Let the feasting begin! The foods of the winter festivals – what could be more glorious. Yesterday launched us fully into the Holiday spirit with two events. Our annual Brandied Eggnog Happy Hour(s) with our friend D was delightful. Nothing fancy, just warm eggnog with brandy and a few sweet nibbles, fireplace roaring, candles lit, and great conversation. Then a short stroll to A’s place for grand dinner nibbles done as only A can: gloriously! Her beautiful home was decorated magically which was wonderful. While reorganizing our storage space in the summer, I buried the Christmas decorations box and can’t even see it much less dig it out. So one sad dry eucalyptus wreath for us, but at A’s wondrous bows of evergreen, lights, eclectic baubles and happy animal ornaments hanging here and there, plus many candles and a lovely fire in the fireplace. To top it all off, a frosty walk home – moon visible but shrouded in mist and bright twinkling colours to light the silent night.
Snowflakes and sub-zero temperatures – that’s more incentive than I need for seeking out the city’s best hot chocolate! Last week, while it was still a balmy 8°C, we tried the offering at Relish. We haven’t eaten there yet as we always seem to arrive just before closing, but the chocolate was very good; rich and delicious. Their daily menus look incredible so we must try eating there soon!
We were recently gifted three dozen eggs (chicken, duck and quail) from dear friends who lovingly raise and care for a variety of foul. They were so beautiful I didn’t want to eat them!
Finally we gave in and made fried quail’s eggs on little toasts for breakfast. And, some of the chicken eggs went into the fruitcake yesterday (but not the blue ones; I want to look at those a while longer!). What to do with the duck eggs is my big question. I’ve never eaten them before and have been told the flavour is a bit strong, so I’m nervous! Hopefully our friends will have some ideas!
I think this is at least the tenth year I’ve made fruitcake on or near December 1. I know there are detractors, but I love fruitcake. My version is based on a recipe my Grandmother had torn out of magazine. I don’t know if she had actually ever made it (she lived in another country, and we never spent Christmas with her), but she gave it to me on one of my trips to visit her about 25 years ago. I use the basic measurements from the recipe, but with all organic fruit (well soaked in boozy booze) and homemade organic peel. It’s all brushed down with rum and wrapped up for a couple weeks to mature. Our studio smells amazing!
We found some very good food in Las Vegas. I only took one food picture strangely, but here are our eating highlights in no particular order.
• Kabuki Japanese Restaurant A small chain, but food was good and service was excellent.
• Julian Serrano At the Aria Hotel. Small plate Tapas with lots of vegetarian, delicious.
• Tamba Indian Cuisine Very delicious Indian food, nice atmosphere, very affordable.
• Chipotle I am so excited to find that a fast food chain could have this kind of integrity. One of our best (and most affordable) meals in Vegas.
• Shibuya Exceptional Japanese cuisine at the MGM Grand. Incredible meal and amazing service. A great experience.
• Mon Ami Gabi We wish we had tried this place sooner. Another small chain, but food was so good and service outstanding. We sat in the atrium just inside from the patio. Breakfast, lunch and dinner.
It’s All Hallows’ Eve, so pumpkin seems like the perfect post today! We carved spooky faces into a couple of pumpkins earlier this week, but I much prefer to eat them. Soup, roasted with spices and sugar and eaten in a salad, in cakes and muffins; delicious – but my favourite way to eat pumpkin is in pie form.
This year I tried coming up with my own recipe for the filling. A bit of trial and error occurred with three different attempts. I’m still not sure it’s perfect, but that might be because I slightly overcooked the last trial. The other experiment this year was finding a gluten-free crust recipe. I found two I wanted to try, but opted for the nut-based one here. It was a crumb-style crust and the flavour was perfect with the pumpkin filling. The other recipe I will try soon for making a fruit pie. When not making treats for my gluten-free friends, I almost always use a Pâte Brisée recipe for pastry. This is an easy recipe to find. Three tricks for ease with pastry: add a bit of fresh lemon juice to the water, keep everything cold and don’t overwork it.
Here’s my filling:
1 & 3/4 cups pureed pumpkin (I used organic local pumpkin, roasted until soft and pureed in the food processor)
3 large eggs (plus one yolk if you have made the nut crust and have a yolk left over)
1/2 cup plus 2 tablespoons brown sugar
1/4 cup real maple syrup
1 teaspoon cinnamon
1/2 teaspoon allspice
1/2 teaspoon freshly grated nutmeg
1/2 teaspoon salt
1 cup whipping cream (36%MF)
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
Optional: 1 tablespoon sherry, rum or brandy
Combine all ingredients in a large bowl and whisk until well combined and creamy. Fill you pastry shell. Bake at 425° for 15 minutes, then reduce the temperature to 350° and bake 35-40 more minutes until the custard is set. With the nut crust, I just used 350° for the whole baking time as the crust had been pre-baked and I was afraid of it burning at the higher temperature. Let the pie cool completely on a rack and enjoy at room temperature or chilled. Yum!
What a great tomato season this year. We’ve been eating so many from local farmers, many different varieties. The only glitch with making a post about them, is that we eat them all so quickly, I don’t get to try new recipes! Salads, of course, have been full of tomatoes. Cherry tomatoes are grazed upon through the day or chopped up for topping pasta or eggs. Mixed varieties and a big bunch of basil whizzed up in the food processor and cooked very gently with garlic, oil, salt, pepper and crushed chili is my most favourite pasta sauce.
The recipe I did follow was one I had tried many years ago. Now GJ wants me to make it all the time: Mexican Gazpacho from The Vegetarian Table: Mexico by Victoria Wise. A delicious late summer soup that is so refreshing. Here’s the recipe:
• 3 pounds ripe tomatoes, peeled and seeded, pureed and strained (see Note)
• 2 cups vegetable stock or water
• 1/2 cup fresh lime juice
• 1 medium cucumber, peeled, seeded, and finely chopped
• 1 medium Anaheim chili, stemmed, seeded, and finely chopped
• 1 jalapeño chili, stemmed, seeded, and finely chopped
• 4 scallions, trimmed and minced
• 1 large garlic clove, minced or pressed
• 1 tablespoon chopped fresh oregano leaves or 1/2 teaspoon dried oregano plus 1 tablespoon chopped fresh parsley or cilantro leaves
• 2 tablespoons olive oil
• Salt, to taste
• 1 tablespoon tequila (optional)
• 1 medium avocado, peeled, pitted, and coarsely chopped
• Wheat or corn tortilla chips
In a large bowl stir together the tomatoes, stock, lime juice, cucumber, chilies, scallions, garlic, and 1 teaspoon of the fresh oregano or 1/2 teaspoon dried. Cover and refrigerate for several hours or overnight, until very cold.
Just before serving, stir in the olive oil, salt to taste, and tequila, if using. Spread the chopped avocado on the tortilla chips and sprinkle the remaining fresh oregano and other herb over the avocado. Ladle the soup into individual bowls. Garnish each bowl with the avocado-topped chips and serve right away.
Note: An equally fine, and also traditional, gazpacho can be made without pureeing and straining the tomatoes. Increase the amount of vegetable stock to 4 cups. Peel and seed 2 pounds of tomatoes and cut them into thin julienne strips. Stir the tomatoes into the stock along with the other vegetables.
My note: I didn’t use the garnish idea so I just stirred in the chopped cilantro when serving.
Friends brought us ten pounds of organic Okanagan peaches a couple weeks ago. The Okanagan Valley is a region of southern British Columbia, Canada renowned for beautiful lakes, fruit production and vineyards. A few days later we made our weekly walk over to Moss Street Market and found an abundance of blueberries. Both fruits were so flavourful and juicy, it was hard to save them for cooking as I just wanted to eat them all right then. I did manage to save enough for a few recipes!
We made an amazing meal, which began with peach-blueberry sangria and ended with peach cake. The meal in between was mostly from Sinfully Spicy: we made Murgh KaliMirh (Black Pepper Chicken), Palak Aaloo (Spinach Potato Stirfry), Baingam Bharta (Smoky Mashed Eggplant), as well as fragrant rice, dahl and chapatis. Topping it all off was locally-made rhubarb chutney and lemon pickle.
Peach-Blueberry Sangria
This was just a simple sangria. I added a thinly-sliced lime, sliced peaches and blueberries to a jug. Another peach was roughly puréed and added along with a bottle of Pinot Grigio. This sat in the fridge for a few hours and we added ice and sparkling water when served. It was simple and refreshing.
Peach cake was the only cake my mother ever made from scratch. She had one cookie recipe, one cake recipe and about ten dinner meals from which she never deviated. This cake was a once-a-year treat if we were lucky. I think the recipe is from her one-and-only cookbook: a small fat book with a cloth cover from the first half of the 20th century, the name of which I have long forgotten. I used vanilla sugar for extra flavour. This is a very simple cake and benefits from the love of whipped cream or ice cream to make it really special. As I didn’t have a 9-inch square pan, I tried making it in a bundt pan, which didn’t work perfectly: it was a bit dry. Next time I would try a 9- or 10-inch spring form pan and adjust the baking time.
My Mamma’s Peach Cake
1/2 cup butter
1 cup granulated sugar
2 eggs
2 cups all-purpose flour
2 teaspoons baking powder
1/4 teaspoon salt
1/2 cup milk
1 cup diced fresh peaches
Preheat over to 375°F. Grease and flour a 9-inch square pan. Cream butter and sugar. Add eggs one at a time, beating well after each egg. Sift together dry ingredients and add alternately with milk to creamed mixture, starting and ending with dry. Add peaches and stir to combine. Bake 30 to 35 minutes. Serve with plain or brandy-laced whipped cream or good vanilla ice cream.
The following morning I made peach-blueberry pancakes. I don’t use a recipe for pancakes, everyone seems to have a recipe they love. I prefer a thinner batter, so I use about one part dry ingredients (flour, sugar, baking powder, salt) to one and a quarter parts wet (milk, yogurt, egg, melted butter). They were delicious and I ate far to many of them!
The last item I baked was a gluten-free peach crumble. We brought it to a wonderful dinner cooked by delightful friends who made us salmon, German potato salad, tomato salad and corn on the cob: all fresh and local.
Peach Crumble: Gluten Free
Preheat over to 350°F. Combine 8-12 sliced fresh peaches with 1/4 cup of maple syrup, 2 tablespoons of sherry, brandy or rum and 2 teaspoons pure vanilla extract and add to your baking dish (I used a 9×13-inch oval).
For the crumble:
3/4 cup unsalted butter
1/2 cup brown sugar
1 cup of gluten-free all-purpose baking mix (I prefer Bob’s Red Mill brand)
1/4 cup wheat-free oat flour*
3/4 cup wheat-free rolled or quick oats*
1/4 teaspoon salt
1/2 cup coursely chopped pecans
1/2 teaspoon cinnamon
Combine all these ingredients in a large bowl and mix together with your hands until you have a crumbly mixture. Spread over the peaches and bake until golden and bubbling, about 40 minutes.
*Most oats are processed with wheat, so if you are baking for people with celiac disease, make sure you find wheat-free oats and oat flour.
The inspiration for this new feature really arrived in the form of a free zucchini from the garden of a friend of a friend; a reminder of the abundance of the season. When we asked our farmer-friend Rebecca what was most prolific from the farm right now, she confirmed what we already new: zucchini and garlic. We left Moss Street Market with pattypan squash, music garlic and Rebecca’s favourite zucchini recipe. With a bit of online searching and I also found a recipe for zucchini bread that sounded good.
Rebecca’s Zucchini Pasta Sauce
Zucchini or other summer squash, cut into half-inch dice
3 cloves of garlic
1 medium onion, thinly sliced
A few fresh tomatoes, cut into one-inch dice
Olive oil; salt and pepper to taste plus shredded basil for garnish
Heat a frying pan on med-high heat. Sauté the onion in olive oil until golden and caramelized. Add the garlic and cook stirring for less than a minute. Add a bit of salt and pepper to taste and then the zucchini. Stir to combine all the flavours then cover and cook for five minutes maximum. Uncover and add the tomatoes. Stir and cook a couple minutes until the tomatoes wilt and soften. Serve immediately over your favourite noodle with basil and a drizzle of olive oil.

GJ made fresh fettucini for our feast and we served the pasta with a gorgeous salad of greens, shaved cucumber and daikon, red pepper and scallion all from the farmer’s market.

For dessert I made two adaptations of a recipe I usually save for the autumn: Pear Frangipani Tart. I replaced strawberries and nectarines for poached pears in the long tart and grated some 70% chocolate into the tart shells before filling with frangipani and a half strawberry.
The free zucchini was used to make the zucchini bread from this great recipe on Smitten Kitchen.

This recipe made either two loaves or 24 muffins, so I did one loaf and 12 muffins just for fun! Great flavour and texture.
We never cease to be overwhelmed (in a good way) by the bounty of our west-coast environment and the appreciation in our community of this bounty and those who grow and produce it. As food lovers, we know how lucky we are to live here. So many neighbourhoods in Victoria have weekly farmer’s markets, like Fairfield’s completely organic Moss Street Market, now in its 26th year. And now, right in our own downtown neighbourhood, a permanent Public Market is about to open. So, an idea for a new blog feature emerged: what is the most bountiful right now in our gardens and farms, and what will I cook with it? This week, in the next post, I will feature zucchini and garlic. I hope this will be a fun new focus for this blog I love. Happy eating and growing!

After many years of planning, the Downtown Public Market Society finally has a space. It should be open in the next few weeks at The Hudson building on Douglas Street between Fisgard and Herald streets.

Until then, once a week the merchants gather to sell there bounty along the walkway behind the building. Bread, honey, cheese, donuts…


































