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Archive for the ‘Food + Recipes’ Category

30 Quotes on Food

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Cooking is like love. It should be entered into with abandon or not at all. -Harriet van Horne

Via.

Written by Anna Brones

February 9, 2012 at 12:48

When Food Equals Love

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There’s internet dating for foodies now. Clearly.

Ultimately, food can be sexy, but dating the foodie crowd? You can only take so many discussions about the merits of sparkling water and urban wineries. As Felicity Cloake of The Guardian put it, “does a foodie really need another foodie to be happy?”

I am not so sure.

George Bernard Shaw once said, “There is no love sincerer than the love of food.” If there are two of you with a love for food, there may not be so much room for the actual love part. And by that same token, if you’re in the business of dating, and you’re schmoozing foodies, you better know what you’re getting yourself into.

Via.

Written by Anna Brones

January 23, 2012 at 15:01

Travel and Food Go Hand in Hand

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An exploration of my recent taco quest in Baja, where I was reminded that all it takes in life is good food, from good places with good people.

“…food in itself is a form of travel, letting us explore no matter if we’re in the country of the food’s origin or thousands of miles away.”

Via.

Written by Anna Brones

January 12, 2012 at 06:14

New York Times Love

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Made my week.

Full recipe here.

Written by Anna Brones

December 23, 2011 at 12:12

Glad Lucia!

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It’s Lucia Day in Sweden which means on the other side of the Atlantic it’s time for singing the Lucia song and baking saffron bread. And drinking glögg of course.

Saffransbröd – Saffron Bread adapted from Vår Kokbok

Almond paste

  • 1 cup blanched almonds
  • 1/3 cup sugar

Mix almonds and sugar in Cuisinart or blender until a chunky paste forms. Set aside.

Saffransbröd – Saffron Bread

  • 1/2 gram saffron
  • 75 grams butter
  • 1 1/2 cups milk
  • 3 teaspoons yeast
  • 3/4 teaspoon salt
  • 3/4 cup sugar
  • 1/2 cup golden raisins
  • 3 cups flour
  • Currants for decoration

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Written by Anna Brones

December 13, 2011 at 09:30

The Foolproof Foodie Menu Guide

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A down and dirty guide for planning the menu at your upcoming restaurant. No really, you’ll want mason jars.

Aperitif

Bourbon, bitters and definitely something infused, preferably with bacon.

Champagne and elderflower.

Appetizers

Choose either a dynamic or intentionally plain name for this section of the menu. Anything in French will do, or simple phrases like “small plates.” Then make sure to have at least two of the following:

Wilted bitter greens.

Some type of carb with crust cut off.

A basket of bread studded with as much farmhouse cheddar or bacon as possible. Rosemary is so 2005.

Goat cheese. Preferably on beets, but other roots will do in a pinch. Think parsnips or rutabaga.

Braised greens on brioche. Both are on foodie menus everywhere, but in such an inventive pairing? Sure to get you a write up.

Full tongue in cheek guide here.

Written by Anna Brones

December 12, 2011 at 14:28

Pepparkakor: Swedish Gingerbread Cookies

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Love collaborating with Johanna of Kokblog on recipes. Her illustrations provide plenty of inspiration.

I grew up, every December, carefully rolling out gingerbread dough. In the early years, it was an awkward dance of pushing and pulling a rolling pin about half my size. Flour tended to go everywhere, and I would end up grinning with dough pieces stuck all over me. Yet my mother simply left me to it, and if I rolled too hard and the dough got stuck to the countertop, I was forced to find a solution myself.

Dust with flour, roll, pull up dough, flip over and repeat until just the right thickness to slice into with a Swedish cookie cutter. These cookie cutters were carefully kept in a large tin – which had at one point in the early 80s held Danish butter cookies certainly purchased at duty free on one of her connecting stops in Copenhagen. Hearts, pigs, Christmas gnomes, the classic gingerbread couple; I loved, and still love, sorting through and picking out my favorites. Feeling lazy? There were always theFranska Pepparkakor to make, a much simpler process of rolling out a log and slicing the cookies. In fact, if Swedish Jul for Dummies were a book, this recipe would be in it.

Full article + recipes here.

Written by Anna Brones

December 8, 2011 at 14:11

The Rise of Tea

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Tea: so hot right now.

The United States isn’t high on the list of global tea drinkers – a whole 0.2 kilograms per person annually, compared to Britain’s 2.3 – and the drink has nothing on its caffeinated counterpart. In 2010 the tea industry in the U.S. accounted for $7.7 billion, whereas coffee stood at $47.5 billion.

But just as you can buy 12 ounce bags of coffee beans for $60, premium cups of tea have been known to go for double digits, and specialty tea culture is on the rise. Just a couple of weeks ago, I found myself nursing aconcoction of Bourbon and Lapsang Souchong; I phoned my father immediately upon exiting the bar. If tea that tastes like a campfire is making its way into strong whiskey drinks, we should take notice.

Full article.

Written by Anna Brones

December 6, 2011 at 07:59

Posted in Food + Recipes, Portfolio

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Recipe: Buckwheat Pumpkin Oatmeal Cookies

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There’s something calming about the kitchen, and when I have an epically long to do list ,I’ve been known to bake things. It could be hereditary, having a mother that more times than I can count has gotten up at 5:30am to make pesto. “That’s normal,” as we both like to say.

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Written by Anna Brones

November 22, 2011 at 17:29

Forest’s Gold: Swedish Chanterelles

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Johanna from Kokblog‘s latest post on mushrooms left me reminiscent of this summer’s Swedish chanterelle excursion.

Saknar.

Written by Anna Brones

October 26, 2011 at 14:39