Martha+Tom

Fritatta with Salsa Lisa

As a recovering ovophobe, I am very particular about how I like my eggs. Having spent 21 years of my life actively avoiding any egg not mixed into a sauce, dough or batter, even after I made the decision to start eating eggs I didn’t have much of a taste for them. So far, I have only dared to try scrambled eggs or eggs cooked well done, omelette style (well, more tortilla style). Some day I aspire to fried and poached eggs, but that day is a long way off. Even when eggs are cooked into a browned circle with ingredients I love, I dread the bites that, well, taste like eggs.

My solution? Hot sauce! Tabasco is my usual choice, but recently we had a jar of the Twin Cities’ own Salsa Lisa in the refrigerator . This is the only salsa available here that I think comes close to approaching the Michigan deliciousness of Jack’s. Be careful though, I am told it is only good in the hot variety.

Salsa Lisa

Now doesn’t this frittata look much better?

Spicy!

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The Cost of Homemade Bread

I make bread at home for a lot of reasons: I like how it tastes, I think it’s fun to make, I get to control what goes in it, and I feel connected to generations throughout history, across all classes and creeds, who in making bread daily expressed their humanity (yeah!). But the nagging question in these “trying economic times” ( 🙄 ) is, does it save money? 

It was pretty easy to break down the costs for my standard bread which is from a recipe published in the March & April 2006 Cook’s Illustrated and yields two (~1.5#) loaves:

Ingredient Amount Cost/Oz ($) Total Cost ($)
Bob’s Red Mill 10 Grain Hot Cereal Mix 6 1/4 oz .1272 .795
Boiling Water 20 oz Free! Nothing!
Unbleached All Purpose Flour 15 oz .080625 1.209375
Whole Wheat Flour 7 1/2 oz .074375 .5578125
Honey 3 oz .243125 .729375
Unsalted Butter 2 oz .243125 .48625
Instant Yeast .275 oz .243125 .06686
Table Salt .76 oz .018846 .014323
Total Cost      3.86
Cost/Loaf      1.93

That’s $1.93/loaf or about 8 cents/oz of bread. A recent trip to Cub revealed the white Wonderbread can be had at the price of 2 for $3 for 20oz loaves. For good quality multigrain bread it’s probably a lot more; I haven’t bought bread in so long that I don’t know. Looks like baking bread at home saves a little money.

Saves money, that is, if you leave out the cost of labor (not to mention gas to heat the oven, electricity to boil the water, and cost of the water reflected in rent). Assuming my time is worth $16/hour counting just the active time for making this the bread costs more like $6 a loaf. For a lawyer to bake bread would cost much more! But baking bread is fun and fulfilling–it makes you human. And if you refuse to commodify your time, you are definitely saving money on the ingredients.

Obviously I’m not the first person to think this way. For a historical perspective, check out this letter to the NYTimes from 1916. Prices were also going up in the writer’s time: $1.10 for 24# of flour!

Finally, for those of you curious about the process behind this bread, it is very simple. First, pour the boiling water over the cereal and let it soak for one hour. After that, you mix in all the other ingredients and knead for ten minutes. Let the dough rise in an oiled bowl for an hour and a half, then divide it into two pieces. Shape the pieces into cylinders and proof in loaf pans for another hour, until they are bursting out of the pans. Bake at 375° for 35-40 minutes. Bread! For a more detailed explanation, check out Cook’s Illustrated #79, March-April 2006.

How can you argue with that?

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NYT – “Trashing the Fridge”

In the Home & Garden section of this week’s New York Times, there’s a short article about people who’ve decided to get rid of their refrigerators.

For some this means switching to a freezer-only or a mini fridge in lieu of the “normal” giant American fridge, so they’re not totally giving up cooling food. Still, it seems like a decent idea given the energy suck that is the refrigerator. I grew up in a house with not one but TWO of them, so it’s also a pretty radical idea to me.

Today, we have a new fridge in the apartment because I requested that the landlord install one. While the new fridge still has issues that more expensive ones wouldn’t (running water down the back, caking ice in the freezer), I don’t miss the old fridge. Like the one of the women quoted in the article, we do the “easy” environmentally friendly things well-known to most people. I try to replace our incandescent bulbs with the squiggly energy saver ones (even when it looks awful) and we recycle all glass, plastic, cans, and newspaper. Most of the time, we use reusable bags at the store… and when we do get the crappy most-people-throw-away plastic bags, we reuse them instead of buying trash bags. While it’s easy to “do our part” in these ways which don’t inconvenience us too much, I’m not sure I could give up the fridge. In fact, I really wish we had another debatably earth-friendly appliance: a dishwasher.

Could you get by in a household of 2+ people with just a college dorm fridge?

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Hooks from Chiasso.com

So maybe I’m crazy… but I think these would be a lot of fun in an entryway. Maybe not *our* entryway, but surely someone out there has an appropriate space on a wall with an inviting color. For $12? It’s a deal.

Hooks

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I love beets! Beet Sandwich

I grew up in a household virtually free of beets. My dad did not, and I think still does not, like beets. In college, I started to experiment with beets and found I didn’t mind them. It’s only in the past year that I’ve started to fully appreciate the glory of the beet. They were big on beets at Blackbird, where I was briefly employed during the past summer, so I became familiar with the process of roasting, slicing, and tossing beets in salad. And then just last week, with beet matchsticks left over from beetza, I put raw beets on a sandwich.

BEET IT

In addition to beets, there was

  • Multigrain Bread
  • Sprouts
  • Turkey
  • Mayo

I was really surprised by how much I liked raw beets. They were crunchy, giving a real bite to the sandwich, and still had that characteristic beet sweetness, just less so than if they had been roasted. Less sweetness is almost always a good thing! So, the moral of the story is, beets: not just for roasting!

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