I travel eagerly the roads of discovery, listening, touching, tasting and seeing, reveling in the joys of being alive.
When I learned by chance that one of the favorite dishes of old Augustus Caesar was parsnips drizzled with honey, I sought out this odd, old-fashioned vegetable and gave his recipe a try.
To this day, I love it. I slice and steam them until they are soft, then drip the honey over them.
How to explain the taste of a parsnip? I find it somewhat similar but superior to the common carrot -- spicier and yet not quite as musky-strong. Do not be put off by its pallid complexion. Certainly don't confuse it with a turnip, which is round, bitter and of a different plant family altogether.
I was excited to discover a recipe for parsnip bread recently. But I was disappointed with the results. The ingredients were quite standard: flour, an egg, oil, salt, cloves, allspice and cinnamon, as well as, of course, two peeled and shredded parsnips.
It also called for a full cup of sugar. I don't care for bread that is "crunchy" with sugar crystals so I halved the amount. If anything, that should have made the resulting dough even less dry than it was. But confronted by a powdery, clumpy pile in the baking bowl, I added about half a cup of milk, nowhere called for in the recipe, until a state of batter was achieved.
The results were still somewhat dry and somewhat flat and quite disappointing. I am sure that good parsnip bread can be made but I will have to find a different recipe.
Thursday, January 20, 2011
In praise of parsnips
Thursday, October 11, 2007
Fun in the forecast
The weekend is due in just a few hours. No work commitments, no family obligations -- I shall enjoy it. I don't get to blog much during the week, or read or do anything except work and sleep.
Sweetie groaned when I picked up a book at the bargain store tonight.
"Another cookbook?"
But this book was special. It was a big, fat, glorious, full-color book all about bread -- bread from Britain, bread from India, even bread from Australia. A history of bread. Bread recipes.
I like making bread. I'm pretty good at it. And I intend to use this one.
I followed a quick German cornbread recipe tonight,from my old book. It was a little dry. I added nearly a cup more milk than it called for and the dough was still dry. Well, Germany isn't known as the land of cornbread anyway, so perhaps I expected too much.
Sweetie says it will be just fine with a little raspberry jelly for garnish.
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Eastcoastdweller
at
10:36 PM
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Labels: cooking
Sunday, September 2, 2007
Savory Squash
Remembering how much I enjoyed rice seasoned with garam masala -- not just tasty but fragrant -- I sprinkled some ground cloves into the squash and potatoes for dinner last night.
Heaven on a plate!
I shall try more combinations like this in the future.
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Eastcoastdweller
at
8:46 AM
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Labels: cooking, food, garam masala