An Artist's Table
The Fine Art of Food
Monday, November 26, 2012
The Pot Luck Club: Steamy Dreamy Turkey
The Pot Luck Club: A Kitchen Island for Thanksgiving
Monday, February 7, 2011
Holy Mole!
This recipe, much like many we all have contain loose measurements and are subject to tweaking at any time, so feel free to make it your own. I will give you the basic idea...
Ingredients:
5 Alarm chili kit (I omit the salt)
2 lbs your favorite chili meat
2 cans your favorite chili beans
chopped onions and garlic
jars of
tomato paste,stewed tomatoes,tomato sauce, whatever tomato products sound good...
in the amount that makes the thick or thin chili of your choice
Rotele chilis
Chipotles in adobo sauce (depending on how hot you like it...I usually use half and use the other half mixed with Raspberry preserves for a kick ass maride for pork chops or mix it in with ground beef for amazing burgers)
large palmful or so of Mexene brand chili powder(this one is one thing that needs to be brand specific I think!)
Several good shakes of cumin, cinnamon and black pepper
Good palmful or so of cocoa powder--I like dark cocoa powder the best.
Cook up the meat, throw in the fresh onions and garlic, green peppers too if you feel like it. Add in all the tomato stuff, beans,then all the spices except the masa. Simmer about a half hour or till you remember. Add in masa mixed with 1/4 cup warm water. Mix in with chili and simmer til your ready to devour.
Everyone has their preference how they serve their chili. I like fresh chopped onions and shredded cheese on mine. Luke loves to enjoy his with crackers and peanut butter.
However you prefer it, enjoy!!
Tuesday, February 1, 2011
Beef Stew
Sunday, October 24, 2010
Bourbon Persimmon Pudding
So my pawpaw ice cream spent a long, tempting week in my freezer awaiting my monthly potluck club. I had a sneaking suspicion that pawpaws and persimmons were meant for each other, so I made my annual bourbon persimmon pudding to find out.
Persimmons grow wild in Southern Indiana and they have always had a special place in my heart. For me, persimmons are the harbingers of fall and one of the few fruits that I have never eaten out of season. And since gathering persimmons requires one very loving mother searching the ground up and down my family’s road and storing the persimmons for my next visit, they really are autumn treasures. (For those of you without a country road of wild persimmons or a mother willing to hunt for them, I actually found persimmon pulp at Paul’s Fruit Market in Louisville and you can also use Hachiya persimmons, which can be found in many grocery stores.)
It’s best to clean
and pulp the persimmons with a food mill when they’re fresh, but you can also freeze them until you’re ready. It takes about two cups of pulp for most recipes, although you can make whatever you have work. There are a thousand persimmon pudding recipes (I adapted one I found on chow.com), but the nature of a pudding is very forgiving so the flavors you use are more important than the exact measurements. And, aside from the food mill (which is helpful but not necessary), you don’t need any special equipment or techniques.
Just mix the ingredients together in one bowl and bake in a cake pan lined with parchment. People will tell you that it’s better than all the other baked goods you’ve made that actually required some baking savvy.
And now I can tell you without question that persimmon pudding was meant to be eaten with pawpaw ice cream.
Saturday, October 23, 2010
Roasted Chicken with Autumn Vegetables

It is funny what can inspire and change a persons outlook on things. The birth of my son changed my entire world, including how I look at food and ingredients. I no longer look at just the sheer enjoyment of wolfing down something I previously deemed palatable, but as more of an experience, and nourishment. It is also important to me now that I protect the environment that my son will be using later down the road. I now am mindful of where the food is coming from and the impact on the land. I try to buy local and seasonal, organic and quality. All that being said, let me share with you one of my current favorite family meals...
(I recently treated myself to a Staub 7 qt oval cast iron enameled dutch oven. LOVE it!)
I start by patting a mixture of curry seasoning (my favorite brand for spice is spice hunter) cumin, fresh oregano, chopped garlic, sea salt and crushed black pepper, in and outside of a beautiful free range organic whole chicken from Maple Valley farms. I sometimes stuff a little lemon inside if I have one handy.
I have been preheating the oven to 350, and a burner on medium with the staub heating some olive oil to almost smoking. I lay the chicken breast side down and let it sizzle for about 5 minutes, then turn it over to brown the back.
At that time I toss in quartered butternut squash, and onions, maybe some carrots, or potatos if I have them handy. I sprinkle some more of the spice mix onto the vegetables and take a big whiff of the bounty. I then put a lid on the pot and put it in the oven to let it cook, self baste and get happy.
At this point I try to go outside and play with Jett or take a walk with the family, so I can come back in the home and smell aroma as if walking into someone elses home.
One hour or so later, depending on the size of the chicken I take it out of the oven and let it rest for a few minutes, afterall, it has been doing some hard work. I take the chicken out and onto a cutting board to prepare it for deboning and presentation. Meanwhile I stir together the juices with the vegetables to make an amazing flavour and texture.
I then serve it to my eager and appreciative family.
Friday, October 15, 2010
Pawpaw Ice Cream

I've never blogged before but the pawpaw has inspired me. The pawpaw is a fruit that grows wild in the woods of Southern Indiana during the fall and we're lucky enough to have a brother-in-law who happens to love pawpaws so much that he cultivates them on our homestead, Brambleberry Farm.
My birthday present this year included two pounds of heirloom Appalachian guinea hog ribs, six pawpaws and a few cups of wild persimmons. If you're at all familiar with these ingredients, you would know that I had just received the makings of a culinary feast. I wish I could say that I made the feast all at once and threw a party, but I didn't. I drove the pork ribs to a friend's in Chicago and let him braise them in some delicious way I didn't pay any attention to, but I kept the pawpaws all to myself. I've been waiting a year to make pawpaw ice cream. I figured ice cream was just the right platform for the humble pawpaw to shine. It's naturally custardy and tastes something like banana (in fact it's nicknamed the Indiana banana), mango, and pineapple.
For the ice cream, I made a basic heavy cream (2 cups), sugar (3/4 cup) and egg yolk (2) custard. You can heat up the cream and sugar first and then temper the eggs before whisking them in, but I prefer to mix it all together cold and whisk it as it warms up slowly and thickens. As the custard cooled, I cut into my compl
etely black (yeah, I thought that meant they were ripe, but in retrospect I should have made the ice cream two days sooner when some green was still left on the poor things) pawpaws and scraped out the flesh, which wasn't as easy as I imagined it would be. The seeds cling on to the flesh more than expected and I definitely overestimated how much fruit I would get from them, but I went with what I had, blended the fruit and some vanilla in with the custard and in about 30 minutes, my cuisinart served up something that looked deceptively vanilla and tasted unexpectedly tropical.
My plan is to serve the pawpaw ice cream with my favorite persimmon pudding, which I would include here, too, but I haven't made it yet. Stay tuned...