Monday, September 30, 2019
Soča Valley Family Photos
Photographer: Happy Moments
Outfits:
Women's Dress: Mango
Men's Shirt: Banana Republic
Boy's Shirt: Petit Bateau
Boy's Shoes: Target (Honestly, I'd buy this shoe in every size.)
Girl's Dress and shoes: Zara
Tuesday, September 17, 2019
Padlizsánkrém a.k.a. Hungarian Eggplant Spread Recipe
Padlizsánkrém, a.k.a. Hungarian eggplant spread.
This stuff is delicious! For me, it conjures up all kinds of nostalgic feelings, as my Hungarian adopted grandma made this all the time. It always felt very "grownup" to eat it, and I've loved it ever since.
Every Hungarian housewife has their own version of the stuff, and there are even differences between regions. The three ingredients everyone agrees on are eggplant onion and salt. I searched the internet, asked my mom, and then Dan and I came up with a hard-to-beat recipe.
Dan recently found a local farm that delivers fresh produce. We were eager to try it and see what our first crate comprised of. We were excited to see three eggplants - one most-commonly-known purple one, one white one, and one gorgeous fairytale one.
I mean, look at that!!!
Anyway, we decided to attempt our very first batch of padlizsánkrém/Hungarian eggplant spread. It turned out perfectly, so I'd love to share the recipe with you!
Ingredients:
3 eggplants
1 small red onion
salt to taste (we used 4 pinches)
pepper to taste (about 1 tsp)
1 tsp smoked paprika (because Dan doesn't think a Hungarian dish can be made without it)
1/2 cup mayonnaise (I read one recipe that used sour cream, but I think I've always had it with mayo. I'd love to hear how it turns out using sour cream if you try it!)
3-4 tsp lemon juice
Directions:
1. Grill eggplants until all the skin is black and blistery. (If you don't have a grill, you can bake them at 180 C/350 F for 45-50 minutes.) We really liked the grilled, smokey flavor that doing it this way gave.
2. Place eggplants in a plastic bag and allow to sweat for 10-15 minutes.
3. Peel off the black "crusted" outside (careful, they're hot!), cut off the prickly green stem and leaves, but keep everything else - seeds and all. (Fair warning, it's a pretty weird texture.)
4. Use a blending wand or food processor to blend it up to the desired consistency. You can leave it chunky for a more "rustic" feel, or make it as creamy as you'd like.
5. Finely mince (or blend up in a food processor) the onion.
6. Add onion, seasonings, mayonnaise and lemon juice to the eggplant. Taste, and see if it needs anything else. (Some recipes called for garlic, but honestly, I think it would take away from the eggplant's flavor.)
7. Place in a container, and chill for a few hours.
8. Serve with bread/toast, bagel bites, tortilla chips, etc.
Tips:
- This amount filled this large jam-type jar, plus another baby food sized jar that we gave to our neighbors.
- Should keep in the fridge for about 5 days.
- Use as a dip at a party (like you would hummus or a spinach artichoke dip), or a spread on an open-faced sandwich.
- Although I did not try it, my mom said that if you make a bigger batch, you can freeze the eggplant, and then add all the other stuff to it when you're ready to eat/serve it.
- This spread is vegetarian, but you could easily make it vegan by using vegenaise instead of mayonnaise.
We added our delicious padlizsánkrém/eggplant spread to that evening's "European" style dinner. We cut up some yummy crusty bread, put out different cold cuts and lunch meats, cheeses, nuts, veggies, and fruit. Our son loves getting to "make his own sandwich", and we love all the delicious options!
Soooo scrumptious! It's a perfect way to celebrate eggplants and those couple weeks between summer and fall.
Perfection.
Sunday, September 8, 2019
Honeybee Themed 1st Birthday Party
This past weekend we celebrated our littlest cutie's 1st "bee day"! I love planning any kind of party, especially one with a fun theme. For Aidan's birthday we went with "The Very Hungry Caterpillar", so I kind of wanted to go with another Eric Carle book for Jocie's party. I found one of his books called "The Honeybee and the Robber", and it was so cute! Slovenia is really into beekeeping, so it just seemed like the perfect choice.
Here are some snapshots from the sweet day:
Food/Treats:
- Danish Lagkage - I decorated the cake with peaches, nectarines, apricots, mangoes and blueberries. Then I added a few fondant flowers and candy bees. I made the cake in a smaller pan, so it made 4 layers. I used a round cookie cutter to cut out three smaller circles and made Jocie a mini version of the cake. It worked out perfectly!
- Sugar Cookies - I bought cookie cutters from Ann Clark. I used the beehive one for the cookies. I decorated them with royal icing, candy bees and flowers. If you plan on making these, I suggest watching a tutorial on youtube, it was a big help.
- Sandwiches - My mom helped by using a hexagon shaped cutter to cut out sandwiches. Then my dad cut bees out of bell peppers. It looked so adorable!
- Melon Flowers - We cut flowers out of melons, put them on kebab sticks, and topped them with blueberries. So cute!
- Oreos - my parents brought back these Oreos from the States that have yellow filling.
- Cereal - we had some flower shaped cereal (Honeycombs would work well too). Perfect for a party for babies!
- Food pouches - another great addition for a baby party!
- Lemonade - we added some of the cut up fruit left over from the cake to it.
Decor/Other stuff :):
- We used sunflowers and craspedia (billy balls) for flowers.
- We found the bee lights at IKEA.
- The banner is from Amazon.
- Jocie's super cute dress from her grandparents is from Mini Mioche.
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