Such a nice Saturday morning for the Boise City Market. 77 degrees F, 55% RH, Winds NNW@5 and a clear, very blue, sky. I just love to see how much this has grown this year. Here are some photos.
Boise Saturday Market
12 Saturday Jun 2010
12 Saturday Jun 2010
Such a nice Saturday morning for the Boise City Market. 77 degrees F, 55% RH, Winds NNW@5 and a clear, very blue, sky. I just love to see how much this has grown this year. Here are some photos.
10 Wednesday Mar 2010
No, it’s not too early to be thinking about your garden for this year. You should have some starts going right now. But I thought that some of you might be interested in this following article and resource. They do an awesome job with refugees coming to Boiseboth in growing their own garden products and selling their products at the Boise Saturday Market.
I like your “foodie” blog. I don’t know who your audience is, but maybe you want to help us advertise our CSA? We could still use some members. You can see the details at Community Supported Agriculture Or, let me know how you want to help. I’m happy to add you to our volunteers email list and put you to work in the garden if that’s what you want.
Katie Painter
Refugee Agriculture Coordinator
Idaho Office for Refugees
1607 W Jefferson St
Boise, ID 83702
208-336-4222
OK, so there you have some information. Do you have some spare time? Energies? Resources? Let them know. Cheers!
19 Saturday Dec 2009
So, I guess, whenever the Holiday Season rolls around, there must also be a special dinner. At our house, we do have a good time with these special affairs. All the way from the planning to the preparation, the serving and eating and, of course, the clean-up! So here is our menu. Do enjoy it! We will!
Fresh Spinach Salad
Wine Marinated Stuffed Leg of Lamb
Puréed Root Vegetables
Dried Corn
Fresh Baked Challah
This is really a great Jewish bread. A little sweet, a lot good!
Flan with Raspberry and Grand Marnier
Complete Wine Selection To Accompany the Menu
So there you have it or, at least, the menu for the dinner. Cheers!
22 Sunday Nov 2009
Posted in Buy Idaho, Lamb, Local Farmers Markets, Things To Do

There seems to be a lot of traffic on this blog looking at the Lamb recipes. Also, several weeks ago, I had some folks asking where to buy lamb in the Boise area. Here are three suggestions.
Here is the first local business that specializes in lamb and lamb products. Before Robin and I started to buy our lamb from a 4-H student we know, we bought it from Meadowlark Farms. This is very good lamb.
We have had some of their lamb and, from what I remember, it was good. Actually, I think that either of these suppliers will give you an excellent product. It will probably be personal choice from here.
If you live out of the area, you will probably have to contact them directly and I think they will do you well. But for now, let’s clear something up. If you notice, at each card description I stated that the lamb was “good”. 
By “good” I mean that there is No gamey taste. No old mutton taste. I do believe that if you say you don’t like lamb, it is because what you have eaten in the past was mutton. Yes, mutton is strong flavored. No doubt about it. But like goat and wine, “It’s a matter of time”. (There’s a strange comparison) The older the lamb or goat, the stronger the flavor of the meat and it does change over time.
Another good source of food information is Guy Hand’s NPR program NW Food News. Check out his web site.
And finally, another source right here on the Internet is Michael Boss’ Behind The Menu site. Michael is trying very hard to bring the consumer an educated choice on where to eat and general information about food, food products and food producers. Both he and Guy Hand are also firm believers in the Buy Idaho program. Look at the Behind The Menu web site by clicking the link. You can also find it on Facebook. Hope some of this information helps. Have a great lamb meal and don’t forget the wine!! Cheers!
Thanks to Susan Ettesvold for sending another link for Idaho Lamb. This link is for Lava Lake Lamb, just a little South East of Sun Valley. There are some wonderful photos of the ranch on their web site and ways to contact them and order lamb.
16 Monday Nov 2009
Posted in Food, Interesting Information, Local Farmers Markets, Recipes, Things To Do
Actually, yes you can!! Robin and I made one of these turkeys yesterday, as a preliminary trial for Thanksgiving, coming up soon. The style of cooking is called spatchcocked. “Really, “spatchcocking” is just a fancy term for cooking a whole turkey or chicken by removing the backbone and splaying the bird out flat.
And it’s that simple. Really! Just cut along the both sides of the turkey’s backbone to remove it (use sturdy kitchen scissors). Flip the bird over and flatten it by breaking the breast bone. Brush the bird with olive oil, salt and pepper…Just 70 minutes later (you’ll want to baste it halfway through), you’ll have a perfectly cooked bird.
–Space. Flattening the turkey out like this makes a lot more room in your crowded Thanksgiving Day oven.
–Carving. With the backbone out of the way, it’s much, much simpler to carve the bird when it’s time to serve it.
–Taste. We actually thought the meat turned out better tasting and more moist than with a traditional roast turkey. And the skin crisped up to golden perfection.” (http://thebittenword.typepad.com)
Serves: 8 – 10
Ingredients: (Oil Mixture)
2 T Extra-Virgin Olive Oil
1 T coarse Salt
1 t freshly ground Pepper
1 whole fresh turkey (about 12+ pounds)
Our Suggestion: Add your favorite spices to this mixture: Sage, Thyme, Rosemary, etc.
Directions:
1. Preheat oven to 450°F. Stir together oil, salt, and pepper in a small bowl.
2. Rinse inside and outside of turkey; pat dry with paper towels. Spatchcock turkey*. Transfer to a rimmed baking sheet, breast side up. Let stand for 30 minutes.
3. Brush or rub turkey all over with oil mixture. Roast, rotating sheet halfway through and basting twice, until an instant-read thermometer inserted
into the thickest part of the thigh reaches 165°, about 1 hour and 10 minutes. Let stand for 20 minutes before carving.
*Spatchcocking: (See photo above)
1. Cut out the backbone. Start with the turkey breast side down. Use poultry shears to cut along both sides of the backbone, beginning at the tail end. If you hit a tough spot, try cutting with just the tip of the shears.
2. Open the turkey. Set aside backbone (and giblets) for stock. Take hold of both newly cut edges, and open the turkey. Remove any large pieces of fat. Turn the turkey, breast side up.
3. Break the breastbone. Place your hand on one side of the breast, close to the breastbone, and push down firmly until you hear a crack. Repeat on the other side. (For better leverage as you work, stand on a step stool.)
4. Flatten the turkey. Pull the thighs outward so the turkey lies flat, with the wings facing inward. Tuck the wing tips under to secure.
5. Brush with oil. Place the turkey on a rimmed baking sheet. Let stand for 30 minutes. Use a basting brush to apply oil mixture.
How To Carve:
A spatchcocked turkey requires a slightly different carving technique than a bird cooked the traditional way, but the basic approach remains
the same: Remove the legs and wings, and then slice the breast meat.
1. Cut legs from breast. With a sharp chef’s knife, remove each leg by cutting through the turkey where the thigh connects to the breast.
2. Separate drumsticks and thighs. At the joint of each leg, cut drumstick from thigh. Transfer thighs and drumsticks to a warm platter. Tent with foil.
3. Cut wings and breast. On one side, find the joint connecting wing and breast, and cut through it (not shown). Repeat to cut off other wing. Cut breast meat into two pieces, slicing along either side of breastbone.
4. Slice breast meat. Slice the breast meat across the grain. Arrange on the platter with the dark meat, and add the wings.
The photos are from Martha Stewart Living and the article came from The Bitten Word. This goes great with a 2008 Bedrock Wine Co. Cuvee Caritas White Wine, Sonoma County (55% 100 year old Semillon from Monte Rosso and 45% Sauvignon Blanc from Kick Ranch Vineyard) and a super gravy made from Madeira. (The gravy recipe can be found on this blog)
We found this turkey to be extremely moist and succulent. And the interesting thing is that it really is easy to do and very fast cooking. It has a wonderful flavor and moistness eaten cold in sandwiches or for “nibbling”. The skin is crusty and wonderful. That’s it. Cheers!
27 Tuesday Oct 2009
Posted in Lamb, Local Farmers Markets, Main Dish, Things To Do
I have had some questions on where to buy lamb in Boise. There are several sources: (1) WinCo, (2) Albertsons and (3) Costco – which I think has the better selection of most meats of the three listed. Costco, I think, has the best selection and quality.
There is a group of us that get a lamb a year from a 4-H source that we have. Then they have the lamb butchered, cut and frozen at Custom Butcher & Smokehouse. We – Robin and I – have always been greatly satisfied with the lamb that we get from there. You may want to contact Custom Butcher & Smokehouse and see if they have any “in stock”.
So, if you know of a 4-H source, you may want to start placing an order. I will check with our source and see if it is OK to publicize their information here. I like using the 4-H group because it really is Idaho produced, and I like to buy local! Anyway, there is a start. Cheers!
10 Saturday Oct 2009
Looks like it might be a seafood type week – except for Saturday which will be Sauerbraten with Cabbage and Potatoes, the beef is getting happy right now. But for tonight, what shall I make. How about a Lemon Spaghetti with Lime Butter Halibut? This was very good! The pasta was not made with fresh cream – I used sour cream, onions, garlic, lemon oil, spinach (peas would be better), chives and fresh parsley. And the halibut was flash grilled with lime oil, butter and French tarragon. YUM-O! Robin had a Spaten Oktoberfest Ur-Marzen and I had a glass of a 2006 Davis Creek Cellars Cabernet Sauvignon. Buh Bye McDonalds, we’re eating dinner here!
28 Monday Sep 2009
Posted in Bike Cam, Food, Local Farmers Markets, Things To Do
I have been using Microsoft’s Movie Maker and I really don’t think it has kept pace with technology. It is very slow to make the movie after editing it and you are very limited on the available formats. I guess you get what you pay for. I found another video maker/editer called Pinnacle Studuo 12. This is my first attempt at Pinnacle, so let’s see what I did. I am also putting a copy on my FaceBook account.
Enjoy!! Let me know if this is any better. Video taken on the “Tryke Cam” (That’s an adult tricycle with a camera mounted on it).
Update:
OK. So snow is forcast for Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday this week. But, thanks that Boise is in the Banana Belt, so the snow will stay in the mountains where it belongs. Snow level: 5000 feet. So this video may be the last for the Farmer’s Market this year. We’ll see!
Cheers!
26 Saturday Sep 2009
Posted in Food, Local Farmers Markets, Things To Do
I have been using Microsoft’s Movie Maker and I really don’t think it has kept pace with technology. It is very slow to make the movie after editing it and you are very limited on the available formats. I guess you get what you pay for. I found another video maker/editer called Pinnacle Studuo 12. This is my first attempt at Pinnacle, so let’s see what I did. I am also putting a copy on my FaceBook account.
The Farmer’s Market will be closed soon. I will miss the fresh produce and guess I will have to go back to that “cardboard” stuff they pass off as “fresh”. Go figure!! Enjoy the video and dream about the produce pictured here this winter.
26 Wednesday Aug 2009
Posted in Local Farmers Markets, Local Markets, Party Time, Photos, Things To Do, Wine and Food
Seems like every Tuesday from 5:30pm until dark, Edwards Greenhouse has a Market where you can purchase fresh and local produce and food products. Fact is, this would make a very enjoyable evening; Listen to a variety of music, visit the 12 or so booths, maybe purchase a dinner and some wine or bring your own picnic, lawn chairs and relax. Here are some photos. Enjoy.
Cheers!