I wiped away the weeds & foam. / I fetched my sea-born treasures home... Ralph Waldo Emerson







Tuesday, March 5, 2013

She Sells Seashells






Hello everyone!



Seashells, Thrift shop china...two of my favorite things.



                                                                [sold]

Over the years friends and readers and buyers on my etsy and eBay shops have asked me about the bowls of seashells that appear as props on my selling photos.



The shells weren't for sale, I never listed them....



the shells are simply beach treasures stuck in a pocket and tossed onto the deck to dry.



Once in a while I'll paint the shells a nice chalk white. I arrange them in my favorite white crazed crackled chipped old bowls.



My beach tends to be very bare, just acres of plain white sand. The lovely large shells, or conchs as they are sometimes called appear only after certain storms...






usually just a few, one here, one there.




The bowl displays grow...add a sand dollar, a starfish, a fancy shell from a Caribbean snorkeling trip...maybe a bit of broken sepia china?




Never sea glass, the sea glass is segregated to the window sills, or the shelf with the ship model, the huge glass jars in the corners. The beach pebbles too have their place. (The pebbles are my secret favorites..I know each and every one, I hold them gently in the palm of my hand and  treasure their beauty....)



The shells act as paperweights, and door stops, too. Many are displayed in bowls, or on old china platters. Then I may add a lavender heart---two or three--- or maybe, in winter, an old and chippy mercury glass ball. Maybe a speckled plover egg [fake of course..]

And the bowls and shells serve as props for my photos.



If you live at the beach you don't want to bring too much home! One's gatherings become clutter or worse, beachy kitsch.




Like the shell strings I make each summer's end! And bestow on unwary friends at Christmas,lol.




Anyway. After H.Sandy, I found some lovely shells...and they're for sale on etsy, in my shop.




I added a couple bowls, platters...for tablescaping, as it is called.



Ironstone platters with beach roses, sigh! How perfect.....




Now my friends and customers can have their own displays, no beach hikes required! In fact, not even a beach...



      love

               lizzy

.................gone to the beach...



 
 
 

Saturday, March 2, 2013

Weekend Food and It is March Already?



Yes indeed, March snuck in like a lamb, at least here at the beach...but winter is still very much with us and despite the calendar, the world seems endlessly cold and grey. And that is if you don't have mounds and mounds of snow.



Hi! If you had last week's blizzard [s?] at your house, I do hope all is well, cozy and warm. The weather just seems perfect for delicious hot fragrant comfort food, so today we'll make classic Hungarian goulash and spaetzle. Yum!



The goulash is essentially a very simple stew. I was inspired to make it recently because I found lovely sweet Hungarian paprika at Savory Spice, when I was ordering the  seasonings for the chili verde.



You do need nice paprika for this...I haven't found truly wonderful paprika since I left Brooklyn Heights and its gourmet spice shops...but you can get a fairly good version in most markets, just look for the red old fashioned tin, and be sure it says "Sweet" [not hot!] on it. [Szeged is the name of the maker, I believe.] Or Savory Spice .



The recipe is old, from a tattered James Beard cookbook my mom gave me when I was in college.
[Yes, I cooked in college, somehow it is always ME who does the providing of sustenance. Too bad I hate to cook....] Nevermind! This is easy and delish!
You need good beef for goulash. Please do not buy ''stew meat'' unless that is all you can afford!
The better the ingredients, the better the result, so true in all cooking!



I usually buy a sirloin steak/ London broil  and cube it myself.



Cut in 11/2" cubes.
Toss with flour, paprika, tenderizer, salt, seasoned [or plain] pepper.






Saute in batches, in a combination of oil and butter. Get the cubes nicely browned.



Add a large can of tomato puree, 2 Cups of beef broth. Some red wine if you have it? You can use what you have on hand. Water to cover. Stir....
Here I used crushed tomatoes and consomme, plus leftover brown gravy, leftover wine.....



Stir in the rest of the flour paprika mixture. I add more paprika...and 2T. of sugar or sweetener.
No onions, No garlic. You can add mushrooms, whole, if you insist.
Stir gently to mix the browned bits into the mix. Cover with foil, then the dutch oven heavy lid, bake 3 hours at 350.




Or at this point transfer to your crock pot and slow cook it for about 8 hours on Low? I like to cook dishes like this ahead of time, so that I can refrigerate overnight. I cool it off and put the whole thing right in the fridge, on a teatowel...
The flavors meld nicely..and I skim off all the excess fat and oil.



Reheat gently. And while you're reheating.... you must make spaetzle! {Or boil up some whole wheat noodles!} Spaetzle is  a noodle/ dumpling, of I think Swiss origin. Pronounced Spetz'-lee.



Mix 2 beaten eggs into 1 cup of cold water.




Pinch of salt. Slowly add flour until it becomes a sticky dough.



I work in the [well-cleaned] sink so it is less messy.



It will be hard to stir, but keep mixing...big circular sweeps with your stirring fork,
until what my mom called rubber bands form. You'll see the noodle dough changes, becomes shiny and makes long swirls? refrigerate while you bring salted water to a boil.


To form the dumplings, hold the bowl in your left hand [or you know, reverse for lefties!], tip it over the boiling water and just as the dough slides to the edge, chop off a small bit with a sharp knife held in your other hand. Keep doing this until the water is full. Remove with a slotted spoon to  colander, then a heated bowl. Takes a few batches but it is easy and fast to do. The dumplings cook almost instantly, I let them all rise to the top of their cooking water and then wait a moment or two. Practice, practice! The smaller the little bits you chop off the finer the dumplings. Up to you. Mine in the pix are too chunky,lol.




Serve with the goulash,and a big blob of fat free sour cream or plain Greek yogurt. I like a green veggie to go with, usually steamed broccoli.




MMMMmmm. Smells so good. Warms your tummy, and your wintry soul. Lots of easy to reheat leftovers, freezes well too.



enjoy.

le Creuset Dutch Ovens here  also at Williams-Sonoma. And you might find a great buy in an odd color at Marshalls or T J Maxx. Mine is 5 1/2 quarts. And it is at least 20 years old.





love

           lizzy
 
         gone to the beach..... [to walk off the goulash!]


 
 
 


a couple real recipes in case you need them, but they're more complicated!

here

and a fancy James Beard one here

Wednesday, February 27, 2013

Goofing Off



note the BIG waves!


Hi! Today after my post office run, instead of my planned trip to the big box store, I snuck off to the newly reopened bird sanctuary wetlands park.



The rain stopped, the clouds parted and spring was in the air. Costco can wait.



The overlook of the wetlands area is a high raised berm, perhaps as much as 30 feet above sea level. and it seems to have fared very well.

                                                          Feb 2013
 
 
late summer 2012
 


The marsh itself is, well--wet! The creeks and pools are much larger. Not sure if that is from H. Sandy or today's very high full moon/ storm  tides. And here is a large hunk of dock....




The ospreys' nest looks good too. Either the nest survived or the ospreys are here early and rebuilding. The other nest to the east was entirely blown away, but it is on more exposed land. The platform though is there, and the birds can rebuild, I am sure.




The lower areas were muddy and I wasn't wearing boots....the entry has new clam shells though and sparkled invitingly in the sudden sunlight.



Hidden paths into the marsh...



Too wet to explore today. And all was silent, empty, and brown.



And here is the turtles' nesting area. How do they know this is their spot? It seems very unappealing and exposed but I'll be watching for them too.




I got home and was further lured to my own beach. Look at the soft spring sky!



What are those big black lumps!?




Marsh grass clumps....
The tides, waves and recent storms have been hard on the beach.
It is very eroded now..
This is where that white bench was just a few weeks ago.



Every day brings changes.




I guess that's life....

love

    lizzy

..............gone to the beach...

"...time had suddenly become exactly what it was: one season turned inward or on end, a point in a great circle." N. Cairn/ Cape Cod Times