humid days, overflowing with charm
Well, every newborn thing has its growing pains, I suppose, and my new blog is going through one… I cannot post photographs now. My brilliant designer is working on it in faraway London, in a different time zone, trying to convince the mysterious powers that be who control my blogging that it isn’t enough for me to tell you that Avery has invented the best dessert of peaches and fresh cream with vanilla. I also want you to SEE the dessert.
And I want you to see a beautiful thing that happened two evenings ago: the sight of Avery through the kitchen window, across the dark terrace and through the lighted bathroom window, cajoling, caressing, spoiling each kitten in its own way. That’s right: we have kittens! Three of them, adopted on Monday from the Danbury Animal Welfare Society in a pouring rainstorm. These kittens were described as “nearly feral,” and if only I could post about one of the thousand and a half photos we have taken of them, you’d see the magic that Avery has wrought. Right now two of them are on her lap and the third beneath her chin. Nearly feral? Not any more. Two of them are long-haired gray and white striped, one with a white mask over her nose and mouth, and the third is short-haired and dark gray, with the same white mask and white socks. Jessica, Jamie and Jessamy. We have five weeks to find homes for them, so considered yourself informed.
I want you to see Avery atop Red Baron, the retired thoroughbred she’s been riding on these hot, still, humid days. It’s a funny mother thing with me: I always can pick her out of the crowd in the pool even without my glasses, or in a big group of girls on ponies, by the straight set of her shoulders, the proud curve of her back. Her instructor was due to have a baby last week, but was teaching the morning she was scheduled to be induced! Now that’s dedication. She finally had to be dragged kicking and screaming away from the horses, having left them in the capable hands of a school friend of hers, who comes to the lessons complete with Hudson, a massive golden retriever.
“He is gorgeous!” I say, stroking him, I who normally does not gravitate to dogs. “He smells so good!”
“Yep, shampooed him just last night, he needed it, I can tell you, after swimming in the pond.”
“That pond, the one covered in algae?” I ask, pointing.
“That’s the one. Loves it. Can’t get enough of it, gives him a break from the heat.”
And as we watched, the super clean dog trotted out of our sight, up a hillocky path and down again, and we heard a splash, saw him go under the scummy surface. Whereupon he emerged, ran back to the stable, dug a hole in the horsey sand surface of the riding ring, and lay in it.
“Guess we’ll be back to the shampoo tub tonight,” Lynne said resignedly.
Avery’s been having such fun jumping! Even dripping with sweat! Honestly, it’s been nearly a hundred for days and days. Then there are massive thunder and lightning storms, alleged to break the heat, but it’s back in punishing intensity within hours. Today, however, the sky has been threatening all the late afternoon, a darkening purple menace in the stultifying heat, but no rain has developed so far. If only it holds off long enough for us to head up the road to Rich’s Ice Cream with Anne, David and Katie from across the road. Katie has been a miracle with the kittens: quiet as a mouse, her eyes big with their Victorian charm, gentle hands, a delighted smile on her upturned face. There is nothing like a baby animal, unless it’s a baby person, and the sight of both together is quite impossibly touching.
The heat has not kept us from our mammoth tennis games, trying to strategize our arrival at the courts to get one in the shade, holding our arms out in the instant of a breeze, shielding our eyes from the glare, deciding “one bounce, or two bounces?” Sometimes it’s just better to let the ball bounce twice than to race heedlessly into the sun to get it in one. I shudder to think what would happen to my weight if we stopped playing, because I’ve been cooking like mad! Of course the luscious fried shrimp, produced today for Anne, David, Katie and also Joel and his two angelic girls, Jane and Molly. And a super-light cole slaw of red and white cabbages and fennel, with a dressing of the oil from a jar of marinated artichoke hearts, plus lemon juice, balsamic vinegar, a goodly dollop of mayonnaise and a ton of fresh black pepper. And potato salad, little red guys still warm from the steamer, piled with celery and a dressing of chives suspended in yet more mayo!
Have you been enjoying the recipe index? And the random recipe? I find that so inspiring, that random recipe. Why can’t I get motivated on my own, without that little push? After all, I wrote the recipes myself! But it takes that little reminder, not necessarily to MAKE what pops up, but to think out of the fridge, out of the rut. How about a hot , dark-green pablano pepper stuffed with goat cheese? Season that goat cheese with my all-time best seasoning friend, Fox Point from Penzeys, and grill them for 15 minutes or so… runny hot cheese, a crisp little spicy bite of pepper, that’s a winner. Wouldn’t you like to see a photo of it? I know I would…
Grilled Stuffed Peppers
(serves 4)
4 peppers, as hot as you like (my brother in law assures me, “the smaller, the hotter”)
1 long log goat cheese
4 tsps Penzeys Fox Point Seasoning
sprinkle olive oil
Simply cut the stem out of each pepper, as you would a Halloween pumpkin. Reach inside the pepper gently, taking care not to rip it, and pull out the white membrane and shake the pepper upside down to get the seeds out. Place a good big dollop of goat cheese into the pepper and sprinkle in a teaspoon of Fox Point. Cover the seasoning with another good slug of goat cheese. Pour a little olive oil into your hand and rub it all over the pepper. Grill over medium heat for about 15 minutes. A pepper per person!
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We’ve indulged in an orgy of house-cleaning, believe it or not, unwilling to pay the lovely Maids who come just before we do at the beginning of the summer, for a repeat visit. And yet, if you had seen John’s t‑shirt when he finished vacuuming the entire house… he looked like he’d taken it straight from the washing machine without benefit of dryer, poor man! The three of us decided, after a few hours of backbreaking labor and with the lingering smells of bleach and Old English polish in the air, that we’d rather not be professional housecleaners. But the house looked great, for a few hours, until daily life took its toll almost immediately.
I may have to roll up my sleeves one more time, before the big party in August to celebrate the 200th birthday of the house!
Can you believe it? For some reason, my blog allowed me to post this ONE photo! But not any others so far. We’ll keep working on it. Every summer, when we first arrive, one of the first things we do is to run inside, get the sign from the shelf where it lives while we’re away, and hang it on the fence. It’s our signal to our little stretch of America that we’ve arrived.
For the party, we’re inviting all the members of the Southbury Land Trust who saved our land and the house from being cut up and sold to developers. And all our friends and neighbors who’ve been dinner guests and lunch guests. We are investigating renting a marquee, which an extremely sober fellow at the hardware store informed me is called a “tent” in this country. OK. It’s hard to be fluent in both English and American. I’m madly thinking what to cook for maybe 30 people. Stuffed grilled peppers! Peaches and cream! Sticky chicken wings with homemade peanut sauce, my brother-in-law’s luscious orzo salad with salami, Parmesan, peas and roasted red peppers. And, if it won’t give him too swelled a head, his amazing hot artichoke dip with mayonnaise and Parmesan. Spread on a bit of toasted baguette, you’ve died and gone to heaven. Recipe in the index of course!
It’s back to fondling a fluffy kitten for me. And here’s hoping for photographs of them soon, if all the blogging wizards can give me a hand…