market” of seven spices. This drop of flavor infusion bursts in your mouth (must be eaten in a single bite!) and then mingles with the textures of the ganache and the fragile crisp shell that holds the liquid. They’re a wonderful surprise to savor!

Now the macaroons are another story, some savory and some sweet and all so very interesting and delicious!! These are the flavors, in the order they are meant to be eaten: melon; strawberry; ”Marseille” with almond, lemon and star anise; lavender and olive oil; tomato, sweet bell pepper and basil; goat cheese and herbs from Garrigue. The Marseille (although I am not fond of the city) is a conflux of amazing and surprising flavors!!Richart infuzz chocolates, seven flavors in a white box.Richart macarons - new summer flavors both savory and sweet, in a white box.

And the goat cheese, as Caitlin said, she would actually search the city to find more of those.

But what is most amazing is that Michel (a lovely, lovely man) has come up with this whole multi-sensory tasting process, “QuintesSense™“ with steps to achieve a goal they call overall flavor. This is a method of tasting that involves all of our senses and reflects our memories and emotions as we share our knowledge and thoughts with every bite.

 
Step 1 is proper presentation. (you know I believe in this!) Foods should be well stored and the presentation should be maximized. The tasters have to concentrate a little, too, and be ready to taste. As Michel says, “To eat is an act that gives energy to our body, but to taste is to give energy to our soul.”

Amen!

Step 2 is knowing the background of what one is eating, down to the provenance of the ingredients, if known. Knowing the back-story for each ingredient helps you to know the final product. As a taster we have to be curious and to ask, says Michel.

Step 3 is sensory analysis. Every one of our five senses will talk to us and we have to learn this special language to understand. In Lyon, Richart has developed some tools to help with this, including a dictionary of words to express feelings.

Step 4 is listening to your heart. This is harder and they don’t have tools for this. You summon memories triggered by the tasting. “This reminds me of…” It’s an emotional analysis of the tasting experience.

It truly makes you slow down to really taste all the flavors and components. This way you have maximum enjoyment of the whole experience. None of just rushing to fill you up can occur.

And he is very clear that his mission in life is to give pleasure to his customers.

Isn’t that great?

You can find Richart chocolates and macarons online at http://www.richart-chocolates.com.

You should really seek these out!

 

Filed Under: Desserts Tagged With: flavor bubbles, KLS Professional Advisors, macarons, Michel Richart, Richart, Richart chocolates, savory macarons, sweet macarons, tastings

April Fool’s Day!!

April 1, 2013 by Mary Frances 2 Comments

Ha ha – have you played any tricks today? I have to check out Google. They always do some crazy things on this holiday. YouTube said it was shutting down for 10 years and then analyzing all videos to pick the funniest one and would reveal it in 2023. Some people actually believed it, based on the comments they received!

Here’s a sign I saw in my work neighborhood – at Tribeca Treats!Free cookie with a weeding cake purchase - April Fools!!

Filed Under: Desserts Tagged With: April Fool's Day, cookies, Google, Tribeca Treats, wedding cakes, YouTube

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