vaznetti: (cooking)
vaznetti ([personal profile] vaznetti) wrote2013-07-20 01:33 pm

recently cooked

It has been very warm in England recently -- around 30 C which is the high 80s and hot for us -- so since coming back from Portugal we've mostly been eating salads and grilled chicken. But then I went to the farmer's market, and A got about three pounds of redcurrants from a colleague, and we had Spartacus' end-of-school picnic. So since Wednesday we have produced the following:

1. Cake brownies
2. Redcurrant ice cream (and we may try home-made ice cream again)
3. Crayfish salad sandwiches
4. Gooseberry cheesecake
5. Red(?) snapper with tomato and spinach
6. A lot of salad

And now I am going to embark on making ALL the redcurrant jelly. We still have strawberries, raspberries and cherries to eat, too.

I am also thinking about making sourdough starter this fall, and making sourdough bread on a regular basis; I really love it, and good sourdough is so expensive here. But my only breadbaking experience is with the occasional challah. What do you all think? Am I crazy? Is it worht a try?
adafrog: (Default)

[personal profile] adafrog 2013-07-21 01:54 am (UTC)(link)
Gooseberry cheesecake? huh.

mmm...sourdough...

[identity profile] miss-porcupine.livejournal.com 2013-07-20 02:20 pm (UTC)(link)
I say go for it with the sourdough. I made all of my own bread for a few years (not sourdough, admittedly) and I found the experience generally worthwhile, if not exactly my favorite thing to do in the middle of a heat wave. But you've also got Spartacus, who will probably find bread kneading and shaping to be fun to help out with or even just to watch, so there's that.

If you're looking for a bread book, I recommend Peter Reinhart's The Bread Baker's Apprentice for a very technical (but understandable) approach.