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Because it’s Monday, and somehow Mondays during the holiday season are extra hard to get through, I’m sharing a few holiday wine and food ideas. Whether you’re entertaining for 10 or more or just having a quiet night for one or two, it’s worth treating yourself to something special this season.

And let’s face it, we’re all preoccupied with food, wine, and fun this time of year, and you’re already counting down to the weekend despite the fact that it’s only Monday (and I have to work 8:30 – 4:30 on Sunday; Saturday is still a day off!).

Greet your guests (or just sit back and relax with a special someone) with oysters and little glasses of your favorite dry bubbly or wine of the sea.  The Martín Códax Albariño is really perfect for any seafood your serve but would work especially well with a chilled seafood platter of oysters, shrimp, and smoked salmon.

Serve your oysters with something a little different, perhaps a chipotle mignonette (my favorite!) or an apple ginger mignonette. Just because it’s cold doesn’t mean everything has to be heavy and overdone; the zip of a mignonette with some gorgeous briny oysters are a welcome brightness in the dead of winter.

Neptune Oyster

While you’re mingling and listening to your favorite festive music (Harry Connick Jr.’s When my Heart Finds Christmas and Bing Crosby’s White Christmas are two great options.), have your main courses already on their way to perfection.

The below photo probably looks familiar, since I blogged about this red wine gravy roast not too long ago. Another way to make a rich, delicious roast is by first marinating it in espresso and spices, which I did this weekend. Gourmesso sent me lots of samples of their Nespresso machine friendly pods, and I have been loving their coffee in my cup as well as in recipes. I cooked my most recent roast in the slow cooker on low all day with some beef broth and three shots of espresso, along with spices like black pepper and garlic powder. Toward the end I added pearl onions and butternut squash and served with a sweet potato mash and a carrot salad (recipe coming later this week). A roast is an easy thing to set and forget, and it’s a fun place to play with bold flavors like strong coffee or a big Cabernet.

coffee marinated roast

Broccoli Cheddar Casserole is a must-make side dish, no matter what your main course is. For Thanksgiving, I used Tiffani Faison’s recipe, which was featured in Spirit Magazine. Here’s a similar recipe; I used fresh broccoli and didn’t have lemon juice in mine but otherwise this is pretty close. Everyone at Thanksgiving was raving about this dish, and I will be making it for Christmas. It would go perfectly with a roast prime rib, which is what we normally eat on Christmas Day. A casserole topped with Ritz crackers and butter might not be fancy, but it is good.

broccoli cheddar casserole

Brussels sprouts are a great side to a beef roast, and they are particularly delicious when mixed with some form of bacon. Roast your sprouts until soft with thick cut bacon, red onion, and a splash of cider vinegar for a salty, tangy treat.

brussels and bacon

‘Most people think of cranberry sauce as a side for turkey, but I love a spiced ginger and orange cranberry relish with just about any protein. A cranberry cocktail is just as delicious; add a scoop of cranberry relish to the bottom of a glass and top with whisky or rum and soda water and ice. Instant sparkly, strong holiday cocktail!

cranberries

If you’re like me, you’ll let your guests bring dessert. I am not one to care about or fuss with sweets, and it’s always good to have a dessert lover share his or her favorite!

For more holiday recipes and holiday food and wine ideas, here are a few older posts. Feel free to share your favorites in the comments!

Holiday Recipe Roundup

Holiday Treats

Tags: Christmas, cooking, entertaining, Food, holidays, lifestyle, oysters, recipes, wine

Do you ever have one of those weeks months where everything seems to fly by at lightning speed, when you rarely have a night free, and where you’re constantly going over plans for days and weeks in advance just to make sure you’re not missing something?

That’s how life has been lately. House stuff, work photo and TV shoots and events, travel planning, family, and more house stuff have made me feel like I am being spun around in a game of pin the tail on the donkey. During that time though, there were so many fun and delicious moments that I thought a rainy, dreary week could use a roundup of happy; that’s what today’s post is all about.

roast with red wine gravy

Slow cooked meals on weeknights – For some reason the kitchen is like therapy to me, and coming home after a busy day is made better by working on a comforting meal. This roast was absolutely incredible. It involved me searing the meat on all sides, then seasoning with garlic powder, pepper, and thyme and deglazing the pan with Travessia Jester red wine and beef stock. After that, the roast went into an oven at 400 with lots of vegetables and an entire head of crushed garlic. The end result was heavenly, the meat even better served cold with horseradish the next day. If you live in Massachusetts and haven’t tried Travessia wine, a visit to their tasting room is a perfect cold weather activity!

photo 4 homemade French toast

Visiting family and hanging out in pj’s on a cold and dreary Saturday with my mom’s French toast is just the best. I can’t wait until Christmas!

stray cat house  A yard full of cats – a stray mama cat and her kittens adopted us. While we try to catch them to bring them to a rescue, they have a little home to live in, along with two meals a day. I am constantly stressed about their wellbeing and hoping a rescue will get back to me soon!

Boston Cream Pie Day

The Massachusetts Governors Conference on Travel and Tourism – My work is so intertwined with Massachusetts travel, plus I love this state, so being at the JFK Library for the day with other tourism professionals was interesting and inspiring. The food at the library is delicious, and it happened to be National Boston Cream Pie Day, so the Parker House contributed the real deal.

JFK LIbrary The JFK Library has such an energy about it. It is also a great Boston day trip.

EF building opening event Speaking of energy and inspiration, the EF Education building opening was another beacon of light on a rainy day. They pulled out all the stops to celebrate their brand new building, and the event included fall cocktails, a flash mob, and the Landfillharmonic, a group of children from a Paraguayan slum who play instruments made from trash recovered from a landfill. The kids played “Imagine”, and there was not a dry eye in that tent. Beautiful.

Atwoods Cambridge We savored the outdoors while the weather was still fine, with beers on Atwoods’ patio and a day out at the Head of the Charles.

Head of the Charles And we played tourist in Harvard Square, checking out beautiful architecture in the First Parish Church. In all of life’s chaos, I sometimes crave the peace that faith brings, and it was nice being in such a beautiful, faith-filled space.

church windows

Head of the Charles cocktails at Grafton Street have been a tradition since we went on one of our first dates, and it was a nice enough day to sit by windows open on to the street. Along with sipping drinks, we made friends with a handsome pitbull named Hudson. It was love at first sight.

cocktails at Grafton Street I have to admit that our dining has been indulgent, and our exercise nonexistent. Lunches on-the-go have included a burger topped with lobster and guacamole at the Legal Sea Foods at Logan Airport. My goal is to join a gym the day we return from Ireland and to try to once and for all get back in shape and lose some of the weight I have gained this past year. It’s definitely been getting me down, and it’s been hard to turn around while so busy. Still, choices like this don’t help!

lobster guacamole burger Finally, we’ve been loving the natural beauty of the season, including the changing leaves in the views from our home.

autumn views Chilly days are still fine for beach trips, and Duxbury Beach sparkled one windy Sunday.

Duxbury Beach And my garden is still hanging on! While the vegetable garden has been turned under and mixed with compost for the season, my little “cottage garden” as I call it, still has flowers and greens sprouting. It adds a little cheer to those dark mornings and evenings when we come and go. I don’t love that we almost never see daylight this time of year!

cottage garden

Are you feeling the  busy-ness of this time of year?

Tags: blogging, Boston, cambridge, cocktails, cooking, events, Food, head of the charles, lifestyle, roundup, wine

That very sad time has come. Our 2014 Summer CSA from Red Fire Farm is over. The 20 weeks flew by in a flash, as does the best season.  Fall and winter produce don’t excite me nearly as much as what we get in spring and summer, so we opted not to do a share again until next year.

Red Fire Farm CSA Our final share included lots of greens like lettuce, kale, and dandelion greens, along with carrots, onions, garlic, sweet potatoes, and pie pumpkins. One of the things I do like about fall produce is that it tends to be heartier and doesn’t need to be eaten right away. Mid-summer, with delicate tomatoes and squashes was a little more difficult and required planning on being home many nights when we might have spontaneously gone out.

We are trying really hard to eat better, move more, sleep more, and drink less, so we have been all about salads, and since I am always cold, I love to introduce some warm ingredients into salads.

This warm autumn salad is just some lettuce topped with roasted carrots, sweet potatoes, butternut squash and a quick vinaigrette made from balsamic, olive oil, mustard, shallot, and a dollop of honey. Some goat cheese made it a little more filling and fun. I love easy dinners like this, where I can get the veggies in the oven to roast and move on to doing other things around the house.

warm autumn salad

Another go-to fall dinner is stuffed acorn squash. There are a billion recipes for stuffed acorn squash, and I love it. It’s a way to have a fairly easy and healthy dinner that you can mix up every time. Our latest stuffed squash creation involved apples, spicy chicken sausage, cornbread, spicy peppers, and onions.

chopped apples

Typically when I am making a stuffed squash, especially a hard squash like acorn, I cut and clean it and get it started roasting, then prepare the stuffing separately. This time around I cooked down some hot peppers and red onion from our CSA in a little coconut oil. I then added in some apple pieces. Once everything was starting to soften, I started the chicken sausage in a separate pan so that it browned. Over the apple mixture, I crumbled some large chunks of cornbread, toasted that up a little, and added some flavor and moisture to it all with chicken stock.

peppers and onions for stufffing

Once that was all settled, I pulled out the acorn squash and stuffed the mixture in, cooking it all together for another eight minutes or so, just until the squash was nice and soft and the filling hot. This stuffed fall squash dish was a huge hit and made for some leftovers the next day.

stuffed acorn squash recipe

Now that we’ve made it through a full 20 week CSA, here are a few observations:

Pros

  • We got to support a Massachusetts farm for a season.
  • We really got to know the growing season in Massachusetts. I loved our weekly email from Red Fire Farm letting us know what was happening in the fields.
  • We ate a MUCH larger variety of vegetables than we usually do. Dandelion greens and kohlrabi are just two items we probably wouldn’t have purchased otherwise.
  • We always had vegetables on hand. Grocery shopping was a quick pickup of some proteins, yogurts, and work snacks.
  • We had SO MANY VEGETABLES. Many people commented on my Instagram that their CSAs did not send as much. Red Fire Farm is pretty awesome, and we are grateful for their hard work.

Cons

  • The payments were in installments early in the season, and they were pretty large chunks of money at once, understandably as it is supporting the farm for the season.
  • We had SO MANY VEGETABLES. This isn’t necessarily a bad thing. Some weeks we shared, others we learned to eat what we were given so we didn’t waste. Still, my compost heap saw a lot of lettuce!
  • Pickup becomes a weekly constant. My poor husband was usually the one stuck with this chore since he has the car. It’s not a huge deal, but there were definitely nights it got in the way.

We will likely join a CSA next year, but I am also going full speed ahead with gardening. I am going to double the size of my garden and have already planted garlic and shallots. I have seeds for broccoli, kale, sunflowers, radishes, beets, and kohlrabi. I may have accidentally purchased 900 kohlrabi seeds, so I will be sharing if we end up with a huge crop! I will also plant potatoes, tomatoes, zucchini, summer squash, and basil.

I am grateful that we have access to fresh local food in so many ways and from so many places. Our CSA was a great adventure in learning more about those opportunities!

Tags: agriculture, autum recipe, autumn salads, CSA, farm, farms, Food, Massachusetts, Red Fire Farm, stuffed acorn squash, stufffed squash

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