Showing posts with label Nantucket. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Nantucket. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 1, 2009

The Hydrangeas of Nantucket


Nantucket has some of the most beautiful flowers I have ever seen, especially the hydrangeas. The bloom in multiple colors and can range in color from pink, blue, purple, white, and my favorite mixture of multiple colors.





The hydrangeas can come in many different sizes and shapes, my favorites are the cones and lace caps. The lace caps look a bit like Queen Anne's lace with surrounded by beautiful hydrangea blossoms.




Friday, August 21, 2009

From Lobsters to Meatloaf

Thats right, no more lobsters. The only lobsters we have in indiana are little yucky ones at the grocery store. So meatloaf is what I come home to. No more days on the beach, no mores tan/sun burn, no more sand or surf.  Vacation is over.
I really liked Nantucket, it was not at all what I expected. I hated to leave, but leaving on the little itty bitty plane was better than expected, by far...just ask my brother.  With paper bag in hand, I boarded the 9 seater with out tears, with out total hysterics, without drugs. I did not use my bag and I actually was able to look around (not behind me) and take some pictures. I still was so claustrophobic and getting into the plane took a few minutes and a little extra breathing.
Coming home is always nice even if you weren't ready to leave. But I am so busy now that I am home, I am working on a Not Just Vanilla surprise.  However, the question I always ask myself is... when coming home after a vacation, what do you make for dinner? I ate seafood. Lobster and shrimp, clams and lobster rolls. So now that I am back in the land of meat and potatoes, what am I going to make for dinner?
When I have no ideas, I take to my freezer and my dry ingredient stash, meatloaf is for dinner!  I really love meatloaf. Its rich and very fulfilling. The recipe I use  makes 1 large loaf and it is chocked full of spice. Most meatloaf I have tried has been dry and tasteless, needing ketchup or gravy, but this recipe is a combination of a few of my favorite flavors and my mom's recipe. It is not dry, but moist, nutty, rich, and very flavorful. I know there really is a season for heavy duty  comfort food, but don't you always need some comfort. I cook what I want, not for the season and not necessarily for the weather. If I want to go from clams and lobster to meatloaf and french fries, I will.
The secret ingredient in this great meatloaf is healthy, hearty, and very tasty. If you are trying to hide healthy food into your dinner, this is a great recipe to try.

Damn the Weather
Damn I am Back from Vacation
Meatloaf

This recipe is easy to do and you can change  or add in some of your favorite ingredient if you wish. Sometimes I make it with roasted onions and garlic  or lamb.  Enjoy!

2 cup oatmeal, I use old fashioned Quaker Oats, crushed in a food processor for about 1 minute until they are powder like
2 eggs
2 tablespoons ketchup or tomato paste
3/4 cup ketchup: set aside for the end
1 tablespoon Lipton's onion soup mix
2 teaspoons ground cumin
1 teaspoon chili powder
1 tablespoon worcestershire sauce
1 tablespoon mayonnaise
1/2 teaspoon paprika
salt
pepper
1 lb. lean ground beef
1/2 lb. ground sausage or ground turkey


Mix together everything but the meat and additional 3/4 cup of ketchup. I whisk all the wet ingredients into all of the dry ingredients. Add in the meats and using your hands, mix the meat and the spices together lightly.  If you over mix the meat if will toughen up. Spray cooking spray into a large loaf pan and put the meatloaf into the pan, try to flatten the bits on top with a damp hand so they do not burn. Bake at 375˚ for 25 to 35 minutes. About 10 minutes before the meatloaf is done, spread the ketchup onto the top of the meatloaf and return it to the oven. I love this part, the ketchup changes and gets glossy. Don't let it burn. Enjoy this meatloaf hot or cold or on the beach.  Yum!



Monday, August 17, 2009

Nantucket Day 1... Will Travel for Lobster

We made it to Nantucket! After hours traveling in a cab, a train, and then the nice big airplane, we had to endure 45 minutes of this 9 seater plane. It was not fun nor was did it give you the sense of calm comfort that I like to have when flying. As I mentioned, I am horribly claustrophobic... so knowing that i was going to get on this itty bitty baby of a plane, wow, this is the crazy stuff nightmares are born of; I had been made aware how small this plane would be weeks ago, so I had a lot to look forward too.

Of course, on a small plane like this the rules are different than a normal (large) plane. First they must know your weight, no lying about it! Also you are seated not with your travel partner, but by how they blance the weight. With my bag stored in the left wing, gripping tightly to my brown starbucks bag, my phone and my camera, I boarded this small, tight, itty bitty plane in tears and some hysterical breathing. I know that I am safer in the sky, most of the time, but that is not what gets me though wishing that we were able to get the hell of the little plane! I sat behind the pilot, and Josh sat in front, shotgun. In a last ditch effort, I handed Josh my camera, I knew I wouldn't be able to get any pictures taken since I was breathing into a paper bag, so this picture of Josh was taken by me after we landed and most people were off the plane.
We made it to the beautiful island of Nantucket and for the next few days this is where we are living, the Wild Rose Cottage. As the only one in my family who hasn't been here before, everyone has told me about what to expect, what they do everyday, etc. So let me tell you what is what... there is a small town with beautiful shops, the roads are a combination of paved, brick, cobblestone and dirt/sand. The roads and sidewalks are small and very uneven, you have to watch what you are walking on instead of looking around and seeing the sights, everyone has tripped a time or two. It is a larger island that I thought it would be, but everything here is very packed in, tightly. They have a very small year-round population, but a full high school. There are many beautiful beaches, each different from the next. Some have pebbly sand and others have soft, white-ish sand, all of the beaches I have been to have rocks and pebbles but no real shells have been see anywhere but the stores.

This is a picture taken from one of the beaches last year, the same beach we camped out on last night until dark, hoping to get more great pictures. I have been wanting to take pictures like this, but there were no clouds and I don't know what I got yet, I haven't been able to download all of my pictures yet. The one thing I have gotten alot of pictures of is ... wait for it... lobster!

A bad picture but great food! I will be home early on Tuesday, so be ready for lots more pictures and stories of me on the small plane, I still have to live through the return trip on anther itty bitty plane!

Saturday, August 15, 2009

Nantucket At Last



I am in Nantucket! After a trip to Chicago, I met up with my brother, Josh and we flew out to the Boston airport, Logan. We continued to Nantucket via Cape Air... a 9 seater plane. I am very claustrophobic, so in this small airplane, I was not very happy! But the 2 lb lobster I had for diner, that made up for the crazy small plane. I will not be blogging while I am here, but I will have lots and lots of pictures and stories and sand and lobsters. I will be back to blogging on Tuesday. Thanks!

Monday, August 10, 2009

A Quick and Easy Dinner and Packing for Nantucket

Photo from my dad,   Nantucket
This week has seriously flown by... I can't believe it. It seems that everyday lasts so long, but in the blink of an eye, the week has come to an end. I have had a busy week, but all will change on Friday.  
 My brother and I are meeting up in Chicago on Thursday and on Friday we are flying out to meet my parents in Nantucket.  Everyone else has been out to Nantucket, except me.  I am always working or whatever, but this will be the first year everyone will be on the beach together, at least for a few days. Hopefully, a few days on the beach, fresh seafood and a whole island to get great pictures of... well, everything.  Now, I just have to pack.  Yuck. I hate packing!


So with packing to do and no time for dinner and a dish washer that hasn't been working, for a while; like months on end... I needed a quick, easy dinner that was not going to leave a huge mess for me to clean up. My tiny kitchen already has clean (drying) dishes covering all but 1 small bit of counter and my stove.  What I needed was a one pot wonder!  Well, 1 pot wonders always tend to be 3 or 4 pots, and a pan or two, etc... But this one pot wonder, really is only  2 pots, thats ok with me! 



Fettucine Alfredo
Recipe adapted from Emeril Lagasse, Food Network
Episode: Favorite Italian Pasta Sauces


Note:  This recipe is fast and easy with little clean-up. When ever I find a recipe on a sight like Food Network, I look at the comments of people who have already made that recipe. The comments I found that most people thought more cream should be added, 1 cup more that Emeril's recipe, so instead of 1 cup more (equaling 2 cups) I added 1   1/2 cups cream.  Enjoy!


1 pound dried fettucine
6 tablespoons unsalted butter
1  1/2 cup heavy cream
1  1/4 cup finely grated parmigano-Reggiano
1 teaspoon olive oil
1/2 teaspoon salt
1/4 freshly ground black pepper
1/2 cup fresh basil leaves, sliced


Cook the fettucine in a pot of rapidly boiling salted water until al dente. (When you boil water for pasta, I add between 1 1/2 to 2 tablespoons kosher or sea salt. When you taste the water it should taste really salty. Just by salting the water correctly you will add so much more flavor than if you just salted the pasta once it is cooked.) Drain in a colander and stir in a few drops of olive oil, reserving  1/2 cup of the pasta cooking water. 


While the pasta is cooking, melt the butter in a medium saucepan over medium-high heat. Add in the olive oil to keep the butter from burning.  Slowly add in the cream  and bring to a boil. Cook until sauce has reduced slightly, about 5 minutes. Remove from heat.  Grate the parmigiano-reggiano and set aside. Pour the 1/4 cup of the pasta water into the pasta and set over medium heat. Slowly mix 1/2 of the cream mixture with the pasta and 1/2 of the cheese. If needed, pour in the remainder of the pasta water with the rest of the cream and cheese.  Slowly mix, gently mix and add in the basil, pepper and salt to taste.  I liked this dish last night, but it is really so much better today. I recommend making this a day ahead. Yum!


P.S. I know the pictures of the pasta don't even come close to show you how good it is and how good it looks. Sorry, white pasta and cheese, not so photogenic.

Nantucket, here I come!




Friday, March 27, 2009

Spring?





Where is spring? Where are the flowers and fresh new leaves on the tree. It is almost April! Lafayette is expecting snow in a few days. Don't get me wrong, I love winter. Snow is fresh and quiet, magical and refreshing, it gives you an excuse to curl up with a cup of tea and just watch!  But here in Indiana, we are ready for spring.  So as I look forward to spring, summer even, I will leave you with a few pictures from Nantucket. Enjoy!