Showing posts with label blackberry. Show all posts
Showing posts with label blackberry. Show all posts

June 18, 2012

Home and Blackberry Jam

As I mentioned in my last post, Bo and I visited my old stomping grounds in Alabama this past weekend.  Since Bo had to work on Friday, we ended up arriving relatively late to my mom's house that evening.  A little worse for wear from our 8+ hour drive (OK - confession time - the reality is that I just sat in the passenger's side seat while Bo drove the whole way, but hey - that can be draining too!  Give me a break!), we arrived tired and starving!

When I walked into my old room to set down my suitcase, whaddya know but my mom had already made the room feel like "home."  Freshly cut from her front garden, my mom decorated the room with my all-time-favorite flower, blue hydrangeas.  I don't know what it is about these flowers, but I simply adore them.  From their plushness, to their indigo hue, I just can't get enough.  Needless to say, right away I was able to relax and enjoy being "home sweet home."


Mom also had a whole dinner ready and waiting for us to devour!  

We ate:

  • butter beans (fresh from her garden);
  • sauteed crooked neck squash (fresh from the garden) and onions;
  • steamed Spanish rice;
  • homemade white cornbread; and
  • roasted chicken (for the meat-eaters).

Hm...mmmm...all that garden fresh food does a tummy good!



The next morning my mom told me that she had a whole bucket full of freshly picked, local blackberries ready and waiting to be turned into jam!

She wasn't kidding either...just LOOK!


I was in charge of mushing (and yes, that is an official term) the blackberries!


I think I did a good job...don't you?!


I was NOT aware that this picture was taken...apparently Bo found the camera and sneaked one past me!


Jam-making is 100% worth it, but it does sort of make a mess.

(Note: I could have used the flash in this picture, but honestly I kind of like the sepia tone that it had without it.  It looks sort of rustic to me...the way jam-making activities should look.  What do you think?)


Dishes.


I was surprised to learn that jam-making doesn't really take that much time, effort, or ingredients.  In fact, other than the blackberries, I think that the only other things we added were lemon juice, all-fruit pectin, and a small amount of sugar.  Not bad at all...and definitely cheaper than buying jam at the store!


We ended up making ten small jars of jam, enough to give away half to friends and family and still have a couple of jars each for ourselves ("ourselves" meaning my mom and I).  In fact, I ended up giving a jar to my dad for Father's Day.  Other than peaches, blackberries are his favorite fruit, so it worked out perfectly!


Side-note: There is something incredibly powerful and meaningful about cooking from scratch, in the kitchen, with your mother.  We - meaning the vast majority of my generation living in the United States - don't do things like this.  Instead, we buy jam/jelly in the condiment aisle of our local Piggly Wiggly, Publix, or Whole Foods.  Most of us, including me until this past Saturday, don't even know HOW to make jam/jelly (or for that matter, many of the other foods that we eat on a regular basis).  For me, returning to the cooking heritage that gave us these ingredients was a really moving thing.  In the future, I want to do more things like this. In fact, I WILL learn to:

  • garden;
  • dehydrate; and
  • can
just to name a few.  Until then, Bo and I should probably work on buying a house.  After all, we will need some land to grow all that food on. ;)



Later that day my Mom and Step-dad hosted a Bar-B-Que lunch in honor of Father's Day.  My biological brother and both step-brothers were able to make it.  So, with all four of the kids together (which is a rare event), we spent the weekend sipping on sweet tea, eating hot dogs and hamburgers (or an amazing salad for me!), and relaxing on the porch.


Mom and I snapped a few pictures together.  

Isn't she lovely?! 
(Which, by the way, reminds me of a "My Fair Lady" song...but I digress...)


Handsome hubby.

Happy couple.



And yes, I know that I already mentioned this at the beginning of the post; but seriously, aren't these hydrangeas G.O.R.G.E.O.U.S.?! 



Next up - all about my 10-year high school reunion! WHO-HOOO!

Question of the Day:


What is the coolest thing (in your opinion) that you have ever made from scratch?!

Blessings,
Ally and Bo

June 8, 2012

Beet, Avocado, and Blackberry Salad

What did you say?!

Come again?

Really?!

You don't like beets?!

Well, if that is the case, let me ask a favor of you. 

Can you keep an open mind just for today's post and give me the change to change your mind with this?!


You say you don't like beets, BUT...

Do you like fresh, summertime blackberries?!

How about locally grown, smooth-tasting avocado?!
(P.S. Dad, I know you're a lost cause on this one)

If you said "yes" to either one of these questions then please, pretty please, give this gorgeous salad a try!
(P.P.S. Mom, I bet you would REALLY love this salad!)


Beet, Avocado, and Blackberry Salad
Serves 2-4

2 large beets, boiled, peeled, and diced
3/4 C blackberries, sliced in half
1 avocado, diced
1 head romaine lettuce, chopped
1/2 tsp salt
1/4 tsp pepper
1 packet stevia (or 1 tsp sugar)
2 1/2 T EVOO
2 T balsamic vinegar
1 tsp lemon-juice

Directions:
  • Combine the beets, blackberries, avocado, and romaine in a large salad bowl.
  • Sprinkle the salt, pepper, and stevia over the salad mixture.
  • Whisk together the EVOO, balsamic vinegar, and lemon-juice.
  • Pour the dressing over the salad ingredients.
  • Toss to coat.
  • Serve immediately so that the avocado does not brown.

There's not much else for me to say about today's recipe.  It's just. that. good.  Honestly, I don't even want to waste my time typing out a more lengthy post because it is almost lunch time and I hear leftover Beet, Avocado, and Blackberry Salad calling my name ("...Ally...come eat me...").

Ok, I'm outta here...catch ya' later this weekend with another post!

Question of the Day:


From my personal experience, beets seem to be quite the polarizing food: Do you love 'em or hate 'em?!

Blessings,
Ally and Bo

March 20, 2012

Dark Chocolate Chip Pancakes with Berry Compote

I am a morning person.  Perhaps my favorite time of day is right before the sun rises.  In those brief moments, it seems like the whole world is quiet, in a state of expectation, embracing all of the potential of the day that is being born.  Maybe that is why breakfast, with a piping hot mug of tea, is my favorite meal of the day.  I wake up excited to greet the final moments of night, and to devour the meal awaiting me!


Although all mornings are special in my book, I have a particularly special love for Saturday mornings.  Usually there is nothing on the calendar that requires you to rush out of the house before noon.  As a result, Bo and I frequently end up lounging in our pajamas until late in the morning (Yeah...that actually means afternoon, or sometimes all day.  Shhhh - don't tell anyone!), sipping on orange juice or hot tea, and devouring a special breakfast/brunch.

This past Saturday I whipped up something extra special...
...with chocolate...
...dark chocolate to be exact!

As you might remember, last Saturday was St. Patrick's Day.  Although our brunch didn't have anything green in it, per se, I decided to serve our piping hot pancakes on green plates.  So there!  You can't pinch me! :)

It is also worth noting that this is the first semi-baking recipe that I came up with on my own!  As I talked about in this post, I have a certain fear of recipe-creating when it comes to baking.  Baking is a science that I don't truly understand, so it was a HUGE success for me when this recipe actually worked!


A HUGE hit with the hubby, these pancakes hit the perfect balance between being sweet, but not too sweet.  Combined with the berry compote, there is hardly any need at all for maple syrup!

Dark Chocolate Chip Pancakes with Berry Compote
Serves 2

2/3 C all-purpose flour
1/2 C bread flour
1/2 C oats
3 stevia packets, divided
1 tsp baking powder
1 tsp cinnamon
1 banana, mashed
1 C milk
1 tsp vanilla extract
1/4 C dark chocolate chips
5 strawberries, diced
1/4 C berries (I used blackberries)


Directions:
  • Preheat a large skillet over medium heat (about a six out of ten on the heat scale).
  • In a medium mixing bowl, mix together the flours, oats, two packets of stevia, baking powder, and cinnamon.
  • Add the mashed banana, milk, and vanilla to the flour mixture.  Mix thoroughly.
  • Dollop 1/4 C circles of batter onto the skillet.
  • Top with chocolate chips (this ensures that the chips will not "bleed" into the batter).
  • Cook until bubbles begin to appear and pop.  Flip, and cook for an additional 1-2 minutes.
  • In a separate bowl, place the assorted fruit, and top with one stevia packet.
  • Microwave the fruit for 1-2 minutes.
  • Top each pancake stack with the berry compote and maple syrup!


Next time - an update on Lola (i.e. her first veterinary appointment, puppy school, and crate training)!

Question of the Day:

White vs. Milk vs. Dark - which type of chocolate do you prefer?!

Blessings,
Ally and Bo