Thanks for the kind words - and thanks to everyone who came with smiles and sometimes drinks and enjoyed the afternoon with us: the fates conspired to give us a beautiful day - even my garden was cooperating for once, and the long-shot underdog horse won! It was particularly fun to hear nr706's Mom talk about her tribulations creating a recipe for a newfangled dish she'd only heard about: pizza (the Courier-Journal finally sent her here to Pizzeria Uno to try some.) After noshing all day, one bite stood out: one of Mike G's biscuits simply dressed with a thin slice of nr706's ham. Delicious. Thanks also to Mike for bringing one of his famous pies - I enjoyed the sound the lattice top made when you hit it with a fork, you'd expect you were cutting into a crisp slice of bacon!
I did a bit of experimenting with the Courier-Journal cookbooks this year and we had some hits and misses: a roquefort-bourbon dip for apples was a definite miss, while the
Henry Bain sauce (what the spouse called a "condiment kamakaze") wasn't near as bad as I thought it would be. The spoon bread,
recipe and back story here, was spectacular, and will most assuredly be finding its way into other celebrations.
Stack Cake, a famous old Kentucky recipe that was apparently a pioneer wedding cake, has gone out of favor IMO for good reason: it was basically four giant soft gingerbread cookies with, in this case, home-canned apples and home-canned pear butter in between - but it came out a bit dry and plain (the recipe conveniently forgot to mention how many layers it made, or how thick they were supposed to be, which may or may not be the problem.) Our tri-tip roast, from Bossy II, is not a cut that shows off our grass-fed, corn-finished quarter cow (so perhaps it was a good thing that we had the strong sauce,) but then the kids all seemed to enjoy the goopy
Hot Brown sandwiches with the extremely complex mornay sauce, though that may have been just because they were topped with bacon

. Sparky was very proud he got so many kind compliments on the Strawberry-Rhubarb crisp he made entirely on his own (next time, I won't have him cook the rhubarb so much, but it tasted just fine.)
Most fun of all, I made two walnut based Derby Pies with one slight variation: in one, I loosely broke up two 3.5 oz Valrhona bittersweet chocolate bars, in the other, I used my standard cup of bittersweet Ghiradelli chips. I was expecting the chocolate bar to pool together and melt - but the chocolate held its shape, resulting in a beautifully chunky pie with more distinct separation between the custard, nuts and chocolate. Definitely a winner.
Last edited by
Mhays on May 3rd, 2009, 8:22 pm, edited 1 time in total.