Tuesday, October 14, 2014

Sharlotka







 FALL

Yowza, where did the summer go? We had such a mild summer this year compared to the last few years that were unbearably hot for weeks on end. This year summer in Colorado was warm, beautiful and oh so lovely, and now fall is here with old man winter fast approaching.
But I will strive to practice the be present philosophy of yoga. Rather than allow my mind to dwell on thoughts of the coming snow, ice and sub-zero temperatures, I will instead try to be in the moment of each and every glorious day the fall season has to offer.
Gone for now are the juicy peaches from the Western Slope, the addictive sweet corn from Olathe, Colorado, sun ripened tomatoes, and lazy summer evenings under warm, starry skies.  These fleeting pleasures are now replaced by one of  the many delicious gifts that comes with fall, apples. Apples, in their vast array of flavors and varieties become the versatile fruit that help ease our sense of loss for a summer now past.
Colorado is not typically thought of as an apple producing state as is New York or Washington, so it may come as a surprise to many that Colorado's climate is actually ideal for growing apples.
Apple trees need a combination of hot and cold weather to produce fruit, making them a natural for our state. Most apple trees like to have a minimum of 600 hours below 40 degrees during the winter to encourage them to set fruit. Then they need at least five or six hours of full sun a day once they've blossomed.
Apple trees also blossom later than some other types of fruit trees making them more likely to avoid an April killing frost. Add to that fact is that many types of apple trees are hardy to about 8,000 feet or growing zone 4 therefore most Coloradans have the perfect prescription for a bountiful apple harvest. There are several varieties that do very well, but some should be avoided as their maturity date is later and you risk loosing your crop to an early freeze. The varieties that do well in Colorado are: Red and Yellow Delicious, Mackintosh, Gala, Honey-Crisp, Cortland, Granny Smith, and Jonathan to name a few.
There are plenty of orchards in Colorado where you can pick your own apples and even press your own cider. A few top spots are YaYa Farm and Orchard, 6419 Ute Highway in Longmont. Camelot Farms, 15911 Black Bridge Road, Paonia. Happy Apple Farm, 1190 1st Street, Penrose. Delicious Orchards, 39126 Highway 133, Hotchkiss. And Apple Valley Orchard,448 K Street,
Penrose.



You'll find more than just apples at most orchards, most have country stores selling everything from fresh pressed cider to pies, berries and other seasonal treats.




So what to do with all these apples?  How about a yummy Apple Sharlotka? Apple Sharla what??  Shar-lot-ka, it's a Russian apple cake, quick, easy and delicious. Top a slice with vanilla ice cream and you have yourself a seriously delicious dessert. A girl friend gave me a sack of fresh picked apples and I made a Sharlotka this last Sunday. It was a hit, even Bossy liked it. Below is a link to the recipe from Chef Matt Danko from Cleveland's Trentina Restaurant as published in this months issue of Food and Wine.


Copy and paste the link below to your browser for a printable PDF recipe for Apple Sharlotka

https://db.tt/vtShPXG4

Thank you for reading, we hope you enjoy the changing seasons as much as we do along with all of the wonderful comfort foods that come with the cooler temperatures!

And I hope you keep me in mind when you're ready to think about selling your home or buying a new one. It would be a privilege to be your Realtor of Choice.

Happy Eating!

Becky Goldsmith

Real Estate
720-979-3184
Becky@beckygoldsmith.com





Monday, June 23, 2014

Incredible, Edible, Spain!





Glorious.

The food, the wine, the people, the city. I left my heart in Barcelona. Many of you know that Bossy and I recently returned from a trip to Barcelona, Spain. We posted pictures of our meals and excursions on Facebook, and from the comments we received it must have seemed as though all we ate was pork, pork, and more pork. Indeed, that swine would be the legendary Jamon de Iberico, and we made it our mission to indulge in this extraordinary meat each and every day.  Iberico is one of the most famous Spanish delicacies and is as rare as it is expensive due to the lengthy and costly production process. I will write more about the pata negra in a later blog.





We dined on and devoured all of the deliciousness that Barcelona has to offer, and folks, that is a considerable amount of deliciousness!

Spain has become the destination for foodies from around globe. Many maintain  that Spain has surpassed France as the undisputed leader in culinary excellence. You'll get no argument from me. From the culinary genius of the Adria` brothers, whose food challenge the senses, to the convivial tapas bars tucked into crowded spaces off the beaten path; food, wine, beer, friends, family, and the exquisite simplicity that make up the finest pleasures in life are the rule in this most charming city; not the exception.

Barcelona is a thriving, vibrant, multi layered city that considers itself independent from the rest of Spain. It is the capital city of the autonomous community of Catalonia and the second largest city in the country. Catalan is the official language not Spanish, and signs of the economic and political struggles that plague the rest of the country seem not to exist here. A new King? Meh, who cares.

 Trendy restaurants and bars are full, expensive hotels are booked and the wildly popular architect Antoni Gaudi tourist sites typically have long waiting lines. It's a young, cosmopolitan city with a respected University, adventurous galleries, numerous museums and cutting edge stores.  Barcelona is a transport hub with the Port of Barcelona being one of Europe's principle seaports and busiest European passenger port. That said, we ate as much seafood as was humanly possible but never had enough.

There is so much to share about our nine incredible days in Barcelona it's difficult to know where to begin. But I'll start by sharing two of our favorite dishes that we have reproduced here at home with great success. Both of these are perfect for summer and ridiculously easy to prepare. Simplicity truly is best, and no place proves this concept more deliciously than Spain.

At most every meal through out the city you'll be offered Catalan tomato bread. It varies slightly in execution from one restaurant to the next but the basic concept is the same. Crusty sliced bread, grilled or toasted, rubbed with garlic, then rubbed with a fresh tomato that has been cut in half, then sprinkled with sea salt and drizzled with olive oil. So simple yet so delicious. With summer tomatoes coming into season you have to give this a try. It's important to note, use really good crusty bread (Denver Bread makes an amazing boule), vine ripe tomatoes, and a high quality olive oil. Don't be stingy with the olive oil, it makes all the difference! This is great on it's own or you can top with cured meats, anchovies, cheese or olives.







The second dish I would like to share with you is a roasted vegetable salad called Escalivada. Vegetables are plentiful, gorgeous and a huge part of the Spanish diet. Escalivada is a roasted vegetable salad, traditionally the vegetables were roasted over coals which gives them a slightly smokey flavor, but now most restaurants roast the vegetables in a hot oven. The salad is served at room temperature allowing for maximum flavor. Roasted red peppers, eggplant, onions and tomatoes, doesn't sound very exciting but when done right it's incredible.






Copy and paste the link below in your browser for a downloadable PDF recipe for Escalivada

https://db.tt/7r60H8Fr



Thank you for taking the time to read our blog, Bossy and I hope you'll try these simple pleasures that we found so delicious while in Spain. There is more to come!!




And if I can ever be of service to your or your friends and family I hope you will keep me in mind should a Real Estate question or need arise. 

Real Estate

Becky Goldsmith
GRI, CRS, CNE
720-979-3184
Becky@beckygoldsmith.com







Friday, February 28, 2014

Crack Biscuits






Crack biscuits. That's what bossy chef calls them. They're so darn good they're as addictive as crack cocaine.

I've tried hundreds of biscuit recipes, always looking for a lighter, more flaky and flavorful version like the ones my grandmother used to make. My grandmother Johnnie Reagan, was the ultimate biscuit maker. She and my grandfather John, lived on a 1200 acre farm in rural New Mexico, not far from the Texas panhandle. As both their names were a version of 'John' my grandfather renamed my grandmother 'Bill' so no one would be confused as to who was who.

 When my brother and sister and I were young we had the good fortune to spend several summers on the farm. We learned to ride horses, take care of chickens, milk a cow, slop the hogs, and many other daily chores that keep a farm running. We also gained about 5-10 pounds each during those New Mexico summers. It wasn't for lack of activity, because we were running around like wild Indians from sun up to sun down. A 1200 acre farm is a great place for kids to run amok.

Our summer weight gain occurred because of Grandma Bills' abundant and delicious southern cooking. Breakfast was a hearty meal, usually bacon or ham, (from hogs raised on their farm), eggs, (from their chickens of course), and either pancakes or biscuits, usually biscuits because they were fast and easy. We drank milk at each meal which came from their dairy cows. Grandmother would skim the fresh milk, and make butter with the cream. Some of the cream she would set aside and allow it to sour, she called it 'clabbered' milk. That's what she used in her biscuits. Most biscuit recipes today call for buttermilk,  you can't buy clabbered milk that I know of and unless you have a dairy cow you can't make it at home because all of our heavy cream is pasturized.

 She made biscuits so often, never using a recipe, just by the sight and feel of the dough. Once when I was about 10, I asked her to teach me how to make them. I really wanted to learn, as I loved being in the kitchen even back then. But she was all business, cooking was just one more chore on a very long list that had to be done each day. She quickly became frustrated with my ineptitude and shooed me away, afraid that I had ruined the dough because it looked too dry. I'm pretty sure she fixed it though, and the biscuits turned out fine, but she wasn't about to have me waste a whole batch of biscuit dough just so I could play. She had raised three daughters during the great depression and wastefulness of any kind was never tolerated.

Grandma Bill set the bar pretty high when it came to biscuits, and as I mentioned earlier I've tried many recipes. Some with excellent results and some were dismal failures. I've learned a few basic techniques that apply for making a good biscuit with any recipe. In no particular order:
1. Your butter or lard has to be very cold. And it doesn't hurt if your flour and other ingredients are cold too.
2. The dough should be JUST dry enough to handle, a little sticky is good
3. Do not over work the dough, the more gentle you are the more tender your biscuits will be.
4. For proper southern biscuits purists use soft red winter wheat flour, low in protein and gluten – traditionally White Lily brand or Southern Biscuit brand. These can be found and ordered on the internet. I've used them and they do make great biscuits.


Bill, aka Grandma Johnnie  has been gone for quite some time now, but the memory of those incredible meals on the farm will never fade. And since I never learned how she made her biscuits my quest to find a biscuit that equals hers continues. The recipe I'm sharing with you today comes pretty darn close. Click on the link below for a printable pdf copy of 'Crack Biscuits' from Max and Eli Sussman from their book 'This is a Cookbook Recipes for Real Life'. (Jack added the 'Crack' because they're that good!)







Thanks so much for reading our blog, we hope you try these tasty little buttery orbs of deliciousness soon, I"m sure you'll enjoy them as much as we do.


Remember I am always here for your Real Estate questions and needs. Financing has changed dramatically since the first of the year, if you would like information as to what a buyer's qualifications and requirements are today don't hesitate to contact me as the lending climate has become one of the great challenges in our industry today.


Uniquely Different.....Simply Better!!


Becky Goldsmith
720-979-3184
Becky@beckygoldsmith.com