Growing Up Savvy Posts

I don’t want to it to be September. I am not ready for the fall and if I pretend that it isn’t coming, I am sure it won’t get here. So… how did I pretend fall isn’t coming? Evan and I cooked all the things that are just right in the summer. Also, we didn’t have to work too hard to pretend because the weather was sweltering.

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Heirloom tomato and mango salad dressed with lime, olive oil and red onion. Fresh and summery.

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Fried eggplant dressed with a cool sour cream-dill-garlic topping. I haven’t made this dish all summer long but I wouldn’t finish out the season without it.

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Old-school Russian tomato and cucumber salad dressed with dill, red onion and sour cream served with a side of roasted red pepper hummus and naan. The ideal hot summer’s day lunch!

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This upside down plum cake was a new venture since I’ve not worked with caramels before. The plums were a petite Italian variety that were just like the ones my Baba had in her garden.

Despite my conviction that Labor day weekend was too short, I did get to knit (this, I will show off when I put the finishing touches on it) and we were able to join some friends for an BBQ. All in all a big success.

Cookery Flavors Hubby Cooks

I am reading, looking up, searching or admiring new sites, ideas, recipes, tutorials and all matter of materials for hours each day. A part of that is for work, a part for continuing education (because I want to) and last and perhaps most important part is for inspiring new ideas whether it be for cooking, traveling, getting away or just developing my style of keeping house and home. In doing so, I have developed a stash of sites I enjoy visiting and on occasion share them here. So alas, without too much further adieu, here are some sites that I really enjoy.

  • There is something magical about pieces that are made by hand by artisans. I pine to own one of these pieces… maybe after we’ve checked off a few more travel destinations, we’ll take the plunge.
  • I love crafts and routinely look here for patterns and inspiration. There is something nordic, basic, simple and oh so very elegant about these knits. Incidentally, I’ve made of the pieces showcased here for Sophia. She loved it.
  • Mmmm… these recipes just beg to be cooked.
  • I can’t help but admire these beautiful jewelry pieces there. Even though I can wear casual clothes to work and don’t dress up while chasing after a 22 month-old, I still appreciate and collect pieces time/budget permitting.
  • If I could afford it, I would summer (okay, even spend a week) at this beautiful nature setting. I am a city girl at heart, but I love to get away and unwind. It is essential to our happiness.
  • I don’t solely drool over jewelry and cooking sites… I also nourish myself with interesting information presented in a creative and unique way such as this.
  • … and last, but not least, I have found serious evidence that Evan and I are not the only people out there who love and live to travel, whose sole purpose in life is to unearth the uniqueness of other cultures. This is a blog about a lawyer who gave up her career to do just that — to travel, to eat, to see and explore and it seems that she feeds not just her belly but her soul.

Do you have sites and blogs that you read regularly? Share them with me in the comments section. I am always looking to diversify my reading list.

General


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Moments

We don’t dine out or take in much. The philosophy behind that is simple: it is cheaper (usually) to cook yourself and you know what ingredients went in. We also believe that dining out should be reserved for special occasions and not for the sake of being lazy to cook at home. Lastly, why go out if you can make it or something better yourself? The only exception to that are ethnic foods that we wouldn’t do justice to at home (e.g. sushi).

We do, however, have a weakness for take-in from a mom-n-pop shop (aka Baba and Deda). When visiting, my parents bring a cooler, a BIG cooler, of delicious foods which we treat as if they were precious delicacies from the Orient. Evan and I agree that while some things like my mom’s famous sous are just plain old delicious, they are not the delicacies we equate to edible gold. Blintzes stuffed with vanilla perfumed farmer’s cheese or savory ones with meat, home-made chicken soup, perfectly seared chicken cutlets, hand-formed deep-fried pirogies stuffed with potatoes or cabbage, and last but never least, strudel are worth their weight in gold at our house.

Most of those items take a long time to make and years of continuous practice to get right. No matter how much I’d like to, I won’t be able to produce crepes as paper thin as my mom for the stuffed blintzes. Evan encourages (okay, sometimes demands) that I cook more Russian dishes at home and learn all the recipes from my mom. It’ll be years before anything I make from my mom’s repertoire is as good as hers, but I suppose I can try. Until then, every last blintz is carefully doled up and little Sophia gets first dibs on anything and everything Baba makes.

I only wish we lived closer so that my blintzes didn’t have to be frozen, but rather delivered fresh.

Life

I struggled finding sample menus for toddlers when Sophia transitioned to solids. Most of the available information focused on recipes for dishes but not well-balanced menus that would describe a typical diet for a week or so. I log what Sophia eats for each course and try my best to vary her diet ensuring she doesn’t get bored. We  like to make sure that she eats whatever is planned for her before trying new foods. This week’s menu is posted below and after looking at it, you will see that we aren’t keen on having too much fat in her diet despite her being a skinny minnie. We limit egg consumption to at most every other day and soups make up at least one meal per day. Kasha (hot cereal) is a staple in our house and I alternate farina and oatmeal hot cereals. Snacks are equally important and because Sophia is not a huge eater, they tend to be bigger. Lastly, and you may have already noticed this, mango is a daily first snack. The mango is a Happy Baby Mango/Spinach/Pear packet that has a lot of fiber and is delicious. Mangos aren’t always in season and the packets ensure Sophia gets a serving all year round.

Menu

Tiny Tastebuds

You didn’t think that we’d hold off on dessert after yesterday’s tantalizingly flavorful dinner, did you?

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Presenting…  biskvit. Otherwise known as a Russian sponge-cake. I grew up eating this plain and with filling (as you see here). I am not sure you will find a single Russian person who doesn’t know about this simple cake. Even though I had it when I was little, I never made it myself and finally decided to give it a go yesterday. In truth, I made it because I was faced with four eggs that had to be used – since I cracked them by accident.

We tend to share household responsibilities 50/50 and since Evan cooked his famous shrimp, I thought I’d bake him and Sophia with a simple but delicious dessert. Besides, you can even eat this for breakfast — plain, definitely and like this if you feel like indulging.

Speaking of being an egalitarian family — our nanny has the plague flu and so Evan and I are splitting care-taking duties 50/50. On the positive, this means extra time with Sophia — can’t beat that.

Cookery Flavors Life

Where did our weekend go? “Poof… all gone” as Sophia would say.

We had quite a busy weekend and are facing quite a busy September and October. First things first… inevitably (as this was really a matter of time), Sophia’s social calendar has eclipsed ours. Saturday afternoon marked a first birthday for her friend Anya whose parents hosted a soiree with one of the most delicious spreads I’ve seen in quite a long time. The Georgetown cupcakes didn’t detract from the delicious-ness, either.

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Sophia’s daily outfitting consists of pants and a t-shirt, so this dress was quite fancy, fancy and I must say, my to much secret delight, she loved her girly outfit.

We continued our general business with an outing to Bethesda Row … where I was inspired to cook a gourmet dinner. Busy1

Let’s not kid ourselves, it looks a little monotone. However, it is anything but monotone in the mouth. Hubby’s famous pan-seared shrimp and my Israeli couscous with Dates, Pistachios, Cardamom and Ginger. A whole weekend, lots of fun, lots of yummy food and new experience with new friends — what else can you ask for?

Cookery Flavors Hubby Cooks Life

 

 

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Moments

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I don’t have to go to school anymore. I remember dreaming about not having to learn/study anymore and then after graduating, I suddenly wanted to go back. There is something invigorating about being in a university setting — young people, an atmosphere of being able to make a difference. At last, thanks to the wonders of the internet, I am able to partake in learning — studying what I want and when I want it free of charge.

I signed up and am very much enjoying a Coursera course called “A Brief History of Humankind“. … and naturally, when it rains, it pours so I also went to a class on Big Data last week taught by Cloudera. The Big Data class was for work and by the end of last week, I felt like my brain was going to explode. The 90 mile a day commute didn’t help and I am glad that I can watch my Coursera lectures anywhere and anytime. This isn’t my last first Coursera class and it won’t be my last. Have you taken a class recently or learned something new on your own?

 

Life

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