Pumpkin Cranberry Muffins

DSC_0006 copyPumpkins are on my mind, because they are all over the windowsills in the kitchen. How can you not eat them, when you look at them all day! We enjoyed pumpkin cranberry muffins this morning for breakfast. The recipe I use is a variation on a pumpkin spice muffin recipe from Ken Haedrich’s Home for the Holidays cookbook. His recipes, while tasty, tend to use every measuring cup and spoon in the kitchen. This is no exception, and I don’t make these muffins often enough to have simplified the recipe yet.

So pull out all your measuring cups…here’s my version of the recipe.

1 ½ c. cooked, mashed pumpkin

1 large egg

3/8 c. packed brown sugar

1/3 c. orange juice

¼ c. butter, melted

1 Tbsp molasses

1 c. all-purpose flour

¾ c. whole wheat flour

1/3 c. cornmeal

2 ½ tsp baking powder

½ tsp salt

½ tsp ground cinnamon

¼ tsp ground nutmeg

¼ tsp ground cloves

¼ c. milk

½ c. dried cranberries

Combine pumpkin, egg, sugar, orange juice, melted butter, and molasses in a bowl and mix well. In a separate bowl, mix the flours, cornmeal, baking powder, salt and spices. Add the liquid mixture to the dry ingredients and stir briefly. Add the milk and continue to stir until the batter is uniform. Fold in cranberries.

Spoon into greased muffin tins (I usually get about 16 muffins, but if you like big ones, you could make 12). Bake at 210°C (400°F) for about 20 minutes. Watch carefully near the end of baking; they burn easily.

Saffron

DSC_0005 cropSaffron is the dried stigma of the saffron crocus, a beautiful little autumn-flowering crocus. Harvested since 500 BCE, saffron has always been a luxury spice. No surprise, when it takes about 150,000 flowers to produce a kilo of saffron! We can get New Zealand grown saffron for $12.50/g (that’s about $350/oz), but we rarely buy it.

DSC_0010 copyA few years ago, we were given half a dozen saffron crocus bulbs, and these provide most of the saffron we use—enough for a couple of meals each year. The flowers bloom in April, and last only a day or two, so it’s easy to miss. The threads need to dry before storage, and then we’ll begin to plan the sunny yellow meals we will make with it.

 

Pumpkin Galette

squash galetteOne of our favourite ways to eat pumpkin. We enjoyed the first pumpkin galette of the year today.

Make enough pie dough for a double crust pie. Refrigerate until you’re ready to assemble the galette.

1 large or 2 medium winter squashes or pumpkins

2 med shallots

3 cloves of garlic

8 large sage leaves

2 sprigs fresh thyme

1 c. grated cheese (cheddar, edam, or whatever you like)

sunflower or pumpkin seeds for on top.

salt and pepper to taste

Cut the squash in half and scoop out the seeds. Place cut side down on an oiled baking sheet (a jelly roll pan works well–avoid cookie sheets, as liquid from the squash may spill off). Tuck the garlic (in its peel) into one of the squash cavities. Bake at 190°C (375°F) for 30-45 minutes, until the squash is quite soft. While the squash is baking, sauté the shallots until translucent in a generous amount of olive oil. Add the herbs and sauté a little longer. Set aside until the squash is done. When the squash is soft, scoop the flesh out of the skins, and mix it with the shallots in a large bowl. Peel the garlic cloves and put them into the bowl. Stir everything together, mashing any large chunks of squash, until you have a stiff puree. Season to taste with salt and pepper. Roll out the pie dough into a large round (38 cm/15 inches diameter). Place rolled out dough flat on a large baking sheet. Sprinkle most of the grated cheese on the dough, then mound the squash mixture on top, leaving about 8 cm (3 in) around the edge. Sprinkle the remaining cheese and a small handful of sunflower or pumpkin seeds on top. Gently fold up the edges of the dough to partly cover the squash. Bake at 190°C (375°F) for about 30 minutes, until the crust is lightly browned.

Helpful kids

still life with nails sm*Sigh*

Dropped a wall on my hand today, so this will be short…typing skills aren’t really up to snuff at the moment.

It’s been a busy week of DIY at our house. Everyone in the family has been involved in one way or another. The days have been long and exhausting, but it’s been great to watch the kids help out, confidently and competently, in so many ways. Not just hammering nails and measuring things. In spite of the demands of the project (in fact, because of it, most days) we still need to eat. Fortunately, the kids are old enough now, they can take care of food, letting the adults spend every possible minute building.

At lunch time, kids get out the bread, cheese, pickles and other lunch items, and call us when it’s ready.

They can also cook dinner, if we’re at a stage where we can’t stop to cook. All those frustrating times teaching them how to chop, sauté, and bake (when having them “help” meant it took twice as long to make dinner), have begun to pay off!

(Especially handy when you’ve dropped a wall on your hand.)

Marcella Hazan

Corzetti made with Hazan's pasta recipe.

Corzetti made with Hazan’s pasta recipe.

Marcella Hazan was born on my birthday…or I suppose I was born on her birthday, as she was born 46 years before me. Our copy of her first book, The Classic Italian Cook Book, falls open to two pages—homemade pasta and risi e bisi (rice and peas). They form opposite ends of our cooking spectrum. Risi e bisi is the comfort food we go to when we come home late from work and school and don’t feel like cooking. It is delicious and filling, and oh so easy to make.

Homemade pasta, on the other hand, is what we pull out when we want an extra special meal–pumpkin stuffed ravioli, linguini with mounds of home grown oyster mushrooms in a creamy goat milk sauce, lasagne packed with the freshest vegetables from the garden.

I didn’t know much about Hazan until she died in 2013. Upon her death, the New York Times published a lovely obituary, painting her as the initially reluctant chef, who wasn’t terribly interested in food and learned to cook to please her husband. Apparently, she had to be cajoled into writing a cookbook. What a lovely picture of this icon of Italian cooking!

What speaks to me most about her cooking style are her insistence on intimacy with the ingredients and the cooking process, and the simplicity of many of the recipes. This was a woman who cooked for everyday, but who felt that every day should include good food. In The Classic Italian Cook Book she writes, “The finest accomplishments of the home cook are not reserved like the good silver and china for special occasions or for impressing guests, but are offered daily for the pleasure and happiness of the family group.” This is a woman I would have loved to meet.

Fresh vegetables, pasta rolled by hand, homemade stock—she could be quite opinionated and judgemental. In her risi e bisi recipe, she notes, “You may use frozen peas, if you must… but until you’ve made it with choice fresh peas your risi e bisi will be a tolerable but slightly blurred copy of the original.” At the same time, her recipes are written for real cooks. About Minestrone di Romagna, she writes, “It is not necessary to prepare all the vegetables ahead of time…while one vegetable is slowly cooking in oil and butter you can peel and cut another. I find this method more efficient and less tedious than preparing all the vegetables at one time”.

For Hazan, cooking and eating were both expressions of love:

“Italian cooking is the art of giving expression to the undisguised flavors of its ingredients.”

“The Italian art of eating is sustained by a life measured in nature’s rhythms, a life that falls in with the slow wheelings of the seasons, a life in which, until very recently, produce and fish reached the table not many hours after having been taken from the soil or the sea.”

“There probably has been no influence, not even religion, so effective in creating a rich family life, in maintaining a civilized link between the generations, as this daily sharing of a common joy. Eating in Italy is essentially a family art, practiced for and by the family.”

Thank you, Marcella, for everything.

Seasonal food

100_0535 cropOvernight, the mountains were cloaked in snow, and this morning they seemed to have leapt closer, looming huge and white where all summer they’d been nothing but distant grey peaks. The wind is cold and keen, and brings driving rain and hail clattering against the windows. The cat stretches out in front of the first of the season’s fires in the log burner.

Overnight, it seems, we have broken from our never-ending summer and have been plunged into winter. And overnight, our meals have changed. Though there are still a dozen cucumbers in the fridge, the thought of a cool cucumber salad is not appealing today. Instead I hunger for potato soup, bread warm from the oven, and hot apple crisp. I eye the pumpkins as I could not on the shorts-and-T-shirt day last week when I harvested them, and I think of gallette, soup, and pie. I am excited by the culinary opportunities the change of seasons presents.

There will be more T-shirt weather, I know. The cucumbers will be eaten. Here in the land of perpetual spring, even winter days can call for iced drinks now and again. But for now, I will enjoy the excuse to eat steaming soup with buttered biscuits, and drink hot tea in the middle of the afternoon.

Quince

quincepaste1smQuince was a fruit I never knew before we moved to New Zealand. Looking like a fuzzy pear, and inedible raw, they’re not the most inviting fruits at first glance. But cooked into quince paste, they are one of the most delicious and versatile fruits around.

Our little quince tree (not much more than a stick) produced three fruits this year, so I made a very small batch of quince paste—about three cups. I’m afraid that it’s almost gone already. It is delicious on crackers with a thin slice of goat cheese. It’s also lovely on toast in the morning, or on bread as a late-night snack. It goes well with yogurt and granola, and…well, it never had a chance of lasting long.

The end of summer

Tomatoes in the greenhouse, still going strong...for now.

Tomatoes in the greenhouse, still going strong…for now.

And here it comes…the Metservice forecast for tomorrow…

A few spots of early rain, followed by fine spells and scattered showers with hail, and possible squally thunderstorms. Snow lowering to 400 metres from afternoon. Cold southwesterlies, becoming strong about the coast in the afternoon.

It’s time to batten down the hatches, rescue the last tomatoes and zucchini, and bring firewood to the porch. I gave the goats some extra bedding (and will do the same for us, too!), and I’ve tucked down the edges of the small tunnel house in the garden, in the hopes of eking out a few more peppers and eggplants.

I’m ready, as I usually am by mid-April, for the summer to be well and truly over. I’m ready to let the chickens loose in most of the vegetable garden, to control the weeds for me over winter. I’m ready to stop frantically preserving the summer’s bounty and start eating what I’ve saved.

Not that there isn’t gardening to do in the winter. My “winter” vegetable garden is bigger than many people’s summer garden, but it is still less than a quarter the size of the summer garden, and feels like a holiday. I’m looking forward to starting that holiday soon.

Fall Foraging

DSC_0016 copyI enjoy foraging for forgotten food, and university campuses often offer good pickings. Development marginalises former research and demonstration plots. The plants are abandoned in some corner between buildings, and are forgotten by everyone but the groundsmen who have to mow around them.

Apples used to be a huge crop around Lincoln (until growing houses became more profitable), and the university has done research on apples for many decades. The “Orchard Carpark” is presumably the former site of the University orchard, but only one lone apple tree remains on the edge of the pavement. No one officially picks its fruit, but passersby avail themselves. This year, the tree is groaning under a heavy crop.

This morning, when I stopped by, the tree was well-picked on the lower branches, but there was plenty of fruit on the ground, and my daughter climbed into the tree to reach a few higher up. We came home with a bag full of tart, firm apples. Perfect for pie.

Mommy’s Magical Crackers

DSC_0007 copyNamed by my kids years ago, these are so magical, they start disappearing almost before they leave the oven. It’s a good thing they’re easy to make—easy enough for every day, good enough to include on a fancy cheese and cracker tray at a party.

1 c. all-purpose flour

1 c. wholemeal flour

¼ c. sesame seeds

1 tsp baking soda

½ tsp salt

1/3 c. vegetable oil

2/3 c. warm water

Mix flours, sesame seeds, soda and salt. Stir in water and oil, stirring just until the dough comes together in a mass. Divide dough into halves. Roll out each half very thin (1-2 mm) on a lightly greased baking sheet. Cut into cracker shapes, and bake at 190°C (375°F) for about 15 minutes, until they are brown and crispy. Check regularly toward the end of baking and remove any crackers that have browned before they burn.

Eat quickly before they vanish!

* Replace the wholemeal flour with rye meal (or a coarse ground rye flour) for a lovely variation.