
Oops!
Dear Readers: This post is addressed to those of you who subscribe to my blog. While posting my Samosa Latke recipe late last night I inadvertently typed in the amounts of spices incorrectly. Please visit the post online to see the exact proportions. If only I were as accurate as I am [...]


I love to cook, but I don’t love cooking that involves a lot of work. I seldom make a recipe that takes more than an hour or so to prepare. I figure I have better things to do with my time than linger in the
I LOVE having an excuse to bake. This time of year I have many reasons to turn on the oven. Yesterday’s was creating a holiday gift for my mother’s New Jersey mail carrier, Colin.
My mother and I are nomadic. We travel from our house in Massachusetts to
I originally planned to post this salad for Sukkot, the week-long Jewish harvest festival. Somehow, the calendar got away from me!
When I decided to make salad my theme for this week, however, I remembered how much I liked the slightly sweet/slightly tangy honey-mustard dressing and
It has taken me several days to recover from the digestive excesses of Thanksgiving. I went to the store yesterday to buy milk and turned a little green when I saw the cream lurking on the shelf nearby.
So I have vowed to work on simple foods–salads in particular–to get 
My family and I celebrated Thanksgiving this year at my mother’s home in New Jersey. We hosted a small party on Friday that concentrated on appetizers and desserts.
We served a very small main course (stuffed shells and salad), surrounded by delectable non-“serious” foods. We began the evening 
As I type this Tuesday evening I am surrounded by red. I’ve been playing with cranberries today. I can’t resist their deep, rich color and their sweet/tart flavor.
I tried making cranberry vinegar (NOT a success–I’ll try again next Thanksgiving).
I made jellied cranberry sauce for the cranberry cream puffs
As a child I was the only member of my family who didn’t gravitate toward pumpkin pie on Thanksgiving. The custard filling was just … so … smooth.
As a grown up I am more enthusiastic, although the consistency still tends to flummox me. The recipe below
You will eat bye and bye
Johnny Mercer was born 100 years ago tomorrow, on November 18, 1909. A 
I recently picked up a gorgeous stem of Brussels sprouts at
After I published my 
Life slows down in early November here in western Massachusetts. Our leaves have begun their steep decline: the bright colors of the local landscape are fast giving way to the grays and silvers that foretell winter’s whites.
I’m always in the mood for salad–particularly after a weekend dominated by pudding! This fruity dressing works beautifully with greens plus such seasonal add-ons as red onion, apple, dried cranberries, and/or toasted nuts. (A little local cheese doesn’t go amiss, either!)
Ingredients:
4 tablespoons cider vinegar (I like the vinegar from
Before I get to today’s recipe, I’d like to remind readers about my beloved
At this time of year I like to put apples in just about everything. So I decided to try baking an apple pizza.
My family was skeptical about the idea and made me order a traditional tomato pie as a backup just in case the apple
This moist, sweet bread makes a better bribe than a plain old apple. I was going to try it with raisins or dried cranberries (which you may certainly do), but my nephew Michael cast his vote for apricots.
The bread we made together goes perfectly with mulled cider.
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I am FINALLY back to apples, thanks to my friends at the West County Independent. My apple recipes and photos were lost in the most recent Great Tinky Computer Debacle, but the wonderful Ginny and Kim have retrieved some of them from an article
The atmosphere in the
With LESS THAN TWO WEEKS to go before the
My neighbor Jack, who read my recent
Last weekend we celebrated not only Labor Day but the Corn Moon–the golden September full moon that marks the height of the corn harvest.
Corn is the perfect late-summer vegetable. Its color reflects the hues of the sun and the goldenrod-filled fields. Its subtly sweet taste reminds us 
How do I love zucchini? Let me count the ways….
I know zucchini don’t always come in for a lot of praise. In fact, I tend to think of them as the fruitcake of summer.
At Christmas the fruitcake bashers jest that fruitcake is so heavy it can 
