Author: Jamie

Day 67: Let Them Eat Cake

Day 67: Let Them Eat Cake

Technically, Marie Antoinette said, “Let them eat brioche.” Which is NOT cake. It’s bread. But it’s really rich, delicious bread…

Now that you have your Ginger Crème Pâtissière chilling in the fridge, let’s make some brioche dough to put it in.

 

This is my version of brioche, inspired by a combination Rose Levy Beranbaum recipes, and Jeff Hertzberg and Xoë François’ techniques. I streamlined some of the time intensive aspects of traditional recipes, but kept the buttery and cake like taste. This is absolutely the EASIEST brioche you will make.

This makes four loaves of brioche, which can be frozen for later use, but you can easily halve or quarter the recipe for less. You’ll need one large plastic tupperware (about 8 quarts if you make the full recipe) with a lid.

Ingredients:

DAY67_Brioche Ingredients

  • 1 ½ cups water (room temperature)
  • 1 Tablespoon active yeast
  • 8 large eggs
  • 1/3 cup honey
  • 2 Tablespoons sugar
  • 1 ½ cups melted butter
  • 1 pound, 2 oz. pastry flour (3 ¼ cups)
  • 1 pound, 3 oz. all-purpose, unbleached flour (3 ¼ cups), not pictured
  • 1 Tablespoon salt

 

Combine the water, yeast, eggs, honey, sugar, and butter in the tupperware and let it sit for 15 minutes to activate the yeast.

Day67_Wet Ingredients

Then add the flour and salt

Day67_Mix in Dry

and mix with a wooden spoon until you get a wet dough that looks like this:

Day67_Mixed Dough

Seal the tupperware and let it sit on your counter at room temperature for two hours, until it doubles in size.

Day67_Seal and Rise

Throw it in the fridge until tomorrow…

…you are gonna like what’s coming.

 


 

*this dough must be chilled before using and is even better after a day or two of resting. The flavors develop quite nicely in the cold and the dough is much easier to work with.

Day 66: Ginger Crème Pâtissière

Day 66: Ginger Crème Pâtissière

When thought gets too heavy and lessons come too hard, I’m pretty sure French pastry is called for. Eee Gads, I’m sick of hearing myself think; it’s time to make busy the hands…


Crème Pâtissière is about the best custard I’ve ever had with fruit and as I have a ton of rhubarb in the freezer begging for invention, we’re going outside the customary creme box and adding GINGER. Lots and lots of spicy ginger.

 

Ingredients:

Day66_Ingredients

  • 2 cups milk
  • 1 Tablespoon freshly grated ginger
  • 1 teaspoon ground ginger
  • 2 Tablespoons Kirsch (cherry liquor)
  • ½ Tablespoon vanilla
  • 1 cup sugar
  • 5 egg yolks
  • ½ cup pastry flour
  • 1 Tablespoon butter

 

Begin by bringing your milk to a boil in a small sauce pan. As soon as you see the steam rising, throw the fresh and ground ginger into it and let it simmer gently, not allowing it to scorch.

Beat the egg yolks with the sugar on high until it turns soft yellow and thick, about 2-3 minutes.

Day66_1:CremeEggsandSugar

Beat the flour into the egg yolk, sugar mix.

Day66_2:AddFlour

In a SUPER slow drizzle, gradually add the boiling milk to the egg/sugar/flour mix – tempering the eggs so they don’t cook – like so…

Then transfer it into a medium sauce pan and whisk the Dickens out of it over a med-high heat. Once it comes to a boil, put the heat to low and continue whisking for 2-3 minutes. This is the forearm workout of the month, but don’t give up or your crème will curdle and burn.

Once it’s thick and shiny, remove it from the heat and add the butter and Kirsch.

Day66_3:Whisk

Put it in a container and cover the top of the crème with cling wrap so it doesn’t form a skin.

Day66_4:Cover

Throw it into the fridge for at least 4 hours, but preferably over night. It’ll keep for a week in the fridge, but can also be frozen after it chills.

Day66_5:Chill

Stay tuned, we’re gonna do something yummy….

 


 

Day 65: Born To Rock

Day 65: Born To Rock


I’ve never had many memories of my childhood. But as I grow in years and witness my children growing in theirs, some faded images of youth are making their way to my mind’s eye and heart’s ear.

One that recently came to me dates back to about age 12: I was visiting my step-grandmother in Arizona. I hadn’t met her very many times. She was a nice lady, but we had little understanding of one another. I remember getting sick. I remember a pain in my gut and a weakness in my head. I remember being afraid that I was ruining vacation.

This woman – her name is Ethel – she sat down in a rocking chair and told me to sit on her lap.

Now, I was 12 and I was no dainty 12. I was already aware of being the tallest girl in class who outweighed most of the boys and was extremely cognoscente of my mass.

She rocked me. It seemed like hours. She wasn’t afraid of my weight. She wasn’t afraid of projectile vomit. She wasn’t afraid of a ruined vacation. She rocked that bug right out of me.

 

You know, I don’t remember anything else about that “vacation” and though I’m sure there was a lot of money spent on souvenirs, I recall only that moment.


Fast forward to age 27: it was the morning of my wedding. I had spent the night at my folks’ place where we’d all head to the church together. As I came downstairs, groggy from last night’s rehearsal dinner and aiming for the coffee pot, my step-mom, Ethel’s daughter – her name is Jane – sat on the couch and told me to sit on her lap.

A MENTAL PICTURE:
Jane:
5’4”,
maybe 100 pounds
(if she’s carrying a bag of groceries),
legs criss-crossed
so she could put me:
5’9”,
at least 140
(without groceries),
in her lap,
wrap her arms around me,
and sway.

 

She rocked me. It seemed like hours. She wasn’t afraid of my weight. She wasn’t afraid of spilling coffee. She wasn’t afraid of getting to church 5 minutes late. She rocked those prayers right into me.


 

Fast forward to tonight: I heard my daughter crying. I couldn’t tell you about what. I still don’t know. But as I stood there with my mouth full of toothpaste, and the laundry timer going off, and the list of “to-do-before-bed” unsurmountable before me, I heard that sound we humans utter that says, “I hurt.” It wasn’t the “I-didn’t-get-my-way” whimper. It wasn’t the “please-someone-notice-me” wail. It was the sound that we make when we ache in deep places. And my daughter made that sound.

I picked that girl up – all 10 years of her – and leaned her into me, and I just let her cry. And I rocked her. It didn’t seem like hours. I wasn’t afraid of the weight. I wasn’t afraid of the snot and the drool. I wasn’t afraid of the hours I’d spend past bedtime getting things done. I rocked the sad right out of her.


And tomorrow?

Tomorrow she’ll wake up and maybe not remember anything else about this whole summer, save the feeling of being rocked when she didn’t even know she could be.

 

Day65_BornToRock


Day 64: Garage Band

Day 64: Garage Band


Absolutely THE DEEPEST RABBIT HOLE I have ever gotten sucked into.

So, garage band… I have NO IDEA what I’m doing but I had a BLAST and recorded one of my favorite songs with melody, octave melody, harmony, descant, and chords. I couldn’t figure out how to mute my vocal count in, I’m pretty sure my levels are all messed up, and it’s possible that recording with the mic that’s built into your computer is not the best option, BUT! I don’t care.

I had fun.

This would be what five of me would sound like in a room…..

… and I ALMOST played it in tune! (almost.)

 

The song is a Scottish Tune, “Da Slockit Light,” meaning “The Extinguished Light.” There are many tales of its origin meaning, but the one I like best is that of the composer, Fiddler Tom Anderson, walking along a high road and looking down upon his village in the Shetland Islands. The little town that had once bustled with community was quiet, as so many had moved away to cities and business. He searched and saw no lights in the homes of those he’d lived, loved, and grown with. The lights were extinguished. He was filled with sorrow for those who’d left and gratitude for having known them, and he played this…

 

 

Day64_Village At Night

 


P.S. My new definition of BRAVERY: being impervious to the imperfections that abound in our work, in hopes that by sharing them as “works in progress,” we remove the pretense that until flawless, we should hide or cower under the assumption that we’re not worth listening to. BAH! I’m over it. Cakes fall, butter melts, strings break, bread crust and vocal chords crack. As long as we’re eating and singing together, I think it all sounds pretty good.

P.S.S. Thank you, Jacob G., for arranging these wonderful lines in bass clef for the Treble impaired!!!


 

Day 63: Holding Water

Day 63: Holding Water


 

It can’t be done,

holding water.

 

it slips through your fingers.
it absorbs through the skin.

 

 

You can freeze it –

in time
in space

– but if you want to hold it,
you’ll have to freeze, too,

 

‘cause your pulse, the blood in your hand, the charge of your heart
would melt it, over time –

and not much time.

 

It leaks from our eyes,
from our brows,
from our chests,
and the backs of our knees.

In strings of silk glass flowing

we drip

and trace wet trails
along the curves of our skin.

it can’t be held in.

it can’t be held in.


 

said the water to the lovers:

In me you can bathe,
in me you can swim,
in me you can drown,
or barely surface skim.

I give you my deep,
I give you my wide,
and break your locked horizons,
and hold you in my tides,

but do not think I’ll be held still
for my nature is to move.
Though you may want eternal soak,
in rapids’ fall, I oft reprove.

Day63_HoldingWater


Day 62: The Things I Didn’t Say

Day 62: The Things I Didn’t Say

The things I didn’t say are a lot.

 

Things like, “Thank you.”

for bearing my weight.
for keeping step with my gait
when the stride was distant and wide.

for wanting more,

for waiting longer,

thank you.

Things like, “I see.”

how lovely you are.
how fast time moves
when it’s standing still
and we’re still standing

out there

in the dark

and together.

I see.

Things like, “I hope.”

That there will be a time
when all the words that are hidden
behind teeth and tissue
flesh and fear
pause and speculation

will be said.

will be spoken.

will be sung.

that embrace will come again.

that a smile can be spread without sorrow too soon to follow.

I hope.

 

These things I didn’t say
and so many millions more
that books are written on my heart
and locked by lips’ sealed door.

In every second fleeting
the courage in me builds
to speak the truths held back by fear
but in the air fulfilled.

 

Thank You.

I See You.

I Hope.

Day62_SealedVolumes


 

 

Day 61: Concrete Bloom

Day 61: Concrete Bloom

I did not plant this here.
I did not set the seed.
Though concrete inhospitable,
it grows, as you can see.

A thing that wants to rise
sets root down with intent;
though challenge irrefutable,
it’s seedling seeks ascent.

It even had to wait
through winter’s cold reprieve.
An annual. One year, they said:
one life, and then bereaved.

 

But do you see the color there?
And the bud, beside it, growing?

 

Does the grey and stone confine you?
Or fill you with gritty knowing,

 

We do not pick our soil,
we do not choose our sun,
but force forth green and vibrant hue
and yield our bloom to none.

Day61_Concrete Bloom


Day 60: The Who That You Are

Day 60: The Who That You Are

You can only be what you’re not for so long

before the who that you are

sneaks up on you

creeps up on you

and demands to be known by you

once again

and for good.

 

it’s a funny thing,

 

when people say, “you’ve changed.”

 

changed?
or changed back?

changed?
or revealed?

is growth good if you grow in “right” directions for wrong reasons?
is growth bad
if you grow mad
at someone else’s moral treason?

 

who is the who that you are?
are you true to that you?
am I?

am I?

Day 60_Change


Day 59: An Overactive Imagination

Day 59: An Overactive Imagination

Admittedly, there have been a few times in my life wherein something I watched was a catalyst for change in how I lived my life or thought about my own potential.

That is, after all, what makes storytelling so powerful, isn’t it?
How it motivates change?

For example:

After seeing Star Wars (in the theater, yes, I’m that old), I was quite certain that if I tried hard enough, I could use the force and move stuff. I think my caregivers were concerned by the length of time I spent starting at tables.

The Little Mermaid convinced me to tie my feet together while swimming so I could “mer-swim” more authentically. Yep. Nearly drowned.

When I saw Braveheart, I converted to Catholicism ‘cause I totally wanted to play bagpipes in the highlands, get secretly married in rebellion of English authority, and paint my face blue. (No kidding, I started embroidering handkerchiefs for my betrothed even though I wasn’t betrothed.)

It was an episode of BayWatch that inspired me to buy my first motorcycle (embarrassing, but true.)

It’s possible the Matrix inspired me to buy my second.

Well….

 

I just saw Wonder Woman.

I’m only saying, IF I happen to show up somewhere donning a leather girdle, quiver, shield, and forearm cuffs (with thumbies), please don’t judge. I’m working something out…

It’ll be over soon.

Day59_OveractiveImagination

 

#DisplacedAmazon
#ThemysciraOrBust


Day 58: Tent Blogging

Day 58: Tent Blogging

In the spirit of not Waiting for Ice Cream,
I’ve decided to camp. Today.

are you with me?

 

On your mark…

Day58_On Your Mark...

Get set…

Day58_Get Set...

Go!

Day58_Go!

 

I’ve built the fire:

Day58_Fire

can you hear it?

got a little easy reading…

Day58_Good Read

and before we zip up and hunker down for the night,

a lullaby,

or two…

 

It’s a new moon.
O, how the stars do shine, tonight…

Day58_Starry Night

goodnight.  good. night.

 


 

Lullaby One: This is a tune I first heard in the middle of a thunderstorm. There was a group of us stranded in a little school house, and fiddler Antti Järvelä played this to pass the time. It’s called “Ola A Anna.”

Lullaby Two: This is a minuet composed by Rasmus Storms and taught to me by Harald Hauggard.