Saturday, August 2, 2025

cook: sauce tomat

I gave all the tomatoes in this bowl to my brother, intending to cook BLTs for the family after a funeral, but couldn't stay after all. However, we had 3 large tomatoes that were too ripe to give away and which I decided to cook into dinner. I chopped the tomatoes into small chunks and sauteed them with butter and olive oil and chopped scallions and garlic. Next I reserved the tomato chunks and then just boiled down its juices into a thin sauce tomat. 

In the meantime, I boiled thin spaghetti for 5 minutes, reserving some of the salted pasta water to thicken sauce just in case.
 
While the sauce was furiously boiling down, I added some heavy cream, lemon pepper chicken breast cut into chunks, and a slug of my Chardonnay to cook into a thicker sauce. Next went the thin spaghetti and lots of ribbons of fresh Italian basil and the slightly cooked tomato chunks. I tossed pasta, protein, tomatoes, and sauce for a constant 5 minutes to emulsify and coat the noodles. No pasta water needed as I let the pasta soak up the flavorful juices.
Served it up saucy and wet like we like it.
No leftovers as I like to eat the tomatoes as fresh as possible and can easily cook this dish again in under 30 minutes.

Wednesday, July 30, 2025

drink: limonada

I traveled recently to San Diego, and to the delight of my brother’s in-law family requested calamansi from their backyard shrub. I suppose if one had to describe the taste of its fruit, it would be kumquat and tangerine. Filipinos use kalamonding to sour sinigang, but in my childhood, my relatives squeezed it into limonada. And so I made a few pitchers of calamansi juice and simple syrup. My sister-in-law's parents filled a plastic bag from which I made 3 large pitchers of calamansi-ade and then split what was left with my sister. I figured my remains would make 1 more pitcher. 
This is a no-recipe recipe. Cut the tiny calamansi fruit in half and remove the seeds and then squeeze the juice from the halves into a mason jar. In another mason jar, I microwaved equal parts granulated sugar and water to make simple syrup. Pour some of each into a glass with ice and stir. I always add water to temper if the limonada is too sweet. Delicious.  
When the simple syrup cooled, I poured it into the mason jar of calamansi juice and refrigerated. Because I wanted even more limonada, I squeezed a few limes into the concoction to drink more juice over the next few days. I'm gonna miss San Diego because the Asian grocery stores are more numerous and have a larger variety of produce ingredients like sawtooth coriander and kaffir lime leaves. I brought back those makrut leaves with me to Northern California. Stay tuned.

Thursday, July 24, 2025

cook: laab

I spied lots of mint in the garden, had a cucumber, green beans, cilantro in the fridge and had stopped at grocery stores for ground pork and jasmine rice because I wanted to make laab, which from Thai restaurants I had ordered as larb and ate as a salad though it was never really served with lettuce and which I ate as an appetizer. Looking up the recipe, laab is simple enough. Just cook the meat in a a couple tablespoons of boiling water and then toss with sliced shallots and fresh herbs and toasted rice powder and serve with raw vegetables like cucumber and cabbage. I didn't have a large mortar and pestle, but I did have a big muddler and metal bowl.
My neighbor had come over and suggested tomatoes while I toasted the jasmine rice. She also drizzled lots of fish sauce and had me taste because she'd watch her Laotian friends cook the dish. It needed a lot more herbs and instead of squeezing the 4 limes juice, she had me cut them into quarters and bash all together with the muddler.
 
And I totally forgot about the green beans and cucumbers I had intended to serve the laab with, and instead ate with lettuce leaves and steamed jasmine rice.
I ate the laab like lettuce wraps, and the meal just brimmed with freshness of herbs and citrus. Larb will definitely be in the meal rotation.

Wednesday, July 23, 2025

cook: crab & surimi omelet

I made a crab/krab salad--a can of crab claw meat, surimi, Kewpie and Best Foods mayo, green onion, Old Bay seasoning. And so I've been eating crab, avocado, swiss melts on sourdough. But one morning, I decided to switch out the bread for eggs. And added lots of herbs. I beat two eggs with chopped parsley, chives, and a bit of marjoram. I also omitted the Swiss and sprinkled ample Parmesan instead.

No sour cream needed as the omelet was pretty rich already because of the mayo in the crab/krab salad and the avocado and cheese.
Darn tasty.

Tuesday, July 22, 2025

cook: white chicken chili

Some days ago, I soaked 2 cups of dried small white beans and then boiled them for 45 minutes, and so the cannellini needed to still boil longer to make a poultry white chili. I thought I was going to use ground turkey, but the mom of my sister-in-law can't eat turkey because of gout. I scoured the internet for recipes and found a white chicken chili in New York Times Cooking. My brother's grandkids have liked my red chili con carne, and so I thought they would also enjoy my white one too.                

And I've bought another Dutch oven. I dropped my 5-quart pot on my kitchen floor and cracked both the Dutch oven which flaked off a large shard of enamel and chipped a tile on the floor. I've been so loathe to buy a Staub or Le Creuset Dutch oven because my Costco set were fine without the high price tag, and would a more expensive pot been of that much better quality? And so my new pot is my favorite material of black cast iron with the enamel in the interior, and it's got 2 lids, one glass and one metal which can do double duty cooking as well as lower sides. However, it doesn't arrive for a couple months, and so I'll use my stainless steel pot in the meantime. 

I'm pretty sure I could cook this white chili recipe from memory. I cooked the ground chicken in two batches, one with the herbs of dried oregano, hot smoked paprika, cumin, cayenne, jalapeno, and cilantro and one with the corn and then put it all into the same pot with the beans and chicken broth to simmer with salt and pepper in between 
I also brought for the meal train, pickled jalapenos (already made a week ago) and pickled radish and red onion.
The relatives loved the white chili and asked for the recipe. One sister-in-law said she appreciated that the chili didn't give her gas and thought it was because I had soaked dried beans and boiled them.

Monday, July 21, 2025

clay: yellow glazes on red clay body

Clay Body: Red Velvet

Glazes: Coyote Parakeet Yellow

Method/Firing: Thrown/Cone 6


Saturday, July 12, 2025

clay: field school for throwing and handbuilding

I was perusing the store website of a t-shirt I liked. I'm in the habit when buying anything online of looking at the  "About Us" or "Who We Are" of a company because I like to know the provenance of my objects even if they're manufactured in China or to know which American city the designers are based. Here's their blurb (with my additions in parentheses):

A field school is the place where everything you have learned meets the messy world.

Fieldschool is about all the things in life you just have to get out and do. Like riding a bike (or paddling a canoe or throwing on a wheel), there comes a time when you have to start pedaling (or paddling or throwing) and see what happens. The learning is in the doing.


I am definitely doing and still always learning ceramics, and I've no idea how long I’ll continue outrigger canoe paddling. I've been in the pottery fieldschool for 20 years, and it's only in the last year that I've been learning to throw. I would have to say that learning to paddle better and throw a pot well were my summer 2025 goals. But even though I've been throwing small bowls at both College of San Mateo and Clay Life, I've also been building a Sculpture Mix under-the-sea themed candelabra and Red Velvet butter dishes and Speckle Buff dinnerware for a niece. 

Over at CSM, where we are firing only Cone 10 clay bodies, I threw a couple of Black Mountain bowls. I rather love 'em because the outside of the bowl is very groggy and brutally rough while the interior is very smooth--I'll be glazing only the interior with whatever white glaze is in the community college studio. I spied a bottle of oil soap there, and so brought what plaster I had left and poured two plate molds.                 
And promptly made that past Tuesday, 3 Black Mountain plates with the 1 plate mold I had while making the other 2 plate molds. I can now have 3 plates at one time drying on their mold in the sun. Next up is my damp box.
  
And here's my sculpture candelabra.     
I like the simple form and its contrast with all the ornamentation. My friend, Jeff says to fire it anyway and let glaze fill in the gaps. And so I lifted and carefully placed that sculpture into kiln, and we’ll see you in two weeks:)

In the meantime, at Clay Life, I've just glazed another plate for the dinnerware set I'm gifting to my niece, Jelissa and her family. And here’s one of the butter boxes as I wait for another butter box and a couple bowls to land on the bisque shelf for glazing.             
On a red clay body, I'd like to try a yellow color. However, this bottle of Bright Yellow Gloss is almost empty.
I may stop at Clay People in Richmond to buy a white engobe and then maybe use the studio's Duncan Stroke and Coat, or find a yellow overglaze which means I need to make test tiles.