• About and Contact
  • Air Fryer Cooking Charts and Conversions
  • Air Fryer Recipes – Update: August 2020 – Chicken Olivia
  • Barcode Country List
  • Boise Foodie Blog Recipes – Updates: Nov 2024 Basic Hollandaise Sauce and Cream of Mushroom Soup
  • Boise Restaurant Guide – 52 Restaurant Choices! Updated: July 2018
  • Companion Garden Planting
  • Instant Pot Recipes – Update August 2020 – IP Chicken with Ketchup, Honey and Soy
  • Recipes from the Captain’s Shack: Dec 2020 – CS Prime Rib

Boise Foodie Guild

~ – Enjoy a meal or a recipe with us! Be sure to check the Sidebar and Menu above. Interesting resources are listed there. Most are hot links. Air Fryer (AF), Instant Pot (IP) and Captain's Shack (CS) recipes now have their own page. Subscribe to the blog. It's still FREE!

Boise Foodie Guild

Category Archives: Photos

Meatless Monday Idea

05 Tuesday Apr 2011

Posted by Bob and Robin in Photos, Photos By: Bob Young, Salads, Special Dinners, Things To Do

≈ 1 Comment


I can’t say that four or six weeks ago when Robin said that we were going Meatless Monday, that I was all that excited. First, let’s decide on the definition of “Meatless”. so we decided that red meat – beef – would be eliminated for one day a week. Salads, stir fried vegetables, seafood and chicken would be on the menu

for Mondays. It has almost been six weeks since we have had beef. Not because we don’t like it, but just because we have found other things. Lots of seafood – salmon, halibut, shrimp, cod, talapia to name a few – have entered our menu. And always chicken and lamb. Wednesday we will have Pork Chops done some way.
So look at what we had tonight. A Crab Salad! Three different types of lettuce, Orange and Pineapple Salsa, Avocado Slices, Tomato and fresh squeezed Lime Juice. And this was really a good and refreshing salad. The Orange and Pineapple Salsa – we made it from scratch – was great. I can dream of it with Grilled Pork Steaks. And yes, I did eat my half of the avocado, not one of my more favorite vegetables.
So there is what we had tonight. And it was good. There is no real recipe. All from scratch and whatever was available. The crab was Crown Prince Lump Wild Caught White Crab Meat. The one thing that I don’t particularly like is the monosodium glutamate (MSG) that they have put in the can. But a lot of Asian foods have MSG and this product comes from Thailand. Give a salad of this type a try. Cheers!

Reblog:

  • Email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email
  • Share on Pinterest (Opens in new window) Pinterest
  • Share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • Print (Opens in new window) Print
  • More
  • Share on X (Opens in new window) X
  • Share on Instagram (Opens in new window) Instagram
Like Loading...

Awesome Birthday Dinner at Le Café de Paris

01 Friday Apr 2011

Posted by Bob and Robin in Birthdays, Party Time, Photos, Photos By: Bob Young, Things To Do, What's For Dinner?

≈ Leave a comment


Every year at our Birthday, we have the choice of where we want to eat; what restaurant. Mickey D’s doesn’t count! This year, I chose Le Café de Paris because they were having a special wine dinner with Michel-Schlumberger Winery from the Dry Creek area of California. As usual, it was a good choice. What a great dinner and some super wines.

Here Robin and I are with Jacques Schlumberger. Such an interesting person and great to talk to. He brought some awesome wines that went quite well with dinner. Oh yes, the dinner! See the photos below …. That’s all there is left!

2007 Schlumberger Chardonnay
(Front label)
This was a great chardonnay and went extremely well with all courses of our dinner. Long finish. Jasmine flowers. “Notes of dried flower, tarragon, quince and dried apricot. Expresses minerality and crisp freshness. Light on oak or buttery flavors.”

Back label explaining about the wine.

First Course
Plateau Apéritif
Crab
Cheese and Chicken Croquets
Potato and Fish Salad on Croustine, Crudite

Second Course
Brandade Stuffed Salmon
and
Roasted Tuna Filet
marinara sauce
Rice Timbale
small shrimp rice, leek, potato
(This was an awesome rice dish)

Main Course
Roulade de Bœuf
spinach-crème filling
xeres-bay leaf sauce
and
Gâteau de Canard
potato purée, zucchini flan, duck egg
(Such an amazing Main Course)

Dessert
Delice au Chocolat
chilled Spanish chocolate dessert
similar to a mousse

Daffodil
So what does this have to do with dinner? Probably nothing. But when we left for dinner, this was not in bloom. However, when we got home, it was as you see it here. One of the first signs of Spring. What a delightful way to end a perfect dinner. Thank-You to Robin and to all the folks at Le Café de Paris for this wonderful Birthday Dinner! (Anyone have a magnum of TBA? It’s my 70th next year.) Cheers!

Reblog:

  • Email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email
  • Share on Pinterest (Opens in new window) Pinterest
  • Share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • Print (Opens in new window) Print
  • More
  • Share on X (Opens in new window) X
  • Share on Instagram (Opens in new window) Instagram
Like Loading...

St Patrick’s Day – The Rest of the Story

18 Friday Mar 2011

Posted by Bob and Robin in Main Dish, Party Time, Photos, Photos By: Bob Young, Things To Do, What's For Dinner?

≈ 1 Comment


Leanne and Tom Felzien – Thank-You so very much for including us in your St Patrick’s Day Dinner. It was fun and delicious.
And as a note: If any one in the Boise area who reads this blog wants a spring lamb or side of beef for their freezer, just let me know and I will put you in contact with Tom and Leanne. For the past 6 years or so, we have been getting some awesome lamb from them. The lamb and beef are all 4-H raised.
Back to the celebration: The party was festive. Some great Whisky was tried, much like a wine tasting, but much smaller samples. There is a photo of some of the whiskys. (No! I didn’t misspell whisky.) Gail made the Corned Beef again this year and in my NSHO, it was better this year. She does a great job with the beef. Enjoy the photos of the party. Cheers!

Gail and Leanne discuss the kitchen proceedure.

Heather and some of the children at the party. It was great to see you again, Heather.

Ah! The Lagavulin Double Matured Whisky. This is awesome and thank-you Gail for sharing it. Look at that golden color and smell the peat smoke.

The party stash!

The food line. Hurry. We’re hungry!

The Irish Soda Bread is sliced and the Sally Lunn Bread is waiting to be sliced. Next year, if we are invited again, I will have to make two loaves of each.

The plated Corned Beef Dinner! It was great!

Wishfull thinking? It’s cabbage, too.



So there you have, “… The rest of the story.” It was a great evening that went on until almost 10:00pm. The meal was fantastic, as usual. Thank-You Gail. And again, a huge Thank-You to Leanne and Tom for opening their home to all of us. It was great to see the bubbly children, too. Cheers!
Here is some interesting facts about the Corned Beef, like, “Where did the name come from?”:

From About (dot) com –
Corned Beef Basics
The first corned beef was packed in salt, and sometimes spices, in order to cure it. It got its name from the corn kernel-sized grains of salt it was packed in. Today, corned beef is usually made by soaking a brisket roast in a brine of water, salt, and spices. While it’s not traditional in Ireland, corned beef is what most Americans prepare for St. Patrick’s Day feasts.

About the Beef
For centuries, corned beef was a food reserved for special occasions. Beef was considered to be a decadent indulgence up until the 20th century. It was only available to very wealthy people, because most cows were kept for their milk or for breeding.

About the Brisket
Brisket comes from the heavily exercised front limbs of the animal, and is consequently a tough cut of meat. When cooked properly–braised–this cut is tender, juicy and succulent. Corned beef and other forms of brisket need to be cooked for a long time with low heat and plenty of moisture in order to realize their full potential as the star of your dinner table.

And from Food History, we learn –

Why do they Call it “Corned” Beef?
The term “Corned” comes from putting meat in a large crock and covering
it with large rock-salt kernels of salt that were refered to as “corns of salt”
This preserved the meat. The term Corned has been in the Oxford English Dictionary as early as 888 AD.

Irish Were the First Exporters of Corned Beef
Irish were the biggest exporters of Corned Beef till 1825.
The English were serving corned beef but also the Irish. In this day and age
corned beef and cabbage is not very Irish, but corned beef is. The area of Cork, Ireland was a great producer of Corned Beef in the 1600’s until 1825. It was their chief export and sent all over the world, mostly in cans. The British army sustained on cans of Cork’s corned beef during the Napoleonic wars …

Origin of the Word “Corn”
The term Corn is modified from an Old Germanic (P.Gmc) Word
Kurnam which meant small seed of anything. Since a kernel of rock
salt look like a wheat or oat kernel size it became known as a corn of salt. Even the word Kernel comes from this word Kurnam. or Kurnilo which meant the root of the seed.

Corned Beef and Cabbage is basically an American tradition on St. Patrick’s

Day started by irish-Americans in the mid 1800’s. Some Irish people feel that corned beef and cabbage is about as Irish as spaghetti and meatballs. Since cows were used for milk rather than meat in poor times in Ireland, beef was a delicacy that was fed to kings. It was more common to celebrate a holiday meal with what they call a ham (Gammon) or bacon joint. ( a cured but unsmoked piece of pork) with their cabbage and potatoes. When many Irish Immigrants came over in the mid 1800’s they couldn’t find a bacon joint like they had in Ireland, so they found that Jewish corned beef was very similar in texture, and they used that for their holiday celebrations.

Just a short history lesson. See you next year!

Great photos, Gail. Thanks!

Reblog:

  • Email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email
  • Share on Pinterest (Opens in new window) Pinterest
  • Share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • Print (Opens in new window) Print
  • More
  • Share on X (Opens in new window) X
  • Share on Instagram (Opens in new window) Instagram
Like Loading...

St Patrick’s Day Dinner and Party

17 Thursday Mar 2011

Posted by Bob and Robin in Anthropology of Food, Party Time, Photos, Photos By: Bob Young, Recipe: Bob and Robin Young, Recipes, Special Events, What's For Dinner?

≈ 2 Comments


Last year, we were invited by friends Gail and Bob Parker to join them and their family at a St Patrick’s Day Dinner. All the trimmings – Corned Beef, Cabbage, Potatoes and a host of other things to eat and drink. We were asked to bring Irish Soda Bread. Evidently, it was OK, because this year, we have been invited to join them again. So here, again, is our offering.

Irish Soda Bread getting very happy in the oven. (It is 2:48pm MDT and this just came out of the oven. YUM-O!)

And this year, we are also bringing a wonderful slightly sweet Sally Lunn Bread from the Smitten Kitchen site – there is a hot link in the side bar to the site. And to quote the Smitten Kitchen, “… It tastes like a light brioche but involves less butter, fewer eggs and significantly less of a time commitment.
Like any food story worth tucking into, the story of Sally Lunn Bread comes with drama over its origins — Was it originally made by Protestant refugees, who called them “soleil et lune” or sun and moon cakes? Was it named for Solange Luyon, a pastry cook in Bath, England who for decades sold these buns on the street? Was knowing how to bake it truly essential to being a successful housekeeper, as this 1884 book, suggests?”

——————————

So there you have the starter of what will be a great evening with friends. We will tip one for you also! See you later with “… The rest of the story!” Cheers!

Reblog:

  • Email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email
  • Share on Pinterest (Opens in new window) Pinterest
  • Share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • Print (Opens in new window) Print
  • More
  • Share on X (Opens in new window) X
  • Share on Instagram (Opens in new window) Instagram
Like Loading...

Food and Shrove Tuesday

08 Tuesday Mar 2011

Posted by Bob and Robin in Fasnacht Day, Main Dish, Photos, Photos By: Bob Young, Recipe: Bob and Robin Young, What's For Dinner?

≈ Leave a comment


I think it’s called Tired of Winter or Cabin Fever. So what does one do while watching it snow one week before the Ides of March – the Roman New Year? I’m glad you asked. Try making a breakfast of

Scrambled Eggs, Fried Potato Pancakes and Fasnachts Berliner . (This recipe is far better than the other one I had. Something went terribly wrong!) This recipe is from My Best German Recipes Blog. You can find a link in the sidebar or click the stated link. Actually, if some of the breakfast had corn or maybe bacon, it just might give this one a run for the money. Corn Fritters, just browned and made thin, not like IHOP pancakes, but thin and fried slowly and over medium heat in bacon fat. I do remember those from my childhood, which was a year or so ago. My Pennsylvania Dutch Grandmother could make those fritters like no one else. I have yet to find the recipe. If you try this recipe, let us know what you think. And if you are looking for some awesome German recipes, check out the blog, My Best German Recipes. There are some really interesting recipes there. Cheers!

Reblog:

  • Email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email
  • Share on Pinterest (Opens in new window) Pinterest
  • Share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • Print (Opens in new window) Print
  • More
  • Share on X (Opens in new window) X
  • Share on Instagram (Opens in new window) Instagram
Like Loading...

A Vignette of a Wine Dinner of the Rhone Valley

25 Friday Feb 2011

Posted by Bob and Robin in Photos, Photos By: Bob Young, Special Dinners, Special Events

≈ Leave a comment


Another wonderful vignette dinner of wines and food parings from the Rhone Valley. And Le Café de Paris did another awesome job. Thank-You Matheiu and your excellent staff!

The photo to the left is one of the wines we had. A 2006 Hect and Bannier Cotes du Roussillon Villages that was rich and smooth. A blend of Grenache, Syrah and Carignon. Full of fruit and well balenced. It was superb with our meal. From the Costco Wine Blog, “… They really did an excellent job balancing the varieties – Grenache, Syrah and Carignan – to create an expressive, rich and velvety wine. It has a beautiful nose that’s smells of (French) quality, with great fruit flavors, and a mild spice on the finish.” Natalie MacLean agrees with this evaluation when she says, “… Terrific notes of cedar, black raspberry, cherry pit and smoke. Full-bodied with supple layers of lasting flavour.”
We also had a 2009 Château Miraval “Clara Lua” that went extremely well with the salad. From K&L Wine Merchant, “Château Miraval’s “Clara Lua” is composed of 95% rolle and 5% grenache blanc. Rolle, which is also know as vermentino in Italy, imparts vibrant citric and slightly leesy nuances, while a touch of grenache blanc provides hints white peach and fresh herb notes. Pairing: Fennel stuffed grilled Bronzino, brandade on crostini, rosemary roasted chicken. Produced from organically grown grapes.” This was a delight with our salad. Here was our great dinner last night. Cheers!

First Course
Salade Lyonnaise
field greens, chicken livers, poached duck egg, bacon, mustard vinaigrette

Second Course
Soupe a l’Oignon
classic French onion soup, calvados, gruyere

Main Course
Blanquette de Veau
(French Veal Ragout)
tender veal, root vegetables, cream sauce, wild rice

Dessert
Bugnes
Rhone Valley Style Beignets

Breakfast – The Next Day
Apple Tart

So there you have it. These Wine Dinners are a wonderful experience in eating here in Boise. You will learn a lot from the food selections – the menu – and the parings of wines that they select. Get on their mailing list by following the link in the sidebar.

Reblog:

  • Email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email
  • Share on Pinterest (Opens in new window) Pinterest
  • Share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • Print (Opens in new window) Print
  • More
  • Share on X (Opens in new window) X
  • Share on Instagram (Opens in new window) Instagram
Like Loading...

Good Trout Meal

22 Tuesday Feb 2011

Posted by Bob and Robin in Photos, Photos By: Bob Young, Recipe: Bob and Robin Young, Seafood, What's For Dinner?

≈ Leave a comment


After a great day today in the field searching and finding Merlins and Sharp-Shinned Hawks – more on that tomorrow on the Flight of the Peregrine Blog – it was good to have a meatless Monday.

Trout Almondine

Spring Mixed Greens
with
Broccoli and Asparagus

Baked Sweet Potato

What a wonderful way to end a great day. Enjoy the recipe. Cheers and Keep Looking Up!

Reblog:

  • Email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email
  • Share on Pinterest (Opens in new window) Pinterest
  • Share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • Print (Opens in new window) Print
  • More
  • Share on X (Opens in new window) X
  • Share on Instagram (Opens in new window) Instagram
Like Loading...

Super Bowl Party

07 Monday Feb 2011

Posted by Bob and Robin in Party Time, Photos, Photos By: Bob Young, Recipe By: Robin Young, Special Events, Things To Do, What's For Dinner?

≈ 1 Comment



Sunday evening found us at the Buzz for a great Super Bowl party! What a great place for family and friends to meet and just hang out and watch the game! Cristi and Tom supplied the bulk of the food buffet with brats, sauerkraut, pulled pork, cheese soup with popcorn, chips and dip and cup cakes. (I know I forgot something.) Then beer and wine were also available. The photo to the left is the buffet line.

Robin and I made some pickled cauliflower, string beans and carrot and some Super Bowl Tostados to add to the party. The tostados were different and really added to the menu. Easy to make. Here is the recipe. Enjoy!

Robin’s Super Bowl Tostados

Serves: 24
Oven Temp: 250 ºF

Ingredients:
½ lbs Sirloin steak
1 Lime
1 Lemon
1 Orange
Salt and Pepper to taste
16 Los Pericos Tostados, sodium free
8 oz Refried Beans
1 c Mexican Blend Grated Cheese

Embellishments:
Sliced Avocado Or Guacamole, Salsa, Pico de Gallo, Pickled Jalapeños, chopped Green Chiles, sliced Black Olives, shredded Lettuce and Sour Cream.

Directions:
Pound the steak to tenderize and thin. Salt and pepper to taste. Combine the juice of the lime, lemon and orange in a zip lock bag. Place the pounded steak in the bag and marinate for 2 – 8 hours in the refrigerator.

Bring the steak up to room temperature. Sear both sides of the steak and cook to medium rare, about 3 – 5 minutes on each side. Cool to room temperature before cutting. Slice thin and cut each slice into about 1” cubes.

Place 8 tostados on a cookie sheet or jelly roll pan. Spread with refried beans and sprinkle about ⅛ cup of the Mexican cheese on top. Bake in the oven until cheese just melts. (We made two trays of these.)

Cut each tostado into quarters while still warm. They should not break if cut warm. Place a piece of beef on each tostado quarter. Serve on a platter with the embellishments listed above. Enjoy!

Reblog:

  • Email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email
  • Share on Pinterest (Opens in new window) Pinterest
  • Share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • Print (Opens in new window) Print
  • More
  • Share on X (Opens in new window) X
  • Share on Instagram (Opens in new window) Instagram
Like Loading...

"Westside Drive-In", Boise, Goes National!

06 Sunday Feb 2011

Posted by Bob and Robin in Photos, Photos By: Bob Young, Special Information, Things To Do, Westside Drive-In, What's For Dinner?

≈ Leave a comment


The Westside Drive-In on W State Street in Boise is going national! (The marquee is correct … the Foodnetwork ad is old.) Tonight on KTVB-TV, they had a segment on the drive-in and Chef Lou Aaron. (I worked 3 seasons for him in his catering section.) Here is that segment and here is a link to The Video of Westside Drive-In. It’s just down the alley from us! Close.

Local chef featured in national business magazine

by KTVB
KTVB.COM
Posted on February 5, 2011 at 3:40 PM
Updated today at 5:23 PM

BOISE — Chef Lou Aaron, owner of Westside Drive-in in Boise is on the cover of the latest My Business magazine – a magazine that reaches almost a half-million small business owners across America.
Aaron was a part of a larger story that addresses how small business owners use technology in their businesses.
“I’ve tapped into Facebook, and the Blackberry Apps, and the iPhone Apps, or I could send a text to somebody and say hey, ‘Come down to Westside right now and get two bucks off this,'” Aaron said. “And we’re just beginning to experiment with that, and it’s working.”
Aaron said he didn’t expect to be on the cover, but that it is an honor to bring the extra attention to Boise, especially in a time when many small businesses are struggling.
My Business magazine, which is the publication for the National Federation of Independent Business, only goes out to NFIB members.

The article listed by KTVB about Chef Lou in My Business Magazine, is listed here.

NFIB member company Chef Lou’s Westside Drive-In, a 1950s-style drive-thru restaurant in Boise, Idaho, started selling frozen dinners and restaurant souvenirs online about 10 years ago. While online sales only account for about 2 percent of the company’s $1.2 million in annual sales, owner and founder Lou Aaron sees big potential for expanding his operation online—particularly because social media tools make it easier than ever to spread the word about his site. The diner manages a Facebook page, uses mobile marketing to text coupons to customers’ mobile phones, and emails website promotions to a growing list of customers.
It takes an offline effort, too, to drive ecommerce sales. Each order at Aaron’s restaurant comes with a small card informing customers that they can purchase frozen dinners and other souvenirs online, and Aaron makes sure all print, radio and TV ads mention his Web address, ChefLou.com. He hosts a Saturday morning cooking show on his local NBC affiliate and mentions his Web address so that viewers will check it out.
Aaron plans to soon sell spices and pre-made sauces online and says he will try to get local media coverage to drum up interest. “Everybody goes online now” to shop, he says. “We need to be there, too.”

Our congratulations to Chef Lou, the Westside Drive-In and the staff that serves us so well. Cheers and hope to see you here sometime.

Reblog:

  • Email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email
  • Share on Pinterest (Opens in new window) Pinterest
  • Share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • Print (Opens in new window) Print
  • More
  • Share on X (Opens in new window) X
  • Share on Instagram (Opens in new window) Instagram
Like Loading...

New York Deli Rye Bread

04 Friday Feb 2011

Posted by Bob and Robin in Baking, Bread, Photos, Photos By: Bob Young, Recipe: Bob and Robin Young, What's For Dinner?

≈ Leave a comment


Robin found this really very good Deli Rye bread from one of her blog subscriptions, the Smitten Kitchen. The directions are somewhat long and involved, but the end result is great. Give it a try.

New York Deli Rye Bread

Adapted from The Bread Bible by The Smitten Kitchen
Notes From The Smitten Kitchen: I have trimmed Beranbaum’s directions significantly. The thing is, she gives great and extensively detailed directions, but my thing is, I like to pare things down a little bit, especially when it comes to bread. I honestly believe that once you are certain your yeast is working, it’s harder to mess up a loaf of bread than it is to make it delicious. Follow the rising times and size pointers, see that it’s kneaded well and baked at the right temperature and you can have a little bit of New York City in your kitchen without a lot less dingy gray snow and loud sirens.
Set aside 8 hours for this. Yes, eight. You’ll only need to be hands-on for about 30 minutes of it, and you’re welcome to run errands in the rising intervals, but you need to be able to check in every hour or two. It’s worth it, promise.
Yield: 1 3/4-pound round loaf
Sponge:
¾ c (4 ounces, 117 grams) Bread Flour
¾ c (3.3 ounces, 95 grams) Rye Flour
½ t (1.6 grams) Instant Yeast
1½ T (0.6 ounces, 18.7 grams) Sugar
½ T (4.6 grams) Malt Powder (or Barley Malt syrup or Honey (10.5 grams), or Sugar (6.2 grams))
1½ c (12.5 ounces, 354 grams) Water, at room temperature
Flour Mixture:
2¼ c (12.5 ounces, 351 grams) Bread Flour
½ plus 1/8 t (2 grams) Instant Yeast
2 T (0.5 ounces, 14 grams) Caraway seeds (you can grind these if you want to avoid the crunch)
½ T (0.3 ounces, 10.5 grams) Coarse Salt
Dough and Baking:
½ T (0.25 ounces, 6.7 grams) Vegetable Oil
2 t (about 0.5 ounces, 16 grams) Cornmeal for sprinkling
Make the sponge: Combine sponge ingredients in a large or mixer bowl and whisk until very smooth, to intentionally incorporate air — this will yield a thick batter. Set it aside.

Make the flour mixture and cover the sponge: In a separate large bowl, whisk together the flour mixture and gently scoop it over the sponge to cover it completely. Cover the bowl tightly with plastic wrap and allow it to ferment for 1 to 4 hours at room temperature. (The sponge will bubble through the flour mixture in places.)
Mix the dough: Add the oil and mix with the dough hook on low speed for about 1 minute, until the flour is moistened enough to form a rough dough. Raise the speed to medium and mix it for 10 minutes. The dough should be very smooth and elastic, and it should jump back when pressed with a fingertip; if it is sticky, turn it out on a counter and knead in a little extra flour.
[Or by hand] Add the oil and, with a wooden spoon or your hand, stir until the flour is moistened. Knead the dough in the bowl until it comes together, then scrape it onto a very lightly floured counter. Knead the dough for 5 minutes, after which it might be a little sticky. Cover it with the inverted bowl and allow it to rest for 20 minutes. (Resting the dough makes it less sticky and magically easier to work with. Trust me.) Knead the dough for another 5 to 10 minutes or until it is very smooth and elastic and your upper arms are strapless gown-ready.
Let the dough rise: Place the dough in a large container or bowl, lightly oiled. Oil the top of the dough as well. Allow the dough to rise until doubled, 1½ to 2 hours. Flip the bowl over and let the dough fall out on to a lightly floured counter, press it down gently, fold or form it back into a square-ish ball and allow it to rise a second time, back in the (re-oiled) bowl covered with plastic wrap for about 45 minutes.

Shape it and wait out the final rise: Turn the dough out onto a lightly floured counter and gently press it down again. Round it into a ball and set it on a cornmeal sprinkled baking sheet. (You can also use a 12”x4”x4” loaf pan.) Cover it with oiled plastic wrap and let it rise until almost doubled, about 1 hour to 1 hour 15 minutes. When it is gently press with a fingertip, the depression will very slowly fill in.
Preheat the oven: Preheat the oven to 450°F.


On a shelf at the lowest level, place a baking sheet or bread stone. [If you want to get fancy and bread-oven like: Place a cast-iron skillet or sheet pan on the floor of the oven to preheat.]

Slash and bake the bread: With a sharp knife or singled-edged razor blade, make ¼ – to ½ -inch-deep slashes in the top of the dough. Mist the dough with water and quickly but gently set the baking sheet on the hot stone or hot baking sheet.
Bake for 15 minutes, lower the temperature to 400°F and continue baking for 30 to 40 minutes or until the bread is golden brown and a skewer inserted into the middle comes out clean (or a thermometer inserted into the center reads 190°F; I prefer this method because you’ve done much too much work to possibly end up with an under- or over-baked loaf of bread).


Cool the bread on a wire rack.

Reblog:

  • Email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email
  • Share on Pinterest (Opens in new window) Pinterest
  • Share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • Print (Opens in new window) Print
  • More
  • Share on X (Opens in new window) X
  • Share on Instagram (Opens in new window) Instagram
Like Loading...
← Older posts
Newer posts →

  • Bob and Robin's avatar Bob and Robin
  • rockinrobin43's avatar rockinrobin43

Meta

  • Create account
  • Log in
  • Entries feed
  • Comments feed
  • WordPress.com

Copyright Notice

Creative Commons License
This blog and all work herein is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 United States License.

The Current Weather at the Captain’s Shack

Click the image to see the very latest and current weather at the Captain's Shack in Boise, Idaho

Enter your email address to follow this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

Join 182 other subscribers

Thanks to all of these readers and subscribersz of this blog!

  • 324,764 and 598,479 Folks Reached

Monthly Archives of this Blog

Translate This Page

Assoc of Food Bloggers

Association of Food Bloggers

BFM Drive-Thru

Boise Farmers Market Drive-Thru

Air Fryer Cooking Time and Temperature Conversion Calculator

To convert to the AirFryer

AirFryer Recipes

https://www.airfryerrecipes.com/

Air Fryer Conversions

Rule of 25%. Reduce oven/frying temperature by 25% and time by 25%.

Fork To Spoon – Air Fryer and Instant Pot Recipes

Great resource for AF and IP information and recipes.

AirBnB Buhl, Idaho

Welcome to Mary Anne’s place, a historic cottage in the heart of Kelley’s Canyon Orchard. Just 20 minutes from Twin Falls, unwind in this quiet retreat by enjoying the pleasant sound of a nearby creek and views that look out into the orchard. 4 guests · 2 bedrooms · 3 beds · 1 bath, Wifi · Free parking · Kitchen, Entire House! 1903 River Rd, Filer, Idaho 83328

Bloglovin’

RSS Links

RSS Feed RSS - Posts

RSS Feed RSS - Comments

-----------------------
I Know. Not Idaho Products, But still Worth A Try!
----------------------

Rockin’ Rs

----------------------
Items of Blog Interest.
-----------------------

Member of The Internet Defense League

The History Kitchen

Interesting historical information about food - prep, origins and uses. Written by a kitchen anthropologist!

-----------------------
Of Concern To This Blog
----------------------

Recent Posts

  • Different Kinds of Peppers
  • It’s Pizza Time!
  • Salmon — Part 2
  • What Is A Salmon?
  • Trike Restaurant Finds Worthy of Posting

-----------------------
Think Local!! Buy Local!!

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

Buy Local!

If you are not from Idaho, think about Buying Local in Your area! As for us, we have lived in Idaho since 1982. We Buy Idaho wherever possible.

Chef Jake Sandberg, Crispeats

Food References and Recipes

Buy Local

And it does ... Just Make Sense! Regardless of where you are from.

------------------------
Think Local!! Idaho Products.

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

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

True Roots Farm

Available at the Boise Farmers Market and online at https://www.trueroots.farm

True Roots is a local produce farm committed to sustainable and chemical-free farming practices. We raise pesticide-free and non-GMO produce fresh from the farm, offering a diverse variety of farm-fresh services to our local community. Since our founding in 2014, our mission has been to provide farm-direct access to clean, reliable, and affordable produce.

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

-----------------------
Some Awesome Recipe and Spice Sources. Culturally diverse.

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

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!

-----------------------
Some Great Boise Restaurants.

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

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)

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.

The Orchard House

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

The Ravenous Pig

1234 N. Orange Ave. Winter Park, FL

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

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

-----------------------
Miscellaneous Items
-----------------------

Blog Syndication

NetworkedBlogs
Blog:
Boise Foodie Guild
Topics:
Food, Recipes, Cooking
 
Follow my blog

Blog Badge

Local & Regional Food Blogs - BlogCatalog Blog Directory

  • Subscribe Subscribed
    • Boise Foodie Guild
    • Join 72 other subscribers
    • Already have a WordPress.com account? Log in now.
    • Boise Foodie Guild
    • Subscribe Subscribed
    • Sign up
    • Log in
    • Report this content
    • View site in Reader
    • Manage subscriptions
    • Collapse this bar
%d