Wednesday, April 16, 2014

Honey-Soy Teriyaki Salmon

Honey-Soy Teriyaki Salmon
Adapted from Serious Eats

1 1/2 lbs salmon, cut into 4 equally sized fillets
1 c soy
1/4 c honey
2 tbsp lemon juice
2 inches peeled fresh ginger, thinly sliced
3 garlic cloves, smashed
1 tbsp chili paste (like sambel oelek)
2 tbsp toasted sesame seeds

Whisk the marinade together. Slide the salmon fillets into a large ziplock bag and pour the marinade over them. Marinate in the fridge, skin side up, for at least 30 minutes and up to 3 hours.

Preheat your broiler and be sure to set an oven rack to the uppermost level. I like to use a study (and much loved aka dingy) pan with sides for broiling. You don't need to line it, but I hate scrubbing off baked-on honey from anything, so I lined my pan with foil, then with parchment paper. Yes the parchment paper will get a tad...singed, so keep a close eye on your oven. It's worth it for zero cleanup. Broil for 7 to 10 minutes, but absolutely no longer.


I rounded out this dinner with baked sweet potatoes with a Chinese five spice butter* and a salad tossed with toasted hazelnuts, avocado and sauteed green beans. 

*It is fancy, but not complicated. Soften 2 tbsp butter, mash in 1/8 tsp Chinese five spice.

Sunday, April 13, 2014

Heigh-Ho, Heigh-Ho

Tomorrow's my first day back at work in just over 12 weeks. I've had an amazing time being at home with Caleb and I'd be lying if I said I were looking forward to leaving him. Friends told me I'd get nothing done other than taking care of the baby while I was on leave and the first 6 weeks or so was like that. But the last six weeks I've felt like myself again: getting enough sleep, making dinner, keeping up with the laundry and taking Caleb for outings. I've even made the gym a regular habit!

Unfortunately this is a maternity leave only arrangement- our household functions best with two salaries. Maybe someday that will change, but in the meantime, it's off to work I go!


Friday, April 11, 2014

Hospitality Week

I have dubbed this "hospitality week" at the Sigmon house. By scheduling luck (and by luck I mean I haven't kept up with a calendar while I've been on leave) we had friends over for dinner twice this week. One couple brought us a "Happy New Baby!" meal of pulled pork sandwiches. Then I pulled out all the stops on a rib dinner for a friend and his daughter while his wife is over in France. (Rough break for everyone, right?) Looking it back, it's sounds like Hospitality Week was sponsored by the National Pork Council but no, I do all my own rib-buying with my lucrative stay at home money.

Being off work leaves time to actually set the table. I picked up the cloth napkins and pineapple napkin rings at our church's rummage sale.

Before I get to the ribs (and you MUST make these ribs), I'll explain this new term "hospitality week." I found that when we cleaned, straightened up and staged the dining room and bathroom to look a lot nicer than it usually does, it was really easy to just pick up again two days later without having to reclean the whole apartment. We have friends (you know who you are :-) who are really good at opening their home to guests - it seems like they're constantly hosting friends for dinner and I'd like to be the same way. So I suggested to Brian that we do Hospitality Week once every month or so. Clean the house, set up the dining room, pick some great recipes and host at least two dinners. Our friends are so wonderful to host- they always bring something to contribute, they don't bat an eye when your baby starts fussing and none of us are fancy 8pm dinner people. Not to mention the most important part- they're great company! We all have a million excuses not to invite people over but I want to push those aside.

This is what happens when you've been off work for 12 weeks. You make a little bouquet for the 3 year old girl coming to dinner.

Now, onto these ribs. I was lacking dinner inspiration when making up this week's meal plan and flipped to through last month's Southern Living. I don't know if I marked this recipe the first time I read this issue, but "Honey and Soy Lacquered Ribs" jumped out at me.

Honey-and-Soy-Lacquered Ribs - Southern Living - Baked - can be done 1-2 days ahead of time and finished under the broiler | pinned from MyRecipes.com

Southern Living needs a little note next to this recipe that says "Your life with be incomplete if you do not try these ribs." I have a new rating system that's going be called "On a scale of zero to Honey Soy Ribs, how delicious is this?" They are so easy: short ingredient list and a lot of hands off time. You can throw these in while the baby naps and still nap yourself. They're sweet and spicy and I might make them weekly in the summer time. If you've got kids coming over for dinner, just skip adding the sauce. They can try them plain, with a regular bbq sauce or if they're adventurous, they can try dipping a piece into the spicy sauce. I served them with baked sweet potatoes (they just bake with the ribs) and roasted broccoli. Our friend brought a salad and dessert, and we had an all-around lovely evening complete with cocktails. To hospitality week! 

Monday, April 7, 2014

Carmelized Onion Sausage Lentil Soup

Or "There's Nothing in the House for Dinner Soup." That quite clearly explains this soup's origins. I have a surplus of green lentils sitting in my pantry, and Brian isn't a big lentil fan, so I try to make them for solo meals. I had planned on eating an apple and almond butter for dinner, but I ate that at 4pm and to no one's surprise, I was hungry again not long after that. In rummaging through my fridge and pantry, this soup was born.

Carmelized Onion Sausage Lentil Soup
Inspired by Mark Bittman's 7 Ways to Make Lentil Soup

3/4 - 1 lb crumbled sausage*
2 yellow onions, sliced into half moons.
1 c. french green lentils
1 bay leaf
1 tsp cumin
6-8 cups chicken stock**
Creme fraiche or sour cream -yes, I also had homemade creme fraiche in the house. 

*I used a homemade pork sausage with garlic and herbs. Don't be impressed. It's ground pork mixed with garlic and herbs. 

**6 cups will get you more of a stew, 8 cups will get you more of a soup. Go figure.

Saute the sausage in a large, heavy soup pot until browned and crispy. I found I needed to add a little canola oil to help the browning along. Remove the sausage and add a just enough water to scrape up the browned bits on the bottom of the pan, then add the onions.These you can cook until they're golden brown, or like, if you have a baby who won't sleep and you constantly have to check on him, until they're very, very, very dark brown. We'll call them "charred." They were still delicious. When the onions are done to your liking, add the lentils, bay leaf, cumin, chicken stock and sausage. Simmer half an hour or so, until the lentils are soft but not falling apart. Top individual servings with creme fraiche or sour cream, or at the very least, a tiny bit of lemon juice. You want something acidic to break through the dark heavy flavors of the onions and sausage. My soup looked like sludge, so I'm sparing you a picture, but it was incredibly delicious sludge.

Now I have to find recipes to use the rest of the lentils in the pantry...

Thursday, April 3, 2014

Caleb, 2 Months

I had this post written and ready to go, and forgot about it. Such is life with a baby! 


This month Caleb started sleeping for longer stretches, smiling and babbling and took his first flight! I still don't have him on a specific schedule- I never know how long he's going to sleep at night and I'm loath to wake him up if he's dead asleep. I attempt to keep his first night feeding between 10 and 11, but sometimes that just doesn't happen. 

Mom and Baby at 8 weeks old.

When Caleb's awake, he's AWAKE. In constant motion.

When it hit 45 degrees, we took a walk to the library.


On Caleb's 8 week birthday we left him with Nana and Papaw Whale and went out with Brian's brother and his wife. Date night!

Nana Sigmon caught this gorgeous picture while we were in North Carolina. Caleb's smile is the best.