Posts in Travel
French Kitchen Copper
Polished and Ready Jam Copper Pot

Polished and Ready Jam Copper Pot

Copper pots and pans are one of the essentials in a French Country Kitchen, not only for their glowing beauty, but fine functionality. Copper conducts heat very well, cooks food evenly, cools quickly, and will last forever when properly cared for. Most copper pots are tin-lined, and eventually this tin lining wears out with use, and the piece should be re-tinned by a retinning specialist. Be aware that tin melts at 450 F. degrees, so cooking in tin lined copper pots should be below that temperature. Confiture or jam making copper pots don’t need to be lined, since there’s enough sugar in jam to prevent the fruit acids from reacting with the metal. Always cook your fruit and sugar together, never cook fruit alone in a copper pot. Copper mixing bowls often aren’t lined as well, especially those intended for beating egg whites.

Some people like to keep the aged copper penny patina, and others like their copper bright and polished. It is a personal preference. Wrights Copper Cream is a good commercial copper cleaner. An old standby recipe to clean copper is mix 1/4 cup salt, 1/4 cup cup flour and enough white distilled vinegar to make a thick paste, use a soft cloth to rub the paste on the surface of the copper. Buff the copper pan until it shines. Rinse with warm water and dry thoroughly. Over time your piece will begin to tarnish, and you simply repeat the process again.

You can find new pieces online easily, or if you favor the hunt, search out wonderful pieces at French flea markets. It is usually the vintage, well-worn patina pieces with a history of their own, that are the best treasures to find. I can’t tell you how many copper jam pots I passed up over the years in France. I simply didn’t have immediate needs to be able to ship it home, it was generally took bulky to carry, and I didn’t want to risk damaging a piece checked in my baggage in my cross Atlantic travels.

The universe works in wonderful ways. Recently I was helping my Mom and Dad clean and organize their downstairs kitchenette. What was tucked away in one of the cabinets, was this beauty, a huge confiture copper pot—big enough to hold all of your fruit and sugar for making jam at one time. My Mom gave it to me, and I did get it home safely in my luggage. It is special to me for sentimental reasons, coming from my Mom and her kitchen in Europe, and now passed on to me. It was like finding a diamond in the rough, and fulfilling the dream to have one and display it in my home.

Copper Jam Pot Washed and Ready to Polish

Copper Jam Pot Washed and Ready to Polish

Some Related Copper Websites:

Mauviel

Williams Sonoma

Elsie Green

The Cooks Atelier

East Coast Retinning

Nicholas Retinning, (No Website), 4641 Telegraph Road, L.A., CA 90022, (tel) (323) 263-0028, Est. 1965.

Bon Appétit et Bon Weekend….Bonnie

Oceanside's The Seabird Resort
The Seabird Hotel on Mission Avenue in Oceanside, California

The Seabird Hotel on Mission Avenue in Oceanside, California

From time to time I highlight “places to know” around San Diego County. Maybe you know, and maybe you don’t, there are two new hotels in Oceanside, California next to the beach and a stone’s throw from the Oceanside Pier. One is the Mission Pacific, and the other is The Seabird Resort.

My husband John, and I are a little partial to The Seabird. Our architect and interior designer, Bill Bocken, who mastered our personal home remodel eleven years ago, has along with a design team done the stunning Seabird Resort interior design. The moment we walked into the inviting lobby, we sensed Bocken’s undeniable style.

The Seabird’s Inviting Lobby

The Seabird’s Inviting Lobby

While daytime is spectacular, I couldn’t help thinking how enchanting it would be to experience The Shore Room at sunset.

Summer Sunflowers Greet Lobby Guests

Summer Sunflowers Greet Lobby Guests

The atmosphere at The Seabird Resort is tasteful California casual, light and airy, with lots of blue tones that repeat the adjacent boardwalk setting, spectacular Pacific Ocean, and sky. A smattering of vintage California seaside photos punctuate the vibe and bring a smile to your face.

Both hotels are an asset to the ever evolving town of Oceanside! Check them out if you are in the area, or you have guests that are planning to visit the area!

A Stone’s Throw from the Oceanside Pier

A Stone’s Throw from the Oceanside Pier

As a side note, Oceanside has a plethora of great independent eateries, breweries, and cafes mainly along the Coast Highway corridor. One of our favorites is the popular Local Tap House (LTH), 308 South Coast Highway, (tel) (760) 547-1469.

Inside Local Tap House, Outside Dining Also Available

Inside Local Tap House, Outside Dining Also Available

Always packed, be prepared to join a waiting list. The American cuisine is marvelous and the menu extensive. Being a Moule & Frites (Mussels & Fries) connoisseur from my Belgian days, I usually order mussels when I see it on the menu. Recently at the LTH, I ordered their Pozole Verde Mussels which came with avocado, crispy hominy, serrano crema, cilantro, garlic, radish, lime, and grilled torta roll. Heaven! Listed under “Snacks” on their menu, it was a delicious feast that got my two thumbs up!

Pozole Verde Mussels at Local Tap House, Oceanside

Pozole Verde Mussels at Local Tap House, Oceanside

Bon Appétit et Bon Weekend….Bonnie

Ma Amie, Kathy
À Kathy’s Maison

À Kathy’s Maison

I have a dear friend who exudes “joie de vivre” whether she is here in San Diego, at her little stone house in Provence, or anywhere in the world. Ma Amie, Kathy Hurder. We are both Francophiles, and share the love of French country cooking, the wine, the copper, the markets, the brocantes, the lifestyle, and the beauty in the simplicity and quality of life.

With France opening up once again to tourists and foreigners, I remember with fond memories our last trip to France in 2019. Kathy and her charming husband, Ron Lauderbach, graciously invited us to their special corner of Provence. My husband, John, and I in turn invited them to share a weekend in Beaune, Burgundy, France, together a week later. We had so much fun, and yes, it was cherry season!

Sainte-Cécile-les Vignes Morning Market

Sainte-Cécile-les Vignes Morning Market

No need to buy cherries this morning, as Kathy and Ron have their own happy cherry trees in their “petite jardin.” When it is cherry season, you enjoy them fresh, but also make a Cherry Clafoutis.

Cherry Clafoutis is a very popular French dessert, simple and seasonal, in which you can easily exchange seasonal fruit of the moment. If I remember correctly, we made Mimi Thorisson’s Cherry Clafoutis from her first cookbook, A Kitchen in France, and in her 2013 blog post, which she shares the recipe along with her complementary Duck Burger recipe. Yum!

Kathy and Ron, in Medieval Village, Séguret, Provence and overlooking Sablet, Provence

Kathy and Ron, in Medieval Village, Séguret, Provence and overlooking Sablet, Provence

One of our incentives for a rendez-vous a week later in Beaune, besides the incredible Burgundy wine and regional food, was taking a “Day in Burgundy Cooking Class” with American ex-pats “mother daughter duo” Marjorie Taylor and Kendall Smith Franchini, at The Cook’s Atelier. Planned well in advance, Kathy and I were lucky to land the last two spots in a Saturday June cooking class. While at our cooking class, our fellas were happy to further explore Beaune and dabble in some wine tasting. Needless to say, it was an incredible day and experience, full of special memories. For more info on The Cook’s Atelier see below.

I can’t say enough about Beaune, Burgundy, and highly recommend spending some quality time there. It is really worth it to bike or hike into the surrounding world famous vineyards. There is a real sense and spirit of place, and the terroir is immaculately managed and revered.

Past and Present Merge in these Vineyards

Past and Present Merge in these Vineyards

A Special Burgundy Birthday for John

A Special Burgundy Birthday for John

It is a real gift to have “joie de vivre” and the ability to put a spark in other people’s lives, just by being your passionate self. Merci Kathy and Ron!

Well Fed and Content in Beaune

Well Fed and Content in Beaune

French Fabulous!

The Cook’s Atelier, by Marjorie Taylor and Kendall Smith Franchini, is one of the best cooking classes I have been to. From start to finish, it is a whirlwind for your senses. I often thought about them, through this pandemic. Was this small family business surviving, with no classes, no brick and mortar storefront retail? Were they writing a new cookbook? Well, good news, yes, and yes, and yes.

The Cook’s Atelier hosts regular one day classes, and also offers week long master classes. The Cook’s Atelier has taken this gift of time to expand their country home outside of Beaune, creating a large potager and teaching kitchen. They are now growing most of their own fruit and vegetables for their culinary classes, and in the week long master class will be bringing the class to their country setting for more culinary instruction and Burgundian experience. Adding to this, they have expanded into custom copper gardening tools, found on their website. Amazing.

Another Related and Past Blog Link, The Cook’s Atelier

Bon Appétit and Bon Weekend…Bonnie


Jubilant for Cherries
Our Gite Patio Overlooking Sablet, Provence

Our Gite Patio Overlooking Sablet, Provence

Back in 2007, my husband and I rented a gite outside of the medieval village of Sablet in Provence, France. A gite is a small furnished vacation house in France, usually in a rural setting. I rented it online, and was drawn to the spectacular setting nestled amongst the grapevines with the stunning lower Rhône Valley before our eyes.

Once a bachelor farmer son’s small stone home upstairs, and where livestock often were conveniently sheltered on the ground floor below, this beautiful little property had been lovingly restored and transformed into a very comfortable gite. I will never forget walking into the stone home and kitchen for the first time, finding a waiting bottle of Rhône wine on the wooden kitchen table, a huge bowl of fresh ripe cherries, and a note to enjoy our stay. I was in heaven.

Since we usually travel to France in the spring, I now always associate Provence in the spring with the fabulous seasonal cherries. So sweet and delicious, perfect fresh or in a light dessert.

Cherries at Apt, Provence, Saturday Market

Cherries at Apt, Provence, Saturday Market

Experiencing fresh cherries in Provence, I wanted to grow spring cherries in our orchard, but cherries typically need a cool climate, abundant chill hours, not normally trees for Southern California. A few years ago, I found cherry trees suitable for Southern California at Green Thumb Nursery in San Marcos, a retailer for Dave Wilson Nursery.

I bought a Minnie Royal and a Royal Lee, two great Southern California cherry trees necessary to pollenize each other. For some reason, I kept losing the Royal Lee tree, twice in fact, and then once with the Minnie Royal tree. Graciously, Green Thumb Nursery replaced each tree for me. I was beginning to doubt it was possible to grow cherry trees in Southern California.

Minnie Royal Cherries in My Orchard

Minnie Royal Cherries in My Orchard

With persistence, both trees are doing really well now. Last year was my first crop, and now this year, an even bigger cherry crop. I eat them off the tree when gardening. I don’t think they will see my kitchen for a couple of years.

Garden Design Tip: I always enjoy spring nasturtium that reseed and self-sow in my orchard which adds a little color and interest. This year I planted multi-color sweet peas at the base of many of my orchard trees, providing a few small stakes close to the trunk of each tree. The sweet peas responded well, climbing up the stakes, some onto the trees, and sprawling around the base of each tree with pretty color. I was pleased, and will continue to do it next year. You can also plant a climbing rose at the base of your fruit tree, and the rose will use the tree as support as it grows. These ideas are simple, add interest, and dress up an orchard or focal fruit tree.

Royal Lee Cherry Tree on the Left, Minnie Royal Cherry Tree on the Right

Royal Lee Cherry Tree on the Left, Minnie Royal Cherry Tree on the Right

Do you have a success story with a fruit tree, or your backyard orchard? Please share!

Bon Appétit and Bon Holiday Weekend….Bonnie






Eat at Wicked Maine Lobster, Stroll Carlsbad Boardwalk
Wicked Maine Lobster on Carlsbad Blvd, Carlsbad California

Wicked Maine Lobster on Carlsbad Blvd, Carlsbad California

From time to time on my blog, I like to share with you “Places to Know” in the San Diego and Southern California area that are fun, memorable, and real gems. I was recently introduced to one by dear friends, it is called Wicked Maine Lobster. I would like to share this gem with you.

Do you need a fun afternoon right about now? I suggest a casual lunch at Wicked Maine Lobster in Carlsbad for a great Maine Lobster Roll, Cole Slaw, and even a Whoopie Pie for dessert. Then take a quick stroll over to the dynamite Carlsbad Boardwalk and take in the shimmering Pacific Ocean. Good food, fresh air, and beautiful water!

Wicked Maine Lobster Roll and Fries

Wicked Maine Lobster Roll and Fries

Two brothers born and raised in Maine, came up with the concept of creating the best Maine seafood dishes to hungry Southern California foodies. Maine seafood comfort food with a California twist. Starting out at local Farmers Markets, Wicked Maine Lobster now has three locations in the San Diego area, and more locations planned in San Diego, and Southern California opening in the near future.

Cozy Outdoor Dining at Wicked Maine Lobster Carlsbad Location

Cozy Outdoor Dining at Wicked Maine Lobster Carlsbad Location

At Wicked Maine Lobster in Carlsbad, you can eat tableside on the sidewalk in front, or venture upstairs to an inviting outdoor eating area, complete with fire rings, European lights, and outdoor heaters.

Wicked Maine Lobster Menu

Wicked Maine Lobster Menu

Sometimes just a change of landscape is enough to jolt you into a fantastic mood. Add a great lunch, and a breathtaking stroll, and you can be transformed. Do you have a favorite haunt, or walk that lifts your mood?

Bon Appétit and Bon Weekend….Bonnie




Rancho Gordo Bean Club
Susan Herrmann Loomis’ French Farmhouse Cookbook,  Lentil Recipe

Susan Herrmann Loomis’ French Farmhouse Cookbook, Lentil Recipe

 

There might be two kinds of people in this world, those who absolutely love all kinds of beans, and those who avoid them at all costs. If you are one of the former group, you need to know about Rancho Gordo Beans, a Napa, California based bean purveyor who specializes in growing and selling heirloom beans, legume, herbs, spices, and products from all over the world. In fact, there is such a cult following for Rancho Gordo beans they offer a “bean club,” like a wine club, which sends you quarterly a variety of special dried beans and recipes to try. I waited a year to get on the “bean club” and had to jump at joining when they emailed me, before my window to join closed. In my first shipment in November, I received “Super Lucky 2021 Black Eyed Peas” for New Year’s Day, Cassoulet beans to make Authentic Cassoulet Bean Soup, a Crimson Popping Popcorn—a rare and wonderful popcorn, and many others.

Spices at Cahors, France Market

Spices at Cahors, France Market

One of the first things I wanted to try from Rancho Gordo, was their French Green Lentils, grown in California, but very similar to the famous French green lentil from Le Puy, Auvergne-Rhône Alpes area of France. French Le Puy lentils are thought to have gastronomic qualities that are attributed to this very specific terroir and the area’s predominant volcanic soil. Consequently, Le Puy lentils have a a very desirable distinctive, peppery, flinty taste, and keep their shape after cooking. When I am France, I look for the Le Puy dry lentils at the outdoor markets because they are so tasty, and easy to transport home.

Not only do lentils taste great, they are good for you, full of protein, some vitamin B, carbohydrates, fats, and minerals. Lentils are versatile and can be used in salads, made into soups, as a bed for grilled salmon, mixed with really great sausages, and much more.

Susan Herrmann Loomis has a nice recipe for Simple Country Lentils in her 1996 cookbook, French Farmhouse Cookbook. It has a wealth of French Country recipes to drool over, and she divides her book by interesting components of French eating such as The Farmyard, The Pasture, The Sea, The Breadoven, etc.

 


Simple Country Lentils

Lovingly Adapted from Susan Herrmann Loomis, French Farmhouse Cookbook


Ingredients:

1 pound small green lentils (preferably from Le Puy or Rancho Gordo), 1 tablespoon olive oil, 1 medium carrot peeled and diced, 1 celery stalk diced, 1 small onion peeled and diced, 4 ounces slab bacon-rind removed-cut into 1/4” pieces, 2 cups dry white wine, 2 bay leaves, 4 to 5 sprigs of fresh thyme or 1/4 teaspoon dried leaves, 2 cups water, sea salt, freshly ground black pepper.


Directions:
1) Rinse the lentils under cold running water, and set them aside to drain. Look for and remove anything foreign from the lentils.

2) Combine the oil, carrot, celery, onion, and slab bacon in a large heavy skillet. Stir so the oil thoroughly coats the ingredients, and cook over medium-high heat, stirring frequently, until the onions begin to turn translucent and the bacon is browned, 5 to 7 minutes. Add the wine and the herbs, and cook until the wine is reduced by half, 5 to 8 minutes.

3) Add the lentils and the water. Stir, cover, reduce the heat so the lentils are simmering gently, and cook for about 20 minutes. Season with salt and pepper to taste, and continue cooking shaking the skillet occasionally so the lentils cook evenly and testing them for doneness, until they are tender but still have plenty of texture, 10 to 20 minutes. Serve immediately. Makes 6 servings. Enjoy!

 







Adieu Lulu
Driveway and Sign for Domaine Tempier

Driveway and Sign for Domaine Tempier

My husband, John, and I visited Domaine Tempier winery on a stunning spring day in May of 2015. It seemed a bit surreal to be walking down the tree-lined driveway and to be on this hallowed ground making our way up to the tasting room. I had read so much about the story of Lucien and Lulu Peyraud, who founded Domaine Tempier, after Lulu’s father gave the young couple this property as a wedding gift.

With a lot of hard work, the exceptional vineyard terroir, the beautiful wines, and seven children later, the legendary life of Lucien and Lulu Peyraud grew and grew. Lulu was not only a mother, but a wine ambassador and marketed Domaine Tempier wines traveling extensively. Her cooking became legendary, pairing the simple gastronomic Provence flavors and foods found at her local markets, which perfectly complemented their wines. The Peyraud’s often hosted, cooked, and feasted with culinary royalty and friends such as Richard Olney, Alice Waters, Fanny Singer (Alice Waters’ daughter), David Tanis, and many more. For an up close look at Lulu’s kitchen and sharing of some of her recipes, David Tanis wrote a beautiful article for Saveur for their special France Issue, May 2016.

A young Kermit Lynch, in the 1970’s, out of Berkley began importing wines from small family wineries in France, also became a lifelong friend and ambassador of Domaine Tempier wines. Today, Domaine Tempier rosé is the gold standard for rosé in Provence, and also their Mourvèdre driven reds.

 
John Amongst One of Domaine Tempier Vineyards

John Amongst One of Domaine Tempier Vineyards

 

When we visited Domaine Tempier in 2015, Lulu Peyraud was 97 years old. We certainly did not see or visit with her, but her presence was felt. Last month, on October 7, 2020, the world lost Lulu at 102 years young, just shy of her 103rd birthday. Her passing was felt all over the world, and you can read more about remembering her, and her life in The Washington Post and The New York Times.

I have always looked up to Lulu Peyraud, because of a similar heartfelt passion and connection with Provence, the wines, the food, the “joie de vivre,” celebrating the simple everyday life. How incredible to experience that much life over time, as well as the unfolding of so many generations of your family. She had recently become a great, great grandmother.

It is also Lulu’s story, her authentic self, humor, and sharing at the table, how one woman could make such a difference in this world, one dish and one glass of wine at a time. She is a shining example, that each and everyone of us is unique, have so much to offer the world, and can make a difference in the world.

 
Richard Olney Insisted Lulu Write Down Her Recipes

Richard Olney Insisted Lulu Write Down Her Recipes

 

Richard Olney was an American expat neighbor who lived nearby Domaine Tempier, in a run down cottage, and did not drive. The Peyraud’s would gladly pick him up and return him home after their get togethers. Richard Olney was the author of eight books on French cooking, and was also the Chief Consultant to the Time-Life Good Cook series. The friendship he had with the Peyraud’s was special, and because of him, Lulu Peyraud shared her recipes with the world. You can find Lulu Peyraud’s cookbook on amazon.

Every time I have a glass of Domaine Tempier, or a bit of olive tapenade, or a slice of onion tart, I will certainly think of Lulu Peyraud, a life well-lived, and all that she shared with the world. Salut!


















Fall in France
Basket of Fall Goodies

Basket of Fall Goodies

Last fall I was in the Toulouse, South France area with French General for a week long “France Getaway, Exploring Craft, Markets, and Food in France.” Since none of us can be there this year, I thought I would share with you a few photos from the trip. If you are interested in joining a week with French General, contact owner Karri Meng, as she will be offering these trips once again, when it is permissible. For now, sit back and enjoy a few photos, and imagine your are in France this fall.

 
Two Lucky Lovers Atop an Arch in Saint-Antonin

Two Lucky Lovers Atop an Arch in Saint-Antonin

 
Walled Garden Below Toulouse Lautrec Museum

Walled Garden Below Toulouse Lautrec Museum

 
Learning the Fine Art of the Cheese Board

Learning the Fine Art of the Cheese Board

 
Impromptu Roadside Stop at Apple Farm

Impromptu Roadside Stop at Apple Farm

 
Completing One Craft, An Original French General Apron

Completing One Craft, An Original French General Apron

 
Alfresco Lunch Setting at Local Winery

Alfresco Lunch Setting at Local Winery

 
Cordes-Sur-Ciel Village, One Lucky Cat Lives Here!

Cordes-Sur-Ciel Village, One Lucky Cat Lives Here!

 
Fields of Fall Sunflowers Before Harvest

Fields of Fall Sunflowers Before Harvest

 
Last Evening, Last Dessert

Last Evening, Last Dessert