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Category Archives: Cajun Food

Hook and Reel Visit

17 Thursday Oct 2019

Posted by Bob and Robin in 4-Stars, Blue Crab, Cajun Food, Catfish, Dinner at Hook & Reel, Hard To Find Foods, Hook & Reel, Photos, Photos By: Bob Young, Po-Boy, What's For Dinner?

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Really a good visit to Hook & Reel – Cajun Seafood and Bar, 1510 N Eagle Rd, Meridian, Idaho 83642. Mon – Thu 11AM – 10PM, Fri – Sat 11AM – 11PM, Sun 11AM – 10PM. (208) 288-4488. They do not take reservations. Robin had a Hook Punch, (Coconut Rum, Blueberry Liqueur, Pineapple Juice, Sweet & Sour Mix) and I had a Lynchburg Arnold Palmer (Bourbon, Honey Bourbon, Iced Tea, Lemonade, Lemon Slices). Both were delicious! Happy Hour Monday – Friday from 2pm – 5pm with special drinks a food bites. The ambiance is good. Not loud music, but I can see where it could get loud. Open space and ample seating. Overall an easy 4+-Star restaurant. We will go back. The variety and choices of seafood is very large. Servings a ample. Good place to go.

Front Entrance faces Fairview Ave.

Robin and the dining area. That’s a Hook Punch by Robin.

Crab Salad that was good. It could have had a little more crab, though. We shared this.

Catfish and Sweet Potato Fries. Catfish was really good.

Oyster Po-Boy that had a super oyster flavor. I did like this!

Our Wait Person, Zabrielle, was very good. Polite and knowledgeable. This was a good visit and I am glad we went. I would call it a moderately priced establishment, but some items are spendy. Blue Crab – yes they have Blue Crab – (in season) are about $6.00 each. Full lobster $25.00. Fried Flounder Basket $12.00, Fried Catfish Basket $12.00. These are appropriate prices.

Menu Sample

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Super Bowl Weekend

08 Monday Feb 2016

Posted by Bob and Robin in Appetizers, Cajun Food, Captain's Shack, Cast Iron, Chicken Wings, Classic Cuisines, Classis Sauces, Cooking Styles, Crab Cakes, Crayfish, Creole Food, Dessert, Dinner For Robin, Housemade Sauces, Photos By: Bob Young, Recipe: Bob and Robin Young, Recipes, Recipes - Breakfast, Recipes - Seafood, Salads, Shrimp, Special Dinners, Tailgate At The Captains Shack, Tailgate Party, What's For Dinner?

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Tags

beet panna cotta, Cajun recipes, Crayfish, crayfish pie


01Feb2015_1c_Captains-Shack-SuperBowlFare_SteamedShrimp-TartarSauceActually, a weekend full of some really fun food. And some I had never made – Crayfish Pie. Made them in individual servings using a cupcake pan. Worked well. And they were good! The Crayfish Pie is a traditional New Orleans dish.Here is my recipe for Crayfish Pie. Enjoy!
And really, I never expected the Denver Broncos to pull this one off. But happy they did. 24 – 10 over the Carolina Panthers. But Carolina is to be congratulated on a superb season – 17-2! Wow!
But now, for the food. We had a great time preparing and securing all of this. Took probably two days and that is where the fun is – prepping. A lot of food for two of us – I really expected more, but that didn’t happen. Anyway, look at what we made and devoured! Left-Click any of these photos to see enlarged. Cheers!

We went to Powell's Sweet Shop and got some candy hearts and gilato. Look at the lid of the candy box on the copunter.

We went to Powell’s Sweet Shop and got some candy hearts and gilato. Look at the lid of the candy box on the counter.

Italian Peppers, Meatballs and Pasta. Thanks Paul!

Italian Peppers, Meatballs and Pasta. Thanks Paul!

Blue Crab Cakes

Blue Crab Cakes

Beet Panna Cotta. Delicious!!

Beet Panna Cotta. Delicious!! Beet Panna Cotta Recipe

Robin making 7 Layer Mexican Dip

Robin making 7 Layer Mexican Dip

7 Layer Mexican Dip

7 Layer Mexican Dip

Purging crayfish!

Purging crayfish!

Crayfish cooking

Crayfish cooking

Preparing the filling for the Crayfish Pie.

Preparing the filling for the Crayfish Pie.

Individual Crayfish Pies using a muffin tin.

Individual Crayfish Pies using a muffin tin.

Individual Crayfish Pie

Individual Crayfish Pie

Shrimp, Chicken Wings, Dips and Sauces. Plenty of Tailgate Food!

Shrimp, Chicken Wings, Dips and Sauces. Plenty of Tailgate Food!

Lots of food all weekend and generally all homemade. Waiting sorta of patiently for the BSU Broncos football season to start next Fall. Seems like it is so far away! We also made two salads – Fennel and Celery with Olive Oil and Balsamic Dressing and Sliced Cucumbers with a Balsamic Dressing. Delicious!

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The Difference Between Cajun and Creole Cuisines

31 Saturday Jan 2015

Posted by Bob and Robin in Cajun Food, Classic Cuisines, Cooking Styles, Creole Food, Cultural Differences, History of Food, Holiday Gatherings, Interesting Information, Main Dish, Mardi Gras, Oysters, Party Time, Seafood, Shell Fish, Shrimp, What's For Dinner?

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cajun, Cajun cuisine, creole, Creole cuisine, Mardi Gras


Mardi Gras Have FunOK. The McCall (ID) Winter Carnival Parade opened up the Mardi Gras season today. And you are Cajun if you can answer this question, “Who’s Your Mama, Are You Catholic, and Can You Make A Roux?” You might enjoy Mardi Gras then. But what are Creole? What is Creole cuisine? What is the difference between Cajun and Creole foods? Here is some really good information on these two cuisines. Enjoy!

Difference Between Creole and Cajun Cooking Styles

From the website http://southernfood.about.com/od/cajuncuisine/a/Creole-And-Cajun-Cookery.htm, “The similarities between Creole and Cajun cuisines are due to the French heritage of both cultures, and the new ingredients to which French cooking techniques were applied by Creoles and by Cajuns. Both types of cooking have culinary roots in France, with a nod to Spain, Africa, and Native America, and to a lesser degree to the West Indies, Germany, Ireland, and Italy. Both cultures take their food very seriously, and love to cook, eat, and entertain.
It is said that a Creole feeds one family with three chickens and a Cajun feeds three families with one chicken. Another major difference between Creole and Cajun food is in the type of roux used as the base of sauces, stews, soups, and other savory dishes. Creole roux is made from butter and flour (as in France), while Cajun roux is made from lard or oil and flour. This is partly due to the scarcity of dairy products in some areas of Acadiana (Acadia + Louisiana) when Cajun cuisine was being developed. Gumbo is perhaps the signature dish of both cuisines. Creole gumbo has a tomato base and is more of a soup, while Cajun gumbo has a roux base and is more of a stew.
Mardi Gras Cajun HouseThe cultural difference between the two methods of cooking lies in the fact that Creoles had access to local markets, and servants to cook their food while Cajuns lived mostly off the land, were subject to the elements of the seasons, and generally cooked meals in one large pot.
Cooking Style. Creole cooking is city cooking: refined, delicate and luxurious, developed and originally prepared by servants. There is greater emphasis on cream, butter, seafood (though not shellfish), tomatoes, herbs, and garlic, and less use of cayenne pepper and file powder than in Cajun cooking, resulting in rich sauces, elegant pureed bisques, and time-intensive soups, brunch dishes, and desserts.
Cajun Country is the southwest section of Louisiana, unique unto itself. Acadiana is an area comprising twenty-two parishes (counties) in Southwest Louisiana. This area is predominately populated by Cajun people who are, technically, descendents of the Acadians expelled from Acadia, now known as Nova Scotia, in 1755. While their new home in Acadiana was familiar in terms of being an agrarian setting already populated by Catholic, French-speaking people, the Cajuns had to adjust to the unknown terrain of swamps, bayous, and prairies that presented some exotic forms of meat, game, fish, produce, and grains.
Mardi Gras Cajun Food RouxIngredients. The Cajuns applied their French cooking techniques to these new ingredients, with a result that is recognized and respected as some of the best regional cooking in America, as well as one of the world’s most unique cuisines. There are versions of Cajun dishes on restaurant menus across the Country, from upscale to hip and trendy to fast food establishments. Unfortunately, many of these restaurants misrepresent Cajun food by using their standard menu items and carelessly over-spicing them, making the food unbearably hot, then calling it “Cajun.”
Seasonings. Cajun food and culture has little to do with the mass media hype of the past twenty years that presents Cajun cookery as fiery hot, and Cajun people as hot pepper eating, beer swilling caricatures of themselves. Pepper and spices are merely one element of Cajun cookery, and not the most important one at that.
Cooking Style. Cajuns in Southwest Louisiana have steadfastly adhered to the preservation of their habits, traditions, and beliefs in terms of lifestyle, language and cooking. They became noticed by society during the oil boom in the mid-1900s, which brought many outlanders (non-Cajuns) into the area. These new residents began to discover the food-oriented, talented Cajun cooks whose lives and socializing revolve, to a large extent, around the preparation, sharing, and enjoyment of food. The word began to spread.”

And from http://www.louisianatravel.com/articles/cajun-vs-creole-food-what-difference, ” So if you’re versed on Louisiana history and culture, then all you really need to know is that Creole cuisine uses tomatoes and proper Cajun food does not. You can stop reading now. That’s how you tell a Cajun vs. Creole gumbo or jambalaya. You’re welcome (to be fair, some Cajun food, such as a sauce piquant, does include tomatoes as a key ingredient). However, if you’d like to know more, please continue reading so that you can learn why the terms “Cajun” and “Creole” that have become used so loosely and interchangeably when describing Louisiana food, are not at all the same.
Mardi Gras PartyA vastly simplified way to describe the two cuisines is to deem Creole cuisine as “city food” while Cajun cuisine is often referred to as “country food.” While many of the ingredients in Cajun and Creole dishes are similar, the real difference between the two styles is the people behind these famous cuisines. They say in order to really know someone, meet their family. The same goes for food. In Louisiana, the best place to find authentic Cajun and Creole cooking is in homes across the state, which is what makes the food so special. Many of Louisiana’s most talented chefs learned their trade from their parents or grandparents. Cajun and Creole are two distinct cultures, and while over the years they continue to blend, there is still a vast distinction in Louisiana, and both have their own unique stories… The word “Cajun” originates from the term “les Acadians,” which was used to describe French colonists who settled in the Acadia region of Canada which consisted of present-day New Brunswick, Prince Edward Island and Nova Scotia. With the British Conquest of Acadia in the early 1700s, the Acadians were forcibly removed from their home in what become known as Le Grand Derangement, or the Great Upheaval. Many Acadians eventually settled in the swampy region of Louisiana that is today known as Acadiana.
Actually, four regions of south Louisiana were settled by the Cajuns, each with different resources and influences. Those distinct areas are the levees and bayous (Lafourche and Teche), prairies (Attakapas Indian land), swamplands (Atchafalaya Basin), and coastal marshes (New Orleans area and Houma)… The term “Creole” describes the population of people who were born to settlers in French colonial Louisiana, specifically in New Orleans. In the 18th century Creoles consisted of the descendants of the French and Spanish upper class that ruled the city. Over the years the term Creole grew to include native-born slaves of African descent as well as free people of color. Typically, the term “French Creole” described someone of European ancestry born in the colony and the term “Louisiana Creole” described someone of mixed racial ancestry. ”

There is a lot more information at the links that I have supplied, including some recipes from both cuisines. Enjoy the food and the information. Happy Mardi Gras!

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Mirepoix. What is it?

02 Thursday Oct 2014

Posted by Bob and Robin in Cajun Food, Classic Cuisines, Classic Herb Blends, Classic Sauces, Cooking Styles, Ethnic Foods, French Foods, German Food, Italian Food, Mirepoix, Polish Food, Puerto Rican Food, Spanish Food, Traditional Food, What's For Dinner?

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Tags

Cajun trinity, mirepoix, soffritto, sofrito, suppengrun


Robin-Bob-In-Kitchen_Looking-RightWell, the simple answer is a combination of onions, celery, either the common pascal celery or celeriac and carrots. Mirepoix is a flavor base used widely in stocks, soups, stews and sauces. These ingredients are also known as aromatics. Traditionally, the ratio of these ingredients is 2-1-1, that is, 2 parts onion, 1 part celery and 1 part carrot. And if you want a white stock, or fond blanc, substitute parsnips for the carrots to maintain the pale color. There. I have added one variation. There are many and we will get to that in time.
OK. So where did this come from? Wikipedia says that,

Though the cooking technique is probably older, the term mirepoix dates from the 18th century and derives, as do many other appellations in French cuisine, from the aristocratic employer of the cook credited with establishing and stabilizing it: in this case, Charles-Pierre-Gaston François de Lévis, duc de Lévis-Mirepoix (1699–1757), French field marshal and ambassador and a member of the noble family of Lévis, lords of Mirepoix in Languedoc since the 11th century. According to Pierre Larousse (quoted in the Oxford Companion to Food), the unfortunate Duke of Mirepoix was “an incompetent and mediocre individual. . . who owed his vast fortune to the affection Louis XV felt toward his wife and who had but one claim to fame: he gave his name to a sauce made of all kinds of meat and a variety of seasonings”: The term is not encountered regularly in French culinary texts until the 19th century, so it is difficult to know what a dish à la mirepoix was like in 18th-century France. Beauvilliers, for instance, in 1814, gives a short recipe for a Sauce à la Mirepoix which is a buttery, wine-laced stock garnished with an aromatic mixture of carrots, onions, and a bouquet garni. Carême, in the 1830s, gives a similar recipe, calling it simply Mire-poix; and, by the mid-19th century, Gouffé refers to a mirepoix as “a term in use for such a long time that I do not hesitate to use it here”. His mirepoix is listed among essences and, indeed, is a meaty concoction (laced with two bottles of Madeira!), which, like all other essences, was used to enrich many a classic sauce. By the end of the 19th century, the mirepoix had taken on its modern meaning and Joseph Favre in his Dictionnaire universel de cuisine (c. 1895, reprinted 1978) uses the term to describe a mixture of ham, carrots, onions, and herbs used as an aromatic condiment when making sauces or braising meat.

Basic Mirepoix

Basic Mirepoix


Cajun "Holy Trinity" Onion, celery and green pepper.

Cajun “Holy Trinity” Onion, celery and green pepper. Just one variation to a mirepoix.

OK. That’s great. But what is the Cajun variation? Here, from Wikipedia, we find one explanation.

The holy trinity, Cajun holy trinity, or holy trinity of Cajun cooking is the Cajun and Louisiana Creole variant of mirepoix: onions, bell peppers, and celery in roughly equal quantities. This mirepoix is the base for much of the cooking in the regional cuisines of Louisiana. Variants use garlic, parsley, or shallots for one of the three. The preparation of Cajun/Creole dishes such as étouffée, gumbo, and jambalaya all start from this base. Origin of the name – The name is an allusion to the Christian doctrine of the Trinity. Louisiana is a strongly Roman Catholic region. The term is first attested in 1981 and was probably popularized by Paul Prudhomme.

And here are some other variations, mostly from Wikipedia. Enjoy!

  1. Not to be confused with Italian Soffritto, which is a kind of Mirepoix. Sofrito being prepared in Spain. Sofrito or refogado is a sauce used as a base in Spanish, Portuguese, and Latin American cooking. Preparations may vary, but it typically consists of aromatic ingredients cut into small pieces and sauteed or braised in cooking oil.
    In Spanish cuisine, sofrito consists of garlic, onion, paprika, peppers, and tomatoes cooked in olive oil. This is known as refogado or sometimes as estrugido in Portuguese-speaking nations, where only onions and olive oil are often essential, garlic and bay laurel leaves being the other most common ingredients.
  2. Italian Soffritto. The Italian version of mirepoix is called soffritto (not to be confused with the Spanish sofrito). According to the American reference work The Joy of Cooking, an Italian soffritto is made with olive oil, especially in Southern Italy, rather than butter, as in France or in Northern Italy, and may also contain garlic, shallot, leek, and herbs. From Tuscany in central Italy, restaurateur Benedetta Vitali writes that soffritto means “underfried”, describing it as: “a preparation of lightly browned minced vegetables, not a dish by itself.” It is the foundation on which many Tuscan sauces, and other dishes are built. At one time it was called “false ragout”, because soffritto was thought to vaguely recall the flavor of meat sauce…According to Vitali, mastery of the soffritto is the key to an understanding of Tuscan cooking. Her classically restrained Tuscan soffritto is garlic-less and simply calls for a red onion, a carrot, and a stalk of celery—all finely minced by hand and slowly and carefully sauteed in virgin olive oil in a heavy pan until the mixture reaches a state of browning appropriate to its intended use.
  3. German Suppengrün. Suppengrün means soup greens in German, and the Dutch equivalent is soepgroente. Soup greens usually come in a bundle and consists of a leek, a carrot and a piece of celeriac. It may also contain parsley, thyme, celery leaves, rutabaga, parsley root and onions. The mix depends on regional traditions as well as individual recipes. The vegetables used are cold climate roots and bulbs with long shelf lives. Suppengrün act as herbs and impart hearty, strong flavors to the soup or sauce, providing a foil for other strong tasting ingredients such as dried peas and beans or pot roast. Large chunks of vegetables are slow cooked to make flavorful soups and stocks, and are discarded when the vegetables have given up most of their flavor. Finely chopped suppengrün are browned in fat and used as a basis for a finished sauce. The vegetables may also be cooked long enough until they fall apart, and may become part of the sauce or pureed to form the sauce.
  4. Polish Włoszczyzna. Włoszczyzna is the Polish word for soup vegetables or greens. The word literally means “Italian stuff” because Queen Bona Sforza, who was Italian and married Polish King Sigismund I the Old in 1518, introduced this concept to Poland. A włoszczyzna may consist of carrots, parsnips or parsley root, celery root or celeriac, leeks and savoy or white cabbage leaves, and sometimes celery leaves and flat-leaf parsley. The most typical, prepackaged combination is celery root, parsley root, carrots and leeks. Włoszczyzna is usually chopped up and boiled to form a flavour base for soups and stews.

And if you are still hungry for information and maybe a recipe or two, try CIA – Professional Cook link. Much information here. Hoipe you enjoyed this article. Good luck with your mirepoix!!

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Creole Slow Cooker Pork Chops

14 Friday Mar 2014

Posted by Bob and Robin in Bone-In Pork Chops, Cajun Food, Captain's Shack, Cooking Styles, Crockpot, Main Dish, Photos By: Bob Young, Recipe by: Robin and Bob Young, Rice, Special Dinners, What's For Dinner?

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bone in pork chops, Cajun food, Cajun Pork, Cajun recipes, Cajun spice flavor, rice blend


13Mar2014_1b_Captains-Shack_Cajun-Pork-Chops_PlatedIf you want to make a change in preparing bone-in pork chops, try this method. It is not a strong Cajun spice flavor, but you know it’s there. An interesting change. The recipe is posted in the Recipe File above, but here it is also: Creole Slow Cooker Pork Chops. This might also be good using chicken. Maybe the thighs? Enjoy the photos! Left-Click any of the pictures to see enlarged.

Bone-in pork chops getting happy with the Cajun Spice Blend that we make and which is also in the Recipe File above.

Bone-in pork chops getting happy with the Cajun Spice Blend that we make and which is also in the Recipe File above.

Cajun Pork in the crock pot.

Cajun Pork in the crock pot.

43.624890 -116.214093

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“Brown Shuga Soul Food” Starts Delivery Service

01 Friday Mar 2013

Posted by Bob and Robin in Brown Shuga, Cajun Food, Comfort Food, Hard To Find Foods, Main Dish, Photos By: Bob Young, Soul Food, Special Information, What's For Dinner?

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bbq ribs, brown shuga, food, red beans and rice, restaurants, sweet potato souffle


Brown Shuga Soul Food ReviewIt is good to see that Yvonne has started a delivery service for her food truck and a constant menu. Here is the latest information from her. Thanks Yvonne. “When in Boise, be sure to stop at Brown Shuga Soul Food Truck at 28 and Fairview. Here is Yvonne’s permanent menu. Enjoy!

Tuesday– Jambalaya 5, Gumbo 5, Red Beans and Rice 5, Collards 3 and Cornbread
Wednesday– Pulled Pork Sandwiches 6, Sweet Potato Souffle’ 3, Mac and cheese 3.5, Cabbage 3,
Thursday– BBQ Ribs 6, Potato Salad 3, Coleslaw 3, Baked Beans 3
Friday– Fried chicken 6, Collard Greens 3, Black eyed peas 3, Sweet potato Soufflé 3, Mac and cheese 3.5
Extras- Potato Chips-1
Drinks- Coke, Diet Coke, Sprite 2.25
Bottled Water 1.5

I am going to go with this every week from now on. So now you will know what is on the menu every day in advance. Use this for the everyday / delivery menu.
For any businesses seeking catering and individual people who would like to order.

There will be a minimum order of $15.00 and the delivery fee will be $4.95. you can call it in@(208) 794-0605 or email it in to brownshugasoulfood@gmail.com. Catering orders have a 24 hour minimum advance notice.“

43.624890 -116.214093

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Super Super Bowl Party!

04 Monday Feb 2013

Posted by Bob and Robin in Appetizers, Beer and Ale, Brats, Cajun Food, Comfort Food, Party Time, Photos By: Bob Young, Seafood, Shrimp, Side Dishes, Special Events, Things To Do, Traditional Food, What's For Dinner?, Wine and Food

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Tags

corn chips, cottage cheese dip, Crab Dip, food, Pico de Gallo, Super Bowl Party


03Feb2013_1_Super-Bowl-Feast_WinesA great party and game! Good food! Good friends! Great family gathering. Thank-You Mac, Marnie and Maggie for joining us and partaking in some awesome treats! Great wines, as pictured here. Great beer for those non-wine drinkers. I had a beer or two also. Enjoy theses photos of the Party Fare! Cheers!

The Table

The Table

Gumbo.

Robin’s Gumbo. The game was played in New Orleans.

Vegies and Pico de Gallo

Vegies and Fresh Pico de Gallo

Mac's Brats

Mac’s Brats

Maggie's Cottage Cheese Dip. YUM-O!

Maggie’s Cottage Cheese Dip. YUM-O!

Steamed Shrimp and Fresh Dipping Sauce

Steamed Shrimp and Fresh Dipping Sauce

Marge’s Eastern Shore Crab Dip. Marge is my sister-in-law. This is an awesome dip. We added some artichoke hearts to it and used Blue Corn Chips.

Marnie's Tiramisu

Marnie’s Tiramisu

So you can see we had a great party! And all of the great food! Almost like Thanksgiving. Or Derby Day. Wonderful!

43.624890 -116.214093

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Seasons Bistro Saturday Special

08 Sunday May 2011

Posted by Bob and Robin in Cajun Food, Party Time, Photos, Photos By: Bob Young, Seasons Bistro, Special Events, Things To Do

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I would be quite remiss if I did not say that we have not been to Seasons Bistro in Eagle for quite some time now. It has changed since we were there last ….. It is better! The floor plan in the main dining area now has a small stage where the cooler used to be and that opens the area up. The food is still as good as it was. So here are some photos we took Saturday while we were there. Much fun and excitement. Loved the band!

Along with the band and a book signing for Gretchen Anderson’s, The Backyard Chicken Fight and Patti Murphy’s, Mother Knows Best – Wit and Wisdom from Idaho Moms, there was a great wine tasting from the Houston Vineyards, Houston, Idaho. (Yes, there really is such a place as Houston, ID!) And Yes, there really is a road named Chicken Dinner Road, but “…. Therein lies another tale!”


Here is their wine list. The 2010 Chicken Dinner White is $22.99 and well worth that price. The 2009 Chicken Dinner Red is $25.99 and the 2009 Houston Vineyards Merlot is $38.99.

The appetizer plate. Yum-O!

The Bill McKeeth Band. A really good locally talented band. I loved the songs.

I think he “thumbed” a ride!

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Think Local!! Idaho Products.

Let them know you saw their logo on this blog. Thanks!
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The New Boise Farmers Market

Summer and Winter - 1500 Shoreline Dr, Boise (Americana and Shoreline)

Idaho Farmers Markets

A listing of statewide Farmer's Markets with contacts.

Find Your Local Farmers Market

Click on the graphic to find your local farmers market either by city or zip code.

Acme Baked Shop, Boise

Available at the Boise COOP. Some of the best bread in Boise and all local!! They make the bread for the 10 Barrel Brew Pub, Angell's Bar and Grill, Salt Tears, all here in Boise. Awesome rye bread that actually tastes like rye bread. And the baguettes .... Wonderful. (208) 284-5588 or runsvold2000@gmail.com

Brown’s Buffalo Ranch

Give them a call or EMail for awesome buffalo meat.

Desert Mountain Grass Fed Beef (formerly Homestead Natural Beef)

Desert Mountain Grass Fed Beef, with Bob and Jessica Howard of Howard Ranch in Hammett. The company will only sell whole animals to the Boise Co-op and Whole Foods stores in Boise and Utah. They will also be at the Boise Farmers Market.

Falls Brand Pork roducts

Click the image for pork recipes.

Kelley’s Canyon Orchard

1903 River Rd, Filer, ID 83328 Hours: 10am - 6pm, Phone: (208) 543-5330

Malheur River Meats

Matthews Idaho Honey

Matthews All-Natural Meats

Meadowlark Farms

All natural Eggs, Lamb and Chicken

Purple Sage Farms

Reel Foods Fish Market

1118 Vista Avenue, Boise, ID 83705 (208) 713-8850 Monday-Friday: 10am-6pm, Saturday: 9am-5pm. Sunday: Gone Fishin’

Standard Restaurant Supply

Plenty of items for the home, too. Check them out. 6910 Fairview, Boise 83704 (208) 333-9577

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Some Awesome Recipe and Spice Sources. Culturally diverse.

Let them know you saw their logo on this blog. Thanks!
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Crockpot Recipes

Many good recipes here.

A Taste of France

A collection of French recipes

Basque Recipes

Best Ever Recipes of Mexico

Malaysian Recipes

Awesome Malaysian recipes.

Memorie di Angelina Italian Recipes

My Best German Recipes Web Site

Regional and Oktober Fest Recipes

There are a lot of recipes here.

Sauer Kraut Recipes

Recipes By Robin and Bob

Recipes that we have collected and created throughout the years.

Recipes of Elizabeth W. Young, Bob’s Mother

These are the recipes that my Mother collected over 85 or so years. The photo of my Mother was one of the last I have of her. It was taken in July, 1987.

Recipes From The Mediterranean Area

Soup and Chowder Recipes

Recipes from "My Recipes"

Deep South Dish Recipes

The Recipes of Greece

Tasty Mexican Recipes

The Shiksa In The Kitchen

Great Jewish recipes!

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Some Great Boise Restaurants.

Let them know you saw their logo on this blog. Thanks!
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Asiago’s – Italian

Bella Aquila, Eagle, ID

775 S Rivershore Ln., Eagle, ID 83616 (208) 938-1900

Bar Gernika – Basque Pub and Eatery

202 S Capitol Blvd, Boise (208) 344-2175 (Checked)

Chef Larry’s Cafe, Titusville, FL

1111 South Washington Street, Titusville, Florida

Capitol Cellars

Awesome food and wine!

Cottonwood Grille

913 W River St., Boise (208) 333.9800 cg@cottonwoodgrille.com

Enrique’s Mexican Restaurant

482 Main St., Kuna (208) 922-5169 New name. Was El Gallo Giro. Same owners and kitchen. The Best Mexican restaurant in the Boise/Kuna area, bar none!

Flying Pie Pizzaria

Goldy’s Breakfast Bistro

108 S Capitol Blvd., Boise (208) 345-4100

Goldy’s Corner Cafe

625 W Main St., Boise (208) 433-3934

Guanabanas – Island Restaurant and Bar

960 N Highway A1A, Jupiter, FL

Janjou Pâtisserie

Janjou Pâtisserie, 1754 W State St., Boise, Idaho 83702 (208) 297.5853

Mai Thai Asian Cuisine

750 West Idaho Street Boise, ID 83702 (208) 344-8424

Mazzah Grill – Mediterranean and Greek Cuisine

1772 W State St., Boise (208) 333-2566

Richards Inn by Chef Richard Langston

Formerly - Vincino's. New location at 500 S Capitol Blvd., Boise (208) 472-1463. Reservations are highly suggested.

Sakana Japanese Sushi Bar

7107 W State Street, Garden City. (208) 853-4993 and they are open Mon – Thursday: 11:00am – 10:00pm, Friday and Saturday: 11am – 11pm, Sunday: 12 noon – 9pm

The Orchard House

14949 Sunnyslope Rd., Caldwell (208) 459-8200

The Ravenous Pig

1234 N. Orange Ave. Winter Park, FL

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Think Local!! Boise Breweries, Brew Pubs and Wine Bars.
Let them know you saw their logo on this blog. Thanks!
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10 Barrel Brewery Boise

830 W Bannock St., Boise (208) 344-5870

Cloud 9 Brewery and Pub

Opening Fall 2013 in the Albertson's Shopping Center, 18th and State in the old Maxi Java

Edge Brewing Company

525 N Steelhead Way, Boise, ID 83704 (208) 323-1116

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Miscellaneous Items
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