Blogger Brunch At East Coast Grill

On Sunday morning, in lieu of nursing the tail end of a cold, I went to Blogger Brunch.  Frankly, this was a great decision!  Everything at this particular Blogger Brunch had wonderful spice.  Also, I got to spend some time with and meet some fantastic people: Robin of Doves and Figs, Karen of Gourmet Recipes for 1, and Elizabeth of Free Food Boston just to name a few!  BF and I arrived late to the brunch, so we missed the first round of appetizers (I was way looking forward to that banana-guava ketchup!) But managed to get the second and third rounds which included a Banana Rellena (Muy Caliente!), a Smoked Pork Stuffed Banana with Inner Beauty Hot Sauce:

And wonderful Monterey Jack Grits with molasses-glazed Grilled Banana, Pinapple, Jalapenos, Toasted Pecans and Crispy Smoked Bacon:

Boyfriend and I were both hopelessly in love with these grits and left stating that we would order them as full meals with a poached egg in the future.  They were perfect, though neither of us has really had grits [Editor’s note: I have too had them before! In the South even!], so we aren’t true judges of southern cuisine but these were heaven and with a piece of the pineapple, it was love in your mouth.

Then came the entrees:

I got a Breakfast platter “In the Style of the Yucatan” which was cheesy Scrambled eggs, Black Beans n’ Rice,  Mango-Avacado-Hearts of Palm Salad, Sweet Fried Plaintains, Salsa Roja and a warm Flour Tortilla.  I loved the salad and the Plaintains, but my eggs were a little bit dry.

BF got Cornbread Crusted French Toast With Orange Marmalade, Tropical Fruit and Real Vermont Maple Syrup.  Two thumbs way up to ECG for the real syrup here, you just showed a couple of New England kids that we can have real syrup if we just look hard enough.  Also the French Toast was delicious (I stole some!).

A big thank you goes out to our servers Robin and Arthur who were accomodating and delightful throughout the whole adventure.  You were patient with 20+ foodies who had questions and wanted to photograph everything; Kudos!  Also a huge and grateful shout out to Renee who orchestrated this whole event, you are awesome!  If you haven’t seen her blog yet, go check it out!  This was a great Boston Foodie Outing and I can’t wait to attend some more of them!

East Coast Grill on Urbanspoon

Sunshine Squash Butter

I love winter squash.  I love all of it. And I love all the different ways you can eat it – baked, mashed, soup-ed, stuffed, and pureed into a thick and luscious spread known as Pumpkin Butter.  I know that Sunshine Squash isn’t a pumpkin at all, but it is a winter squash and pumpkins are winter squash.  Also people tend to know what something will taste like a little more if you say you made “pumpkin butter”, as opposed to “winter squash butter”. (Author’s Note: I was going to put an image of Winter Squash here but I didn’t like any of them, so here is Boyfriend’s Hallowe’en pumpkin instead)

I am a stress cook; well, sometimes I’m a stress cook.  I made this batch of [insert something cozy and sweet here] butter after a spectacularly bad day at work.  I was cooking to relax – chopping, peeling… it was soothing and exactly what I needed to do the evening I made this butter.  I also tackled granola and creme brulee that night.  The granola rocked but I overcooked the creme brulee (curses!).  I also don’t have a stellar amount of pictures here, because the actual night that I made the butter, I wasn’t photo-ing, just cooking to cook,which is something I simultaneously like and don’t like.  I need to form good cooking habits right now, with the top two being a) dishes while I cook, because they are always so sucky after and b) take pictures throughout, from start (raw ingredients) to finished product and serving.  These are both fairly tricky for me because I’m kind of lazy and messy. I tend to get my hands covered in flour/butter/squash; then I don’t want to touch my camera. Anyone know a helpful person willing to come take pics while I cook free-of-charge?

Anyway – the pumpkin butter was delicious and hit the spot on that night, when I needed something warm and sweet to offset the bitter taste of my work day.

Winter Squash Butter
Note: I made this with a Sunshine Squash because it’s what I had on hand, but any flavorful winter squash will do; Kabocha or Sugar Pumpkin would undoubtedly be lovely.  Also, the spices are in portions I like. If you want your butter to be more like pumpkin pie, add more clove and less cinnamon.  Also, you can just throw in some pumpkin pie spice in place of all the spices; just remember to punch it up with some extra cinnamon.

1 medium winter squash- cored, peeled, and chopped into 1/2 inch pieces
Apple Cider- get it as local and as fresh as possible, about 2 cups
1/4 tsp Ground Nutmeg
1/4 tsp Ground Cloves
1/2 tsp Ground Ginger
1 tsp Ground Cinnamon
1/2 cup dark amber Maple Syrup. Again local is better and if you can’t get real maple syrup, use 1/4 cup molasses

In a deep pot (or a dutch oven if you are lucky enough to have one) put the squash and just enough cider to come up to but not cover it.  Bring it to a simmer and cook until soft and falling apart (15-20 mins).  Remove the pot from the heat.  If you have an immersion/stick blender, use it to puree the squash apple mixture until it is smooth with no lumps.  If you don’t have an immersion blender, you can use a regular stand blender or a food processor; just do it in batches again until it’s smooth and even.  Return the squash puree to the heat and add the spices and syrup.  Stir everything well and bring it to a simmer.  Simmer the pot, uncovered if you dare (it gloops and splatters) for about twenty minutes.  The mixture will start to thicken and be spreadable when it’s ready.  And you’re done.  Serve it while warm on vanilla ice cream or cold on yogurt.  This is wonderful as a spread for breads too. Basically I love it, ALL THE TIME.  Actually I’m going to have some… right now.  Ta-Ta!

On Breakfast and Scones and Coffee

I love a homemade lazy breakfast. There really isnt anything that satisfies my Saturday morning quite as much as a good cup of coffee and standing in front of the oven, stove top or toaster to create something warm and bready that can be slathered in butter. There is something very satisfying about knowing you created the breakfast you are enjoying with your own motivation and not just out of a need to eat. These scones are no exception to that rule. I originally found the recipe on one of the many cooking blogs that clutter my GoogleReader feed and it piqued my interest, so I starred it thinking maybe I’ll go back to it. I will mention that I rarely eat a satisfying scone – mostly I find them bland and dry, the exception to this rule being those ones I ate in the catacombs at St. Martin’s in the Fields (oh the clotted cream how it sings to me).

So I approached these scones with low expectations, boring was what I was expecting but not what I got. These scones are flaky and delicious – also not too sweet and totally malleable which I love about them. They also went spectacularly well with my perfect coffee (Thanks Polcari’s)! Since the initial find of the recipe I have made these scones twice – both times to enthusiastic applause (well mouth full nods) and plates where the crumbs have been licked off.

The boyfriend is not the biggest fan of ginger so I wasn’t expecting the response he gave me which was, quite simply, “Make more right now, please-and-thankyou.” I was shocked to say the least, someone who is decided not the biggest – read here could eliminate it entirely – fan of ginger asking for seconds with a ginger based baked good, well if you insist boyfriend.

With the tang of yogurt and the spice of ginger I desperately want to serve these for an afternoon tea. Now if only I can find a good place to purchase some clotted cream…

Whole Wheat Lemon-Ginger Scones

Note: I made these scones with jelly as the sugar (my mom makes a plum ginger kind) but real sugar would probably work just fine.  Also, I made my scones with greek yogurt which is a thick yogurt, if the yogurt you are using isn’t thick skip the milk.
1/2 c greek yogurt
1 t vanilla
1/4 cup milk
1 egg
2 c whole wheat flour
2 t baking powder
½ t salt
1/4 c cold butter, cubed
2 T sugar
1/4 c candied ginger, diced
lemon zest from 1 small lemon

Preheat oven to 425 degrees Fahrenheit. In a small bowl, whisk the yogurt, vanilla, milk and egg together until frothy. Set aside.

In a large bowl, mix together the flour, baking powder, and salt. Work in the butter with your hands until the mixture resembles small peas. Add in the sugar, zest, and ginger and stir in the yogurt mixture, reserving about a teaspoon for later. Mix gently with a fork until the dough comes together.

Sprinkle a clean work surface with a bit of flour and turn out the dough, kneading for no more than 12 times. Pat dough into a round shape, flattening it with your palms to 1/2 inch thick and cut into 8 wedges. This fits perfectly in a pie plate, or whatever it doesn’t really change shape as it cooks. Bake for 10-15 minutes or until golden. Cool on a wire rack and eat warm or cold.

Chai Spiced Apple Oatmeal Muffins

sm_P1040978

Spring has sprung here in our fair city which means I have been faced with the dilemma almost daily of spending the time I have after work reveling in the lovely warm weather that spring has produced or blogging. I’ve been reveling.  

Admittedly with Spring having “sprung” there is also a LOT of rain, I don’t thing I ever realized that it could rain so much, If it’s not perfect out is rainy, can’t it just be a day I want to stay in and get real work done? Alas it can’t. Regardless I have been coping with these alternating perfect and pouring days by baking, a lot. I’m thinking that this baking is the reason I’ve decided to not go crazy on the rain and curl up on the sofa and feign a deathly illness. One such rainy terrible morning I made these muffins- Chai Spiced Apple-Oatmeal Muffins, even the name sounds decadent. They were light and fluffy and remarkably healthy and were nothing at all like Oatmeal, a flavor I love but a texture I just can’t support.

sm_P1040943

So over the past couple of weeks I have been raving about these muffins, not only because they were delicious but also insanely nutritious, with only half a cup of oil and no processed sugar they tasted decadent without being decadent, especially with that lovely toasted coconut crumble on top. 

sm_P1040971

These muffins paired perfectly with a cup of hot coffee, though I wouldn’t have said no to a cup of black or earl grey tea either. They had just the right crisp out of the oven and kept their moisture for a couple of days afterward (because they have so much apple) and were still delicious when chilled.

Chai-Spiced Apple Oatmeal Muffins 
Adapted from Everybody Likes Sandwiches through Cheap Healthy Good
Makes 12 Muffins or one loaf

Note: I made these with milk but I’m pretty sure you could substitute in almond or soy milk and they would come out fine. Also, If you are really averse to one or any of the spices leave it out, or leave them all out and substitute 1 tsp cinnamon for them (then you’ll have Apple-Cinnamon Oatmeal Muffins, and I’m pretty sure those would be delicious as well)

1 Cup Old Fashioned Oats
1 Cup Flour (I used unbleached white but if you use whole wheat let me know how they turn out)
1tsp Baking Soda
¼ tsp Ginger
¼ tsp Ground Coriander Seed
1/8 tsp Ground Cloves
1/8 tsp Ground Nutmeg
1/3 Cup Canola Oil
1/3 cup Milk
1/3 Cup Honey
1 Egg
4 Small or 2 Large baking apples (Cortlands work perfectly), Peeled, Cored and diced into ½ inch cubes
Unsweetened Toasted Coconut (This is entirely optional, I had some leftover from making caramels so I used it)

Preheat the oven to 350 degrees and oil and line a muffin pan (this recipe will also work as a loaf but I like muffins). In a medium mixing bowl mix together the oats, flour, baking soda, ginger, coriander, cloves, and nutmeg. 

In a separate larger bowl combine the oil, milk, honey and egg. Add the dry ingredients and stir until just combined (12-15 strokes should do it). Fold in the diced apples to coat. This batter is mostly apples, so it should look like a bowl full of apples – that’s ok.

Pour the batter into the prepped muffin pan until it’s all gone, the muffin cups should be mostly full, and sprinkle with the toasted coconut. Bake the muffins for 20-25 minutes, 40-50 for a loaf pan. The top will be a nice medium brown and a toothpick inserted in the center should come out clean. Let them cool for about ten minutes and enjoy.