Recently in Food Category
Speaking of banana pudding, I saw that Geer Street Garden offers it on their menu, and I bet it is good. I might give it a try when I go out with the guys tomorrow night.
In other news, we're making a big push to be moved into the "new" house by Saturday evening when Brooklynne's sisters arrive to kick off the summer season of fun. The project left to do are endless, but I find that having a deadline makes me more focused on the essential work. When beach week rolls around in a couple of weeks, I'll have more time to post some before and after shots.
Finally, long-time readers know I'm a wanna be stargazer, so I was glad to see the winning photos from the Earth and Sky photo contest presented by The World at Night. Here are a couple of my favorites.
I saw an article on Starbucks changing its logo this morning, but the image of the old logos that went with it was too small to see. So, naturally, I got curious and googled the history of the Starbucks logo and found this really interesting article.
Who knew? I thought those things were her hands or something. I wonder what other sketchy things we would find in other logos if we knew what we were looking for?
Cheerwine filled Krispy Kremes. But you'll have to come for a visit if you're not in NC.
Caffinated beef jerky. 'nouf said.

Ever since our days in Bozeman, where we often ate at Cafe Zydeco, Brooklynne and I have both loved various New Orleans-style foods, so finding a indigenous cookbook was high on our priority list when we visited Ben in LA last September.
We ended up getting Cooking Up a Storm. When Hurricane Katrina wiped out New Orleans, alot of people lost their recipes and cookbooks to water damage. So, the Times-Picayune decided to create and publish a cookbook of recipes that were submitted to its local cooking column over the years. A portion of the profits apparently go toward hurricane relief, and the book came highly recommended by the guy who runs the Southern Food and Beverage Museum (whom Brooklynne and I met when we visited earlier this year--and BTW, he is a big Allen & Son fan), so we bought it.
Monday night, we finally had a chance to try a recipe, and since it was Monday (the traditional day for this dish), we made Red Beans and Rice. Oh man, it was good! I altered the recipe a little for ease by substituting a few ingredients such as bacon instead of smoked ham hock, canned beans for the dry ones, and parsley flakes for the fresh stuff. So I'm posting our version of the recipe after the break.
I usually have a twang of hesitation when I post a recipe out of a book (kind of like when I burn a mix CD), but I think I can justify this because we tweaked the recipe enough, and because once you try this dish, you will want to buy the book for the rest.
***Also, this recipe happens to be dairy and soy free for any nursing mothers who may be interested.***
I went to the "Rock" (as in Roxboro, NC) for Thanksgiving today. That's where my grandmother lives, we had a smallish gathering that included Mama H, Kim, Dixon, Skip, Maggie, Mom, Dad, and the Pattens--Sarah, Aaron, and Emma. As usual the food was outstanding, and I even got to load up a tin pie-plate with leftovers for the weekend.
If Brooklynne was here, I'm sure she would have gone all out to contribute our share of the fixin's, so there was some pressure for me to represent our branch of the Travis clan. However, I've only really been to the store once since Brooklynne left, and all I got was spaghetti sauce and noodles. So, it was time for some old-school, Miles-style razzle-dazzle in the kitchen.
I got up this morning and surveyed the available ingredients. I wanted to make something traditional, but I really didn't have anything that fit the bill, so I had to be creative. Here's my train of thought:
Let's see.... I have one sweet potato (left from before Brooklynne flew out). That's kind of Thanksgivingy. What could I make that takes only one sweet potato? A pie? No--that takes 2 lbs. This one is maybe 1/2 lb. Maybe that would be enough for cookies? Is there such a thing as sweet potato cookies? (I looked in The Joy of Cooking.) No sweet potato cookies listed. But I do have all the ingredients for oatmeal cookies. Could I make sweet potato flavored oatmeal cookies? I'll never know until I try....
An hour and a half later I had a large dish of sweet potato-oatmeal cookies. Don't laugh--they got rave reviews at dinner. In fact, they got such good reviews, that I am posting the recipe here for my own future reference and for Kim and Mama H. One caveat before I continue, though: this was an experimental batch, and they came out kind of flat and gooey, so the baking time is still open to tweaking. I'm putting exactly what I did in the directions below, but I'll put a note at the bottom of the recipe explaining baking time and temp options that might be worth experimenting with.
- Position a rack in the top third of the oven.
- Pre-heat the oven to 375.
- Grease several cookie sheets (at least 3 for the most efficient baking rotation).
- Skin, chop, and boil 1 average-sized sweet potato until it is very soft.
- Whisk together:
- 2 cups all-purpose flour
- 1 teaspoon baking soda
- 1 teaspoon baking powder
- 1/2 teaspoon salt
- 1 teaspoon ground cinnamon
- 1 teaspoon ground nutmeg
- 1/2 teaspoon all-spice
- 1/2 teaspoon cloves.
- Beat until well blended:
- 2 sticks unsalted butter (softened)
- 1.5 cups packed light or dark brown sugar (this is what the oatmeal cookie recipe called for, but I discovered at this point that I did not have brown sugar, so I substituted 1.5 cups regular white sugar and 3/4 cup molasses)
- 3/4 cup sugar (just to be clear, this is in addition to the other sugar I used to simulate the brown sugar)
- 2 large eggs (Kim mentioned that increasing the eggs may help the cookies keep their shape later--so perhaps worth trying 3 eggs?)
- 2.5 teaspoons vanilla.
- Beat the sweet potato into the butter mixure until the "sauce" is smooth.
- Stir the flour mixture into the butter/potato mixure.
- Stir in 4 cups rolled oats.
- Use a tablespoon to drop the dough onto the cookie sheets. An even tablespoon will make a large cookie. You should space them at least two inches apart, and I got the best results by limiting myself to only 9 cookies per sheet.
- Bake one sheet at a time. I found that 10 minutes was the best amount of time, but I was also using the "speed bake" feature on my oven. If you do not have "speed bake," you may have to bake the cookies longer, or increase the temp to 400. The cookies will come out darker bron than typical oatmeal cookies and you should take them out when they are just barely firm in the middle.
- Let the cookies firm up on the baking sheet for a couple of minutes before transferring them to a rack for cooling. I got in a rhythm of taking one sheet out of the oven, placing the next sheet in to bake, and then loading a third sheet with dough while the first sheet cooled (thus the 3 sheets from step 3 above). Once the third sheet was ready to go in the oven, the first sheet would be cool and the cookies could be removed to the cooling rack. Then I would repeat the pattern. The recipe yielded 6 batches of 9 large cookies (54 total).
I forgot to mention that I made it a total guy cooking night by setting up the laptop in the kitchen and watching Aliens while making the sauce. I'm sure the Alien Queen would find my sauce tasty.

My office is having a thanksgiving potluck today. I wanted to contribute, so I tried to think of something that was
- traditional
- cheap
- easy
- cold (so I could make it the night before and not worry about reheating)
I settled on fresh cranberry sauce. Brooklynne has the camera in Utah, I think, so you will have to settle for and approximation. This is about what the finished product looked like.
TWJ is not moving--at least not for now. I ran into some speedbumps moving my entries to WordPress, so I'll have to live with MT for a little longer. TWJ will still move eventually, but it will probably be more like October before that happens. Since I've wanted to start blogging again for a long while, I'm not going to wait for the switch.
Today's topic: ten thoughts for the day.
- Reading Rainbow aired it's last show. I always hated RR as a kid, but I felt something sad while I was listening to the NPR story on why the show was being cancelled. It turns out that a big reason was that the Dept. of Ed. put pressure on programers to focus on shows that actually teach fonics and other reading skills, and not on shows that teach the enjoyment of or reasons for reading. What a sadly practical world we live in.
- I am pulling for Greg Paulus at Syracuse. I know we (tarheels) are supposed to hate him, but I don't. I don't hate most Duke players once they're through, especially not the ones that seem to be generally disliked by their own fans. That's why I also pull for Jeff Capel at Oklahoma (besides that both have brothers who are part of the tarheel family).
- Small group has been particularly good for the past few weeks. Last night we discussed the balance between expecting in faith that our prayers can change the world around us, and knowing that our prayers are not always in line with God's will and should thus change us instead. Thoughts?
- Beau is as long and heavy at 4 months as Halleigh was at 8.
- We're headed to New Orleans to visit Ben Sept. 4-8. Here's the list of things I hope to do (in no particular order):
- Eat muffuletta.
- Eat beignets.
- Eat crawfish.
- Eat gumbo.
- Eat jambalaya.
- Eat etouffee.
- Eat fried shrimp po' boy.
- My favorite sports season is coming--the college football/baseball playoff season. The Dodgers are limping toward the playoffs and Carolina is looking good. I'm cautiously optimistic about the Heels because I'm hearing the right things from the coaches, and I think we're just enough of a darkhorse to play with a chip on our shoulder. The key to the season will be the O-line, which everyone says is a weakness. From what I can tell, the O-line is fine, but thin. If we avoid injuries, the young receivers will be good enough to keep defenses honest and Shaun Draughn should rush for 1,000 yards.
- I bought a jointer off Craig's List and I'm ready to start churning out some hurricane furniture.
- I have been running 4 miles 2 or 3 times per week this summer and I've brought my time down to a respectable 29 minutes. I plan to run in some road races this fall. Anyone up for training/running with me?
- I've joined an African American history working group based at UNC.
- The Mountain Cabin is coming along.

