Baby Shower Decor

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By Sarah Lagrotteria

This is not an Apples & Onions original (sigh) but I wanted to share with you the beautiful floral arrangements photographer Tory Williams made for her sister, Lancey’s baby shower at the end of September.

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Such a mix of textures and colors.  The arrangements look casual and handpicked in that way that only an artist’s handiwork can.  And they in no way scream baby shower, which I love, but are simply part of the happy whole.  See more pix, including the joyful tablesetting here.  I love her use of thistles.  And, as Tory explains on her inspiring blog, the pitchers that look exactly like heavy ironstone are from, where else? Ikea.

Make sure to check out all of Tory’s sites, she’s an incredible wedding photographer and portrait artist.

xoxosl

October Flower Centerpieces

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by Lydia Ellison

dahlias and roses

dahlias and roses

My best friend Mary is getting married on Halloween this year. Every time I tell someone this they scrunchy up their face and say “Costumes? Fake cobwebs? Why would you want that at your wedding?” Well I’m here to set the record straight, Halloween decor can be chic.

feathers and flowers

feathers and flowers

October flower arrangements don’t have to be all pumpkins, gourds and leaves (not that those are bad.) If you want to glam up your fall Holiday table or household decor check out these arrangements I made last year for a clients Halloween Dinner.

view from above

view from above

Happy October! Get decorating…

long & low=conversation friendly

long & low=conversation friendly

Say It Ain’t So….

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By Sarah Lagrotteria

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I know I’m not the only one in mourning today.

As melodramatic as it sounds, I can’t imagine my world without Gourmet Magazine. I loved Gourmet long before I loved to cook.  My grandmother, a wonderful cook,  tried not to throw away a single issue.  She stashed them everywhere–on a table in the guest bedroom, under her bed, in an antique firewood box next to the sofa.  I spent hours poring over the glossy photos and reading the recipes line by line, imagining that I knew from experience just what would happen if you didn’t let your meat rest after roasting and nodding knowingly as the recipe told me.  I wasn’t sold on cooking itself–my own mom didn’t seem to enjoy it and it struck me as a lot of work– but, Gourmet in hand, I was an armchair cook extraordinaire.

Fashion and lifestyle magazines are deemed aspirational, but Gourmet was that for me.  It’s what first prompted me to think of cooking as place– as where we come from and who we want to be, how we want to make people feel.  Gourmet is where I discovered that all those words I loved in books–words like warming and verdant and gooey— applied not only to radiators and smiles, grass and spring, mud and glue, but to spices and cheeses and caramels as well.   All those vibrant words and photos literally opened up another world to me, one in which oysters weren’t just cold and squishy but an actual bit of foggy San Francisco, where I had never been, and that dal, made a certain way, was home itself for someone not unlike me in her love of comfort food.  More importantly, Gourmet served as a guide that remained meaningful long after I’d warmed myself with enough good words, good voices and good recipes to start creating my own world, meal by meal.

It will be missed.

xoxosl

Bye Bye Summer

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By Sarah Lagrotteria

Lydia and I spent the weekend making “airplane food” -individually wrapped sandwiches for a client and her friends to take with them on their trip.  We made roast beef on brioche buns with horseradish sauce, balsamic red onions and arugula; curried chicken salad with green apples, raisins and almonds on walnut bread; roast turkey breast with lettuce, tomato and sprouts on whole wheat and fresh mozzarella, heirloom tomato and roasted eggplant with pesto on crusty rolls.  Don’t they look sweet all wrapped and ready to go?

Wrapped sandwiches

But the real story here is these tomatoes…the last of the beautiful summer heirlooms here in Southern California.

mozzarella, tomato, eggplant and pesto sandwiches

We’ve been using tomatoes of so many colors and flavors all summer long that I almost became immune to their gem-like hues.  I love the look of this luscious mozzarella against the thick slices of citrine, peridot and garnet.  So glad we snapped this picture as a last reminder of summer ’09.  It’s been a good one.

xoxosl

Watermelon Margaritas

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By Lydia Ellison

Visit this recipe and a few others at http://www.Fyndes.com/blog

Here is Southern California we still have ripe melons leftover from the summer’s bounty. Grab a seedless one and puree it up for a refreshing cocktail. These Margaritas are really, really delicious, they are gaining a following with my friends.

Watermelon Margaritas

Watermelon Margaritas

Watermelon Margaritas
Makes 1 Pitcher

6 cups of fresh watermelon, chopped (about 4 1/2 c pureed)
5 limes juiced (about 3/4 c)
1 1/4 cup premium white tequila
1/2 cup triple sec
2 tablespoons agave syrup to taste

Optional:

2 teaspoons Maldon salt

Kosher salt for the rims

Puree the watermelon cubes in a blender or food processor until smooth. Add the fresh lime juice, tequila, triple sec and a pinch of salt. Test for sweetness adding agave syrup if the watermelon juice is not sweet enough. Chill for at least one hour before serving. Mixture will separate so mix well before serving over ice in glasses with salted rims.

Tortoise General Store

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By Sarah Lagrotteria

Tucked into a little split-level bungalow on Abbot Kinney are all things wonderful Japanese kitchen-style.  Tortoise General Store is easy to miss, but keep an eye out as you stroll down the road for a window display of pottery and cookware that is both elegant and earthy.  Or, check their online store and blog.

My favorite Tortoise product is their Tenugui cloths.  These are essentially Japanese bandanas (you might recognize them as what Mr. Miyagi wrapped around his head), but the patterns are so much richer and the fabric so much softer to the touch.  I haven’t tried them as headwear but I do swear by them as napkins,  kitchen towels, and hostess gifts.

Here’s my current collection:

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See how soft the cotton looks after a few washes!  Like the butteriest of old cotton Ts.

And here’s TGS’ new fall collection:

tenugui1

Personally, I’m not so into the bunnies (maybe it’s just me, but red eyes scream rabies), but I love the big Chinese mum print in the second row! And are those figs at the top left?

Per the saleswoman’s advice, I cut the long cloths in half to make perfectly-sized napkins, leaving the edges to fray which is quite nice.  I like to mix the patterns and set them against solid plates for a happy, casual look.  When they get dirty just toss them in the wash.

xoxosl

Mexican Hot Chocolate Ice Cream

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By Sarah Lagrotteria

I made this for dessert Saturday night.

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Mexican hot chocolate ice cream with a  puddle of bittersweet chocolate sauce, toasted almonds and flakes of sea salt…barely sweet with a cinnamon kick…rich and velvety…crunchy… salty.

I couldn’t find the Ibarra chocolate called for in the recipe so I followed the alternative directions, using 8 ounces bittersweet chocolate, finely chopped, plus 1/2 cup granulated sugar.  I beat the sugar in with the egg yolks (beginning of step 2) and stirred the chocolate into the custard after all the liquid had been incorporated into the egg mixture (end of step 2).

The recipe is from NorCal chef Maria Helm Sinskey’s The Vineyard Kitchen.  Formerly the exec chef at SF’s PlumpJack Cafe, Sinskey is the wife of indie vintner Robert Sinskey and runs the vineyard’s culinary center.  I haven’t tried her other recipes but if this ice cream is any indication, oh my god…..

I added freshly whipped cream as well.  The coupes are from Anthropologie circa 2002.  Now they have these.

xoxosl

Perfect Party Favors

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By Sarah Lagrotteria

Aren’t these beautiful? My Aunt Nancy hosted a party for our out-of-town guests the night before our wedding at her beautiful apartment in downtown Chicago. She asked Angus and I to choose our favorite chocolate truffle flavors from Vosges Chocolates.  The two-truffle boxes were perfect party favors.

We chose the Gianduia truffle made of milk chocolate and hazelnut praline, my all-time fave flavor combo for anything sweet…

Gianduia truffle

and Jazz, a dark chocolate truffle with ground chicory coffee.

Jazz truffle

So so good.

The best part?  Nancy had the Vosges signature purple boxes personalized with a line from the Philip Larkin poem that was being read at our ceremony the next day.

We keep the remaining boxes–empty since I finished off the truffles on the honeymoon– in a little compote in our kitchen cupboard.  Such a great reminder of a wonderful night!

All photos but the last (clearly) courtesy of vosgeschocolates.com.

xoxosl

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