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Category Archives: All Recipes

  • Big Chocolate Chip Cookies

    March 27, 2012

    3 Comments

    With kids in the house these do not last very long.

    There is one thing we know for sure at Putney Farm, you can never have enough chocolate chip cookies, or enough good chocolate chip cookie recipes. And you do need more than one chocolate chip cookie recipe. There are so many variables to consider: crunchy, chewy, cakey, buttery, salty, chunks, chips, dark, milk, white, nuts, thick and thin. All these variables can be part of a truly spectacular cookie, but not all go together. It takes time, skill and testing (yum) to get the best cookies. 

    So with the goal of having a full set of different, but awesome, chocolate chip cookie recipes we are starting a series of tests. We are happy to share the results. And please hare your own recipes and tips, we are happy to try them.

    So here is cookie recipe #1, the Big Chocolate Chip Cookie.  Continue reading →

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    Posted By: putneyfarm Category: All Recipes, Dessert Tags: big chocolate chip cookie recipe, chocolate chip cookie, chocolate chip cookie recipe, chocolate chip cookie recipes, cookie, cookie recipe, Guittard chocolate
  • Radish, Fennel and Dandelion Salad

    March 26, 2012

    2 Comments

    Now that we are getting spring vegetables, Carolyn and I decided to try some new salads. We are seeing beautiful radishes and fennel at the farmers market and decided to find a salad that used them. (It is a bonus that our kids actually like radishes, so if we can make a dish with them, we will). 

    Carolyn went immediately to Alice Waters’ cookbook “Chez Panisse Vegetables” for some ideas. This is quickly becoming a “go-to” cookbook for us when we are looking for seasonal vegetable dishes. The book has detailed, useful information on the vegetables themselves, different varieties, their seasons and suggested uses. The cookbook tends to lean towards European flavors, but Waters wisely admits this and sticks to her strengths. And so far, every recipe we try or adapt has worked very well. And if you’ve been to Chez Panisse, that’s not a surprise. The work they do with seasonal produce is still the gold standard. In our area only perhaps Manresa, a restaurant with its own farm, can compete. Continue reading →

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    Posted By: putneyfarm Category: All Recipes, Lunch / Salads / Sides, Vegetables Tags: chez panisse vegetables, dandelion, dandelion green salad, fennel, fennel and dandelion salad, fennel salad, radish, radish salad
  • Weekly Cocktail #8: The Baroque

    March 22, 2012

    6 Comments

    The Baroque Cocktail

    Let’s get right to the point. The Baroque is a cocktail with rum and gin. And it’s good. And if your first thought was “rum and gin together, that’s nasty”, I wouldn’t be surprised. But this combination works very, very well. I stumbled across this drink at the excellent cocktail blog A Dash of Bitters. If you like cocktails (and good writing) you should check it out.

    In any event, I do not often think about combining rum with gin, it seems like wearing flip-flops when you are in a Tuxedo. But as I found with last week’s cocktail The Last Word, sometimes what sounds like a train wreck is quite good, you just need to try it. Continue reading →

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    Posted By: putneyfarm Category: All Recipes, Cocktail Recipes, Gin, Rum / Cachaca Tags: appleton's rum, baroque cocktail, gin and rum cocktail, rum cocktail
  • Carnitas

    March 21, 2012

    4 Comments

    And then we ate this....and it was good.

    Our boys just love tacos and we make them regularly, but we tend to make either fish or steak tacos. But the boys are both starting to enjoy pork, and that means we get to “graduate” to the best (IMHO) taco meat, Carnitas.

    Carnitas are chunks of pork shoulder slowly simmered in their own fat. Crunchy on the outside, tender inside and joyously “porky”, Carnitas are perfect in tacos, burritos or on their own with a little rice. Traditionally, in the Michoacan region of Mexico, the pork is simmered in large copper pots full or pork fat. This is the best stuff. But we do not have the copper pot or that much pork fat (although our bacon fat supply is growing). Happily there is another method for making Carnitas that works just as well, and without the copious amounts of fat.

    This method involves first simmering chunks of pork shoulder in water and then rendering out the pork fat. As the water evaporates, the pork starts to cook and get crispy in its own fat. This is a very easy way to make a super-tasty, flavorful dish. The only real requirement is time (about 3 hours) and some attention. As for ingredients, some recipes suggest just pork and water. Some other recipes include salt and still others either orange or lime juice. Having made many a low and slow pork recipe, we used salt and a touch of both the orange and lime juice to add color and a little flavor to the dish. But these are optional ingredients, really all you need is pork, water and salt.  Continue reading →

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    Posted By: putneyfarm Category: All Recipes, Dinner Tags: Carnitas, carnitas tacos, pork, pork tacos, tacos
  • Perfect Biscuits

    March 19, 2012

    3 Comments

    Biscuit with butter and blackberry jam.

    It seems in the food blogosphere there are a few “baseline” recipes that every writer must have. The number one of these recipes is for a “perfect” whole roasted chicken. That is a rabbit hole for another post. Probably the number two “baseline” recipe is for a good, tender biscuit that is easy to make. Well, after some work, we are ready to submit our “perfect” biscuit recipe.

    Perfect? Sure. These biscuits are easy to make, taste great, have a light, tender texture and even have a little science behind them. We did test a number of recipes, but in the end we went with a recipe adapted from King Arthur Flour.

    If you are not familiar with King Arthur Flour, you should be. Based in Vermont, King Arthur Flour provides some of the best baking products in the country. While Chris Kimball and the Cooks Illustrated crew all talk bout their “Vermont-ness” (all while acting like they run a foodie hedge fund) the folks at King Arthur actually walk the walk and deliver simple, reliable recipes and techniques that make you a better baker. Continue reading →

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    Posted By: putneyfarm Category: All Recipes, Breakfast, Dinner Tags: biscuit, biscuit recipe, pastry flour, tender biscuit
  • Weekly Cocktail #7: The Last Word

    March 15, 2012

    6 Comments

    This is a good green cocktail. Seriously, try it.

    Well, St. Patrick’s Day is coming, and despite being contrived and hokey, I have been researching green cocktails. But I was looking (praying?) for a green drink that was not artificially green, minty or nasty. A search for St. Patrick’s day cocktails did not really solve the problem, in fact it was pretty depressing. So I figured that I would approach the problem backwards and look for a decent green ingredient and build from there.

    That led me pretty quickly to Chartueuse, another of those strong, medicinal European liqueurs that pop up in many traditional cocktails. Chartreuse is made in France by Carthusian Monks (gotta love the French, even the monks). Made from a secret formula with the extracts from over 130 plants, Chartreuse is, not surprisingly, green. It is strong stuff (100 proof), sweet and features intense herbal flavors. I would not drink this stuff straight. And Chartreuse isn’t cheap either, at about 30 bucks for a small bottle. But I made the plunge and bought some, figuring it will last a while. And I am glad I did, because I got to make this week’s drink, the Last Word, and it is good, real good. Continue reading →

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    Posted By: putneyfarm Category: All Recipes, Cocktail Recipes, Gin Tags: chartreuse, chartreuse liqueur, last ward, last word, last word cocktail

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