Category Archives: food

The Santa Fe Pizza You Don’t Get to See (But Here’s the Recipe)

It’s like this, see.  The pizza looked so incredibly delicious that I forgot all about the camera.

Sorry about that.  I guess you’ll have to use your imagination.

Our counters were filled with glass bowls containing chopped garlic, cilantro, Serrano peppers, cheese, artichoke hearts, roasted red peppers, kalamata olive paste, kalamata olives, tomatoes, mestiza (chipotle) sauce, mozzarella, and feta.  Flour dusted our island, the perfect place for rolling out the crust.

Our glasses were filled with red wine and Pavarotti serenaded us in the background.

If you’ve never had my husband’s pizza, you’ve missed out on something.  He made 4 this weekend.  Here’s the recipe for the newest one:

Sante Fe Pizza Recipe

Your crust, uncooked (We can’t give all our secrets away!)

  • 2 cups of Mexican-style shredded cheese
  • mestiza sauce w/ roasted tomatillo, chipotle and tomato (medium heat)
  • 2 links spicy chicken sausage, sliced
  • 2 serrano peppers, seeded, cored  & sliced
  • 1 green onion, diced (greens, too)
  • 1 slice red onion, finely diced
  • 1/3 c of fresh cilantro, chopped (or more to taste)
  • handful of corn kernels

Put pizza stone in oven & preheat to 500°.
Spread crust with chipotle sauce.  Sprinkle cheese over pizza.  Follow with sausage.  Spread rest of ingredients evenly over pizza.

Bake on preheated pizza stone at 500° for 8-10 minutes.

A Month of Meals

So guess what’s on my fridge?  Nope, not a photo.  Nope, not a school drawing.  Okay, okay, fine.  Both of those are on there, much to the chagrin of my tidy husband.  But there’s nothing new about photos and drawings.

Let’s take a step back.  It’s a new year and a new year means progress, right?  As I thought through how to make the most of my time this year, I was shocked to find how few things I can actually control.  But I  finally found one:  knowing what’s for dinner.

It sounds easy, right?  You’re probably one of those people with a pretty Pottery Barn chalkboard hanging in the kitchen, with cursive letters spelling out your Menu Plan Monday , aren’t you?  Well, I’m not.  I’m terrible at planning meals, particularly meals my three children will find barely bearable.  Terrible, I tell you.  I can do it for a week, and I love it and I feel so organized and the things I need are right there in the fridge.  Life is good!  But by Sunday night I’m exhausted, so the next week I am scrounging around at 5:00 every evening, looking for something to feed the people who live here, as I shuffle between getting kids to practice, checking e-mail and making sure everyone has clean socks for tomorrow.  Less good.

So I sat down the other day and made a list of meals my kids like.  And a list of meals they will tolerate.  And a list of meals they might gag down but I will certainly enjoy.  Then I put them all together–a month’s worth!–on a Mac Calendar for goodness sakes, and I printed that baby out and put it on the fridge.

At the top it says:  Dinner Plan:  Subject to change whenever Mom says so.

I’ll let you know how it goes.  And if you fancy people with your fancy Menu Plan chalkboards have any suggestions for me, I’d love to hear them.  One step at a time here.  And unless we want to have exactly the same meals next month, I’ll need a little help.

Homemade Holiday Gifts that Rock: Traditional Christmas Cookies

There aren’t many cookies I don’t like, but there’s something special about the ones we make around the holidays.  I make all sorts of cookies when the weather turns cold.  Here are three recipes I love to eat give throughout the Christmas season.

The Classic Peanut Blossom.  I could care less about peanut butter or chocolate, really, but put these guys together and, man, this is one fantastic cookie.  You can’t beat the Hershey’s recipe–you can find it here.  Then break out the milk, friends, you’ll need a glass!

To give these cookies as a gift is complicated not only by the fact that you and your kids will want to eat them all yourselves, but also because the tips of those chocolate kisses are so delicate.  Make sure the cookies are completely cool before you pack them up into a pretty package.

The Decorated Cut-Out, or the Show-Off Sugar Cookie.  Who doesn’t want a sugar cookie, or five?  Cut-outs are fairly easy to make; it’s the decorating that throws people.  Using Meringue Powder in your icing is your best bet.  Or pipe Royal Icing around the edges & use a flow-in icing to fill (it’s actually pretty easy, you just have to get the hang of piping).  Here’s a great recipe, including a Royal Icing with meringue powder.  To make flow-in icing, put some Royal Icing in a dish and slowly stir in enough water until it ‘flows’ smoothly onto a surface after you stir it. It works beautifully!  (Use a pastry bag to pipe & flow.  To get flow-in icing into corners–on a star, for example–use a toothpick quickly, before the icing sets.)

The Pressed Cookie.  My mom’s friend gave her this recipe, called Mürlee oder Toegebäch way back before I was helping in the kitchen.  (Okay, fine, I never really helped much in the kitchen, but she got this recipe when I was young, anyway.)  I tried Googling the name to no avail, but I assume it came from the Old Country somewhere.  At any rate, these are better known as Pressed Cookies now, or sometimes Spritzes.  To make them, you’ll need to invest in one of these (it’s a cookie press).

I loooove these cookies and I love to switch out the disks to make fun new shapes.  Here’s the recipe from my mom:

  • 1 c powdered sugar
  • 2 c butter, softened
  • 3 1/2 – 4 c flour
  • 1t vanilla
  • 1/2 – 1 t almond extract (optional – I don’t use it)

Preheat oven to 350°
Combine butter, sugar, and flavoring(s).  Beat with a hand mixer until fluffy.  Stir in flour by hand and mix well.  Separate dough and add food coloring.  (You might want lots of green, for example, if you’re making wreaths or Christmas trees.) Spoon dough into cookie press.(Chill remaining dough until ready to use.)
Bake at 350° for 10-12 minutes.


This week, I’ve posted all sorts of Homemade Holiday Gift Ideas that Rock.  If you’re short on money but willing to spend time, I can promise you that your friends, kids’ teachers, and favorite aunt would love to receive any of these.

A word to the wise:  make extra for your own family.  Don’t say I didn’t warn you!