It's rare that I make something that I really want to write up on the blog. Tonight's dinner was a simple sausage and sweet pepper pizza, but it turned out so delicious that I wanted to memorialize it.
Salsiccia e Peperoni Pizza
1 Smitten Kitchen pizza dough
1/2 lb sweet Italian Sausage
1/2 large red or orange bell pepper, sliced
Shredded mozzarella
Fresh basil
Tomato Sauce:
1 14.5 oz can plain Tomato Sauce
Seasoning: dried Oregano, dried Rosemary, Garlic powder, dried Onions, crushed Red Pepper flakes, Red Wine Vinegar
Heat the oven as high as it will go.
Season the Tomato Sauce to your taste, and let it simmer on the stove while you make the rest of the pizza.
Heat a tbsp of olive oil in a large skillet. Add the sausage and let it brown, but it doesn't need to cook all the way through. Remove the sausage, leaving the oil in the pan. Add the peppers, saute until al dente.
Create your pizza! Roll out the dough, add a thin layer of sauce, then pile on the sausage and peppers. (You definitely won't use all the sauce and about 1/4 of the sausage.) Sprinkle on a thick layer of the cheese.
Bake 7-10 minutes. When it comes out, add the torn basil.
Eat!
Monday, July 28, 2014
Thursday, July 24, 2014
And life goes on, with cake
We’ve been in Nashville almost two months now.
I’m pausing as I think about this. There are ups and downs
to life at the moment. We’ve had Brian’s family here for two weekends in a row,
which was wonderful. It is truly a joy to have them within driving distance. At
the same time, I haven’t seen my parents in almost two months, which is the
longest I’ve gone in probably five years. (Another pause to swallow the lump in
my throat as I think about that fact.) The lack of friends and a church home
has become taxing. Thankfully there are our friends by phone and Facebook, and
new, kind and supportive coworkers. But it’s that moment when you walk into
Costco and realize it’s laid out backwards from your Costco in Wisconsin and
then you want to cry a bit.
Our apartment kitchen continues to aggravate me – I feel
like I’ve lost my cooking mojo. I’m trying to push through that feeling,
because I find joy in making dinner or treats for my family, and I don’t want
to let one crappy space stop me. I’ll let you know how that goes.
House hunting is also challenging, of course. The part that’s
hardest is the lack of knowledge about the greater Nashville area. If we were
doing this hunt in Milwaukee, we’d know exactly what the communities were like,
and the pros and cons of each one. If we were in North Carolina, we’d build a
house on the family land. But we’re in a new city, and we need to take the
schools into consideration. We’re priced out of the best school systems and
sometimes that bothers me and sometimes I can’t care and sometimes I think “maybe
we’ll be able to afford it in 10 years when it really matters,” but Brian gives
me a look that says “I’m never moving again, don’t ask me.” We need to take
traffic into consideration and we’ve got next to no one to ask about anything,
except our realtor, who is great, but she has a stake in this conversation and
that needs to be considered. He and I have gone round and round about what we
want in a home and we keep going back to our dream of land. A few acres. Not in
the suburbs. Somewhere with a garden big enough to be classified as a “hobby
farm” and a few chickens. But close to the city, with the good schools, please!
And not expensive.
It’s making my head
spin.
And I miss our friends. Most of whom have scattered across
the country – this was the year for moving, apparently. I’m glad we weren’t
left behind to endure another year of the job hunt but I long for this time
last year, happy and pregnant, scheming lake weekends and cookouts, long
dinners on my parents’ deck and bible study with my girlfriends. Of course, now
we have our little boy, which is so much better than anticipating our little
boy. He makes new noises every day, he sits up on his own, he eats like a
piglet. He’s always happy and giggling (when he’s not exhausted) and we can’t
believe we’re lucky enough to be his parents. So while I wait for a routine to
fall into place, I take joy in my husband and son, even in our teeny apartment.
And I make cake. I failed to have brown sugar in the house - I'm convinced I don't remember to pick up a pantry staple as simple as brown sugar because I don't have anywhere to put it. I had planned on making homemade brown sugar with molasses, but then I didn't have that either. So I made it with Sorghum Syrup, a sweetener from my home state.
Peach & Blueberry Buckle
Adapted from multiple recipes
1 3/4 c AP Flour
2 tsp Baking Powder
1/2 tsp Salt
1 stick Butter, at room temperature
1 cup White Sugar
2 tbsp Sorghum (or molasses, if that's what you've got)
1 large Egg, at room temperature
1/2 c Sour Cream
3 Peaches, skinned and cut into pieces
1/2 pint Blueberries
Sliced Almonds
Preheat your oven to 350. Whisk together the flour, baking powder and salt and set aside. Pour the sugar into a stand mixer and add the sorghum. Blend until there are no bits of syrup and it resembles brown sugar. Add the butter and beat until light and fluffy, 2 to 3 minutes. Beat in the egg. To the butter and sugar, add half the flour, all the sour cream, and the rest of the flour, in that order. Combine each before adding the next, stopping to scrape down the sides. Pour into an 8x8 container and top with a layer of sliced almonds. Bake until a toothpick comes out clean, 1 hour to 1 hour & 20 minutes (mine took the full time). Let cool slightly, but serve still warm.
Peach & Blueberry Buckle
Adapted from multiple recipes
1 3/4 c AP Flour
2 tsp Baking Powder
1/2 tsp Salt
1 stick Butter, at room temperature
1 cup White Sugar
2 tbsp Sorghum (or molasses, if that's what you've got)
1 large Egg, at room temperature
1/2 c Sour Cream
3 Peaches, skinned and cut into pieces
1/2 pint Blueberries
Sliced Almonds
Preheat your oven to 350. Whisk together the flour, baking powder and salt and set aside. Pour the sugar into a stand mixer and add the sorghum. Blend until there are no bits of syrup and it resembles brown sugar. Add the butter and beat until light and fluffy, 2 to 3 minutes. Beat in the egg. To the butter and sugar, add half the flour, all the sour cream, and the rest of the flour, in that order. Combine each before adding the next, stopping to scrape down the sides. Pour into an 8x8 container and top with a layer of sliced almonds. Bake until a toothpick comes out clean, 1 hour to 1 hour & 20 minutes (mine took the full time). Let cool slightly, but serve still warm.
Wednesday, July 9, 2014
Dreamboat
We've been doing a "dream feed" with Caleb for a couple months now. It took the place of his first middle of the night feed and helped us transition to a full night's sleep. When we started, it took place around 11pm. We've slowly moved it closer to his dinner so that we can do away with it in a few weeks. Now it's around 8:45. It's probably our sweetest time with him. He usually sleeps through the entire 6 ounce bottle. As I was feeding him tonight it occurred to me that I want to remember him just like this.
Sleeping little man
He has the chubbiest little cheeks and arms. His hair is always a bedhead disaster. His eyelashes are so long it should be illegal. Sometimes his little arm floats up to his head and plays with his hair while he's sleep-eating. He makes the sweetest little noises. His little ears are sea shell shaped. I always get the best cuddles holding him while he's asleep. We won't be doing this "dream feed" for long, so I'm treasuring it while it lasts.
Saturday, July 5, 2014
Here housey housey housey
This post starts a few weeks ago. Let's go back to move in day, the day when we walked into our apartment and I immediately announced to Brian that we would be buying a house in a year, not two years. Then there was the first week in our apartment: broken appliances, unresponsive management, me throwing fits as Brian was walking in the door at night. I started browsing Zillow that week. We had a price range in mind, but wondered if that was truly what we could afford.
We visited an open house a couple weeks ago, where we met a very nice Realtor who understood that we were only gathering information, not seriously looking at this house. (Too small house, too small yard, over budget!) She gave us some information about the area and her card.
Fast forward to tomorrow, which will be our second Sunday afternoon spent looking at homes with our Realtor. We're more serious than we thought. We got preapproved for a loan and found out we could afford monthly payments in our price range. We fell in love with a house last weekend (also known as the first weekend we looked!) but it sold by 4pm on Monday. Not to be! We're trying to look at all our options, multiple areas of Nashville, etc.
In the meantime, we become more frustrated with our apartment by the day. Service requests go unanswered, my oven runs a good 50 degrees hotter than what it's set to, broken drawers, lack of pantry...etc. The location and pools are placating us at the moment but we're really excited about the possibility of finding a home we could live in for more than a few years.
Friday, July 4, 2014
Favorite Things, June 2014
A few things that are making me happy right now...
The Nashville weather! I thought I was going to move to 95 degrees and 100% humidity every day, but there's been much more variety. If it's below 90, I don't even think it's really hot. I'm loving the warm evenings and the fact that my feet have a tan line from my Rainbows. The pool in our apartment complex is the cherry on top.
Liberte Coconut Yogurt
I'm super picky about yogurt. I don't like Greek yogurt and I don't like yogurt that's too sugary. That leaves a very, very small window, but thankfully the Liberte (non-greek) yogurt is perfect. The coconut is my favorite- not too sugary, with bits of coconut for crunch.
30 Day Fitness App
I found this app a couple weeks ago and have been loving it! It's full of short exercises that start out small and build up over thirty days. I'm currently working through the ab & squat challenge, plank challenge and triceps dips. I never know what I'm supposed to do at the gym, this has been a huge help.
Yes to Blueberries
The Nashville weather! I thought I was going to move to 95 degrees and 100% humidity every day, but there's been much more variety. If it's below 90, I don't even think it's really hot. I'm loving the warm evenings and the fact that my feet have a tan line from my Rainbows. The pool in our apartment complex is the cherry on top.
Liberte Coconut Yogurt
30 Day Fitness App

Yes to Blueberries
When Kim was home in May, we did a girls trip to Ulta. One of the things I asked her about was an eye cream. I'm in the last year of my twenties, so this is preventative. So far I'm remembering to use it twice a day.
Simplicity Parenting
One of my best friends recommended this book to me. I haven't finished it yet, but I like the principles outlined in the book: slowing down as a family, a consistent schedule and rhythm, lots of active play in the outdoors, etc. It really speaks to how Brian and I live our lives. We're creatures of habit, we eat dinner together every night and we keep Caleb on the same schedule every day, give or take half an hour. It's important to remember we need to keep this kind of consistency as our lives get busier.
Brunch with Bobby
In my time at home, I'm usually looking for something to have on in the background while I'm folding laundry or doing the dishes. (One of the few perks of this apartment: I can see the tv from the sink/prep area.) {Side note: Brian and I just had a whole conversation about if the period went inside or outside the parenthesizes. He told me not to put a whole sentence in parenthesizes. I told him I didn't care about his opinion anymore.}
ANYWAY. Brunch with Bobby (Flay) is my new favorite cooking show. He does a sweet dish, a savory dish and a drink. It's the perfect meal.
Those are just a few things making me happy this month!
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