Spring is springing in the northeast! It is sooooo beautiful out today!
My chives from last year are poking up.
The pussy willows are fluffy
I got the tote I won from 21 Rosemary Lane. I never win anything so this was big!
It's from 31 Gifts and it's adorable. It will be perfect for lugging around all my Mommy junk this spring and summer and all those pockets will make it a great tote for an upcoming trip.
For the record I left the room and came back to find my toddler laughing hysterically inside this suitcase.
I just want to live outside today. Hope it is sunny and mild where you are too and you can get outside and enjoy it!
Showing posts with label travel. Show all posts
Showing posts with label travel. Show all posts
Thursday, March 8, 2012
Wednesday, February 29, 2012
tzatziki
We went to Greece for our 1st wedding anniversary. That was 5 1/2 years ago, what??? Can't believe it has been so long already! We visited Athens and Santorini and both were amazing. To see all these things I saw in books in art school in person was mind blowing and Santorini, well, it was just beyond beautiful. When we first arrived at our hotel in Santorini and sat next to the pool looking out over the caldera we had a conversation that went something like this...
"whoa"
"oh my god"
"have you ever? I mean whoa!"
The views were spectacular and the food was delicious. We had tzatziki every day. If you haven't had it before it is a yogurt dip flavored with garlic, cucumber and dill and it is delicious! It is excellent with pita, veggies, on grilled chicken or lamb, with roasted potatoes. With just about anything really! I've tried to make tzatziki before but I didn't follow a recipe figuring I could make it up and it came out blah and watery. I found this recipe from Kalyn's Kitchen and it sounded great and now I see the steps I missed and why my first attempt didn't cut it. You'll need:
3 cups Greek Yogurt (or regular plain yogurt, strained)
juice of one lemon (about 3 T)
1 garlic clove, chopped
2 medium cucumbers, seeded and diced
about 1 T kosher salt for salting cucumbers
1 T finely chopped fresh dill (can substitute mint leaves for a slightly different version)
Kosher salt and fresh ground black pepper to taste
To strain your yogurt you can use a yogurt strainer which I did not have! She also suggested coffee filters which I also did not have so I used some cheese cloth inside a colander and it worked pretty darn well.
Peel cucumbers, then cut in half lengthwise and take a small spoon and scrape out seeds. Discard seeds. (If you use the small seedless or European cucumbers with few seeds, you can skip this step.) Slice cucumbers, then put in a colander, sprinkle on 1 T salt, and let stand for 30 minutes to draw out water. Drain well and wipe dry with paper towel.
In food processor with steel blade, add cucumbers, garlic, lemon juice, dill, and a few grinds of black pepper.
Process until well blended, then stir this mixture into the yogurt. Taste before adding any extra salt, then salt if needed. Place in refrigerator for at least two hours before serving so flavors can blend. (This resting time is very important.)
That is that and it is super yummy!
I hope we'll get back to Greece someday. At least the tzatziki will take us back a little...
linking up to:
The Kurtz corner
Let Birdz Fly
The Shabby Creek Cottage
At the Picket Fence
"whoa"
"oh my god"
"have you ever? I mean whoa!"
Oia in Santorini |
The views were spectacular and the food was delicious. We had tzatziki every day. If you haven't had it before it is a yogurt dip flavored with garlic, cucumber and dill and it is delicious! It is excellent with pita, veggies, on grilled chicken or lamb, with roasted potatoes. With just about anything really! I've tried to make tzatziki before but I didn't follow a recipe figuring I could make it up and it came out blah and watery. I found this recipe from Kalyn's Kitchen and it sounded great and now I see the steps I missed and why my first attempt didn't cut it. You'll need:
3 cups Greek Yogurt (or regular plain yogurt, strained)
juice of one lemon (about 3 T)
1 garlic clove, chopped
2 medium cucumbers, seeded and diced
about 1 T kosher salt for salting cucumbers
1 T finely chopped fresh dill (can substitute mint leaves for a slightly different version)
Kosher salt and fresh ground black pepper to taste
To strain your yogurt you can use a yogurt strainer which I did not have! She also suggested coffee filters which I also did not have so I used some cheese cloth inside a colander and it worked pretty darn well.
clearly a very professional setup over here |
look at all that liquid from the yogurt! |
Peel cucumbers, then cut in half lengthwise and take a small spoon and scrape out seeds. Discard seeds. (If you use the small seedless or European cucumbers with few seeds, you can skip this step.) Slice cucumbers, then put in a colander, sprinkle on 1 T salt, and let stand for 30 minutes to draw out water. Drain well and wipe dry with paper towel.
In food processor with steel blade, add cucumbers, garlic, lemon juice, dill, and a few grinds of black pepper.
the dill and garlic all ready to go |
Process until well blended, then stir this mixture into the yogurt. Taste before adding any extra salt, then salt if needed. Place in refrigerator for at least two hours before serving so flavors can blend. (This resting time is very important.)
That is that and it is super yummy!
I hope we'll get back to Greece someday. At least the tzatziki will take us back a little...
linking up to:
The Kurtz corner
Let Birdz Fly
The Shabby Creek Cottage
At the Picket Fence
me at the Parthenon |
my husband enjoying the view from our patio in Santorini |
me in the door of our hotel room in Santorini |
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)