On the other hand, served warm or at room temperature, German potato salad is lighter and goes better with almost any meat. I remember my grandmother Anna used to make it with roast chicken for Sunday dinner, along with spaetzle noodles and gravy.
Friday, April 30, 2010
German potato salad
I cook for a person who won't eat mayonnaise, so German-style potato salad is an alternative to the fattening kind made with gobs of real mayonnaise, eggs, celery and sweet pickle. I think American potato salad is delicious, but that might be because I don't get it very often.
On the other hand, served warm or at room temperature, German potato salad is lighter and goes better with almost any meat. I remember my grandmother Anna used to make it with roast chicken for Sunday dinner, along with spaetzle noodles and gravy.
As usual, I don't have a real recipe to share with you, but nothing could be easier to make by taste. Of course you start by boiling and draining the potatoes, then slice them thinly. Mince 2 or 3 slices of smoky bacon and sauté until crispy.
There are no unusual ingredients. I chopped some chives from the garden, because I didn't have green or red onions on hand.
Add the bacon (with a little of the fat) and sprinkle the potatoes with whole celery seed, about a teaspoon of sugar, some salt and pepper. I think this salad is better with plain old cider vinegar and vegetable oil, but I've also tried olive oil and white wine vinegar. Use a generous hand with the oil, the salad should be shiny and not dry.
It was good the other night-- we had chicken baked in the oven with a Parmesan breadcrumb crust.
On the other hand, served warm or at room temperature, German potato salad is lighter and goes better with almost any meat. I remember my grandmother Anna used to make it with roast chicken for Sunday dinner, along with spaetzle noodles and gravy.
Thursday, April 29, 2010
They're back...
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My barn friends are on the lookout for swallows; they're late. Some sort of gnat plague just hatched in the damp weather, pestering the horses. We need some flying insect eaters. Yesterday afternoon, Jennifer our barn manager called me at home to say she saw the first one, and no doubt about it. They found our little barn again-- and what a nice person she is to call, just to tell me they're back...
Wednesday, April 28, 2010
Willa Cather's Nebraska
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Imagine a world without TV, radio, electricity, or cars-- no airplanes, computers, texting, email, movies, video games, Ipods or cell phones. Imagine a world where life revolves around the seasons, crops and caring for your animals. Where kids did chores after school instead of being chauffeured to activities. Then imagine this life in a place as bleak and flat and dull as rural Nebraska in the late 1800's. Finally, imagine young people who don't know the meaning of the word bored. Who find enchantment in nature, and happiness in family and friendship.
This is Willa Cather's world in her novels "Oh, Pioneers" and "My Antonia." Cather moved to Nebraska as a child in 1883. These stories are beautiful reminiscences, but there isn't anything saccharine sweet about them. There was no shortage of hardship and tragedy. I like to read these books again every few years-- the writing is wonderful, and they put our soft lives into perspective. But you have to appreciate this irony: I just downloaded a free copy of "My Antonia" to read on my Kindle...what would Cather think of that?
Here's a quote from the book about the Nebraska winter:
Next to getting warm and keeping warm, dinner and supper were the most interesting things we had to think about. Our lives centered around warmth and food and the return of the men at nightfall.
Well, some things never change.
Tuesday, April 27, 2010
Snake plants and Mother-in-Law Tongues
Snake plant (Sansevieria trifasciata) is native to places like the Congo and Nigeria. It's supposedly one of the best houseplants for removing pollution from indoor air.
Monday, April 26, 2010
Spring picnic
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Amanda was telling me yesterday about the latest milestones:
Nova crawls everywhere-
Nova pulls herself up to standing every chance she gets-
Nova drinks from a sippy cup-
Nova says ma-ma and da-da-
Nova likes avocados and oranges-
Nova laughs at funny, rude noises (and lots of other things, too)
Nova steals the show wherever she goes!
Saturday, April 24, 2010
"Now that lilacs are in bloom..."
An old and beloved shrub on farms, ranches and in city gardens, lilacs are mentioned in many works of literature.
Here's the lilac stanza:
Now that lilacs are in bloom
She has a bowl of lilacs in her room
And twists one in her fingers while she talks.
'Ah, my friend, you do not know, you do not know
What life is, you who hold it in your hands';
(Slowly twisting the lilac stalks)
'You let it flow from you, you let it flow,
And youth is cruel, and has no remorse
And smiles at situations it cannot see.'
I smile, of course, And go on drinking tea.
from,
Portrait of a Lady
T.S. Eliot
Friday, April 23, 2010
New window blinds
So, you take it from there and start down the material list: wood, wood veneer, something called faux wood, and something called composite. The sales lady does not believe in cheap aluminum blinds. Oh yes, then you need to pick from dozens of colors. By this time your head is spinning, and the sales lady hasn't even taken out her calculator. By the time she leaves, you've looked at so many different things you can't remember what you ordered. You just hope for the best.
We've been watching the television series Madmen, so I must have been influenced by the old-fashioned wide Venetian blinds on those perfect 1960's sets. I finally went with smooth two inch horizontals in a cream color that matches the trim. Simple and nice!
Here's a view of blogger central with the new blinds. And when the afternoon sun blazes in, no more fumbling with fusty, dusty tab top drapes.
Thursday, April 22, 2010
Happy Birthday, April
Wednesday, April 21, 2010
April rain
The curled hosta leaves are beautiful when they first emerge, fresh and clean in the spring. Hostas are ornamental plants that die to the ground in the winter, then come back like a miracle. Most have flowers, although nothing to write home about; the attraction is the foliage. They look like something the slugs would enjoy chomping up, but I don't have that problem here.
It's raining this morning, and I'm looking out on a green jungle. The apple tree is blooming, and the roses have buds. The robin has been chirping since 4:15. A few days of warm sun, and the garden will go wild.
by Langston Hughes
Let the rain kiss you
Let the rain beat upon
your head with silver
liquid drops
Let the rain sing you a
lullaby
The rain makes still pools
on the sidewalk
The rain makes running pools in the gutter
The rain plays a little
sleep song on our roof at
night
And I love the rain.
Tuesday, April 20, 2010
A week of whale news
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Gray whales migrate through Puget Sound each spring, and some individuals are even recognized by name. Most are close to starvation when they get here, having spent 4 or 5 months in southern waters with nothing to eat. Passing through Puget Sound, they have to contend with heavy shipping and industrial waters. Not to mention, pants and bags.
Another unfortunate gray whale was in the news last week after being attacked by a pod of transient British Columbia orcas (killer whales) off Whidbey Island. It was witnessed and filmed by a boatload of shocked whale-watchers. This particular whale is a favorite known as "Patch," and his comings and goings in Puget Sound have been followed since 1991. The British Columbia orcas have a taste for mammals, and prey on the gray calves as they cruise north with their mothers, although attacks on adults are rare. Our Puget Sound resident orcas prefer to eat Chinook salmon, not mammals.
But as we know from other grisly news, killer whales are intelligent and unpredictable animals, and sometimes do bad things "just for fun." The B.C. transient orcas rammed poor "Patch" several times, and he rolled on his back in front of the tour boat to protect himself. It is unknown how badly he was hurt, but he was spotted later resting in shallow water, and seemed to be OK.
Monday, April 19, 2010
Beethoven and puppets
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In December 1808, Beethoven played the newly composed No. 4 and conduced an entire concert that included premiers of his Fifth and Sixth Symphonies, the Choral Fantasia, Op. 80 for solo piano and several other works. The Vienna hall was freezing, the orchestral was unrehearsed, the audience was baffled, and Beethoven was probably in a bad mood. The entire concert was described as a "famous disaster," and the 4th Piano Concerto wasn't played again in Beethoven's lifetime. We're talking about shivering through many hours of music. It's hard to imagine it, sitting in a comfortable concert hall on a warm spring afternoon in Seattle.
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It was a nice afternoon of music, then we went home and ate turkey enchiladas for dinner. And another weekend bites the dust...
Sunday, April 18, 2010
Tulipmania
For home gardeners, this seems wasteful, not to mention lots of work. But the problem with keeping spring bulbs in the ground is they need to die back naturally after bloom to replenish the bulb. This leaves an unsightly mess of yellow drooping leaves for several weeks, just when you want your garden looking spiffy for early summer.
I was reading in a magazine (Martha Stewart, again) that it's become trendy to naturalize tulips and place bulbs more-or-less randomly in perennial beds. Once the tulips fade, the other flowers take over while the tulip leaves have a chance to die back and regenerate.
When you've been doing something for years out of simple laziness, it's always nice to hear from Martha that you've been stylish all along. I haven't planted new tulips bulbs for a long time, but plenty still come back willy-nilly each April. They don't multiply in the ground, but the big yellows and reds are especially long-lived.
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Saturday, April 17, 2010
Friends are important
Here's a few pictures Amanda took this week of Nova and her baby friends. These little folks were all born within a few weeks of each other. Talk about lifelong friendships for babies and mommies!
Friday, April 16, 2010
And the livin' is easy...
We can't use the pastures in the winter, or they would be churned into a sea of mud. In the wet months, the horses are outside in gravel paddocks instead. But when the weather dries out and grass starts growing again, the pastures are "open" for summer enjoyment. For fairness sake, the horses rotate turns in the fields, so a few times a week they can eat grass and roll around on the warm ground.
Thursday, April 15, 2010
Malibu Potteries
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Many vintage California homes feature beautiful Malibu Pottery tiles. The May issue of Martha Stewart magazine has an article about the exquisite Adamson House in Malibu. What really caught my eye was this magnificent "carpet" made of 670 tiles, right down to the fringe. It was designed by Malibu Potteries for the house in 1929. A detail of this hall floor is featured on page 92, as well as pictures of other rooms all lavishly decorated with California tiles.
The tile factory in Malibu operated for only seven years (1926-1932) so as you can imagine, these vibrant and intricate tiles (made with superior clay) are treasured collectibles. Enough to get the Antiques Roadshow folks excited. They're featured extensively in Adamson House, which is considered "The Shrine" of California tiles. When the house was built, a single family owned all the land in sight: 13,000 acres of ranch land high above the ocean. No mansions, no roads, no tourists.
Now owed by the state of California, the house is a museum that showcases the tile and the region's history. I'd love to see it the next time we're in southern California. If you don't get Martha's magazine, the museum also has a virtual tour on their website:
http://www.adamsonhouse.org/Tour/tour.html
Wednesday, April 14, 2010
Baby plums
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I have eaten
The plums
That were in
The icebox
And which
You were probably
Saving for breakfast.
Forgive me
They were delicious
So sweet
And so cold.
William Carlos Williams
Tuesday, April 13, 2010
Steamed mussels
Monday, April 12, 2010
The Chinese Garden
The Seattle Chinese Garden is being designed by artisans from Seattle's sister city, Chongquing. It's a big, ambitious project moving forward in slow stages, and construction is just starting on the large pavilions. A group of 30 Chinese artists will be living and working on the site this spring.
The Chinese garden ideal is to provide its visitor with access to philosophical wisdom, spiritual insight, emotional balance and physical health.
Sunday, April 11, 2010
Martha Washington
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Shopping at Costco is like a competitive sport. I don't know why that is, because there is plenty for everyone. Something about that big parking lot and warehouse makes people barge around rudely, or maybe they just want to get in and out as fast as possible. Who can blame them? Anyway, speaking of competitive, I was one of the first in the door at 9:30, and snatched up a flat of Martha Washington geraniums before they were pawed over. I believe this one is called "Halo." Dark red flowers trimmed in silver; it should be pretty in clay pots around the mossy old fountain.
After I planted the kitchen window box with plain red geraniums, I hosed down the deck and it was dry with a few minutes. There's already lots of radiant energy from the sun, and despite the clouds and wind, a feeling that spring is winning out.
Saturday, April 10, 2010
So nice...
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