A personal blog to communicate with friends and family. I moved from rural Halfway, Oregon, to Washington DC in August (2011) to start a new job. This is the chronicle of my move and adventures in our nation's capitol.
By the way, you can enter your email on the right hand side to be subscribed to automatic messages whenever I put up a new blog post.
Wednesday, November 19, 2014
Saturday, November 15, 2014
Things to do with Pumpkin
Yay fall! Yay pumpkin! Really that's Yay squash! because even Libby's canned pumpkin isn't made from the big round orange pumpkins (Cucurbita pepo). It's made from a variety that's smooth and tan in the same species as butternut squash (Cucurbita moschata) called the Dickinson's Select Pumpkin.
But I know more that Libby's, or at least I'm willing to work harder, so I successfully turned my free big orange pumpkin from Safeway ("Free. All pumpkins must go.") into pumpkin puree for baking. It was just a matter of cracking it open by dropping on the floor (yes it had a really hard skin...I would not have wanted to carve this one!), scraping out the seeds (to toast) and microwaving the sections to soften the flesh. After I scraped the flesh out of the skin I had to boil it a while longer in a pot to fully soften. Then I pureed the flesh in the food processor and boiled down the remaining liquid before mixing it all back together. You have to do this with C. pepo varieties because their flesh is more watery and less strongly flavored compared to the ones we call squash. Once I did all that it made great pumpkin puree and I've been baking with it for the bake sale next week.
Then I had to mix up some pumpkin pie spice. I modified this recipe.
Update: Oh my god! Cardamom is the best thing ever in pumpkin pie spice. I used this in the pumpkin pie cobbler and wanted to eat the pumpkin batter with a spoon. This is hereby christened:
Sarah's Pumpkin Symphony Pie Spice
Brownies gone wild: I mashed up recipes from Smitten Kitchen and David Lebovitz and made "Pumpkin-Chocolate Brownie Cake Bars with Cheesecake Swirl topped with hazelnuts and spiked with Cinnamon and Cayenne." It was definitely over the top...good thing it's for the bake sale! I'm not posting the recipe yet because I want to tweak it to be less cake-y and more brownie-y and make a real pumpkin blondie. I think the original Martha Stewart recipe Deb used has way too much flour to be a brownie (or blondie) so I'll try cutting that way back. It would be easier to beat the eggs with a stand mixer though.
Next is an effort at pumpkin cobbler...
But I know more that Libby's, or at least I'm willing to work harder, so I successfully turned my free big orange pumpkin from Safeway ("Free. All pumpkins must go.") into pumpkin puree for baking. It was just a matter of cracking it open by dropping on the floor (yes it had a really hard skin...I would not have wanted to carve this one!), scraping out the seeds (to toast) and microwaving the sections to soften the flesh. After I scraped the flesh out of the skin I had to boil it a while longer in a pot to fully soften. Then I pureed the flesh in the food processor and boiled down the remaining liquid before mixing it all back together. You have to do this with C. pepo varieties because their flesh is more watery and less strongly flavored compared to the ones we call squash. Once I did all that it made great pumpkin puree and I've been baking with it for the bake sale next week.
Then I had to mix up some pumpkin pie spice. I modified this recipe.
Update: Oh my god! Cardamom is the best thing ever in pumpkin pie spice. I used this in the pumpkin pie cobbler and wanted to eat the pumpkin batter with a spoon. This is hereby christened:
Sarah's Pumpkin Symphony Pie Spice
2 T ground cinnamon
2 t ground ginger
1 t freshly grated nutmeg (not really measured of course)
3/4 t ground cloves
1/2 t ground mace
1/2 t fresh ground cardamom (grind the seeds in a mortar and measure after grinding)
Brownies gone wild: I mashed up recipes from Smitten Kitchen and David Lebovitz and made "Pumpkin-Chocolate Brownie Cake Bars with Cheesecake Swirl topped with hazelnuts and spiked with Cinnamon and Cayenne." It was definitely over the top...good thing it's for the bake sale! I'm not posting the recipe yet because I want to tweak it to be less cake-y and more brownie-y and make a real pumpkin blondie. I think the original Martha Stewart recipe Deb used has way too much flour to be a brownie (or blondie) so I'll try cutting that way back. It would be easier to beat the eggs with a stand mixer though.
Batter layer number one. |
The chocolate layer. |
With cream cheese swirl. |
Out of the oven. |
Close up! |
I still have two more pumpkins in waiting... |
Tuesday, November 11, 2014
Fun in November
Happy Armistice Day! (I think that's a cooler name than Veterans Day.) We had super lovely weather in DC today. There is a crazy big concert going on on the Mall...glad they aren't freezing people out! It think it was lucky all around because the freezing air currently snowing on Minnesota is scheduled to hit us the end of the week.
Elizabeth and I went on a bike ride to Glen Echo and Bethesda.
So Glen Echo is where I like to go for swing dances. Here's what that looked like last week at the WWII Canteen Dance with the Eric Felten Jazz Orchestra.
Elizabeth and I went on a bike ride to Glen Echo and Bethesda.
The C&O Canal path and the Capitol Crescent Trail (the paved one) |
I love crunchy leaves! |
There's Elizabeth by the bikes. |
Sky view |
Cyclist selfie |
Here's the Spanish Ballroom from the outside. |
And I got some great views on my way home from the ECRI conference on complex patients.
![]() |
Makes DC awesome: the Washington Monument from the Constitution Garden pool. |
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)