Tuesday, December 28, 2021

A tasty, rainy, West Coast Christmas

Despite our best efforts to the contrary, coronavirus trapped us on the West Coast for a second year in a row. We made the most of it with a very last minute celebration with a few Argentinian friends who were also stuck in this corner of the planet. Though family was only with us on zoom, family tradition was very present as we baked the most prized of family heirlooms, my great-great-grandma Aloia's manicotti recipe. While various renditions of the family not-so-secret tradition in numerous matriarchs' handwriting circulate through the generations, now seems as good a time as ever to ensure that I've got an electronic back-up. So, though the writing of this blogpost may be anything but inspired, its contents most certainly are. Here for posterity is the Aloia Family Manicotti Recipe!

We couldn't enjoy the holiday with family but we did enjoy it with a family tradition: manicotti. Yum!

Ingredients

  • 8 eggs (6 for pasta, 2 for filling)
  • 1.25 cups flour
  • 1.5 cups water
  • 3 pounds ricotta
  • handful of grated Parmesan cheese
  • salt (0.5 tsp & a pinch)
  • pepper (0.25 tsp)
  • grapeseed oil
  • 50-60 ounces of tomato sauce

Instructions

  1. Whisk 6 eggs and water together.
  2. Sift the flour into the mixture, continually whisking.
  3. Add a pinch of salt.
  4. Heat a 6.5" cast iron fry pan over medium-low heat. Use a pastry brush to coat pan with a thin coat of grapeseed oil.
  5. Pour less than a quarter cup of batter into the pan, tilting to cover the bottom.
  6. When the edges of the crepe begin to curl and the crepe looks solid, flip it onto the other side to cook. Do not brown the crepe.
  7. Move the cooked crepe from the pan to a paper towel.
  8. Repeat steps 5-7 until batter is used up. Between crepes, as needed, re-apply a light coat of grapeseed oil using the pastry brush. In all, at least 24-30 crepes should be made.
  9. Mix together the ricotta, salt, pepper, 2 eggs, and Parmesan.
  10. Pour a thin layer of tomato sauce in the bottom of the baking pan to coat.
  11. Fill each crepe with approximately 1 tablespoon of the ricotta cheese mixture. Fold over the sides of the crepe. Lay the crepes side-by-side in the pan.
  12. Add a layer of sauce between each layer of cheese-filled crepes.
  13. Pour a final layer of sauce atop the crepes. Sprinkle with Parmesan cheese.
  14. Bake at 350 degrees Fahrenheit for about an hour or until hot in the center. Cover with foil to avoid drying out while baking.
  15. Enjoy! :)

I hope your holidays have been equally delicious and filled with loved ones, be them acquaintances of the old & dear or more recent variety. Cheers to saying F-off to 2021!

Friday, December 24, 2021

Twas the Night Before Christmas, 2021

 Twas the night before Christmas and all through the flat,

Not a creature was sober except maybe a cat.

Flamingo stockings hung by the bookshelf with care,

In hopes that Nico would enjoy the Christmas flare.

The kitties were nestled all snug in their beds,

While visions of tuna fish swum through their heads.

And I with my shaker and Nico prepping the rest,

Had settled our brains for a winter taste test.

We started with raspberry, creamy and light,

Then onto the yuletide spice for the night.

It flowed from my glass, such a wonderful flavor,

A taste that our holiday guests could all savor.

And so with our mixing skills all in full gear,

We perfected our Christmas cocktail for the year.

Raspberry cream mimosas

Ingredients (4 servings)

  • 2 cups of frozen raspberries
  • 1/6 cup (or 2 2/3 tablespoons) white sugar
  • 1 cup heavy cream
  • 1 bottle sparkling wine
  • a few fresh raspberries for garnish

Instructions

  1. In a small saucepan, thaw the frozen raspberries on medium heat until they've broken down and become soup-like. Add sugar to the sauce, stirring until it dissolves. Remove from heat.
  2. Filter the raspberry sauce to remove raspberry seeds and fruit guts.
  3. Add heavy cream to the filtered raspberry sauce. Chill. (We tried freezing it in the photos above but ultimately think it's better with just some fridge time.)
  4. Mix equal parts raspberry cream and sparkling wine.
  5. Top with fresh raspberries.

The Harvest Sparkle

What it lacked in photogenicity it made up for in flavor. This wintery bourbon-prosecco drink may just become our new Christmas classic.

Cider syrup ingredients

  • 1/2 cup honey
  • 1 cup freshly squeezed orange juice
  • 1/4 teaspoon ground ginger
  • 1/4 teaspoon ground cinnamon
  • 1/8 teaspoon ground cloves

Cocktail ingredients (1 serving)

  • 1 ounce bourbon (or whiskey)
  • 1 ounce prosecco
  • 0.7 ounce cider syrup
  • 1/2 sprig rosemary
  • ice

Instructions

  1. Make the syrup: mix the honey, orange juice, and spices in a small saucepan over medium heat. Whisk until it starts to bubble, then remove from heat for 5 minutes.
  2. Mix the bourbon and syrup over ice in a cocktail shaker.
  3. Add prosecco and garnish.

Sunday, December 5, 2021

Home sweet home

One month ago today we spent our first night in the new place, and it's been a little over a week since we hosted our first bash. With cat-flap glass panel installed into our patio's sliding glass door, both we and the cats have been making the condo and the entire complex home - Mars even swung by the pool area while we were enjoying the hot tub earlier this evening and escorted us back into our unit. So it seems about time to share the before-and-after collages that show how we've started making our first condo into a proper home. It's modest (at an obscene Bay Area price tag) but it fits us very well. Come take the tour!
Step into our new home.

As you walk in you'll see the kitchen to your left.

Before you you'll see the open plan dining and living spaces.

From your seat at the dining table, you can look back to see the kitchen and, beyond that, our second bedroom and bathroom which were currently renting out to the roommate we took with us from our last home.

Come check out the living room, pictured here from several different angles - top is what you see as you first approach it from the dining area. Below, to the left is what you see while standing by the bookshelf shown at the very right in the previous image, and to the right is the view from the back corner where the table lamp stands.

From the dining room, you can also walk out the sliding glass door onto our spacious patio, now furnished with a six-seater table and a small light-up electric heating bistro table with chairs. It's illuminated by some surprisingly convincing solar-powered faux candle lanterns.

When you walk into our home, rather than veer left after the kitchen, you can also take a hard right and peer into the master bedroom where, after nearly five years of marriage, we've finally gotten around to framing and hanging a few wedding photos, shown above.

When you walk into the master suite, you'll find the bathroom to the right.

If you make a left instead, you'll soon notice our charming modestly-sized walk-in closet, which is forcing me to keep my dress and shoe collection strictly under control.

And finally our lair, where sleeping into a king-size loft bed is totally a legit thing that grown-up married adults do.

We've each slotted our desks into opposite corners of the window wall, with me tucked neatly behind our staircase to the bed.


Friday, November 26, 2021

Something savory, something sweet, and something to wet your whistle

Excess is a word that captures this Thanksgiving pretty well. We had such an excessive amount of food that we've got meals covered for the rest of the long weekend and the next week, easily. But we also found ourselves surrounded with an excess of good company and laughter, something it's been harder for us to find since landing in the US a few years ago. Sure, a pandemic hitting just after Nicolas hit his one-year in the US didn't help, but overall this country has been the loneliest place that we've made home as a couple, so yesterday was a beautiful change in pace, with over twenty guests joining us for our very first party in our new home - pix on that to come soon!

A sneak peek at our Thanksgiving tables at our new home and some portion of the meal as we all dove in.

We prepared the turkey, as usual, but among the other dishes we prepared were a few delicious and definitely blog-worthy specials. I won't bore you with a typical recipe-blog-post style multi-paragraph story about how this food and drink transformed their lives or some other nonsense I always have to scroll through to get the good stuff. With no further ado, some classics - one that first made our Thanksgiving repertoire in 2020, and two new ones that made their debut yesterday: Cream Cheese Mashed Potatoes, Vanilla Orange Candied Cranberries & a Cranberry Gin Fizz

Cream Cheese Mashed Potatoes

Pre-mashing: get a load of all that cream cheese!

Ingredients (10 servings):

  • 5 Pounds Russet Potatoes
  • 8 Ounces Cream Cheese
  • 1 Stick Butter
  • ½ - 1 Cup Milk
  • 1 Teaspoon Salt
  • 8 cloves of minced garlic
  • ½ Teaspoon Pepper
Instructions:
  1. Wash and peel the potatoes. Cut potatoes into 1 inch cubes. Place in a large pot, covering them completely with water. Boil the potatoes for 15-20 minutes until tender. Drain and return to pot.
  2. Add cream cheese, butter, milk*, and seasoning. *Start with just a half cup of milk. After mashing, add more milk as needed to achieve desired potato consistency.

Vanilla Orange Candied Cranberries

Ingredients (12 servings):

  • 3 3/4 cups sugar, divided
  • 1 3/4 cups water
  • 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
  • 2 teaspoons Grand Marnier
  • 12 ounces fresh cranberries
Instructions:
  1. In a sauce pan, mix 2 ½ cups of sugar and all the vanilla, Grand Marnier, and water. Heat over medium until all the sugar has dissolved into a simple syrup without allowing it to boil.
  2. Remove from heat and mix in the cranberries, ensuring they are all submerged in the simple syrup by placing a plate atop the sauce pan.
  3. Leave the sauce pan in the refrigerator overnight.
  4. Strain the cranberries, saving the vanilla-orange-cranberry simple syrup for cocktails!
  5. Place the remaining sugar in a rimmed dish. Roll them in the sugar until they are coated, transfer to a baking sheet, and let dry for one hour.
  6. Once the sugar has hardened, store in an air tight container in the fridge until ready to serve.
Ingredients (8 servings):
  • 2 lemons
  • 1 orange
  • 3 cups dry gin
  • 2 cups ginger beer
  • 2 cups vanilla-orange-cranberry simple syrup
  • handful of candied cranberries (garnish)
  • mint (optional garnish)
Instructions:
  1. Squeeze the lemons.
  2. Mix the lemon juice, vanilla-orange-cranberry simple syrup, and gin.
  3. Slice the orange, add to the pitcher, and muddle with a wooden spoon.
  4. Mix.
  5. Top with candied cranberries, ginger beer, and mint (optional).
  6. Enjoy!
Those three recipes are just a small sampling of the multitude of flavors that filled our day. Hope that you were lucky enough to have an equally warm and yummy Thanksgiving surrounded by wonderful people.

Wednesday, November 10, 2021

Friday, October 22, 2021

News!

By now this is week-old news, but here you have it!
I'm not sure this answers the question posed at the start of this blog - how does an expat "come home" after a decade abroad? One thing we've learned is that the US will never be 100% home. We left our hearts in Paris and probably won't "find home" until the day we move back, but our finances and our careers have other ideas for now. What does feel special is that we've broken the holding pattern we've been in since moving to the US: hunkering down, lining our savings accounts, living in tiny spaces with roommates, and paying our monthly rent in places that would never be ours. The roommate situation might not be changing for now, and we'll still be adult-bunk-bedding in our king size loft, so this isn't a 100% leap into full adulthood. But there are some big wins: we'll finally have a slice of our very own outdoors, a major gift to the fur babies. And we've finally escaped that landlord middle-layer. After the trauma of our arbitrary eviction back in 2017 from a beloved home for which we'd always paid rent, just because our landlord felt like taking it back, these keys in hand feel like a massive weight off my shoulders. It's funny to think that this is what home ownership looks like. I'd always imagined the big day would involve falling in love with the perfect home. This isn't that, but it's the right next step for us, and a very sensible two-bed two-bath in a charming community in a nice part of Emeryville, just a few miles from our previous place in downtown Oakland. And it'll soon be home. Here's to next steps, even if they aren't the big leaps once envisioned.

Monday, October 11, 2021

A few more themes

The ink has dried on our notarized contract signed two full days ago, and the final countdown has officially begun! While we wait to get our hands on the keys, I've been getting mine on a few more works of art. Etsy is just such a magical place.

 Theme: Boss Ladies with Fins
Remember those "few charmers" I off-handedly introduced at the end of my last post? Don't ever trust me to let the strays stay that way. The mermaid riso print from Four Eyes Illustration is now paired up with another mermaid riso print from artist Doriane Millet. I'm expecting these works will land somewhere around my desk space in a corner of our future bedroom.

Theme: Black Girl Magic
I've been trying to be more conscious of the default whiteness that exists in art depicting people. The fact that not all of us get to see ourselves equally reflected in art really eats at me, and I want to make sure that our home doesn't further propagate that issue. So when I stumbled across Tabitha Brown's prints, whose beautiful designs, vibrant colors, and modern style work perfectly with the look we're building for our living/dining spaces, I knew they were a must-have.

Theme: My cup of tea
The top of this pair, a piece from Anne-Julie Aubry, isn't entirely new to me - it's something that's been hanging in our current home for a few months now, but I'd like to port it over to our future home. I'm imagining it'll fit snugly into a corner of our bedroom, maybe near my desk and those riso mermaid prints. After a very long hunt for a proper pairing, I was excited to come across the works of Carlos C. Lainez. I had put a rule down that I wouldn't buy any new cat art for our home since the three feline residents already do enough to express our cat crazy without our walls doing just the same, but I found this piece to be so unique that it was worth bending the rules.

Theme: Cats!
Last but not least, these limited edition prints that I'd purchased from Jane Ormes back in 2016 for our big move to Brighton might just make the cut - we'll see once we've begun settling in.

We've also managed to frame the little piece of Brighton art that we'd used as the marker for our table of honor at our wedding back in 2017 as well as a photo or two from the big day, something that's never actually reached any of our walls in the nearly 5 years since. The only thing left on the docket is the potential purchase of a decorative clock or two. Nicolas may have won the fight on the front to actually have me wait until we move in before purchasing something. But there's still time, so no promises. ðŸ˜…

T minus 4 days until - yes, I'll put it in writing - Nicolas and I will officially become home owners!