Harry & David $60 {giveaway closed} | The Friday Fifteen: March 22, 2013

Peanut Butter Molasses Ginger Chews | www.foodiewithfamily.com

This week feels like it has gone almost as quickly as that stack of cookies up there disappeared. Is it just me? We’re bustling around to get the house ready for the arrival of the many family members and friends who will be joining us for a Celebration of Life service next week for my beloved bonus mom (stepmom), Valerie. This week’s Friday Fifteen has food to feed a crowd, books that I love for quiet time, and a woooonderful giveaway to cap off our week.

Let’s do this thing!

Main Dish Madness

Thai Chicken Tacos by Gimme Some Oven Whoa. Can everyone agree with me? Just whoa. Tender chicken on slaw with Thai peanut sauce drizzled over it. I want it badly.

Kale, Mushroom, and Cheddar Bake by Simply Recipes Word. I want a pan of this and a spoon and a comfy chair. Clearly, I am in need of comfort food. This looks like the thing to do the job.

Garlicky Greens and Chevre Hand Pies by Starting Fresh Recipes It’s pretty safe to say that I am totally, 100% obsessed with these right now. As a born-Yooper, I have a hand-pie birthright (Hello, Pasties!) and I am eminently qualified to judge hand pies. I declare these to be crave-able. I also declare these to be on my to-do list.

Easy Chicken Green Chili Tacos by My Life as a Mrs. YES, baby!!!! I think tacos and pizza are the perfect foods. They’re the right ratio of meat/cheese/tacos/crunchy goodness. Rawr. RAWR. I could use a half dozen of these right now.

Thai Chicken Pizza by Seeded at the Table Didn’t I just say pizza and tacos are perfect foods? Heck to the yes. I will stick my face in the pizza very, very soon. Mark my words.

Appetizing Appetizers and Snacks

Nutella Brie Bites by Bev Cooks Seriously, Bev. You need to stop doing what you’re doing or I’m going to weigh 500 pounds. These are little tiny rectangles of puff pastry baked with thin slices of brie on top so it gets melty and bubbly as the pastry gets puffy. When they come out of the oven they’re drizzled with warm Nutella. Dear heavenly Father. I’m totally making this for the houseful of guests I have this week. I guarantee my sisters will be parked in front of the tray as it comes out of the oven. I’d better get a big honkin’ wheel of brie.

Pickled Avocados by La Fuji Mama I am all over this like brine on a pickle. It’s a well known fact that I am obsessed with pickles. Also well known is my fixation on avocados. This is happening here and soon and probably getting served on top of a rice bowl with a fried egg and some pickled carrots. That’s all I have to say about that.

Beautiful Breads

Fabulously Fluffy Buttermilk Butter Biscuits by Fields of Cake Biscuits are the instant gratification baby of the bread world. I know biscuits and these biscuits look fantastic. Can’t you just imagine a plate of these fresh from the oven slathered with marmalade? I know I can.

Deadly Desserts

Ho Ho Cake by La Fuji Mama Fuji Mama hit my Friday Fifteen twice this week and for good reason. Lemme tell you, I was talking to my aunt who’s flying up to our area from Florida for the memorial service and I asked what she wanted me to make for her food-wise. She said, “Honey? Just comfort food. Lots of it.” I would say this cake qualifies with a capital Q. It’s a ho-ho cake, people. I think I’ll make three.

Jello Blood Worms by The Idea Room I made this with a cooking class I taught for kids last year. It went over like gangbusters, people. They actually looked like REAL worms after being tossed with Oreo crumbs. In fact, someone came to me and asked if I was really and truly letting the kids eat worms. You’d like photographic evidence? Absolutely. That’s my boy!

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I do have one piece of advice: have people handy to help you squeeze the jello worms from the straws. Your hands get slippery and it ends up (*wimpy alert*) kind of hurting your hands a bit.

Knock You Naked Brownies by The Pioneer Woman Well, I don’t know about THAT. I mean, I want those brownies more than I want my left foot right now, but I think I’d keep my clothes on. I’m kind of neurotically modest like that. Well, aside from the time that I actually lifted my shirt to prove to Ree that I was wearing Spanx (the one time I actually WORE Spanx because they’re EVIL) when I was visiting her for the Bush’s Beans event. But that’s another cup of coffee. And the point remains: I want these brownies, but I will eat them clothed. In lots and lots of clothing.

 Beautiful Breakfasts

Oatmeal Brulee with Maple Cinnamon Cream by Very Culinary Oatmeal rocks my husband’s world. I’m pretty fond of the stuff myself. I’m pretty sure this beautiful concoction from Amy at Very Culinary is one of the best looking oatmeals I’ve ever seen. And I’m also equally certain that the heavy cream in it is offset by the whole rolled oats and fruit in the recipe. Heyyyyyy. I didn’t get to the pinnacle of food bloggerhood without some serious rationalization. It’s my gift to you.

 

Books, books, books!

The Code of the Woosters by P.G. Wodehouse. Many years ago, Val gave me my first Wodehouse collection. I had never read anything by him before and I didn’t know what to think about them. It was daughterly duty that made me crack that first cover but -oh my goodness- once I was two pages in, I was hooked. Wodehouse does situational slapstick unlike anyone else I’ve ever read. The Jeeves and Wooster stories are so lighthearted, so sweet, so ridiculous and so endearing that I re-read them nearly every year. They’re the perfect summer read and they do not tax your emotions while still remaining smart and quick. These have my absolute recommendation!

Sense and Sensibility by Jane Austen. Oh sure, everyone knows Pride and Prejudice, and for good reason. Sense and Sensibility is the Jane Austen book that truly has my heart, though. The story -spun only as Jane Austen can- focuses on Elinor who is rational and sensible and her sister Marianne who is a wild, uncontrolled romantic and their suitors. The book isn’t some soppy romance, though, as Jane Austen managed to marry satire and romance. I adore this book.

GIVEAWAY!

Update: The “Pick a Giveaway Winner” plugin has chosen Barbara N. as our winner. Barbara, please check your email and send your mailing address so we can get your goodies out to you! Congratulations!

You know I love Harry & David dearly. They sent me a gorgeous Easter box of their best Royal Riviera pears to review this week. My review, in short, is that they are the best pears I’ve ever had. This is my fourth batch of Royal Riviera pears and they have all been equally wonderful. They’re so juicy and tender that you can eat them from the skin with a spoon. I hate to say it, but we’re ruined on other pears for now because the Royal Riviera pears are so darned good.

How to Enter the Giveaway!

Harry & David has generously offered to give an Easter gift to one very lucky Foodie with Family reader. Do your best Easter Bunny impersonation and hop on over to look at Harry & David’s Easter gift selection then hop back here and leave a comment letting me know which item under $60 you’d like. That’s it- you’re entered! One entry per person, please! We will use random.org to choose a winner Monday, March 25, 2013 and announce it here by noon on this post.

harrydavid

The Friday Fifteen: March 15, 2013

Pork and Fig Mollettes 3

It’s Friday the 15th! And I have the Friday Fifteen today! This is all too tidy, so I’m putting -at my father’s suggestion- sixteen links into this post. I clearly have an authority problem.

See that picture up top? That is one of my newly favourite dishes ever, ever, ever. I tasted one at Rick Bayless’s Frontera at Chicago’s O’Hare airport and almost wept with joy. Yes. I loved airport food. I loved it so much that I made my own. If you haven’t tried it yet, you’d best do it soon. You’ll regret the time you’ve lost not eating it if you don’t.

There’s been so much great stuff out there this week for Saint Patrick’s Day… You KNOW how I feel about corned beef, so it figures largely in this week’s roundup. And colcannon? Forget it. How could you go wrong with mashed potatoes, greens, onions, butter and cheese?

 

Main Dish Madness:

Favourite Slow Cooker Recipes by Add A Pinch. Dear Robyn has collected her favourite slow-cooker recipes from her site. Can I just personally put in a word for every single one of the recipes she included? Her Balsamic Roast Beef and Slow Cooker Chicken Enchiladas are on our regular rotation around here. Oh, and BONUS! She’s giving away a most fabulous slow cooker. Get on over there and enter, people!

Corned Beef Poutine with Guinness Gravy by Closet Cooking. My word. French fries, corned beef, Guinness gravy, melted cheese. Mercy. I’d probably just have to sit alone eating this so I wouldn’t have to talk to anyone thereby ruining the joy of the experience.

Baked Tilapia with Pecan Rosemary Topping by Cookin’ Canuck. I am a fish nut and this tilapia looks beyond tempting with its sweet, spicy, crunchy, nutty topping.

How to Make your Own Corned Beef by Black Girl Chef’s Whites. Yes, yes, yes. This is how I feed my corned beef habit at less than a billion dollars per pound and it’s so easy and so gratifyingly delicious. Try it out. Now, you won’t have it done in time for St. Pat’s, but who cares? Corned beef is for the year round!

 

Appetizing Appetizers and Snacks:

Chipotle-Cheddar Broiled Avocados by Eating Well. Oooooooh yeaaaaaaaah. I’ll take five. Make it six. We wouldn’t want to leave that poor avocado half hanging, would we?

Ricotta Crostini Party by Honestly Yum. This tray full of thin, crispy crostini topped with ricotta cheese and all sorts of lovely toppings actually makes me angry. Angry because I’d have to employ strategy to prioritize which one to eat first to ensure I get my favourites. Radishes, smoked salmon with dill, honey with blueberries or nuts, strawberries with aged balsamic vinegar, cucumbers and herbs? Holy man. I’d have to lock myself in the closet and eat them all by myself.

Reuben Style Potato Skins by Simple Comfort Food. Hubba hubba! Potato + Corned Beef + Sauerkraut + Swiss Cheese= Happy, happy me. This is happening.

 

Deadly Desserts:

Chocolate Pretzel Nachos by Gimme Some Oven Are you even kidding me? Would you look at those? Pretzel chips topped with chocolate chips, a fudgy sauce, mini marshmallows and SPRINKLES! GAH! I about died when I saw these. My kids begged for me to make them. They’re on the docket for this Saturday’s nacho-fest.

Nutella Peanut Butter Chewies by Seeded at the Table. These cookies made me do a double take. No flour? Nutella, peanut butter, powdered sugar, egg and vanilla. Hey, these are gluten-free! And boy do they ever look good! Nikki says they’re crispy on the outside and chewy on the inside. I can’t wait to give these a whirl for myself!

Classic Shamrock Shake by The Naptime Chef. There are not words to describe my obsession with Shamrock Shakes. Oh, and I’m pretty sure I mentioned once or fifteen times that I gave up frozen treats for Lent so you know that means I won’t have one from The Golden Arches this year. I will, however, have every single ingredient in my pantry/fridge that I need to make this on Easter Sunday.Woot woot!

Chocolate Amaretto Crepe Cake by Sprinkle Bakes. This take on a classic French dessert is sure to be a head turner. We are talking about a visually stunning dish that tastes equal to its looks; layer upon layer of whisper thin crepes filled with a chocolate amaretto ganache then frosted. When you cut into it, you have so many layers of lusciousness that it can be overwhelming in a good way!

Beautiful Beverages

Homemade Bailey’s Irish Cream by Averie Cooks. Make your own Irish Cream in a blender. Okay. If you insist. I’d be happy to. Thank you. Mwah!

Cool Gadgets

Magimix by Robot-Coupe. This is my only recommended gadget this week. I received one for review and have been putting this thing to the grindstone for several weeks. If you want to buy a food processor, do yourself a favour and save up until you can get this one. I’ve paid my own money for other big name food processors and been terribly disappointed by the shoddy, lightweight construction and anemic power behind them. This one is heavy and serious. I LOVE that it doesn’t hop around on the counter while I’m using it. I adore that it blitzes whatever the heck I put in it in record time. I can’t get over how sharp those French blades are. I used the commercial equivalent of it when I worked in restaurant kitchens and loved it then and love it even more now. I know the reputation of the company and I know how great their customer service is and can recommend it without reservation. (Note: I am not compensated for this post or the review. This is NOT an affiliate link. I seriously believe this is the best food processor you can possibly get outside of a commercial kitchen and it’s well worth the money.)

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Books, books, books!

A Thousand Splendid Suns by Khaled Hosseini. There’s no getting around it, this book made me weep the ugly cry and jagged sobs. So why am I recommending it? Because I think it is one of the best books in the last decade. Because I think it is crucial to know how very fortunate and blessed American women are. Because Khaled Hosseini is a masterful story teller who pulls you into the story so effectively that you are willing to join humanitarian or missions groups just to go help people around the world.  Get it on Kindle:

…Or in paperback. It’s hard to beat a used copy for a penny plus three dollars in shipping!

Or go to your library and get on the waiting list for it for free, but do read it. And when your sons and daughters are old enough, have them read it, too. It’s that important.

A Wrinkle in Time, A Wind at the Door, A Swiftly Tilting Planet, and Many Waters by Madeleine L’Engle. It’s hard for me to explain just how much these junior fantasy books mean to me. I read them first when I was about thirteen years old; they were gifts from my Aunt Molly. They transported me completely to the world of the O’Keefe children that I almost could’ve sworn that I was the red-headed, awkward, hot-tempered, glasses-wearing Meg O’Keefe. Madeleine L’Engle is widely considered to be a children’s author, but I’ve reread these books several times as an adult and gotten something new and deep from them on each reading. In fact, my best friend of years-upon-years and I had a discussion over the phone about Charles Wallace’s farandolae and mitochondria and how it’s a metaphor for what society is experiencing with perpetual childhood. Don’t let that scare you off of the books, though… Give them to your favourite tween or teen or read them yourself and see what I mean. And if you haven’t read them yet, do yourself a favour and start one on a dark and stormy night while snuggled under your quilt. Oh what fun!

 

Magnificent Movies

Spirited Away by Hayao Miyazaki. Yes, this is an animated film. This acclaimed and award winning fantasy is about Chihiro, a young girl trapped in a world of traditional Japanese spirits. Despite her fears, she perseveres in order to help save her parents who have undergone a mysterious transformation. Miyazaki has an unparalleled ability to use silence and quiet to fill the spaces that would normally be filled with chatter taking a film that could’ve been merely good and making it great. All of my kids (ages 6-15) love this movie and I can happily recommend it to that age group and above. I do suggest that if you have kids who are particularly susceptible to tension in movies, you may want to preview it. Personally, I put this movie firmly in my top-five-films-of-all-time list. It is heartwarming, magical, sweet, cautionary and redemptive all at the same time. Don’t just take my word for it, though, look at the other reviews for it!

 

The Friday Fifteen: March 8, 2013

A Snowman Army by Foodie with Family

I spend a lot of time on the internet for research and networking. Oh, okay… I also spend far too much time on Pinterest just browsing and making myself hungry and I also do it because, frankly, I’m getting more than just a little tired of this winter weather.

I often stumble upon things -recipes, kitchen gadgets, fashion or fitness tips, books, movies, etc.-  or have other news that I want to share with you and until now, I hadn’t figured out a way to do it without inundating you, your email inboxes and your readers with all sorts of tiny little posts. I’m too tidy to do that to you.*

*And yet, somehow, I’m not tidy enough to keep up on laundry. Riddle me that.

The proverbial lightbulb in my brain went poof this week, though. A weekly roundup of one big old collection of fabulous things on Fridays was the answer. There will be at least fifteen, but I am going to give myself permission to throw a few extras in if it’s a particularly wondrous internet week because honestly, there’s so much great talent out there that deserves some link love!

I can’t even wait to dig in, so let’s kick this thing off!

Main Dish Madness:

Fontina Polenta with Easy Marinara Sauce by Foodie Crush. Drool with a capital D! I am not usually a red sauce and pasta girl, but I am MOST definitely a red sauce and polenta (or as my kids call it, “Eye-talian Grits.”) girl. Polenta pretty much completes me all by itself, but you add cheese -especially fontina- and I’m going to beg for it. As usual, Heidi’s photography makes me want to lick my computer screen.

Feta Basil Turkey Burgers by Fifteen Spatulas. This turkey burger studded with feta cheese, fresh basil, and Worcestershire is calling my name in a big way. Those are four of my food impulse words (burger, feta, basil, Worcestershire) in one gorgeous looking recipe.

Basil Primavera Stuffed White Sweet Potatoes by Oh Sweet Basil. Carrian says she’s ready for spring. I am, too… and this baked white sweet potato (YUM) topped with a creamy primavera sauce with fresh basil, asparagus and sweet peas sounds like just the way to ring in Spring.

Butter Chicken Sliders by A Spicy Perspective. Holy moly. I’d like to be alone with a plate of these, please. Just shut the door on your way out, if you don’t mind.

Lemongrass Beef Banh Mi by The Little Kitchen. All the flavours of a classic porky banh mi transferred to beef, served with a fried egg on top? Dear me. I’m afraid I could consume far more of this than is good for me and not regret it at all. Ever. I might even ask for more.

Appetizing Appetizers and Snacks:

Bacon Wrapped Apricots with Rosemary Honey by Reluctant Entertainer. You’re killing me, Sandy. I could make a meal out of these quite happily.

Greek Tatziki Sauce with Garlic and Dill by The Lemon Bowl. Liz recommends serving this with Middle Eastern dishes but she missed discussing what I think my favourite way would be to eat this: with a big, fat spoon. Mmmm… Garlic, yogurt, dill? That’s happy land.

Whipped Feta by How Sweet Eats. Once again, Jessica has blown my mind. Whipped. Feta.

Deadly Desserts:

Salted Caramel Sauce by Two Peas and Their Pod. There is nothing to say other than, “Please pass me that jar and a straw, Maria.”

S’mores Ice Cream by A Kitchen Addiction. I don’t even usually LIKE S’mores (heresy, I know… they’re just so sticky and rich) and I want an entire bowl of this ice cream to myself. It’ll have to wait ’til after Lent, though. You know why…

Hostess Cupcake Cookies by Bake at 350. Bridget is a mad genius with cookies and these cookies are just too darned cute. They wouldn’t get past the door before being inhaled in this house.

Chocolate Mint Skillet Cookie by She Wears Many Hats. This is almost more temptation than I can handle. I have a weakness for Thin Mints. I have an affinity for skillet cookies. I just can’t handle how delicious this looks.

 

Cool Gadgets:

The Panasonic 5 Cup Fuzzy Logic Rice Cooker is a kitchen convenience I highly recommend for singles and smaller families. I have used a larger 10-cup cooker for years for my small-regiment sized family, but received this rice cooker to review shortly before the holidays. I put it through its paces and sent it home with my dad to see how it worked for someone cooking for one. I loved the ease of use. My dad has done smaller amounts of white, wild and brown rice and been pleased with the results. This cooks -as it should- all kinds of rice perfectly. The porridge setting is great for oatmeal or jook/congee breakfasts. I think the coolest part of this is the included steamer basket that allows you to cook a small amount of rice and steam some fish or veggies on top all at the same time.

 

Books, books, books!

Classic Snacks Made from Scratch: 70 Homemade Versions of Your Favorite Brand-Name Treats by Casey Barber. Let’s talk about this for a moment, shall we? Casey has put together the Bible on recreating classic snack foods from scratch at home: Corn Nuts, Doritos, Sour Cream and Onion Potato Chips, Twinkies, Hostess Cupcakes, Klondike Bars, and more. CORN NUTS AT HOME, PEOPLE. My kids took one look at it and disappeared into the den with a notebook and pencil. An hour later they came back with a prioritized list of the recipes they wanted me to try first and another list with the chores they were willing to do to get them. I kid you not. Buy this book for yourself and it will make your children behave. Maybe. Well, at least as long as it takes for you to cook your way through their favourites.

The Dangerous Book for Boys by Conn Igulden. To say that my boys have spent a little time with this book would be the understatement of the century. The book is filled with things that make boys’ hearts sing: rope and knot work, Morse code, how to build a fort/tipi/lean-to, how to do coin tricks, how to talk to girls (“You have cooties” is not one of the options.), states and capitals, marbles, tree identification, space travel history, baseball stats, dinosaur guide, astronomy, role-playing games, Shakespeare, how to make a water bomb/paper hat/boat, making a pinhole projector and so very much more. Every one of my boys has their own favourite section of the book and even though it’s been stashed under pillows, left in the rain, used as the corner brick in a blanket fort, and slept on by dogs, the binding is still holding up beautifully. Those publishers knew what they were doing in more ways than one. If you’re looking for a book for a boy age 6-16, I don’t think you choose better than this!

Disclosure: The links for The Dangerous Book for Boys, Classic Snacks Made from Scratch and the Panasonic Rice Cooker are all Amazon.com affiliate links. I was not compensated for recommending them.