Roving Trellises, Splashing Eggs, and Miscreants!

Today when we were leaving, I noticed that one of my trellises was missing.  Where did it go?


Oh, there it is!  On the other side of the driveway.  How did it get there?  


 And when we closed the garage door, we discovered this lovely eggy treat.    

The Neighborhood Miscreants were at it again, last night.  I'm guessing that a good citizen found the trellis in the street and rescued it.  Fortunately, I didn't find any empty beer bottles, so my Party Garden Gnomes took the night off.

Sour Cherry Pie for Cindy


“When you acknowledge, as you must, that there is no such thing as perfect food, only the idea of it, then the real purpose of striving towards perfection becomes clear:  to make people happy.  That’s what cooking is all about.”       -Thomas Keller                                                                         



Last weekend, we celebrated my friend Cindy’s fiftieth birthday. And she surprised her own surprise cocktail party! She walked into the hotel suite and two of my friends scurried away from the door like cockroaches while muttering, “Oh shit!”

I stood behind a pillar giggling.  We all hugged the laughing birthday girl, placed a drink in her hand, and took pictures. Before we went dancing, we lit the candles on her two sour cherry pies and serenaded her with a pitchy version of Happy Birthday.  We served the pie with scoops of lightly melted Tillamook vanilla bean ice cream on top.  Cindy enjoyed her favorite birthday treat that I tailor made for her. 

I’ve worked all winter on learning how to make pies and it was worth the effort to watch her smile!  I just updated her recipe so I don’t forget it for next year.  And I decided to share it here with you, just in case you want to try it.




New Twice-Baked Sour Cherry Pie
slightly tweaked from Melissa Clark
with David Lebovitz's butter pie crust


Butter Pie Dough 
 2 ½ cups all purpose flour
1 tablespoon sugar
½ teaspoon of salt
1 cup unsalted butter, cut into 1 inch cubes and chilled
7 to 8 tablespoons ice water

In your mixer bowl with the paddle attachment combine the flour, sugar, and salt.  Add in the butter and mix until the butter chunks are ¼ inch big.

Pour in the 7 tablespoons of water all at once and mix until the dough just starts to come together into a coarse dough.  Add one more tablespoons of water if needed. 

Pour the dough out onto a cutting board and cut it in half.  Press each piece into a one inch thick round disk and wrap with plastic wrap.  Refrigerate for at least an hour or up to two days.  They can also be frozen for up to two months.

I rolled out and shaped my pie shell crust.  Make sure to press the crust into the pan so it doesn’t slide down the sides of the pan. Then I froze it for 30 minutes to prevent the crust from shrinking. 

Then, I prebaked my pie shells at 375 degrees for twenty minutes with a piece of foil and pie weights (beans) inside. While the pie shells bake prepare the filling.  I removed the foil and weights and baked for 10 more minutes.   Then add the filling.


Sour Cherry Pie 
3/4 cup sugar
3 tablespoons instant tapioca, pulverized into a fine flour in my vita-mix
1/4 teaspoon ground cinnamon, heaping
2 pounds sour cherry cherries, pitted and unthawed
1 1/2 tablespoons kirsch
4 tablespoons heavy cream, divided in half
1 tablespoon fresh lemon juice
raw sugar, for sprinkling

Pulverize the tapioca in a vita-mix or coffee grinder.  Add the tapioca and cinnamon to the ¾ cup of sugar and stir together in a bowl.  Then combine the sugar mixture, cherries, kirsch, lemon juice, and 2 tablespoons of cream together.  Let sit while the crust bakes.
Roll out the remaining disc of pie dough and using a round cookie cutter, cut out circles of dough.
Once the crust is ready add the cherry mixture into the crust.  Place the rounds of dough on top.  Brush the dough with the reserved 2 tablespoons of cream and sprinkle raw sugar on top of the pie. 
Place in oven and bake for 50 to sixty minutes.  Check on the pie after thirty minutes to see if the edges of the crust are browning too quickly.  Cover the edges of the crust with foil if necessary. Bake until the crust is dark and golden and the filling is burbling.  My pie took sixty minutes to bake. 
Remove the pie from the oven and let cool for 2 hours before serving.  Sing Happy Birthday to the birthday girl.  Then serve the pie with generous scoops of vanilla bean ice cream. 
Yield: 8 servings



Garden Blogger's Bloom Day: February 2013


Sweet Coltsfoot, Petasites japonicus, and The Assistant's foot
Happy Bloom Day!  I'm happy to report that my Sweet Coltsfoot, Petasites japonicus, is blooming and hasn't been trampled (yet) by The Assistant.  But, it's definitely been nibbled on by slugs.  Time for a slug hunt.





And the first hellebore bloom is just starting to open.  I accidentally received this hellebore in 2008 when I was given permission to thin a hosta bed at The Crystal Springs Rhododendron Garden and to plant the hosta thinnings in my garden.  Thunder rumbled around us and lightening lit the way and I was grateful that I didn't get electrocuted through my shovel.
hellebore
 I enjoy this hellebore every year.  And I adore the seed heads it forms later in the season.


Please take a moment to visit Carol at May Dreams Gardens who hosts this monthly event.  It's fun to catch a glimpse of flowers blooming around the world today. Happy Friday to you!


Romance and Valentine's Day

I’m not a big fan of Valentine's Day.  It somehow feels forced to me.  Expected. I’d much rather be surprised with a romantic gesture on any other day of the year.  Just not on Valentine's Day.



Instead of the fancy box of long stem red roses that My Pirate used to send me, now My Pirate doles out more romantic gestures all year long.  And I love it.  Sometimes he warms my towel in the drier while I take a shower, so I can dry off with a warm fluffy towel.  I wake him up with his favorite coffee and scrambled eggs.  And all these tiny gestures fill our year up with love and happiness.  Try it. 


Update:  Don't think for a sec that I baked these adorable cookies!  All the credit goes to my friend, Toni Bagnall.  While I took pictures with my iPhone, she filled the cookies with yummy pink frosting and topped them with sprinkles.  Too cute.

Indian Plum

The Indian Plum shrub, Oemleria cerasiformis, is one of my favorite native plants.  I was first introduced to it in third grade by a park ranger while on a class field trip.  The park ranger picked off a leaf, tore it in half, and asked me what it smelled like and it smelled like a freshly cut cucumber.  It was a magical moment that kick-started my love of plants.  
Indian Plum,  Oemleria cerasiformis
In high school, I was an outdoor school camp counselor that taught sixth grade campers about native plants while we hiked around Camp Eagle Fern.  The Indian Plum never failed to wow the students unlike encouraging them to lick a slug to experience the numbing sensation of slug slime.  Which I think is a pretty cool defense strategy, but I digress here. 


I’ve been growing an Indian Plum shrub in my backyard for the past six years.  I placed it so that I can see it out my back windows.  I enjoy its early white blossoms that emerge before the foliage. 


And the hummingbirds enjoy it too.  A female Anna’s Hummingbird curiously supervised The Assistant and me while singing a nonstop litany of threats as I took the pictures for this post. Unfortunately, I failed to capture a good shot of the hummingbird while she nibbled on the Indian Plum buds.  Maybe next time.