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sprig of thyme

August 27, 2017

Turnip Rock Farm / Part 1

by Iglika in Stories


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It is an early and cool mid-July morning and I am waiting on the sidewalk with several bags bursting with plates, bowls, silverware and napkins – my props for today. My heart full of joy and excitement for the day ahead – I get to go to spend a day at a farm with Eliesa Johnson and my camera. I get in the car as I am balancing a huge cheese pie, which overflew in my oven the night before as I misjudged the amount of eggs I needed for the size of my pan. I am half awake and half asleep as the car moves quickly through the city and into the hilly Wisconsin side of the state border. Every time I spot a farm or a field I get a bit more alert as I am thinking ‘Here we are! This is it!’ My eagerness is not due to my impatience or boredom (no one could ever be bored in the energetic company of Eliesa Johnson), but more so of my excitement for the day ahead. We are going to the Turnip Rock Farm.

I met Rama and Josh, the owners of Turnip Rock Farm, a few years ago at the Mill City Farmers market, where they sell their Cosmic Wheel Creamery cheese. Rama’s huge smile and genuinitykept drawing me to their stand. I always had to stop, chat with them and get some cheese. To me it was not a good day at the market if I didn’t stop to say hello and get a chunk of their divine cheese – soft, ripe, spreadable, aged, you name it – I love it all.  And in my humble opinion, Rama’s cheese is in par with some of the best quality artisan European cheeses I have had over the years. It is creamy, full of flavor and it reflects the love and care Rama and Josh give to their animals, land and their respect to the entire process of what it takes to make a really good cheese. 

That is where my excitement to visit their farm came from. I was eager to see their world, how their days were shaped, where they made the cheese, the vegetable fields, the animals – to get a glimpse of Rama and Josh’s day-to-day life, of their challenges and blessings.

A little over an hour and we arrived at the farm cheerfully greeted by a small heard of friendly dogs that were as happy to be at there as we were. Armed with our cameras, Eliesa and I started wondering around breathing the crisp air and taking pictures of our beautiful surroundings. We slowly moved between the open fields of grass where the cows were grazing in different age groups, then to the calm sheep who seem super excited for us at first and then not so, making our way to the vegetable fields, where Rama, Josh and their helpers were. Eliesa and I were super excited for what we will see next while we were totally mesmerized and consumed by the calming effect our surroundings had on us. It made me think that there was something so powerful about nature. It draws us in, a gentle reminder that we humans belong to it.

I always felt the calmness and content of Rama and Josh, which is so unusual for find in the busy, city people and I always wonder if this is the effect that nature has on us when we spend more time with it. As I slowly got to know them I realized that they had the same approach and philosophy about what they do, where they live and most importantly how they do it. Their sense of intention and purpose to live well rounded lives, grounded in nature and its laws, was so strong and it shone through their presence, energy and their cheese craftsmanship. Their farm and home was a reflection of that. They approached each piece form a holistic point of view where everything is connected to everything The healthy fields provided the best food for their animals. The fields were kept healthy by rotational grazing, giving the best grass by moving animals after a certain period to the next field. As cows would eat their favorite grass first in a pasture containing several grass species, rotational grazing prevents the fields of being overgrazed and keeps the animals moving. In turn, the cows will give the best milk when roaming the fields freely, the best condition for their natural cow-self. When cow milk is turned into cheese the flavor is as full and complex as the lives of the cows. And when that real, healthy love and natural interest to the best conditions needed for our object of love to bloom, flourish and be their very best self is applied to cheese making, beautiful things happen. Rama is a self-thought cheese maker who approaches cheese making with full-hearted love and wisdom of what it takes to make a really good cheese. She is as curious about the techniques of cheese making as she is interested in what it takes to have the best milk and healthy cows. Her relentless love, hard work, determination and science-like curiosity produces cheese, in which the flavors are full, bold, complex and as beautiful as the nature, the animals and the hands involved in producing it.

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Photography by Eliesa Johnson

Photography by Eliesa Johnson

Photography by Eliesa Johnson
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Photography by Eliesa Johnson

Photography by Eliesa Johnson

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Photography by Eliesa Johnson

Photography by Eliesa Johnson

Photography by Eliesa Johnson

Photography by Eliesa Johnson

Photography by Eliesa Johnson

Photography by Eliesa Johnson

I will eat any of Rama’s cheeses. I love them all. Without any exaggeration, I eat her cheese every single day. Following and in the next blog post you can find some recipes that use some of Rama’s soft and aged cheeses. The cheesecake recipe you will find here is sublime; it is a courtesy of Rama. She made this cake for Eliesa and me when we visited the farm and we kept thinking and talking about that sensational cheesecake for days. It was as delicious as it was beautiful and it was made with plain Quark cheese rather than cream cheese. Hands down, the most delicious thing ever!

And this is the end of Part 1 of the Turnip Rock project. Part 2 will be posted in a couple of weeks when more stories and beautiful pictures will be revealed. Hope to see you back then.

xoxo

Photography by Eliesa Johnson / Styling by Iglika Petrova

Photography by Eliesa Johnson / Styling by Iglika Petrova

Photography by Eliesa Johnson Styling by Iglika Petrova

Photography by Eliesa Johnson
Styling by Iglika Petrova

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Photography by Eliesa Johnson / Cake by Rama Bryceson

Photography by Eliesa Johnson / Cake by Rama Bryceson

 

Recipes

 

Zucchini mint Salad

Makes 4 salads

Ingredients:

Dressing
• 1/4 cup fresh lemon juice
• 1/4 cup olive oil
• 1 tsp salt
• 1/2 tsp black pepper
• 1 tbsp Dijon Mustard
• 1/2 tsp of chopped fresh thyme
• 1/2 tsp of chopped fresh basil

Salad
• 4 medium-small zucchinis (2 green and 2 yellow), julienned in long strips
• 4 round tablespoons of Cosmic Wheel Creamery garlic Quark cheese
• Fresh herbs such as thyme, basil and savory
• 4-6 squash blossoms (optional) cut in half with center pollen removed

Directions:

  1. Place all the dressing ingredients in a jar with lid and shake until thick and creamy. Set aside.

  2. In a medium bowl toss the zucchinis with 1/2 of the dressing. Taste and add more dressing and seasoning to your liking.

  3. Divide the zucchinis among 4 shallow bowls and top with a tablespoon of the Quark cheese, the fresh herbs and 2-3 squash blossom halves.

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Quark Cheesecake Cockaigne

 

Ingredients:

For Crust
• 20 whole graham cracker (10 ounces total), broken
• 3/4 cup (1 1/2 sticks) chilled unsalted butter, diced
• 1/2 cup packed golden brown sugar

For Filling
• 1 1/2 pounds cream cheese or firm quark cheese (room temperature)
• 1 cup sugar
• 1 teaspoon vanilla or almond extract
• 3 large eggs (room temperature)

For Topping
• 1 cup sour cream (room temperature)
• 1/4 cup sugar
• 1 tablespoon vanilla
• 1/4 teaspoon salt
• Fresh berries

 

Instructions:

Make Crust

Position rack in center of oven and preheat to 350°F. Wrap foil around outside of 10-inch-diameter springform pan with 3-inch-high sides. Combine graham crackers, butter and sugar in processor. Using on/off turns, blend until crumbs begin to stick together. Press crumbs onto bottom and 2 3/4 inches up sides of springform pan. Bake crust 10 minutes. Transfer to rack and cool while preparing filling. Maintain oven temperature.

Make Filling

  1. In a medium bowl, beat until creamy (about 30 seconds to 1 min) 1 1/2 pounds quark cheese. Gradually beat in 1 cup sugar, 1 teaspoon vanilla/almond extract.

  2. Beat in the eggs – 1 at a time, just until incorporated, scraping the sides of the bowl and the beaters after each addition.

  3. Scrape the batter into the crust and smooth the top. Place on a cookie sheet. Bake until the center just barely jiggles when the pan is tapped, 45-55 minutes. Let cool in the pan on a rack for at least 1 hour.

Make Topping

  1. Whisk all ingredients in a medium bowl to blend. Spread topping over the cake.

  2. Let cool completely in the pan on a rack before unmolding. Cover and refrigerate for at least 3 hours, preferably 24, before serving top with fresh berries.

Recipe provided/modified by Rama Bryceson, Turnip Rock farm. From The Joy of Cooking (1997) by Irma S. Rombauer, Marion Rombauer Becker, and Ethan Becker

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TAGS: zucchini, squash blossoms, salad, quark cheese, cheese cake, dessert, Vegetarian, summer


February 14, 2016

Mexican Chocolate Truffles

by Iglika



 

Happy love day everyone! As much as I like challenging myself and my writing skills (which need a lot of attention and practice), the following words are a re-post from an article I found online. It is a beautiful summary of pretty much everything that has been going in my head lately, and over the past few years, yet someone had expressed it better than I ever could. These words are not intended to be the obsolete truth, but rather to serve as a reminder, to myself, that love and relationships are the flowers of life. If we choose to tend to them and have them in our gardens, we need to care for them, water, protect and nourish them so they can bloom and flourish. That people’s hearts are not to be taken for granted because as the Fox said to the Little Prince “It is only with the heart that one can see rightly; what is essential is invisible to the eye”. So lets start inviting in only the people who can see us with their hearts and not solely with their heads or eyes.  

 

 

 

Why are relationships so hard today? Why do we fail at love every time, despite trying so hard? Why have humans suddenly become so inept at making relationships last? Have we forgotten how to love? Or worse, forgotten what love is?

We’re not prepared. We’re not prepared for the sacrifices, for the compromises, for the unconditional love. We’re not ready to invest all that it takes to make a relationship work. We want everything easy. We’re quitters. All it takes is a single hurdle to make us crumble to our feet. We don’t let our love grow, we let go before time.

It’s not love we’re looking for, only excitement and thrill in life. We want someone to watch movies and party with, not someone who understands us even in our deepest silences. We spend time together, we don’t make memories. We don’t want the boring life. We don’t want a partner for life, just someone who can make us feel alive right now, this very instant. When the excitement fades, we discover nobody ever prepared us for the mundane. We don’t believe in the beauty of predictability because we’re too blinded by the thrill of adventure.

We immerse ourselves in the inconsequentials of the city life, leaving no space for love. We don’t have time to love, we don’t have the patience to deal with relationships. We’re busy people chasing materialistic dreams and there’s no scope to love. Relationships are nothing more than convenience.

We look for instant gratification in everything we do – the things we post online, the careers we choose, and the people we fall in love with. We want the maturity in a relationship that comes with time, the emotional connect that develops over years, that sense of belonging when we barely even know the other person. Apparently, nothing’s worth our time and patience – not even love.

We’d rather spend an hour each with a hundred people than spending a day with one. We believe in having ‘options’. We’re ‘social’ people. We believe more in meeting people than getting to know them. We’re greedy. We want to have everything. We get into relationships at the slightest attraction and step out, the moment we find someone better. We don’t want to bring out the best in that one person. We want them to be perfect. We date a lot of people but rarely give any of them a real chance. We’re disappointed in everyone.

Technology has brought us closer, so close that it’s impossible to breathe. Our physical presence has been replaced by texts, voice messages, snapchats and video calls. We don’t feel the need to spend time together anymore. We have too much of each other already. There’s nothing left to talk about.

We’re a generation of ‘wanderers’ who wouldn’t stay at one place for too long. Everyone is commitment phobic. We believe we’re not meant for relationships. We don’t want to settle down. Even the thought of it is scary. We cannot imagine being with one person for the rest of our lives. We walk away. We despise permanence like its some social evil. We like to believe we’re ‘different’ than the rest. We like to believe we don’t conform to social norms.

We’re a generation that calls itself ‘sexually liberated’. We can tell sex apart from love, or so we think. We’re the hook-up-break-up generation. We have sex first and then decide if we want to love someone. Sex comes easy, loyalty doesn’t. Getting laid has become the new getting drunk. You do it not because you love the other person, but because you want to feel good. It’s all the temporary fulfillment we need. Sex outside relationships isn’t a taboo anymore. Relationships aren’t that simple anymore. There are open relationships, friends with benefits, causal flings, one-night stands, no strings attached – we’ve left very little exclusivity for love in our lives.

We’re the practical generation who runs by logic alone. We don’t know how to love madly anymore. We wouldn’t take a flight to a far-off land just to see someone we love. We’d break up because, long distance. We’re too sensible for love. Too sensible for our own good.

We’re a scared generation – scared to fall in love, scared to commit, scared to fall, scared to get hurt, scared to get our hearts broken. We don’t allow anyone in, nor do we step out and love anyone unconditionally. We lurk from behind walls we’ve created ourselves, looking for love and running away the moment we really find it. We suddenly ‘cannot handle it’. We don’t want to be vulnerable. We don’t want to bare our soul to anyone. We’re too guarded.

We don’t even value relationships anymore. We let go of the most wonderful people for ‘the other fishes in the sea.’ We don’t consider them sacred anymore.

There’s nothing we couldn’t conquer in this world, and yet, here we are ham-fisted at the game of love – the most basic of human instincts. Evolution, they call it.

 

By Ankush Bahuguna

Find original source here.

 

 

 

And now back to my usual blog content. Hope you didn’t think I will forget to include a recipe. This one for Mexican Truffles and it comes with a slight kick and lots of chocolate, so I hope you are ready for it.

xo xo

 

Mexican Chocolate Truffles

Ingredients:
Makes about 50 (1/2-inch) truffles

 

• 16 oz. (450 gr) good quality bittersweet chocolate, finely chopped
• 3/4 cup (180 ml) heavy cream
• 1 vanilla bean
• 5 tbsp (70 gr) unsalted butter at a room temperature
• 2 tsp cinnamon
• 1/2 tsp cardamom
• 1 tsp chipotle pepper, divided in half
• 1/2 cup Dutch cocoa powder

 

Directions:

Place the cream in a small saucepan. Scrape the vanilla bean and add it to the saucepan. Heat over meduim-high heat and bring to a gentle boil. 

Place the chocolate and the butter in a medium heatproof bowl and top with the hot cream. Let it sit for 1 minute to allow the chocolate to melt. Stir with rubber spatula until smooth. If chocolate chunks are still present, place the bowl over a saucepan of simmering water and stir until all chocolate has melted. 

Add cinnamon, cardamom and 1/2 of the chipotle pepper. Taste and add the remaining 1/2 tsp of chipotle pepper if desired.

Allow mixture to stand at room temperature for 30 minutes. Refrigerate for 2–3 hours or until just firm. 

Roll teaspoonfuls of the truffle mixture into balls and place on a large baking tray. Roll truffles in the cocoa powder until it is coated evenly. Keep refrigerated until ready to be enjoyed.

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TAGS: chocolate, dessert, mexican, cardamom, chipotle pepper, sweets, cinnamon, winter


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