Green Beans with Crookneck Squash and Caramelized Onions (Tired of Your Green Beans? Try Mine.)

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When you have a generous friend who’s also a talented gardener, your life sometimes takes a sweet, interesting turn come summer. Regular readers might remember my good friend, Pam Lehmkuhl (whose kind husband also supplies me with gorgeous game and fish). Pam recently gifted me a mess of green, green beans and some oh-so-yellow baby crookneck squash. My go-to green bean “recipe” is to cook the beans nearly granny tender, drain, drizzle them with olive oil, and then sprinkle on salt, black pepper, crushed red pepper and really lots of lemon zest. (Great hot or cold.) I adore summer squash sliced and grilled for the most part. Thinking I’d do something different with both of them, I still searched my own blog first because… well, I could. An old Thanksgiving-style recipe popped up where I paired green beans with caramelized onions. I didn’t know how things would end, but I would at least begin by starting a pan of onions on the back burner. While I first considered dicing the squash up and cooking it with the beans for the last few minutes for simplicity’s sake, it sounded tastier to sauté those cheerful bits in a skillet. I’d then be able to add both the cooked onions and green beans to the squash and heat the whole shebang together right before serving. A glance at the garden had me running in with a handful of chives and chive flowers; they could go on top. Couldn’t they?

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Blueberry-Peach Muffins with Ginger + Alyce’s Tips for Baking Your Best Muffins

I added a little extra fruit right on top just before baking this batch. Pretty-AND we know it’s blueberries and peaches!
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Strawberry-Blueberry Scones: this recipe, just using half strawberries

If I haven’t a clue what’s for breakfast but know my husband and best sous Dave would like something fresh, warm, and sweet when he comes home from the morning dog walk, I will usually throw together a mess of muffins. Occasionally there are scones or biscuits or a coffee cake instead, depending on my mood and what else might be on the menu. I can gather the ingredients for muffins, however, without much thought; get them into the oven; and have them piping hot on the rack–or nearly so– when he comes through the front door exactly 30 minutes after he leaves. But before I stir them up and bake them, I’ve got to check what’s available in the fruit, nut, or even occasionally chocolate department. When I’m muffin dreaming, as long as I have a cup of fruit or a bit more, there will soon be muffins no matter what. And if there isn’t enough fruit, I’ll probably make them anyway, perhaps adding nuts, coconut, or dried fruit. And if there are none of those things at all, there’s simply nothing wrong with the plain muffin I’d bake –or even a corn one. Especially served with butter and jam. A baker will bake, you see. Breakfast will be had.

I do nearly always have fresh blueberries and, if not, there’s a bag of frozen ones in the freezer waiting my measuring cup. (When they’re the best and the cheapest and come from the Pacific Northwest, I freeze a bunch.) The other day, I had Palisades peaches (known to the rest of the country as “Colorado peaches”) over-ripening in my south window and not too awfully many blueberries. There was, I thought, just enough fruit for 12 muffins if I combined the two. And what if I stirred in a little fresh ginger for spicy interest? Turned out to be a perfect match made right here on the mesa in Colorado Springs.

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Shrimp Burgers with Fennel-Cilantro Coleslaw

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Granddaughter Piper w/ me in Michigan

You’re right. If you’re a regular reader, you might say this looks more like FRIDAY FISH (my 7-week Lenten posts) than August but August it is. Where is the summer going?! After over a month away from the blog (scroll down to LIFE GOES ON) getting ready for, celebrating, and taking a family trip for our 50th wedding anniversary, it’s feeling just plain old good to be home and to share a new –to me–dinner with you.

As always, when I arrive back home, I’m focused on making big over our 10-year-old flat coated labradoodle, Rosie; getting the unpacking/laundry going; stocking up at the grocery store; reading the mail and email; and enjoying my own coffee pot and bed. This time, as fall approaches (school starts in one district here today), I also did a good check of the freezer to see what needed to be used before its yearly defrosting and readying for fall cooking–think soup, of course. A big bag of partially used shrimp stuck out, oddly placed on the top shelf with baked treats and baguette. Time to do something fun with it before it turned all icy-crusty, as shrimp will do. There are a lot of shrimp recipes on this blog but right off, a quick burger came to mind as summer will soon be tapering off and burgers often feel like summer to me. I read through my blogs for Pepperjack Cheese Fish Burgers and Crab Burgers, as well as the one for Caprese Salmon Burgers to find a quick path to dinner. A run to the store for buns and some produce for the Fennel-Cilantro Coleslaw and I soon had dinner on the table. Both dishes, for speed, depend on the food processor but can also be done by hand if that’s your druthers.

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Strawberry-Rhubarb Bars

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I bake less in the summer even though it’s when the fruit is both perfect and plentiful. The house is warm and doesn’t need my gas oven blasting in an out-and-out war with the pricy air conditioning. But baking less doesn’t mean I don’t bake at all. The other day, it never got above 60F. I was a baking fool. Other times, if I happen to be up early, I’ll slide a quick fruit coffeecake or a tray of scones into the oven while the house is still open and cool from the night air. In Colorado, it’s not unusual to have temperatures in the 50’s at o’dark thirty. Thank you, weather gods. Birthdays? I’m up at 5 a.m. making cake no matter what. I mean, people need birthday cakes; don’t they? Even when it’s summer? Of course.

Funerals, too, need sweet treats to eat through the grief and to have something to share with other mourners while sipping coffee or punch. (At my funeral, there d*** well better be wine. If it was good enough for Jesus…) Gives you something positive and sacramental (“breaking bread,” right?) to do together while you remember a friend/loved one or think ahead to a life without that special person. So even if it’s hot, I’ll bake for a funeral. Wouldn’t you?

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Salmon on Lemon Polenta with Vegetables

For vegetarian guests, nix the fish, add extra veggies +/or grilled tofu, and top with big shards of Parmigiano Reggiano

Dedicated to the memory of my dear friend, Kathy Beck (1944-2024)

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As an official salmon fanatic, I cook one of the world’s healthiest and most popular fish year round. But once summer begins, I find it’s on my menu just a little more often because 1. it grills so easily, 2. is done quickly, 3. pairs with nearly anything, and 4. the leftovers are awesome–think frittata, salad, sandwich, pasta, appetizer spread, or fill-in the blank_____.

I’m rarely stuck about what to serve with salmon as I keep a fridge and countertop full of vegetables and even a plate of sliced tomatoes is fine if it’s hot and sticky. Sometimes I find myself cooking a boatload of this awesome fish because I need the leftovers for a specific purpose. This time, I wanted to take my Greek Salmon Pasta Salad to a friend, so cooked a whole side of salmon one night –making this Salmon on Lemon Polenta with Vegetables for us– then stirring together my friend’s pasta the following afternoon. I still had a little left and tossed that in the freezer so I can make Salmon-Cheese Spread some other day. Salmon: It’s the fish that keeps on giving. If you are one or two, don’t hesitate to cook a whole side of salmon. It’s the old cook once, eat three times mantra.

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Almond Shortbread

Who first thought of sugar, butter, and flour together? A match made in heaven, I’d say.
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I’ve made the same shortbread recipe for years. Ina Garten stands by Eli Zabar’s shortbread recipe and I’ve done the same. What’s good enough for Ina…! In fact, there are several variations on that theme right on this blog–think chocolate dipped and salted fluted rounds, sugar-sprinkled hearts, lemon-scented fluted cookies, and even a savory appetizer version. I have, however, heard from a follower that the dough is a perfect pain to keep together and roll; I partly agree. It is sometimes, though not always, difficult–you must pay strict attention and keep patching and rolling– but the result always seemed to be worth it. Facing the need for a couple hundred shortbread cookies for my friend Lynne Stefonik’s mom, Marge Murray’s funeral, I decided to compare Ina’s/Eli’s basic to other shortbreads just to see what I could see. One that appeared promising was SCOTCH SHORTBREAD from THE FANNY FARMER BAKING BOOK by Marion Cunningham, a book I trust implicitly. The two recipes were similar in scope, the big difference being the use of powdered sugar rather than granulated. Any Scot baker worth her salt knows shortbread is made with granulated sugar–though some also have cornstarch, which is an ingredient of powdered sugar, after all– but I decided to give these a try, given my need for ease and speed. What a bake! This dough goes together, rolls, cuts, and bakes like the perennial dream cookie. The recipe is so simple I had it memorized by the second or third batch. My only change was to move from vanilla extract to almond extract, which is just enough to give them a tasty boost to my mind. I also fleshed out the directions a little. Thanks, Marion. Once again!

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Chickpea-Artichoke Heart Salad for Memorial or Any Day

Today's recipe is in honor of the newly married Annie Harm and Louis Sigtermans. Eat well! Live well! Love well!!

It isn’t even summer yet. But we should be in planning mode for Memorial Day weekend, shouldn’t we? It’s less than a week away; is that possible? Where did May go? Our deck only got swept today and I’ve planted zero, zip, nada, zilch. (Too big of a chance of a freeze, still.) There are some new plants in their pots patiently waiting their turn out front and I can run them inside should a really cold snap appear, as it nearly always does. But last night, after a warm day, just felt like it was time to begin tossing easy no-cook dishes together — ones that get stuck back in the fridge for lunches or sides for the next night’s chop or fish so you don’t have to start dinner from scratch. (Something that might be good for, say, Memorial Day?!) I am, perhaps like you, a circuitous cook. There’s always something coming round tomorrow from what happened today or yesterday or last week or month. It’s conservative–in a good way, smart, healthy, and gives me more time for other things. I adore cooking but it’s not the only thing in my life.

Checking the pantry, there were lots of chickpeas; we love hummus. Artichoke hearts in a big glass jar from COSTCO jumped out at me, as did a forgotten can of hearts of palm, a Trader Joe grab, I think. My fridge and counter are always chock-full of fresh vegetables and I don’t go a day without olives or pickles somewhere along the way. I began chopping and tossed the ingredients in the bowl so that you could see them easily. I do the “recipe in a photo” for social media occasionally and someday I’ll do a little graphics study to improve my work. In the meantime, isn’t it fun to look at something like this and know you could make it? If you save the photo below, you can print it and put it on your fridge. The internet is full of chickpea or other bean salads, but this one is mine and, soon, yours. I do include a for real recipe; scroll down.

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Grilled Halibut with Basil Salsa on Corn and Poblano Risotto

…shown here with cauliflower soup garnished with chopped sautéed mushrooms and garlic

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Menus: always in pencil!

When students or friends are talking cooking, the comment that comes up quite often is, “I just don’t know what to make for dinner.” Even I feel that way once a while and maybe you do, too. To avoid jumping in the car and going to a restaurant and spending money or cooking scrambled eggs and toast (though I love scrambled eggs and toast), I try and make a menu each week. That helps a lot. If the penciled menu and I are not on the same page on a given day –let’s say we ate some leftovers for lunch instead saving them for dinner– my fast meal answer is always fish. I keep 3 or 4 kinds of fish in the freezer and sometimes more. If I bag the fillets tightly in a ziplock bag (after removing the original plastic packaging for safety) and stick them in a bowl of cold water for thawing, I can be grilling or sautéing or roasting our meal in a half hour. A salad gets tossed while the fish cooks–or maybe only tomatoes sliced if it’s summer and the tomatoes are perfect. Soon, dinner is on the table. Other nights, I’ve planned ahead on a gorgeous fish dinner complete with scrumptious sides and that’s what today’s Grilled Halibut with Basil Salsa on Corn and Poblano Risotto is all about.

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KIDS BAKE MOTHER’S DAY: Blueberry Streusel Coffee Cake

Are homey cakes best? Try mine and see!
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Wasn’t it just New Years? Or at least Valentine’s Day? I only yesterday took the Easter runner off my piano. Geez, Alyce. After a month away from home, hearth, dog, and blog, I was –after getting a little reacclimated — amazed to see Mother’s Day coming up quickly on the heels of Cinco de Mayo. The time simply runs. Perhaps you, too, have yet to make the first plan for Sunday, May 12, 2024, but you might start right here with nearly the simplest of sweet treats, my Blueberry Streusel Coffee Cake–which you can throw together and slide into the oven in truly a few minutes. If you are a really good soul (and you are, right?) and are baking with a local kiddo, it might take a few more. And if you’re skipping Mother’s Day all together, go ahead and bake this for yourself or have a favorite neighbor in for coffee. Don’t wait. Everyone should have a 9″x 13″ coffee cake in their back pocket and if you’ve not yet found yours, claim this one now. It’s fast, inexpensive, easy, flexible, and requires no chopping of fruit since it’s made with toss-in-the-bowl blueberries. Frozen work as well as fresh; just rinse and use — no thawing necessary. One thing about this cake is: it’s really a cake, by golly. This isn’t bread masquerading as cake. There’s a bu** load of sugar and even more fat than that and you’ll darned well like it when you eat it, I promise you. Diet another day and make sure the coffee is hot, good, and strong (just like mom!) while you’re at it.

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FRIDAY FISH: Tuna Patty Breakfast Stack

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I think most folks keep a few cans of tuna in the pantry for quick lunches or emergency dinners. It’s lovely food, inexpensive as protein goes, shelf stable, and versatile. I buy a stack of tuna cans at Costco, alternating every few months with canned salmon just so we have a change. We’re tuna salad for lunch people, maybe once or twice a month but during FRIDAY FISH weeks, looking for new uses for canned fish is something that keeps me hopping. Two weeks ago, including fish in a brunch dish in the spring lineup began to flit through my brain. Eggy meals complete with red meats line the menus of breakfast shops with only a veggie omelet, a smoked salmon benedict, or the occasional bowl of tan, sticky oatmeal to tempt someone looking for a healthier alternative. Why couldn’t there be a benny-ish sandwich utilizing a filling tuna patty topped with a gorgeous fried egg? The easy answer was that there could. I took the fish burger or salmon patty approach, but opened cans of tuna instead of salmon or chopping up raw cod. I added a few typical ingredients (panko, onion, garlic, egg) and then threw in dill, Old Bay, and a bit of ground cayenne for fun. What was so amazing was how fast these little tuna patties, as they came to be called, came together. And when I toasted and buttered an English muffin, topped one with that hot egg and a few garnishes, I was happy as a clam with my breakfast. (Why are clams happy?)

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