Olive Oil

A variety of gourmet olive oils currently in our pantry

Some people have too many condiments, we have too much olive oil. Well, who can ever have too much? We will use all of this and more. With our CSA subscription to The Little Farm in Gilbert we receive a lot of salad greens and so this variety and incredible quality of olive oils make dining on greens all the better.

The first and third bottle in the photo is from the Stonehouse California Olive Oil Company. We bought these last month at the Ferry Building Marketplace in San Francisco. The Olio Nuovo, also known as Sevillano Single is an early harvest and one of the most flavorful and strongest of olive oils.

The next bottle is from Joëlle, also a California company. This olive oil is my current favorite, I love the peppery, grassy flavor. This particular bottle is the hand-picked cold-pressed Early Harvest Manzanillo.

Fourth bottle is from Il Frantoio Di Montepulciano from the village of Montepulciano in Tuscany, Italy. While we tried and loved it before buying it in San Francisco, we haven’t opened this one yet.

Finally is Lapas Extra Virgin Olive Oil from Greece, which was purchased from Whole Foods, a good inexpensive everyday oil.

Pepper-Passion

Various dried pepper corns ordered from Bruce Morgan of www.pepper-passion.com

I recently bought a pepper sampler in order to try some of the exotic and different peppers that grow around the globe. Opening the box I found five four-ounce bags and a gift – two long narrow plastic tubes filled with peppercorns. The sampler includes a Vietnamese Gourmet Pepper, Tellicherry from India, Talamanca Del Caribe from Ecuador, Lampong from Indonesia, and Malabar from India. The first free gift was the Hawaiian Rainbow pepper pack containing Tellicherry black, Mutok white, and French Rose while the second one called Ebony & Ivory merely states Black & White peppercorns.

Peppercorns stay fresh for years, while ground pepper starts to lose flavor between three hours to four months after it is ground, depending on which authority you are reading! My sampler cost $25 and was ordered online from Bruce Morgan at www.pepper-passion.com up in the state of Washington. From order to delivery it only took six days, and now on to try our new and exotic peppers!

Himalayan Crystal Salt

Macro of Himalayan Crystal Salt

For the next week, I’ll be photographing things from my kitchen. This first picture is of Himalayan Crystal Salt. Who would have known there were such different qualities to salt? Commercial grocery store salt is treated with chemicals to stop it from clumping and may have iodine added, while natural salts like Himalayan and Celtic Sea Salt are not chemically treated. They may clump but they are still full of their original nutrients, making them healthier for you. I ordered mine from Elaina at PureJoyKitchen.com, where 2.2 pounds costs $29.50.

Dripping Cheese

Grilled Cheese

Made me a grilled cheese sandwich. Sorry, no image of Jesus appeared, but the cheese did ooze. My recipe for making grilled cheese was inspired by a local cafe that makes an awesome sandwich, so I tried duplicating it at home.

This got me thinking about the economics of eating grilled cheese at home compared to eating out; consider this.

A loaf of 9-grain bread costs $3.99, eight slices cheddar $2.99, eight slices Swiss, an eight oz. wheel of Brie $6.50 or less, two tomatoes $0.90, a handful of arugula $0.90, butter to grill sandwich $0.40. The ingredients to make eight gourmet grilled cheese sandwiches cost $18.67 or $2.33 per sandwich.

Driving 5 miles each way to said cafe at the federal government compensation level per mile of $0.48 adds a total of $4.80 in automobile and gas costs to the $0.96 tax, $1.80 for the tip, and $11.98 for our sandwiches (they cost $5.99 each). But when I’m finished having someone else prepare my food, the cost totals $19.56 or $9.78 per sandwich.

In other words, for the price of two cheese sandwiches at the cafe, I can make eight sandwiches at home. Am I turning into a stingy old man, or what?

New Shoes

Bought new shoes today, took a photo of them and then tried the plastic wrap filter from Photoshop on them

I bought new shoes today and took a rather uninspired photo of them. So today is the day I try a Photoshop filter on an image in an attempt to make something more of it. This is the plastic wrap filter, and I still find that the photo is not very worthy of posting – but then I have nothing else to post, so it will have to fill the spot of the 321st photo of the year.

Cool Weather

Hot Air Balloons back in the sky indicate cooler temperatures for Phoenix - YAY!

Only after temperatures come down from the brutality of this desert’s 100-plus degree days do the Hot Air Balloons return to the skies. This was one of a few balloons seen in the morning sky, the first I have spotted since the waning days of spring. For the next six months, we will see many more balloons traverse our blue skies, as the wind permits, of course.