April 22, 2011

Wedding #2. It was today, five years ago, that I said ‘I do’ to my best friend. That worked so well, we decided to do it again in a drive-thru in Vegas. Happy Anniversary, my love.

20110423-093616.jpg

Since the picture above was not taken by me and would therefore be cheating, here is a shot of the other happy event during our trip to Vegas: meeting my DH’s long-lost brother 🙂

20110423-093827.jpg

April 21, 2011

Jellyfish at the Mandalay Bay Shark Reef. In Vegas, baby.

20110421-060016.jpg

April 20, 2011

Vegas or Bust!

I can’t believe my vacation is finally (almost) here! Vegas, here I come!

April 19, 2011

Very Narrow Focus Vanilla Chai Tea

Tea #2 from Thyme for Tea/Tearific Spices, a vanilla chai black tea blend. A nice blend with just the right amount of vanilla and spice to make it interesting.

April 18, 2011

The look of determination

Yesterday I had the pleasure of photographing our local running store’s weekly fun run. This is my own dear runner. Although he might disagree with me, I think He’s fast. I know zippedy-squat about lap times, but 6:17 for a mile sounds pretty fast to me.

If you’re in the Miami area and have any desire at all to either run, walk, or support a great local business, check out iRun. Everyone that works there is really passionate about what they do and has tons of knowledge on the subject. iRun sells anything you could possibly want for running, walking, etc. Need new running shoes? Have no idea what you need in an athletic shoe and what the different types of shoes are supposed to do? Go see the guys at iRun. They have knowledge and are more than willing to share!

More run pics coming soon.

April 17, 2011

Today, I finally at long last finished my #2 batch of baby preparedness bundles for the two upcoming girls in my life. Included: diaper bag with 1 large, 1 medium and 2 small exterior and 1 interior zipper pockets; changing pad with zipper pouch; wipes case; and baby sling. This batch was much harder to get through than last early fall’s bundles for boys. I’m thinking it was a combo of knowing just how much work was ahead, finding time to wedge sewing into my busier schedule, and my sewing machine acting up pretty much continually throughout the project.

20110417-122911.jpg

20110417-122939.jpg

April 16, 2011

One of two Robocop chicks from our favorite comic/cool stuff/conspirator store, Tate’s.

20110416-104047.jpg

April 15, 2011

Tea Blend

The B2 tea blend from my best friend’s favorite local (to NC) tea shop, Thyme for Tea. Although the tea took 4 months to arrive (due to a business model shift & customs problems), it’s a nice little blend of black tea & botanicals and I might just order more when this batch runs out.

I’ve been missing her a fair amount lately, and this is a good little daily reminder that she’s out there in the world carrying on.

Canadian? Bacon — Charcutepalooza Challenge #4

I’ve always wondered what made Canadian bacon Canadian. Is it that Canadians don’t know how to make real bacon? Does it have something to do with Virginia and hams? was it originally a marketing ploy by McDonalds? How many degrees away is this from Kevin Bacon?

You don’t know either? Let us then take a culinary detour of sorts to discover the real roots of this bacon.

Canadian, aka back bacon or Irish bacon isn’t Canadian at all. Not really. It’s more of a Canadian-English-American hybrid super bacon.

Canadian bacon comes from the lean pork loin, which is located in the middle of the back. It is then brined and smoked.

According to Kitchen Project, this type of savory pork was most likely dubbed “Canadian” by marketers in the United Kingdom who took to importing pork from Canada to deal with a shortage in the mid 1800s.

This imported bacon was prepared Canadian-style (unsmoked and brined) and rolled in ground yellow split peas (or some other form of fine yellow meal) to aid with preservation. In Canada, this type of cured bacon is still common in parts and is called Peameal bacon.

When the English got their porcine packages, they added smoke and didn’t bother to change the name. Emigrating bacon lovers brought the new concoction to the States and Canadian bacon as we know it was born. Isn’t globalization great?

Mmmmm…. pork loin…..

This slab o’ pork wasn’t nearly as hard to find as the pork belly. My friendly neighborhood butcher at Laurenzo’s Italian Market had it on hand and was more than happy to hand me the tastiest looking roughly 3 lb. pork loin in the case.

Since this preparation is all about the smoke, I broke down and purchased a stovetop smoker (Camerons large from Amazon). The smoker is compact, looks easy-to-use and presents as a neat silver self-contained package.

Ok, so I forgot to take a nice beauty shot of the smoker before it got not so nice looking but smoky.

The brine for this preparation was simple; just tons of water, Kosher salt, pink salt, table sugar, garlic, thyme and sage.

Ever feel like a serial meat drowner?

I popped the loin in, waited 2 days, took it out, wiped it off and slapped it on a tray to air cure in the fridge for a few days.

All brined up and nowhere to go
Ok, so it has somewhere to go…

And then my smoker finally came in from Amazon, and we were off!

 

 

 

 

Alder chips/dust for smoking

 

 

 

 

The lid didn’t quite sit perfectly over the hump of meat, so I wrapped the smoker in foil

I smoked my pork centered on one burner over medium with Alder chips for a couple of hours. It smoked the house out a bit, but not unbearably so (keep in mind that smoke is sticky and if you don’t want your kitchen and/or house to smell like someone’s been cooking bacon for a week, make sure to clean anywhere the smoke could have gotten thoroughly).

Deeply smoky pork exterior
Smoky but not quite so baconed interior

The final product was meh. Not terrible, not great. The outer portion on the outside of the fat cap looks and tastes like Canadian Bacon, but the inside looks and tastes like a pork roast. A deeply smoky pork roast at that. I think where I went wrong was the nice thick pork loin. Had I used one of the thinner loins, I think it would have turned out just right. Live and learn.

I’ve been racking my brains trying to think of a new vehicle in which to premiere the Canadian Bacon, but to no avail. I tossed a handful in with some greens and a fried egg, and it was not my favorite. Entirely edible, but I liked the dish sans smoke better.

I’m thinking maybe a soup. Maybe even the split pea soup my DH has been begging for for months will do this “bacon” justice.

Split Pea Soup

A Much Better Use of Canadian Bacon–Split Pea Soup
Adapted from Split Pea Soup with Country Ham from one of my favorite food blogs, Orangette

6 oz. fresh Canadian Bacon, cubed
1 large Vidalia onion, chopped
3 carrots, chopped
2 c. dried split peas
8 c. water
Cap full of apple cider vinegar
Salt & white pepper to taste
Olive oil
Crusty bread (optional)

Add1 Tbsp. olive oil to a large heavy-bottomed pot over medium-high heat. After the oil heats up, add the bacon and cook, stirring, until starting to brown.

Add the onion and carrots and cook, stirring to avoid burning, until the vegetables are tender but not browned (roughly 10 minutes).

Add the split peas and water. Bring to a boil, reduce the heat to simmer and cook 90 minutes to 2 hours or until the peas have broken down.

Taste, add the vinegar if the taste needs punch; salt & pepper to taste.

I covered the pot while cooking and the resulting soup was more watery than I like. So, I grabbed my slotted spoon and got to work separating the bacon from the vegetables and excess liquid.

If you want a more refined-looking soup at this point, let the soup cool a bit and blend the vegetables and desired amount of liquid until smooth, add back to the pot along with the reserved bacon and heat through to serve.

Serve with a nice swirl of olive oil to finish and thick slabs of crusty bread for sopping.

Serves 1 hungry deprived husband for dinner with enough left over for you too, if you don’t get too close.

Canadian? Bacon — Charcutepalooza Challenge # on Punk Domestics

April 14, 2011

I’ve been abandoned. My sewing machine decided to completely crap out today while working on some fairly time-sensitive projects.

20110414-094851.jpg