Friday, December 23, 2011

Sushi and Cookies....Mmmmmm.....


This has been the first week of the holidays for both of my older children and, like every other parent of school-aged children, I have been trying to keep the girls busy to keep myself sane until January 4th rolls around and they go back to school.  This week, we took a little sojourn to Japan, as my oldest daughter wanted to make sushi.  (These were really California rolls, as they both turned up their noses at raw fish.  No sashimi for me.  Boo.)  We filled nori wraps with sticky and seasoned sushi rice, slices of cucumber, avocado, carrot and the pressed fish product that my husband refers to as, "K-R-A-B".  My younger daughter did not really care for the Krab, so she resolutely picked it out of every roll she consumed.  The activity lasted for the better part of an hour and gave us a pretty good sized little tray of sushi for dinner, so I would call it a resounding success (especially because EVERYONE actually ate it).

Our second activity this week was baking and decorating sugar cookies, ostensibly for Santa to consume on Christmas Eve.  We don't do this every Christmas, but my oldest daughter has gotten it in her head that we do, in fact, so I decided to keep up the "tradition" again this year.  (Honestly, I think we have decorated cookies, specifically for the St. Nick purpose perhaps once in her eight years.)  Again, this was a good activity for them to do and was so successful at eating up such a large chunk of time that I am starting to wonder if I should begin a "New Year's Eve" cookie decorating tradition. Nah....that just makes my New Year's Resolution to stop eating so many freaking cookies that much harder.  Anyway.....we actually had a couple of play dates during the cookie making and decorating processes, occurring on two separate days, so I was able to pawn at least a dozen cookies off on other kids (and their extremely grateful parents, I am sure.  My sister just wrote me a message the other day, asking, "why has someone not invented a sarcasm font?"  I know, right?!?  I sure could use it in this little passage right here!).  Seriously, there is nothing like homemade sugar cookies and there is nothing like the sugar high induced by said cookies, covered in globs of powdered sugar glaze, and crusted with every kind of sprinkle imaginable.  You are welcome, Santa.  (My insulin levels are shuddering as I type.....in a "wink-wink" kind of code in case my daughters somehow happen upon this post.  Just go with it.) 

So, from our house to yours, Merry Christmas and, in case I don't get a chance to post something next week because I have lost my mind screaming at my kids to stop beating each other because they are bored out of their minds, Happy New Year!

Monday, December 19, 2011

My new favorite icing (and the cake that went with it)!

Since it has been more than a month since I last posted on here (and since I have less than 10 minutes to write this morning), I will jot down a few quick thoughts about the cake I made yesterday for my mom's birthday.  I have recently been inspired to experiment with making cakes from scratch and so, I decided to inflict my aspirations on my mother, my sister and of course, my husband and my children.  I whipped out my Professional Baking tome, one of the few textbooks that I felt compelled to save from my culinary school days, found a recipe for devil's food cake and Italian buttercream icing and went to town!  The cake was relatively easy to make, though I discovered that I need a digital scale to create from scratch confections on a more regular basis (and for my paying customers), as I just have a scale that measures to the ounce (not very accurate, if you are dealing with measurements below that increment).  It came out of the oven risen, but almost perfectly flat on the top (if you have ever baked a box cake, you know about the evils of "doming"), and when I torted it (I am not sure about the spelling there, but I am in a hurry, so I don't really care), I found it to be dense and with a rather nice, sturdy crumb texture.  Success achieved on the cake front.  The Italian buttercream was very interesting to make, to say the very least.  You start by whipping egg whites and drizzling in a hot simple syrup (to which I added orange zest, scenting the sugar syrup and candying the citrus peel), whip until it is cool and then begin whipping in massive amounts of softened butter.  (I think I used something like 14 tablespoons to make just enough icing to cover an 8 inch cake.)  Using all of that fat made me think that the icing would be heavy and oppressively rich, but it was really just the opposite: it was light and airy, sweet without being cloying and had just enough of the orange flavor to brighten it considerably.  I LOVED it!  I also loved cleaning it up - anyone who has ever made a shortening based icing (and I make A LOT of it) can tell you that it is a bear to clean anything that touches said icing.  Seriously.  Anyway, the buttercream went on like a dream, held its shape and texture (i.e. didn't melt at all - love the stabilizers of the egg whites and sugar syrup!) and melted on command (i.e. putting it in your mouth to eat and also by adding hot water to clean all of my tools).  I was dubious about it at first just because it didn't come together completely until I whipped the bejesus out of it (that is a technical culinary term, of course).  I became dubious again when I refrigerated it while the cake was cooling.  It completely solidified (as butter does, of course), so I decided to just whip it to bring it back to room temp.  What I ended up doing was breaking it completely, so I actually had big clods of fat attached to my whip which, when they hit the side of the mixer bowl, sent up sprays of what I assume was actually buttermilk.  After some thought, I put the bowl over a double boiler, heated it slightly and tried whipping it again.  Finally: success achieved with the icing!  The end result is shown above - the cake's flavor and texture left a little to be desired as it was quite dry, but my success certainly gave me the confidence to continue with my experiments.  I intend to find a chocolate cake recipe that is relatively easy to make and produces results with more chocolate flavor and less chemical flavor than the boxes.  Don't get me wrong - I like the box mixes and I can count on them every time, but I want to see if I can do it all by myself.  I believe I can! 

Monday, November 14, 2011

So Much Going On.....

I guess it is just getting to be that time of year....you know, right before the holidays, when everything goes to hell in a hand-basket?  I have been crazy busy the past week or so.....I restarted my cake business and it has been booming!  That is great news, but it has not allowed me time to write and I really intended to blog at least once a week.  Ah, well.  What are you going to do, right?  Anyway, we have had a lot of stuff going on, in addition to all of my cakes.  The baby has been trying new foods right and left and has moved to eating three meals a day.  We are working on texture with him right now, which he is not particularly fond of, but I think it will come in time.  As far as "real human food", as my five year old calls it, goes, he has tried potatoes, scrambled eggs and mashed bananas.  The eggs were moderately successful, but he tried really hard to gag himself on both the potatoes and the bananas.  It was not a pretty sight. We have been moving through the second foods pretty rapidly as he has also increased the amount that he eats at any given meal.  Right now, he seems to be enjoying the green vegetables the most (usually an odd combination of green veg and fruit, actually), but he has also shown an affinity for the pumpkin and banana combo, as well as a lovely pinkish bananas, beets and blueberries that he tried yesterday and today.  I plan to get him some teething biscuits at the store in the next couple of days and hopefully, we can start giving him food from the table pretty soon as well.

Probably the most interesting thing I cooked in the past couple of weeks was our German dinner a week or so ago.  I did a roasted pork tenderloin, served with red cabbage and sauteed spaetzle and mushrooms.  The spaetzle was by far the most interesting thing on the table, particularly because we grew the mushrooms!  My sister gave my husband a "grow your own mushrooms" kit for his birthday and we decided to try it out.  Lo and behold, we successfully grew about 1/2  pound of oyster mushrooms!  I harvested them, cleaned them and sauteed them with the spaetzle for a twist on our "normal" spaetzle combo of onions, mushrooms and swiss cheese.  Yum.  I missed the cheese in the revised dish, but it was still pretty delicious.  The mushrooms added a nice earthy quality and, since I did actually saute them in the drippings from the pork tenderloin, which I seared before roasting it in the oven, they picked up quite a bit of the pork flavor as well.  In any case, it was pretty tasty, which makes me more than a little disappointed that we have not had any success (yet) growing mushrooms again from the kit.  (You are supposed to be able to grow between 2 and 4 crops of mushrooms.  We are only on our second.)  The weather changed recently, bringing colder temps, so that might have something to do with it.  Ah well, maybe we will still get some more delicious mushrooms that I can play with in another dish.  Until next time, folks!  Have a wonderful Thanksgiving!

Tuesday, November 1, 2011

Slacking

I really don't have much of anything to write about today, but this is pretty much the only time that I have this week to blog, so I guess those of you who actually read my ramblings will just have to put up with it for this week at least.  As far as the baby foods go, we have not started anything new with him yet this week.  I did, however, buy A LOT of new foods to start (after we finish our stash of first foods that I have in the pantry).  I think the one that I am most excited for him to try is the Pumpkin and Banana 2nd foods from the Plum Baby Organics line.  I don't know why that sounds good to me, but it does.  I also bought a couple of foods from the Happy Baby Organics line (Pear, Peas and Broccoli, I think), so that will be interesting as well.  We are going to try mangoes, spinach and eventually beets, blueberries, zucchini, summer squash and lentils (as well as about a million other things that I can't even think of right now).  I am actually really excited about having him try all of this stuff.  The baby could kind of care less right now - he hasn't been all that interested in eating his fruit and cereal in the mornings lately.  I can get about two bites down the hatch before he starts fussing and turning away, so down the garbage disposal it usually goes.  Dinner time seems to go a bit better, but that may be because he is eating veggies rather than fruit.  Who knows? 

On another note, I called this post "Slacking" because I have been doing just that in the kitchen in general.  I was sick last week with a particularly nasty cold, which knocked me clear on my ass for the better part of the week, so I did pretty much anything I could to avoid cooking.  I did, however, make homemade chicken noodle soup early in the week, which was delicious and satisfying, but did almost nothing to make my cold symptoms disappear.  Home remedy my foot.  Anyway, the rest of the week was all sandwiches, runs to the....gasp!.....local fast food joint, etc.  This week, I am feeling better and am planning to cook dinners all week long.  Last night, we had something dubbed "American Ghoul-ash" by Michael Symon of The Chew talk show.  It was ok - not spectacular, but relatively inexpensive and very easy to make.  Let me take a quick detour here and state my personal opinion about the show itself.  I feel like I should like this kind of talk show....I mean it has famous chefs, who make lots of tasty looking food, as well as decorating, home improvement and entertaining tips. All right up my alley.  I keep turning it on (mostly by accident as the noon hour is about the only time I have to sit down and watch TV, as I scarf my lunch before the baby gets up from his mid-day nap) and I keep HATING it.  I haven't yet figured out why I dislike the show so much.....maybe it is because I find Mario Batali beyond pretentious or maybe it is because I generally find the women (who I don't even know their names) insipidly obnoxious.....I don't know.  I do kind of like the aforementioned Michael Symon and I obviously liked the recipe idea enough to try it myself.  I don't think it will be repeated because the kids ate it only begrudgingly, but I could probably do a riff on it myself at some point.  Back to the topic at hand.....I will probably have some more interesting things to post about in the next couple of days (or next week, rather).  We have some German food on the menu for this week, complete with homegrown oyster mushrooms (that is definitely another post altogether), as well as lentil soup, which, oddly enough, always goes over well in our house.  Until then, Happy Dia De Los Muertos to you all!  Hasta luego!

Monday, October 24, 2011

First Foods are Finished!

We have finally made it through all of the baby's first foods!  Just in the nick of time, too, as he will be 6 months old in a couple of weeks.  I don't know that the 6 month mark is necessarily much of a distinction as far as the foods go, but the baby food packages all have "6 months and up" printed on the second foods.  (I am nothing if not a consummate rule-follower.)  I am so excited for him to start the new food combos - he can have stuff like quinoa, green beans, spinach, mangoes....the list just goes on and on!  Although I have not made any food for him yet, I am actually pretty excited to be able to do that as well.....my hope is, once produce starts showing up again at my favorite farmer's markets, that I will be able to get some fresh veggies, bring them home and cook them for the whole family (baby included) that day.  We will see - for those of you who may read my blog and are outside of my immediate area, my home state is stuck in the middle of an epic drought which has pretty much scorched everything grown outdoors.  Lovely.  Anyway, and regardless, he should be able to try lots of new foods very soon.  We actually bought him a multi grain cereal yesterday, so I can soon add spelt and millet to the list of foods that he has tried.  As of last week, he has enjoyed sweet potatoes and bananas, in addition to his other favorites.  I was a little surprised that he took so well to the bananas because he has not shown a strong affinity to any fruits (save prunes - he is such a little old man).  Honestly, I was a little put off by the bananas (from the Sprout line) because of their bizarre color - pink.  Seriously, I was a little concerned until I noticed that the jarred bananas are the same color.  I don't know if the color comes from the fact that bananas suffer from oxidative browning or what, but the baby food purees are all a really pretty shade of pink.  (At first, I was going to blame it on Tyler Florence's affinity for roasting fruits.....yes, the bananas are also roasted.....but, based on the comparison at the store yesterday, I don't think that was the cause.  You lucked out this time, Tyler!)  My husband is really excited about a feeding gadget that he found at the baby store yesterday: it is a spoon that will attach to a baby food package that has a spout on the end.  I don't know how to describe it other than that - it is literally a spout that you uncap and squeeze the food out of.  The packaging is actually really cool and my husband was pretty excited about being able to travel with food slightly easier.  (Saturday night, we found out the hard way how hard it is to feed the baby in the middle of a child's birthday party.  It took both of us to get the baby fed while our older kids were running amok.) 

I think the only other "new" food related issue is my continuing effort to go dairy free....I don't think it is having an effect on the baby's skin issues and I am seriously missing cheese and chocolate these days.  I am going to give it another couple of weeks to see if we notice any improvement, but, as of right now, I am not convinced the problem is the dairy.  On the plus side, I think I have actually dropped some weight - I had not realized just how often I was consuming cheese, yogurt, milk and other assorted dairy products.  Let's just say....A LOT (side note: this was totally necessary during my pregnancy, for obvious reasons).  So, to wrap up, I should have some new baby foods to document in the next couple of weeks and I am looking forward to the weather cooling off, so that we can all enjoy some of my favorite winter dishes (which I also plan to share on here).  Until next time, have a great week and Happy Halloween!

Wednesday, October 12, 2011

More Fruits and Veggies (for all of us)!

So, the food count for the baby is now: apples, pears, peaches, prunes, oatmeal, rice, squash, carrots and peas.  Of those, he has definitely shown a preference for the veggies, but, as a surprise twist, enjoyed the heck out of the prunes!  (My sister has started calling him a "little old man".)  Last night was our first go round with peas, and as par for the veggie course, he loved them!  I did not have a chance to make them myself yet, as we were eating out last night, but we did experiment with a new baby food brand: Nurture Me.  These are basically packets of freeze dried (?) fruits and vegetables that can be reconstituted with the liquid of your choice (mine was plain old tap water).  The nice things about this brand are: they are very portable, you can add liquid to make the consistency you prefer, and the peas were a gorgeous, bright green color.  (Which my mother said looked weird.  I asked her if she had ever seen an actual pea before - you know, of the not-canned variety.  I am pretty sure she refrained from calling me a smart-ass only because my older children were hanging around.)  Anyway, it was interesting mixing the peas up and I really liked that they maintained that verdant hue, rather than dulling to the standard (canned) olive green of oxidized/overcooked green vegetables.  The baby agreed with me and scarfed his oatmeal-pea gruel down.  After he finished eating (probably should have been before, but what are you going to do?), I tasted the peas.  They had a wonderful, fresh flavor.....but a really weird, chalky texture.  My sister, who also braved the baby food taste test, said that they reminded her of peas that had been left in the freezer for too long.  I agree - it is probably the effect of the processing, plus the starchiness of the peas themselves.  No matter, as I plan to make my own batch tomorrow - have to finish the other half of the packet first today. 

So, as the post title indicates, we are all enjoying more fresh produce.  A friend of mine is currently training a group of us in CrossFit workouts and is doing a cleanse-type diet called Whole30.  I read through all of the nutritional information (which was a lot and very comprehensive) and ultimately decided that the whole Whole30 was not for me, based on the fact that I am still breastfeeding and plan to continue to do so until the baby is at least a year old.  Anyway, the basic tenets of this diet are eating whole foods, specifically fruits, vegetables and clean meats (with which, I am totally on board).  They eschew eating grains, legumes and dairy products for various reasons.  (Side note: I have actually given up dairy to see if that helps with the baby's health issues - he has reflux and eczema.  It is a bit of an experiment, but it is a place to start.)  I decided that my take-away from the Whole30 would be to introduce more fruits and vegetables into our diet, and, if possible, to substitute them for certain white potato and grain based side dishes, upon which I have come to rely.  Hence, when I made Shepherd's Pie last night for my family (and extended family of my mother, sister and aunt), I used grass-fed, organic ground beef, organic carrots, organic spinach, onions, garlic, tomato paste and.......wait for it......instead of topping it with mashed potatoes, I used cooked, mashed cauliflower!  It was a hit!  Everyone ate it, including my two daughters, and my aunt thought that the topping was actually potatoes for half the meal!   Anyway, I consider it to be a win - it was homey, delicious and very satisfying! 

Tuesday, October 4, 2011

Bread Making: First Run

I am going to try to finish the post that I started (and thought I lost, but apparently not) yesterday.  As the picture included (sort of) indicates, my husband and I have decided to take up bread making.  This was a loaf of whole wheat bread that we made last week and I honestly think it turned out pretty good.  The recipe came from America's Test Kitchen's Healthy Family cookbook, which I generally love.  Some of the recipes (I am looking at you "Easy Cinnamon Rolls") really suck, which is surprising, considering that ATK tests the bejesus out of everything. The bread recipe, actually called "Rustic Boule" was generally pretty good.  I had to add quite a bit more flour to the dough than the recipe actually called for, but it rose well and baked up with a nice texture and fairly dense crumb.  (Which, in case anyone was wondering, is just how I like good bread).  We started with a "starter", which we allowed to ferment overnight.  (I could not remember if it was a "biga" or a "poolish" preparation....if my baking professor reads this, she can be properly horrified that I can not remember my baking terms correctly.)  Anyway, the starter gives it some added lift and a LOT more flavor, so we decided to keep that extra step in our prep.  (You can delete it, if you are in a hurry to make bread.  "A hurry" is defined by only being willing to wait like 6 hours instead of 24 + hours for your homemade bread.)  The next day, we made the actual dough, added the starter and put the dough in the fridge to kind of slow the rising process so that I could finish it the next day when I woke up.  (This was all done after the kids went to bed, mind you, so I didn't really want to wait up for several hours to finish the bread.)  I took the dough out the next morning, let it come to room temp, punched it down and then shaped it into a round, boule shaped loaf, and let it rise again before baking it.  The recipe called for a baking stone to be placed in the oven at 500 degrees for no longer than one hour before baking.  Once you slide the loaf onto the stone, you reduce the temperature to 425 and bake it until the internal temperature registers 210 degrees.  I tried to follow the instructions, but my pizza stone started smoking and, oddly, produced a fair amount of some kind of moisture in the center, while it was heating.  I opted to remove the smoldering, weeping stone before I caused some kind of bizarre brimstone laden fire and place the loaf in the oven on a baking sheet lined with parchment paper.  Honestly, I think it turned out just as good as if I had done it the way the recipe was written.  Once it was finished baking, I let it cool completely and we enjoyed it for dinner that evening.  It was just the right amount of chewy with a really crisp exterior with which I was really impressed. That was good, but having leftovers for breakfast the next morning was pure bliss....I am a sucker for really good, toasted bread, spread with a little peanut or almond butter, served with some fruit and a spicy mug of Chai tea.  So, for our first go round with bread making, I think it was a success.  We are going to try our hands at rye bread sometime this week.  As a matter of fact, I need to stop writing and locate a recipe for that.  Until next time!

This Baby Doesn't Like Fruit

I know this picture is fuzzy and way over exposed, but it does tell the story of a number of different things happening in our house right now.  First of all, and most pertinent to this blog, is that our son has now tried a number of different fruits (all different brands as well) and seems to have reacted to them in a variety of ways, ranging from apathy to full out rejection.  (Just in case you were wondering, this is the picture of full out rejection.)  Today's experiment was the third day of trying peaches for the first time.  These were organic peaches from Plum Baby Organics, which has the distinction of really cool packaging (comes in squeezable packets with a pretty cool, choking hazard top.....anyway....) containing a pure puree (meaning the fruits/veggies are not baked or roasted.....I'm still looking at you askance, Tyler Florence).  So, the first time the baby tried peaches, they were tolerated, but he was not thrilled with them.  The second time, I got a slightly better reaction to them, in that he ate the peaches and oatmeal mixture without fussing or turning his head away.  This morning was a completely different story.  The picture doesn't really capture how sour of a face he made when I was trying to feed him the exact same mixture this morning.....I just couldn't move fast enough with the camera to really catch the "I-just-sucked-on-a-lemon" pucker he had going on, but you can definitely see the act of spitting the peaches out, right after I completed putting the spoonful in his mouth.  You can also see how much ended up on his shirt and my hand....pretty much all of it.  Our daughters were watching all of this, as they enjoyed their own breakfasts.  Our younger daughter, after several attempts to get him to actually swallow a bite, said, "Um....Mommy?  I am pretty sure he doesn't like peaches."  Yep, I got that.  I am starting to think he just doesn't like fruits.....at this point, he has tried apples, pears and peaches and none of them have gotten a very warm reception.  Plain brown rice and oatmeal cereals, as well as butternut squash have been much better received.  I think we will try the peaches once more today (just to finish up the packet) and then I will move on to peas.  Which I will be making myself.  As a side note, the second story the picture tells is that yes, I did actually switch to cloth diapers.  My goodness.....I am not sure I even recognize myself any more!  I appear to have fully embraced my latent environmental side (not so latent anymore, obviously).  I am all good with that - my family is happy, healthy and we are doing our part to help care for our world.  In any case, I will report back soon with more updates on how the food is going.  I can't wait until we get past all the basics with the baby and can move on to some more adventurous eating (and baby food making for me)! 

Wednesday, September 21, 2011

"Popeye Basil" Burger and Oven Baked French Fries

Behold: the "Popeye Basil Burger" with oven baked French fries.  My husband coined the title of this recipe last night as we were discussing, surreptitiously of course, what the secret ingredients were that I mixed into this delicious riff on a traditional hamburger.  (Our kids were, obviously, sitting at the table, blissfully enjoying their burger which had been loaded with extra ingredients that they would normally not touch with a ten foot pole.)  I started with a pound of organic, grass-fed, ground beef that I actually found last weekend at my local grocery store.  Being the queen of re-purposing that I am, I also had some bagged spinach in the refrigerator that was threatening to go totally manky on me if I didn't use it.  So, I decided to finely chop it in my little food processor, add some garlic and then add the mixture to the ground beef to "stretch" the beef, as it were.  While I was doing this, my two older children were watching TV, so I was trying to get this all done and pitch the packaging before they had a chance to come into the kitchen to investigate what I would be serving them for dinner. 

In addition to the spinach, which my younger daughter once described as making her "tongue all angry",  I also chopped up ten ounces of button mushrooms and tossed those into a skillet to brown.  Once those were done, I cooled them off a bit, tossed them into the mixing bowl with the spinach, garlic and beef; then, I added a beaten egg, bread crumbs and salt and pepper.  By this time, my younger daughter had finished her TV time and had arrived in the kitchen to check out the dinner preparations.  She looked into the bowl, where the ingredients awaited mixing and forming into the hamburger patties, said, "that looks pretty good.  What is all that green stuff?"  I fudged my answer (DUH!) with, "oh, it is some herbs and spices that I am putting into the hamburgers".  She walked away satisfied and I was left to continue my food deception for a little while longer.  

I grilled the burgers on my favorite kitchen gadget, which I may have mentioned before - the Griddler by Cuisinart - topped a few with Swiss cheese (for my husband and me - the girls don't care for Swiss or any white cheese for that matter) and popped the burgers onto toasted sandwich thins.  I served them with hand-cut (like that really matters, but burger joints are forever touting the fact that they actually cut their potatoes with a knife.  Puh-lease.), oven baked French fries, which began as russet potatoes, thinly sliced and tossed with olive oil, salt, pepper and a seasoned salt blend.  They were baked in a 400 degree oven for about 40 minutes until crisp and golden brown.  My oldest daughter pronounced, "well, at least the fries taste the same as usual."  

The burgers may not have tasted the "same as usual", but they were eaten with nary a complaint and nary a question as to what "Popeye basil" actually is.  The mushrooms were completely undetected - score one for me (or two I guess, since I got spinach and mushrooms down their throats without them gagging)!  My younger daughter even had seconds!  So, I think this recipe was a resounding success: I stretched well made beef into 8 hamburgers; I used up an item in my fridge that would have probably gone to waste otherwise; I got my kids to eat - and enjoy! - two veggies that they really dislike; and, best of all, I have an extra hamburger for me to enjoy when my son takes his mid-day nap!  Guh-guh-guh, indeed!  (That was my dialectal Popeye.....just to be clear.) 

Tuesday, September 20, 2011

Adventures in Baby-Feeding!

Anyone get that movie reference?  Anyone?  Alrighty then....well, as the title of the post indicates, we have officially started solid foods at our house.  My four and a half month old son has taken fairly well to moving from an all liquid diet to a diet that includes a couple of tablespoons of some kind of solid food on a daily basis.  As with our other children,  we started the baby off with a semi-liquid rice cereal (organic brown rice cereal) that he mostly spit out onto his bib - which is typical.  We fed him the cereal for four days, gradually thickening the consistency.  I can't say that he had any particular opinions (as far as infant opinions go).  I mean, would you have any strong opinions on what amounts to a pasty gruel?  Nope, I didn't think so. 

Anyway, things started to get slightly more interesting when I purchased several different packets of organic fruits and vegetables at my local grocery store.  I was a little disappointed with the selection there, but I figured that he didn't need a huge variety to begin with anyway.  I chose organic roasted apples by Sprout, a baby food company apparently co-founded by TV chef Tyler Florence.  I am not really sure why the apples needed to be roasted, but Mr. Florence seems to prefer that method of cooking baby food.  It definitely deepens the color of the pureed fruit, but I would kind of beg to differ that it enhances the "natural sweetness" of the apples.  Those suckers must have been some kind of tart when they were roasted and pureed because the final product was pretty sour.  I didn't taste them before I started spooning them into my son's mouth, so I was kind of surprised when he made a face after the first spoonful.  He continued eating them, so he must not have been completely put off by the flavor.

Our next adventure was with roasted butternut squash, also by Sprout.  This went over substantially better with the baby - he actually started opening his mouth in anticipation of the next bite of squash!  I can understand the roasting method here - the squash would have to be cooked somehow.  The flavor, in my opinion, was fairly mild, but my son seemed to really enjoy it (especially when mixed with a little rice cereal).

Since our baby food packet supply was being rapidly depleted, and since I happened to be at one of my favorite stores - Target - I decided to see if that store had anything else by way of different baby food to try.  I was so excited to see that Gerber's organic line was more complete at this store.  They had peas and prunes in the first foods, which I was pleased to see, especially because my grocery store did not have any first foods in that particular brand.  I picked up a couple of packages and was really excited to try peas with my son.  The packages sat in our pantry for a couple of days and the day that I deemed him ready to try peas, I happened to pick up the package to take a closer look at it.  The label on the front touted "now with DHA!", so I thought, "huh, I wonder if those have a higher protein content than the other brand's veggies".  I flipped it over to check the nutrition label, happened to read the ingredients and discovered that the DHA comes from adding tuna oil to the baby food.  I have two problems with this: first and foremost, we have a family history of severe anaphylactic-type allergies to fish, shellfish and nut products.  I always read ingredient labels and have always been extremely careful when it comes to feeding these potential allergens to my babies.  Obviously, he would not be able to eat the products with the tuna oil in them.  Which is ALL of Gerber's organic baby food line - even down to the fruits!  That is my second problem: adding tuna oil to fruits just offends my chef sensibilities.  Seriously.....I don't want to eat a peach cobbler studded with tuna fish, why the hell would my baby want to eat a pureed version of the same thing?!  Back to the allergen thing and more to the point: Gerber did not even have a warning label on the food, indicating that it contained fish products.  That just pissed me off. 

So, long story....long?.....I will be writing a letter to Gerber to complain about the stupid DHA.  I will also be making my own organic peas (sans tuna oil, of course).  Making my own organic baby food got me thinking about other things....like switching to cloth diapers instead of the disposables that my son rapidly outgrows.  That is a totally different blog though.  Right now, we have just mastered Sprout's Roasted Pear baby food.  Oddly enough, he did not enjoy that one very much either.  I will have to try to find another brand of fruit baby food for him to try because he may just not care for Tyler Florence's riff on fruit puree.  I don't know.  (Again, I tasted it - this time, it was less tart than the apples, but really didn't have much pear flavor.  Geez....this makes me think that I may be getting myself in for making more than just baby peas here.)  Until next time, baby (and grown up) food lovers! 

Thursday, September 1, 2011

I'm Back!

Yes, that's right!  I am back....after an embarrassingly long period of time!  I know I usually start my posts by apologizing for not writing more frequently, but this time I am going to start by updating you all on what has been going on in my life and what I hope the future holds for my writing.  

First of all, we have had a lot of changes over the past year!  Part of the reason that, if you go back to my archives and read my posts from last fall, I did not want to cook or eat was that we were expecting our third baby!  It was a boy, who is now a healthy, happy (and huge) almost-four-month-old!  For the first couple of months, I was fairly nauseous and rarely, if ever, felt like cooking.  After that, I slowly regained my normal sense of taste and smell, as well as my appetite, but I did not really feel like writing about what I was doing in the kitchen.  At this point, I am ready to pick the blogging back up and ready to let all (two) of my readers in on what is cooking....if not on a daily basis, then at least on a weekly basis.  (That is my goal, anyway.  As it stands right now, I am typing as fast as I can to take advantage of my son's very short nap times.)

So, here is where the adventures begin!  I have recently come to a couple of conclusions about what I want to do with my life and with this blog.  First and foremost, I plan to continue writing about the healthy (for the most part) fare that I cook for my family.  I also plan to write about introducing new foods to my infant son, as I am really quite fascinated with how babies develop a taste for new foods.  (Side note: he will be eating organic foods; occasionally cooked by me, but most often of the packaged variety.  I am going to try my hand at veggie purees and, possibly, fruit.)  Part of my reasoning behind writing about what I fix for my family, is my passion for helping all families eat better.  I have always been a proponent of healthy eating, but I especially want to do my part to help combat obesity, particularly childhood obesity.  I plan to not only write about what my family eats, but also about how much the food cost, per serving, and how my readers can replicate my recipes.  

So, that is how it stands right now.  I am going to have to run and try to engineer a longer nap for my son. (I am trying to begin sleep training him right now and I usually have to help him fall back asleep once his first sleep cycle has run its course.)  Look for new posts often - hopefully, they will all make sense, as I continue to be a bit sleep deprived!  Until next time!