
Follow former Chatelaine associate food editor Jennifer Danter as she packs up and leaves her home in Toronto to start a fresh life - and new career - on the scenic shores of Victoria, B.C. (including plenty of local eats!).

Follow former Chatelaine associate food editor Jennifer Danter as she packs up and leaves her home in Toronto to start a fresh life - and new career - on the scenic shores of Victoria, B.C. (including plenty of local eats!).
I always think of the fall as an inspirational time to whip up renewed energy and ideas….but sometimes things happen when you least expect them. It’s time to live the cheese dream. With a wealth of experience under my belt from working at Ottavio, it’s time to move on. Look out city of Victoria….a cheese explosion is on its way.


So thanks to everyone for reading my silly rants and raves and I wish you many great meals and exciting food adventures.
Best,
jennifer
“There is no love sincerer than the love of food.” ~George Bernard Shaw, “The Revolutionist’s Handbook,” Man and Superman
OK, not promising everyone will laugh at this…..but I chuckled, once or twice, at this inane bit of film – mostly in the beginning. It’s the Smosh Brothers Food Fight 2007 – over 4 million people have watched it – for whatever that’s worth! But it served as a timely distraction from getting anything real done this morning.
Watch it like you’re following a recipe. Follow these directions:
1. Remove brain.
2. Insert brain of teenage boy or take on persona of a character from the movie Super Bad.
3. Watch movie. Don’t be afraid to laugh at something dumb.
4. Switch brain back on.
5. Get on with life.
smosh brothers 2007 food fight
Happy Sunday to all,
here are the 2 recipes:
Luscious Lavender-Strawberry Jam
1/4 cup organic lavender buds
1/3 cup boiling water
8 cups crushed hulled strawberries
1 orange, zested
6 cups granulated sugar
Sterilize jars and lids. Pour boiling water over lavender buds and let steep, at room temperature, at least 30 minutes. Strain and save liquid. In a large deep saucepan or dutch oven, stir strawberries with lavender liquid, orange zest and sugar. Bring to a boil, stirring constantly to dissolve sugar. Reduce to heat so mixture gently boils, and stir often until mixture is thick. Remove from heat and test to see if jam has reached “gel stage”. To test, spoon a little jam onto a frozen saucer and freeze for 1 minute. Remove and push edge of jam with your finger – the surface should wrinkle when pushed.
Ladle hot jam into sterilized jars (leave a little head space). Sprinkle a few more lavender buds in each jar, if you wish. Remove air bubbles (I use a chopstick) then centre lids on jars and fasten with screwbands. Boil jars for 10 minutes. Makes 8 250-mL jars.
Cream Scones
This is a recipe from “The New Best Recipe – From the Editors of Cook’s Illustrated” (2004). I followed the recipe as written with the only exceptions being I omitted the currants and added about 1 tsp (5 mL) grated lemon zest. This is my shorthand version of their recipe……Enjoy!
2 cups all-purpose flour
1 tbsp baking powder
3 tbsp granulated sugar
1 tsp grated lemon zest (my addition)
1/2 tsp salt
5 tbsp cold unsalted butter, cut into 1/4-inch cubes
1/2 cup currants (I didn’t use)
1 cup 35% heavy cream
1. Adjust an oven rack to the middle position and preheat oven to 425F.
2. In a food processor, pulse flour with baking powder, sugar, salt and lemon peel to mix.
3. Add butter (try to evenly distribute) and pulse for twelve 1-second intervals. Mixture should resemble coarse meal with a few slightly larger butter lumps. Turn dough into a large bowl.
4. Using a fork, stir in cream just until dough begins to form, about 30 seconds.
5. Turn dough (and dry flour bits) onto counter. Gently knead and gather just until dough comes together to form a ball. This will take about 10 seconds.
6. Using your hands, press and flatten dough to form a 3/4-inch thick circle (flour counter first if dough is sticky). Cut into rounds and place on a baking sheet. Re-roll scraps once. Lightly brush tops with more cream and sprinkle with pinches of granulated sugar.
7. Bake until tops are golden, 12 to 15 minutes. Cool at least 10 minutes before serving – with jam and butter of course.
Now this is an interesting idea:
Strawberries and cemeteries…..have never seen that duo share the bill of a social before. Almost died from laughing. Kept me chuckling as I drove around town to dig up this seasons best berries. (yes, sorry, bad puns there)
And what a tour – visited U-Picks and any roadside farmer’s stand we could find. I needed a lot of berries for my own social………a strawberry jam making and scone eating social. Instead of boring you with the details – here’s a visual essay, so to speak:
If anybody is interested I can post recipes tomorrow for jam (one had lavender added – so lovely with strawberries) and I tried a new scone recipe that will now be my mainstay.
Eat it. Well, actually it’s a foot, not the shoe. But the toes are dipped in chocolate……. how heavenly. It’s a donut foot, just to clarify.
This was today’s reward, all the way from Sydney-by-the-Sea (previously I was on a hunt for strawberries but got sidetracked). It is one of the most delicious donuts I have ever eaten. And I’m a repeat eater of these giant, sweet sugary feet.
The bakery reminds me of those classic, mom&pop jobs I would go nuts over when driving through small towns in Northern Ontario, en route to various camping and cottage trips. It’s the kind of place you instinctively know that anything you choose will taste great – from the gloopy white cheese buns, fluffy floury baps, gem-studded fruit bread to big jam-filled cookies and butter tarts – only if there’s raisins, but no nuts. And of course, the home fried donuts. They’re so soft and pleasingly sweet…..coated with the kind of hard glaze that flakes off in chunks when you bite in. This is a big foot – but gone before you know it. Be sure to consciously think about the last bite. I ate this one too quickly and realized it was gone before full appreciation set in. Really hate that.