Allez Cuisine!

Here’s another first: On Saturday, we did our first real paid catering gig (along with my mother and my uncle Kevin – my mother was the head chef). Marcia has worked as a professional chef before (at the Bed&Breakfast she used to manage), but this was my first time in the professional arena. It was the first time doing catering on someone else’s site for both of us. It was a lot of work, but a lot of fun too.

Marcia, Karen, and Jacob

The event was a wedding reception with about 150 guests, with an Italian food/decor theme. The menu was a mix of traditional Italian and non-traditional Italian-inspired food. The entrees were Grilled Chicken Fettuccine Alfredo (traditional), and Inside-Out Ravioli (a non-traditional but very delicious creation of my mother’s). We also did a fruit salad, a chef’s salad, some REALLY good breadsticks, a cheese tray, and a few other tasty morsels. We did not do the wedding cake, though we did provide a chocolate fountain which was a real BLAST, as you will soon see…

Chocolate-Dipped Strawberries

But let’s start with the strawberries – In talking with the mother of the bride, it became apparent that the bride’s favorite treat is chocolate-dipped strawberries. It was decided that we would provide a plate of chocolate-dipped strawberries for the bride and groom to enjoy. At first, we were just going to do some simple traditional dips, but then my mother got a crazy idea – and when she gets those ideas, there’s no stopping her. She wanted to use white and dark chocolate (dark in color, not in flavor) to make half of the strawberries look like tuxedos, and then use white to make the other half like like wedding dresses. It took a little bit of [very tasty] experimentation, but when she figured out how to do it, the results were great:

The world's coolest chocolate-dipped strawberries
We offered a few of them to the pastry chef who did the cake to put them on or around the cake if he wanted, and he loved the idea. The rest went on a plate for the bride and groom to share. We also made some more plain dipped strawberries for the rest of the head table to enjoy.

Cake Flower

The pastry chef (who was a friend of the bride’s family and also a wedding guest) had his daughter with him. She was probably 6 or 7 years old. While he was putting the strawberries we gave him on the cake, I was talking to the little girl, who said “my daddy made the cake.”

“It’s pretty,” I responded, “and you can eat everything on it!”

“Not the flowers,” she said.

I went into teacher mode. “I bet you can.”

“No!”

“What kind of flowers are they? Are they carnations?”

“Yes.”

“Then you can eat them. What do you think they taste like?”

She half-shrugged, half rolled her eyes at the idiot who thinks you can eat flowers.

“They taste like pepper.”

She’d had enough. I was clearly insane. She laughed at me, said “Nuh-uh!” and scampered off.

Later, I was lucky enough to serve her her food. I asked if she wanted salt, pepper, or flowers on her pasta. Again, the “for a grown up, you’re really stupid” look.

For the record, you CAN eat carnations, and they DO taste like pepper. Just be careful when you buy them that you get ones grown without any pesticides, because pesticide not only tastes nasty, it’s not very good for you.

Chocolate Fountain of Death

About halfway through dinner, we were all serving or preparing more food, when someone came in, grabbed Kevin, and said “the chocolate fountain is exploding!” We thought that perhaps it had spilled a little, or maybe overheated and ruined the chocolate (it does happen on occasion).

No. This was pretty literal.

A piece of food had fallen into the bottom of the fountain, and worked its way into the auger that moves the chocolate from the bottom to the top. It got stuck inside the auger tube and began acting as a lifting shelf for the auger, so the auger started climbing up the tube – like it was unscrewing itself from the fountain. Once the auger got above the top of the tube, it started flinging chocolate about. To make matters worse, a few moments after that, the whole fountain started to spin about because the movement of the auger had thrown the balance off. Then the rotation caused various pieces to come apart, and very soon the whole thing had come apart, flinging chocolate all over 4 bowls of strawberries, pretzels, and cookies, a white tablecloth, and a surprised little boy.

The fastest way to clean up the mess was simply to clean the fountain, swap the tablecloth for a fresh one (luckily, no chocolate got on the floor or walls), and get things moving again quickly. Kevin put the soiled tablecloth in a freezer so it could be easily cleaned later (you can peel the cold chocolate off of the cloth and have a pretty good chance of saving the tablecloth). After things calmed down and dinner was done, we took a moment to take some pictures of the tablecloth (this is after being frozen):

Kevin and Jacob with the chocolate covered tablecloth
I wish we had gotten some pictures of the little boy who was equally chocolate covered, but he got cleaned up too quickly. Thankfully, the bride and groom and all the guests thought the whole incident was quite funny, and nobody was upset at this minor disaster. I think it’s the only thing that went wrong the whole day (which means my knife skills have improved!).

The Aftermath

In the end, we received many compliments from the guests, and the bridal party (especially the mother of the bride, who hired us) was very pleased. We were happy with a job well done, and a buffet table well-eaten:

The buffet table after the wedding
A number of people asked us if we had a catering company, or if we were available for hire. The four of us have threatened to start a catering business before, but have not actually done so. Perhaps with a little more experience, we would feel comfortable doing that. Only time will tell.

So Close-ish

This is a Picture of the sky we saw as we left Sam’s wedding (Jacob’s cousin), also the same day we took Erin to the airport for schooling.  We, meaning Richard and Karen and I, Jacob had a band thing to attend.

Here is a picture from the wedding.  It was a Civil War Wedding, and it was pretty cool!  Her dress was fabulous.

10 Months Down

? to go.

Today marks our 10th monthiversary of marriage.

Joking with Jacob I asked, “Can you believe we have been married for ten months and haven’t killed each other yet?” He responded with this question, “Does that surprise you?” Me, “More everyday.”

Truth be told, it does not surprise me. I love Jacob, very much so. We have learned many things in these ten months. Such as a dishwasher really does make happiness, and when you live in a house (v. apartment) you do not have to turn the TV down after 10pm. I think we have learned more about sharing and caring for some one else more than ourselves (at least part of the time). I know I need to work harder on that one, but after 27 years of not being married, there is bound to be some adjustment.

Then there is the dreaded “C” word, communication. Suffice it to say, we are still reading the dictionary on that one. I just hope we are using the same dictionary.

I love you Jacob, and I am glad you are my mate.

Standing in Nowhere, Illinois

It is amazing that we can stand in our small town and see details in the night sky.  Tonight we went out with Erin and Keri to our favorite cemetery  (yes, the same one where we visited with the Police Officer) with the telescope.  We saw the galaxy Andromeda, Jupiter and his moons, our own moon, and the Milky way was incredible.  With my camera on my tripod, this is what I captured.

And, looking through the telescope this is what we saw.

The way the telescope works with the mirrors, it places the image upside down and reversed.

It is just amazing to see all that detail, even most of it is visible through binoculars.

We had a great time, and I just wanted to share it.

Lunar Eclipse

We may sound just a little crazy when I tell you that we got up at 3:30 this morning to watch the eclipse. We stayed up for two hours with the telescope watching the shadow begin and become a full eclipse. Here are a few of the pictures we captured, from our front porch. The moon set while the eclipse was full.
Short version:


Long version:

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2L51HHNWZGw[/youtube]

This is a good site to see what other things may appear in the sky, just look around.

We Went to Indianapolis …

We went to see the DCI contest over the weekend.  We have been planning this for all of our married life.  It was a lot of fun (I am sure Jacob will post more about the show).  We also went to the Indianapolis Museum of Art.  Here we are out front.

We wandered around shopping (we didn’t buy very much stuff-yay for us).  Then on the way home we played the game that starts with “I/We went to [place] and brought back:  [stuff starting with each letter of the alphabet, taking turns in order].”  I bet you can’t guess who had which letters…  Here is our list.

“We went to Indianapolis and brought back:
Apple
Books
Catalog
Ding-dongs
Experience
Folder
Gucci shoes
Ho-hos
Ice cream
Juju beans
Kite
Llama
Marcia
Nissan
Order form
Practice pad (which is true)
Quick steal
Row boat (to carry it all)
Sausage links
Tinkerbelle
Underwear
Virgin
Windshield washer fluid
Xylophone
Yo-yo
Zizzer-zazzer-zuzz”

Kentucky Hot Browns

Time for another culinary post… A few days ago we were watching the food network. Specifically, we watched Throwdown with Bobby Flay. This particular episode was all about a dish I’d never heard of – the “Kentucky Hot Brown.”

As we washed the episode and learned about the dish, we both started saying “that sounds really good.” By the end of the show, we had determined to make hot browns.

We went to the store the next day and bought the necessary items, remembering as best we could what was involved on the show (how do you make a Molnay sauce again? Oh yeah, Bechamel + Cheese). We then got fresh tomatoes from the garden, and I set to work:

I put a couple of very thick slices of roasted turkey breast on a thick slice of white bread (crust removed). On top of that went a couple of a tomato slices, sauteed just to the point of charring. Then a very healthy portion of molnay sauce (easy to do: Flour, butter, milk, cheese) slathered all over it. I put it under the broiler for a few minutes, just until the sauce was bubbly and the top golden brown, then put it on plates, topped it off with more of the tomatoes and a couple strips of bacon.

Can you feel your arteries clogging?

The result:

Jacob's Kentucky Hot Browns

This is what each of us ate: a DOUBLE portion of hot browns (really, each of those should be a whole serving), plus some fresh fried zucchini just because it was ripe. It was so tasty that we both ate just about all of it, and with all that turkey and cheese and bacon, sleepiness soon set in and we retired relatively early that night.

The verdict: This one is a keeper. EXCELLENT comfort food that isn’t very hard to do, and tastes GREAT.

Money can’t buy happiness or love…

They say that money can’t buy happiness, and money can’t buy love.

What money CAN buy is….a dishwasher.

And when two people who both hate doing dishes fall in love and get married, that is money well spent on making those two people happier and helping them remember how much they love each other.

So money may not be able to buy happiness, but it can sure help.