This Blog Needs You

  • For $5 a month, a one-year subscription, you'll keep us ticking! Dig this blog? Do it!
    What's this?

Search



  • Wanna talk about the latest In Bed Show? Click here.

My Photo

Susie's Store


  • All My Books, Movies, Podcasts, & Favorites






The Best Blogs To Advertise With

  • Trendsetters' Hive
  • Liberal Blog Advertising Network
  • The Liberal Prose
  • Lesbian Hive
  • Love Hive

Vintage Erotica

Food and Drink

April 02, 2008

Paris Kitchenette

Kitchenpotdefeu The best meals I ate in Paris last week— and later, south in the Languedoc region— were the ones I prepared in our own kitchen, and ate at home.

I didn't plan it that way, and it's no criticism of French restaurants, but it was a revelation.

It started because of jet lag. My lover and I were hungry, and awake, when we arrived, late, in the city. We were staying at a friend's apartment who lives around the corner from one of the original cobblestone roads to Rome, Rue Mouffetard, where there are several farmer's market stalls, and plentiful delis, patisserie, and charcuterie shops, who spill their talents onto the street.

You can't walk out the door without being hit with the smells of roast chicken and potatoes, shellfish paella, fresh garlic, ripe cheese, boxes of strawberries from Spain. You're offered wine samples in the street. The Nutella and banana crepes are sizzling on the outdoor burners. The artisan's boutique of olive oils and vinegars beckons, so luxurious in its offerings it makes the wine shop look slack.

It was a fantastic scene, and also very familiar, because Paris's seasonal offerings are just like what we're eating from our farm co-op in California. The tomatoes are from Spain instead of Baja. Everyone on Le Mouffe was loading up for Easter supper, and that felt as cozy to me as any crazed Wednesday at the Santa Cruz Farmer's Market. We have our own olive orchards in Northern California,  so it isn't unusual to me to point and say, "Oh yes, I want to try that one, and that one, and that one," in tiny paper cups.

This isn't the way I grew up shopping and eating... no, my childhood was spent with my Mom, marveling at the frozen food section at the supermarket.  I was as enamored of "TV Dinners" as the next '60s kid parked in front of My Favorite Martian. 

But when the early organic food revolution hit California in the 70s, I was luckily in the geographic center of it. I became an early adopter simply by opening my mouth and  sighing with pleasure. Plus, despite my era-changing background, I  still knew how to use a knife and a iron skillet.

As our week went by in Paris, I saw that the other heavenly thing about home-cooking, was that I could escape my unease and humiliation about how to "act" in a Parisian restaurant.

Maxinestable My French language skills are up to parsing the right words, reading the menu, sounding like an articulate three-year-old. But my physical bumbling in the restaurants— the way I kept inadvertently breaking fashion and decorum rules— embarrassed me so dearly, I was close to tears sometimes. You wouldn't consider me anything other than "well-mannered" if you saw me at an American eatery. But by Parisian standards, I am a total disgrace, and I will never even be able to count, let alone understand, all the ways I "offended."

It was different on the Paris street. At the delis, the cheese and jam shop, the tent with the melons, the shopkeepers were enthusiastic and tolerant; they joked with me. My smiles and enthusiasm and Cowboy Earth Boots were fine. The Euros spilled out. If I came across like Minnie Pearl, it was fine with them!

Back at our apartment with my zucchini, garlic, and Camembert omelet, my butter lettuce salad with raspberries and vinaigre de figue, I could literally put my feet up while I enjoyed our supper. I splattered homemade mayonnaise in a new potato salad and guzzled my Bordeaux. Later at night, I'd wander out in my clogs and umbrella, and flirt with the tart girl, who serves quiches right from her window. I could lick the caramel from the waxed pastry wrapper that enclosed the fruits des noixettes I picked out in the sweet shop— a sticky pie made of five kinds of nuts and syrup. 

I was like a kid at a county fair, my fingers in everything. "Quelle est votre confiture favorite?" I asked the gay cheese boy, pointing at all the fruit jam jars sitting above the creme fraiche pot. He was absolutely set on the Cherry, and showed me the fromage that makes you moan when you slather the two together.

Because I'm so spoiled in Central California, I can't say any of the French veggies or fruits were unusual quality. They were fine. But the bread— The Bread— is on another level of sensation.

Bread is not traditionally put in plastic bags in France. Once a loaf has gone hard from being in the air, it's either "pain perdu" or it's in the trash. No one would dream of freezing it, or making it "last longer" than forty-eight hours.

Because freshness, and everything that goes with a fresh baked piece of bread is so crucial, the French don't bake just once a day, but twice. The evening shopper has as flavorful and crispy a baguette as the one who shops at dawn. Le Pain is baked twice a day to fulfill everyone's expectations.

And the varieties! I can't even tell you all the types I crunched... every boulangerie has their own recipe, their variation on country-style breads, traditionelle, Parisian-style, nouvelle mixes; it's ENDLESS. The terms "white," "wheat," or "rye" have no meaning here, because it's more like three thousand instead of three.

Typical French shoppers go out every day or two. When you go home, you eat at leisure with your family. I can't tell you how amazed I was to spend two and a half hours at a table, again and again, with families which included teenagers enjoying themselves, eating everything, all blabbing at once.

Dinnerpotdefeu I last saw these particular young people when they were toddlers, (I lived in France, in farming country, in the early 90s) so of course, then, our kids were tied to our apron strings. But now they're still at the table! I don't mean to say there's no generation gap— the funniest thing about my travels was listening to French parents rail about the same adolescent outrages that my peers do at home. But the family meal was the place where everyone come together, no matter what.

Americans wouldn't recognize how much time, energy and domestic satisfaction is lavished on food here, as a matter of course. But French culture is in a state of sustained shock that over the pressures applied to them to jump on the global bandwagon of speed-eating and homogenization.

In the States, the slow food movement is galloping; we see a wellspring of sustainable agriculture practices, and desire for all that is fresh and homemade. Of course it hasn't brought Safeway or KFC to its knees, but it's remarkable.

Meanwhile, in France, the most intense gossip I heard when I returned to my old village in Languedoc, concerned the suicides of two local farmers who had lost everything, the French terroir equivalent of a Great Depression. The experience of the European Union, at least among my old neighbors, is one of being culturally robbed and financially bankrupted. I wish I could have understood more in my brief visit, to explain what's going on, but the feeling was unmistakable. The starkness of class divides, and  feeling of ancient traditions in chaos—  I didn't need a translator.

Back to Paris. One day, I'd like to be able to dress, speak, and behave myself well enough to take a seat in the French-Korean restaurant around the corner of Rue Mouffetard, or the interior of Le Chartier, without everyone staring at me like I was Sasquatch. I'd love to pull it off. But in the meantime, I won't be forsaken by the farmers, the bakers and butchers, the sticky jam makers, no matter where I travel. I know what it's like to get my hands dirty. 

Photos: Jon Bailiff

November 19, 2007

Little Susie Homebreaker

Double_life In a great gust of energy last weekend, I started a new blog. It's called Little Susie Homebreaker. I was taunted with that nickname back in the day, but I'm quite fond of it now!

I love cooking and eating, and thinking about cooking and eating. And when I'm not waving a sharp knife in the air, I sew and stitch with every escapist minute I can get. I'm a proud member of the Ladies Sewing Circle and Terrorist Society.

I've always wanted a blog that I could dedicate to my "leisure hours," and this is my first effort. It has all the domestic devilry I've run in this journal, but also my early stories for Craft magazine, and some of my pattern reviews and food writing that hasn't appeared anywhere else.

I'll still write about my little pleasures here, on occasion— but if I want to write for seven days in a row about graffiti embroidery or pumpkin cheesecake maneuvers, I will let it all hang out at Homebreaker.

If crafty bitchery or foodie obsessions are your bag, please check it out and tell me what you think!

July 27, 2007

Cream of Whatever— I'll Take Seconds!

Potatoeaters I recently attended a potluck picnic of slow food gourmets and wine snobs.

We gathered around one particular potato dish which was causing a sensation, licking our fingertips and screaming for more.

When pressed for the recipe, the woman who brought the casserole burst into blushing tears. She begged our forgiveness, and then told us the secret of Mother-In-Law Potatoes:


Mother-In-Law Spuds

1 32-oz. package of Ore-Ida Frozen hash browns (Don't defrost them!)

1 c. cheddar cheese

1 c. jack cheese

1 stick butter, melted

1 carton sour cream

1 can cream-of-whatever soup
(Campbell's cream of chicken, mushroom, celery, etc.)

1 bag of potato chips


Place the frozen potatoes in a 9 x 13 baking pan. You can break it up, but don't defrost!

Put all the other ingredients in a bowl, except the chips, and mix them up. Pour and slather the mixture on top of the hash browns.

Crumble about two cups of chips on top.

Bake uncovered at 350 degrees for 1 hour and 15 min.

It's soooooo yummy. And I'm sure we could figure out a "slow" alternative if we wanted to!

What's your favorite irresistible dairy/potato confection?


The Potato-Eaters, Van Gogh, Nuenen, April 1885

June 28, 2007

Spoiled: The Dream Birthday Picnic

Picnic222 Today is my daughter Aretha's 17th birthday, and I offered to make a "dream picnic" for her. This is the menu she submitted to me:

Mommy's Breaded Chicken (obviously!) — don't be shy with the salt

Light fluffy GOOD bread to eat chicken with and clam chowder bowls

Cucumbers (lightly salted)

BIG array of fruit that won't wilt in picnic basket

Strawberries a must!

whip cream (for strawberries)
chocolate sauce (for strawberries)

macaroni and cheese (your homemade, the kind with breadcrumbs)

BABY vanilla yogurts from TJ's

Clam Chowder, NOT homemade, from Carniglia's at the wharf— you will be hurt if I don't like yours (I meant this sensitively, not as a threat)

pepper
salt

german chocolate birthday cake with a big 1 and a big 7, not seventeen candles!

pretty white & red checkered picnic blanket (do not want dog's blanket)

my rubber baby spoon

watermelon (seedless and not mealy)

butter
iceberg lettuce
mayo



Isn't that the most "sensitive" list you ever read?

So what is your dream picnic basket? And who, if anyone, in your family/tribe would be the one to spoil you and make the whole damn thing? ...Or is KFC your momma? 

May 30, 2007

The Toasted Marshmallow Electric Milkshake Goodness Test

Soda220050801074223 Last night I had a toasted marshmallow milkshake.

It was so heaven-gobsmacked-delicious I hardly know how to reconstruct the recipe. Is there anyplace else besides New York that has this on the menu?

It was served at a upwardly mobile burger joint called Stand, which my friend Laura Miller introduced me to.

She said there was no point in even considering another flavor, although there were many. Not only is the ice-cream itself potent with the nostalgic taste of a six-year-old's first bite of a burnt 'mallow— but the shake itself is topped with real whipped cream and a CROWN of actual torched marshmallows melting hot on the ice cold glass. Sweet Jesus!

April 27, 2007

Eat Me Now Ask Me How

Chocolatekamasutra I've rarely felt so aroused and hungry at the same time.

You can see all the positions of yumminess at a site created by ardent, philosphical, drug-geek hedonists. What lovely people.

However, they give no clue who the artist is.

Apparently, you can buy the eight-bar set at a snooty chocolate web boutique, although they warn you:

Although tastefully done, the illustrations on these bars are quite graphic and adventurous in nature, including nudity, and are not for everybody.

Well, I wouldn't want anything less!


thanks to monsieur brown for the tip.

March 15, 2007

Willow's Perfect Scones

Scones I got up this morning and decided to bake something, something that would give me zest for life.

I found myself reaching for Willow's Perfect Scone recipe.

I get excited by the classic English scone— the tender one that teases you where the butter crumbles in the flake, the one that's just a little sweet— to get your attention— and makes you groan for lemon curd. Yeah, those scones. Not the hockey pucks.

Before I met Willow, I had no idea scones were so easy to make. People have been fooled by scone mixes and Starbucks-society to think they're not a simple home-cooked treat. Not true! The key is buttermilk. For lack of buttermilk, many cooks cave in and make waffles instead. 

The great thing about buttermilk is once you buy that bright yellow quart, you can leave it in the fridge for a lonnnnng time. It's not like regular milk, it's already sour. Just pick up a bottle next time you're at the grocery store without planning anything in particular. Or get the powder, if you're cautious.

Now you're ready to unleash the buttermilk fiend at any time: fried chicken that makes grown men sob, blowing your afore-mentioned waffles' minds, dressing up salads or anything spicy, and of course, making the unforgettable scone.


Willow’s Perfect Scones

Zest, 1 orange
3 - 4 T. orange juice
½ c. golden raisins
1 ½ c. flour
¼ cup sugar
1 t. baking powder
½ t. soda
½ t. salt
1 stick of butter
1 ¼ c. oats (rolled oats, the kind you cook in five minutes)
½ c. buttermilk

Preheat oven to 400.

Steep orange zest in buttermilk.

Soak raisins in orange juice.

Whisk together dry ingredients. If you want to  go hog wild, shave in some dark chocolate

Cut in the butter with a fork.

You can cheat at cutting in butter, like I do: measure the dry ingredients right into a food processor bowl. Cut the butter into tablespoon-hunks into the bowl, as well. Pulse it for six or seven full seconds. The mixture should be uneven—  most of it like sand, but with random pea-sized butter globs. Transfer into a regular mixing bowl.

Mix in raisins, juice, and oats into butter/flour mix.

Stir in buttermilk.

Turn out and knead gently a couple times. Do not stress over this. Just get it into shape and fold it over and under 2 - 4 times. Don't overhandle it, or the heat of your hands will melt all those very important butter globs.

Shape into disk, about ½ inch high, and cut into “pie” slices.

Place on baking pan. I am in love with those silicon mats.

Glaze slices with milk and egg yolk mixture. You can use a pastry brush (I'm crazy about my new silicone brush), or your fingertips.

You can also sprinkle with sugar, if you like.

Bake 20 minutes.


Willow is my Santa Cruz friend, and an amazing cook. This recipe is dedicated to Annalee Newitz, who I'm sure is grabbing her apron strings right now.
 

February 06, 2007

My Teeny Tiny Tasty Super Bowl Party

2032rex If you were surprised by the big TV ratings for past Sunday's Super Bowl game, let me introduce you to one of the surprising fans: me. I barely know the rules of the game, but I am a total sucker for anything political, poignant, or scandalous about big league sports.

This game had it all. Black head coaches, one mentor, one protegee. Of course they weren't make a big deal of it, but it was a big deal. The linguistics alone were worth following.

Then we had a dude named Tank who got to play with a special court order cause he can't stop stocking weapons of mass destruction in his apartment. Plus everyone's still talking about how the  NFL essentially uses their players to be concussion dolls until they turn into brain-deformed "retirees" who off themselves rather than endure life in a deranged stupor.

Finally, there was Chicago itself. I was rooting for the Bears, as I will root for any team that hasn't had a win in decades. As I explained to my daughter, when the 49ers first won in the 80s, San Francisco exploded into a lubricated sea of love. I've never seen anything like it again until  Gavin Newsom rang the bells for gay marriage on Valentines Day.

The day Dwight Caught Joe, that very moment, I was sitting in a flat on Potrero Hill, the bedrock of the city, and you could hear a roar that came up from Market Street on one side and Hunter's Point on the other. It shook the window glass.

I walked out into the street, and it was as if EVERYONE walked out on cue. You could kiss ANYONE. I got on the MUNI bus just to ride the hottest parties. You heard about how the whole nation of Denmark is on a permanent high because of a big game they finally won fifteen years ago? Such is the disposition of the underdog who finally gets a break.

I don't have cable service, or even a television in the house, but we remembered we had a miniature set in the garage, so we dragged it out of hibernation. We biked to Radio Shack to pick up an eight dollar antenna.

Thank god for the Salinas CBS signal, one of the few stations we could receive. If you're a native English speaker, you're presumed to have cable. But if Spanish is your first language, all the Telemundo-style stations are beaming loud and clear with nothing but a VHF bunny ears propped on the table.

I find that if you haven't watched TV with your lover in a long time, it's... sexy. Surreal. We had to sit in each other's laps to view the tiny screen. Super Bowl Sex was in the air. We practiced our wardrobe malfunctions.

When it comes to anything happening on the field, I'm a screamer. "Shut him the fuck down!" I kept wailing at the Bears defense. I could sack Peyton Manning with the side of my clit; what was their excuse?

L_707f76ccd733e2ef21b413685c91f9ba Then we had the Bears QB problem child, Rex Grossman. I knew the local press had picked him apart like dime bag, but I was wiling to give him a fair shake. Until that moment, in the second half, when he was sacked twice in— what was it?— two minutes? Throwing passes up in the sky like it was Balloon Day at the Big Game?

The camera showed us a close-up of Rex walking back to the sidelines, and holy shit—  "He's got a pouty face!"  I screamed that too. Biggest professional day of his life, and he's sulking. My heart sank.

Back in the holy days, when the 49ers were losing, but still had six minutes left, you would raise your glass and sigh, "Oh darling, let's ENJOY Joe Montana scoring two touchdowns now, shall we? Let's go for a little drive! —All the time in the world!"

0204_priest This, however, was your garden-variety soaking. I started using my laptop to tune into Indianapolis live barroom coverage so I could at least enjoy  the sounds of the Rock Bottom getting their binky on. Even the priests were sashaying in Colts vestments.

One question though: Peyton Manning is obviously talented and conventionally good-looking, but he has zero sex appeal. What is the problem? This whole Bowl was short on that kind of charisma; I had to provide all the tingles myself.

The special note to my teeny tiny Super Bowl party was the food.

I know how to make a chili for people who hate chili. —A chili for vegetarians that the meat-lovers will demand for seconds. —A chili you can make in minutes but will make everything believe you toiled for hours. You can cook it as picanté as you like, but I know how to take all the heat out of it, and still make people feel rambunctious. And... my guacamole is the best.

Jalapenomed_1 These are not idle boasts. Here is my recipe, rudely adapted from Molly Katzen's Still Life with Menu, for Black Chili with Pineapple Salsa, Susie Guacamole, and Crazy Cuke Sauce: Link.

It's good for any winter day you wanna feel like a winner!

December 30, 2006

The Top Ten Stories of Susie's Year

02twain2 Lies, damned lies, and statistics. But I do love them so!

I was fascinated to learn from my stats provider, BlogLog, about the most popular stories published here at my humble journal.

My hottest links are  skewed toward the end of the year, because my blog readership has tripled this fall.

Why? I'm a poster girl for the natural curve of blogging— if you keep at it (two years being a turning point) and you post daily, the worm turns.


1.  That's Right, You're Not From Texas, Sodomy Loves You Anyway

What's not to like? Molly Ivins in prime form, dildo details you never dreamed of, and the Texas State Legislature in a rare form that would take Mark Twain's breath away.


2.  My Cartoon Blow-out

I thought I was being a sentimental, self-indulgent diaper-baby to post all my nostalgic cartoon favorites, but apparently a lot of us are sucking on the same tit! This link was also wildly promoted by the new browsing tool, Stumbleupon, which I had never heard of 'til I wrote this!


3.  Penthouse Letters Are Real, Grand Theft Auto is Not, and St. Louis, I Do Mind Dying

This is one of the best-written stories I ever posted, and I'd like to think it was my skill and poetry that shot it to #3.  However, it's more likely a hit because I interviewed the woman, Lavada Nahan, who worked for Penthouse for more than a decade and was shut in a room with one million unopened sex letters and told to spin them into gold!


4.  The Best Spaghetti You Ever Had

This just goes to prove that sex bloggers and their readers are the biggest food sluts you ever met.


5.  Sneak Preview of Best American Erotica 2007: The Lolita Backlash

Well, wait 'til you read the whole thing! I look forward to interviewing many of the authors in the coming months.


6.  Four Things You May Not Know About Me

Okay, here's a fifth thing: When my alarm clock goes off in the morning, this is what I hear: Carolan's Welcome. I got this album from the musician himself, James Kline, busking in front of the San Francisco Farmer's Market, and my lover recognized him from playing on the streets of Sienna!— years earlier! I'd love to see him again and kiss his feet.


7.  Esther Perel Musses the Marriage Bed

This is one of the best interviews I've ever done for In Bed, thanks to Esther's tour de force extemporaneous analysis of why married people stop fucking and then don't understand why.  The whole interview is posted for you to listen to.


8.  Egg Sex

My story of my sex life— physical, emotional, political— during pregnancy and childbirth is one of the most popular stories I ever published, long before blogging. I'm eggstatic it found a new audience here.


9.  BlogHer Sex Survey Results

The square business press portrayed the first woman's blogger conference as either a bunch of hard-bitch geeks, or "really nice pretty girls that you don't have to be scared to talk to!"  Yawn. I found it to be the coolest pool party and hands-on change-the-world party I'd been to in a long time. And of course I had to give a sex survey...


10.  The League of Amazing Latkes

I want some more right NOW.


My potato pancake recipe was followed in popularity by a blistering polemic by Dan Savage, my G-Spot Fraud Detection Squad, and the index of all my posts on photography.

I happen to think my photographic art babble is right up there with Susan "Dyke" Sontag on Hash, but to my dismay, I think my link gets mega-hits because there's some nekkid people in the illustrations.  It's a huge hit in the United Arab Emigrates, surpassed only by Kansas.


Thanks again to Steve Ho for the stats that made my head spin. Tomorrow, I'll post the top ten places you all came from! Glorious illustration of Mark Twain by Ralph Steadman.

December 23, 2006

The League of Amazing Latkes

Wwwvalgiai

I dream about potato pancakes. There aren't enough Hanukkah parties to sate my appetite; I always want more.

I used to cry like a spoiled brat because even though I have the perfect recipe— and I do mean "the best latke you've ever tasted"— my routine took a couple hours of numbing handwork to prepare, and ruined any possibility of a quick fix.

I don't like squeezing water out of potato gratings in cheesecloth scraps until my arms fall off. I don't care to spend all day grating a mountain of potatoes plus part of my knuckles. Yet nothing but my own recipe satisfies me.

It turns out that immediate gratification IS possible with the right equipment. It took me twenty years to realize this, but no one should suffer as long as I did. The tools are everything in this recipe. There are no substitutions!


Susie's Perfect Latkes On Demand

2 1/2 - 3 cups grated potatoes, grated in a Cuisinart

1 onion— the size of a tennis ball, grated in a Cuisinart

2 large eggs

3 tablespoons fine matzo meal crumbs from the box— no other crumb will do!

2 T. sea salt

Lots of black pepper

2 T. butter

2 T. canola or safflower oil

Sour Cream

Applesauce

Preheat your oven to 250 degrees— you won't be baking, but you need a warm place to store your piles of fresh-cooked latkes. You'd like to think you could cram them all in your mouth at once, but be realistic— you need a spot to keep them hot.

Grate your potatoes (any kind as long as they're fresh) using the standard grater attachment in the classic seven-cup Cuisinart food processor— the greatest kitchen aid since a sharp knife. I've had mine for twenty years and it works as well today as it did the first second I turned it on. Your potato grating will take all of five minutes. I can hear my grandmother weeping.

Grate the onion the same way and put it aside in a mixing bowl.

B00004ocjq01_aa280_sclzzzzzzz_The key to tasty latkes is to get the water out of the potatoes before you fry them in hot oil. But the potatoes don't want to give up their water. How to do you squeeze them efficiently without exhausting yourself? The answer is an old-fashioned potato ricer.

Put a handful of the sopping potato gratings in the ricer's mouth. Press the handles together, and all the water is expressed through the sieve side. What's even better is that you don't have to use two hands. You leverage one arm of the ricer against the other by propping it over the sink-top and pressing down. You only do it once— there's no extra effort required. Your second five minutes is now over.

Now mix all the ingredients in your bowl. Don't try to reinvent the cracker crumb with your rolling pin. What you want is in a inexpensive box of prepared-food luxury that will last you all year: unsalted matzo meal. It's exactly the right size of crumb, and the ideal flavor.

Any kind of salt will do; I like sea salt. Shake your pepper shaker like the Duchess's mad cook. I suppose a tablespoon is the right amount.

Melt 2 T. butter and 2 T. canola or safflower oil in a seasoned cast iron skillet.

Don't even THINK about using another kind of pan; your latkes will suffer for it.

Another caution: don't be tempted to use olive oil, because it will leave too much of a flavor for our purposes. And never leave out the butter. This is the full-cardio latke and there's no messing around!

Over medium-hot flame, there should be a quarter-inch or so of melted hot oil in your pan.

Ladle in a heaping tablespoon of the latke batter and flatten it with the back of your spatula.

It will fry quickly and you'll see it browning through the other side. The smell will make your mouth water.

Turn them over for another minute, then take them out and put them on a plate laid with a paper towel.

Stick them in the oven to keep warm while you dash off the rest of the latkes. Of course, you could eat them right out of the pan, but that could incite a riot if you're making a batch for everyone. Just keep adding the hot latkes to your hot platter, layered with paper towels to blot a bit of the buttery residue.

Serve with sour cream and applesauce. Cry freely, because they taste so good and you barely broke a sweat.

Potato pancakes are a controversial dish because of family tradition... everyone longs for their childhood memory. My recipe may not bring your great-grandmother to life, but I dare say you'll look upon me as a favorite aunt.

Last year at Xmas, I gave my notorious homemade eggnog recipe, and it is, to this day, one of the most popular links on this site. No wonder this place isn't workplace safe— the gluttony and pleasure-seeking never cease!

Tip Line



  • www.flickr.com
    Susie Bright's photos More of Susie Bright's photos


Library Thing

The Cost of War

Susie's Q