Sunday, December 27, 2009
Ginger-Lemon Pinwheel Cookies
Our holiday open house was a big success with over 100 people showing up. Here is a cookie recipe that was a big hit.
Ginger-Lemon Pinwheel Cookies
Ingredients
* Ginger dough:
* 1/4 cup unsalted butter, softened
* 1/3 cup packed dark brown sugar
* 1/4 cup molasses
* 1 large egg yolk
* 6 ounces all-purpose flour (about 1 1/3 cups)
* 3/4 teaspoon ground ginger
* 3/4 teaspoon ground cinnamon
* 1/4 teaspoon salt
* 1/8 teaspoon ground nutmeg
* Dash of ground allspice
Lemon dough:
* 5 tablespoons unsalted butter, softened
* 2/3 cup granulated sugar
* 1 large egg white
* 2 teaspoons grated lemon rind
* 3/4 teaspoon vanilla extract
* 6 ounces all-purpose flour (about 1 1/3 cups)
* 1/4 teaspoon salt
Preparation
1. To prepare ginger dough, place 1/4 cup butter and brown sugar in a medium bowl; beat with a mixer at medium speed until well combined (about 3 minutes). Add molasses and egg yolk; beat until well blended. Weigh or lightly spoon 6 ounces (about 1 1/3 cups) flour into dry measuring cups; level with a knife. Combine 6 ounces flour, ginger, and next 4 ingredients (through allspice); stir with a whisk. Add flour mixture to butter mixture; beat at low speed just until combined. Wrap dough in plastic wrap; chill 30 minutes.
2. To prepare lemon dough, place 5 tablespoons butter and granulated sugar in a medium bowl; beat with a mixer at medium speed until blended (about 3 minutes). Add egg white; beat until blended. Beat in rind and vanilla. Weigh or lightly spoon 6 ounces (about 1 1/3 cups) flour into dry measuring cups; level with a knife. Combine 6 ounces flour and 1/4 teaspoon salt. Add flour mixture to butter mixture; beat at low speed just until combined. Wrap dough in plastic wrap; chill 30 minutes.
3. Unwrap ginger dough. Roll ginger dough between sheets of plastic wrap into a 13 x 8 1/2–inch rectangle (3/16 inch thick); chill 10 minutes. Unwrap lemon dough. Roll lemon dough between sheets of plastic wrap into a 13 x 9–inch rectangle (3/16 inch thick); chill 10 minutes. Carefully stack ginger dough on top of lemon dough, leaving a 1/2-inch border along one long edge. Starting with the long side without a border, roll up dough, jelly-roll fashion. Seal edges (do not seal ends of roll). Cover with plastic wrap; freeze 30 minutes.
4. Preheat oven to 350°.
5. Unwrap dough. Cut with a sharp knife into 40 slices (about 1/4 inch thick). Reshape rounds, if necessary. Arrange slices 1 inch apart on baking sheets lined with parchment paper. Bake, 1 batch at a time, at 350° for 8 to 9 minutes or until set and lightly browned. Cool on wire racks
December 2009--Cooking Light
Thursday, December 3, 2009
Trinidad Holiday Home Tour
Sunday, September 20, 2009
Human Rights Shouldn't Justify Human Wrongs
"Douglas McCue, 68, stands in front of his home in Perth, ON, Sept. 19, 2009. The CornerStone Bed and Breakfast that he operated out of his home since 2003 was closed on March 30 following court procedures and an Ontario Human Rights Tribunal case after he refused to let a blind man with a guide dog stay at the B&B due to his allergic reaction to dogs, which affects his diabetes."
This summer, we had a similar situation with a much less stressful resolution.
A man and his "lady-friend" showed up with their dog after making online reservations. With no forewarning of their unique situation, and with several printed pages of our obligation to accept their animal into the Inn, they "forced" my kind-hearted Innkeeper to let them stay. I told them that we would never discriminate against anyone - handicapped or otherwise.
I felt their using a "dog-in-training" (this guy trains them for autistic children), along with misusing an admirable piece of legislation was wrong and unacceptable to me. I let them stay the night, but that was it. The next morning my guests were asking all the questions I would, like what's the disability, how the dog helps, etc. Turns out that his lady-friend (his words) was calmed by the dog-in-training, and he was misleading me when he said that she was "slightly" autistic.
Needless to say, I was outraged at his irresponsibility and selfishness. We do not allow animals in the house for the same reason most small B&Bs do not, guests have allergies. I have two dogs and I love animals. I keep them out of the Inn out of respect for my guests. So what can I do? I'm posting this article, and I contacted our local B&B association to warn them, and to flag any future reservations from this person.
I did learn more about the law, its intentions, and how it can be misused and misapplied for selfish reasons. I hope everyone will stand up to such "bulling", learn your rights, and be kind to each other.
Referring article:
(http://www.ottawacitizen.com/health/When+rights+wrong/2013286/story.html)
When Two Rights Go Wrong:
In Perth bed-and-breakfast battle, there are no real winners - BY KELLY EGAN, THE OTTAWA CITIZENSEPTEMBER 20, 2009COMMENTS (26)
© Copyright (c) The Ottawa Citizen
Thursday, July 23, 2009
Westhaven Blackberry Festival
WESTHAVEN -- The Westhaven Volunteer Fire Department's 49th annual Wild Blackberry Festival will be held Sunday from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. at the Fire Hall, south of Trinidad at the Sixth Avenue exit off U.S. Highway 101.
Sponsored by the fire department and the Westhaven Ladies Club, this old-fashioned fundraiser in the redwoods by the sea will feature live music, a barbecue, blackberry snow cones, local brews and wines, a raffle, children's activities, artists booths and the firemen's dunk tank.
The Ladies Club and its helpers have been working all year making blackberry jelly, jam and pies you can eat by the slice with ice cream, or purchase whole pies that have been frozen and then freshly baked.
Visitors can meet the fire crews of the Westhaven Volunteer Fire Department and the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection with their fire trucks on display, and kids can have their picture taken with Smokey the Bear.
Donations to this nonprofit event support the fire department and the local community.
Sunday, June 14, 2009
Huckleberry Banana Bread
Ingredients:
1 cup butter
2 cups sugar
4 eggs
3 cups unbleached flour
1/2 teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon baking soda
3/4 cup buttermilk
3 to 4 very ripe bananas, sliced
1 cup walnuts (optional)
1 cup huckleberries, rinsed and drained (you may substitute with blueberries)
Cream together, butter, sugar and eggs. Combine flour, salt and baking soda in a small bowl. Alternate adding dry ingredients and buttermilk to creamed mixture. Mix well. Beat 200 strokes. Fold in sliced bananas and huckleberries. Bake in a greased and floured mini loaf pans at 350º for 45 minutes to an hour.
Monday, May 25, 2009
Adopt-A-Highway Program
Trinidad Bay Bed & Breakfast been a part of the Adopt-A-Highway program since April 2006. The adopted area is about 3 miles north of the B & B on HWY 101 just before Patrick's Point State Park. The weather has been very nice and I figured that I needed to get out there and clean the highway before the B & B gets too busy. I walked the two mile stretch of the highway and only picked up one full bag of trash and one bag of recyclables! This is a big improvement from the last time I went out and picked up about 6 bags of trash. I just love being out there doing this for the community. Cal Trans provides me with all the tools needed for the job. This includes a hardhat, trash grabber, trash bags, yellow vest and bags for recycling. Businesses or individuals may adopt a stretch of highway. All one needs to do it check out the Adopt-A-Highway website to apply.
Tuesday, May 12, 2009
Wednesday, April 22, 2009
Cherry Almond Scones
Cherry Almond Scones
For the scones:
3/4 cup dried cherries
1 cup boiling water
1 egg
3/4 cup low-fat buttermilk
2 teaspoons vanilla extract
1 teaspoon almond extract
2 cups flour
1/4 cup granulated sugar
1 tablespoon baking powder
6 tablespoons butter
1/4 cup almonds, chopped
For the cherry butter:
1/2 cup butter, softened
1/4 cup cherry preserves
To start: Preheat the oven to 400˚. Grease a baking sheet or cover baking sheet with parchment paper; set aside. Put the dried cherries into the boiling water; set aside.
Prepare the scones: In a large bowl, combine the egg, buttermilk, vanilla and almond extracts; set aside. In a food processor, blend the flour, sugar, baking powder, and butter until the mixture forms coarse crumbs. (You can also just use a simple hand held pastry blender to do this if you don't have a food processor). Drain the cherries and stir into the egg mixture. Add the crumb mixture to the egg mixture and stir until blended. Stir in the almonds. Drop the dough by heaping tablespoonful onto the prepared baking sheet. Bake for 12 to 15 minutes or until golden. Serve warm with cherry butter.
Make the cherry butter: In a medium bowl, combine the butter and preserves. Stir until blended.
Yield: 24 scones
Friday, April 10, 2009
Trinity Alps Guest Room - Remodeled
Tuesday, January 20, 2009
Tu Tu' Tun and Bandon-By-The-Sea, OR
Saturday, January 10, 2009
Trinity Alps Guest Room - Remodeling
It's so touching to read these entries over the years.
If I ever feel unappreciated in my town, or a bit blue, I just head to one of my rooms and read a little.
Can't feel blue long with all these wonderfully warm words, left by such kind people, staying in my little Trinity Alps Guest Room over the garage, in this charming 50's Cape Cod Home, on the bluff overlooking the Bay, in my favorite place on earth - Trinidad!
Thanks for staying with us. -Mike Morgan, Owner
Tuesday, January 6, 2009
Best of the West Award from Bedandbreakfast.com
Times Standard Story and photos by Sharon Letts
Posted: 11/05/2008 01:30:12 AM PST
Trinidad Bay Bed & Breakfast innkeeper Jason Richie was born and raised in Eureka, but he'd like to die in Trinidad -- and it's not due solely to the inn's 1,000-thread-count Egyptian sheets.
"I love being in a small town and knowing the people here and also them knowing me,” he said. “I can see myself being old here and dying here, I love it so much. I feel blessed to be able to live here in this town and in this house.”
The bed and breakfast is small, with just four rooms available, but it sits just across the street from the Trinidad Harbor with clear, expansive views of Trinidad Head, and the Trinidad Memorial Lighthouse, making every room at the inn “a room with a view.”
"I love the beauty of Trinidad,” Richie said. “I love the small cottages and what is left of the historic buildings in town and that there are some streets without sidewalks -- the sounds of the buoy bell, the smell in the air, all the birds, seeing the storms come in and out during the winter. I even love it when it is very stormy with a lot rain and wind.”
Richie was living in Trinidad and working in the telecommunications department at Humboldt State University when he learned a few years ago that the historic bed and breakfast was for sale.
"My friend, Michael Morgan, decided to move to Trinidad from San Francisco,” he said. “He was planning to buy some houses in Trinidad and I had heard that the Trinidad Bay Bed & Breakfast was possibly for sale, so I let Mike know. He'd already bought his other house at the opposite corner of the bed and breakfast. He was then able to purchase the bed and breakfast from Don and Corlene Blue, who were the previous innkeepers.” Morgan hired Richie as innkeeper about two years ago. And though he'd never run a bed and breakfast before, Richie knew he loved to bake.
"I had never cooked for people before, but after I took the food safety course and got started trying recipes, I realized that I enjoyed it,” he said.
“Serving breakfast is my favorite part about running the bed and breakfast. It's a great way to get to know the guests and to provide them with a good, hearty meal for the morning.”
Breakfasts at the inn are quite lively. Richie said there is lots of laughing in the dining room and a lot of lingering at the table afterwards over coffee.
"For the guests that want more privacy, I'll deliver a breakfast tray to the two private entrance rooms,” he said. “I have about seven main dishes I can do. The longest I have had a guest stay is about seven days, so I can change the entree each day.”
All of the meals at the inn are made from scratch. Richie uses organic flour, sugar and other organic and local products, including Humboldt Creamery milk and butter, organic Signature Coffee out of Redway and fresh produce from the farmers market.
Every detail at the bed and breakfast is carefully attended to by Richie and his staff, including ironing the sheets and making cookies and other baked goods every day.
"I bake a variety of small muffins and breads,” he said. “I got interested in making peach preserves when my neighbors down the street, Kim and Stan Binnie, had all these peaches from the tree in their backyard. I spent a couple weeks this year just making preserves and jarring those for the next coming year.”
Richie uses the preserves both as a spread and for a French toast dish he makes. He also makes homemade fruit mincemeat used as a topping for baked apples.
"Baked apples have been a part of the breakfast here for 20 years,” he said. “The mincemeat I make has cranberries, apples, orange and lemon zest, currants, spices, brandy, rum and many other ingredients. When blueberries are in season, I'll go out to Wolfsen's blueberry farm in McKinleyville to pick my own.”
Visitors represent the four corners of the world, he said, and many are repeat guests. Richie said locals have been known to get away to the inn, too.
"Guests come from all over Europe, Canada and the United States,” he said. “I had one couple from Tokyo, Japan today. They heard about the bed and breakfast through a recent New York Times article that was published in September 2008.
"There are also quite a few repeat guests who have stayed with all the innkeepers who have run the inn. It's also popular for honeymooners and some locals who celebrate special occasions.”
The Trinidad Bay Bed and Breakfast was honored this year, along with the Ship's Inn Bed and Breakfast in Eureka, as being the “Best of the West” in the annual “Best of BedandBreakfast.com” awards. BedandBreakfast.com is an online bed-and-breakfast directory.
Richie said that reviews of nearly 50,000 bed and breakfasts were submitted to the Web site from guests throughout the world.
"We're grateful for our wonderful guests,” he said, “as their reviews resulted in this recognition and we are honored.”
Those who stay at the bed and breakfast wake up to one of Richie's many baked dishes, and he honors past innkeepers by keeping their featured dishes on the menu, including the baked apples and even halved and sectioned baked grapefruit. Other morning dishes include smoked salmon scrambled eggs, shirred eggs with chicken-apple sausages, and peach French toast or waffles.
However, some dishes he's made his own, such as an egg strata made with brie.
"I found the egg strata recipe in a magazine called Cooking Light,” he said. “I love to prepare this dish because it's an unusual dish that most haven't had. I'm able to have everything chopped and ready to go the night before and put it in the fridge overnight in a baking dish ready to go. In the morning, I wake up and just add the egg mixture and bake it.”
Richie shares the recipe below:
Brie and Egg Strata
To prepare the night before serving, assemble and layer the casserole without the egg mixture; cover and refrigerate. Combine the egg mixture and refrigerate that in a separate container.
In the morning, pour the egg mixture over the bread mixture; allow the strata to stand for 30 minutes before baking.
If desired, substitute a French baguette or sourdough loaf for the flat Italian bread called ciabatta. Freeze the brie for about 15 minutes to make chopping easier.
-- 2 teaspoons olive oil
-- 2 cups chopped onion
-- 1 1/2 cups diced unpeeled Yukon gold potato (1 large)
-- 1 cup chopped red bell pepper
-- 1 cup halved grape tomatoes
-- 1 teaspoon salt, divided
-- 3/4 pound ciabatta, cut into 1-inch cubes, toasted
-- Cooking spray
-- 4 ounces brie, rind removed and chopped
-- 6 large eggs
-- 1 teaspoon herbes de Provence
-- 1/4 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper
-- 3 cups of 1 percent low-fat milk
-- 2 tablespoons chopped fresh parsley
For casserole:
Heat oil in a large nonstick skillet over medium-high heat. Add onion, potato and bell pepper; sauté 4 minutes or until tender. Stir in tomatoes; sauté 2 minutes. Stir in 1/2 teaspoon salt.
Combine this mixture and the bread.
Place half of the bread mixture into a 13-by-9-inch baking dish that has been coated with cooking spray.
Sprinkle with half of the brie. Top that with the remaining bread mixture and the remaining brie.
For egg mixture:
Place egg substitute or eggs in a medium bowl. Add remaining 1/2 teaspoon salt, herbes de Provence and pepper. Add milk, stirring with a whisk until well-blended.
Pour egg mixture over bread mixture. Let stand 30 minutes.
Bake at 350 F for 50 minutes, or until set. For a brown top, leave in the oven a little bit longer. Sprinkle with parsley. Serve immediately.
Makes 12 servings.