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Earlier this week, I treated myself to my own, homemade, Pasta Carbonara (diced Guanciale, grated - by me - Pecorino Romano, organic, free range, egg yolks, pasta, and several ladles of the starchy pasta cooking liquid); very tasty.
 
Gazpacho! I love tomato season.

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Also had some grilled Italian sausages and homemade dilled refrigerator-pickled green beans:

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In 2011 I bought a kamado-style grill/oven, and also discovered the pizzamaking.com forum, and I went totally bananas on pizzamaking, could cook NY-style at 700º, Margherita style at 900º, taking notes, experimenting with hydration levels, 6 to 8 pizzas a week! Then, after a year and a half, I burned out. Haven't made a pie since, and only have been to a pizza place a couple times for office parties, etc. Just total burnout.

Well, this week I decided to try one, see if a decade's break cleared my burnout:

pizza.jpg


Cake flour, 68% hydration, olive oil in the dough, two-day in-frig rise/ferment, Boar's Head pepperoni, low-moisture Mozz, Parmesan Reggiano, and garden basil.
Bleh. I ate about half of it; still in burn-out mode. Have three more doughballs in the frig, guess I'll be baking some bread or something tomorrow. I'll give it another ten years. 😕
 
In 2011 I bought a kamado-style grill/oven, and also discovered the pizzamaking.com forum, and I went totally bananas on pizzamaking, could cook NY-style at 700º, Margherita style at 900º, taking notes, experimenting with hydration levels, 6 to 8 pizzas a week! Then, after a year and a half, I burned out. Haven't made a pie since, and only have been to a pizza place a couple times for office parties, etc. Just total burnout.

Well, this week I decided to try one, see if a decade's break cleared my burnout:

View attachment 2412898

Cake flour, 68% hydration, olive oil in the dough, two-day in-frig rise/ferment, Boar's Head pepperoni, low-moisture Mozz, Parmesan Reggiano, and garden basil.
Bleh. I ate about half of it; still in burn-out mode. Have three more doughballs in the frig, guess I'll be baking some bread or something tomorrow. I'll give it another ten years. 😕
Wow that is terrible, pizza burnout very scary, pack that oven up and send it down to me so I can try to burnout 🙂
Pizza looks amazing so at least you still got the chops.
 
Pan seared Salmon
In 2011 I bought a kamado-style grill/oven, and also discovered the pizzamaking.com forum, and I went totally bananas on pizzamaking, could cook NY-style at 700º, Margherita style at 900º, taking notes, experimenting with hydration levels, 6 to 8 pizzas a week! Then, after a year and a half, I burned out. Haven't made a pie since, and only have been to a pizza place a couple times for office parties, etc. Just total burnout.

Well, this week I decided to try one, see if a decade's break cleared my burnout:

View attachment 2412898

Cake flour, 68% hydration, olive oil in the dough, two-day in-frig rise/ferment, Boar's Head pepperoni, low-moisture Mozz, Parmesan Reggiano, and garden basil.
Bleh. I ate about half of it; still in burn-out mode. Have three more doughballs in the frig, guess I'll be baking some bread or something tomorrow. I'll give it another ten years. 😕
Oh my!!! I'll take the other half! That looks amazing!
That sounds like a good goal for retirement: getting burned out on pizza and sailing.
 
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In South of France at the moment. Needed some snacks to take on the boat so I made a sandwich.

Fresh bread from the boulangerie, Brie, prosciutto, salami, heirloom tomatoes, rocket spring mix, balsamic vinegar, olive oil, and a dash of honey.
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That looks absolutely delicious.

My kind of sandwich.

Gorgeous.

Do enjoy.
 
In South of France at the moment. Needed some snacks to take on the boat so I made a sandwich.

Fresh bread from the boulangerie, Brie, prosciutto, salami, heirloom tomatoes, rocket spring mix, balsamic vinegar, olive oil, and a dash of honey.
8b22cf66dcb2831873159e08b0bdf20e.jpg
Dayam, who needs a boat at that point?
 
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This evening, I dined on: Roasted Mediterranean vegetables, (courgette/zucchini, aubergine/eggplant, peppers, tomatoes, onions, mushrooms), steamed chard, fresh tomatoes that have met - and become well acquainted with, that great golden globe in the sky, in other words, the sun, - drizzled in olive oil, grilled chicken, and a basket of fresh bread.
 
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Couldn't decide between the Bouillabaisse, and the squid ink risotto, so I ordered both.
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While squid ink risotto is a delightful delicacy (and one that I remain more than partial to), if faced with that particular choice, for me, there would be no contest:

Bouillabaisse each and every time.

Yum.

That looks absolutely divine.

Do enjoy.
 
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In the US the concoction of an "omelette Norvegienne" is called "Baked Alaska," although I am not sure just why. Certainly this particularly delicious and fancy dessert has nothing to do with the usual eggy omelets [or variant spelling] omelettes the way we usually think of them!
 
In the US the concoction of an "omelette Norvegienne" is called "Baked Alaska," although I am not sure just why. Certainly this particularly delicious and fancy dessert has nothing to do with the usual eggy omelets [or variant spelling] omelettes the way we usually think of them!
Ah.

Now, I have heard of the dish known as "Baked Alaska", but the reference to an "omelette Norvegienne" left me completely baffled, as I had never heard of it until it was kindly explained to me, here.
 
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