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Category Archives: Musings

  • Weekly Cocktail #10: The Peachfrog

    April 4, 2012

    7 Comments

    And if you immediately thought “Peace Frog” by the Doors, you get a gold star! (And you just gave a likely indication of your age..;-). In any event, our cocktail karma continues to be good. This week’s cocktail is one of our own creations, or I should say, a slight adaptation of an existing cocktail. But I guess that is how the “creative process” works.

    The Peachfrog cocktail is a simple riff on a cocktail called the Leapfrog from Jim Meehan’s PDT Cocktail Book. We have been working through the PDT book, trying cocktails that sound good, and the Leapfrog sounded great. Interestingly, the Leapfrog is an adaptation of an early 20th century cocktail called the Leaping Frog that featured lime juice and apricot brandy. And so it goes, cocktails are a lot like jazz, everything is a new riff on something else.

    As for the Leapfrog, it is a mixture of gin, apricot liqueur (Meehan suggests Rothman and Winter Orchard Apricot), lemon juice, mint and orange bitters. All good stuff, but as it happens, we did not have all of that stuff. Well, necessity is the mother of invention, and we really wanted to try this, or something like it.  Thus a new drink is born. Continue reading →

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    Posted By: putneyfarm Category: All Recipes, Cocktail Recipes, Gin, Musings Tags: Jim Meehan, leapfrog cocktail, PDT Cocktail Book, peach liqueur, peachfrog, peachfrog cocktail
  • Pork Belly Ssam With Celery Root Remoulade

    April 2, 2012

    5 Comments

    Building your own recipes often creates some strange bedfellows. In this case, we developed a recipe based on the work of two cooking titans from very different places in the culinary spectrum: David Chang and Ina Garten. Chang is the bad-boy New York City chef of Momofuku fame, known for excellent, innovative Asian-inspired comfort food that is uniquely upscale and downscale at the same time (a tough balance to pull-off, btw). Chang is also known for extreme profanity, the occasional tirade and the pursuit of perfection. Ina Garten, better known as the Barefoot Contessa, is a Food Network staple, former Hamptons caterer and cookbook author who is best known for simplifying classic recipes and coolly saying “now, how easy is that”. I doubt they often share afternoon tea.

    Actually, I have no idea if they know each other, or how they feel about the other’s work. But I will tell you that they have very different approaches to cooking- and their cookbooks bear this out. Chang’s “Momofuku Cookbook” has some very easy recipes, like pork belly, but is also full of multi-step, hard-to-find / make ingredients and sometimes highly technical cooking. The Momofuku cookbook, not surprisingly, reads like it was written by a chef. But happily, we do get some incredibly tasty, and easy recipes for the home cook like roasted pork belly. It is a great dish and anyone can make it. And it is really, really good. I have (very happily) had pork belly at Momofuku Ssam Bar and the home version competes very nicely. It is porky, soft, fatty, salty and incredibly indulgent. Yum. Double Yum.

    (Ed. Note: A few years ago, we had a take-out roasted pork shoulder from Momofuku as part of a Thanksgiving meal in New York with family and friends. It was one of the best, most memorable, meals we have ever had. I thank David Chang and his team, to this day, for helping that meal happen.)

    Continue reading →

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    Posted By: putneyfarm Category: All Recipes, Dinner, Home-Cured Meats, Musings, Vegetables Tags: barefoot contessa, celery root remoulade, david chang, momofuku, pork belly, pork belly ssam, pork belly ssam with celery root remoulade, ssam
  • Blossoms, Buds, Blueberries and Bees

    March 31, 2012

    10 Comments

    Gravenstein apple blossom.

    Spring is here, and while I can wax semi-poetic about the season, it is best to let nature (and Carolyn’s photos) do the talking. Our fruit trees and berries are blossoming and even fruiting! Here is a photo-tour of the progress to date:

    Heritage pear blossom.


    Heritage pear blossom #2.


    Heritage pear blossom #3.

    Continue reading →

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    Posted By: putneyfarm Category: Garden and Orchard, Musings Tags: apple, apple blossom, blossom, blossom photos, cherry, fig, orchard photo, peach, pear
  • Weekly Cocktail #9: Cameron’s Kick

    March 30, 2012

    67 Comments

    Cameron's Kick Cocktail

    It’s late at night, and I am writing this now because our local barn owl is keeping me up. (No, I don’t know “who”, so shaddup already!..;-) It could be worse, the owl used to scratch around on our roof while eating its prey. Very cool, but also kinda creepy.

    In any event, this week’s cocktail, the Cameron’s Kick, comes from what is rapidly becoming my favorite cocktail book, the “PDT Cocktail Book” by Jim Meehan, with illustrations by Chris Gall. David Wondrich’s “Imbibe” is still my foundation for cocktails, but the “PDT Cocktail Book” almost seems to pick up where Wondrich left off. The PDT cocktail book has over 300 classic and new recipes, notes on ingredients and real insight on how to stock and manage a modern bar. It was clearly a labor of love and passion. Chris Gall’s illustrations add a whimsical touch that reminds you, that while Meehan takes his drinks seriously, cocktails should be fun.

    As for the Cameron’s Kick, all I can say is that our “cocktail karma” has been very good recently, this is another drink that exceeded expectations. I was looking for a cocktail that would use up some of our liquor that was almost done, in this case some Johnny Walker Red and some Bushmills. It turns out that the Cameron’s Kick combines blended scotch, Irish whiskey, lemon juice and Orgeat syrup. In case you are scratching your head, Orgeat is the special “almond-ish” flavor in  a Mai Tai- you may have some in the back of your liquor cabinet or bar right now. If not, Orgeat syrup is cheap and easy to find, go get some and then you can make Mai Tai’s as well, and who doesn’t like a Mai Tai? Continue reading →

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    Posted By: putneyfarm Category: All Recipes, Cocktail Recipes, Musings, Whiskey / Rye Tags: Cameron's Kick Cocktail, Cameron's kick cocktail recipe, cocktail recipe, irish whiskey cocktails, Jim Meehan, orgeat cocktails, PDT Cocktail Book, scotch cocktails, Steuben glass
  • Gardening Means Killing

    March 27, 2012

    10 Comments

    The gardener's "Most Wanted" list

    Yes, I am afraid it does. If you want a good garden, a garden that produces a lot of the food, you should be ready to kill for it. You will need to kill for it.

    Let me step back a bit.

    While our garden is doing well, Carolyn and I are always looking to improve our yield. So last week, we went to Filoli (a beautiful local garden) for a morning class on vegetable gardening.

    The class had about a dozen students and one instructor. The instructor was a horticulturalist who worked at Filoli and now manages private vegetable gardens and teaches classes. She was a very good teacher, clearly passionate and knowledgeable about her craft. She gave us a number of insights, but I was struck by one exchange concerning garden pests, here is my recollection of the exchange: Continue reading →

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    Posted By: putneyfarm Category: Garden and Orchard, Musings Tags: aphids, garden pests, gardening, gophers, killing, killing pests, pests
  • A Wall of Bitters Makes a Cocktail Better

    March 21, 2012

    1 Comment

    Oh, the glory...and the cocktails...

    Wow. My awesome sister in NYC just sent me this pic of a wall full of bitters at a specialty store (and yes, I am sometimes jealous of all the cool stuff back in my birthplace). What are bitters? These are the accents that make a good cocktail great. I will not (and cannot) explain how bitters are made, but you need these. Bitters are not expensive, and as most cocktails just use a dash or two, bitters will last forever.

    And bitters are a necessity of good mixology. If you have a few types of bitters, a few bottles of booze, citrus, sugar and the internet- you have 200+ excellent cocktails on hand. Easy. No crazy infusions, no special tricks, just great drinks. Right now we have Angostura, Peychauds, Fee Brothers Lemon and Fee Brothers Orange Bitters in our bar. This is a good start, and all for about $20. Go get some, most liquor stores will have what you need. Continue reading →

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    Posted By: putneyfarm Category: Entertaining, Musings, Reviews and Notes Tags: angostura, bitters, Cocktails, orange bitters, peychauds

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