Tuesday, August 28, 2007

CSA Week 6

We have a working oven and range again! To celebrate, we used almost all of our CSA share (for some reason the beans keep getting forgotten.) We made baba-ganouj with the eggplant which was good, but a bit lemony. We got the recipe from cooking light, and they sometimes overdo the lemon to bring flavor to lower fat dishes. In the future I will look for a higher fat version, or just up the tahini and lower the lemon juice. The carrots and leek went into a tasty vegetable soup and we had the peppers in salads and stuffed with a jasmine rice stuffing.

Man it is nice to do something other than grill. Maybe one day we'll have a kitchen sink again and won't have to clean veggies in the bathroom.

On to this week's share!

More Potatoes We don't usually keep a lot around, but we've managed to keep up with the last three potato deliveries pretty well. These'll likely end up grilled -- though more options are now available, the grilled potatoes are good enough to do even with the stove installed.

Carrots I have never seen white carrots before, but we got a mix of orange (aka carrot colored) and white. We'll see if the taste differs.

Bottle Onions

Summer Apples Is fall really this close?
Basil

Heirloom Tomatoes

Celery This bunch of celerey is pretty divorced from the huge heads we are used to seeing at the grocery. That's probably just as well, since 50% of the household doesn't care for it.

Kale

Rhubarb I was all excited to make the crisp I made with the first batch of this we got way back in week 1, but the newsletter included a recipe for an apple and rhubarb crisp which I think we'll try. It has crystalized ginger in it, so it has to be good.

Banana and Anaheim Peppers We like spicy food, but don't have a lot of recipes that call for hot peppers. We may roast em? Time to hit the web for recipes...

Thursday, August 16, 2007

CSA Week 5

We are offically at the midpoint of the CSA, and overall we are very pleased with how it's gone. We did passably well with the last share, and considering we had no kitchen I think that's pretty awesome. I did try the grilled potato recipe, and we've been very happy with it. It's pretty easy (cut, oil, season the potatoes; direct grill em sixish minutes a cut side and then indirect grill em on the skin side for six more) and makes a pretty good fry. We also grilled all that glorious corn. Everything else was either eaten in salads or is still sitting in our fridge.

After this weekend, we should have most of a kitchen again, so things'll be basically back to normal, cooking-wise.

Carrots

Parsley Yay. It's more parsley. We currently have two bunches in the fridge (this one and last share's more dapper curly leaf one) so I may have to look up a recipe for chimichurri (I think that's the name) which is a parsley puree one puts on meats.

Romano Beans

Orange and Yellow Slicing Tomatoes In the past when I have had non-red tomatoes, they have always tasted a little stale or underripe to me. Turns out, they were stale or underripe because these suckers taste great. Not the same as a red tomato, but definitely full of flavor.

A huge whopping Leek Which I guess we'll put in soup, maybe?

Globe Eggplant which is destined for becoming dip (in the form of Baba Ganouj).

Muskmellon I am a recent convert to mellons other than water, and this was my first time trying the musk. It's mellony, but less so than a cantelope. It's a gateway mellon -- You start with this and next thing you know you're robbing liquor stores to cover your honeydew habit.

Green Peppers are soon to be stuffed with jasmine rice and other goodies.

Button Mushrooms

Red Onions

Tuesday, August 7, 2007

Progress!

Amazing what difference a week and a half makes. My parents have been in all week helping out with installation, and we have some very photogenic progress to report.

We had finished the floor scraping (soooo muuuuuch floor scraping) and had patched and primed the walls before my folks got into town. Mary and mom painted the room (Informal Ivory, probably the mildest color in our place) while dad and I...did something very important, I am sure.

Ah, lights! We prepped and hung new lights. We never really used the old overhead light in the kitchen, because the switch is in a dumb place and the light gives off very little, well, light. For the new ones, we ran two spurs off of the original junction box (which we also moved to the center of the kitchen where it should have been all along) and then we hung the three new pendants. So nice! So bright! I think we'll be making the trip to the switch a lot more often now. Those CSA pictures are gonna sparkle.

Then came the cabinets -- Base then upper, though when we started the uppers we found instructions telling us to start with them. Dad said it's a whole mac/PC, emacs/vi thing. Folks do it both ways. We got all bases and most uppers in on Sunday, then finished up the uppers and trim peices early Monday.

I was going to hang the hood microwave Monday as well, but we discovered that not only did our oven come with the bits for a different model, we also got a damaged microwave. Thanks for nothing, ABT! We got a replacement ordered, and that went in with fairly little drama. I spent a lot of time double checking my measurements, only to find out they were all wrong anyway. Oh well. Nobody can see into that upper cabinet anyway.

Instead of the microwave installation, we pressed on with the tile. Despite a little rain, we managed to get it all installed before 7 pm when the pizza came. Wow does it look good. We used a limestone tile that we loved and it looked even better in place.





Did I say we finished the trim peices? There are always more trim pieces. Looking at the underside of the cabinet (which is over a snack bar area) you see various panels, scribe moldings, facers, and tracks for lighting. Under that is a whole 'nother set of bits and pieces to keep it all up (or give it something to attatch to.) It's amazing how quickly the huge changes occur, but now slowly the little finishing details do. Still, despite spending days doing the small stuff, we're very pleased with how this looks. Don't forget to compliment us if you ever sit on a stool here!

The folks have headed off now, and Mary and I are busy getting the grout in. We weren't 100% sure on the color, but after a grout intervention from the nice man at Home Carpet One (they're awesome! go there!) we went ahead with our original color. Once that is in and cured, the appliances go in and the long wait for counters begins.

Thursday, August 2, 2007

CSA Week 4 - Vegetables in a time of madness

I am coming to the conclusion that travel is the enemy of the CSA. For more than half of the past two weeks, one or both of us was traveling. Sadly, this meant that some lovely produce (alas, poor beets, I hardly knew ye) passed on to a better place before we could roast them alive.

I did manage to make and freeze some pesto, with the help of some grocery store basil. We also made chocolate chip zucchini bread with some of the squash, which was quite tasty.

Week four is the first of two deliveries that will come during the renovation of our kitchen. Thankfully, most of this week's haul appears to be grillable or edible raw.

Cornsplosion! We love corn, and more specificially love it grilled. It is unlikely that we will get sick of it before we run out, even though we have 14 or so ears.

Potatoes can be grilled. Who knew? I have a recipe for roasted potatoes that use a mix of direct and indirect grilling. I'll report back on how that one goes.

Beans Hrm. We actually still have beans from last time around, so...more beans. We have a burner on our grill, so I sense that we'll boil some water and have some beans.

Mixed Salad Greens Prewashed! The closest the CSA gets to a Rachel Ray episode.

Cucumbers

Radish Sprouts taste like mild radishes and are destined for salads.

Broccoli The world's smallest head of broccoli, which is probably good since I don't think we can grill it. I guess we'll cut it small and have it in salads.

Curly Leaf Parseley Perhaps we'll toss some in with the beans? Maybe we'll just garnish the hell out of our burgers.

Red Garlic

Various Detritus from our Coffee Table I can't even claim that our coffee table looks cluttered thanks to the remodel. It always looks that way.

Wednesday, August 1, 2007

What troubles you, John Spartan?

It has begun! The great kitchen remodel of aught seven is officially underway.

First, as with all good makeovers, some before shots. Not much to comment on here, really. We don't hate our kitchen as such, it's just a little dated. The building was converted from a factory in the 80s, and those white laminate cabinets have seen better days.

Also, the oven you can see here can not hold a temperature to save it's life (or the life of a baked good) and we have to regularly set the temperature twenty five degrees higher than we want to get it to come all the way to temperature.




More lovely laminate cabinets, and our inexplicably white sink. The new one will be stainless steel and undermounted. Fancy!

Our faucet drives us bonkers. It has a built in sprayer thingy, but it never actually stays on sprayer as it should, except when we want it to go back to being a stream.

Finally, you may notice the darkness of the pictures. That is due in large part to the darkness of the room (and in small part to the lack of ability of the photographer.) We have three new lovely pendant lights that we hope will alleviate this issue.





Cabinets, gone!

Fridge gone! (But in our living room, in working order thank goodness.) Refridgerators are really heavy. I mean, really heavy. Moving the fridge took way more time and effort than we expected.

The hood microwave also was more work than expected, being more firmly attatched than we realized. Thankfully, after a little fiddling I was able to get it down.

We also managed to disconnect the gas line from the stove with a minimum of drama and no action movie explosions.





More cabinets gone!

Sink gone! And heavy!

All in all, the cabinet removal went much easier than we expected. Having never done it before, we really didn't know how it would go. It ended up really just being a case of taking out some screws and pulling out the cabinets.

The tile removal was fun as always, and Mary discovered a new favorite tool. It's basically a heavy chisel on a sturdy broom handle that used to break up tile (you can see it in the background here next to a floor scraper.) I still prefer the tried and true concrete chisel and sledge approach, but to each his own.

Now comes the long and boring processes of scraping the tile adhesive off the floor and patching and priming the walls. Someone needs to invent a painting method that involves the sledge hammer. I'll call Galager.