Idylls of Cuisine, #45
[A picture, and nothing more, for silent contemplation.]
[A picture, and nothing more, for silent contemplation.]
Continued from January 7, 2010: In the beginning, dealing with Michel’s injured finger didn’t bring out the best in me. …
I won’t pretend that living in a Francophone sub-Saharan African country like Burkina Faso was some romantic T. E. Lawrence …
“Secret, self-contained, and as solitary as an oyster.” ~~ Charles Dickens, A Christmas Carol (Due to family obligations for a …
Sweet foods haunt many childhood food memories. And usually pie stands high on any list of sweet memories. Sadly, pie-making is fast becoming a lost American art form. Too bad, really, because although the early English settlers brought basic pie-making techniques with them, the culinary skills of the colonial American housewife elevated pie-making to a rarified art form. In hundreds of log cabins, farmhouses, and mansions, women of every socio-economic class invented light flaky pastry and hundreds of fillings.
[A picture, and nothing more, for silent contemplation.]
HAPPY NEW YEAR TO ALL!!!! I thank all of you for reading “Gherkins & Tomatoes” and hope that 2010 brings …