10/19/2024

The Week of New Stuff



Well, hello all you folks out there in the Sunday Salon, Foodies Read, and elsewhere in the cosmos!  It's been an interesting week!  Wanting to get over various skin issues, I got into a bit of fasting, beginning with  a few intermittent ones and then a 3 day water fast.  This book, Eat, Fast, Feast, was an excellent guide, and very helpful.  Skin things are a bit better and a few more fasts may even finish the job!

Then, there was gardening with a new and very fascinating (the history, uses and medical benefits of) plant, a vine called Sacha Inchi, aka Peruvian peanut.  It's going great guns, climbing on the front fence and fruiting already! With a most unusual shape, having 4-7 points.  The idea is to wait until it dries before harvesting.  Meanwhile, being a mite impatient, I ordered a bag of the nuts to try.  I mean you want to know what you're getting into, right?  Whether it's worth all the trouble.  I liked the (what can I say) nutty taste and thought they would be an excellent boost to my cooking and eating as they're a complete protein.  So, it's all good.  

Also currently in the garden, are abiu, grapefruit, guavas, passionfruit and lemons, various herbs, and an overload of shishito peppers.  I've pickled them, made a salsa, and stir fried them for multiple meals.  Now what?  A friend just told me he smoked a bunch of peppers and made a sauce.  Well, I could get a smoker, I suppose?  But nope, I found a great new recipe for salsa that will keep a long time, and picked a pound of peppers.   Also ongoing this weekend, drying mac nuts in the dehydrator.

Now to my intriguing kitchen counter creature.  Fermenting soybeans!  Bubbling away and overflowing onto the counter when I caught it, mopped up and put a high ended plate underneath.  Yes, and before you ask, not natto.  I'm hoping for something a bit less slimy and even tasty:).  Because we added salt, garlic, onion, oregano and cumin.  That's why.  The main question now is how long do I let it go?  Maybe it will tell me by letting up with all the fizzing. I'll keep you posted.

Then, there's always food!  Despite fasting, I do enjoy trying new things and of course, eating!  This meal branched out from a Yotam Ottolenghi recipe, to be found in his book Flavor, Miso Butter Onions (or Shallots).  Can one improve upon Yotam?  Perhaps, when adding a nice piece of steak, black ramen, and a beet salad on the side.  Especially as it started out delicious!  With that fabulous sauce on things.  

Another great meal began with my bringing home a spaghetti squash and deciding not to do the usual red sauce thing.  Instead, I followed the excellent directions to first cut the squash crosswise instead of lengthwise, for actually the longest strands, as they grow in a spiral around the seedy core.  This from a recipe in another favorite cookbook, Milk Street Vegetables, by Christopher Kimball.  Spaghetti Squash with Lemon, Cream and Herbs.  Wow! Another wonderful sauce!  Beautifully added to (if I do say so) by pieces of smoked sashimi salmon. 

Currently reading Table for Two, by Amor Towles.  A writer I have enjoyed in the past.  He wrote A Gentleman in Moscow and Rules of Civility.  And The President's Hat, byAntoine Laurain.

That's it for today, and my week, or all I have time for.  I'm linked with Sunday Salon, hosted by Deb Nance of Readerbuzz and the Foodies Read Challenge for October, hosted by Heather.


13 comments:

Mae Travels said...

Ottolenghi is definitely a great recipe creator!

thathappyreader said...

What a lovely harvest of beautiful vegetables! I have tried intermittent fasting but I can only do it short term. I hope your skin condition heals itself soon! Have a great weekend.

Claudia said...

He is Mae, but adding to and improvising with recipes is just what I do. Can't help it!

Deb Nance at Readerbuzz said...

I have been curious about Table for Two. I have enjoyed everything I've read by this author so far.

Fasting always sounds so...well, dramatic, I guess. Not sure if I could do a three day water fast---I admire you for doing so!

Claudia said...

I’m just hoping it helps to get rid of the rashes!

Carla said...

I am just not into Ottolenghi. All his recipes are past me. I'm more of a Mark Bittman style cook. I've tried fasting and technically I do fast because I go 12-14 hours between dinner and breakfast but I don't think of it too much. The benefits of fasting are great. I hope it continues to help with your skin.

A Day in the Life on the Farm said...

I have never tried fasting except for during Lent and then it is only for a few hours. I'm hypoglycemic so not sure it would be a good idea for me. I'll have to look into it.

Harvee said...

Wish I lived someplace warmer so I could plant a garden like yours! Keep enjoying it.

Cindy said...

Your food looks great! Enjoy your weekend!

Yvonne said...

Now I'm hungry :) The food and your books look good. Hope you have a great week!

Joy Weese Moll said...

You have a lot of interesting experiments going on in your garden and kitchen. Fun!

Emma at Words And Peace / France Book Tours said...

Intermittent fasting is so fascinating!
Oh nice to see Laurain on this post! I have read and loved so many of his books!

gluten Free A_Z Blog said...

It's nice to find an alternate to red sauce. The Spaghetti Squash with Lemon, Cream and Herbs sounds wonderful.