Monthly Archives: October 2010

Homemade food: salmon, banana-squash loaf, dinosaur cookies and chicken soup & stock

I’ve had an extremely busy Sunday last weekend cooking and baking up a deli­cious homemade storm.  Since coming back to Canada I have felt the need and want to create won­der­ful things for Chris and I to eat. The worlds cuisine has inspired and reminded me about how import­ant food is. Before we left too many dinners simply con­sisted of broc­coli, pota­toes and a pork chop. You can imagine how unin­spir­ing that gets after a few months.  The fol­low­ing post is mostly about what I managed to do one Sunday after­noon and evening, except for the cre­ation of the Sockeye Salmon.

If you like food, you might want to check­out some of our posts about food in MoroccoIran, CambodiaTurkey,  Turkish break­fastsTurkish food at Dilek National Park,  Thailand cuisine and won­der­ful Italian cooking.

Chris is pretty excited to eat the Sockeye Salmon cooked on a Cedar plank.

Chris pre­pares the Salmon by cutting off the head, tail and fins.

He ensures the insides are clean and gives the entire fish a wash.

I just like how the water looks in this photo, espe­cially with random fish parts.

For the past two hours, the cedar plank has been soaking in water. Before remov­ing it from the water Chris stuffs the Salmon with fresh lemon slices and fresh dill. He also seasons it with some freshly ground pepper and Kosher salt.

The BBQ is hot and ready. The salmon is care­fully placed on its cedar plank and cooked to perfection.

The salmon was com­pli­men­ted nicely with a salad: cut olives, blue cheese, red pepper, cucum­ber, green onions and lettuce.

The final result before the dinner party devoured the entire deli­cious creature. Even Zappa, the cat, enjoyed a nibble.

The next morning, I tossed some flour, yeast, sugar, butter and sliced walnuts into the bread maker for a fresh loaf of bread. I then used the bread to serve Chris and I homemade cinnamon-nutmeg French Toast topped with sliced bananas, icing sugar and Maple syrup.

While waiting the 2.5 hours for my bread to bake, I made short­bread cookies with some dino­saur cookie cutters I bought at the Buck-or-Two at the Grande Prairie Mall. I didn’t have any vanilla extract in the house, so I used the equi­val­ent amount of Maple syrup instead. I also didn’t have any corn­starch. To replace this I used flour, doub­ling the amount of corn­starch it asked for. The cookies turned out amazing. We enjoyed them at my office Monday morning and at our Halloween party on Friday, October 29th.

For an inter­lude to my baking, I con­tin­ued to paint designs on the paper­mache water jug I have to make for my belly dancing class. We are doing an Egyptian style of belly dance where we are sup­posed to be peas­ants with water jugs. I won’t admit how many hours this jug and the sewing of the dress took me. It’s ridicu­lous! The class seems more inter­ested in cos­tumes, dressing-up and per­form­ances than actu­ally learn­ing how to dance! Ha,ha. Nonetheless, I have a lot of fun at it. It’s a social exper­i­ence more than any­thing. Thanks to my belly dance class I’ve actu­ally met a couple other ladies in town and atten­ded a belly dance work­shop two week­ends ago with my friend Marcia who’s in the weekly class with me.

Finally, I got the inspir­a­tion to make homemade chicken stock and soup. We had chicken bones from lunch and a frozen carcass from a few days before. I tossed them in a pot with water, 1 coursely chopped onion, 3 chopped carrots, 1 box of chicken stock, salt, pepper, thyme and oregano and let it simmer for about 3.5 hours.

While waiting for the soup to simmer, I cut up the veget­ables I was going to use for the soup itself. We bought the carrots and pota­toes from the Hutterites at the Grande Prairie Farmer’s Market.

Everything chopped up and ready to go.

The homemade chicken stock, soup and freshly baked homemade bread, just before I dove into it.

I ended the night by making a banana-squash loaf. I had cooked the squash the night before, so it only took 15-minutes to whip it together with a banana, flour, an egg, sugar, vanilla extract and baking soda before throw­ing it into the oven to bake for 1-hour. Um. Yummy!

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Lost in Translation

Iran: This is one of the murals painted (and repainted, again and again) on the old American Embassy in Tehran. The Embassy now houses some of the young hard­line right-wing organ­iz­a­tions. About 95% of the Iranians we met are out­wardly embar­rassed by sen­ti­ments like this one. We even had people on the street whisper things to us like: “Ahmadinejad: terrorist!”

Italy: A “cre­at­ively” named energy drink.

Cambodia: We chuckle because it’s so hor­rible. It’s a way to deal with a place that requires signs like this one. There were actu­ally bones that are eroding out of the ground here; just like we are used to at dino­saur bone beds. Only this time, they’re human bones.

Iran: Eff-Eh-Gee is the acronym for an auto­parts company. No further explan­a­tion needed.

Italy: This one makes me go “aaaah­h­hhh.” A Syrah wine named after both my mom (Donna) and my wife (Laura). Of course we had to buy a bottle. It wasn’t too bad!

Thailand: We’ve shown this one before. We were dis­ap­poin­ted by the overall lack of Engrish in SE Asia. Guess we’ll have to go to Japan next.

London: The Beauchamp. Hmmm. Nice ring to that.

Morocco: Maybe some of the French speak­ers can fill us in on this one. It just seemed so literal...

London: “Yup, she’s one old broad.” Named after the Queen perhaps? Uh, oh, now I’m going to have the mon­arch­ists after me.

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CONTEST: Where in the World is the Lovely Lady Laura?

#1 — Guess the coun­tries and win a prize! Post your guesses in the com­ments and we’ll ship a souvenir to the winner.

I have been spend­ing the past three weeks working my butt off on my new Grande Prairie busi­ness endeav­ours. On the photo side of this work, this has meant pouring over thou­sands of images I’ve taken in the last five years to compile as com­pre­hens­ive a photo port­fo­lio as pos­sible. This has been fun, at times, but it’s also made my eyes cross a little bit too. Phew. It’s all organ­ized now though, and you can see my brand spank­ing new pho­to­graphy website here.

As part of this, of course, I went through our travel photos, and this made it pain­fully clear to me just how much blog­ging we still have to do to share our full trip. As a couple trav­el­ling together we spent a LOT of time together, and of course, snapped a lot of pic­tures of each other. So, post-trip blog number 1 (for me at least) will be my favour­ites of the shots I got of my lovely wife from our jaunt around the globe. These sev­en­teen images are from eight dif­fer­ent coun­tries. If you think you can name all eight, let us know in the com­ments. Whoever gets the closest to all sev­en­teen correct answers will get a special souvenir from our trip!

(And yes, most of these have already been pub­lished on our blog, so you can go back and cheat if you want, but some others are brand new.)

Do your best!

Cheers,
Chris

#2 — Where’s Laura? She doesn’t even know...

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#17 — This is one of my favour­ite shots from the whole trip, by the way.

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