Grilled Cheese Please to honor FDR, and more cheese opportunities

Ever since I made those asparagus and cheese sandwiches based on Homesick Texan for her Parmesan coated toasted bread, I have been also using that parmesan coating for regular grilled cheese too sometimes when feeling like I want a hug from the gloomy winter weather. You can tell it was one of those days based on the poor lighting in my kitchen 🙁

All you have to do is sprinkle shredded parmesan on the buttered part of the bread. The upgrade is easy, and it adds a bit of crispy cheesy crust to the toast and oozy cheese inside for a textural upgrade to a normal grilled cheese. I don’t have a toaster oven so I melt my cheese in the oven, and I will flip the sandwich and top the other half with parmesan once the color looks right (depending on the bread). I prefer making grilled cheese in the oven rather than a pan or griddle because I can be sure the cheese will get melty and oozy, which doesn’t always happen when I’m using the pan before the bread is already toasted and starting to take the approach of getting burned.

Besides, that gives you time to heat up your soup or stew, or prep a side salad. Mmmm, winter hug with food. And, it ties in nicely with this month and upcoming Presidents’ Day- grilled cheese was one of FDR’s favorite foods. Franklin D Roosevelt is one of the most quotable presidents of history, and his quotes reveal his introspection and understanding of the nature of humanity and the path America was on – including stating several warnings about the rise of private power and how poverty and unemployment and a culture of fear was the enemy of democracy.




And… back to food. I always have a preference for seedy oat bread, which is what you see here, as well as two slices of smoked provolone- and a bit of melted butter and pinch of parmesan on each side, that’s it! I have historically always kept it simple, using a really nice cheese that is flavorful so that I only need a couple slices in it rather than stacking up a multi-cheese sandwich.

parmesan crusted grilled cheese parmesan crusted grilled cheese parmesan crusted grilled cheese

parmesan crusted grilled cheese

Though now, looking at all the food porn photos of grilled cheese at Grilled Cheese Social and whenever I glance at the Grilled Cheese recipe books by Laura Werlin, it is something I might reconsider.  These ladies really puts together some incredible sounding grilled cheese combinations. Now Laura Werlin has a new Mac and Cheese book out too. I’m so jealous of her life. Her ability to just remember and list out recommendations of various amazing cheeses is something I aspire to- which is why starting this year I am now starting a cheese notebook to track what I try.

I’ll aspire but probably never be cheese champions like Laura or Steve of Cheese Bar, but I hope to be more conscious of learning instead of just eating it! But of course, I will continue to just love it even as F points out the contradiction of trying to eat healthier but never ever being able to give up cheese and wanting more cheese. One of the best ways I learned about cheese was during Steve and Ten 01 (since closed) one time event the Cheese Bar Spectacular in summer 2010. 100 cheeses is a lot to try and even I got cheesed out, but it made me hone in what I liked and didn’t like though comparisons.

There is an upcoming event that can help you (and me) with this though: the annual Boys & Girls Clubs’ Showcase of Wine and Cheese. Every year this is a ticket that grants you entrance to a room in the Oregon Convention center where you can sample hundreds of wines and there are cheese vendors and an appetizers buffet. I missed this event last year because I was traveling internationally for work and the year before that because of family in town, but I plan to support them again this year. The cheeses are not going to be artisan cheeses as they are too small to donate to the hundreds that attend this event, but I don’t discriminate against any cheese and it is still a great way to get introduced and practice your palate.

Also consider this kickstarter for a community cheese club that Cyril is starting:

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Lunches at Lardo

Lardo PDX– sniff. I remember when we first met, when it was a new food cart, brand new and just custom built, when I attended the annual food cart festival Eat Mobile 2011. I also visited it on a food cart tour. Then, the cart grew up- so fast!- to a brick and mortar location, first on the east side of the river, and now on the west side where I visited its bright shiny digs with huge glass windows and doors and the same clean wood and food that celebrates fat. F/Jack that can eat no fat hates this place, but I naturally love it. Now they are so grown up they are throwing Super Bowl parties with heated tents and a big screen and game day food today, and earlier this month collaborated to offer a Swine and Barley Wine event (A Pig Out Production) of barleywine pairings with offerings from their menu and cheese from Steve’s Cheese (check out a take from an attendee at one of the local PDX blogs I follow, Beer Musings from Portland)

In their transformation from food cart to two physical restaurants, they still have a very casual level of service.  I’ve seen this in many places in Portland in order to reduce service staff costs. You go up and order from a chalkboard on the wall, and are handed a number so that your order can be delivered to you, and then you bus yourself to the bins. Wisely, they already have to go boxes for your leftovers out.

I also want to assure you that what is pictured below is more than one lunch I had at Lardo, and these sandwiches are not all mine. You don’t need to fear for my heart and whether I can continue to enjoy deliciousness. This was not one meal.

First of all, the Bloody Mary is quite spicy! I loved it! There haven been many a bloody mary that I have tried around PDX that didn’t bring it (and with great distilleries like New Deal with their Hot Monkey vodka and so much heirloom tomatoes and homemade pickling!). Thankfully, Lardo brought it to punch with flavor with their take on a bloody mary. As I waited for my order to be prepared (they do so to order), that bloody mary really raised my expectations of what I was about to experience, as it ranked right up there with ones I’ve had at for instance when I visited Tasty N Sons and my brunch at Simpatica.

Lardo west, bringing the fat back, Portland restaurant, sandwich restaurant Lardo west, bringing the fat back, Bloody Mary

You may consider bringing a friend to share with if you get the double burger and fries- I felt my heart would burst just eating that half of a Double Burger (with both Cascade natural beef and pork belly as the meats along with the cheddar and lardo sauce) and the Dirty Fries. Oh those Dirty Fries with fried pork fat scraps, marinated peppers, fried herbs and parmesan, a tasty but filling combination on the tastebuds of savory and salty and spicy and sour, both crispy and so lingeringly soft in the same chew. Genius.

I’m not sure why you would not order these fries dirty- you sort of need all those peppers to balance out that pork belly on the burger. Not to say the pork belly isn’t delicious- at one point I separated them out to eat them individually to savor them, and even without the pork belly that burger is so juicy and messy and glorious. I can see this showing up on the national charts of Food & Wine as one of the best burgers in the US, and it is definitely in the top 3 for Portland.

Double Burger, Dirty fries, Cascade natural beef and pork belly with the cheddar and lardo sauce, Lardo west, bringing the fat back, Portland restaurant, sandwich restaurant Double Burger, Dirty fries, Cascade natural beef and pork belly with the cheddar and lardo sauce, Lardo west, bringing the fat back, Portland restaurant, sandwich restaurant Double Burger, Dirty fries, Cascade natural beef and pork belly with the cheddar and lardo sauce, Lardo west, bringing the fat back, Portland restaurant, sandwich restaurant
Double Burger, Dirty fries, Cascade natural beef and pork belly with the cheddar and lardo sauce, Lardo west, bringing the fat back, Portland restaurant, sandwich restaurant

Other sandwiches I was able to sample included the fried chicken sandwich, eggplant parmesan, and porchetta sandwich. The fried chicken sandwich was decent but I was hoping for more- I don’t mind cold fried chicken, and the description of Cold Fried Chicken, blue cheese, bacon, pickles sounded promising. But, I realized as I ate it that I was hoping for a cold fried chicken that would compare well with cold chicken from Kentucky Fried Chicken.

Maybe my memories are rosy since it has been years since I’ve had KFC since I don’t eat fast food chains anymore, but I remember not minding leftover KFC the next day because of the wonderful seasoning on their original recipe chicken or the extra crispy chicken version still having a corner of super crunch here or there. Neither of this was true with the cold fried chicken from Lardo, and I was hoping they would have celebrated the fat of the skin more either with seasoning to let it sing, or lots of breading to highlight extra crispy skin. I also wouldn’t have minded more blue cheese, such as Rogue blue cheese tang.

Meanwhile, Lardo’s Eggplant Parm ‘Old School’ with tomato sauce, provolone, basil was messy with its generous saucing, and the breading still had a bit of crispness despite it. It is a good option for the vegetarian who you drag to eat Lardo with you. In fact, Lardo offers two vegetarian sandwiches- there was also a Rapini sandwich with aged provolone, capers, and red pepper agrodolce available as an option.

Fried Chicken Sandwich, Cold Fried Chicken, blue cheese, bacon, pickles, Lardo west, bringing the fat back, Portland restaurant, sandwich restaurant Fried Chicken Sandwich, Cold Fried Chicken, blue cheese, bacon, pickles, Lardo west, bringing the fat back, Portland restaurant, sandwich restaurant Eggplant Parm, Lardo west, bringing the fat back, Portland restaurant, sandwich restaurant Eggplant Parm, Lardo west, bringing the fat back, Portland restaurant, sandwich restaurant

Finally, Lardo’s signature porchetta sandwich with caper aioli, gremolata that have been written up nationally including the recipe shared at Saveur. It’s a sandwich of fatty melt in your mouth pork belly that is wrapped around the roasted pork and doesn’t apologize for it, and in fact adds all that good olive oil and gremolata on top (though seriously just the meat/fat combo itself is already luscious).

Lardo's signature porchetta sandwich with caper aioli, gremolata, Lardo west, bringing the fat back, Portland restaurant, sandwich restaurant Lardo's signature porchetta sandwich with caper aioli, gremolata, Lardo west, bringing the fat back, Portland restaurant, sandwich restaurant

Lardo is serious about bringing the fat back. And, it doesn’t hurt that now with having a restaurant space (two actually!), they can offer half a dozen options for cocktails and more than a dozen local Northwest microbrew beers to wash that extreme richness down with. They also have pie holes- I stared so wistfully at those pecan pie holes but couldn’t muster the courage to add more to my arteries in one meal (well, also considering what gluttony the meal order already consisted of as you see. I more than blew my caloric allowance before dessert…) Not a single thing is more than $10, but every item is an indulgent pleasure that seems to border on sinful in its exaltation of richness.

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Ham and Cheese Slider Melts

I thought I would share my take of one of the first recipes I saw when I joined Pinterest that I immediately pinned: Ham and Cheese slider melts, highlighting Hawaiian sweet rolls and ham and cheese and mustard and butter. It’s great for a quick but simple recipe that is also very comforting and good for a group (say… an upcoming Sunday Superbowl party… or using up leftover holiday ham). Or you can just eat it all yourself, that’s fine too. I did both.

The recipes that you can find sometimes have onion but sometimes not.  I did not use the versions of the recipe that used mayo. As to be expected of home cooks, there are lots of variations of the recipe out there tailored based on personal taste (and they really vary on how many sliders the recipes yield). Naturally I still made my own variation.  I decided to make two different kinds of the sauces- one for the slider insides that has the onion, and then a separate one without the onions that I would use to top the sliders because I didn’t want sweet caramelized onion everywhere on my hands/wasted on plate and napkins, just enfolded in the sandwich.

ham and cheese slider melts with Hawaiian dinner rolls

In the photos below you will see there is a lot of ham in the sandwich so you might want to reduce further to about 12 large slices- depending on the cut of your ham this will vary the weight. You can also substitute fake meat aka vegetarian deli slices like from Tofurky or Yves or Lightlife, or if you can’t find Hawaiian sweet rolls then regular dinner rolls will work and add a tablespoon of brown sugar to the dijon butter mix topping for some sweetness. Not that the substitution will make this a healthy sandwich. For my get together, it was the main snack I was serving (along with chips and baguette slices topped with a cauliflower parmesan spread) and the sliders are a great absorber for alcohol which is exactly what I was looking for as my friends and I shared a growler and a few pint sized bottles of beer one evening!

Ingredients:

  • 10 tablespoons of unsalted butter, divided into 6 tablespoons and 4 tablespoons: I made two batches, using most inside and another smaller version as topping.
  • 1 small onion, minced
  • 3 tablespoons Dijon Mustard, and 1 separate tablespoon of mustard
  • 3 teaspoons Worcestershire Sauce, and 1 separate teaspoon of  Worcestershire
  • 3 teaspoons of poppy seeds, and 1 separate teaspoon of poppy seeds
  • 1 package of 12 Hawaiian sweet rolls
  • 1  pound of shaved deli ham- I used Black Forest. You need at least a minimum of 12 slices
  • 1 cup shredded cheese + 6 slices of cheese of your choice- popular options might be Swiss or Havarti or Provolone or Monterey Jack, or indulge with Gruyere. I used shredded Monterey Jack and slices of Swiss

Directions:

  1. Preheat the oven to 350 degrees F. In a saucepan melt your first half (3/4 a stick or 6 tablespoons) butter. Add onion and cook until soft and translucent. When this occurs, now add the 3 tablespoons Dijon mustard, 3 teaspoons Worcestershire, and 3 teaspoons poppy seeds. Stir and then simmer for 5 minutes.
    sautéed onion sautéed onion sautéed onion
  2. Meanwhile, open the package of Hawaiian sweet rolls and slice them all down the middle. Place the bottom part of the rolls in a greased baking dish, or you could use a lined pan. Now, pour this onion mustard Worcestershire and poppy seed mixture on the bottom part of the rolls
    ham and cheese slider melts with Hawaiian dinner rolls ham and cheese slider melts with Hawaiian dinner rolls
  3. Now time to assemble the rest of the roll with the ham and cheese. I wanted cute chubby sliders so I used a lot of ham, and then I used a cup of Monterey Jack and 6 slices of Swiss on top of the shredded cheese to add a little complexity to the melted cheese layer. Put the top half back on the sweet rolls.
    ham and cheese slider melts with Hawaiian dinner rolls
  4. In the saucepan you used before, melt the second half of portion of butter (4 tablespoons), and stir in the separated single teaspoon of Worcestershire, teaspoon of poppy seeds, and the tablespoon of mustard. Pour this mixture on top of all the tops of the rolls.
    mustard butter sauce mustard butter sauce
  5. Bake for ~25-30 minutes,  until the cheese has melted and the butter mixture starts to caramelize. . Cut the sliders where each roll already was in the package and serve warm and gooey.
    ham and cheese slider melts with Hawaiian dinner rolls ham and cheese slider melts with Hawaiian dinner rolls

But, you don’t have to buy the 12 pack of rolls either – you can buy a 4 pack and make a smaller portion. You can even do a lazier version using just the microwave and oven and no stovetop if you leave out the onion. When I did this another time a few weeks later just for a lazy weekend dinner, I used the

  • 1 package of 4 Hawaiian sweet rolls,
  • two 90 calorie 2 oz deli packages of ham,
  • 4 slices of reduced fat Swiss (no shredded cheese this time round),
  • 4 tablespoon of melted butter (nuked in the microwave) which I then mixed
  • 1/2 tablespoon each of dijon mustard and Worcestershire and
  • 1 1/2 teaspoons each of brown sugar and poppy seeds.

Spoon part of the mixture on the bottom half of the rolls that have been placed on a greased baking dish, top with the ham and cheese, put the top of the rolls on and spoon the rest of mixture on top. And then eat all of these yourself, ha ha!

ham and cheese slider melts with Hawaiian dinner rolls  ham and cheese slider melts with Hawaiian dinner rolls

What make these ham and cheese slider melts so much more than just a regular hot ham and cheese sandwich are the buttery toasted tops of the buns while it is still all soft and all oozy and gooey inside, be it fresh from the oven or warmed up the next day, and then the mixture of tang and sweetness with an undertone of sharpness from the mustard all from the sauce. Mmmmm.

If you are looking for other Super Bowl recipe possibilities, you might consider beer cheese, spinach or squash pinwheels, ranch oyster crackers, or the slightly healthier cucumber topped with ricotta (you can buy ricotta and don’t need to make it like I did).

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Smoothies at Local Choice Market

I had some time to kill before attending I Love to Eat, so I decided to visit the just opened Local Choice Produce Market in the Pearl district. They specialize in really focusing on local produce, hence the name. It is still winter and cold (hovering just above freezing), so all the glass garage doors that I’m sure they will throw up during warmer weather were down but I can imagine it will seem even more like an open air market once the season changes.

One of the things I noticed immediately is that it seems like half the store is devoted to being able to enjoy the foods immediately- there is a section as soon as you walk in where there is a “Farmatherapy” area that offers juices and smoothies and shares the space with coffees as well. It also has various baked goods, including gluten free. It has its own register and so it gives it an independent feel almost as if you were at one of the stands at Pike Place Market on a much smaller scale: limited and specialized to focus itself. They even have two different register areas that just have a couple registers each in order to pay for your groceries, rather than the normal layout where there is a “checkout” row. I also don’t remember seeing any carts that I would have to navigate through- just baskets- and no traditional aisles, just “areas” in the store.

In particular, I was drawn to the Farmatherapy and its wide combination of juices and smoothies offerings- with ingredients also able to be combined into your own desired blend. Base drinks included a parsley carrot green apple cabbage ginger one, or a pear pineapple wheatgrass green apple mint in the Fresh Juice Blends section. In the smoothies section I was particularly curious about a rice milk, banana, cocoa, fig, lecethin, espresso, cacao nib, hazelnut, and bacon smoothie, but I went with the oatmeal, hazelnut, cinnamon, flax seed oil, and date sugar smoothie.

So as you can imagine, you can add whatever ingredients they have to one of the drinks. Their juices include apple, grapefruit, orange, carrot, and also wheatgrass. Their extras include whey protein, hemp protein, flax seed oil, bee pollen, cacao nibs, hazelnuts, dates, date sugar, figs, oatmeal, bacon, and a ginger shot.

If I lived closer I would stop by every morning for a smoothie. In fact, I found out later that the Farmatherapy section is actually “doctor designed”… though I’m not sure yet on what this means when a Naturopath and Nutrition Therapist contribute to creating the menu. Everything you can add into it (ok, maybe not the bacon) sounds healthy- but I’m not sure what each option offers.

Farmatherapy smoothie menu at Local Choice Market Farmatherapy smoothie menu at Local Choice Market

I’m guessing that the intent of having such a large amount of space devoted for easy and more immediate eating is to support the farmers market, but in a prepared convenient way (aka using the stuff from the grocery side of the store directly into the prepared food offerings). For instance there is also an area where you can get rotisserie chicken, and a beer and wine bar also offers happy hour and you can order local cheese plates and charcuterie plates. In the deli section, they had a variety of food options that were more along the level of Whole Foods and Zupan’s, such as vegan meatloaf and wine marinated mushrooms and roasted beets and a blue cheese potato gratin, the latter of which I asked for two pieces and they heated it up on a white glass plate for me to enjoy with my smoothie.

The deli in the back also supports you ordering a build of your own sandwich.  The sheet to build your own dream sandwich includes

  • what kind of bread (three kinds of Grand Central Bakery and three kinds from Gabriel’s Bakery),
  • meats (8 different kinds, including mortadella and Painted hills pastrami),
  • cheeses (8 different kinds including herbed goat cheese),
  • lettuce (yes, 5 choices in lettuces, from butter lettuce to arugula to micro herb greens!),
  • 9 veggies and condiments (roasted red pepper! mama’s lil peppers! avocado! and 6 more!) and
  • 7 sauces (including herbed aioli, romesco sauce, or basil sauce).

The sheet listed $8.50 as a base price with additional meats and additional cheeses beyond the initial one as extra, so I wonder if the other options you could just stack on like you’re Dagwood Bumstead. But, as a bonus, you could eat your sandwich right there and probably even get one of the local brews or local glass of wine to wash it down with.

beer and wine bar at Local Choice Market

I was impressed with how selective they are in what they offer. As a specific example, their cheese section for instance isn’t as large as what you would typically find at your local Fred Meyer or Whole Foods or Safeway (the latter two being also in walking distance away from Local Choice). None of their sections will be as large- even City Market Northwest and Food Front Cooperative have more honestly. But what they do carry is of high quality, such as Rivers Edge Chevres’ tortes and rounds and crottins, and Mt Townsend Creamery cheeses such as the Off Kilter that is washed in Pike Brewing’s Kiltlifter scotch ale, or their creamy decadent Trufflestack with Italian black truffles…

Essentially really artisanal premium stuff that I would have had to go to a specialty cheese shop like Steve’s Cheese on the other side of the river to find. I spent a lot of time gazing at the cheese section (I love cheese, what can I say), but I recall the same was true of their pickles, granola, crackers, jam, chocolate, meat and seafood, even the salts. And these are all made in Oregon or Washington, fulfilling their promise of local focus in their name.

Everything here is thoughtfully curated, obviously looking to fulfill the needs of a sophisticated foodie shopper who is also savvy enough to recognize what is being offered here. The consumer also is one financially comfortable enough and conscious enough to vote with their dollar for organic sustainability and supporting local businesses versus just the lip service and still wanting cheap prices. Local Choice is not about cheap prices, that’s for sure. The intended audience is also this actively eco-conscious foodie who would be glad to have something finally on the west side of the river and not just the area on the east side of the river and the suburbs.

But, you won’t be able to get everything you need here- clearly you’ll still need to get to your larger chain grocery for other needs such as household and toiletry products. This is a specialty stop. It’ll be interesting to see if this will work- will people appreciate the quality here and be willing to go to more than one place rather than a get it all single big box store? That model does seem to have some success- you can’t necessarily get all you need at Whole Foods, Trader Joe’s, or Zupan’s either. Trader Joe’s is actually very similar to Target in a way in that you generally know that everything is good there (and TJ even mimic’s with the grocery circular a chatty “local” newsletter recommending a product like a neighbor), and their customer is willing to accept less choice in order to trust that it has been selected based on proof of quality. Local Choice is attempting this same niche, more so at a very local curated farmers market scale- though I didn’t quite see any information promoting that connection from farm to fork beyond just hoping the consumers recognize the products and know the story behind the producers.

Particularly, I wonder how the parking situation is going to work out too for Local Choice, I am not sure just the neighborhood population will necessarily be enough, even if it is the Pearl. Still, when i was there on a nice sunny though chilly Sunday early afternoon, I definitely saw quite a few people wandering in out of curiosity to check out what Local Choice has to offer- at one point there was a sudden, surprising rush at Farmatherapy and a line 10 people long. But, I didn’t see anyone doing any real shopping- just browsing and then any purchases were more in the prepared food side.

Since I had the I Love to Eat show to attend I wasn’t ready to do any shopping, but I hope to come back to try their beer and wine bar soon, and see if things have picked up since their opening week.  I also hope they can help form a base of community like you would have had at the local neighborhood grocery store back in our parents and grandparents time… we’ll have to see. Let’s see if Portlanders are willing to really spend the money to walk the walk of supporting all the principles and causes that Local Choice Market embodies.

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A Winter dinner at Oven and Shaker

So I’ve already raved about their savory Wild Fennel sausage pizza with potato, tomato, chilies, scallions, smoked mozzarella, and their heavenly Bianca cheese pizza topped with teleme, truffled sottocenere, bufala mozzarella, and fried sage. These two are regulars all year round. The brussels sprouts pizza is part of their winter menu, replacing what during the summer included the smoky and tangy Cauliflower pizza I had with roasted cauliflower, mozzarella, provolone, olive, spring onion, Mama Lil’s chlies, and crumbled salami.

See, I haven’t even shown you what I ate yet and you probably already want to go to Oven and Shaker.

This time I will roll my eyes back as I bite into their Brussels sprout pizza. After seeing I Love to Eat, it was only a block away to Oven and Shaker, and I had no problem waiting the 15 minutes or so until their dinner menu began to be served (this was perfect for vegetarian F who immediately ordered off the Happy Hour menu). He started with the salad of Semplice with spring greens, fennel, carrots, scallions, pear, red wine vinaigrette, a nice starter if you don’t want the heavier Nostana salad. He also ordered from the Happy Hour menu the Margarita pizza which had lots of tangy tomato sauce.

Oven and Shaker salad Oven and Shaker margarita pizza

I will also sip these beautiful new cocktails they offer. The Caribbean Snowflake with 2 oz Cruzan Single Barrel Rum, 1/4 oz St Elizabeth All Spice Dram, 1/2 oz freshly pressed lime juice,. 1 oz freshly pressed grapefruit juice, 1/2 oz simple syrup, 1 small egg white, and silver flake sparkled before my eyes and as I sipped it, I think it also added sparkles to my eyes too.

Oven and Shaker cocktail Oven and Shaker cocktail

I also loved the Pisco Noir with 7 fresh blackberries and 2 oz Capel Pisco, 1/2 oz Green Chartreuse, 3/4 oz freshly pressed lime juice, 3/4 oz simple syrup and 1 small egg white with its dark berry and citrus flavor. Ok, I admit maybe my eye wandered a few times to the Pepper Smash and Lost Cosmopolitan cocktails at the table over, but I wasn’t cheating. I was reminiscing and admiring beauty.

Oven and Shaker cocktail

And I loved you most of all, Brussels Sprouts pizza with brussels sprouts, bacon, robiola, pecorino, a mix of flavors of the leafy shreds of brussels sprout and salty bacon and creamy robiola. I had to force myself to stop eating you all up because I totally good you are so delicious, but I wanted to wrap you up to go so I could have some more of you later. I have to stop looking at you now or I will go pull you out of the fridge even though I told myself you are a reward after going to the gym. Miss you already, brussels sprouts pizza.

Oven and Shaker brussels sprout pizza Oven and Shaker brussels sprout pizza

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