Spiced Banana Bread

I think this is my new go-to banana bread. I added some buckwheat flour (apparently I’m becoming a little obsessed – I just made some pancakes with this flour too!), which I think makes the flavor a little deeper, and the spices compliment that well. The butter and eggs make it moist. I brought this to a choir rehearsal and it’s a good thing because I would have eaten way too much on my own!

why hello there

why hello there

Spiced Banana Bread
Adapted from here for the basic recipe and here for the spices

Ingredients

1.5 cups all-purpose flour, plus a tablespoon or two for dusting the pan
1/2 cup buckwheat flour
3/4 cup sugar
3/4 teaspoon baking soda
1/2 teaspoon salt
3 very ripe bananas, mashed into about 1.5 cups
1/4 cup plain yogurt
2 large eggs, beaten lightly
3/4 stick/6 tablespoons/85 g unsalted butter, melted and cooled, plus more for the pan
1 teaspoon vanilla extract (or add 1 sachet de sucre vanille to the sugar measuring cup before you measure the normal sugar)
1/2 teaspoon cinnamon
1/2 teaspoon pain d’épices mix (or 1/4 teaspoon nutmeg, pinch of ground cloves, and a few grinds of black pepper)

1. Adjust an oven rack to the lower-middle position and preheat the oven to 350°F/175°C. Butter the bottom and sides of a 9 by 5-inch loaf pan, then dust the pan with flour.
2. Mix the mashed bananas, yogurt, eggs, butter, and vanilla in a medium bowl.
3. Add the flours, sugar, baking soda, and salt to the wet mixture and mix until just combined.
4. Scrape into the prepared loaf pan. Bake 50-60 minutes, or until a toothpick inserted into center comes out clean and top is brown.

This is what "mix until just combined" means

This is what “mix until just combined” means

Crème de Marrons + Buckwheat Flour Cookies with Fig Jam

finished cookies

This was my first time baking with buckwheat flour and I’m a convert! It has a deep and nutty flavor that plays well with the chestnut cream. Unlike all purpose flour which only serves to form other cookies, buckwheat flour becomes one of the main flavors of these cookies.

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Ever since I first tried crème de marrons, I’ve wondered how it would taste in cookie form. I finally got around to testing it out, and I’m glad I did! I’ll warn you though: these are addictive!

Crème de Marrons Cookies with Fig Jam

Ingredients

1/2 cup butter
1/2 cup brown or white sugar
1 packet of vanilla sugar (optional)
1/2 cup crème de marrons
1 egg
1 tsp vanilla (if you have no vanilla sugar)
3/4 cup buckwheat flour
3/4 cup all purpose flour
1 tsp baking powder
1/2 tsp salt
fig jam

Preheat oven to 350°F/180°C. Cream together the butter and sugar(s) until smooth. Add the crème de marrons and egg and mix until smooth – the batter might get weirdly lumpy but don’t panic. Add flours, baking powder, and salt and mix batter until combined. Roll dough into balls that are 1.5 inches in diameter and then chill the dough for at least 30 minutes. Bake cookies for 10 minutes. Remove from oven, and use a small spoon to create a dip in the top. Fill each indentation with fig jam. Return cookies to oven, making sure to rotate the pan the other way. Bake 7-10 more minutes, or until cookies are set and starting to brown on the bottom.

Make space for the jam!

Make space for the jam!

Pan-Fried Corn

Get in my tummy

This dish was created mostly by my bestie. A few weeks ago, I went over to her apartment for a calm weeknight dinner. We made avocado pesto on orecchiette with peas, and this corn dish. I was making the pesto so I didn’t taste the corn until we sat down – and it blew my mind! So flavorful, so crunchy, so sweet! I had seconds, and thirds.

I made it for my parents last week with the addition of bacon, and they loved it too. So, with or without bacon, this is a winner!

I am nearing the end of my 2 month summer at home in Oakland. I am an emotional wreck, to say the least. The good news is that my friends and family are all still here, doing their thang. My fear that I would come back and not know anyone and no one would know me did not come true. But, that’s also the bad news. Because, now I’m leaving again and it will be just as painful as last time. Why do I do this to myself?

All I can do is stay present, enjoy life today, and try not to worry about the future too much. And eat corn!

Pan-Fried Corn

Ingredients

3-4 slices bacon (optional)
3-4 large ears of corn, shucked
1 small red pepper, diced
1/4 red onion, diced
a handful of cilantro leaves, rinsed and minced
the juice of 1-2 limes
salt and pepper to taste

Instructions

Cook bacon in a large skillet until crispy.
Remove from pan and drain on a plate lined with paper towels.
Once cool enough to handle, crumble or chop the bacon into corn kernel-sized pieces and reserve on a plate.
Pour off some of the bacon grease and return skillet to medium-high heat.
(If you aren’t using bacon, start here and use 1 tbsp olive oil instead.)

Onions, peppers, cilantro, and bacon


Add the onions and cook until starting to brown.
Add corn and red pepper and cook until browned.

Once everything is cooked through and has lots of color, remove from heat.
Stir in crumbled bacon and cilantro.
Squeeze lime juice over corn to taste.
Add salt and pepper to taste.

Fiesta!

Lately…

Food Creations

I haven’t made any recipes that are too involved in the past few weeks, but I have a few things that I want to share!

Sandwich with Brie and Cornichons
inspired by a boulangerie near the Sorbonne

On a baguette or panini bread, place a few slices of chorizo or salami, brie cheese, and cornichons (pickles). Grill in a pan with a heavy pot or pan on top (or a panini maker if you are so lucky) and eat! The combination sounds weird but it works – salty, creamy, and crunchy all at once!

Broccoli with Lemon, Parmesan, and Black Pepper

I have been using a new healthy-eating technique that has been working really well to keep me eating lots of veggies! I chop up a vegetable and put it in a tupperware, and then for the few days after I have no excuse not to use it since it is already prepared. Broccoli works well because it doesn’t go bad very quickly, but I’ve also done it with cauliflower, cucumbers, bell peppers, and onions.

Little trees dusted with snow

Here is how I do it in my small “kitchen:” Place bite-size pieces of broccoli in a bowl with an inch or two of water, put a plate or paper towel on top, and microwave for 30 second intervals, testing with a fork until it’s as soft as you want it. (Usually for me it’s 45 seconds, but it depends on your microwave and how crunchy you want it to be.) After it’s cooked to your liking, drain the water out. Then squeeze lemon juice over it, put a few spoonfuls of grated Parmesan cheese, and a twist or two of black pepper.

It’s really flavorful and quick to prepare. Eat it right away because it gets cold fast and there’s nothing worse than cold broccoli. Next I am going to try adding in zucchini!

Tomato and Basil Salad

With a simple vinaigrette, this has been a great lunch along with bread and cheese. It’s a great light lunch when it’s too hot to cook or eat hot food (such nice weather this week!).

Simple and delicious!

Herb Butter

I saw a bunch of herbs at a store near me for only 1.50eu per bunch! I couldn’t resist so I got basil and cilantro. They have started to wilt before I could use them all, so I finally made herb butter, something I see on blogs all the time but haven’t gotten around to trying. This is now going to be my go-to recipe to use up herbs that are on their way out.

Simply use some good butter (I used this yummy salted butter, but you can use unsalted and add salt if you want) that is slightly softened. Chop up whatever combo of herbs you want (I used basil and cilantro; thought it would be weird but they work together!) and throw them into the butter. Mush together with the back of a spoon until the herbs are incorporated.

So easy, so fancy!

I would love to do this with cream cheese; in fact, I thought I was buying cream cheese but I actually bought margarine. (Just when I was getting confident in my ability to understand French, the dairy goods got me again! I don’t know if I will ever be able to navigate the extensive French dairy aisles…) Damn it! Anyone have a good use for margarine?

Anyways, I put my herb butter on toast. I bet it would be good with pasta, on some sort of roasted meat, baked onto chicken, on toasts for a party, need I continue?

Oranges and Mint

No picture here, because this was a dessert one night with the family I work for. Peel and slice oranges and then garnish with a little mint. If you are thinking – EW that sounds like when I brush my teeth and then drink orange juice – SHHT! It’s not! It’s refreshing and makes you forget the fact that you are eating just oranges for dessert! :)

Non-food stuff:

-Did you know I am kind of a freak? Well, I left a comment about my siren song on my favorite podcast, and I got a shoutout on this episode! I was happy I made Joy the Baker and Shutterbean laugh. :) I was a little starstruck just listening to them say my name (well, my fake name “sweetmaddy”)!

What’s your siren song?

-This week, I went to Vertigo Productions, a recording studio located in Boulogne-Billancourt where I live, for a recording session. I, along with a group of six people from my choir, sang some small singing bits for the film Nous York. The recording engineers needed more voices to layer the sound in a few parts of the movie. There is a birthday scene, so we sang “Happy Birthday,” and we also sang the chorus of this song by Diam’s. In the film, the main actress (who showed up later to listen to us!) gets a group of the patients at an old folk’s home to perform the song with her. So, our voices will be used to round out the sounds of the group of old people singing on stage with her. Hilarious!

The screen we watched the movie on with the lyrics sliding by below

My friend Sophia and I – so excited to become superstars!

-Speaking of my choir, we have a concert coming up! I am very excited for this one. Not only do I love all three pieces we are performing, but I have a solo! I love most music, but it’s rare that I am STOKED to sing everything on the program, and I am SO stoked. I dork out every week and really enjoyed practicing and rehearsing every minute of this music. So, if you or anyone you know will be in Paris on June 8 or June 9, please stop by!

-I am still hammering out the details of what I will actually be doing next year, but I did buy my plane ticket back to California on July 5. I will be returning to Paris on September 3, so the adventure will continue!