Dear Readers,
I did it! On January 5th I moved from my mother’s house in Kensington, California to Johnny’s rental house in San Leandro. I have been here the better part of a month. I have moved the bedroom furniture about fourteen times (hope I’m done now), mostly seeking places for shoes and a filing cabinet. My stereo isn’t hooked up yet (Johnny’s is) and my backup hard drive has gone missing. Fiona the cat has run away and returned twice: now I only let her out in the afternoon before she has been fed.
After three and a half weeks, the bedroom is close to organized. The kitchen and breakfast nook are further behind and there are still things in boxes and plenty of things in the garage and garden shed. The hold-up in the kitchen is storage space: I need a tall shallow shelf for my spices and I need a china cabinet or hutch of some sort: some of my china is sitting on a former bookshelf and another bookshelf has been pressed into service for cookbooks and dry goods, but my best china remains in boxes in Kensington along with a mixer, a blender and other things I have not been able to incorporate into my new kitchen.
Nevertheless I hit the ground cooking. I think the first meal I cooked for us here was a dish of broccoli-feta pasta. We have also had Thai green curry, chicken sausages and baked potatoes, plus Johnny’s special scrambled eggs with vegetables, which he once delivered to me in bed! At the end of the first week I made Johnny his favorite red beans and rice from his friend Mike Goodwin’s cookbook, Totally Hot. And so began a tradition of making a legume-based soup or stew every week: we can eat it for a few days and I can freeze any that we don’t eat. I also make other soups, including the butternut squash version of this soup.
Susan of Susan Eats London kindly sent me a box of ingredients, featuring lentils de Puy, the small green organically grown French lentils. First I tried them mixed with red lentils in a Green’s recipe for a curried soup which calls for yellow split peas — I had had this soup twice at a Chanukah party: it was memorable and I had been meaning to make it. The verdict: it was better made with yellow split peas and I need to replenish some of my Indian spices, including cardamom.
Then I solicited recipes on Facebook, confessing that, to me, lentils taste like dirt. I received a lot of the usual suggestions: cook them with potatoes, carrots and celery, etc. Some people mentioned lemon. Then I went to Smitten Kitchen, one of my favorite food blogs, and found a lentil and sausage and chard combination. Hmm.
I followed the recipe loosely, using two cups of lentils instead of one and incorporating a quart jar of stewed Sun Gold tomatoes from my Berkeley Farmers’ Market pal, Tom Gattonelli. I used some Aidell’s sun-dried tomato chicken sausages and ladled each serving over leaves of wild arugula. I did enjoy the soup: the special ingredients ameliorated the dirt flavor and the soup got better and better as it sat. I did not, however, make Deb’s garlic oil garnish.
The star of the kitchen is a butcher block cart: I traded yet another bookcase to my friend Elaine for it and I use it everyday. Johnny likes to sit at it and eat, but I like to use it to chop and mince and slice. I have made two shelves below the cutting board into a baking pantry, containing my rolled oats, unbleached flour, cornmeal, sugars, baking soda, baking powder, nuts, rice, chocolate and dried fruit. The rolling pin and measuring spoons hang on small hooks and the biscuit cutters, pastry cutter and dry measuring cups fill the small drawer.
Earlier this week I visited Thrift Town, a short walk from the house and scored copper-plated storage canisters and a glass casserole dish without a lid. By fitting a pie plate over the top I had what I needed to cook baked beans, the legume recipe of the week, pinto beans layered with chopped onions and minced bacon, mustard sauce and molasses. Johnny loved them and I said, “They are really simple. Even Johnny could make them.” I told him he had done the hard work of chopping the onions and preparing the bacon, that the oven did most of the rest. Just like a New England housewife of old I used the slow oven to make an accompanying Indian pudding.
Next up? I have potato water sitting in the fridge crying for me to make a loaf of bread — did you know that the cooking water from potatoes is a terrific bread ingredient? — and I have ripe Meyer lemons asking to be turned into a lemon sponge pie. Plus, the sour half and half has accumulated again. From this we make waffles, biscuits, cornbread and muffins: because I got a box of organic pumpkin puree from Grocery Outlet this week we’ll probably have pumpkin-walnut bread or muffins.
Meanwhile, I commute to Berkeley up to six days a week to sing at the BART stations and farmers’ market, do odd jobs for my friend Elaine, try to keep the cat happy and settle into my new cozy life with Johnny (which includes band rehearsals on weekends). San Leandro is sunnier than my Kensington yards so once I have pickaxed the hard pan in the backyard I will get some vegetables going — legumes, of course, so that their roots break up the clumped soil: I’m hoping for sugar snap peas and bush beans, perhaps red or white clover for the bees, too. And Elaine, who giveth all good things, has provided some iris and muscari bulbs so I’ll have to see if I can get them in the ground somewhere before I write the next post.
Congrats on the move!
Thank you. YC.
It sounds like a busy life! I enjoy puy lentils with grilled fish, or duck or as a substitute for meat in lasagne or cottage pie
And a garden. … I’ll enjoy reading your progress and wish green thoughts for you
if you are looking for puy lentil suggestions – there are some here, http://promenadeplantings.com/2012/02/28/my-flexible-friends-cooking-with-lentils/ – and you can always add chopped bacon/ lardons!
Good, Claire — next time some fall into my lap or my pantry I’ll look up your link. The garden is being helped by rain this morning: we are so grateful to have it just after drought has been declared here. When it is dry and I have time I go out and pickax weeds, trying to get to their taproots — the yard has been neglected for years, but should have fertile and mineral-rich clay soil when I have lightened it with compost.
I’m so happy for you that you’ve successfully moved and are clearly so much happier! Certainly all the cooking and baking is evidence of that, as is your joy in “nesting”. 🙂 One of my favorite tips here is using potato water for bread…what a great idea. And those copper canisters are gorgeous. They really are a score. Wishing you continued fun and joy in your new life, and good luck with the garden, too.
Thank you, Betsy. It is good to be here in our own house. It is good to have a kitchen to cook in. Even stocking the pantry each week is fun. The yard needs work, but i can take my time about doing it — we are going to have water rationing this year in California. Meanwhile my mint is flourishing from the abundant sun here and today’s rain means I don’t have to water it.
You certainly are keeping busy. I lived in San Leandro for 15 years and loved the town. The climate was great and my best gardens were there. It seemed that no matter how much I added, the ground ate compost, rough sand, and mulch.
I loved the photos.
Thank you, Teri. They have master gardeners at our farmers’ market here and as soon as I have a free Saturday (next month?) I will go have a chat with them. I am grateful to be able to play guitar again and earn some money and am settling into our new home.
So very beautiful Sharyn, to hear about your move for love and it’s practical implications…you are a lucky woman and deserve all of the joy…I think about you every day as I blend my Kale drink…few inspire me but you do…love to you and Johnny…
Thank you, John. What do you put in your daily kale drink? I’m just trying to lead a pleasant, wholesome, simple life while allowing time for artistic pursuits — quite the juggling act sometimes, but because of my reliance on walking and public transit my life goes at a slower pace than many.
Sounds like you’ve got a lovely arrangement with Johnny, even with it’s challenges. I’m sure you’ll find new space for all your treasured ingredients and such. Finding space for shoes is always a problem, at least for me ;)!
I’ve not thought of lentils tasting like dirt before.
Hi Eva. The hardest thing for me is surviving full-band rehearsals with drumming, especially when they occur at night when I am disinclined to leave the house — there is nowhere close to go to hang out. I am on the track of a borrowed china cabinet, so I may be able to increase my storage soon. I’m sure lentils don’t taste like dirt to most people: I’ve heard cilantro tastes like soap to some people (I love cilantro): apparently, it is a genetic variation that some have. In the main, Johnny and I are quite happy in our casita.
Glad the move went well! Sounds like you’ve settled in very well! Thanks for the tip about potato water in bread – I’ll remember that!
Hi Charles. Yes, potato water is a good thing not to waste. It doesn’t keep that long though — you want to use it in a few days.
This is very exciting news, Sharyn. I’m very happy that you are obviously very much at home! Your enthusiasm comes through and it’s good to hear about all the cooking–and very clever kitchen organization! I can only imagine how much Johnny is enjoying your amazing recipes on a fully time basis! Who wouldn’t? 🙂
Hi Debra. Yes, Johnny does eat well and is very much appreciative of my efforts. He used to live mainly on frozen dinners and breakfasts. Now he gets homemade soups, bread, casseroles, baked French toast…
Just catching up. Congrats on your move and new life.
Thanks for stopping by, Linda. And congratulations on your new book.
Congratulations sharyn on your new home! I’m thrilled for you! We just moved before christmas and I’ve rearranged rhe kitchen 3 times so far! We managed to piece together our furniture from charity shops too which I love! I’ve never heard of using potato water in bread. If you have a recipe please pass it my way 🙂 thanks! X
Hi Lauren. Isn’t it nice not to be moving anymore? I just use potato water for the water or other liquid in any bread recipe — it’s particularly nice in cinnamon buns or other white bread.