Monday, September 20, 2010

My, Aren't We Lucky! Golabki!


For our yearly Alliance Francaise Potluck dinner, I had a huge dilemma. What do I possibly make? The directions were to make a full dish (whatever that means!), and I knew that this dish may have to sit for a while before being consumed. I went through a few options, and most turned out to be too expensive for our meager budget, so I had an epiphany. Why don't I make golabki (or as I know it, golumpki! (the "l" is a W sound in Polish-actually it needs to have a line slashed through it to be correct). I am a Polish girl, not a French girl, after all, so why don't I make something I am familiar with. ( from Wikipedia: Gołąbki is the plural of gołąbek, the diminutive of gołąb, meaning "pigeon". This refers to the shape of the roll; none of the ingredients have any connection with the pigeon meat known as squab. Gołąbki are also referred to as golumpki, golabki, golumpkies or golumpkis).

Little did I know, but I spent the whole afternoon in the kitchen preparing this dish. Had I had the gift of foresight, I would have made a much simpler quiche, but I had no clue what I was getting into, since we had never been to this event before. It did turn out well, although a little difficult to eat in a casual setting, and did remain hot until dinnertime.

So, here is the complete recipe that I used, with pictures:

2 tblspns. olive oil
2 chopped yellow onions
2 (28 oz.) cans crushed tomatoes and their juice (I used one crushed and one coarsely ground)
1/4 cup red wine vinegar
1/2 cup light brown sugar, lightly packed
1 1/2 tsp. kosher salt
1/2 tsp. freshly ground pepper
2 smaller-sized green cabbages, keeping outer leaves

Filling:
2 1/2 lbs. 90% lean ground beef
4 large eggs, lightly beaten
1 small minced yellow onion
1/2 cup bread crumbs
1/2 cup uncooked white rice
1 tsp. fresh thyme leaves (I was lucky to have these in my garden)
1 1/2 tsp. kosher salt
1/2 tsp. ground pepper
1/2 tsp. paprika
1/4 tsp. nutmeg (I left this out because my grater is MIA to my complete frustration!)

DIRECTIONS

Heat the olive oil in a large saucepan, add the onions, and cook on med./low for 8 minutes, or until onions become translucent. Add the tomatoes, vinegar, brown sugar, salt, and pepper.


Bring to a boil, then turn down to low, and simmer for 30 minutes. Keep stirring every once in a while.

Here are some filling ingredients: nutmeg, thyme, paprika.
Remove the entire core of the cabbage with a paring knife. Bring a large pot of water to a full boil, and then immerse one entire head in the boiling water for a few minutes, pulling the leaves off with tongs as they soften. Please be very careful in this step. I wish I had been! I splashed boiling water on my face, and later actually submerged a finger in the very boiling water. I got to see first hand what it feels like to be a hot dog!

Set the leaves on some kind of platter or pan as you remove them. Don't use the leaves towards the core. These are much too hard. I had about ten leaves in each head of cabbage. So, repeat with the other head.

Mix entire list of filling ingredients in a large bowl. Add 1 cup of sauce to the meat mixture, and mix lightly with a fork. Preheat the oven to 350 degrees. Remove the hard rib from the base of each leaf with a paring knife.

Place about 1/2 cup of filling (more or less depending on the size of the leaf) near the rib edge of each leaf, rolling toward the outer edge, tucking the sides in as you roll. this may take some practice to perfect! Place one cup of suace in the bottom of a Dutch oven. Place cabbage rolls, seams side down, on top of the sauce. Keep adding rolls until you have a layer, then cover with sauce. Repeat with more layers until you fill pot. Once full, cover with remaining sauce. Cover the pot tightly and bake for at least an hour. I recommend more because the cabbage just gets more tender with time. Also, it is always better the next day! Enjoy!

Some beautiful Golabki! What more could we wish for?

Saturday, September 18, 2010

My First Wreath



I'm not sure how big of a handmade feat this was, since it took me merely 5 minutes to put together, but it is my first wreath and it was handmade (although all the materials were store-bought). I figure this was a practice run for an upcoming Halloween and Thanksgiving wreath that are in the works as we speak!

Wednesday, September 15, 2010

Our Not-So-Extreme Home Makeover



Finally, after 7 years of waiting, the exterior of our 1928 house is complete!
These are the before pictures, winter and spring respectively. We live in a typical American Four-Square colonial with Craftsman detailing (corbelling and dentil moldings). We wanted to give the house a chance to show its historic details, so more natural, earthy colors were chosen. There is something about the green of grapevines in the autumn with the grapes just hanging off them that I respond to, so I used this idea as my inspiration. I really wanted to have a house to decorate for autumn and Halloween and am so excited to finally get the chance this year!

I wanted to also take the opportunity to comment here about the travesty of vinyl siding and how every effort should be made to keep the original clapboard on old houses, or, in our case, the original cedar shake shingles. Yes, I realize that when you replace with vinyl, you don't have to paint every 10-12 years, but, and this is a big BUT, you can never replace the beauty of wood and its natural quality. Vinyl is man-made, machine-made crap that, in my ideal world, would be outlawed. Besides, it does eventually fade and need to be painted (or replaced).

Many hands were involved in the transformation, including a team of painters, my very diligent and efficient husband, and myself, who did most of the legwork for materials and the color choices. We love our old house and do not think twice about putting in that extra effort to keep it historic.

And, the moment we have all been waiting for:

The Finished Product!
TaDa!



Color Choices:
Benjamin Moore
Kennebunkport Green
Sherwin Williams
Morning Sun
Sherwin Williams
Black Swan

Railing:
Benjamin Moore
Black























Rocking Chair: Lowes
Address Numbers: from a market in France
Mailbox: target.com
Door knocker: bought on the island of Malta-
shows fish intertwined
Doormat: Smith & Hawken
Light Fixture: Schoolhouse Electric
sea creature motif
Cat: Classic Blue Tabby named Leonardo
SPCA



Now to start on the interior, but it may take another 7 years! Oh well, it will be worth it in the end!

Monday, September 13, 2010

Getting Kids to Make rather than Consume




This weekend, I had the privilege of being involved in the crafts part of our monthly Alliance Francaise playgroup. I brought a whole arsenal of crafts to try to interest the kids: paper bag puppets, paper plate masks, stained glass fish etc. etc. There were two children who participated (not including my own child, but that's another matter). One boy, instead of making a puppet out of the paper bag, made a tie! I thought that was so ingenious of him, not to mention uber-creative. His sister made a paper plate mask, but made a tiger with yarn whiskers. Really cool! Unfortunately, I do not have pictures of the finished products. These kids are way too fast for me. They were finished and left all before I could notice they were gone! Here of some pictures of the process and my own creations.


paper plate mask, in progress
stained glass fish, in progress

Grand Opening of From the Hand

Announcing the premier of my new blog, From the Hand! This blog will be a kind of celebration of all things that are made by hand, a rarity in our modern world. I hope to show many things that I myself have made, but I will also include work that I have observed made by others, as well. I hope that this blog will encourage me and others to consider making things themselves rather than buying them. Not only will this act of making keep us in touch with our own ability and innate nature, it will also keep in touch with our own consumption and the concept of We are What We Eat, or Drink, or Wear, or Grow, Place in our homes, etc., etc....