tom hudgens

author of The Commonsense Kitchen and the WHOLE HOG blog

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A Commonsense Thanksgiving

November 14, 2011

Tags: Thanksgiving, Oysters, Absinthe, Beets, Soups, Winter Squash, Brussels Sprouts, Chestnuts, Pumpkin Seeds, Panna Cotta, Pears, Persimmons, Almonds, Desserts

(Fuyu persimmon from K&J Orchards in Winters, California; photo courtesy of the blog "In Praise of Sardines")
With Thanksgiving just around the corner, here are some fresh ideas for you! It's many cooks' favorite season--fall. We love all the hard squash, all the greens unfurling, the herbs, and especially the fruit--quinces, persimmons, pears.... Here is a menu, with several more-or-less original recipes, of dishes that would walk quite well with all your standard Thanksgiving favorites (turkey and stuffing and cranberry and pie, for all of which The Commonsense Kitchen has great recipes), or that could be served as a special, festive harvest-time meal on their own.
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Lone Pine, California, April 2011

April 28, 2011

Tags: Duck, Chickpeas, Oranges, Kale, Beets, Leeks, Peas, Rice, Watercress, Desserts, Almonds, Lemons, Macaroons, Apples, Chocolate

Food is an expression of the place where you are. Bearing that in mind, last week my long-time friend and Deep Springs classmate Kevin West and I headed to the Eastern Sierra (Deep Springs country) to cook several memorable meals in the iconic town of Lone Pine, in Inyo County’s southern Owens Valley, for a visionary group of creative folks called The Metabolic Studio (“at the intersection of art and philanthropy”). These dynamic Angelenos, well aware of the upcoming 2013 centenary of the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power’s diversion of water from the Owens River via the Los Angeles Aqueduct (remember the movie Chinatown?), are taking a keen, artistic-philanthropic interest in the Owens Valley region and its promising agricultural and culinary future, as the valley’s water is gradually restored. Today, a visitor to the Owens Valley sees mostly desert and a few cattle ranches among towering mountainscapes, but with a little poking around, he or she might find an apple farm, a sprawling vegetable garden in someone’s backyard, wild watercress growing in a pond, nettles near a stream, herds of elk, or pińons in the lower mountain elevations.
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(tangerines and dates; winter Cooking Class, 2011)

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(hog at the trough, Deep Springs, Summer 2007)

(chard in the Deep Springs garden, Fall 2006)

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