Technivorm Coffee Talk
Welcome to 2012!
Oh gosh oh my golly! I am so happy to see the sweet fresh new year. We needed it didn’t we? That silly 2011 was getting on my last nerve!
It wouldn’t be a new year without news, SO here we go–
This year this blog will take a decidedly different turn. That turn is into the kitchen! Yes, friends and perhaps soon-to-be former-readers my focus will be about food.
Each day there will be a blog of thoughts on food, shopping for food, techniques, products, failures, successes, of simply what I cooked that day. I know this might be a bit if a surprise to my yoga-centric readers. I am sorry if you are disappointed. But truthfully, you eat dont you? Okay then! See you are still totally in your element! Seriously though, I do have a few subscribers and while I am not all about that, I certainly don’t want you guys to go away. I hope you will hang around and see what ‘s happening on the kitchen.
For example- this January (tomorrow) we are going to be juicing and creating a cleanse. Monday my dear friend Lou and I will buy too much fruit and veg and proceed to juice AKA create a crime scene in the yoga kitchen!
Crime scene you wonder???
I ask: have you ever juiced a beet?
AHHH, but that’s tomorrow.
Today it’s simple. It’s coffee.
This is my everyday coffee experience. Typically I make a simple single cone drip Melitta, with brown sugar and half and half. This is a great cup of coffee. Strong- full bodied sweet and creamy. Perfect.
Until i met this REALLY sexxy machine The Technivorm KBT-741 and it’s BFF the Nespresso Milk Frother!.


I brew up This delicious German coffee that is packaged as freeze dried, pre-ground. My darling friend Kim’s sweet chef boyfriend turned me on to this coffee, and I have never looked back.
I am sure there are plenty of coffee snobs out there who insist to grind your own beans is the only way. I will tell you, I tried grinding my own beans for a couple of years. In my opinion
it’s too God damned early for all that noise! So I buy this. (I used to buy my coffee in West University Village here in Houston, but alas it’s a trip to a part of town I do not like and another story)
This coffee is a blessing. Thanks to JM for the tip!
So that’s it! This coffee machine is amazing. It heats the water to the perfect temperature, drips the brew into an insulated carafe and this part is key- the carafe is not heated, the coffee does not continue to cook and stays the perfect drinking temperature!
You may be thinking this is still no big deal, but until you drink coffee from this machine you will not understand. I am not being paid for this, or compensated in any way- it’s just true. The Nespresso frother is just lovely. It will make “latte style” milk with just a little foam, or “cappuccino- style” with more foam. The coffee is great all on it’s own, and granted this may be a bit spoiled-girl of me… but this is the perfect milk for the perfect coffee.
There you go.
Coffee. Milk. Brown sugar. Easy as pie! (easier!)
Welcome 2012!
So happy to see you, may you be as easy and energizing as my delicious coffee.
Dog eats from a fork, nicely.
Frank’s a pretty fantastic dog, and my dear husband Michael is pretty darn fantastic too. They get along great and share meals together often. Ocasionally, after he’s finished with his dinner, Mr.Darla will feed Frank, the lovely Standard Poodle, the remainder of his dinner, with a fork. This is always a delight for me to watch, tonight I thought I’d share it with you.
Enjoy!
Meditation with butter
Isn’t it interesting how we decide what we can and cannot do?
You go through life, you experience things, you think about things that you want to do. Often, we decide whether or not we’re able to do those things before we even give it a try.
I do this all the time. I have experienced and even accomplished some things I never thought of being for me. I have done many things that I once thought I would never do- or never would have the opportunity to do or ability to do, for example: climbing mountains, or rollerblading really fast on the street, or even cooking certain foods.
I can add another one to the “that looks hard I don’t think I could do that” list– making baklava.
I know that making baklava is not really like climbing a mountain but it does take time and patience. Climbing is NOT something to rush every step, every route must be planned. For baklava it’s the same. A few days ago while watching “The Chew” on ABC, Chef Michael Symon demonstrated and offered his recipe for his mom Angel’s baklava. Chef Michael’s mom’s name is Angel- and it’s a perfect name for this dish! Baklava is so beautiful! The layers are delicate and bring to mind angel wings… AND It looked easy!
What’s the big deal?? I LOVE baklava! I have eaten it a few times and I seem to remember now (as I am through at least 25% of the pan) that I REALLY liked it back in the early 90’s. I recall, as most surfaces in my kitchen now have a slightly sticky residue, that I decided back in the early 90s that I couldn’t eat baklava, because I like to eat baklava too much. Waay too much. Like… “I hear the baklava calling me from downstairs” too much. You dig?
But that’s between me and my therapist!
Chef Symon said it was easy and delicious so I was determined! It was a bit of an adventure to get the phyllo dough necessary for the recipe. There was not fresh phyllo available in Houston. With some advice from a cool grocer I decided to make the trek over to “Phoenicia” way out on Westheimer (25 min. drive one way) to see if I could get the perfect (if frozen) phyllo dough. It turns out one of the brands they have is the same brand that is carried at Central market down in Highland Village so that was good to know. I decided to buy a different brand; Apollo brand.
I don’t think I saw this one at Central market so I decided to try it. While I was at Phoenicia I bought fresh walnuts and pistachios for making the filling, there were graham crackers in the pantry and I certainly had plenty of butter on hand so I was set.
I need to stop here and say that you are going to need a pastry brush. Didn’t think I needed a new pastry brush because I had several. One that was like a regular bristle pastry brush, and a few different sizes of silicone brushes. I knew that the regular bristle brush would probably be my best bet from other tips, unfortunately this pastry brush decided immediately to start dropping bristles. It began dropping bristles into the butter the moment I put the brush to the pan before the 1st layer of dough went down. Of course I saw the bristles laying in the bottom of the pan and had to wash the pan- and then had to do the entire recipe with silicone brushes. I do not recommend them! They’re great for barbecue sauce but not for buttering/laminating pastry. My darling husband Michael recommended that I just go to the paint store and pick out a couple of really really nice paintbrushes and use them in the kitchen. He pointed out that they would hold up very well and not likely be willing to give up their bristles. Since this was Christmas Eve night I had no choice but to continue with silicone, but you better believe I will definitely hit the hardware store before I need a pastry brush again! This is your most important tool, friends.
I did some research online also about using the phyllo dough since I had never used it before. One tip was to move the dough in the box just as it is stored in the freezer into the refrigerator a couple of days, at least overnight before using it. Also the box recommends that you also leave it out on the counter for a couple of hours before you even take it out-of-the-box and begin assembly. Apparently these steps are very important to keep the dough separate. It worked beautifully for me. I have absolutely no complaints on using phyllo dough. I guess I got lucky, call beginners luck if you wish, but I don’t really see what the big deal is. Easy Peasy! Yes, you do have to keep the stack of leaves covered while you butter the one you’re working with. It is a little bit of a pain to make sure that they are covered nicely each time- so make it a moving meditation- a respectful ritual. Remove the plastic, carefully lift dough sheet lay on top of butter pan, replace plastic on top, apply butter to leaf, remove plastic, carefully lift a new sheet, lay it on top of previous buttered sheet, replace plastic on top. apply butter to leaf, remove plastic…You get the idea! It took me a while you do those 1st 10 layers, but it’s great preparation for the layers after the nut mixture.
After you place and butter 10 leaves, then you add a layer of nut mixture, continue layering the dough with butter for 4 sheets and then add filling again. The 1st leaf that goes on top of the filling is the most difficult to deal with. This leaf tends to slide around on top of the filling and move while you’re trying to butter it. I discovered that if you glue the layers edges together with the butter 1st and then butter the rest of the sheet it helps hold everything in place. This process takes forever! You have to be patient, and you have to just do the work. After about the 15th layer it turns into that meditation of movement and butter!
The results were great!
The baklava tastes amazing and it looks beautiful. I wish I could stop eating it. They say it freezes well but I haven’t gotten up enough self-control to actually freeze some of it, I mean what if I want some and it isn’t thawed out yet?? Yes, I definately encourage you to go over to the website that I linked to above and check out this recipe and make your own pan of Angel’s baklava. I’d love to know how it turns out (and how you keep yourself from eating all!)
Winter Solstice 2011
These are some of the sights and sounds of Winter Solstice 2011 at my place.
May your blessings be many as you count them, may they multiply.
Happy Solstice!
“Oh, but the fire went wild!”
Let’s set the ambiance, shall we?
Click this and listen as you scroll read the post.
It’s a nice multi-media experience isn’t it?
You may wonder why I chose this sad version instead of that sassy June and Johnny one? You see, it’s because it’s how I feel today.
Since today is my first official day on sabbatical I feel a little like June without her John. I am all fire… no ring.
Yes, yes I know I need to ease my way onto my new lifestyle. The best way to transition seemed be staying in the same “space”.
That “space” seems to require heat. And no better use of long-term heat (with out yogis) than to make food, today specifically- broth!
Today the chickens were brave- they showed up and I did what I do. I applied a low steady flame and implored them to relent.
Come on in, relaaaaxxxx, get a little steamy, do a Pigeon or two…
You don’t know how it feels
Mr.Tom Petty is so wise.
Yeah yeah, he’s a dope smoking rocker- but he’s also a poet- an artist.
I love him, and I love this song.
At 1:43 in the video he says
“I woke up in between a memory and a dream”, Good Lord! What a phrase.
I surely did. And that’s why tonight’s the night for DYG. (yes early birds will sing tomorrow one last time)
SO let’s get to the point…
So, you want to open a yoga studio? It’s EASY!
** yes friends, I changed the video to this really sweet LIVE version with a young linen swathed Sting. Enjoy. love. d**
Chai for Shakti
There is nothing that stirs up the desire to sit quietly and listen to the inner music of the soul than masala tea, or what is called “chai” by most folks. I am talking about indian spiced tea. You might know it. It’s been REALLY popular in the united states since yoga gained super popularity back at the millennium. Chai, for me, is all about the ashram, all about the sweet feeling of early morning mediattion and sleepy chanting of the Guru Gita. Ahhhh….. there’s nothing like inhaling that spicy fragrance and listening to your breath.
I have made this particular chai lately, playing with the ratios of spice to one another. I also like to add a little half and half, or heavy cream to up the fat content. Baba Muktananda is said to teach, “the meditator needs a litttle more fat and sugar, it feeds the shakti”. Yes, Baba. 😉 **
Chai for Shakti
2 cinnamon sticks
12 whole green cardamom pods
12 whole cloves
2 (1-inch) piece ginger root, peeled and thinly sliced
10 whole black peppercorns
6 cups water
5 single-serve black tea bags or 1 tablespoon loose black tea
4 tablespoons dark brown sugar
2 cups milk (I use whole milk with a few tablespoons of cream to equal amount needed)
Method
Ingredient Options: Use non-dairy milk for a vegan version.
Place cinnamon, cardamom, cloves, ginger, peppercorns and water into a small pot and bring to a boil.
Cover, reduce heat and simmer for 5 minutes. Remove from heat and set aside to let steep for 10 minutes.
Return pot to the heat and bring to a boil. Remove from heat, add tea, cover and set aside to let steep for 3 to 5 minutes. Strain through a fine mesh sieve, discarding solids, then return liquid to the pot. Stir in sugar and milk and heat over low heat for 1 minute. Pour into cups and ommmmmm.
** (Baba is said *to have taught* he, of course left his body many years ago)









