Please join the ladies at Do Me A Favor tomorrow as they celebrate their 4th anniversary. They have brought in a wonderful variety of local vendors...sweet food for the hand, eyes, nose and palette! In addition they will have many of their luxurious gifts discounted up to 30%. For full details go to www.favorfinegifts.com The girls and I will be there with some of their friends from the herb and flower gardens as well as some cousins from California! We're all so excited to get out of our farm duds and mix it up in a lady-like manner! Now if I could only figure out how to upload the photos you could see the girls in their regalia. They loved their photo session.
A water glass serves as a lovely vase for fragrant jasmine, by your bedside perhaps?
Lavender Larkspur in a bucket. Why Not?
A box of Sweet Peas to be delivered as gifts... from my garden... to Do Me A Favor... to the patron... to the honored receivers. What a lovely way to end a beautiful day.
Playing in the garden, Laughing in the kitchen, Life is good at Tre Soli because we stop to smell the roses! Always interested in new ways, new seeds, new varieties, new recipes, new tools. You know something we don't, so tell us all about it.
Thursday, April 29, 2010
Sunday, April 18, 2010
Rose Petal Tea
Whew! The heat is on. No need to sweat it, just made some tea to refresh.
Rose Petal Tea
1-1/2 cups rose petals
3 cups water
honey to taste
Slices of Sweet Orange cut in half
Choose fresh rose petals. Strip the flower gently under running water then place the petals in a saucepan. Take care to look and see that all hitch hikers have been rinsed off of the petals. Cover with fresh filtered water and boil for 5 minutes, or until the petals become discolored. Strain into teacups over an orange slice or two. Add honey to taste. For iced tea chill until cold and ice does not melt quickly. Or you can reducce the boiling water by 1/2 and add ice and cold water after honey. A couple of mint leaves add a nice zip. Serves 4.
Rose Petal Tea
1-1/2 cups rose petals
3 cups water
honey to taste
Slices of Sweet Orange cut in half
Choose fresh rose petals. Strip the flower gently under running water then place the petals in a saucepan. Take care to look and see that all hitch hikers have been rinsed off of the petals. Cover with fresh filtered water and boil for 5 minutes, or until the petals become discolored. Strain into teacups over an orange slice or two. Add honey to taste. For iced tea chill until cold and ice does not melt quickly. Or you can reducce the boiling water by 1/2 and add ice and cold water after honey. A couple of mint leaves add a nice zip. Serves 4.
Friday, April 16, 2010
Out and About
"The Girls" are planning an outing to the Scottsdale Old Town Farmers Market on Saturday. They asked if you'll be there too. They heard that ME and Carol may be coming. They're choosing their fragrance as I write. Well...will you be visiting on Saturday? If you do please stop and smell the roses, I mean "The girls".
http://www.arizonafarmersmarkets.com/pageScottsdaleOldtown/ScottsdaleOTsat.htm
http://www.arizonafarmersmarkets.com/pageScottsdaleOldtown/ScottsdaleOTsat.htm
Thursday, April 15, 2010
We are honored Do Me A Favor has invited us to share our roses at their Fourth Anniversary Open House on Friday, April 30th. They are the delighful and elegant, friendly gift shop next door to Relics. Those of you who know us, know they are a favorite haunt. Do Me A Favor is one of the great local shops we are so fortunate to have close at hand. They offer the finest gifts from around the world and around the corner. It is a pleasure to be working with Jennifer and the ladies at Do Me A Favor. For complete details please follow the link http://domeafavorphx.squarespace.com/l
Friday, April 9, 2010
Spring Artichokes Steamed
This recipe is very loosely written. There are no hard rules or measurements. It assumes that you have a steamer insert but it is not necessary, though inserts are inexpensive and readily available. This recipe could accommodate 1-4 artichokes. Be sure to choose tight, firm, round artichokes for the most meat.
Prep
Prepare a bowl of water large enough to cover your artichokes
Select, quarter and squeeze 1 juicy big lemon into the water
Reserve the lemon quarters to put in the steamer pot
Cut stem of artichoke as close to bottom as you can go so that artichoke can sit flat.
Remove bottom four leaves by pulling them off
With the tip of a knife slice an "x" in bottom
Cut off the top ¼ of the artichoke
Trim leaves by cutting the sharp pointed tip of each leaf off. Kitchen scissors work well for this
Soak the artichokes in the bowl of fresh squeezed lemon water for about 1 hr to help preserve color
Cook
Add water to just below the steamer insert
Remove steamer insert
Add to the water 1 tablespoon each of dried Tarragon and Basil, or more!
When the water is boiling place the artichokes top side down on the steamer
Add squeezed lemon quarters
Steam in pot ~ 30 minutes or until a knife slides easily into the bottom and leaves are easily pulled off.
Comments
Who ever was the first person to think they'd try eating a thistle, as the artichoke is, thank you for thinking outside the box! There's something so simple yet special about the artichoke...the time and care of prepping. Then pulling the meat off of each leaf with your teeth. The care we take to cut out the choke to get to the heart. I always use a grapefruit spoon to core out the thisitley choke at the core, on top of the heart. Safer, faster and easier than a knife. Aahh! The heart of the artichoke, your sublime reward. Delicious with the scent of tarragon and basil permeating it's flesh. But I've been known to use a "dipping sauce". My favorite being garlic aioli with tarragon but I guess that's not the healthiest alternative! My other favorite is to add fresh pressed garlic and a little squeeze of fresh lemon to butter and melt it until fragrant. But I guess that too is off the health-o-meter. So for a change from the usual mayo or butter dipping sauce I'm going to Martha Stewart and try her Vinegar Shallot Dipping Sauce.
Happy Spring!
This recipe is very loosely written. There are no hard rules or measurements. It assumes that you have a steamer insert but it is not necessary, though inserts are inexpensive and readily available. This recipe could accommodate 1-4 artichokes. Be sure to choose tight, firm, round artichokes for the most meat.
Prep
Prepare a bowl of water large enough to cover your artichokes
Select, quarter and squeeze 1 juicy big lemon into the water
Reserve the lemon quarters to put in the steamer pot
Cut stem of artichoke as close to bottom as you can go so that artichoke can sit flat.
Remove bottom four leaves by pulling them off
With the tip of a knife slice an "x" in bottom
Cut off the top ¼ of the artichoke
Trim leaves by cutting the sharp pointed tip of each leaf off. Kitchen scissors work well for this
Soak the artichokes in the bowl of fresh squeezed lemon water for about 1 hr to help preserve color
Cook
Add water to just below the steamer insert
Remove steamer insert
Add to the water 1 tablespoon each of dried Tarragon and Basil, or more!
When the water is boiling place the artichokes top side down on the steamer
Add squeezed lemon quarters
Steam in pot ~ 30 minutes or until a knife slides easily into the bottom and leaves are easily pulled off.
Comments
Who ever was the first person to think they'd try eating a thistle, as the artichoke is, thank you for thinking outside the box! There's something so simple yet special about the artichoke...the time and care of prepping. Then pulling the meat off of each leaf with your teeth. The care we take to cut out the choke to get to the heart. I always use a grapefruit spoon to core out the thisitley choke at the core, on top of the heart. Safer, faster and easier than a knife. Aahh! The heart of the artichoke, your sublime reward. Delicious with the scent of tarragon and basil permeating it's flesh. But I've been known to use a "dipping sauce". My favorite being garlic aioli with tarragon but I guess that's not the healthiest alternative! My other favorite is to add fresh pressed garlic and a little squeeze of fresh lemon to butter and melt it until fragrant. But I guess that too is off the health-o-meter. So for a change from the usual mayo or butter dipping sauce I'm going to Martha Stewart and try her Vinegar Shallot Dipping Sauce.
Happy Spring!
Wednesday, April 7, 2010
Did you know that April is National Garlic Month?! Did you know roses love garlic? They do! Fortunately when your roses are planted with garlic they will not smell like garlic but they will be healthier. The topper is in addition to your beautiful rose bouquets you have fresh garlic for your sauce, salsa, soup, bread, whatever! Here is a favorite recipe of mine using fresh veggies and garlic. Beware this does have addictive qualities. My friend Gale and I would get up the day after Thanksgiving, while the families still slept, and munch on veggies and dip, giggling about everything, til there was none left. Do you suppose we were drunk on garlic?
Making and refrigerating this a day ahead brings out the fullness of the garlic and mellows the blue cheese.
Garlic Blue Cheese Dip
1 cup (4oz wght) Crumbled Blue Cheese
1 Cup Mayonaise (homemade aioli if you have it)
1 Cup Sour Cream
1/4 Cup Balsamic Vinegar
2 Tblsp Sugar
1/2 Cup Cream or 1/2 milk + 1/2 cream
2 cloves Garlic or more. Can you ever have too much, I use 3-4
Whisk all together and let rest in covered container in the fridge for 24 hours. Dip will be a lovely sepia color due to the balsamic vinegar.
Making and refrigerating this a day ahead brings out the fullness of the garlic and mellows the blue cheese.
Garlic Blue Cheese Dip
1 cup (4oz wght) Crumbled Blue Cheese
1 Cup Mayonaise (homemade aioli if you have it)
1 Cup Sour Cream
1/4 Cup Balsamic Vinegar
2 Tblsp Sugar
1/2 Cup Cream or 1/2 milk + 1/2 cream
2 cloves Garlic or more. Can you ever have too much, I use 3-4
Whisk all together and let rest in covered container in the fridge for 24 hours. Dip will be a lovely sepia color due to the balsamic vinegar.
Monday, April 5, 2010
Hasn't this been the lovliest winter?! And now after all that sweet rain we have gardens bursting. I'm looking forward to my second season making my roses, flowers, fruits and veggies available to others. Here I'll show you what's blooming, what's ripe and what's growing in my gardens as well as other related interests... discoveries, garden shows, green efforts, books, music, movies, humanitarian issues and opportunities. I hope you enjoy taking this ride with me and sharing your insights and finds.
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