I am back!

Hi guys, I am back up and about! This morning I posted a couple things we tried last week, before my wisdom teeth came out. Needless to say, this week I ate a variety of mashed fruits, veggies, and scrambled eggs. Nothing exciting or new (except the banana-apple sauce and mango-apple sauce –ooh boy). Food is rather boring when you can’t really taste it and it’s always mushy.

 

All that laying in bed got a bit tedious, so I did peruse some cooking websites and bookmarked a bunch of things that I want to bake once I can chew again! Hopefully next weekend!

Celery Root

So last year about this time, as I was pursuing my “try new things from the farmer’s market” goal, I bought a celery root. Unfortunately for the celery root, I bought a bunch of other veg on that day as well, so I stowed it away in a cool dark place with the potatoes, assuming it would last for a week or two. But then week three rolled around and it was a bit too far past it’s prime, so I sadly tossed in in the compost.

Now, I did taste celery root for the first time on New Year’s weekend. Eugen had made some mashed celery root (so delicious!) and then two weeks ago we had a celery root salad at the Auberge in Alsace. That was sort of like a French cole-slaw and also super yummy.

This past Monday we made our own mashed celery root to go with polpetta as an alternative to pasta. Cut off the rough outside and brown knobbies and chop. Boil and then mash up with a bit of milk, salt, and pepper. And don’t forget the secret ingredient.

Mugnut! or Megnut or Nutmeg…or whatever that is. Finely grate some in (I imagine a microplane would be perfect, but watch your fingers).

Celery root has a very mild “celery” flavor, and no annoying strings getting stuck in your teeth. A yummy veggie to try. Next time we might do a celery-potato mash to mix things up a bit.

Blanching Almonds

 

 As you can tell, we have been a bit enthusiastic lately with our new favorite snacky snack – roasted almonds. Last week, I decided to follow mom’s advice and try Alice’s recipe, and use blanched almonds to switch things up. I don’t know about where you buy your almonds, but here in Germany the blanched almonds are more expensive than almonds with skins on. And also considering the fact that I had three more bags of regular almonds in the pantry, I decided to blanch them myself. It was actually really easy, although it did take about 20 minutes to peel a cup of almonds. But it was sort of zen-like and relaxing. Seriously.

I put my almonds in a bowl, poured boiling water over them, and let them sit for 2 minutes exactly. Then I drained and rinsed them with cold water and spread them on a tea towel to cool.

Then I proceeded to peel them. You squeeze them from one end, and they just sort of slip out of the skins. They were slippery little suckers, and at least three escaped and flew across the kitchen.

Then, per Alice and Mom, I tossed em with a couple teaspoons of salt water and sprinkled a good tablespoon of chopped rosemary on top. Instead of my usual cookie sheet, I tried roasting them in the ceramic dish. And I was paranoid about “over-toasting” aka burning them, so I think in fact I took them out a few minutes too soon. Once out of the oven, I sprinked on some fleur de sel and 2 tsp olive oil. These were awesome! Not totally crunchy but so yummy! Blanched almonds seem to have a more delicate flavor than regular almonds. Let the experimenting continue!