After scrolling through my humble contribution to the food blogging world during the past year, over 100 posts, I can honestly say, “I’ve come a long way, baby!” My passion for food, cooking, entertaining, writing, travel, and photography continues to grow, and this past year has been quite a journey. In no particular order, this post recaps some of the most memorable moments of our 2011, in food and life.
At the beginning of the year, I joined French Fridays with Dorie, and began cooking my way through Dorie Greenspan’s Around My French Table. Although I don’t participate every week, a majority of her recipes have been fabulous. I gravitate to unfamiliar and unique recipes, for the challenge and learning experience. Dorie’s introduction to each recipe entertains and educates, and the recipes are sophisticated, yet approachable.
In February, we traveled to New Orleans. That trip, and another wonderful cookbook, John Besh’s My New Orleans, inspired many wonderful dishes throughout the year. In May, I hosted The Daring Cooks’ Gumbo Challenge. I mastered the art of roux, and fell in love with Drew’s Chicken and Smoked Sausage Gumbo in the process.
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| Best Gumbo – Drew’s Chicken and Smoked Sausage Gumbo |
Another winning recipe from
My New Orleans is
Beignets. After our early morning walks to
Cafe Du Monde in New Orleans, famous for beignets and chicory coffee, we had to come home and recreate these pillowy doughnuts blanketed in powdered sugar. With a more modest dusting of powdered sugar, and John’s decadent dunking sauces, I was ready to open my own beignet bakery in Coronado!
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| Best Sunday Morning Treat – Beignets |
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| Best Chicken – Crispy Braised Chicken Thighs |
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| Best Sandwich – Pork Schnitzel and Chipotle Sandwich |
We don’t eat nearly enough salads, and I was thrilled to create this
Salmon, Arugula and Couscous Salad, inspired by one on
Il Fornaio’s brunch menu. I developed a fondness for arugula this past year.
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| Best Summer Salad – Salmon, Arugula and Couscous Salad |
If you eat mostly salads throughout the year, you have permission to reward yourself with
Walnut Turtle Pie, a signature dessert at
Fleming’s Prime Steakhouse. Chocolate heaven. This pie won out over Bobby Flay’s
Throwdown Pumpkin Pie for Thanksgiving this year (and Bobby’s
Pumpkin Pie is one of my most visited posts).
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| Most Decadent Chocolate Dessert – Walnut Turtle Pie |
While photographing one of many food and wine events we attended this year, we tasted our first
Liege Waffle, made with Belgium Pearl Sugar. I was able to order the sugar from
Get a Waff and tried a few different recipes at home. After mastering these, I was ready to add Liege Waffles to the menu, along with the beignets, at my Coronado bakery!
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| Best Waffle – Liege Waffles |
Getting back to
French Fridays with Dorie, I looked through all the 30 or so recipes I’ve made from
Around My French Table and decided this
Tourteau de Chèvre deserves the highest recognition. I love that it’s so unique and adaptable. The recipe provides the option of using a savory or sweet tart dough, depending on whether you plan to serve it with white wine as an aperitif, as a dessert with a drizzle of honey and fresh fruit, in the afternoon with tea, or in the morning with coffee.  |
| Best French Fridays with Dorie Recipe, so far – Tourteau de Chèvre |
Speaking of unique – these
Cherries as Olives were a surprise hit at one of our summer Concerts in the Park. These come from Chef José Andrés’ Made in Spain cookbook. Fresh cherries are marinated in a mix of olive oil, orange and lemon juice and zest, garlic, rosemary, thyme, bay leaves, and sherry vinegar, with an optional sprinkling of Marcona almonds before serving. Please try these for your next party or picnic. They are addicting! |
| Best Nibble – Cherries as Olives |
One of our highlights of the year was getting to know several chefs. Chef Bernard Guillas (The Marine Room, La Jolla) is one of San Diego’s most respected chefs. Recipes from his award-winning cookbook, Flying Pans, are often featured on The Marine Room’s web page. I have a copy of the cookbook and love that there is a stunning photograph accompanying every recipe. It’s nice to see how the chef wants his dish presented.
For Thanksgiving this year, I made
Sylvie’s Stuffed Turkey Breast Ballotine with Croissant Sausage Stuffing, Glazed Carrots, Cipollinis, and Apple Cider Gravy. If you’re looking for an alternative to roasting a whole turkey, this dish is so impressive.
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| Best Holiday Dinner – Slyvie’s Stuffed Turkey Breast Ballotine |
Much of the fabulous food we enjoyed this year was shared with friends and family, at some of our annual events and parties. If you’ve followed There’s a Newf in My Soup, you know we spend our summer Sundays at Coronado’s Concert in the Park.
eCoronado named me the unofficial
Top Chef of Concerts in the Park this year because our group puts out such incredible spreads of food. We always have a culinary theme, and
Childhood Favorites was one of our most memorable concerts of the summer. Everyone shared a photo from their childhood for the blog post.
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Best Concert in the Park – Childhood Favorites Photo of Alec’s Grandma Rachael |
John went over the top with our Annual Halloween Party. This year’s theme was
Pirates, and he transformed our yard into a movie set right out of
Pirates of the Caribbean.
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Best Halloween Party Ever Coronado Island Pirates Board the HMS Obsessed for a Halloween Sail |
One of the funniest parties of the year was
Alec’s Rat Pack Party. Nina set up a little photo booth and the boys really got into posing in the Marilyn dress and wig! Many of the photos had to be censored from the blog, but this one of Kai and Alec, with my plate of cannoli, is classic.
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| Funniest Party – Take the Cannoli, to Alec’s Rat Pack Party |
John and I work well together behind the camera, and the blog has opened a few doors this year. We’ve provided photography for several local food and wine events, cooking classes, and restaurants, and fly to Colorado next month to photograph a Relais & Châteaux guest ranch.
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| Best Chef Photo – Chef Marco, Il Fornaio |
My life would not be complete without plenty of pasta. We’re regulars at Il Fornaio and are now considered family. We photographed two of Chef Marco’s cooking classes (
Risotto and
Homemade Pasta), and attend the monthly
Tuesday Night Tasting of the Festa Regionale Menu. This
Spaghetti alla Lucana is from
The Il Fornaio Pasta Book. Chef Marco moved to Seattle, and we miss him dearly.
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| Best Pasta – Spaghetti alla Lucana |
We continue to acquire beautiful copper cookware, and other blogalicious cookware, serveware, props, utensils, and tools. This copper Cataplana from Williams Sonoma is my favorite of the year. We also have the matching Couscoussier. I need to cook in these pieces a bit more in 2012.
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| Best Cookware – Copper Cataplana |
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| Best Pasta Tools – Corzetti Stamp |
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| Gnocchi/Garganelli Board |
Although you may have caught me complaining about the electric stove we acquired when we moved in June, we are fortunate to be living in a beautiful home, with a lovely private courtyard off the dining room for entertaining, and a picturesque front yard. After all the drama we went through the first half of 2011 in the old house, moving was definitely the highlight of our year.
John bought us a gorgeous grill, and we devoured the best
grilled lobster, ever. Never mind that it was the
only grilled lobster we had all year, but John prepared and grilled it to perfection, and we were so happy to be sitting outside, soaking up warm afternoon sun, and sharing one of many wonderful times on our new patio.
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| Best Lobster – Wolfgang Puck’s Grilled Lobsters with Spicy Herbed Compound Butter |
And finally, one last photo…the
Best Bread of the year! Three loaves of
Chocolate-Cinnamon Babka contain 5 sticks of butter and over 2 pounds of chocolate. I made these for Christmas, and the recipe can be found
here, courtesy of Martha Stewart.
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| Best Bread – Chocolate Cinnamon Babka |
If you’re still with me after this rather long recap of 2011, I want to thank you for reading and supporting There’s a Newf in My Soup! We look forward to continuing our journey, wherever it may lead, and hope you’ll come back to visit from time to time to see what we’re cooking.
Eat well, drink only good wine, and have a very happy and healthy New Year.
Cheers!
***
As I ate the oysters with their strong taste of the sea and their faint metallic taste that the cold white wine washed away, leaving only the sea taste and the succulent texture, and as I drank their cold liquid from each shell and washed it down with the crisp taste of the wine, I lost the empty feeling and began to be happy, and to make plans.