Monday, December 12, 2011

I'm Dreaming of a White Christmas





Yummys from the kitchen.


Les petits plats sur les grands.........


Breaking out the good silver.

All photos via iiiinspired 

Visions of sugarplums.................


........And if they don't turn up while you're asleep, you just might find them here:  Anybody remember Mowie from my blogroll?  The Christmas edition of his Mowie magazine is coming out soon. I think it's going to be good!  Find it here.  If you need to be convinced, have a look at his previous issue at the same link.







Sunday, December 11, 2011

Monday Bites - Nice Nosh!


I'm not cooking this Christmas......


but apparently that doesn't mean that I leave off one of my very favorite Christmas traditions:


leafing through old magazines and excavating those recipes that I always dreamed of trying and never got round to.  OK, I know, caviar and toast doesn't strictly qualify as a "recipe".  But it's still a yummy idea is it not?  


Who knew years ago that a Christmas tamale recipe would come in very handy once I'd landed in L.A., as this is a very traditional Christmas specialty in this part of the world.  


But let me be honest.  It's nice to consider festive main courses for the occasion but the really true excitement for me of the season has got to be the Christmas world of DESSERT.


Truffles seem to have been supplanted in the popular American imagination by macarons, but really, what is nicer, and easier, for a Christmas buffet or cocktail party than these?  It's a little like making mudcakes, isn't it - you can get your hands dirty and have a little snow dance under shakings of cocoa powder....... DON'T buy those stale, torpid, slightly greasy things in boxes that announce their ubiquity at the ends of all the supermaket aisles!!!!!!!  There is NOTHING like fresh (cream) truffles.  Don't hold back.  Yes. Do try this at home with your children.   It's something you will never forget.


Christmas pie or Christmas cake?  My mother always favored cherries jubilee, but if I am at home in the States, it will always be cake for me.  (In England, without fail, it's Christmas pudding.  I adore it with a generous slathering of brandy butter!)  There's no doubt that some kind of white cake blends in beautifully with all your Christmas decorations.  And will look drop-dead festive.


We are great lovers of coconut cake in our family, but this one could just be peppermint.  And I like the idea of a very very pale pink frosted cake with a white inside.  If I were to make such a pink and white cake I would have to pass on the peppermint and do something plainer, or with nuts in it like a German hazelnut torte with a whipped cream frosting, or a repeat of the Pierre Herme derived recipe from last Christmas' cupcakes:  (raspberry, lychee and rosewater flavors, that I posted about here). 

I really truly think that Christmas flavors should be special.  And not something that you might readily eat at any other time of the year.


Now, strictly speaking, I'm not really an ice-cream and cake girl.  I hate actually, the way the ice cream tastes so cold and overpowers the cake flavor, but then so quickly melts, and then makes the cake soggy and gets all soupy and sticky with crumbs floating in it.  Arrrrrrgggggghhhhhhh.  Really, what a mess.  SO NOT special and festive to me.

Instead, I much prefer a Baked Alaska.  We used to make this at a restaurant I worked in.  It's an old school idea, but one that's really quite easy to pull off (especially if you're not afraid of handling a blow torch.)  And it's always exciting to bring one of these into a crowded room of people, whether or not you've set the center alight.  The ice cream and the cake stay at mostly the same temperature and because of the insulating meringue coating, soften nicely for eating but stay firm enough to hold their consistency but separateness.  i.e., no ice cream in your cake, and no cake in your ice cream!


These are something I never would have thought twice about on the East Coast, but now in L.A. with lovely fresh dates available (I'm almost certain, even at this time of year) these would be light and lovely and easy to make to serve with espresso.

(Photos mostly vintage Martha Stewart, then British Homes and Gardens
 and Marie Claire Maison.)


Finally, pate de fruits.  Who doesn't love tangy acidic delicate fruit flavors that will still melt on your tongue in the middle of a cold and dark festive season.  With brilliant sunny colors?  I can't think of anything better.  It's a lovely alternative to the "too-much-is-never-enough" ethos of Christmas partakings.  

Do you get really inspired by Christmas cooking and try always new things, or do you go with very traditional recipes that go back in your family?   Do you have a signature recipe that everybody always asks for?  After all the cooking, do you feel like eating?

What does Christmas mean to you?  Is it all about the food?  The family gatherings?  The presents and the kids?  The Christmas lights?  Or a big old rest at the end of the year?









Saturday, December 10, 2011

Seasonal Sepias




Enjoy the Celebrations,  Don't Overdo the Shopping......


Just make sure you get lots of naps.









Thursday, December 8, 2011

Count Down: Just About Two Weeks to Go!




These are Christmas colors aren't they?  Have a great weekend all you shoppers, bakers, and wrappers!








Wednesday, December 7, 2011

This Would Be A Longer Post........



If I weren't madly trying to get Christmas cards out!


Like the pic?  I found it via Delphine at ParadisExpress.  (Photo by BNPS - Bournemouth News and Picture Service - who knew?)  Do you have a tree yet?












Tuesday, December 6, 2011

Corner View - Youer than You


What makes



me ME.  And you?  A YOU-er you?  Have you ever thought about it before this Corner View?

What does it mean:  "Who are YOU?"  (WHO AM I?)  Is it who you call yourself?  Or what someone else calls you?

Could it be that you could be a YOU-er you......if?.......you'd studied something else,  married someone else, grown up elsewhere.

Is a YOU-er you always a good thing?

Is a you-er you, the things you own?  The things you'd like to own?  The way you spend your time, and with whom? Where you come from?  Or where you're going?  The things you've made.  Or the things you spend your time doing to hold all the rest together?

The things seen, read.  Any things unsaid?

Do your children, or your parents, make you a you-er you?  Or is it someone else?

Anything more you'd like to do?  To find yourself a YOU-ER you?  (With a little shoutout to Dr. Seuss.)



For a World of YOUS, via Corner Views:



  



Monday, December 5, 2011

Christmas Bests


Can I make some Christmas shopping suggestions from some of my web favorites?


Cards and prints from Suzanne Norris', Sakura Snow Etsy shop


 Winsome and witty little felt characters from Swig

Dreamy fine art prints from Jeremy Miranda



Luminous cards for the season of lights from Guillemette at Grey Lemon


Toasty alpaca fingerless gloves from LeafGreen Handmade


Inspired papercuts of all your favorite places at Famille Summerbelle


Inspiring paper cuts from cult cutter, Rob Ryan


All that's girly (and a little that glitters) at Anzu London



And the sweetest and most beautiful tribute in book and prints to a lovely little dog from Camilla Engman and Studio Morran



And from ShipandShape.  What do I need to add?


Click on the links to find out where to buy them.  Christmas is soon already, isn't it?  Done your shopping?  Sent your cards?