July 2, 2010

Thirty Days: Done!

Another Thirty Days Project, our sixth, ended on June 30th. To celebrate, Aya prepared a fantastic steak dinner for the co-founders of Thirty Days Project (us and Tim Gerwing). You can see the global collection of everyone's work at thirtydaysproject.com

Aya started us off with salmon cakes with a mustard, dill and lemon mayonnaise. We opened Tim's bottle of BC's See Ya Later Brut, which proved to be charmingly lemony and bright, if a bit rustic in texture. Quite refreshing and a perfect pairing for the salmon cakes.

Aya also made "shrimp toasts", which turned out to be chopped shrimp in an egg-white batter on thin slices of bread. These were then gently sunk, like the Titanic, into a deep pot of hot oil. The main difference between the shrimp toasts and the Titanic soon became evident as the toasts emerged sizzling from the oil, crispy and delicious, while the Titanic remained on the ocean floor, untasted, as it has for decades.

The fact that there are no photos of the shrimp toasts is a testament to how they were simultaneously all-consuming and all consumed.

Aya served whole-wheat spaghetti, with its wonderfully nutty flavour, as the first course. The cream sauce was loaded with blue cheese and walnuts. At this point we started on a bottle of Sandhill Small Lots Syrah (2003). Sandhill was Canadian Wine Awards' "Winery Of The Year" for 2009, and this 7 year-old Syrah from the Phantom Creek vineyard was a perfect example of why they deserve that award. All dark fruit, spice and smoke, the wine was deep, rich and an excellent match for the creamy, nutty blue cheese sauce.

Then it was steak time: soft, flavourful strip loins, seared with crispy stripes and red inside. Aya made a mushroom cream sauce and sautéed some vegetables. The wine opened up to deep, complex spiced-plum flavours and ended up with an almost cola-like finish. Just spectacular.

Dessert was a spiced angel-food cake with a hot toffee sauce, light and heavy together, each needing the other and both pairing beautifully with the Knob Creek bourbon we gently sipped.

May 16, 2010

Playa Las Balendras, La Paz

We took a 360-degree panorama, standing in the waist-deep water of the gorgeous harbour at Las Balendras, just up the coast from La Paz.
Later, on the flight home, we flew directly over Las Balendras and had a great view of the beach. The red dot is approximately where we stood while taking the panorama photos.

Here's the Google Maps link:



View Larger Map

May 12, 2010

Todos Santos Life

Todos Santos is more than bright colours, flowers, and dappled shade. The tourist area ends with the paved roads, but walking the dirt-road neighbourhoods isn't any more or less romantic. It's just different. No-one here has a second house in another country. No-one is on vacation. Why would they go anywhere else?The sun sets, and our roast chicken is ready to pick up from Super Pollo.

Chicken?



Aya waited very patiently, silently, for the occupant of this hole to emerge.

May 11, 2010

Colours of Todos Santos

Todos Santos is a beautiful town. Lots of colour everywhere you look.



Our full Baja photo collection is on Flickr. Click here to take a look.

Baja California Sur: Todos Santos

Enjoying life in Todos Santos.

Todos Santos is here:

View Larger Map

Baja California Sur: Cabo Pulmo

A family gathering in Cabo Pulmo for Dad's 70th birthday. The first time we had all been together since 1996. This time, we all brought partners. It was a wonderfully happy event in a beautiful location.

Playing boules on the beach with whatever rocks we thought might work. We like to compete.

Delicious fruit for breakfast, with lots of limòn juice.

And Aya's fantastic huevos rancheros!

Breakfast on the patio in Cabo Pulmo.

The water was so beautiful and warm. Lots of snorkeling and swimming.

Cabo Pulmo is here:

View Larger Map

December 27, 2009

Boxing Day Breakfast

A growing tradition for Christmas: pannetone French toast made with egg nog. And short, strong espresso, of course. Then out for a brisk walk (after brushing our teeth).

Pannetone. An Italian brioche with candied peel, raisins and orange essence. Makes excellent toast.

Christmas Dinner

This one was just for the two of us, nice and quiet.

Coating the clove-studded ham with a mix of quince paste and mustard.

Glazed and smelling wonderful.



With leftover sweet potato strudel and snap peas. We opened Orofino's fantastic Reisling but found it overpowered so switched to a very tasty, and much more appropriate, Beaujolais Nouveau. The candied finish from the carbonic maceration was an excellent match with the glaze and the salty meat.

Christmas Wine

See Ya Later's Gewurztraminer was an excellent aromatic match with the kabocha ravioli with a walnut pesto.
Aromatic, rich and spicy fronted by smooth blueberry fruit. Deep inky blue/black. Deliciously matching the spiced rub on the roast.

Developed bouquet, suede-like tannins with dark, oaky fruit. Wonderful with the intense roast prime rib.

Christmas Party, 2009

Another wonderful Christmas party with dear, close friends. Aya planned and created the whole menu, as usual, with some familiar treasures and new delicious adventures.

Kabocha (Japanese pumpkin) ravioli.

Aya's new favourite tool: the ravioli wrinkle-cutter.

Rolling the sweet potato strudel.

Poached bosc pears.

The strudel with the prime rib roast.

Inside the strudel with golden raisins and cranberries.

Table decorations.

November 26, 2009

Thanksgiving 2009


Aya's amazing menu for eight people. All made from scratch over four days.


Stuffing the turkey with Pinot Noir grapes from Foxtrot Vineyards.


The turkey had soaked in brine overnight and here gets extra stock injections along with butter, herbs and garlic under the skin.


Aya's first roast turkey, with parsnips, carrots and roast garlic.
Web Statistics