Archive for the 'Cooking' Category



Autumn Harvest Soup

White Nightshade Berries Orange Tree Datura

The dark half of the year is upon us, spirits come closer to us, and the nights grow cold replacing the friendly warm summer nights with cold darkness that chills the bone. My garden soldiers on regardless, producing flowers, berries, and seeds. My daturas are still blooming along with the mullein and my white nightshade’s berries are turning as black and as shiny as a raven’s eye. At this time of year I get cravings for root vegetables and squash. Pumpkins, acorn squash, sweet potatoes, yams, parsnips, turnips, and carrots — oh my! I saw acorn squash at the market and had to bring one home for soup. Don’t bother and worry about all that cutting and peeling – there’s no need. I just cut them in half (use a serrated knife for ease), scoop out the seeds with a spoon and then season the inside with salt, pepper, and herbs. Then I place the halves face down on a baking sheet and roast in the oven at 375°F for 30 minutes.

Roasted Acorn Squash

While the acorn squash is roasting I set to work dicing two onions, two large carrots, two yams, and four garlic cloves. I tossed the onions and carrots in the soup pot with some olive first and when they had softened I added the garlic. Then I added 12 cups of chicken stock (you could easily use vegetable stock for a vegetarian version) and the diced yam and brought it to a boil. I let it boil on medium heat for half an hour until the yams had cooked through and then I added the roasted squash which I easily scooped out of the skin with a metal spoon.

Adding the acorn squash

Pureeing the Soup

Once the squash was added I poured the soup in a large bowl and added a little at a time into my blender to purée it. I took the centerpiece out of the lid to let the steam escape so the soup didn’t explode my blender and through the open hole added more soup once the blender had been turned on. Each blended portion then gets poured back into the soup pot and heated. Then I added salt and cracked smoked black peppercorns along with fresh thyme and oregano from my terrace garden.  I always add a dash of hot sauce and worcestershire sauce to my soups as well.

Lastly I made some Irish soda bread with whole grain flour and lots of diced green onions (and plenty of butter) to go with the soup. And voilà, you have yourself a delicious Autumn harvest soup that will serve 8 people. To change it up you can use any kind of squash: pumpkin, spaghetti squash, butternut squash… whatever your favourite may be. If you hate squash then just up the number of carrots used and maybe add some parsnips too. Instead of herbs you could add nutmeg, ginger, coriander, and cumin for a spicier tasting soup. Happy witchin’ in the kitchen!

Soda Bread

Wild Monsterberry Mead

Local Wild Berries of the PNW

MEAD!!! Mead, mead, mead! If you have only ever tasted an SCAer’s crappy month-old homebrew, don’t let it affect your opinion of this glorious beverage as you haven’t truly tasted mead. Good mead is ambrosial, indescribable, divine wine, and I highly recommend making your own at home. The stuff labelled mead in a few liquor stores still just isn’t at the same level you can get with home brew. Five gallons of mead makes about thirty bottles and usually costs $30 per 5 gallon batch — that’s $1 per bottle! On average, purchasing a good bottle of mead costs anywhere from $20-$60 per bottle. How can you not want to make mead after doing that math! I’ve found it’s also a very traditional and well received offering to gods and spirits. They love something you’ve slaved over making with your own sweat, blood, and tears as well as lots of love, care, and patience – now that’s a sacrifice. In case I’ve convinced you, here is a pdf I wrote of instructions for the mead party members: Basic Mead Making Method

Crushing the wild berries

Now on to the mead making! A couple weeks ago my apprentice and I hiked up the mountain with two pails in search of wild berries.  We picked wild raspberries, thimbleberries, huckleberries, salal berries, blackberries, rowan berries, and wild Oregon grapes. As the majority of the berries are said to belong to the Monster Woman of the Woods in local Native lore, I think the name “Wild Monsterberry Mead” has a perfect ring to it. We left an offering of a handful of the berries at the dirt crossroad on the mountain and then headed home to make mead from our colourful harvest.  Once home, we heated up some wild Dandelion honey mixed with a little water on the stove until hot, but not boiling and poured it over the berries. Yes, that’s right, we didn’t wash the berries! What good is a wild mead without some bugs and dirt in it? We added a black tea bag and a little lemon juice and then set to work crushing the berries in our hands to help speed along the fermentation. Lastly, we added the yeast. The bucket of berry deliciousness sat in my dining room for about two weeks with a heavy dish cloth covering it to keep out fruit flies and dust. I stirred it every day to add oxygen which is good for the yeast at this point.

Freshly racked Wild Monsterberry Mead Exploded Wild Monsterberry Mead

Before and After the Explosion

Last night, my apprentice came over for her weekly lesson and we strained and racked the mead with more Dandelion honey into a sanitized carboy and then put it back in the dining room to ferment. We went on to sanitizing wine bottles to rack two already finished mead flavours into the bottles, but a quick look back at the newly racked carboy told us it was going to blow! So we moved it back into the kitchen and even though I cleaned it before going to bed, it still exploded during the night. It’s normal though. It happens when the yeast is very happy getting it on with the honey and just a little too over excited about it. I just wiped up the mess, cleaned the airlock and hope it doesn’t ejaculate berry juice all over my linoleum and fridge again. At least it wasn’t the carpet… After the minor mess we went on to bottling two Loki meads – which is just slang for “happy accident” mead made from the combined leftovers when racking multiple mead batches. One was a blend of Salmonberry and plain methlegin meads and the second was a mix of last Autumn’s “Pomegranate-Raspberry” and “Apple Spice” meads. The first one is delicious, but the second is ambrosial. My two gallons of Ginger-Lime and one gallon of Huckleberry mead should be ready to bottle soon as well. My wine rack is starting to look nice and full again… most excellent, yes…

Newly Bottled "Loki" MeadsNewly bottled “Loki” meads

My Mead Rack with Six Different VaritiesMy mead rack with six different varieties

A Witch’s Birthday

Spoiled Witch

It was my birthday recently (hence the slowness around these parts) and I was well-spoiled by friends and family. How old am I? Well a lady never tells her age, and I’ve been told I’m a lady, so it will have to remain a mystery. I was spoiled with wildcrafting books and a large granite mortar and pestle by my man Mojo who took me out for a witchy day about town to Banyen Books, Aphrodite’s Cafe, and then off to a movie. It was indescribably delightful to spend a whole day out with my sexy man.

Aphrodite's Cafe

Birthday Breakfast Milk Oolong and Cream Earl Grey Teas

The day after my birthday I spent with my apprentice as it was her birthday. We spent the entire day exploring Granville Island with the leisure we’d always wanted to, but never had the time for. We made our own breakfast from the market of fresh croissants, fresh figs, local goat cheese, wild boar proscuitto, and duck proscuitto (yes, duck proscuitto!!). Can you say foodgasm? We were still hungry so we wrapped the wild boar proscuitto around the fresh figs and chunks of well-aged gouda – that seriously went beyond a foodgasm to the realm of something divine. We visited our favourite shops and artisans and then stopped for a beer tasting at the Granville Island Brewery. Six different flavours isn’t hedonistic at all…

Totem Pole Carvings in Progress

Skeins of naturally dyed silk at the silk weaving studio

Empty beer glasses - I swear they're mini

Other wonders and curios found their way into the mail box or were delivered by hand just in time for the celebration – the lovely new issue of Hex Magazine, a copy of Pan’s Labyrinth, a bottle of Liquor Strega for Diana, a whole Raven’s wing, a 1920s book of Polish fairy tales from my parents, and a copy of The Visions of Isobel Gowdie. I received a lot of birthday wishes and phone calls from family out east. It was a great birthday this year thanks to the wonderful people I am surrounded by – so thank you all so very much!!

Off to the Mountains

The Wigglian and the Witch are going camping this week deep in the mountains. The Botanica will be temporarily closed until Saturday and I won’t be able to respond to any emails or comments until then.  I spent all day yesterday in my kitchen cooking chili, cornbread, muffins, and cookies. I plan to spend the majority of the trip carving when I’m not exploring the forest or jumping into the freezing cold mountain lake. Here’s a little sneak peak at what I’m currently carving and what those on my woodwork email list can expect to receive in their inbox when I return:

Phallic Goat Amulet carved from BlackthornPhallic Goat Amulet carved from Blackthorn

Best Incense Making Day Ever!

kyphi incense blends

What happens when you let two Leos loose with expensive herbs and resins and give them a kitchen to work in? Why the best incense making day ever of course! My lovely apprentice came by this morning for a day we had long anticipated after shopping at Soma Luna. We made an original ancient Egyptian Kyphi incense recipe and Holly’s Hermes Kyphi recipe. Both will still take a week or two before they are finished. We made a huge batch of the Egyptian Kyphi and will be selling the excess in the Botanica. It’s not too often you find authentically made Kyphi pill incense these days.

Rolling the Bee Oracle Incenserolling bee oracle incense

Bee Oracle Incense Pills

Then we made the Bee Oracle Incense (melissae incensum) pictured above which is an original mock-kyphi recipe I came up with. The main ingredient is bee propolis resin, but it also contains honey and homemade mead along with herbs associated with bees and prophecy. I have to say that bee propolis resin smells absolutely amazing! It’s like honey and vanilla had sex with flowers. It smells delicious burned on charcoal and lasts a long time. It’ll take a few days to dry and then I should have it up in the botanica. It’s to be burned for divination, oracular work, blessings for mead making, and for working with bee familiars. The Melissae are tied to Aphrodite, Dionysus, Hermes, and sometimes Demeter in Greek mythology. My apprentice’s lovely man came over after hiking in the woods and he helped us portion and form the Bee Oracle incense into pills as well as the Amber resin we made.

Making amber resin with a double boiler Packaging Amber Resin

My apprentice and I have also been very tempted for a while to make our own Amber Resin. So of course we had to make some for the best incense making day ever. Amber resin isn’t actually made from amber, which is a petrified tree sap, but is usually made with benzoin resin and vanilla. For our own recipe we used benzoin resin, liquid storax resin, vanilla bean, honey, and pure beeswax. We melted it all over a double boiler and then let it set and cut it into pieces and wrapped them up like candy. The amber cubes smell like candy, but I wouldn’t recommend eating one! They smell absolutely delicious and sexy when burned. Our Amber resin recipe would be perfect for love and sex magic. There is nothing like vanilla and honey with a touch of sickly sweet benzoin. These we finished today and should be up in the shop tomorrow or Monday. We put three cubes to a packet as you only need to burn 1/9 of a cube at a time to fill an entire room with smoke – and it burns for a good while.

Of course once we had made all these incenses, the three of us had to light a charcoal and hover around it as we tested each one inhaling their divine scents. I can easily see how incense is the food of gods and spirits. I have to say, it is very much worth it to spend good money on your gods for such a purpose.

Testing the new incenses

« Previous PageNext Page »





Browse the Archives

Categories

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

The Reading Queue

All original text and images are copyright of the Witch of Forest Grove. Please do not copy without permission. Text excerpts must be under one paragraph and have full attribution.

© Sarah Lawless 2006-2012

Visitors

  • 1,066,833 hits


Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

Join 824 other followers