Recipe: Roasted butternut squash soup


Roastie Butnut Soup! Yay!
You will need:

2 – pears
1 – apple
1 – butnut squash, roasted (duh)
3 slices of bacon (yum)
3 – carrots
1 – sweet Vadalia onion
1 – cup of milk (I used Goat’s Milk but I’m sure Cow would suffice)
1 – bouquet garni of fresh sage, thyme, rosemary and a cinnamon stick

Fry the bacon in the bottom of the slow cooker (chopped into tiny bits). Corsely chop everything else up, and add to the cooker once bacon is browned. Cover with water. Submerge bouquet garni (herbs tied up in cheese cloth) under the liquid. Boil away on high for a few hours, then switch to low. (I usually leave on low overnight, but this makes the liquid completely disappear, so I suggest no more than 4hrs.)

Add milk at end, and sea salt to taste (I add loads cause I’m a sea salt addict).

Then whiz it all up with a hand-whizzer.

Serve with a dollop of sour cream, labne, or creme fraiche on top.

Enjoy,
x

My Santa brings organic veggies biweekly

Yes, Virginia, there is a Santa Claus. He exists on the doorsteps of men and women in Toronto, carrying a blue Rubbermaid tub, and is driven there by a team of volunteers. He doesn’t work at the North Pole; rather, his hub is in South Etobicoke. His workshop: a warehouse. Dirt under every nail.

I get my fruits ‘n’ veggies delivered biweekly from Front Door Organics. Their basic “Good Food Box” costs $37 and contains an array of organic foods to satisfy any palate. Being a vegetarian at heart, who just happens to be addicted to pork, I love all fruits and veg. So, FDO can do no wrong in my book. My only problem is finishing everything before it goes bad. Because of the organics-ness of the products, they don’t last as long as the waxy version I could purchase at my local Bloor West No Frills. This is not always a bad thing, as it forces me to cook proper food. I have made soups, chillis, stir frys, stews, fish-n-chips (pollack-n-organic fingerling potatoes to be exact), pad thai… the list goes on.

Here’s a look at my latest Good Food Box:


Acorn Squash, Red Potatoes, Carrots, Red Cabbage, MacIntosh Apples, Kale, and Shiitake Mushrooms (all from Ontario). Non-local produce include: Grapefruit, Valencia Oranges, Zucchini, Avocado, Plums, Kiwis, and Boston Lettuce (my fav of the lettuces, so soft and buttery!).

I have already planned to make mashed potatoes with shredded kale. Am considering a curried cabbage concoction of sorts. I have to roast the cauliflower that’s in my fridge from my last delivery. Cauliflower, unfortunately, is my least favourite vegetable. But I do like it roasted in a Lebanese style, and I have my trusty Middle Eastern Cookbook (by Maria Khalife) on hand to provide some inspiration (I never follow recipes, but use them as a jumping-off point for my own inventions!)… However, I have just searched quickly through the book and there’s nary a cauliflower in sight! Not good. So, instead, at some point this week, I will attempt “Cauliflower Bhajis” which I have discovered in Cooking With Vegetables by Joanne Glynn. Basically a flour-battered cauli with cumin, cayenne, and coriander. Mm, Mm, and Mm! Cumin and coriander are of course my favourite spice/herb flavours.

A couple weeks ago I made a cabbage soup from my Good Food Box. This was a take on the “Cabbage Soup Diet” that claims to help you lose a pound a day as long as it’s all you eat. I love the soup, but I can’t enjoy it sans a huge chunk of crusty bread, slathered in unsalted butter.

I made a roasted butternut squash soup that week too. Didn’t take any photos of it, but I’m eating some of the leftovers tonight for dinner. You can find my recipe here. I froze 1-2 servings in a Ziplock bag and laid it flat in my freezer for optimum space-saving ability. (My freezer is full of homemade foods that I can’t seem to finish on my own. I keep dropping off little parcels to my across-the-hall neighbours. They are young and on their own, and I’m sure they don’t bake muffins or slow-cook homemade stews, so I figure I’m paying it forward. I guess that makes me their Santa!)

Toods,
x

I swear, I do more than brunch!

Nonetheless, I just love taking photos of my cute meals, and the cutest of course are the ones involving eggs. Today I had two hard-boiled (but still warm) eggs from a farm outside Milton, Ontario, atop a bed of organic spinach sauteed in cinnamon-butter. For the sauce, a hobo bearnaise (sans terragon) made with mayonaise, creamy dill mustard, a splash of white balsamic vinegar, and a couple drops of Worcestershire. Steeping in my oversized mug is Whittard of Chelsea’s loose-leaf peach-flavoured black tea.


But honestly, I swear I do more than brunch. It’s only that I work from home, so I have access to a fully-stocked fridge, a proper stove, and unsupervised breaks. Today I am working on a copywriting project – an advertising campaign for a Canadian plastic parts distributor. You know you love advertising when you get excited about creating a brand for a plastic parts distributor! I think I have some good ideas for this project, and maybe some future ones if they like my suggestions.

Before I started work this morning (my business hours are 10am-6pm), I went for a brisk walk/stumbling jog around High Park and took a photo of my tree. On my way across the street to the Park, I brought a box of cupcakes to the construction workers who have been repairing the waterline along Bloor West since I moved in this September. They were leftovers from my birthday party on Saturday that my Mom made. She freelances in cupcakes with her own business, PattiCakes. Here’s what she made me:


Black Forest, Butter Pecan with Turtle topping, and Coconut flavours. I put little bombs on the Black Forest cupcakes (cherry bombs lol) and presented them sparkling away on a smaller cupcake tree as my birthday cake. Delightful!

Now, back to work for me :o)

Toods,
x

And so the legacy begins…

It was my birthday on 13 November, and one of my b-day resolutions is to blog regularly. Et voila, here is Coco Hobo: The Blog. I already have been active on Coco Hobo: The Twitter Feed, so maybe the segue to longform online writing will be quick and painless. Nonetheless, I don’t really have anything exciting to say today, except that I made a delicious brunch that I shall share with you:


Two poached eggs on a bed of arugula, with hobo hollandaise (a.k.a. Thousand Island dressing, I kid you not, it’s so versatile!) and ruby red grapefruit slices. And yes, that is a Starbucks sippy cup of water. Leftovers from my walk in High Park yesterday.

Speaking of High Park, because I just can’t do things the easy way, I am starting two blogs simultaneously: this, and “TreeSixtyFive” a diary in the life of a tree. Basically photographing the seasonal transformation of my favourite tree in High Park. [Note to Self: find out what species said tree be!]

You can find my tree blog here.

Also, I am beginning research on a website dedicated to beer, thirstybeaver.ca, which should be up and running by the end of the year! :o) The Beave is a subsidary of my communications agency, Innings Gate Co., and I am as excited to create it as I hope its viewers will be to read it!

Well, until next time.

Toods,
x

Random things I love right now

Cross-Country Ski Club based in High Park with Sunday trips to various ski resorts… Baroque music, live or when played on CBC Radio 2 Tempo… The Ossington Avenue bar strip… Community Building (not Networking) with mediabistro.comEnglish Rose flavoured tea from Whittard of Chelsea (my fav tea emporium)… This winery but only because it features a wire-haired dachshund on its label, and of course its Pinot Grigio is so easy to drink… et cetera

Making random soups and stews in my slow cooker, not that I follow recipes but my cookbooks inspire me to invent my own

Working from home, although it has its ups and downs, today I love it :o)