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Roundup: Fun food activities plus food for thought

October 1st, 2008 · Books, Eating out, Food in the news, Roundup, local food

A big week for food fans is shaping up here in Lawrence, and there are other items of interest, too. Read on…

Put these activities on your schedules:

Who needs farmland? Developers’ attorney suggests Douglas County has plenty. Maybe he likes his food tasteless. (LJW Town Talk)

Food and farm philosophies. Sustainable ag gets its due at the Land Institute’s Prairie Festival, but Kansas’ senators believe in industrial. (Salina Journal) Meanwhile, keynote speaker Barbara Kingsolver inspires the festival’s crowd. (Salina Journal)

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You can’t go wrong with brownies at potluck

September 30th, 2008 · potlucks, recipes

I forgot I had a potluck to attend last weekend, so I reached for an easy, reliable and always welcome recipe: Katharine Hepburn Brownies. You can find these brownies all over the Internet (at Patti Cakes, at Angelnina’s Cottage and The Gourmet Project, to name three). I found it in my Gourmet cookbook. You cannot, however, find these brownies left over after a potluck.

Katharine Hepburn brownies

  • 2 squares (ounces) unsweetened chocolate
  • 1 stick (1/4 pound) butter
  • 1 cup sugar
  • 2 eggs
  • 1/2 teaspoon vanilla extract
  • 1/4 cup all-purpose flour
  • 1/4 teaspoon salt
  • 1 cup coarsely chopped walnuts (optional)

1. Melt the chocolate with the butter over low heat in 2-quart saucepan.

2. Remove from heat and stir in the sugar, eggs and vanilla; blend well.

3. Stir in the flour and salt and walnuts, if desired.

4. Pour the batter into an buttered and floured 8-inch square pan. Bake 35-40 minutes at 325 degrees F or until a toothpick inserted in center comes out clean. Cool, then cut and serve. Makes 16-20 brownies (depending on how you cut them).

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Pick a parcel of peppers and put ‘em up

September 29th, 2008 · Cooking tips, Food preparation, local food

What do you do when someone gives you nearly a peck of (unpickled) hot peppers like these? If you’re like me, you freeze them. (Of course, you could also pickle them.)

I no doubt harmed their quality by letting them sit in the fridge for a week, but then I dug in. I washed them, lopped off their tops, split them lengthwise and removed membranes and seeds with a quick flip of a paring knife. Then I filled two quart-size freezer bags with them and put them in the freezer. That was it.

Unlike most fruits and vegetables, you can freeze peppers—hot peppers or sweet (bell) peppers—without blanching. The University of Nebraska extension office says you don’t even need to cut your hot peppers. I did, though, because I wasn’t sure how hot these peppers might be. (They seemed too small for banana peppers, and I’m not sufficiently pepper-savvy to identify the type, but the friend who gave them to me said they were superhot. I finally tasted one about halfway through my exercise, and they weren’t all that hot.) No matter, they’re ready to go into soups, casseroles or wherever I want them. I can leave them halved or chop them later.

TIP: Don’t forget either to use fork and knife to hold and cut your hot peppers or to wear rubber gloves while you work unless you’re exceedingly tough like my brother-in-law. Hot pepper juice does burn—especially if you make the highly unfortunate mistake of getting it in any tender areas such as your eyes or nose.

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Apples, apples, apples, and thank goodness

September 26th, 2008 · Farmers markets, Food selection, local food

The common wisdom is that the fruit trees in this region are making up this year for last year’s noncrop. Apple trees are no exception, sending out vast amounts of fruit, just as the pear trees and cherry trees and raspberry brambles did this year.

Sample apples

My first 2008 apples, as you may recall, were the summer Lodi apples. So far this fall, I’ve only received three free apples, as seen in the photo above, and they are humdingers. See that quarter there for size? And each apple weighs/weighed more than 8 ounces. My oldest sister gave them to me the other day, samples from her haul from Waverly, Missouri (something of a centroid of apple production in the area for one reason or another, including at Peters Orchard).

She gave me a sample of each of the three varieties she bought. From left, in the photo above, are Jonagold, Jonathan and Fuji. Only the Jonagold remains, and not for long. I’m quite sure I’ve never seen a Jonathan as big as this one was, but it’s flavor (sweet-tart) and texture were delicious. The Fuji was quite sweet. Both have, as expected, fairly thin skins.

Local apples

Meanwhile, I’ve been buying local apples, too. I bought Gala and Golden Delicious from a vendor at the Lawrence Farmers Market who was in from Sabetha, Kansas. (Or was it Seneca. Drat. Guess I’ll have to figure that out later.) I haven’t gotten into the Goldens yet, although the vendor said they were pretty tart, and they’re a little on the green side. I don’t doubt him; Golden Delicious are wonderful for baking (and not related to Red Delicious I learned recently), but the local ones never seem to capture the sweetness that the Washington ones do. The Galas were agreeably sweet and crisp.

I also bought Jonathans from Fieldstone Orchard of Overbrook, Kansas, at the Community Mercantile. Ken Krause, who chatted up Merc customers last Saturday on a vendors day, said the family also has a you-pick operation, which got a nice writeup in Fat City. And I got those 50-cent-a-pound Jonathans (scroll down for the apple reference on that link) at Davenport. I should have gotten more; they’re almost gone.

On top of all those apples are the three or four Red Delicious last week in my Rolling Prairie bag. Haven’t tried them yet. Red Delicious aren’t my favorite. Don’t care for the leathery skin or the supersweet (or tasteless) flavor and the often-mealy texture. But. I’m sure these are dandy, and they probably are the only organic ones in the lot.

How ’bout them apples?

The Jonathan and Golden Delicious are probably my favorites for their lovely but different flavors and their versatility for eating and baking. What are your favorites? Why?

Amazingly, for all these apples, I have yet to bake apple anything. I’ve just eaten them daily, sometimes two or three of them. Like the trees, I’m trying to make up for last year’s noncrop.

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Local wines pleasantly surprise tasters

September 24th, 2008 · General

They came. They tasted. They were surprised and pleased. That’s the nutshell result of a group of friends’ tasting local wines. Kansas wines. Mostly Douglas County wines. (Kansas licenses several more wineries, too.)

To recap, here are the wines we tasted and the order we tasted them in:

  • Seyval. Holy-Field. $12.95. (In photo at right, which is in focus, but it’s chilled and instantly collects condensation.) Also, a Seyval from Kugler’s, which a couple of our tasters brought, as Kugler’s is their neighbor.
  • Vignoles. BlueJacket Crossing. I think this was about $10.
  • Corky’s Barrel. Holy-Field. A red blend of Chambourcin, Cynthiana (a.k.a. Norton) and Foch, $10.95. Someone over the phone identified the grapes for me, and I swear she said it was spelled Fouche. I was unable to find any information about a Fouche grape, so I’ve concluded it must in fact be Marechal Foch, a.k.a. simply Foch.
  • Wolf Red. BlueJacket Crossing. An off-dry red made from Chambourcin and St. Vincent grapes and aged in American oak.$11.00.
  • Charlemagne. Davenport Winery. Chambourcin. $12 (I think)

The whites

If I had it to do over, I’d have started with the Vignoles rather than the Seyval, but we didn’t. No matter. The Holy-Field Seyval was greeted with “I love it!” and “Oh! This is good!” and then Brian pronounced that it “compares favorably with some very expensive California Rieslings.” I wouldn’t know, but it was, as the vineyard’s flier declared, a fine wine, delicate and crisp with loads of apple character. It had as much complexity and body as any white wine I can think of.

Then we had the Kugler Seyval. It had some of the same flavors but was overlain by excessive sweetness and didn’t match up.

Next, we went to the Vignoles, a sweet (or maybe off-dry) white with distinct grapefruit and other citrusy flavors. It’s good. It is, however, distinctly lighter than the Seyval and suffered a bit from the comparison, which is why I wish we’d served it first.

The reds

Bottle of BlueJacket Wolf RedSince we weren’t able to get any dry wines, our reds were off-dry to sweet. We started with Corky’s Barrel, which again was quite satisfying, with a medium body and layered flavors. The Wolf Red (at left) had a similar character but more sweetness.

The meal

After tasting those wines, we adjourned to dinner, where we feasted on local chicken (both as chicken salad and chicken Marbella), local beef brisket (fully pastured, on the guests’ own property), a salad featuring local kale and roasted peppers. We also had local cucumbers, peppers and a little bit of melon to snack on.

I guess it’s an indication that summer’s peak has passed, as no one brought the tomatoes or beans I might have expected. Nevertheless, it was all delicious. The two Holy-Field wines were the most popular choices to go with dinner.

The finishing flavors

We saved the Charlemagne to serve with dessert. It was medium- to full-bodied and sweet, and it complemented the Balsamic-Goat Cheese Pears quite nicely.

Local wines where you live

The biggest drawback to these wines is that they aren’t generally available at your neighborhood liquor store. The proprietor at mine said that’s because the Kansas wineries generally don’t produce enough to interest wholesalers, and wholesalers are where most retailers get their stock. I know I have seen Kansas wines in stores from time to time, but not consistently. Maybe I’ll look into that more at a future date.

Meanwhile, although its information may not be entirely up to date, the Appellation America web site’s appellation index lets you click on your state and see the appellations available there. Yes, there is wine-making in North Dakota. Utah, West Virginia and Vermont, too. Check out your state. Do you drink local wines?

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Roundup: Growing, going, research

September 23rd, 2008 · Roundup

Growing in Kansas. Commentator John Schlageck gives the rundown on Kansas’ ag statistics. (Pittsburg Sun)

Food and fuel. The Agricultural Business Council of Kansas City is having a food and fuel forum on Oct. 23 (DomesticFuel.com)

Food and research. The KC Star endorses a Johnson County, Kansas, sales tax to fund research that would include a K-State facility on food safety and animal health. (KC Star)

Wheat beat. Kansas wheat organizations ask State Fair go-ers about their wheat knowledge. (KansasWheat.com)

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