Posts in Musing
Perfect Holiday Salad

Side by Side, Bibb Lettuce Salads with Persimmons and Candied Pecans

Would you like to know a perfect holiday salad, easy, and elegant for your holiday gatherings? It is “Bibb Lettuce Salad with Persimmons and Candied Pecans.” It is chock full of fresh seasonal ingredients like cranberries, Fuyu persimmons, and pecans.

Visually, a treat for your table. Healthy and good for you. It is what I call a composed salad, which is layered with a drizzled dressing on top, rather than tossed all together. You can make this salad ahead of time on individual salad plates or on large serving platters. It has different textures of crunch and softness, and sweetness from the cranberry dressing and candied pecans that stand up well to the tang of bold crumbled blue cheese. Your family and guests will love this salad!

 

Bibb Lettuce Salad with Persimmons and Candied Pecans

Lovingly Adapted from Bon Appétit Magazine, December 2005

 

Ingredients:

3/4 cup whole-berry cranberry sauce (purchased or homemade)

1/4 cup fresh lemon juice

1 tablespoon honey

1 tablespoon golden brown sugar

6 tablespoons extra-virgin olive oil

2 heads of Bibb lettuce, coarsely torn

4 Fuyu persimmons, peeled, sliced

1 cup (generous) crumbled blue cheese

Candied Pecans

 

 

Directions:

-Whisk first 4 ingredients in medium bowl; whisk in oil. Season with salt and pepper.

-Mound lettuce in center of 8 plates. Top each with persimmon slices, then drizzle with dressing. Sprinkle with cheese and Candied Pecans.

Recipe Note: I often substitute Bibb Lettuce with a Baby Spinach & Green Lettuce Mix, or when I can find it, a Baby Red Butter Lettuce. Trader Joe’s carries a ready-made Candied Pecans 5 oz. bag, perfect for salads or snacking.

 

If you make this salad, please share with me your comments. I would love to hear from you!

Another Related Post:

Beet & Goat Cheese Arugula Salad

Bon Appétit et Bon Weekend….Bonnie

 

 

Autumn Splendor into Holiday Tablescaping Ideas

Vintage Tray Proudly Holds Autumn Splendor

A couple of years ago I gave a tablescaping workshop for one of my garden clubs. I thought it would be fun to revisit my notes and handout and share these with you. This is the time of year when we start thinking about the holidays, gathering closer our families, more entertaining, and heightening of our home decorating.

First, think about the basics of tablescaping. Second, don’t be afraid to mix faux and real. Third, use what you love. Fourth, when decorating, choose objects and pieces that can easily transition from fall to holiday (see some ideas below). Fifth, can I use the “beauty and function” principle, will it be beautiful as well as useful in my space.

Here are some of my ideas and suggestions to get you started.



Tablescaping Ideas

 

“Simplicity is the best elegance.” Tablescaping is the art of decorating your table with your personal signature, and for the pleasure of sharing and bring joy to others.

 

Elegant Holiday Tablescape. White. Gold. Monogram China. Pearl Napkin Rings. Rosebud Centerpieces.

Basics:

Know and start with your style. Classic, Country, Eclectic, Modern, Rustic, Traditional, etc.

 

Find your theme. What do you collect, what do you love.

What types of pieces can bring interest to your table and hold materials.  Baskets, Brass, Ceramics, Copper, Crystal, Ironstone, Mercury Glass, Pewter, Silver, Transferware, Wood Pieces, etc.

 

Use pieces that can do double duty and easily transition autumn into holiday.  Antlers, Burlap and Burlap Ribbon is your best friend, Magnolia Leaves, Whole Nuts, Moss, Tabletop Topiaries, Pomegranates, Pinecones, Silver, White Pumpkins.

 

What is your color palette, and color accents?  Blue, Brown, Green, Grey, Gold, Neutral, Pastels, Red, etc.

 

Use what you have. What is in your garden and on your property? What might your neighbor share with you? What have you collected over the years? What do you have which can be re-purposed?

 

Include an element for a pleasant surprise. Something unexpected that might evoke a smile.

 

Keep in mind your intention, menu and presentation of food. Buffet style, formal sit down, or simply a pretty vignette that creates a mood. Elevate serving pieces when using buffet style.

 

Step-by-Step Flow

1)    Place your tablecloth, table runner, antique shawl, etc. on your flat surface. Select neutrals easily carry into different seasons.

2)    Place your desired theme or objects in place.

3)    Start layering your tablescape by filling your theme.

4)    Continue to layer with smaller objects.

5)    Add accent color, glitter, and glow.

6)    Remember simplicity, and less is sometimes more.

7)    Transitioning from autumn to holiday is as simple as using neutral table runners, tablecloths, and pieces that double duty. Take out autumn pieces that don’t, and add in your favorite holiday choices.

Autumn Suggestions

 

Setting the Mood. Carolyn Roehm says “Texture is the preeminent design feature in fall.” Fall is all about abundance and warm tones.

 

Branches

Eucalyptus branches and berries, Dried Kiwi Vines, Lemon leaves, Grapevines, Magnolia Branches and Leaves, Olive Tree Branches, Smoke Tree Burgundy, Pink Pepperberry Stems, Pyracanthus Branches and Berries.

 

Foliage

Acacia, Cypress, Dried Leaves, Juniper, Privet and Berries.

 

Flowers

Dahlias, Chrysanthemums, Ornamental Millet, Roses and Rose Hips, Sunflowers.

 

Dried

Bark Pieces, Indian Ornamental Corn, Ornamental Grasses, Hydrangeas, Seedpods, Wheat. 

 

Fruit

Apples, Clementine, Figs, Kumquats, Oranges, Pears, Passion Fruit, Persimmons, Pomegranates.

 

Nuts

Chestnuts, Hazelnuts, Walnuts, Macadamia Nuts.

 

Gourds, Pumpkins, Squash

All kinds, colors, and shapes.

 

Miscellaneous

Antlers, Baskets, Burlap Material & Ribbon, Candles, Copper Pieces, Feathers, Plaid Material & Ribbon, Pine Cones, Silver.

 

 

Holiday Table Ready for Tea

 

Holiday Suggestions

 

Setting the Mood. Holidays are about anticipation, celebration, glow, glitter, heartfelt giving, and joy.

 

Foliage

Boxwood, Juniper, Magnolia Branches, Tabletop Topiaries, Pine Branches, Privet Branches,

 

 

Flowers & Bulbs

Amaryllis, Dusty Miller, Paper whites, Poinsettias, Star Hydrangeas, White Chrysanthemums.

 

Fruits

Whole Cranberries, Dried Pomegranates, Oranges.

 

Nuts

Chestnuts, Hazelnuts, Walnuts.

 

Objects:

Beeswax Candles and Figurines, Candles, Crowns, Ornaments, Santos, Strands of Pearls.

 

Pine Cones

Natural, Colored, Glittered.

 

I would love to hear how you decorate for fall into the holidays, and your favorite tablescaping ideas. Please share.

Bon Appétit et Bon Weekend…Bonnie

Autumn in the Vineyard

Sunset Over Domaine de Manion

I have taken you through a whole year in our vineyard. Winter, Spring, Summer, Harvest, and now Autumn. The grapes are in, the vines are slowly going dormant and turning beautiful fall colors. Light frequent rains, have already transformed the vineyard floor into a verdant carpet. If you look closely you can see that the grapevines almost mirror the spectacular color of a recent sunset. Yellow, orange, red, tawny, leaves give a spectacular visual display before soon dropping to the ground and starting the process all over again for next year. Like life, each year is different, and full of surprises. It is a time of reflection.

At this moment, I would like to “thank all of you” who read this blog, and so many who have reached out to me, in person and online, about the information shared, great recipes, or tip they gleaned in one of the posts. If you have friends who might enjoy it as well, you can sign them up on my website homepage, bonniejomanion.com or email me and I can sign them up.

I am very thankful and grateful for your kindness and support. Blessings! Merci beaucoup!

Bon Appétit et Bon Weekend….Bonnie

Simple Autumn Tablescape
Simple Autumn Tablescape

Simple Autumn Tablescape

Not all pumpkins are orange, some are silver. Meaning use what you have. Borrowing the phrase from a Christmas card I received one year, “If you love what you have, you have everything.”

I created this simple autumn tablescape using one of my black and white tablecloths, choosing white dinnerware and napkins to match, finding tawny russet candles in my closet, looking for colored dollies in my drawer but finding forgotten beautiful autumn leaf dollies instead, adding a black ribbon to my vintage candlesticks, bringing out my little prized silver pumpkin that illuminates at night, and buying two Wee Bee pumpkins at the market. Simple, yet it creates a playful seasonal ambience that is perfect for everyday autumn, or could be further embellished for that very special harvest dinner or Halloween evening.

We all use the term “tablescape” effortlessly these days, and many of you I am sure are wiz’s at your own creative tablescapes. According to Wikipedia, tablescaping was first mentioned by television Chef Sandra Lee in 2003, so the term is less than twenty years old. Tablescaping is an example of a term called portmanteau, which is a word that blends the sounds and meanings of two words. In this case, “tablescaping” is a combining of table and landscape. Another example of a portmanteau would be combining breakfast and lunch to make “brunch.” An alternative definition of portmanteau is a large suitcase or trunk, usually leather, and able to open in two equal parts. So you can see easily where the term comes from.

I tend to decorate my four seasons and tablescapes with objects from the garden that are natural such as flowers, gourds, pumpkins, pinecones, greenery, magnolia branches, etc. It is hard to beat the beauty of mother nature. I also have saved treasures that I have bought over the years, or cherished gifts given to me by friends and family that can add a special charm.

Tablescaping is fun and creative for all to enjoy. Think of what you have, besides what you might need, and how you can create a truly amazing beautiful table. Think along the lines of color, texture, surprise, and of course, season. A beautiful seasonal tablescape heightens a room, your dining experience, and makes fond memories.

Lucky Pumpkins

Lucky Pumpkins

Please share your favorite autumn tablescape ideas!

Bon Appétit et Bon Weekend…Bonnie




French Kitchen Copper
Polished and Ready Jam Copper Pot

Polished and Ready Jam Copper Pot

Copper pots and pans are one of the essentials in a French Country Kitchen, not only for their glowing beauty, but fine functionality. Copper conducts heat very well, cooks food evenly, cools quickly, and will last forever when properly cared for. Most copper pots are tin-lined, and eventually this tin lining wears out with use, and the piece should be re-tinned by a retinning specialist. Be aware that tin melts at 450 F. degrees, so cooking in tin lined copper pots should be below that temperature. Confiture or jam making copper pots don’t need to be lined, since there’s enough sugar in jam to prevent the fruit acids from reacting with the metal. Always cook your fruit and sugar together, never cook fruit alone in a copper pot. Copper mixing bowls often aren’t lined as well, especially those intended for beating egg whites.

Some people like to keep the aged copper penny patina, and others like their copper bright and polished. It is a personal preference. Wrights Copper Cream is a good commercial copper cleaner. An old standby recipe to clean copper is mix 1/4 cup salt, 1/4 cup cup flour and enough white distilled vinegar to make a thick paste, use a soft cloth to rub the paste on the surface of the copper. Buff the copper pan until it shines. Rinse with warm water and dry thoroughly. Over time your piece will begin to tarnish, and you simply repeat the process again.

You can find new pieces online easily, or if you favor the hunt, search out wonderful pieces at French flea markets. It is usually the vintage, well-worn patina pieces with a history of their own, that are the best treasures to find. I can’t tell you how many copper jam pots I passed up over the years in France. I simply didn’t have immediate needs to be able to ship it home, it was generally took bulky to carry, and I didn’t want to risk damaging a piece checked in my baggage in my cross Atlantic travels.

The universe works in wonderful ways. Recently I was helping my Mom and Dad clean and organize their downstairs kitchenette. What was tucked away in one of the cabinets, was this beauty, a huge confiture copper pot—big enough to hold all of your fruit and sugar for making jam at one time. My Mom gave it to me, and I did get it home safely in my luggage. It is special to me for sentimental reasons, coming from my Mom and her kitchen in Europe, and now passed on to me. It was like finding a diamond in the rough, and fulfilling the dream to have one and display it in my home.

Copper Jam Pot Washed and Ready to Polish

Copper Jam Pot Washed and Ready to Polish

Some Related Copper Websites:

Mauviel

Williams Sonoma

Elsie Green

The Cooks Atelier

East Coast Retinning

Nicholas Retinning, (No Website), 4641 Telegraph Road, L.A., CA 90022, (tel) (323) 263-0028, Est. 1965.

Bon Appétit et Bon Weekend….Bonnie

Home Stretch to Harvest
Happy Grape Clusters Ripening

Happy Grape Clusters Ripening

I am always amazed at the vineyard from winter to spring to summer, and now to fall and the ensuing transformation of buds to fruit clusters on the grapevines. It is almost time to harvest at Domaine de Manion. Vintages each year are just like children, and years of your life, each one is always different, and unknown to the outcome.

I am simply going to leave you with one of the most memorable quotes on wine by Galileo Galilei, “Wine is sunlight, held together by water.”

It means that wine is the perfect combination of it’s terroir, natural rainfall, and perfect amount of sunlight.

May this year’s vintage be outstanding and remarkable at Domaine de Manion! Salut!!

Bon Appétit et Bon Weekend….Bonnie

End of Summer Lunch
End of Summer Lunch Beckons Fall

End of Summer Lunch Beckons Fall

I write and speak a lot about seasonal living. You can feel it in the air, as exciting leisurely summer turns into reflective autumn. Our everyday routines begin to change and adapt to the season. Small subtle changes such as our weather transitioning, the foods we eat, the clothes we wear, our gardens changing, all tell us we are into a new season. We have a short window to embrace this fall season, and then it is gone for another nine months, and winter heralds in. Living seasonally heightens our everyday living, and in turn living in the moment.

On the cusp of summer ending, means I can use a pretty autumn tablecloth, a fall-scented tawny candle, a beautiful blooming dahlia from a friend, and a menu which uses both summer and autumn flavors. The menu was a lovingly adapted composed salad from Miss Maggie’s Table, a savory warm Goat Cheese and Fig Quick Bread by Dorie Greenspan, and a light dessert of summer berries with a dollop of vanilla mascarpone Italian cheese with a sprinkling of Demerara sugar.

I will share with you these recipes next week. In the meantime, how have you transitioned into autumn? What do you love most about autumn?

A Related Past Blog Link:

Follow the French

Bon Appétit et Bon Weekend…Bonnie

Alice Waters Delivers Delicious Words to Live By
Worthwhile to Read or Listen To!

Worthwhile to Read or Listen To!

I recently listened to the the audiobook, We Are What We Eat by Alice Waters. It is available in book form in stores, online, and audible apps like Libby, “the award-winning much-loved app for libraries.” Back in June 2021, there were quite a few articles written about Alice Waters and her new book, We Are What We Eat, as it was being released. With the popularity of her new book, I had to wait a few months to borrow the audiobook on Libby read by Alice Waters herself. Once I was able to borrow and listen, I breezed through the approximate six hours of her book, absorbed by her straightforward candor on the state of our food industry, agriculture, culture, food practices, climate change, and more. You may think of her as a successful restaurateur, but she is really so much more—able to speak history, science, politics, philosophies, etc. at a drop of a hat, or should I say a drop of a spoon.

If you have followed this blog for a while, you know first hand how I revere Waters and her philosophy, books, teaching, activism, and Edible Schoolyard Program. It is the same message she has preached for decades, and she doesn’t back down.

Now 77, Waters has decades of material and stories to draw from her childhood, well known Chez Panisse 50-year-old restaurant, and food experiences and events revolving around the globe. Waters wisely uses these stories to illustrate her points from chapter to chapter.

While the first part of the book focuses on explaining our fast food culture with chapters called Convenience, Uniformity, Availability, Truth in Advertising, Cheapness, and Speed. The second half of the book focuses on explaining slow food culture with chapters called Beauty, Biodiversity, Seasonality, Stewardship, Simplicity, and Interconnectedness. I particularly like how she shares her time in France, and how deeply influenced she was through their food culture, markets, and the people she met to understand these now called slow food principles.

I can relate. These are all principles I try to live and eat by, and what I talk so much about in my cooking classes and presentations. Less is really more, and within simplicity there is so much golden, so much elegance. I highly recommend reading or listening to this book.

“Tell me what you eat, and I will tell you who you are.” —French Proverb

Bon Appétit et Bon Weekend….Bonnie