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this time I mean it

spinach salad

To write this post, I was trying to think back to a month ago, when we ate this salad, on a night when I’m almost sure there was still snow on the ground. I guess there must have been, since that was the night my friend Jackie came over for dinner, and she had to grip the stair railings to keep from falling on the ice on her way inside.

But listen to this: Tonight? I drove home with the windows down, the sun beating on me, and I actually was sweating, if you can believe it. All around me, the grass outside is totally green, there are flowers budding that look like lumps of cotton, and the skies are the perfect shade of blue.

I know I’ve said this before, but it is really spring here. Finally. And honestly, I’ve almost forgotten winter.

I think there’s a lot of value in forgetting sometimes. I mean, it’s not good to forget the story your friend told you yesterday at lunch, but it’s pretty great if you can forget the obnoxious thing that guy said to you at work. And this time of year, I am all for forgetting: forgetting the ice, the snow, the cold, the commutes. Forgetting that last time I posted about the weather getting better, it went and snowed.

spinach salad

And now that is spring and all, let’s start eating like it.

Hannah of Honey & Jam gets credit for sending me the link to this one, originally posted at This is Reverb (and tip: she also made her own deconstructed version, viewable here).

At its heart, this is a pretty basic salad: just some spinach tossed with sliced apples and oranges, maybe also pecans if you’re like me. But it’s the dressing that makes things so good: a combination of olive oil, honey, balsamic vinegar, pepper and Parmesan, this topping is sweet and tangy, absolutely perfect as it blends with the acid of the fruits and the texture of the spinach.

I say, this weekend, if you’re living anywhere like Chicago, where Saturday temperatures should be in the 70s (!), put on your tank top and jeans, sit outside in the midst of it all, and eat this salad. It’s the kind of thing likely to make you forget about anything that isn’t, well, you know, fresh and fragrant, perfectly green and filled with sunshine.



One Week! Next week, this time, by the way, I’ll be the girl in Washington, D.C., doing normal everyday things like taking private tours of the Capitol Building. I know there are a lot of you D.C. foodies out there, and I’ll be there a couple days, so give me your tips! (Please?)

Spinach Salad, with fruit and homemade dressing
Adapted from This is Reverb, via Honey & Jam

You’ll notice some of these instructions are pretty vague—I’m sorry about that. Because this salad is so easy, though, you can feel free to eyeball a lot of it with how much you want or don’t want. The originally recipe calls for goat cheese, so by all means, try that. I also think a variety of different nuts and/or fruits could work here.

Ingredients:
Fresh Spinach (amount is up to you – I used enough to fill the bowl)
1 Apple
1 Orange
Some Pecans

For the dressing:
2 Tablespoons Olive Oil
1 Tablespoon Balsamic Vinegar
1 teaspoon Honey
Some Parmesan Cheese
Dashes of Salt and Pepper

Directions:
Wash and drain spinach and place it in the salad bowl. Slice the apple into thin slices; peel the orange and slice it into segments, removing the pith. Add these fruits to the spinach, along with as many pecans as you’d like.

In a small bowl, combine all the ingredients for the dressing and whisk thoroughly. Pour on top of the salad and enjoy.

just like I promised

granola on spoon

Gosh, I like you guys.

I mean, really. I bring you a pathetic story about destroying four artichokes, and you respond with encouragement and advice and funny memories of dropped cupcakes and melted plastic lids on macaroni and cheese. You sure know how to make a girl feel better. I could hug you—each and every one.

But since we are Internet friends and all, and since you probably can’t be heading out to Chicago for some kind of cooking support group, I guess I’ll just do the next best thing—better, in fact:

This granola recipe is something special, really special, just like I promised and just like you ought to receive. This is the granola you will mix together in minutes, simply stirring and spreading and putting in the oven. And when it’s cooled and fully mixed, you will reach for handful after delicious handful, wondering where it’s been all your life.

I do not exaggerate.

granola with a wooden spoon

It is the creation of Kristin, author of beautiful TheKitchenSinkRecipes.com, and originally calls for flax seed and sesame or pumpkin seeds, but I didn’t have those things, so I omitted them. What I love about this granola (O.K., one of the things I love about this granola) is that it’s the best kind of versatile. Don’t like pistachios? Use something different. Can’t imagine granola without raisins? Make them one of the dried fruit additions.

This is your granola, so you can tweak it.

And it’s good. Really good. Like, the-best-kind-I’ve-eaten good.

dried fruit in pyrex

After I made this last Saturday, I brought a little Tupperware container over to my friend’s house, where we were going to watch a movie and eat healthy things like turkey burgers and fresh fruit, and the four of us, standing around the island talking, could not stop reaching for this stuff, with at least one person repeating, No, seriously, how is this so good?

With the crunchy texture of baked oats, this granola is sweet, with additions like maple syrup and brown sugar and honey; yet it’s also salty, lightly kissed with sea salt and filled with nuts. You could say I’m prejudiced, as the girl who does anything to put salty and sweet flavors together, having gone as far as sandwiching chocolate between Saltines, but the blend of these tastes is perfection, never allowing your mouth to get bored.

granola and fruit

And over the course of the week since making this batch, I’ve eaten it by itself, in bowls of milk for breakfast, in big handfuls at my work desk where I’ve been known to drop crumbs on my shirt and the desk around me. There’s a very real danger that I won’t stop eating this granola, not soon, not ever.

granola

But actually, that’s not a danger at all.





Homemade Granola
Adapted from The Kitchen Sink Recipes

Ingredients:
3 1/2 cups old-fashioned oats
1/2 cup coconut flakes, unsweeteend
1/2 cup toasted mixed nuts (I used shelled pistachios and slivered almonds here)
2 teaspoons cinnamon
1 teaspoon sea salt
1/4 cup brown sugar
1/4 cup canola oil
2 tablespoons honey
1 tablespoon pure maple syrup
2 teaspoons pure vanilla extract
2 cups mixed dried fruit (I used chopped dried apricots and dried cranberries)

Directions:
Preheat the oven to 375. Line a rimmed baking sheet with aluminum foil.

In a large bowl, stir all the ingredients but the dried fruit together.

Spread the mixture on the prepared baking sheet, smoothing it out into an even layer. Bake for 20 to 30 minutes, depending on how dark and golden you want it, stirring every 10 minutes.

Remove the granola from the oven and and cool completely, in its pan, on a wire wrack. Once it’s cool, mix in the dried fruit.

because it’s April

honey cinnamon ice cream

As I sit at my computer tonight, I hear the rain outside, hitting the window, sloshing on pavement as cars drive by. It smells fresh, earthy, like your hands deep in soil when you’re working in the garden, yet clean, like the glassy drops of dew on grass in the morning. It reminds me this is the time of year when things green, when they begin to grow. All the storms and pounding rain bring us tulips and lilies, leaves on trees, buds on branches.

And it’s funny how, a few months ago, when I scraped ice off my car and skidded down the expressway, I didn’t believe this time would come again. At its darkest, winter was unending, hopeless—in that way, a little like life, sometimes.

Maybe it’s because I’ve been thinking about dreams lately—the big ones we make as children, unashamedly, be they astronaut or firefighter or surgeon. Everything’s sunshine and rainstorms and possibility, then. But as we get older and things seem more difficult, it becomes easier to lose yourself to discouragement, to long, cold afternoons under blankets in bed, metaphorically or not.

Come spring, I think of the cycles of life, the beginning and ending and beginning again. And I see a precious truth that no matter how bad things can seem, they can change.

ice cream on a spoon

I recently received a copy of Falling Cloudberries: A World of Family Recipes, written by Tessa Kiros. It’s a thick, hardcover cookbook filled with memories from the author’s heritage, which includes a Finnish mother, a Greek-Cypriot father and residences that changed between London, Africa, Athens and Mexico. My immediate reaction, opening it, was a happy sigh—kind of like my response to warm sunshine on my drive home—as it could, quite possibly, be the most beautiful cookbook I have ever seen.

Photography was done by Manos Chatzikonstantis, and it is like all the best of Tastespotting and Foodgawker and your favorite food magazine rolled into one, filled with full-page color photographs that will have you running to the kitchen.

ice cream

To begin, I chose the recipe for milk, honey and cinnamon ice cream. It seemed a perfect way to celebrate spring and, in a less obvious way, the future. While my experience with the author’s cardamom buns would prove to be incredibly frustrating (possibly due to my converting measurements from fresh yeast to active dry), the ice cream was exactly the opposite.

I tasted the mixture before freezing it, when the warming smells of honey and cinnamon proved too hard to resist, and I immediately thought of a Greek dessert. You know the kind? Layers of phyllo dough with honey and cinnamon and whipped cream? Like baklava, but lighter. Once it hardened, the ice cream scooped out nicely, never quite freezing into a total solid, rich with the taste of honey.

I’ve been to Greece once, on a quick trip during my senior year of college, where I ate savory chicken souvlaki and walked through ancient ruins and saw preparations for the Olympics being built. If you’d asked me this last December if I’ll ever return, I’d have said, No, probably not, right before I went to watch a D.V.D. and drink some tea. But ask me now—or about anything, for that matter—and I’m open-minded. Anything can happen, I remember. I just have to look outside and see the ground come alive again, and I know.




Milk, Honey and Cinnamon Ice Cream
Adapted from Falling Cloudberries: A World of Family Recipes

There’s no need to worry if you don’t own an ice cream machine; this recipe gives you guidelines for making it completely by hand or with a hand mixer. There may be a few more steps involved as far as the pulling out of the freezer and whisking without a machine, but overall, it’s a snap.

Ingredients:
2 3/4 cups milk
1 1/2 cups heavy whipping cream
1 level teaspoon ground cinnamon
3/4 cup honey

Directions:
Heat the milk, cream and cinnamon in a pan over low heat, mingling the flavors. Add the honey and increase the heat until the mixture is just coming to a boil; remove from heat and cool. Transfer to a freezer-proof bowl with a lid, cover and put in the freezer.

After an hour, remove the bowl from the freezer, give an energetic whisk with a whisk or an electric mixer, and return to the freezer. Whisk again after another couple of hours. When it is nearly firm, give one last whisk,, transfer to a suitable freezing container with a lid, and let it set in the freezer until it is firm (depending on the type of honey you use, your ice cream may not freeze completely solid).

Alternatively, pour the mixture into your ice cream machine and freeze, following the manufacturer’s instructions.