My Life of Pie

For years, I wrestled with pie-making.  I’ve been the designated pie maker ever since we started traveling to the Monterey Peninsula for Thanksgiving and until a few years ago it was mostly a failure experience.

A confident and experienced cook, I was baffled that pie crusts Would Not Cooperate. I played by the rules—chilling the butter or shortening (depending on the recipe), cutting it into the flour until it was the recommended consistency of peas, sometimes by hand, sometimes with a food processor (again, depending on the recipe) and sprinkling just enough ice water over the dry ingredients to bind everything together.

Invariably, when I would attempt to roll out the chilled dough ball, it would crumble into a mass of broken bits on my well-floured surface. I tried different rolling pins and surfaces—but to no avail. Instead of a single, malleable blanket of pie dough I always ended up with a Frankenstein patchwork that barely held together.  Thank goodness by the time dessert rolled around the guests were all too full and sleepy to care that the pie crusts were homemade but ho-hum.

Then two things happened.  First, I cut the shortening/butter in finer—to the consistency of coarse sand, not peas.  And, second, I found the Just Right Pie Crust recipe.   Using a mix of butter and shortening blended in a food processor, the recipe is basic but reliable. Meant for a strawberry-rhubarb pie, it still plays nicely with pumpkin and pecan and cranberry fillings.  So, friends, on this Thanksgiving Eve, I give you my favorite pie crust recipe.  Go forth and conquer your pie-making and remember that your crusts should still look a little misshapen.  Because who would want a perfect pie crust? That’s available in any supermarket freezer.

Just Right Pie Crust

(adapted from a Bon Appetit recipe for Lattice-Topped Strawberry-Rhubarb Pie April 1997–makes enough dough for two 9″ pies)

3 cups all purpose flour

2 1/2 teaspoons sugar

3/4 teaspoon salt

2/3 cup chilled solid vegetable shortening, cut into pieces

1/2 cup plus 2 tablespoons (1 1/4 sticks) chilled unsalted butter, cut into pieces

10 tablespoons (about) ice water

Combine flour sugar and salt in processor.  Using on/off turns, cut in shortening and butter until coarse meal forms.  Blend in enough ice water 2 tablespoons at a time to form moist clumps.  Gather dough into ball; cut in half.  Flatten each half into disk.  Wrap separately in plastic; refrigerate until firm, about 1 hour.*  (Can be made 1 day ahead.  Keep chilled.  Let dough soften slightly at room temperature before rolling.)

* When you’ve successfully, happily, easily put those pie dough balls into the freezer to chill, take a moment to chill yourself and read this smart essay on how to be a good host (surprise–it’s not about the food!)

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Making a Scene

So then there’s the day your daughter’s work and name makes it into the New York Times and you marvel at life’s unexpected blessings.

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Friday Things Considered: The Thanksgiving Edition

This is the time of year when we often get the chance to talk about things we’re grateful for. Do you have a regular gratitude practice otherwise? Or is counting your blessings a seasonal novelty like cranberry sauce and pumpkin pie?

Years ago I started a practice of writing down good things that had happened in my day–in effect a gratitude journal a la Simple Abundance and Oprah. For several years I used the Niggli Colour Calendar. But when that became harder and more expensive to track down I moved to this 18 month turntable planner by Moleskin. Some weeks I fill in the pages religiously, other weeks I’m less devout.  No surprise, the weeks I record consistently are the weeks I’m more aware of the abundance in my life.  If you keep some kind of gratitude journal, has it been a blessing to you?  What type of planner/calendar/diary/journal do you use?

On this Thanksgiving week, I’m grateful these things crossed my path:

Simple leaf place cards could be done in advance or put together by guests who like to arrive early (imagine that.)

In the rush of getting Thanksgiving dinner to the table, it’s easy to forgo niceties like garnishing the turkey platter.  This year I’m planning ahead.

I’m also hoping to try this surprisingly simple morning-after turkey hash by molecular gastronomist Wylie Dufresne.

Speaking of turkeys—do you think it’s a good idea for women to rate men they date?

These otherworldly headdresses made we want to get to know some Finns (thanks Karen).

Zadie Smith’s take on mortality is both witty and wise.  In other words, wonderful.

I hope this week finds you gathered close with new friends and old pals.  Much like the childhood buddies and their grandkids in this Google India ad.

Happy Thanksgiving!

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Design Book Review: Suzanne Tucker Interiors – The Romance of Design

I don’t know about you, but I’m finally tuning in to the holiday calendar and starting to think about gifts for friends and family. Right now I’m considering several recently released design books as possible gifts. Over the next few weeks I’ll share some favorites in hopes of helping you whittle down your own gift list.

One of the loveliest design books of the fall comes from the San Francisco designer Suzanne Tucker. “Suzanne Tucker Interiors: The Romance of Design” (The Monacelli Press) is Tucker’s second book and it showcases some spectacular high-end interiors.

Tucker’s clients have lavish homes and the budgets to furnish them but her designs are not garish or conventional.  Instead they evoke a quiet, considered—albeit rarified—approach to gracious living.   “The Romance of Design” is divided into five sections that range from displaying collections to editing for the empty nest. Each section starts with a well-chosen quote from an author or artist about what home means and some words from Tucker about her own design philosophy.  For example, here’s what she has to say about designing for someone else: “A client’s house is not a portrait of me.  It is, however, my personal vision of their dreams—larger, utterly unique, and more special than they could possibly envision for themselves.”

On the mix: “Things don’t need to match, but they do need to marry.”

On what’s behind all those design choices: “What is home? Where is home? It’s what generates within each of us that feeling of being most at peace.  It’s where we are most ourselves, among the objects, treasures, and pieces that bear witness to our experiences and the deeply held memories that we share with those we love.”

Most of us will never live in these luxurious surroundings but we can visit them through images like the ones found in Tucker’s tome and recognize the universal components of a welcoming home no matter the design budget or location.  “The ache for home lives in all of us, the safe place where we can go as we are and not be questioned.”  (Maya Angelou as quoted in “The Romance of Design.” )

This would be a lovely gift for a design friend who leans toward traditional design with a twist. Perfect for post-holiday perusals of exquisite objects thoughtfully placed in extraordinary homes.

Photos by Pieter Estersohn, Matthew Millman and Lisa Romerein

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Friday Things Considered: The ARTful Edition

When we were young and broke it was a challenge to fill our empty walls with something more than inexpensive framed posters.  We actually rented our first piece of original art through a rent-to-buy program at the Oakland Museum.  That program has since been discontinued (though SFMOMA still runs one), but I’m grateful that it allowed us to sample art not found in a cardboard tube. Twenty-two years later I still love that rented, and eventually purchased, piece—a collage called “Childhood Memories” by Berkeley artist Pam Johnson. Mostly because it evokes the farm landscape of my childhood and my pioneer ancestors, but also because it is unique, one-of-a-kind, special. Even more so now that it’s made four different homes ours.

Find out more about selecting, buying and displaying art for your home in my latest BANG article.  As designer Kriste Michelini says, “Art should bring you joy!”

Here are a few other arty things I enjoyed this week:

Simple holiday decorations like these needlepoint houses are the best.

On the other hand, this quirky, complex, lovely home (owned by the visual director at Eileen Fisher) invites exploration.

Quilted landscapes (thanks Heather) look like elaborate Settlers of Catan game pieces, don’t they?

This little pep-talk on setting priorities by Anne Lamott rang true.

I loved this glimpse into the marriage of performance artist Laurie Anderson and musician husband Lou Reed.

Here’s some good advice for beginning writers.

I want to try this apple cake this weekend. And learn more about salt.

Just for fun, here’s the Story of Thanksgivvukah.

And finally, how one doctor’s heartache helped him connect to his patients.

Happy Weekend All!

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Beyond Bread and Butter

On the day my keys went missing I tried out two hearty fall recipes.  The first was a savory panade made from layers of buttered cabbage and rye bread and gruyere cheese.  It’s a dish meant for Swiss peasant farmers or snowboarders or anyone coming in from the cold.  The second was a bread pudding made with a baguette and some pumpkin-infused custard.  It’s meant for everyone.

Serve this menu as a Thanksgiving teaser.  Your dinner table companions will be very grateful.

 

Cabbage Panade (from Deborah Madison’s “Vegetable Literacy”)

Serves 4-6

1 clover garlic and butter, for the gratin dish

3 tablespoons butter

1 onion, thinly sliced

1/2 teaspoon juniper berries, crushed

2 tablespoons coarsely chopped sage leaves

About 2 pounds Savoy or smooth green cabbage, quartered and cut into ribbons 1/2 inch wide

3 to 4 cups garlic stock*

Sea salt and freshly ground pepper

4 slices strong-textured dark or light rye bread

1 cup grated Swiss, Gruyere, or more delicate Teleme cheese

 

*To make garlic stock – simmer 5 cups water with 6 cloves garlic,

12 fresh sage leaves, and 1 bay leaf for 25 minutes, then strain.

 

Melt the 3 tablespoons butter in a wide skillet over medium heat.  Add the onion, juniper, and sage and cook, stirring occasionally, until the onion begins to brown, about 10 minutes.  Add the cabbage and 1/2 cup of the stock, season with 1 teaspoon salt, and cook until the cabbage is tender, about 20 minutes.  When it is done, taste for salt and season with pepper.

Place half of the cabbage in the prepared dish.  Cover it with the bread and the cheese, then with the remaining cabbage.  Pour over the remaining stock.

Bake until bubbling and the edges of the cabbage leaves are attractively browned, about 45 minutes.  Spoon the bread and cabbage into soup plates, then pour any juices remaining in the gratin dish around each serving.

 

Pumpkin Bread Pudding (from Gourmet Today, edited by Ruth Reichl)

Serves 6

1 cup heavy cream

1/2 cup whole milk

3/4 canned solid-pack pumpkin (not pumpkin pie filling)

1/2 cup sugar

2 large eggs

1 large egg yolk

1/4 teaspoon salt

1/2 teaspoon ground cinnamon

1/4 teaspoon ground ginger

1/8 teaspoon ground allspice

Pinch of ground cloves

5 cups cubed (1 inch day-old baguette or crusty bread

3/4 stick (6 tablespoons) unsalted butter, melted

 

Put a rack in middle of oven and preheat oven to 350 degrees.

Whisk together cream, milk, pumpkin, sugar, eggs, yolk, salt, and spices in a bowl.

Toss bread cubes with butter in a large bowl, then add pumpkin mixture and toss to coat.  Spread in an ungreased 8-inch square baking dish and bake until custard is set, 25 to 30 minutes.

Serve warm or at room temperature.

 

 

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Lost and Found

Yep.  They’re back.  Found them in the pocket of an apron I wore briefly on the day they went missing when I made dinner last night–safely out of Mercury Retrograde.

Oh, and Miss Venezuela won the Miss Universe pageant.

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Friday Things Considered: The Mercury in Retrograde Edition

 

This week there was mischief afoot.  On Tuesday I lost my keys for good, as best I can tell. I remember using them last when I came into my house after walking with a friend and threw them in the little pink tray on the shelf above my desk.

But Wednesday morning the keys were not in the tray.  Nor were they in their second home in the junk drawer upstairs.  Or on the dresser or the table or the kitchen counter. They also weren’t under the couch cushions, behind the bed, in the bathroom vanity or the freezer drawer (don’t ask.)

After clearing all the clutter off the horizontal surfaces in our not so big house I decided maybe I’d used the keys a second time  when I’d gone out to pick up the mail from our key-locked mailbox. Maybe they’d been inadvertently tossed into the recycling along with some junk mail on my way back in.  So I spread a tarp onto the driveway and turned out the large recycling bin to sort before it was hauled away.  I found lots of newspapers and magazines and restaurant fliers and parking meter slips but NO keys. And so I’ve been carrying around the spare set feeling jangley ever since.

The same day I lost the keys I made a lovely pumpkin bread pudding and left out the sugar.  Today I showed up at the gym with mismatched running shoes.

My New Age friends say it’s all because Mercury is in retrograde and will be until Monday.  If that’s the case, hold onto your keys and double check your shoes before you leave the house. Oh, and please don’t forget the sugar!

Some other things worth paying attention to this week:

The holidays are upon us! Check out suggestions for holiday table decorations culled from DIFFA’s: Dining By Design in my latest BANG story.

Art in context makes sense.

This reflective journaling program sounds promising for a winter project.

OMGoodness!  Check out the Miss Universe Pageant country costumes here and here.

On a more serious note, the lengths Venezuelan women will go to to achieve one man’s beauty queen ideal are no joke.

Happy Weekend All!

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Some Smashing Second Acts

If you’re design-inclined and traveling to New York or Boston in the next two months, you’ll probably enjoy one or both of the shows I saw when I wasn’t ogling leaves in New England.

The first is the beautiful John Singer Sargent Watercolors exhibit at the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston which showcases ninety-two watercolors from the Brooklyn Museum and the MFA.

The paintings are glorious on their own, but where they fall in Sargent’s career makes them even more compelling.  Though Sargent had done small watercolor sketches since he was a boy, he gained fame and financial independence with his oil portraits of high society.  Then in middle age, tiring of formal portraiture and now able to step away from commissions, he moved on to masterful watercolors that captured far-flung landscapes, memorable strangers and close family members. Free to paint purely for himself, these paintings were his second act and they are just ravishing.

A few favorites include portraits (surprise) like the haunting “A Tramp.”

Or the brooding “Bedouins.”

“The Cashmere Shawl” invited a closer look at both the model (Sargent’s niece Rose-Marie) and the shawl.

And the sisters resting on the Simpion Pass were as refreshing as Sargent’s “Pomegranates.”

 The other depiction of a formidible artist applying undisclosed talents to a second act I saw was the delightful play “Buyer & Cellar” at the Barrow Street Theater in Manhattan’s West Village.  As actor Michael Urie (Ugly Betty) explains in a little pre-show chat, the play was inspired by Barbra Streisand’s 2010 coffee table tome “My Passion for Design” wherein the actress/singer turned design maven reveals that she displays her vast collection of pricy knick-knacks in a basement mall of thematic “shoppes.”  Urie plays a down-on-his-luck actor hired to be the shopkeeper tending to Babs tchotkes–as well as the popcorn and frozen yogurt machines–and ends up in a design-driven friendship with the original Funny Girl.

Here’s Urie playing the shopkeeper Alex and his outraged boyfriend Barry who rants about “Ms. S” and her Brooklyn roots.

The rest of the show is a sweet and savory treat— “like buttah”-ed popcorn with a swirl of frozen yogurt on the side.

 John Singer Sargent’s Watercolors runs through January 20, 2014 and “Buyer & Cellar” closes January 5.

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Falling Back

Now that we’ve fallen back time-wise, I’m not only waking up before the sun but also ready to crawl into bed before prime time. Anyone else start to hibernate over the weekend?

I’ve adjusted the timer on the back yard twinkle lights so they’ll come on at 6:00 am and again at 5:00 pm to keep me company as I bundle up for an early morning walk or start chopping onions for dinner. I’ve also turned up the house lights.  A few weeks ago the good folks at Cree sent me some newfangled light-emitting diode (LED) bulbs to try.  Here’s a shot of my bedroom lamps.  One has a Cree LED bulb, the other a standard incandescent light of the same wattage.  Can you tell which is the LED-lit lampshade?

LED lights have historically given off a blue-white color that is only slightly more flattering than the frozen tundra glare of a fluorescent light bulb.  But since LEDs save significant energy and last longer, I hoped there would eventually be some significant improvement in the LED’s quality of light.  And lookee here—there is!

The Cree LED bulb is actually in the lamp on the left of the bedroom photo.  It gives off good reading light and doesn’t make the room look like a polar ice cap. Which makes getting–and staying–out of bed just a little bit easier.

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Kathryn Pritchett

writes about Things Elemental — where we find shelter, why we connect, what sustains us and how we strut our stuff.