Herbed Gougères

This recipe has been updated and moved to the new blog.

You can now find it here: Herbed Cheese Gougeres on The Creekside Cook

Posted in Appetizers, Quick Breads, recipes | 7 Comments

4th of July Recipe Round Up!

I thought you might like to see a collection of recipes that would be great for 4th of July celebrations. Many of these can be made ahead a day or two, and most will travel well, to help make you an even more welcome guest than you would ordinarily be. Enjoy!


Bulgur Veggie Salad You don’t have to worry about someone else making the same salad with this one. Fast and easy; totally fresh and delicious. Bulgur Veggie Salad


Herb Grilled Chicken Thighs A slightly updated take on a local favorite. Chicken thighs are marinated for a day or two and then grilled to flavorful perfection. These can be made ahead, and are equally yummy hot or at room temp.Herb Grilled Chicken Thighs


Fast and Easy Guacamole If you showed up at my party with a big bowl of this and some chopped veggies or chips for dipping, I would kiss your feet. I don’t care if it sounds weird, that is what I would do. Fast and Easy Guacamole


My Favorite Potato Salad This has been our family favorite for years – a classic combo of flavors that never grows old.My Favorite Potato Salad


“Dirty” Deviled Eggs A sure way to get invited back – bring these little babies with you!“Dirty” Deviled Eggs


Jalapeno Lime Cucumber Salad This is a bright and refreshing cucumber salad that comes together in just a couple minutes.Jalapeno Lime Cucumber Salad


Sweet Zucchini Cornbread And to end the collection – a cornbread that uses just coming into season zucchini and would be great alongside the meal, or among the desserts.Sweet Zucchini Cornbread

I hope you enjoy the assortment, and please, in the comments, leave a link to your favorite summer picnic recipes. I can’t wait to see them!

Posted in Holidays, recipes | 5 Comments

Swedish Visiting Cake & A Grand Leap

This post has been moved to my new blog.
You can find it here: Swedish Visiting Cake

Posted in Cakes, recipes | 15 Comments

A cheap trick – for great garden containers

Some years, I am pretty careless with my budget for the pots I plant up for the porch and other spots around the place. I am self indulgent about this because I tell myself that I have to make up for looking at snow all winter. We have tons of little garden centers and plant nurseries around here, and every one of them knows my secret – which is that when it comes to buying plants, I am easy. If you have some pretty plants out there, I’m probably going to buy some of them. This year, we are having to keep a bit closer eye on things, so I am being more frugal than usual, but this is a trick that I use every year, whether we are feeling flush or not.

It can be hard to find an annual that has immediate, big time impact in a pot. Especially for under 4 bucks. You can spend $8 or $10 for a six inch pot, but that is a little beyond my budget for a single plant that is going to to die come October. See the hosta in this pot? I got it at Lowes for $3.98. It is called “Patriot”, and is going to bring a nice big pop of contrast to this corner of the porch. I tucked in a couple of smaller coleus and lobelia from cell packs, and a 3 inch pot of an orange Impatiens. Total price for the plants in this 12 inch round container? $6.27. And this is a big pot – about 30 inches high, so when everything fills in, it is going to look really nice.porch container with hosta
Then in the fall, I will pull that hosta out of the pot and plant it someplace in my shade garden out back. Double duty for SO cheap. You can do this with quite a few perennials actually – for sunny locations, plants like rudbeckias and coreopsis work well, and for shady spots, coral bells or lamium would be a nice choice, and there are lots of smaller grasses that would look wonderful in a pot with annuals. Around the end of October, or after the first hard freeze does in your porch pots, stick them in the ground, and next spring they will almost always come back up. Here in my zone 5 Upstate NY garden, I have gotten stuff in the ground as late as the beginning of November, and it was just fine the next spring. Hope you find this idea useful, and have a great day!

Posted in garden | 5 Comments

“Dirty” Deviled Eggs

This post has been updated and moved to my new blog.

You can now find it here: Deviled Eggs on The Creekside C00k

Posted in Appetizers, recipes, Salads, Side Dishes, Snacks | 4 Comments