Sun-Dried Tapenade

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Christmas has rolled around again. This year I was sick until the week before the holiday and did no baking or cooking for people outside my household.


I was healthy enough to supply the potatoes and the tapenade and crostini for the Christmas Eve party my husband’s sister hosts every year. I often get requests for the recipe, and I don’t have a phone to simply take a picture of it and send it. (I share a phone with my husband—no secrets in this relationship—and he is painting a bedroom right now so I’m not going to bother him.) It’s easier for me to say, “Go to my blog and search on tapenade.”

Sun-Dried Tomato Tapenade

  • 2 oz. Sun-dried tomatoes (unrehydrated)
  • 1 ½ teaspoons fresh garlic
  • minced ¾ teaspoon fresh rosemary
  • minced ¼ teaspoon dried thyme
  • 3 tablespoons olive oil
  • 33 Greek olives, pitted
  • 1/8 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper

Add all ingredients to a food processor and pulse until mixture is the texture you require. If you are going to bake on top of fish, process more coarsely. I process it to a mealy texture for topping crostini. Serve at room temperature.


Crostini


Slice fresh baguettes ¼ inch thick and brush both sides with olive oil. Place on a jelly roll pan or cookie sheet and bake at 450˚F until golden brown. Cool before serving.


Serving Suggestions and Hints:


I present this tapenade with the crostini and cream cheese served separately. You could, however, spread the crostini with cream cheese and tapenade, or just tapenade, and serve as an hors d’oeuvre.


You can substitute fresh for dry or dry for fresh herbs. Just remember, for every tablespoon of fresh herb, the substitution of the dry herb is one teaspoon and vice versa. (I like fresh rosemary and am too cheap to buy it from the store, so I always pot up a rosemary to raise under lights for the winter.)


Buy your olives pitted. It saves a lot of time and tedium. If you must pit olives, a hand-held cherry pitter is a good investment.


You can substitute sun-dried tomatoes in oil for rehydrated dry ones. (I raise and dry my own tomatoes. If you want to do this yourself, see my blog “Drying Cherry Tomatoes.”) Start by adding less olive oil than recommended by the recipe. You can always add more if you think you need it.


I use extra virgin olive oil for this recipe. It should have a green tint and not have any off flavors. Taste your oil before you use it.


I hope you enjoy this recipe. Happy New Year, Begonia

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Southern Wisconsin Early Spring Garden

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I’ve decided to try to keep up with the progress of my garden this year!

The beds that I planted earlier this month are now sprouting. We’ve had a good deal of precipitation–of all types–so far this spring. It is the temperatures that are a few weeks behind.

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Three types of radishes

What you see sprouting in these two raised beds are mostly brassicas, greens, and root vegetables that germinate at lower temperatures.

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Mesclun Mix

I was happy to see the rhubarb emerging. As well as the French sorrel, hard-neck garlic, and mache. If the weather warms up, we should have salad and rhubarb cake by the first week of May.

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French Sorrel–this seeds around if you let seed head mature.
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Garlic and Mache–I replant the garlic every fall evenly spaced to get bigger heads, but I could let it seed around like the mache and have my food without work.
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Rhubarb–I have four plots of rhubarb in various parts of the yard.

As I age, I am trying to transition the garden to plants that seed themselves or come up on their own every spring. I am also tending toward single plants that provide more food without having to be coddled–fruit and nut trees and berry bushes.

I hope that we get some warm weather soon. I planted snap peas a week ago but have seen no signs of life yet. I still have half a pack of seed left if it turns out I have been too hasty and need to replant. Hope springs eternal when you are a gardener. Begonia

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Zinnias in Wisconsin in April?

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I found this zinnia on the dining room table the morning of my birthday! (I’m not saying how old I am–but it was a significant number.) It was miserable cold day and I wondered, “Where did they find a zinnia at this time of year in Wisconsin?”

I looked a little closer and realized that the flower was made of crepe paper and was a present from my daughter. She has been making all kinds of crepe paper flowers for our neighbors and friends in the past month. Some of them take hours to make. I don’t have the patience, but I am glad that she does.

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This little guy appeared a few days later. He is a present from my husband. We subscribed to Disney+ for New Year’s so that we could binge watch The Mandalorian until the ball dropped. It was cheaper than streaming movies, so now we have Disney+ even though I am not a real Disney fan and have most of the Marvel superhero movies on disc.

One of my nieces ended up with one of these little animatronic guys at the end of a family gift exchange last Christmas. I didn’t think much of it at the time, but after watching The Mandalorian and Boba Fett over again a couple of times, I ended up with a bad case of Grogu fever.

Man, those character designers sure know how to press all our buttons: baby sounds; small and seemingly helpless; ugly/cute; first steps-style baby walk; large liquid eyes in a little round noggin; toddler naughtiness; and unbaby-like food preferences (for gross worms and amphibians), green alien skin color, and (of course) superpowers. A character who needs to be saved and to save in return.

My mom had a similar reaction to Alf back in the 1980s when the show was on T.V. My dad bought her the Alf plush character and a rose for her birthday one year. I think Baby Yoda is cuter, and he doesn’t chase the cat.

All in all, it was a pretty nice birthday! Thanks to all my friends and loved ones who sent cards and greetings! Begonia

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