Project 365 week 30 complete. View original photos at winosandfoodies project 365
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Project 365 week 30 complete. View original photos at winosandfoodies project 365
July 30, 2010 in Project 365 | Permalink | Comments (2) | TrackBack (0)
A few hearts from Melbourne
...and from the South Bank markets
Beautiful glass from the lovely lady at see glass. Sadly, a bad photo of her beautiful heart shaped glass dish.
Cards with hearts....however this vendor told me off for taking photos of his cards.
July 18, 2010 in Hearts | Permalink | Comments (4) | TrackBack (0)
Unfortunately the blogger assigned to Stage 13 has been unable to complete his post. Rather than not post anything from the region I've put together a quick background to the area. I did not have time to make a dish so at the end of the post you will find a link to a recipe.
Thank you to Tammi at Tammi Tasting Terroir for Stage 12. Stage 13 begins in the mountains at the city of Rodez. I have never visited Rodez but after reading about the open-air market in front of the cathedral , I would certainly add it to my itinerary if I was in the region. Picture wonderful plump olives, and spices in all the colors of the rainbow.
The 13th stage runs 196km from Rodez to Revel, an arrondissement of Toulouse in the department of the Haute Garonne. Revel's market is even more well known.
'Revel, with its octagonal shape and original grid street pattern, is nearly unique in France as a perfect example of a bastide. (Bastides were fortified towns constructed in the south-west of France during the 100 Years' War). At the heart of the town the market square is bordered by medieval houses with galleries under the first floors. In the centre of the square a large tiled roof supported by a forest of ancient oak pillars and beams is topped by a belfry, once a watchtower. Saturday morning market, held under the massive central roof and all around the square, brings together people from Revel and from the surrounding villages and countryside.
Revel Market is classified as one of the 100 most beautiful markets in France. Open on Saturday mornings, local products sold, include farm bredveal, duck, charcuterie, cassoulet, cheeses.
Many producers in the region have guided tours and tastings - you can taste everything from honey to cheese to charcuterie.
Photo from La Ferme de Cabriole
Get 27, a mint liqueur has been manufactured in the town since the 18th century.
Cassoulet is a traditional dish of the region but as that has been covered already I'll direct you to a recipe for another dish you will find on the menu in the Haute Garonne - Duck Gizzard Salad.
Visit Lamb's Ears and Honey for Stage 14.
July 17, 2010 in Tour de France | Permalink | Comments (6) | TrackBack (0)
COOKIE heART
I have a lot happening around me at the moment. Moving house.... actually moving cities. We are headed to Brisbane and hopefully, by the park at New Farm.
Three family birthdays this week, and other things that will keep me from posting until the end of the month.
Sally at Bewitching Kitchen has kindly agreed to take on the final Gastronomic Tour de France final stage post on 25th July.
July 14, 2010 in Hearts | Permalink | Comments (11) | TrackBack (0)
Over the years I made plenty of novelty cakes for the boys birthdays, and sometimes for their friends. I have made them all - planes, boats, trains...even a hot hair balloon for one party.
If Kids Cakes from the Whimsical Bakehouse had arrived in my post box when my boys were tiny, I just know they would have wanted me to make the 3 D Fishbowl. Just one of some great ideas from Liv Hansen and Kaye Hansen, the mother daughter team behind the Whimsical Bakehouse books.
This particular book received mixed reviews on Amazon, one that it repeated much from their previous book. It was all new to me as it is the first of their books I've come across. The majority of my readers are from North America, so the fact metric measurements are not included won't bother them. Personally I'd like to see all recipes, in all cook books, in all measurements.
Not having any little kids around I got together with my son's fiancee (who also has no little ones around) and together we made the Magic wands, which she has shared with her work mates.
First make a sugar cookie dough
Roll out rested and chilled dough to 1/4 inch (61/2 mm) thickness. Cut star shapes with a cookie cutter.
Carefully place a skewer into star
Bake cookies and cool them to room temperature.
Prepare the royal icing
Cover cookie with a layer of royal icing and dip cookies into sanding sugar or other candy decorations. Keep the bowls of icing mixture covered with a damp cloth or plastic wrap to stop it hardening while not being used. Finish cookies by piping patterns around edges with royal icing. Tie a ribbon around skewer below the star.
.....they look just as pretty without the extra piping
DISCLAIMER: I was offered this book to review from the publisher.
July 06, 2010 in Food and Drink, Recipes | Permalink | Comments (21) | TrackBack (0)
Follow our gastronomic Tour de France. A complete list of participants and the tour stages can be found at my original post on 03 July.
Read the food traditions of The Netherlands, Belgium and the regions of France as the riders pass through them.
July 06, 2010 in Tour de France | Permalink | Comments (7) | TrackBack (0)
Rotterdam is a city and municipality in the Dutch province of South Holland. With a population of just over 603,000 it is the second largest municipality in The Netherlands.
The ASO, organizer of the Tour de France, chose Rotterdam because, in addition to it being another big city, like London, to showcase the use of bikes for urban transportation, it provides a location well positioned considering the rest of the 2010 route.
The start in Rotterdam will be the fifth Tour de France start in the Netherlands.
I have never been to the Netherlands and have no real knowledge of Dutch food. Oliebollen, a deep fried pastry dusted with powdered sugar, is my only experience of Dutch food.
So I went straight to the source - Mickey, a lovely Dutch woman I'd met through the forums at Chocolate and Zucchini. Mickey kindly shared her love of Dutch food with me.
Many of the Dutch food traditions come from the availability of the food, historically. Much of Holland is farmland so there are a lot of potato and onion dishes. A regular normal every day Dutch household dinner would be : potatoes (boiled), meat and (boiled)veg. Very Dutch would be cauliflower with a white sauce with nutmeg.
A popular dinner dish is ertwensoep, also called snert. It is usually served in winter, either as an appetiser or a main meal. Ertwensoep has a thick consistency and often includes pieces of pork and smoked sausage, and is almost a stew rather than a soup.
Stamppot a mixture of potato and vegetables boiled and mashed together is a traditional winter meal. Often crispy lardons/bacon/pancetta is added. It is served with either a good smoked sausage or stewed meat called draadjesvlees.
Popular stamppot combinations
Some stamppotten have funny names like
Herring (haring in dutch). Hollandse nieuwe, the fresh new herring of the season, is served with a glass of Korenwijn, a special Dutch drink, a type of Dutch gin.
Gibbing, the process of preparing soused (salted) herring, was developed by the Dutch in the Middle Ages. The soused herring known in the Netherlands as, maatjesharing, is an especially mild salt herring made from young immature herrings. The herrings are ripened for a couple of days in oak barrels in a salt brine.
We are all familiar with the well known Dutch cheeses Gouda and Edam. Gouda cheese is named after the city of Gouda in the South Holland region, but as the name is not protected, gouda cheese can come from anywhere in the world.
The term 'Noord-Hollandse Gouda' is registered in the EU as a protected geographical status. Gouda is the TYPE of cheese , and ' noordhollands' is the protected name for cheese made in the north-holland area according to certain standards. The taste of this cheese differs from regular gouda (again, the type) it's more full, creamy and slightly sweeter.
Besides cheeses, Gouda is famous for its candles and 'stroopwafels' (syrup waffles).
Other well known cheeses are from the regions
Dutch apple pie Many countries have their own special apple pie. The Dutch have been making their own special version of the apple pie for centuries. A Dutch painting dated 1626, depicts the pie as having a diamond pattern made with strips of dough. Try as I may, even asking my expert friends Janet and Megan I cannot trace the actual painting.
A popular Dutch dessert is a Griesmeel pudding made from semolina and served with a sauce made from berries.
Boerenjongens (meaning farmerboys), raisins in brandy, and boerenmeisies (meaning farmergirls), apricots in brandy, are a traditional Dutch treat. They can be eaten as a sweet or used as a topping.
One other very Dutch treat is 'poffertjes'. These are small fluffy pancakes (size of a large coin, or a small blini), freshly baked in a poffertjespan and served with lots of butter and icing sugar.
Other Dutch snack foods are bitterballen and kroketten. Both are a savoury snack made from meat.
The Dutch invented the process known as Dutch Process chocolate, where chocolate has been treated with an alkalizing agent. It forms the basis for much of modern chocolate and is used in ice cream, baking and hot cocoa. Earlier this year David Lebovitz posted the differences between Dutch process and natural cocoa powder.
Despite its name, Hollandaise Sauce, a key ingredient in Eggs Benedict, is not a Dutch creation. There are several explanations to its name. One, it is said to be named from a sauce which was like a Dutch Sauce made for the state visit to France of the King of the Netherlands. Alternatively it earned the name because it contained fine butter and good eggs which Holland was known for producing.
I asked Mickey if the Dutch shared any foods with bordering countries. She mentioned several food shared with Belgium - Brussels chicory, Brussels sprouts, eels (although the Dutch prefer it smoked),white asparagus (served with boiled potato, boiled egg, good ham and melted butter) and French Fries.
Except for Indonesian foods, traditional Dutch foods have not been influenced by immigration. It is normal in Dutch families to make a large pan of nasi or bami once a week. Chinese food in restaurants is often more Indonesian than Chinese. Most cafes and bistros will have sateh on the menu. In the sixties Italian and pasta dishes began to appear.
The Dutch had colonies in the Caribbean as well: the Dutch Antilles and Aruba, and Surinam. Because many people from there moved to Holland, there are some of their influences in Dutch food also. Surinam takeaways are a regular sight, mainly in the bigger cities
For more information on Dutch food, sorry only in Dutch, go to http://www.vandeboer.nl/
I could not find any food traditional to Rotterdam, so I have a Pea soup recipe for you. Mickey's description is better than anything I could offer. "a winter tradition, but also a feeling of those nostalgic, cold winters when one can go ice skating. It's not just a soup, its a meal, its a feeling. It makes me feel good and connected to all the grandmothers who know how to cook, if I make a large pan of pea soup".
ERTWENSOEP Traditional Dutch Split Pea Soup (Visit the About.com sight for recipe)
* Mickey says it isn't necessary to puree the soup, the peas will fall apart and thicken the soup all by themselves! Stirring is enough. The soup profits from long simmering and is definitely much better the day after you made it!
The herb 'celery', which in Holland you can buy in bunches at the supermarket, is important in the soup, and is added extra next to the celery stalks and celariac.
Please visit My Kitchen Treasures tomorrow for Stage 2
July 04, 2010 in Tour de France | Permalink | Comments (30) | TrackBack (0)
In 2004 I watched as Lance Armstrong won his 6th consecutive Tour de France. I knew nothing about the race, apart from his involvement. Six years later, I'm almost an expert on the pelaton. For three weeks in July my conversation is all about stage leaders, overall leaders, breakaways, king of the mountain, sprints, time trials.
LiveSTRONG With A Taste Of Yellow was born from the Tour de France.
For the next 3 weeks a group of food bloggers will bring you the food traditions and recipes from the stages of the 2010 Tour de France. Recipes to represent each region the 2010 Tour de France will pass through.
Below you will find a link to all the blogs and the days on which they will post their recipe.
Running from Saturday July 3rd to Sunday July 25th 2010, the 97th Tour de France is made up of 1 prologue and 20 stages and will cover a total distance of 3,600 kilometres. It includes 9 flat stages, 6 mountain stages and 3 summit finishes, 4 medium mountain stages, and 1 individual time-trial stage (51 km).
The tour begins in the Dutch city Rotterdam, travels through Belgium and into France.
Stage 1 04 July Rotterdam - Bruxelles
Barbara at winos and foodies
Stage 2 o5 July Bruxelles - Spa
Finla at My Kitchen Treasures
Stage
3 06 July Wanze - Arenberg Porte du Hainaut
Krista at Rambling Tart
Stage 4 07 July Cambrai - Reims
Liz at Strayed Table
Stage
5 08 July Epernay - Montargis
Jeanne at World On A Plate
Stage 6 09 July Montargis - Geuegnon
Amanda at Eye Candy Carousel
Stage 7 10 July Tournus - Station des Rousses
Eliza at Gastronomy Gal
Stage
8 11 July Station des Rousses - Morzine Avoriaz
Reena at Coconut Raita
Stage 9 13 July Morzine-Avoriaz - Saint Jean de Maurienne
Alison at Sushi day on her other blog Fridgg
Stage 10 14 July Chambery - Gap
Chris at Mele Cotte
Stage 11 15 July Sisteron - Bourg les Valence
Tami at Running With Tweezers
Stage
12 16 July Borg de Peage - Mende
Tammi at Tammi Tasting Terroir
Stage 13 17 July Rodez - Revel
Barbara at winosandfoodies
Stage
14 18 July Revel - Ax 3 Domaines
Amanda at Lambs Ears and Honey
Stage 15 19 July Pamiers - Bagneres de Luchon
Allison at Pease Pudding
Stage 16 20 July Bagneres de Luchon - Pau
Molly at Seasonal Seattle
Stage 17 22 July Pau - Col du Tourmelet
Erin at Endive Chronicles
Stage
18 23 July Salies de Bearn - Bordeaux
Gilli at So So Simple
Stage 19 24 July Bordeaux - Pauillac
Stephanie at Bite Style
Stage 20 25 July Longjumeau - Paris Champs-Elysees
Sally at Bewitching Kitchen
July 03, 2010 in Tour de France | Permalink | Comments (29) | TrackBack (0)
July 03, 2010 in Hearts | Permalink | Comments (3) | TrackBack (0)
Half way - Project 365 week 26 completed. View original photos at winosandfoodies project 365.
I'd like to give a shout out to Eat Below the Line Cooking Challenge. I am unable to participate this time, but please support those who will post there live on $2 a day experience.
July 02, 2010 in Project 365 | Permalink | Comments (1) | TrackBack (0)