Showing posts with label home. Show all posts
Showing posts with label home. Show all posts

Friday, November 8, 2013

Have a Happy Weekend!


Hi, friends.  What will you be up to this weekend?  I am taking the opportunity to enjoy a little staycation, relaxing at home and maybe enjoying a dinner with friends.  Hope that you have a lovely few days ahead.  xox

* * *

I walked by Barcelona, a new tapas restaurant on 14th Street, last weekend.  It is gorgeous.  Like, I might want to move in.  Strong Yelp reviews, too.

Alternatively, if you are in Madrid (Some of you are!), you may like to check out Marta Argüelles's exhibit at La Portegna's store in el Barrio de Salamanca next Thursday.  Find details on La Portegna's Facebook page.

Not Martha's hilariously suspenseful Kinder Egg A Day series.

Products to keep your winter boots and shoes looking new.

What to expect from Game of Thrones's fourth season.  Gulp.

I have been listening to this throwback on repeat since hearing Alison Krauss's CMAs performance the other night.

The robin's egg color of this sweater is refreshing. 

Why isn't there a filtering water pitcher (Looking at you, Brita.) as pretty as this carafe?

I'll play my Native Southerner card and say that D.C. still needs good barbecue.  Here's hoping that DCity Smokehouse delivers.

A whole lot of delicious uses for cinnamon.

(Image is Urbano 12 by Marta Argüelles.)

Wednesday, September 25, 2013

(Really) Simple Food: Cannellini Bean Dip


I like making foods that are hard not to love. 

That's really what I aim for when I make food at home.  I want delicious, totally lovable food that elicits a (positive) verbal reaction.  If, in addition to being delicious, a food is both nutritious and cheap, then it stands a pretty good chance of meeting my definition of "totally lovable".


Beans, whether the canned or dry variety, have always been a favorite of mine.  My reverence for beans may rival Martha Stewart's love of eggs.*  I love beans for their versatility (universality, even) and humility.  They can fit any mood and most any meal.  They are remarkably nutritious and conveniently take the place of animal protein in a balanced diet.

It's no surprise, then, that beans star in one of my favorite, extremely easy go-to recipes, smashed cannellini bean dip.  Lately, I've been making a batch on Sunday in preparation for the week ahead.  I'll slather it on Wasa crackers for breakfast, or pack it in a plastic container with salad greens for a workday lunch.  It also makes a perfect, substantial-enough snack with pretzels or carrots. 


The ingredients and process are all so simple that I feel a little silly writing this out, but....

Yield: 2 cups
Time: 5 to 10 minutes

You'll only need four ingredients to make the dip:

Cannellini beans, 2 cans, drained (If you prefer, use two cups of cooked dry beans.)
Olive oil**, 2 tablespoons
Salt, 2 teaspoons
Red pepper flakes, a generous pinch (May be omitted, but why would you do that? :)

You'll also need something to transform the whole beans into a dip.  Lots of options would work just fine:

Molcajete or mortar and pestle
Food processor
Immersion blender and bowl
Bowl and fork, spoon, wooden spoon, potato masher, or other implement to smash with

Now, here's what I do.***  I rinse my canned beans thoroughly before putting them into the bowl/molcajete/food processor.  I tend to use a mortar and pestle, and I smash the beans in batches, before putting them into a smallish mixing bowl.  I smash until the beans are about seventy percent smoothish paste, and about thirty percent still-relatively-whole bean.  (If you want your finished product to be completely lump-free, then using a food processor or immersion blender is your best bet.)  I transfer the smashed beans into my mixing bowl and then add the seasonings, which are all to taste, though I've estimated quantities above.  I'm quite generous with the olive oil and salt, since they both highlight the buttery and savory qualities of the beans.  Apparently, cold recipes also need to be seasoned more than hot recipes, and generosity here, as in most instances, yields karmic benefits.  The pepper flakes add a nice edge to richness of the salt and fat.  They make the stuff harder not to love.

*Martha has said that eggs are her favorite food.  I don't think that I am making this up, but a quick Google search didn't turn up any proof of a statement, aside from tons of Martha's egg recipes.

**People always recommend using "good" olive oil.  Do not confuse "good" olive oil with over-priced olive oil.  For most recipes that call for olive oil, including this one, I prefer using a dark-colored, fruity extra virgin olive oil.  The darker oil contributes complex, fragrant flavor that lighter oils lack.  This difference is especially notable in cold recipes, or when the oil is added at the end of a hot recipe preparation.

***You could make major changes in your own recipe, and it would still turn out great.

Monday, June 18, 2012

Apartment Gardens

I've been thinking a lot lately about how to bring some more of the outdoors inside, despite the constraints of my apartment. At the moment, there's one healthy (though possibly lonely) houseplant on the coffee table.  It's lush, in a green-glazed pot, but otherwise pretty non-descript.

For several years, I've had a crush on kumquat trees. There's something so whimsical and fresh about an indoor citrus tree, whether kept in a trim topiary style or as a fuller shrub.


Lovely potted kumquat tree.

The variety of possibilities for apartment-friendly container gardening is also inspirational. Tiny pots, bottles, and cans make plants mobile, enabling maximum access to suitable light and temperature conditions.


Herb garden in tea cans.
Vertical pallet garden via Apartment Therapy.
Plastic bottle planters.
Herbs and vegetables grown in a shoe organizer via Apartment Therapy.
Tiny window sill garden.

DIY Ikea planter re-do.
I have my eye on the weathered tea cans. Mismatched thrifted tea cups, kettles, or pitchers would also be sweet.  And the vertical planters could do nicely on an indoor wall or the narrowest of balconies.

Which of these ideas would work best for your space? What do you do to bring a bit of the outdoors into your home?

Thursday, June 7, 2012

Design Inspiration: A Refurbished Lebanese Home

Pinterest is a veritable treasure trove of interior design ideas, and all sorts of ideas, really. For example, I find the deep, moody blue and purple hues in this living room enchanting.

Blue and purple living room
Blueprint Modern via Jody McKee's Pinterest

But, after scanning tons of interiors, some gorgeous, some totally over-done, and most at least a little on the busy side for my taste, I yearn for something simpler and more sincere. This refurbished Lebanese home in Batroun, documented by the New York Times in 2010, gets it just right. Fresh, bright, and a bit styled, yet welcoming and livable, don't you think?

Bryan Denton for the New York Times
Lebanon home hall white tile windows
Bryan Denton for the New York Times
Lebanon home living room
Bryan Denton for the New York Times
Lebanon home dining room kitchen
Bryan Denton for the New York Times
Lebanon home entry shoe console
Bryan Denton for the New York Times

How have you decorated your home? Does form or function reign, or do you strike a balance between the two? And where do you find design influences?