Me, Myself, and Ina

By Katie Roche 21 Sep, 2020
For this post, I wanted to combine two summertime flavors into the crisp recipe one of my oldest Alaskan friends passed on to me years ago. Rhubarb, if you're unfamiliar, is a reddish stalk that kind of resembles really big celery. It's very tart and is most commonly paired with strawberry. I've rarely seen it star in its own show dessert-wise, but my friend Kylee has been making rhubarb crisp for years and it's the best crisp I know of. Blueberries are usually in season in late summer; I have not been home for a blueberry season since Dan's last deployment in 2018 so in order to make this recipe I actually used blueberries from a friend's parents' farm in upstate SC! They're a little sweeter than the blueberries I'd have picked at home, but they worked well. I'm going to pretend like I was actually picking blueberries at home in Alaska for the purpose of showing you what that would look like.
By Katie Roche 01 Sep, 2020
I was getting all ready to write this post, going through my process with photos starting in my kitchen when I realized that a lot of my friends probably don't know what fireweed is or where it comes from and this recipe actually starts far, far away from my kitchen. This will be the first of a few posts highlighting iconic Alaskan ingredients. I've wanted to do this for a while because my home inspires me in so many ways, writing and cooking particular among them. Fireweed is a wildflower that is rather ubiquitous in southcentral Alaska and is often considered a gauge for how long summer will last. It is said that when the blooms reach the top of the plant, winter is six weeks away. Whether or not that's accurate, fireweed is found all over in late summer in Alaska. Here is some I spotted in mid-July by Eklutna Lake:
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Blog Post

French Bistro Steaks with Provencal Butter

  • By Katie Roche
  • 16 Apr, 2019
It turns out it is incredibly hard to make time to write a blog post when you're obsessively watching playoff hockey for 7-ish hours a day. Even as I have finally sat down to write this, I am flipping back and forth between the Nashville/Dallas game and the Calgary/Colorado game. I am fascinated to see that Dallas has fans. I'm kind of curious where they come from because I have never seen one or met one in real life. I have a few preconceived notions about people from Dallas and absolutely none of them involve hockey fandom. And now that I'm trying to mentally *get back on track*, it's only 50% working because I'm envisioning Ina Garten at a hockey game. OK. STEAK. 

The ItemQuest for this was ridiculous. Everything besides the actual meat was pretty easy to find, but I read the ingredient list and thought to myself, ok, weird cut of steak? A butcher will have that. That's, you know...the point of a butcher. So we went into the butcher and were like, "Do you have hanger steak?" And not only did they not have it, they basically said that nothing substitutes for it that well, because nothing is really all that similar. The internet says that people will sometimes substitute London broil or tri-tip, mostly just aiming for a lean cut. Apparently a hanger steak comes from the diaphragm of the cow so since each cow only produces like two of these steaks, they're difficult to acquire. The other difficult thing about this experience is WRITING ABOUT COW PARTS because it's making me think about how cute cows are, which is making me think about being a vegetarian. But anyway, our butcher shop sells high quality meat but has low quality calling-back skills, so you really have to pester them multiple times if you have special ordered something or are trying to get them to special order something for you. It's really annoying, but I don't want to alienate them by complaining about it since I'm in there a LOT. I think it was two weeks before they finally got it in, and Dan and I had dropped everything, left a work function early (oh noooo, so sad) and arrived at the butcher 5 minutes before closing to pick up our cow diaphragm. Off to a great start, cow diaphragm, YUM.
This picture is honestly not doing justice to the truly off-putting color this steak was when I took it out of the bag. It was such a deep red, like way deeper than any steak I've ever seen. Like a brownish burgundy. I'm not sure if my distaste was prematurely developed by finding out that it was a cow diaphragm or what, but I like to think that I'm plenty desensitized at this point, thanks to the large quantity of cow tongue sandwiches I was fed as a child. If I never worried about eating meat on which you can actually SEE THE TASTEBUDS, I don't know why a cow diaphragm would be an issue. Although I definitely had a way higher tolerance for disgust as a child than I do now, because just thinking about eating something with visible taste buds is grossing me out immensely, as does blood or the insides of any creature and I used to have an uncontainable enthusiasm for dissecting things. I thought I was going to be a neurosurgeon. Now I run away when people get minor flesh wounds. I wish I had an explanation for this. I guess I had adult-me reaction to cow diaphragm steak, instead of kid-me trust that it would be fully edible and enjoyable. 
Continuing with the theme of things that I liked as a child but inexplicably find abhorrent as an adult, we have anchovies! I can't say for sure that I liked anchovies as a child but I'm pretty sure I would have eaten them without question if my dad or my brother had offered them to me. My brother used to sit at the kitchen table in his long underwear with a giant Robert Jordan novel and open a tin of sardines, and then call me into the kitchen to offer me some of the "stinking fishes" on crackers. Between this and my dad thinking everything is "prison food", if I haven't successfully painted a picture of my family as some of the weirdest people you'll ever meet, I don't know what could make that clearer. You might be wondering what these anchovies are for. Right. They're to put in butter. Because why wouldn't you? Chopping these was the WORST because they were somehow kind of working this hairy texture, which I can only assume from my experience with salmon was actually pin-bones that were not removed.
So here is the completed cylinder of butter which makes up the "Provencal butter" part of this recipe title. I kind of tried to figure out what exactly makes mashing (or in this case, food processing) a bunch of herbs and anchovies into butter "Provencal" and had about as much luck with that as I had figuring out how to use the correctly accented character in the word "Provencal". I can only assume from what I've previously read about Provencal food for other posts that this fits that description because of the fresh herbs and seafood, if you can really consider anchovies "seafood". I just Googled to find where anchovies come from and I guess they really do roll into that Provencal theme since they're from Mediterranean and south European seas. Alrighty then. The other things in this butter are capers, chives, thyme, garlic, lemon zest, and pepper. I had to roll it up in parchment paper like a giant piece of rather unappetizing candy and pop it in the fridge while the steak grilled.
Not sure this picture is adequately capturing the bizarre shade of this steak either. But oh well. Ina says of hanger steak that it's "a little less tender than other cuts but it has lots of flavor". Not very tender but lots of flavor. I would like to actually adopt that as my Twitter bio, thanks Ina. 
The butter did melt quite a bit more after I took this picture, but here we have it. Just when I thought food couldn't get more intense, we're out here putting straight up fish butter on cow diaphragms. I just...anyone who tells himself that they would choose this over a regular hamburger is a liar. This is substantial proof that luxurious and comforting are just not the same thing sometimes. If we were likening food to, say, clothing items, theoretically this would be jeans, the thing people say they wear to be comfortable ("I'm a jeans and a t-shirt kind of girl!") versus hamburgers which would be pajamas - what people ACTUALLY wear to be comfortable. But I don't play. I own my preference of pajamas over everything, and that holds true for my food metaphors as well. I reluctantly ate like three pieces of this steak and passed it off to Dan, who ate it enthusiastically. Strange as it may be, I am never actually all about a meat entrée - I'm straight up there for the potatoes and the meat is just the thing you have to have as a reason to have potatoes. So I paid my steak the respect it was sort of due, ate my few slices, and heartily consumed my air-fried French fries. 

I REALLY WISH there was a way to describe the taste and texture of this steak. I do not have the right words. All I can say is that I did not like it. I did not like it at all. Dan was on board, but is not the writer of this family so the best I could extract from him is that the steak had an almost oily taste/texture to it. In addition to this, with which I agree but which I also realize is hard to imagine, I found the steak to be a bit tough, and for me, that was mentally really hard to get over. Knowing I was putting intense chewing energy into a cow diaphragm was just a lot for me to handle. Ina's recipe intro assures us that this is a "dish to please any man"! A bold claim! I own Ina Garten's cookbook ode to her man, the infamous Jeffrey, and between, ok, that ENTIRE BOOK and this steak recipe, I am curious as to just what Ina thinks she knows about "any man". Until Ina has personally met, I don't know, a NASCAR fan or a man who lets Tupperware ferment in his car and goes to Taco Bell for fourth meal, I'd say she should consider using the term "any" sparingly when it comes to men. And maybe, just maybe, she could also use anchovies and animal diaphragms sparingly in her recipes while she's at it. Just overall, less of all of everything that was happening here would be great. 
By Katie Roche 21 Sep, 2020
For this post, I wanted to combine two summertime flavors into the crisp recipe one of my oldest Alaskan friends passed on to me years ago. Rhubarb, if you're unfamiliar, is a reddish stalk that kind of resembles really big celery. It's very tart and is most commonly paired with strawberry. I've rarely seen it star in its own show dessert-wise, but my friend Kylee has been making rhubarb crisp for years and it's the best crisp I know of. Blueberries are usually in season in late summer; I have not been home for a blueberry season since Dan's last deployment in 2018 so in order to make this recipe I actually used blueberries from a friend's parents' farm in upstate SC! They're a little sweeter than the blueberries I'd have picked at home, but they worked well. I'm going to pretend like I was actually picking blueberries at home in Alaska for the purpose of showing you what that would look like.
By Katie Roche 01 Sep, 2020
I was getting all ready to write this post, going through my process with photos starting in my kitchen when I realized that a lot of my friends probably don't know what fireweed is or where it comes from and this recipe actually starts far, far away from my kitchen. This will be the first of a few posts highlighting iconic Alaskan ingredients. I've wanted to do this for a while because my home inspires me in so many ways, writing and cooking particular among them. Fireweed is a wildflower that is rather ubiquitous in southcentral Alaska and is often considered a gauge for how long summer will last. It is said that when the blooms reach the top of the plant, winter is six weeks away. Whether or not that's accurate, fireweed is found all over in late summer in Alaska. Here is some I spotted in mid-July by Eklutna Lake:
By Katie Roche 18 Aug, 2020
If you know Dan and me very well, you probably know by now that if our life were a sitcom, he'd low-key be the funniest character. Because that is true, I thought I'd include his bottom ten with accompanying remarks before giving the actual bottom ten. His are hilarious, but aren't as legitimate as mine because he actually tried way fewer of these than one might think. I realized as he was flipping through the book that my old coworker Cam probably ate more of these foods than anyone else did. The overarching theme of Dan's song of Ina Garten hatred is not the actual taste of the finished product but more how asinine he finds that particular recipe to be. So here you are, Dan's bottom ten.

#1: Butternut Squash Soup
By Katie Roche 04 Aug, 2020
You guys asked for my top ten from the blog, so here we go! And I'm thinking that what you *really* want is actually the bottom ten, so I'll go ahead and give you those next week. That post will probably be A LOT funnier. While preparing to write this post, I had Dan flip through the cookbook to give me HIS top ten and he was all disgruntled as he did so and only came up with eight that he even liked at all.  "I'm not a picky eater!" he insists. Yeah ok. Although to be fair, I've seen some cookbooks I would only make, like, one thing out of and plenty I'd make nothing out of, though sometimes that's because I find the chef so annoying. @ the Pioneer Woman. I just don't trust someone who puts sour cream in spaghetti and then bakes it. Plus all her recipe intros are about, like, Ladd or Tadd or whatever the heck her husband's name is "coming in from the fields starving for dinner". If I came in from working in a field and you tried to give me sour cream spaghetti, I'd be like, "How about a hot pocket instead? Thx." Anyway, this is not Dan's blog so these are not his top ten. You can ask him which ones he liked, but you'll end up in a long convo about how much he hates Ina Garten. Anyway, these are not ranked or anything, they're just in order from the cookbook.

So with that, #1: Juice of a Few Flowers
By Katie Roche 08 Jul, 2020
It was Sunday afternoon and I thought to myself, "What a perfect time to make jam!" I mean, how positively quaint: just sitting in my home in suburbia, finished with weekend chores, relaxing with some knitting...why not? Why not make some jam? I mean, obviously my afternoon-kitchen-activity was directed toward jam-making because it was next up in the book BUT whatever, I was kind of excited! Also, this is the last recipe in this book!!! I'm still in the process of deciding what I'll do now, so if there's something you'd like me to make and tell you about in my own fashion - you know, with lots of tangents and jokes - please do let me know! I'll likely continue to tackle Ina content, but may start including some recipe faves and/or foods people text me about a lot! I get a lot of cake questions, a LOT of frosting questions (because meringue buttercream is bae and I've got everyone in my social circles who eats my food on board), and a lot of fish questions. So look for more food to come, even though this is the last recipe in Back to Basics. 

We went to Publix to ItemQuest for this and Dan said, "Don't we already have strawberries???" And I had to confess that I had eaten them all because it's honestly amazing how good fruit can be when it's 1) in season, 2) somewhat local, and 3) not ludicrously expensive. I'm about to travel home to Alaska for about a month, and it's going to put a real damper on my current fruit-snacking habits when I go into Fred Meyer for some strawbs and they're like, $7/lb and already trying to be moldy. Also needed blueberries (partly for the jam, mostly for the snax), one Granny Smith apple, and more superfine sugar. Publix had all of these things, plus about a million old people 'cause Sunday + Publix = Old People City.
By Katie Roche 27 Jun, 2020
I was glad Ina gave me something easy for this week, because I was packing for Alaska and just *did not have the time* to mess with hunting lobsters or weird cheeses from the internet or whatever. ItemQuest was fairly straightforward, just took Dan a trip to the liquor store next to the Publix for some limoncello. I grabbed this particular lemon curd in the British aisle of Publix; I think last time an Ina recipe called for lemon curd I bought it from Trader Joe's and it was DISGUSTING. I mean, truly awful. I would like to recommend making your own lemon curd if you have the time and the inclination. Ina's lemon curd recipe is phenomenal and it is one thing for which I can say she is truly correct: homemade is BETTER and store-bought is not at all as good. The most beloved cupcakes I have ever made were filled with Ina's lemon curd, and had the lemon curd mixed into the meringue buttercream frosting. HIGHLY RECOMMEND!!! Anyway, the rest of this was fruit that I had on hand, mint, and Greek yogurt which we did have to buy because I don't, as a rule, eat Greek yogurt of my own free will. It's chalky and disgusting. 
By Katie Roche 19 Jun, 2020
Dates are something I honestly never even thought about until I did Whole 30. I have mentioned my Whole 30 experience several times over the course of this journey through Back to Basics, but if you're new to reading the blog, this is what happened: I did Whole 30 one time, just to prove that I could, because salvation-by-diet apologists were obsessed with it as the newest fad in righteous eating practices. It was a terrible experience; on top of hating every minute of it for myself and finding exactly zero wellness benefits, I also hated it for Dan who was not allowed to eat popcorn for 30 days. Dan is in love with popcorn; his addiction to it is almost at the level of my addiction to coffee. He gets rage-y without it. But anyway, Whole 30 recipes are big into dates as sweeteners and some of the things you can eat, like Lara Bars, are made with dates. Dates are impossibly chewy. I ate more of them in that 30 days than I ever wanted to, and now when I see them in recipes I can't help but think of that Whole 30. Fortunately for me, I got to begin this recipe by chopping TWO CUPS' worth of dates. Oh, they also kind of look like cockroach bodies, so there's that. The only thing I actually had to get at the store for this was oranges! I had everything else on hand, even Cointreau, thanks to many previous Ina recipes. 
By Katie Roche 12 Jun, 2020
Alright so, I'm not the Muffin Man. I don't really make a whole lot of muffins, for a lot of reasons, one of the main ones being that on the rankings of breakfast foods they definitely do not crack the top five, maybe not even the top ten. If I have an option for a bagel or a waffle, I'll pick one of them over a muffin every single time. I also prefer cereal, cinnamon rolls, or *cue eye roll* avocado toast. I've just never risen from my slumber and been like, "You know what would really hit the spot right now? A MUFFIN." But!!! In recent months, since my friend Logan came into my life, I've been making muffins a lot more frequently because he really loves them. So the last blueberry muffins I made were from a 99cent Betty Crocker mix packet which he brought into my house and asked me sweetly to make, because they're what he grew up with and along with many preservatives, they are full of nostalgia for him. Here is Logan and me, preparing to mix the muffin batter. Out of respect (and to make up for the disrespect of rolling up with muffin mix), he wore one of my aprons. I will treasure this picture forever.
By Katie Roche 05 Jun, 2020
You guys...Ina has "a thing" about commercial granola bars. Her beef with them, apparently, is that they say they contain real fruit and nuts but that all she sees when she looks at the labels are like, ten different kinds of corn syrup. I'm going to go ahead and guess, just based on this, that none of the lunches her mom packed for her growing up contained any Fruit By the Foot. And surely if we introduced her to Gushers, she would die. This is a real shame. I also feel like this disdain for corn syrup is maybe just a tad self-righteous, coming from the woman whose frosting recipe calls for literally six entire sticks of butter. At that point, what's a little corn syrup  to you really? People's nutritional hills-to-die-on really fascinate me (and also kind of annoy me sometimes) and the ones about sugar might get me the most. I feel like, at some point, sugar is sugar and whether you're baking with honey, white sugar, brown sugar, molasses, maple syrup, etc you're still probably making something that's not amazing for you so, in terms of sugar, why not just be in for a penny in for a pound, amirite? So while I'm on this topic, before I even get to the actual point (please, I know you're here for the tangents), I would like to just let anyone and everyone know that I'm absolutely not interested in your "healthy substitutes" for things that taste good in their original form. I do not WANT a chocolate chip pancake made out of bananas and grains you harvested in your field this morning. If I want a banana I will eat one, and if I want a chocolate chip pancake I will eat one, and that's that. And DO NOT, I repeat, DO NOT come @ me with "cashew cheese". Just don't. I don't even think I should honor that concept with an explanation of why it's so wrong. If that's not self-evident, I can't help you.

So down to the granola bar ingredients. I rolled up to Kroger only to find that their already meager bulk bins had been EMPTIED because if you scoop dates into a bag and then someone else scoops dates into a bag, you might get the coronavirus. I'm glad they've taken the precaution of removing this shopping option, since I cannot resisting licking my hands after every grocery trip I make. Thankfully, they still had the lil tower of small containers of some of the weirder items right there in the organic section, which was where I was able to find dates. The rest of this stuff was on the baking aisle, with the exception of wheat germ which was, for some reason, with the cereal. I'm still kind of unclear on what wheat germ is actually used for by people, and the context of it being located on the cereal aisle makes me wonder even more. Do people eat it like grape nuts? Sprinkle it on stuff like how people like to do with nutritional yeast right now? ("It tastes just like cheese!" You know what else tastes like cheese? Actual cheese. You're welcome.) Anyway, I was very grateful that Kroger at least had everything I needed and I didn't have to go on a for real ItemQuest.
By Katie Roche 28 May, 2020
At first I saw the pictures of this and thought, "YAY!!! Cinnamon rolls!" And then a couple of weeks ago, I actually tried making cinnamon rolls for the first time and realized that my inability to roll/shape/slice yeast doughs is still a thing. AND THEN I read this entire recipe and realized these get filled with raisins. So here we go! 

ItemQuest was only dramatic because the stores just DID NOT have puff pastry sheets; I was only finding it in "shells". I tried Bi-Lo and Dan tried Food Lion before he finally located sheets at Publix. The rest of the ingredients, I already had on hand! 
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