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Blog update: Recipes

Helllooo everyone!

I have a blog-related announcement today…the look of my Recipes page has changed! Click the link or the Recipes tab in the header bar to check it out!

The Recipes page used to be just a searchable database of past posts tagged as a recipe. Each one was listed as a paragraph excerpt from the beginning of the post with no pictures to help you find what you were looking for.

Well…my awesome programmer husband has jazzed it up and now it looks like this!….

Recipe page screen shot

Now, all recipes show up as a Poloroid-like icon, much prettier and easier to sift through than the clunky search feature was.

Currently, about half of the total recipes from the site are available, but as I have time to update the rest to the new format more will pop up.

Speaking of the new format….

Some of you may have already noticed that my posts containing recipes appear a little differently now. To show you an example of the new look, here’s a short recipe for spicy cucumber quick pickles that I made yesterday.

Spicy cucumber quick pickles

Spicy cucumber quick pickles

These spicy cucumber pickles are quick to make and are a cooling compliment to spicy dishes.

Prep Time: 20 minutes

Yield: About a cup of pickles

Ingredients

  • 2 small cucumbers
  • 1 sliced scallion
  • 1 tbsp. mirin
  • 1 tbsp. rice vinegar
  • up to a 1/4 tsp. chili garlic sauce
  • sesame seeds for garnish
  • salt to remove excess moisture

Cooking Directions

  1. Slice cucumbers very thinly and sprinkle with salt.
  2. Massage salt into cucumbers and allow to sit for 10 minutes.
  3. Rinse and squeeze out cucumbers and return to bowl.
  4. Add mirin, rice vinegar, chili garlic sauce, scallions, and sesame seeds.
  5. Mix everything well and store in the refrigerator.

Now, recipes appear in a box with all the information you need to recreate them at home. Even if all the steps for the recipe were explained elsewhere in the post, you’ll still find the whole recipe written out like this towards the end of the post. That’s because soon I intend on adding a print feature to make using recipes even easier!

Neat, huh?

I hope these changes really do make finding and using recipes easier. I know even I was having trouble finding anything with the old layout.

What kinds of recipes do you get most excited about? Desserts, smoothies, appetizers, ethnic foods, dinners?

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Pork with Thai basil and fried egg

While we were in Seattle, Jeff had a Thai dish that had him “mmming” and “yumming” the whole time. It was this dish of pork, flavored with Thai basil, garlic, and ginger, and served with a fried egg.

Thaiku basil pork with egg

It looked like something that I could recreate at home, so I logged it in my memory to try out sometime.

I got together a pound of ground pork, Thai basil, scallions, ginger, garlic, soy sauce, fish sauce, chili-garlic sauce, and 2 eggs for my attempt at recreating that memorable flavor.

ingredients for pork with thai basil

I chopped up the scallions, garlic, and grated some ginger and set it aside.

Scallions, ginger, and garlic

I browned the pork in a pan without oil, there’s enough fat in the pork to keep it from sticking. When the fat had rendered out and the pork was browned, I drained it in a metal sieve then returned it to the pan to add the aromatic ingredients…

Adding aromatics to pork

As soon as those were smelling fragrant, I added the sauces and made sure to mix the spicy stuff in well…

Adding sauces to pork

Then I added the chopped basil and let it wilt completely.

Adding thai basil to pork

And here’s my finished version!

Pork with thai basil and a fried egg

Complete with a fried egg just like the original.

This was awesome. Certainly a more meat-heavy dish than we typically have for dinner, but it was a nice indulgence. I think the pork would taste amazing in crisp lettuce cups, maybe I’ll try it that way next time.

Pork with Thai basil and fried egg

Pork with the aromatic flavors of Thai basil, garlic, ginger, and scallion. Served with a fried egg over rice.

Prep Time: 10 minutes

Cook Time: 15 minutes

Total Time: 25 minutes

Yield: 2 servings

Ingredients

  • 1 pound ground pork
  • 1 bunch Thai basil
  • 2 large cloves of garlic (minced)
  • a 1 inch piece of ginger (grated)
  • 2 scallions (sliced)
  • 2 eggs
  • 2 tbsp. fish sauce
  • 2 tbsp. soy sauce
  • 1/2 tsp. chili garlic sauce

Cooking Directions

  1. Brown pork in a pan without oil.
  2. When pork is cooked through, drain off fat and return to pan.
  3. Add scallions, ginger, and garlic.
  4. Add sauces and mix in.
  5. Add chopped Thai basil and allow to wilt.
  6. Fry eggs sunny-side-up in a separate pan.
  7. Serve pork over rice with a fried egg and garnish with toasted sesame seeds if desired.

Have you ever made something at home that you’ve tried in a restaurant?

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Grocery glimpse

I have been meaning to do a grocery post for a long time. Finally, I made a trip where I had to buy a bunch of pantry staples so I have more of what I typically buy to show you than just a pile of vegetables.

I buy about 80% or more of the edible groceries for our household from a local “farmers market” called Your Dekalb Farmer’s Market. I say “farmer’s market” in quotations because it’s really not one, it’s more of an international foods warehouse.

Most of the foods there are drastically cheaper than you would find in chain grocery stores. They have an unbelievable selection of produce as well as quality meats and fish and bulk items.

Here’s what I picked up for just $75!….

Pantry staples and eggs

  • A huge bottle of fish sauce (I’ll definitely go through it!)
  • Rice vinegar
  • Mirin
  • One bag of jasmine rice
  • Two bags of sushi rice (You wouldn’t believe how quickly we’ll go through this)
  • A block of parmesan
  • Firm tofu
  • Honey and Lemon Chobani yogurt (OMG I should combine those sometime!)
  • A dozen eggs

And the produce…

Veggies and fruits

  • Scallions
  • Yo choy sum (Like bok choy but less bitter, I put it in stir-frys)
  • Thai basil
  • Onions
  • Tomatoes (The first I’ve bought of the season! I hope they’re ready)
  • Avocados
  • Shiitake mushrooms
  • A pineapple
  • Bananas
  • Carrots
  • Cucumbers
  • A carton of strawberries (I’m gonna try not to eat them all in one sitting)

Not shown……..a pound of ground pork, 4 large beef short ribs, whole wheat pizza dough.

Can you believe all that is $75!? The mirin there is a full $2 cheaper than I’ve seen it anywhere else. Those bags of rice are around $1 each, crazy!

I usually shop at Kroger for all of our non-edibles and for a few things like Jeff’s preferred brand of oatmeal and my Larabar habit. I hit up Whole Foods about once a month or even less to stock up on “special items” that I don’t keep around all the time, like kombucha and coconut water.

Where do you do your grocery shopping?