Big Grapefruits, Squid and Roses…

Biscuit for Two with Rosehip Jelly | www.purplehousecafe.com

I’ve had a few great recipes posted to the Pete’s Fine Foods blog recently:  a Valentine’s Day treat – Biscuits for Two with locally made rosehip jelly and coconut cream – which was a simple favourite in our house.

Then there was my attempt, at long last, to satiate my lust for Cantonese pastries with this spin on steamed custard buns, infused with the flavour of pomelo.  It worked:  I no longer have to show up at my favourite Cantonese bakery on a Monday only to wilt in disappointment that it is the one day they are closed.  My kitchen has been inaugurated, and I can whip up custard buns at my leisure.

Pomelo Steamed Custard Bun | www.purplehousecafe.com

Finally, there was this simple salt and pepper calamari recipe, which I jazzed up with a beautifully vibrant seafood rub mixed into a classic aioli.  

Classic Calamari with Dave's Aioli | www.purplehousecafe.com

So, as you see, my kitchen and camera are getting just as much love as always, but it’s being funnelled in a slightly different direction.  I’ve been doing a lot of other food and related writing lately as well, and it’s hugely gratifying.

Rick’s Coconut Oatmeal and Chocolate Chip Cookies

Rick's Cookies | www.purplehousecafe.com

These past few months, I’ve struck up somewhat of a relationship with a man I’ve never met, whose life bears a somewhat uncanny resemblance to mine, in ways, at times.

It’s not often that reading a book inspires me to seek out the contact information of the author and send him an email, but after reading Rick Taylor’s book “House Inside the Waves,” I couldn’t help but reach out.

I first heard of Rick when I read an article in one of my favourite magazines about his adventures swimming the Waikiki Rough Water swim.  Fellow long distance open water swimmers – the people who are, like me, crazy enough to jump in lakes just after the ice melts to paddle out kilometer after kilometer; the only people, perhaps, other than astronauts, who know what it feels like to adjust to gravity after having been without its’ influence for hours at a time – are rare.  Then, I found out that Rick and his family had spent a year living (writing, swimming, and surfing – three of my favourite pasttimes) in a little town that I too called home for a while, when I was working there as a divemaster.  Rick wrote about this experience in his book “House Inside the Waves,” which also shares a candid peek into the life of a stay-at-home dad, and what’s it’s like to parent small humans.  It’s a beautiful, introspective, philosophical and adventuresome book that I couldn’t put down.

Rick's Oatmeal Chocolate Chip Cookies | www.purplehousecafe.com

Throughout the book, Rick references these oatmeal chocolate chip cookies, and like any good writer, describes them in a way that make them sound irresistable, in that gotta-get-one-in-my-gob-right-now kind of way.  I was highly motivated to reach out to him for the recipe to these when, in fact, I turned the page of the book where he had kindly shared with his readers how to create the friendship-building, child-assuaging, magical sweets.  

So I made the cookies immediately – and yes, they are all that, and emailed Rick anyway, to say hey, loved your book, loved your cookies, and isn’t it cool we share a few hobbies and a deep love for a little Australian town that captivated us both.

To my surprise, Rick wrote back, sharing some articles that he had written or was featured in, chatting about his family, and his time living in Byron Bay.  He emailed me when his grandson was born in August, and shared some musings on writing, swimming, and life.  I wrote to him about the pause I’ve taken in my writing to attend to family and home, and about my dreams of one day publishing a book.  

 It’s an unlikely friendship, in ways made less “virtual” and more genuine with the help of warm, gooey cookies.

Rick's Coconut Oatmeal and Chocolate Chip Cookies
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Ingredients
  1. 1/2 cup butter
  2. 1/2 cup white sugar
  3. 1/2 cup brown sugar
  4. 1 egg
  5. 1/2 teaspoon vanilla extract
  6. 1 cup all-purpose flour
  7. 1 1/4 cups oatmeal
  8. 1/4 teaspoon salt
  9. 1/2 teaspoon baking powder
  10. 1/2 teaspoon baking soda
  11. 3/4 cup sweetened grated coconut
  12. 1 cup milk chocolate chips
Instructions
  1. Preheat oven to 350F. Prepare a baking sheet with parchment paper or grease.
  2. Using a stand mixer fitted with the paddle attachment, cream the butter and sugars. Add in the egg and vanilla, and mix until incorporated.
  3. Whisk together the flour, oatmeal, salt, baking powder and baking soda in a separate bowl.
  4. Add the wet ingredients to the dry ingredients, hand-mixing until well incorporated. Stir in the coconut and chocolate chips.
  5. Drop cookies onto baking sheet, and bake 8-10 minutes or until they begin to brown on the bottom.
Purple House Café https://www.purplehousecafe.com/

Lavender Cardamom Granola

Lavender Granola | www.purplehousecafe.com

I had the sweet, sweet pleasure of finding myself driving past one of the most beautiful beaches in the province the other day with a few minutes to spare.  I pulled over the car and stepped out, immediately braced by the upper notes of briny freshness in the air.  Each breath of it felt like life, reaching the crevasses of my sinuses and sending a rush of airborne happiness through my system.  I gulped each clear, clean lungful as though I had been living my life in a cellar with no concept of the purity of wind and water-flecked oxygen.

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On Vulnerability and Vegetables for Breakfast…Carrot, Pistachio and Honey Yogurt

Carrot, Pistachio and Honey Yogurt | www.purplehousecafe.com

As adults, I find that we rarely, truly confront discomfort.  We can go years without putting ourselves in that very vulnerable place of learning something new, being in a situation that scares us, or exploring the unknown with no way to predict what might happen.  In my work, I see women fighting with the inevitability of the unknown in birth:  for many, not knowing what will happen during the course of their labour and birth and not knowing whether they will achieve the outcomes they had hoped for is enough to send them into the throes of in-depth contingency planning or panic, or both.

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