We often have breakdowns of electricity for some hours when there is a heavy thunderstorm. We are cut off the drinking water whenever the old communal water pipe is leaking for the hundredth time.
But never before we had both at the same time. Weird feeling…
the pleasure of a spontaneous paella
Paella sounds like mastery. An elaborate spanish national dish with many ingredients you normally don’t store in your pantry. No place for spontaneity.
This might be right in theory, but….. if you keep in mind (and in your pantry) two or three essentials which are responsible for the typical paella flavour you’ll be surprised by the result. Even without shopping before at the best delikatessen in town.
I’ll tell you the secret:

- if you have got an outdoor hotplate, use it. It will give you an immediate feeling of luxury and ESPAÑA!
- the smell and the flavour of fried red bell pepper is a must and peas always look nice in a paella
- more chopped vegetable like courgettes, green beans, onions, garlic…
- you need pieces of fish, shellfish, chicken or chorizo, at least one of these four
- a big jar with a mixture of vegetable/chicken stock, a can of tomatoes and a big glass of white wine
- paella condiment (pepper, thyme, rosemary, safflower, cloves and nutmeg, paprika)
- any kind of not too sticky rice

Have always in mind that Paella originally has been a dish to make use of remains. As you can see in the picture I had a variety of vegetables but from the fishy side only salmon and a few shrimps. Why not?
Paella ( the genuine, one of the many)
extra virgin olive oil
1 medium chicken, jointed and cut in pieces
1 chorizo sausage, sliced
500g mussels
8 big prawns
2 small pieces squids, trimmed and cut open
1 onion
a handful of peas
a handfull of green beans, cut in pieces
1 red bell pepper, chopped
4 garlic coves, finely chopped
500g rice – Paella style
1 1/2 l stock
400g canned, puréed tomatoes
150ml white wine
1tablespoon Paella condiment
1 bayleaf
salt
pepper
1 lemon

Season the chicken with salt and pepper.
Mix the hot stock with the tomatoes, white wine and paella condiment. Fill it in a jar.
Put the oil in a Paellera ( large flat pan) and brown the chicken pieces. Add onions, garlic and red bell pepper (Hm, the smell!) and allow to soften. Add the chorizo.
Add the remaining vegetables and a pinch of salt.
Add now the rice, stirring until it is coated with olive oil. Pour 1/3 of the stock mixture into the pan. Cook until the stock has disappeared. Add the mussels and squids and 1/3 of the stock. When the rice is almost cooked, add the prawns and the last 1/3 of stock. Check the seasoning.
When the rice is cooked cover it for ten minutes with a periódico (newspaper) and take a bottle of red wine out of the fridge.
Cut the lemon into wedges and place them around the edge of the pan. “Que aproveche!”

barbecue night
Finally the nights have become warm enough to inaugurate the Barbecue season. No better holiday feeling than heating the charcoal, mixing the sauces and preparing the lots of meat we normally abstain from.
And of course, our guests had to be introduced into the pleasures of a well-prepared Leapfrog.




David’s sorbet and Kelly’s rickshaw
Since strawberries are in full season now (we can pick them ourselves in endless strawberry fields nearby), I have been looking for some more exciting recipes than the familiar cakes, creams and yoghurts.
Here is the result of my research:
The STRAWBERRY SORBET comes from David Lebovitz’ book The perfect Scoop, the best ice cream book I ever owned.
Every so often I prepared it, it disappeared in the twinkling of an eye. Believe me, it’s best florentine Grom quality!
To make it in your own kitchen you need:
500g fresh and ripe strawberries
150g sugar
1 teaspoon kirsch
1 teaspoon freshly squeezed lemon juice
pinch of salt
Slice the strawberries and toss them in a medium bowl with the sugar and kirsch, stirring until the sugar begins to dissolve. Cover and let stand for an hour, stirring every so often.
Purée the strawberries and the lemon juice in a blender or food processor until smooth.
Chill the mixture thoroughly, then freeze in your ice cream maker.
And when the night comes I recommend the STRAWBERRY RICKSHAW…

I found this cocktail in eat make read ; it’s just awesome!
I love to visit this Blog, because apart from sharing super creative happy hour cocktails (Zucchinitini the latest one) Kelly has always amazing recipes and readings to offer . Check it out, I’m sure you’ll love it too!
The recipe for the strawberry rickshaw you find here. Enjoy!
Leapfrog
sweet, strong and very italian – granita de caffé
flowers for the Royal’s hats?
When I heard that British hatters had ordered thousands and thousands of artificial flowers from the Sebnitz manufactory, I decided that it was high time to pay a visit to this tiny village at the Czech border. 50 km from Dresden, the perfect destination for a weekend trip.
Already on the staircase, where I took the photograph above, I got some slight doubts about the lifelike appearance of these works of art. Moving along to the wedding room I was happy for being already married… (Funny enough that I actually wore a wreath of white and pink flowers on my wedding.)
Next we visited the creepy iron cellar where all the moulds were stored. Thereafter we were shown a film about the artificial flower production in Sebnitz before World War II. At that time Sebnitz produced 3/4 of the world demand.
Endless rows of workers, men and women, doing one single movement the whole day, cutting flowers, pressing, dying, making stems. In the factory and in home work- pictures from the industrial revolution!
After this disturbing impression we were guided to the today’s manufactury. We could watch a woman pressing veins into green cotton leaves (2000 kg pressure at 120°C!), another one fixing marigolds on stems, and a third one colouring poppies.
AND: finally we had the possibility to ask questions.
NO, there is no big production anymore. Artificial flowers now come from the Far East. We only produce for the shop downstairs. NO, we didn’t deliver to English hatters on occasion of the royal wedding. Those flowers came from Wallroda (also nearby), from a manufacturer with better connections to the WEST.

Finally we were guided to the shop. Hard to believe, but there were only a few lifelike flowers, the bigger part had exchanged the natural look for stage potential (easy to be seen from the last row…)
Rose Carrarini’s pistachio cakes
One of my most loved cookbooks at the moment is Breakfast, Lunch, Tea from Rose Bakery in Paris.
Rose Bakery offers a modern, simple and healthy cuisine, using first quality, organic ingredients from regional suppliers. Just what I’m trying to do here in my everyday kitchen for my family and friends.
One of Rose’s recipes I tried out lately is the pistachio cake. I was looking for a nut cake, because I had some leftover roasted ground almonds waiting to be used. Hm, only 60g… well , in the drawer I still stored some hazelnuts, pistachios and pine nuts from my last Almwiesenmuesli. I ground them all in the little Zyliss drum grater (highly recommendable: my best kitchen tool!) and tadaaa: the required 200g!
The original cake and the original recipe look like this:

And here is my variation:
250g butter
200g sugar ( I took 25g less than in the original)
grated zest of one lemon
2 tablespoons rosewater (yes, it gives a very subtle and delicious flavour!)
4 eggs
200g ground almonds, pistachios, pine nuts and hazelnuts
50g flour
1 teaspoon baking powder
1 pinch of salt
Preheat the oven to 180° C.
Butter a 25cm cake tin or the cake tins you decide to use.
Beat the butter and sugar until light and creamy. Mix in the lemon zest and the rosewater. Add the eggs one at a time, beating well after each addition.
Now fold in the ground almonds, ground pistachios, flour, baking powder and salt.
Pout the mixture into the prepared tin and bake for about 40 minutes. 30 minutes if you take smaller baking tins.
I made no topping, because I liked the little Gugelhupfs just like that. Otherwise heat in a saucepan:
50g pistachios , whole or chopped
50g caster sugar
grated zest and juice of on lemon
and pour the mixture over the cake.
Intro To Awesome Punch
Our new favourite from now!
As I’m convinced that the malevolent Ehec germ lives neither in spanish cucumbers nor in our regional vegetables, I fancied trying a cocktail with fresh cucumbers. The Intro To Awesome Punch has been created by Jane Danger, head bartender at Cienfuegos, a spin-off from the owners of Death and Co., a cocktailbar located in the East Village of Manhattan.
The Punch mixes best while listening to this music














