Wednesday, December 11, 2013

A December to Remember

It's hard to believe December is here and the end to 2013 is drawing near. This has been a big year for us, but more on that to come later.

With today being reportedly one of the coldest of the year (29! Brr!!) it's hard to remember the beautiful days of November we had with sunshine in the low 60's!
Just a few weeks ago these yellow leaves were falling all over our backyard
Despite the many Saturdays spent raking and blowing leaves (we still have more to do!), I always wanted a house with big, old trees in the yard and just feel so blessed that we have them. And despite the many hours going back and forth to Home Depot and Joel's grumbling about more house projects, he has become quite handy and I think he even secretly enjoys it. Last weekend he built us shelves in our closets, hung curtains and blinds, and did some work on the casita! I have some lofty goals for re-working our backyard and knocking down walls to make it more cohsive, and knocking down more walls inside to create a master suite, but for now we are quite cozy. It has been nice to spend some of our weekend just relaxing by the fire and watching the Broncos win.



Smart Puppy! She knows who to cheer for!
Our little family is quite happy getting settled in! One of my favorite new traditions has been walking to dinner on Friday nights to meet Joel after he gets off work. It's so fun to pick a new (or old favorite) place each week. So far Il Vacino, Zinc, and B2B have been some of our favorites.
One of my other favorite routines has been my daily (well almost daily with this Artic Storm) walks to a lovely park in our neighborhood. A few weeks ago when we got our first snow of the year Vesper also got to experience snow for the first time. She had a great time rolling in it, running around with the other dogs, and trying to steal the football from the kids playing in the park.
 

We've had much more snow since then, so Vesper is thrilled every chance she gets to play in it, especially when it involves finding sticks (or should I say branches) as long as she is!


We wrapped up the day with the Nob Hill Shop and Stroll and Parade. It was great to be a 5 minute walk away from all the action!

Vesper trying to get warm





 

Monday, November 18, 2013

Fall Fun

This weekend was full of fall fun! We are ALMOST finished with all the little projects around the house, which will be a huge relief as that has taken up most of our weekends since we moved in. I'm hopeful everything will be as I want it by Christmas!

We had a fun filled Sunday though...


We were long over-do on taking my niece on a "date" as she called it. She was most excited to see the sharks at the aquarium....
 


 
Until we got to the botanical gardens, when her "most favorite" of the "best day ever" was playing in the leaves, having a leaf fight, and throwing leaves all over her Uncle Joel. We had a great time spoiling her!
 
 
Our baby had a busy day too. After agility she was just too tired to take so many pictures
 
 
 
I remember why I didn't do a Christmas Card picture last year--Joel and Vesper are just too difficult! Although our photographer aka my sister Steph did a great job anyway. Here's a preview:
 
 

The Broncos winning was an end to our perfect Sunday. So grateful for our little family!

 


 

Tuesday, October 15, 2013

Fall Picnic

Is it just me or did fall completely sneak up on us? We had plans all summer to go camping, but between the fires and the rains and selling our house we never did make it. With one of my favorite holidays, Columbus Day, approaching, it felt like the perfect weekend for a fall getaway. We had hoped to go camping in the Jemez mountains, but thanks to our elected officials' refusal to agree about anything even National Parks and campsites are shutdown! Well we decided we won't let them shutdown our fall excursion entirely and decided to just take a day trip and picnic instead.
 
At some point we had also stopped at this beautiful winery for a tasting
 
 
 
One of my favorite parts of fall is all the delicious fresh harvest food. I've also been in the mood for some soups and other cozy, comfort foods. When planning our menu I wanted to find delicious fall recipes that took advantage of all the wonderful freshness of the season that could also be easily transported and fairly light. We also had a Fall Harvest Feast with Vicki and Johnny on Saturday.  Here's what I came up with:

Fall Harvest Dinner Menu:
Shallot, Mushroom, and Goat Cheese Flatbread
Butternut Bisque
Grilled Chicken with Lemon, White Wine, and Rosemary
Garden Salad
Four Cheese "Grown Up" Macaroni
Green Chili Apple Pie

Picnic Menu:
Ham, Cheddar, and Apple Sandwiches on Croissant with Confit D' Oignon
Oven-Roasted Mushroom Soup
White Chocolate Macadamia Nut Cookies (Joel loves these anytime)
and Pinot Noir to drink, which should pair nicely with the Confit D' Oignon and really bring out the flavors of the mushrooms
 
Here are the recipes!

Shallot, Mushroom, and Goat Cheese Flatbread
1-2 Shallots
More than one half of mushroom carton-baby portabellas or other gourmet mushroom
2-3 green onions
Sprinkling of goat cheese
Olive Oil
1-2 tsp minced garlic
Salt
Pepper
Pillsbury pizza dough

Arrange all ingredients on rolled out pizza dough. This would be good really with a variety of other toppings, chicken, roasted bell peppers, or you could use a flavored olive oil instead of regular, or more spices such as rosemary or thyme. As my guests had already arrived I didn't want to spend too much time cooking but this could probably be made and/or prepped ahead of time. Bake at 400 12-14 minutes.

Butternut Bisque

1/2 container of butternut squash (I used the packaged container of pre-cut cubes from Costco)
2 tbsp olive oil
2 shallots, minced
2-3 cloves garlic
2 c. chicken broth
1/2 c. water
1/2 c. cream or half and half
1 tsp salt
1 tsp pepper
pinch of cayenne pepper or more to taste
pomegranate seeds
goat cheese

Heat oven to 400. Arrange squash on baking sheet, sprinkle with olive oil, a dash of salt, pepper, and sage. Bake 25 minutes.
Saute olive oil, onions, and garlic in dutch oven or large pot. Caramelize about 10 minutes.
Puree the squash in a food processor or blender, mix with chicken broth as needed to help puree.
Add the remaining chicken broth, water, puree, salt and pepper. Bring to a boil, then reduce heat to maintain a simmer until slightly thickened, about 10 minutes.

I had made all of this in the morning, and at this point I put the soup away and re-heated it right before serving.

Re-heat and add cream, stir. Garnish with cayenne, pomegranate, and goat cheese.


Grilled Chicken with Lemon, White Wine, and Rosemary
We used breasts and thighs from Kellers, which were super fresh and I could definitely taste the difference from the traditional store bought chicken. I marinated it for about 5 hours in 1/2 c olive oil, 1/4 c. dry white wine (I used a cheap Pinot Gris), juice of 1/2 lemon, 1 1/2 tsp rosemary, 1 1/2 tsp thyme, salt and pepper. The grill masters Joel and Johnny cooked for a total of about 25 minutes.

Four Cheese "Grown Up" Macaroni
I don't use a standard recipe for this other than the one I modified from Pinterest, since I've found that many recipes are too much for just two people. This way I modify for how many people I'm cooking for.

Fill a small sauce pan half full with milk. Simmer macaroni or other pasta noodle for about 25 minutes until noodles are soft.  Slightly reduce heat and add cheeses of your choice, I used medium cheddar, sharp white cheddar, Gouda, and Parmesan. Add more cheese or milk depending on how creamy you like it. Season with salt, pepper, and paprika.

Green Chili Apple Pie
I tend to use any basic apple pie recipe: granny smith apples, white and brown sugar, cornstarch, Cinnamon, nutmeg, and allspice. The green chili is what I think makes it really special. My guests seemed super impressed thinking that a pie was difficult to make, but preparing the apples in advance cut down on a lot of the prep time. I believe shortening based crusts are far superior to butter based crusts, and I think they are easier to make. I used a pizza cutter to make the rows for the lattice crust, which was actually easier than placing a whole crust on top, prettier, and healthier.

I prepared the apples a day in advance, so all I had to do the day of the party was make the crust. They had plenty of time to absorb all the appley-goodness! (I added the green chili right before baking. Marinating it with the chili might have been too spicy.)


 

 
Ham, Cheddar, and Apple Sandwiches on Croissant with Con fit d' Oignon
Assemble sandwich with your choice of deli meats and cheese, the sharp cheddar paired wonderfully with the apples. I think a white cheddar would be good too. We used Granny Smith but any fall apple would probably be delicious. The combinations of the onion con fit and the apples with the Pinot Noir paired perfectly. We also had a few apples leftover to snack on as a side.
 
Oven Roasted Mushroom Soup
Adapted from Country Living
Serves: 4
Yields: 7 cups
 
1/3 c. olive oil
3 pounds mixed gourmet mushrooms, shiitake, cremini, baby portebella, etc, stems discarded and caps roughly chopped into large pieces
1 cranks of sea salt, or about 3/4 tsp.
2-3 cranks of course ground pepper, or about 3/4 tsp.
1/2 c. finely chopped shallots
3/4 c. white wine
3 c. low sodium chicken broth
1 1/2 tsp thyme
3-4 tbsp heavy cream
 
Roast the mushrooms: Heat oven to 400, place olive oil in a large nonstick roasting pan. Add the mushrooms and salt and pepper. Roast on lowest shelf for 20 minutes. Add the shallots, stir, and cook for 10 more minutes.  Remove about 1 1/2 c of the mushrooms, set aside.
 
Make the soup: Remove the roasting pan and pour in the wine; stir, scraping the browned bits from the bottom of the roasting pan. Add the chicken broth, 1/2 c water, and thyme. Return pan to oven and cook about 20 more minutes.
 
Remove the remaining mushrooms and puree with 1/4 c of the soup in a blender. Stir the puree and cream into the soup. Stir in remaining mushrooms and pour into thermos.
 
French Onion Marmalade - Con fit D' Oignon
I found this marmalade in a recipe on a blog paired with the cheese and apple sandwiches. It is a french condiment that they often use with meats or  as a spread for sandwiches, breads, and appetizers. I'm thinking this may also be great as part of a cheese platter.
3 large red onions, peeled, cut in half, and thinly sliced*
1/2 cup
olive oil
1 teaspoon coarse or sea salt
1/2 teaspoon freshly-ground black pepper
2 bay leaves
2 rosemary sprigs
2 tablespoons soft brown sugar (you can add more or less according to your taste)
1/3 cup dry red
wine
1/3 cup red wine vinegar
1/8 cup good-quality
Balsamic Vinegar
* You can use any large onion variety that you desire. If you use a white onion, use white wine and white wine vinegar. I only used one onion because 3 sounded like a lot. Total cooking time for this recipe was about 2 hours, so if you are going to make it, making it in a big batch makes the most sense. (Although it took 2 hours you could easily do other things while the onions are cooking. I'm still adjusting to cooking on gas so I was worried the onions would burn.)
Cut off the stem and root ends of the onions, then halve then lengthwise, and peel away the dried skin. Cut the onions into 1/4-inch slices. It is important to have all the onion slices roughly the same size so they cook evenly. At this point, your pot will be full of sliced onions, but the onions will wilt and shrink dramatically during the cooking process.
In a large heavy frying pan over medium heat, heat up the olive oil. Add the sliced onions, tossing around to make sure they all have a coating of olive oil. Reduce heat to mediums and cook, covered, until the onions start to color. Add the salt, pepper, bay leaves, and rosemary. Cook, stirring occasionally, an additional 20 to 30 minutes or until the herbs have wilted.
Add the brown sugar, wine, and wine vinegar. Bring to a boil, stirring constantly; then lower the heat to low and let simmer for approximately 20 to 30 minutes until the liquid is dissolved and the onions are soft and sticky. NOTE: Stir constantly during this process so that the onions do not stick to the bottom of the pan and become burnt.
Remove the rosemary and bay leaves; discard. I didn't have bay leaves or fresh rosemary, I used about 1 tsp of rosemary and left it in the onions.
The Onion Marmalade is now ready to serve and eat, but it only gets better if left to mellow at least 2 weeks, even better after 1 to 2 months. The onion marmalade will keep for up to 6 months if immediately poured into sterilized glass preserving jars and then sealed or for up to three (3) days in an airtight container in the refrigerator.
To sterilize the jars I put the jars in water and heated it to boiling, boil for 10 minutes. Turn off heat and add lids and tongs, leave in at least 10 minutes.
One jar at a time, ladle the hot prepared jam into the hot, sterilized jars. Fill to within 1/8 inch of top of jar. Wipe rim of jar or glass with a clean damp cloth. Immediately place a hot lid and ring on top of the jar; tightly screw the ring on the jar.

 
 White Chocolate Macadamia Nut Cookies
Nothing fancy here, I just used the recipe on the back of the white chocolate. I think the secret to these is using the white chocolate chunks instead of chips, especially for a white-chocoholic like Joel.

Here's some pics from the forest area north of Santa Fe. We missed the trees at their peak but it was still nice to get away.  


 
 
                                                                           
                  
 

Our New Nest


After much house hunting we put an offer on the Silver house, a historic registry bungalow at all of 1200 square feet and 2 bedrooms, 1 bath. I fell in love with this adorable little house's charm, and with all of the outdoor living space I was convinced it would be perfect for us. Sadly for me at the time it was not meant to be, and they didn't accept our offer. After looking at what I was convinced was every house in our price range in the whole Nob Hill, UNM, Ridgecrest area, from funky floor plans to stinky houses with pet hair everywhere to a house that put the Texas Chainsaw Massacre house to shame, I was done looking.

But the following weekend everything fell into place, while a family was touring our house for the second time, we stopped by an open house in Nob Hill after having lunch at Nob Hill Bar and Grill with the pup. After taking turns looking, when I came out for the second time we both looked at each other and just knew this was the one. We received and accepted an offer on our house that Monday, and made the offer on the new house on Wednesday. After a stressful 48 hours of waiting, the sellers countered our offer, and we accepted. We were officially moving!

 
 
It's been two weeks now and it is starting to feel like home. Will post more pictures as I have time to take them! There have been several few repairs that just needed upkeep and addressing, but fortunately we have not encountered anything major, and have been very glad we decided to get a warranty. We are absolutely in love with the neighborhood, and the short commute has proven to be a major source of stress reduction for me. I love having everything we need and all the fun things we like to do in walking distance or a very short drive.  On Sunday we walked the 4 blocks to Central and had dinner at a great new place, B2B Bistronomy, which features all local burgers, wine, and beer. We might just need to add it to the regular rotation. They had a great seasonal pupkin beer and perfectly hot and flavorful green chili for the burgers. But the best part was walking home in the beautiful October evening.
 
We are all settling in and enjoyed a cozy evening and had my in-laws over as our first guests!
 


Monday, October 7, 2013

VEXU Ten Year Reunion

Ten years ago this fall I made a decision I have never regretted to pledge Pi Beta Phi. Ten years later, I am incredibly blessed to still count some of these womens as my best friends. We celebrated with a tailgate to prepare for the Lobos defeating the Aggies, and went on to enjoy a night of festivities in Nob Hill. I love my VEXU sisters!





Alaska Anniversary Trip

Finally sorting through the hundreads of pictures from our Alsakan cruise.

 Some of the highlights were seeing the glaciers, riding the train through the mountains and gold mine trail, and biking down the mountain. The balcony room on the ship was well worth it, and although still small, I would highly recommend it to anyone going on a cruise. Especially while in Glacier Bay, it was nice to sit out on our balcony and see the glaciers and not have to deal with the mobs of people on deck.

Speaking of the mobs of people, that was probably the worst part of the experience. If you dont' like being around a ton of people, want to relax and feel like you always have to be doing something, and don't want to have to worry about getting charged extra for everything, than I don't think a cruise is for you. At least that's how we felt. I could see us doing a cruise again maybe with kiddos, since there was definielty a lot of family oriented things to do and tons of things for kids to do while parents are entertained (i.e. sitting at the bar drinking), but at least for the 2 of us it probably won't be something we will do again (at least not until we're 70).

The trip was a double celebration for Joel's birthday and our two year anniversary, so it was wonderful just to get away and enjoy being together. Skagway and Ketchikan were stunning, very typical of what you might think of when you think of Alaska. Victoria, Canada was one of our favorite cities as well, and of course Seattle, so we would definitly love to go back someday and spend some more time in each port.

Here's some of the highlights

We departed Seattle on a beautifully sunny day



Mendenhall Glacier, Juneau, Alaska





Mendenhall Glacier



Brrrrr! The temperature dropped 10 degrees as we approached the glacier


Whale watching in Juneau

 
 
 
 
 
 
 View from our balcony, Skagway, Alaska

Skagway, Alaska


 

 Train ride through the White Mountain Yukon Pass and Goldmine, Skagway, Alaska

 

 




 There were stunning waterfalls at nearly every stop as we biked 20 miles down the mountain




Ketchikan, Alaska



Gorgeous fresh boquets at the Seattle Pike Market  





 

 
 
 
 Had to throw in a few wedding pictures to celebrate our anniversary! The present is a new house!

 
 
 
 

 

Friday, August 23, 2013

Agility Training


Hi Friends! My mom and dad are out looking at another house, so I'm here catching up on my rest and blogging after graduating from agility training! It didn't seem like it at first, but I really have learned a lot since I started six weeks ago.

We started with jumping and weaving between bars set at various heights. After just 3 tries I had it down perfectly! It was my mom who had trouble remembering which foot to step with first and which hand to give me my reward from. And I LOVE LOVE LOVe running through the tunnel. I was scared at first but now it's one of my favorite things to do.

 We finished the day with jumping through the tire, running through the tunnel, and jumping over a high bar. I can't wait to start my next class and hopefully an agility trial when I get a little older. We are still learning but my mom says I'm well on way to becoming an agility champ! Maybe next year I'll look like these Springers!

Love and Licks,
Vesper

I jumped through a hoop similar to this one

My dad says my ears flopped just like this pup's when I jumped over the bar, but my mom didn't get to see since she was too busy guiding me to the finish!