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Hello from Arizona! I hope you are all having a great weekend. Today’s post is a guest post from Raija, one of my dearest friends and one of my favorite people to eat and drink with! I hope you enjoy her post on mouthwatering Hollandaise sauce. Have a good day!

Hollandaise is a sauce that seems very fancy — the key to Eggs Benedict, a sauce for asparagus, and the basis for Bernaise Sauce, so luscious over a good steak (which uses tarragon vinegar, or white wine, tarragon and vinegar instead of lemon juice for the acid).  But its really not too difficult to make, and you can do it without a double boiler pretty effectively (or at least I’ve had luck!).  I looked up online “hollandaise sauce” and used a Food Network recipe to get the right ratios of egg yolk, lemon juice and butter. 
The ingredients for hollandaise are as follows per serving (let’s say one yolk = one serving…you may have a little over one serving, depending on the size of egg, etc.)

One egg yolk
About 3 1/4 teaspoons of lemon juice
2 tablespoons of melted butter

Melt the butter and set it aside to cool just slightly — you don’t want it so hot that it will cook the egg yolk.  Use a metal bowl that is not too much bigger than the saucepan you are going to use as your make-shift double boiler (unless you have a double boiler).  Put just enough water in the pan so that when you place the bowl on top of the pan that the pan does not directly touch the water.  I put about an inch of water in the sauce pan and get it to a boil.  Once its at a boil, I turn the heat down, and put a dishcloth over the sauce pan (be careful so it doesn’t hang over and touch the heating element or flame of the burner).  In the metal bowl, whisk vigorously the egg yolk and lemon juice together until it becomes thicker and increases in volume.  Place the bowl over the towel and the barely boiling water, while still whisking.  The dishcloth helps hold the bowl in place while whisking and makes sure that the water doesn’t touch the bowl.  This is where its a little bit tricky – keep whisking quickly while slowly drizzling the melted butter into the egg yolk and lemon juice.   You have to whisk rapidly so that the egg doesn’t cook.  Keep whisking.  The sauce should continue to thicken and double in volume.  Once at this point you can take the sauce off of the heat and either serve immediately, or keep in a warm spot off the heat, covered.  If you wait a bit to use it and it starts to cool, you can still keep it together with whisking rapidly. 

Hollandaise
Source

This sauce stuns me each time I make it — it is so rich and delicious — I often end up using my fingers to get every last taste from the bowl.  Mmmm…  Its also very quick and uses very few ingredients.  Its a great way to make a dish very decadent. 

I hope this recipe works for you — please give feedback if it doesn’t work.  I’ve made Hollandaise twice recently and both times with great result.  Next I need to find a way to successfully make poached eggs! 🙂

Tags: guest post, Hollandaise, recipe, sauce

If they did, I would be doing it tonight! I was searching through On Demand, and there seem to be all sorts of yoga videos, but none for cranky people. 🙂 It was a great great weekend in New Jersey, but I am exhausted and not at all ready to face a crazy week. A hectic Friday led right into a 6 hour drive in torrential downpours, so we arrived at my mom’s house at around midnight. I was too wired to sleep well, and woke up Saturday morning to a ton of work email to tend to and then went straight into helping my sister prep for the party.

I got put in charge of the penne with tomato vodka sauce:

Canned crushed tomatoes

Olive oil to coat the bottom of a big pot

Lots of chopped garlic and about half of an onion

prosciutto di parma (I didn’t see much benefit to adding this, so I would leave it out next time)

tsp oregano

fresh ground black pepper and sea salt

1 shot of vodka

heavy cream to taste (to a big ol pot we added maybe 3/4 cup of cream)

1/4 grated parmesan

Sautee onions and garlic until soft and the garlic is golden, then add everything but the cream and cheese. The cream and cheese can be added at the very end, and we shared the load doing this. I stirred and she poured so that nothing would congeal or get yucky. If the sauce was for my house I would definitely add crushed red pepper flakes because I love spice in my tomato cream sauces, but this was a kid party. We served it over regular penne. I would do whole wheat at home. It was easy peasy, delicious, and a real crowd pleaser.

Simmering

SimmeringWith cream

There was so much to eat and drink at the bbq: my mom’s famous baked lima beans with brown sugar and bacon, potato salad (mom’s famous again!), green salad, fruit salad, sausage and peppers, teriyaki chicken meatballs, rolls, pasta, and these smazing soft pretzels that they buy at a special pretzel bakery.

I had LOTS of orange and yellow peppers

I had LOTS of orange and yellow peppers

There was also a lot of this:

6 types of Harpoon

6 types of Harpoon

On a side note, we live a couple of miles from the Harpoon Brewery, and it has trumped Sam Adams as my favorite local beer! I have been to a couple of charity events at Harpoon, and the fact that they do them for free makes the beer even better to me. I liked their Brown Session Ale and their Crystal Wheat, but give me a classic Harpoon IPA, and I am a happy girl. Remind me to blog someday about Yankee Lobster , an awesome fresh fish restaurant yards from Harpoon. Yankee Lobster roll + Harpoon IPA = summer in my mouth!

Ok back to the bbq post! There was also cake, a Dorah cake with lemon filling for my niece and a chocolate mousse filled cake for my hub’s belated birthday. Sadly, I really don’t like many cakes any more. They are far too sweet for my palate. That’s probably a good thing!

The party colors were pink and orange

The party colors were pink and orange

Overall, I ate well and didn’t stress. I also brought Amazing Grass with me so I was not without my green smoothies. Do you stress about food when you are out of your routine? I came up with a few very simple tips this weekend to make these times easier:

1) Eat as healthily as possible for the situation you are in. Seems like a no brainer, but other people’s homes are not stocked like mine, and rather than freaking out, I make do. I made my smoothies with organic regular milk, something I definitely don’t do at home, but it was fine and tasty for a couple of days.

2) Water water water! When I travel I tend to not drink in the car so I don’t have to stop. This is silly. Dehydration makes you tired and cranky and more likely to feel hunger pangs that aren’t there. Drinking my normal 80 ounces or so kept me feeling good and also kept me from unneccesary snacks.

3) Enjoy! I had a little bit of everything. If I didn’t like it, I didn’t finish it. I waited for at least 30 minutes to go for a seconds plate, and when hungry a few hours after the party, I filled up on fresh cherries to feel full and satisfied. Trying all of the party food felt great, tasted great, and totally kept me from feeling deprived.

4) Don’t overdo the post party “detox”. Other than having lots of water and veggies tonight and doing some stretching, I am going to relax. Traveling to events can be exhausting, and while a little voice was telling me earlier to push myself to run, my knees are sore, and I am just feeling overwhelmed about work. A weekend off won’t undo your exercise/training progress. It will most likely make you better when you return!

I hope you all had a great weekend. I am off to watch “Mondays in the Sun” and to stock my ipod with some new “Notes in Spanish” Spanish podcasts for my walk to and from work. Tomorrow night I am having dinner with friends (I think Ashmont Grill wine club!) and will announce the winner of the Nigella giveaway. Have a GREAT night!

Tags: cake, cooking, Food, party, sauce

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