from Bread & Water I ate this succulent bean dish in a small traditional comidas in northern Spain, where cooks make the most of their pork products. There, this is made with shreds of leftover jamon, air-cured pork leg. As a kid, I ate my mom’s version, with smoked pork hock or ham, just as […]
from Bread & Water I make roasted tomato sauce each fall and store it in the freezer for instant anything! Spread out the work over the day to make assembly a quick job. Makes 4 rounds or 2 large rectangles. Ingredients Dough: 1 tsp. yeast1 tsp. sugar1/2 cup warm-to-hot water4 cups all-purpose flour1 Tbsp. kosher
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Bread & Water uses lyrical prose to examine those two fundamental ingredients, and to probe the essential questions on how to live a life. Hobsbawn-Smith uses food to explore the hungers of the human soul: wilder hungers that loiter beyond cravings for love. She kneads themes of floods and place, grief and loss; the commonalities of
Right smack dab in the middle of a pandemic, author Naomi Hansen decided that Saskatchewan hadn’t been given the due it deserved in highlighting the province’s culinary delights. To correct that, she traveled throughout the province to bring us a little taste of local food and the people behind it. https://www.naomihansen.ca/ And the reaction from
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from Only in Saskatchewan This quiche was a Tea Room favourite that regularly appeared on their feature menu, showcasing ripe red Roma tomatoes sourced locally in season. The quiche has a savoury tomato basil flavour, and the addition of cornmeal to the crust adds a distinctly light and flaky touch. This recipe is from former
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In this celebration of Saskatchewan cuisine, Naomi Hansen pairs recipes from the province’s best-loved restaurants with profiles of the chefs and families behind those recipes. Only in Saskatchewan captures the mix of culinary influences—Ukrainian, Indigenous, Italian, Vietnamese, Indian, Persian, Dutch, Mexican, and more—that come together in the land of the living skies. With food and landscape photography
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from Eat More Plants Mexican grilled corn? That seems like a fun idea. Never mind the fact that using sweet corn isn’t really authentic. Because it’s damn good. Seriously. Just you wait…this is so good you will want to eat all four cobs. Forget sharing. Why I never thought to slather corn in mayo is anyone’s
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Are you a carnivore that shies away from vegetarian cookbooks? Please reconsider! Books like Eat More Plants will ensure you have the very best side dishes as well as ideas to serve your vegetarian friends. When my kids were growing up, we always had a Meatless Monday and a book like Eat More Plants would
from Extraordinary Ornamental Edibles Making herbal-infused vinegars is almost a rite of passage for novice gardeners, but just be sure you have a plan for how to use them. Besides working as delicious vinaigrettes for salads and sushi condiments, a splash of herbal vinegar will add zest to soup, chili, barbecue sauce and meat marinades.
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Who better to know about edibles for our garden, than author Mike Lascelle, a nursery manager and certified arborist. He brings 35 years of experience that includes estate gardening, landscape construction and design along with authoring several books on plant selection and garden design, as well as articles for various publications. He lives in Maple Ridge,
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