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Cocktail

The Cranberry’s Gold

one and a half slices local simple recipes food

The Cranberry's Gold

one and a half slices holiday cranberry bourbon cocktail

Happy Holidays (or Merry Chrismahannusolstikwanzadan) from OneandahalfSlices!

❄️🥂❄️

Consider this your early Holiday present. It’s a good one. If Aperol Spritz set the tone for the summer and Paper Plane became the vibe of the fall, this drink says Holiday in my house. It is quite a bit smoother and more balanced than a Paper Plane. If you’re not a cranberry fan, not to worry – it is not over-cranberry-y. It is tart and smooth and very festive. Truth in advertising, I stole this one from a new food blog friend, The Yankee Cowboy.

☃️

what you need

**1 batch of cranberry simple syrup, ~2 hrs prep time

For syrup:

1 cup honey

1 cup filtered water

1 1/2 cups fresh cranberries

 

For cocktail:

2 oz bourbon of choice

1 oz lemon juice

1 oz cranberry simple syrup

how to make it

To make the cranberry simple: combine 1 cup of water and 1 cup of honey in a saucepan over high heat. Heat until it comes to a rolling boil. Add the cranberries then remove from heat, cover, and let stand for two hours. After two hours, strain the liquid into a jar for storage and keep the cranberries for later. Note that the consistency will not be syrup-y but it will be thicker than water. 

To make the cocktail: Combine 1 oz lemon juice, 1 oz cranberry syrup, and 2 oz bourbon of choice in a cocktail shaker with ice. Shake vigorously and strain over a large ice cube. 

To garnish: Roll the cranberries in cane sugar so they become little sweet gems. Stick them on a toothpick and use them as garnish!

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Veggie

Perfect Mashed Potatoes

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Perfect Mashed Potatoes

one and a half slices perfect recipes seasons fall locally sourced local food produce

Some are of the opinion that mashed potatoes do not a blog post make. Too simple. And I get it. We do think of mashed potatoes as being simple. To make them restaurant-quality, you have to infuse your cream, caramelize your garlic, and get one of those weird potato grinder sifter contraptions. You can still do all that and those potatoes are STELLAR. But there is this one little trick – this simple, potato-based nuance that changed my weeknight potatoes for life, without purchasing a new kitchen contraption.

See, all my life I’d loaded up my mashed potatoes with heavy cream, parmesan cheese, butter, and anything else that would make them, well, creamy. My mother will quietly remind me of the time that as a 12-year-old I dumped an entire bottle of Bullseye barbeque sauce into a bowl of mashed potatoes I was serving it to my parents in an attempt to make them moist. Turns out I was missing the key to moist mashed potatoes. That key is gifted to you here.

On another note, did you know that a potato with a dash of milk has everything a person needs to survive??? All essential vitamins and even a little protein. No wonder people got by in the great potato famines. Scenes from Dr. Zhivago are rich in my mind when I think of the elegant simplicity of a boiled potato with perhaps a splash of milk and some salt. 

what you need

1 1/2 pounds of white or red potatoes, washed, and half peeled

1 tablespoon minced fresh garlic

1 tablespoon butter 

Salt and Pepper to taste

(optional) 1 splash of whole milk or heavy cream

(optional) 1 tablespoon minced chives for garnish

(optional) 1/4 cup fresh parmesan cheese for flavor

note: the optional ingredients are just that. optional. why? because you don’t need to add heavy cream for moisture. if you’d like to add it for depth of flavor, you are welcome to do so alongside chives and parm (personally, I LOVE the parm). 

how to make it

Cut potatoes in half and boil stovetop for ~20 minutes on high until potatoes are soft. Once soft, drain the majority of the water from the pot, but not all of it! 

The key to moist mashed potatoes is to leave some (about 1/4 cup for a small-ish pot) of the reserve potato water in there while you mash. 

Mash the potatoes, Stir in the butter, fresh garlic, cream, parmesan cheese, and salt and pepper to taste. Garnish with chives if desired and serve.

I serve these potatoes all the time but they are featured here as part of the 2021 Christmas Goose dinner alongside Crispy Cranberry Brussels Sprouts and Citrus Dill Roasted Carrots

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Veggie

Crispy Cranberry Brussel Sprouts

OneandahalfSlices food blog recipes One and a half Slices Virginia eat local

Crispy Oven Cranberry Brussels Sprouts

oneandahalfslices brussel sprouts crispy recipe holiday

Crispy Brussels Sprouts are a fall favorite but this recipe definitely adds some #Christmasvibes by adding both the color and the flavor of dried cranberries. If you really want to up the flavor profile, you could also crumble on a very small amount of bleu cheese. This dish was part of the 2021 Roasted Goose dinner alongside my Perfect Mashed Potatoes and Citrus Dill Roasted Carrots but these sprouts make the perfect Fall-Winter side dish to almost any meal.

what you need

1 bag of Brussels Sprouts

1/4 cup dried cranberries

3 drizzles olive oil

1 scant drizzle balsamic vinegar

Salt and Pepper to taste

(optional) 2 tablespoons finely crumbled bleu cheese

how to make it

Preheat oven to 375. Wash the Brussels Sprouts and cut them in half (the larger ones in quarters). In a mixing bowl, coat the sprouts in olive oil, vinegar, salt, and pepper, tossing thoroughly. 

Spread sprouts out onto a baking sheet and bake for ~30 minutes or until crispy. Toss with dried cranberries and serve immediately, topping with bleu cheese if desired.  

one and a half slices christmas goose dinner recipes
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Omni

Roasted Goose

OneandahalfSlices food blog recipes One and a half Slices Virginia eat local

Roasted Goose

OneandahalfSlices roasted goose recipe simple holiday

#Christmasvibes

Who else has heard of a Christmas Goose? Had the urge to make one? Okay, maybe that’s just a Mel thing, but mostly by accident, I ended up with a locally-sourced, 9-pound Goose to cook this Christmas courtesy of Whiffletree Farms in Warrenton, Virginia.

I thought it would go about like a turkey and then started reading recipes – man, was I wrong. Goose is super intimidating. It’s heavier than both chicken and turkey, and is technically more akin to duck, which means the breasts should be served medium rare with the rest of the bird cooked through. Some light Googling of recipes had me panicked about two-day preparation routines, de-skinning my goose, or dismembering my goose for a staged cooking enterprise. This was not what I intended to sign up for.

Finally I landed on a recipe that didn’t look too difficult. I ended up with a variation on the theme of Gordon Ramsay and I do not regret a single moment of my Christmas Goose endeavor. Highly recommend for an elegant, unique holiday meal. It makes for a lovely table. Here it is paired with Citrus Dill Roasted Carrots, Perfect Mashed Potatoes, and Crispy Oven Cranberry Brussel Sprouts. The wine pairing is a Georgian Saperavi – a medium-bodied red with sweet, red berry flavors. 

🎄

what you need

1 whole goose (7-10 pounds, giblets and excess fat removed)

1 bundle of fresh herbs (I used three large sprigs of rosemary)

1 lemon, zested with zest set aside, then cut in half

3-5 garlic cloves, peeled and cut in half

2-3 shallots, peeled and cut in half

3 tablespoons dried thyme

Plenty of sea salt

5-7 short stalks of celery

3 tablespoons of honey 

2 tablespoons paprika

1 tablespoon chili powder

how to make it

Prepare. Preheat oven to 450. First, remove giblets and excess fat from your goose. Rinse it in cold water, place it in its roasting vessel, and pat it dry with paper towels.

Season. Combine lemon zest, sea salt, dried thyme, paprika, and chili powder in a dish. Run generously into the goose skin, sprinkling some inside the goose cavity.

Stuff. Stuff the goose from back to front: half the lemon, half the garlic cloves, half the shallots, the herb bundle, the celery stalks, the remaining garlic and shallots, and finally the remaining lemon half. 

Roast. Roast the goose for 10 minutes at 450 then lower the oven temperature to 375. You want to cook your goose for 28 minutes per kilogram of weight. For a 9-pound goose, that is right around 1 hour and 45 minutes. Baste the goose once after the first hour,  drizzle on the honey, and cover with foil. There will be a lot of fat rendered off the goose. You’re aiming for an internal goose temperature of around 140-150 degrees at the breast, and 160+ everywhere else. You’re also looking for that crispy, golden brown skin, so feel free to finish it under the broiler if the skin doesn’t get there (but it should). 

Rest. Your goose is tired from all that roasting. Give it a break. Remove foil, let it steam, then tent it with foil for 30 minutes while you finish off your side dishes. This will make it easy to cut and serve.  

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Cocktail

City of Jewels Sidecar

OneandahalfSlices food blog recipes One and a half Slices Virginia eat local

'City of Jewels' Sidecar

sidecar recipe jewels blood oranges oneandahalfslices

This is a unique, festive twist on a classic Sidecar cocktail, which makes it great for the holidays. We incorporate the lavish blood orange to elevate the flavors. A classic Sidecar contains cognac, orange liquor, and lemon juice. Here, we substitute blood orange juice for lemon juice and use Solerno blood orange liquor instead of Cointreau. 

[ sidenote on the definition of Cognac… Cognac is brandy made in the region of Cognac, France. Brandy – a distilled wine spirit – can be made anywhere. This is similar to Champagne which can only be made in the Champagne region of France. It goes by other names (Cava (Spain), Prosecco (Italy)) when produced elsewhere ]

As we get close to the holidays, we are all looking for the something special to put on the table. For some, it’s a fun side dish. For others, it’s the centerpiece (a Christmas goose or rack of lamb). Still for others, it will be that speakeasy-grade cocktail that people will remember for years to come. This is that cocktail. 

Not to get all Yogic on you guys, but Manipura, the third chakra associated with the fire element, is translated from Sanskrit to mean “City of Jewels.” In Vinyasa yoga classes, it is frequently the chakra associated with the intensity of holding positions, such as planks, to generate ‘burn’ within the workout. I called this Sidecar The City of Jewels because it has that intensity, that sweet, intricate balance of citrus and velvet smooth. Plus, the rim is sparkly.

💎

what you need

1 1/2 oz Brandy or Cognac of choice (Courvoisier will do just fine)

3/4 oz Solerno blood orange liquor

3/4 oz blood orange juice

Garnish: Blood orange wedge, thyme sprig, and/or cinnamon sugar rim

how to make it

If you want to rim your cocktail glass, run the blood orange around the edge then dip it in a cinnamon/sugar mixture. 

Combine all liquids in a cocktail shaker with a thyme sprig, if desired, and shake vigorously with ice.

Pour into cocktail glass, garnish, and serve!

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You’ve all had my Classic Manhattan and are, by this point, hopefully well-versed in decent bourbon or rye selection. So now we put a small twist on my all-time favorite cocktail (a more subtle twist than straight up ordering a Sazerac). So what, you might ask, makes a Manhattan “French?” A traditional 1860s-style Manhattan is typically made with rye whiskey though more modern tastes frequently prefer bourbon. A French Manhattan uses a cognac base and emphasizes citrus with the gentle addition of Grand Marnier or Cointreau. It is a smoother cocktail – substantially smoother than a Rye Manhattan – and might be more agreeable who those whose tastes do not naturally gravitate towards the darker spirits.

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Cucumber Mint Gimlet

With this cocktail, I officially declare it summer. This beautifully crisp invention came from a friend of mine after two bottles of Prosecco’s worth of Aperol Spritz’s and my vehement proclamation: “will you please do something with this cucumber?!” Little did I know the ‘something’ would become one of the highlights of the evening. The cucumber mint gimlet is crisp, vibrant, cool, and everything a summer cocktail should be. It also paired perfectly with our Mediterranean-themed meal which included homemade tzatziki sauce. 

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Butterbeer (iced)

Whether you like your butterbeer hot, iced, boozy, or clean, I’ve finally got the recipe for you. #youreawizardharry 🪄

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Sweet

Sweet Potato Pie

OneandahalfSlices food blog recipes One and a half Slices Virginia eat local

Sweet Potato Pie

sweet potato pie Thanksgiving oneandahalfslices

The first time I had sweet potato pie was in college at the University of Florida. I went to the Wednesday afternoon farmer’s market and spent $4 on a miniature pie from a local pie shop. At the time, the idea of a sweet potato pie struck me as odd, as a baked potato pie might, but I took a chance. What hit my mouth was an exquisite, sweet, smooth rendition of sweet potatoes like I had never tasted them before. And suddenly, just like that, I was a sweet potato pie fan (not convert, mind you, because my locally-sourced pumpkin pie is an all-time fav). Naturally, given that we’re in spooky season, I asked The Piemaker to tackle this one since I had pumpkin covered. And man, did he deliver. We made the CSA happy as well with its falltime mandate to consume 4 lbs of sweet potatoes per patron per week given the surplus. So if you’ve never tried sweet potato pie, I challenge you to give it a chance. If you’ve never made a pie from the actual vegetable/fruit and usually buy canned filling, I challenge you to give that a chance. In any event, this is a great place to start. Happy Fall! 🍂

what you need

Dough

**this is the Serious Eats pie dough recipe and we will be using it again

2 1/2 cups all purpose flour

2 tablespoons of sugar

1 teaspoon of salt

2 1/2 sticks salted butter, cut into pats

6 tablespoons (ish) ice cold water

Filling

1 pound sweet potatoes

1/2 cup unsalted butter at room temp

1/4 cup granulated sugar

1/4 cup brown sugar

1/2 cup whole milk

2 tablespoons maple syrup

2 large eggs

2 teaspoons vanilla extract

1 teaspoon ground cinnamon

1 teaspoon ground nutmeg

1/4 teaspoon salt

pinch of clove

heavy whipping cream

🍁

how to make it

Dough

Place about two thirds of the flour, all of the sugar, and the salt into a food processor and pulse twice to mix. Then spread the butter pats evenly across the surface and pulse until the dough just begins to come together. Sprinkle the remaining flour on the surface and pulse again until just incorporated. 

Transfer to a bowl and sprinkle with the water 1-2 tablespoons at a time. Using a rubber spatula, work the water into the dough so it begins to hold together. Do not overwork your dough. 

Once incorporated, divide into two disks, wrap in plastic wrap, and refrigerate for ~2 hours. Remove from fridge, roll out on floured surface, and place in pie dish. For this pie, we did not par bake this crust.

Filling

Preheat the oven to 400 and bake sweet potatoes wrapped in foil for 45-60 minutes depending on size. You should poke your sweet potatoes with a fork and be sure to place them on a sheet pan because they tend to leak sweet stickiness all over your oven. 

Allow sweet potatoes to cool completely and then puree the flesh in the food processor, lowering the oven temperature to 350. Add remaining ingredients to the food processor and puree until smooth and combined. Check for flavor. 

Pour filling into the crust and bake for 50-60 minutes until a knife comes out clean. 

We are partial to homemade whipped cream for topping, sometimes adding cinnamon or maple syrup for extra flavor. A torched meringue, however, would really take this up a notch. 

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This is the dessert for the Whiskey Pairing Dinner generously provided by The Piemaker. I’ve never been a huge pecan pie fan (nor was I a big Key Lime Pie fan) until The Piemaker came into my life. This pecan pie is as ‘from scratch’ as it comes, with hints of bourbon and maple folded into the filling, served with a luxurious maple cinnamon cream. This is a decadent dessert – decadent is an understatement. But if you’re looking to level up your Holiday meal game, this is the place to start. We definitely felt the need to eat one and a half slices… 😃

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This pie is spring and summer, Florida, and sunshine in dessert form. It is as light and airy as crisp, springtime air, with a tangy, vibrant flavor reminiscent of the place where Key Limes originate – The Florida Keys. It also isn’t sickeningly sweet like so many restaurant-grade key lime pies.

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Sweet

Pecan Pie

OneandahalfSlices food blog recipes One and a half Slices Virginia eat local

(Bourbon Maple) Pecan Pie

From the @whiskey_CA_mmelier Collaboration Dinner

pecan pie recipe maple bourbon one and a half slices

This is the dessert for the Whiskey Pairing Dinner generously provided by The Piemaker. I’ve never been a huge pecan pie fan (nor was I a big Key Lime Pie fan) until The Piemaker came into my life. This pecan pie is as ‘from scratch’ as it comes, with hints of bourbon and maple folded into the filling, served with a luxurious maple cinnamon cream. This is a decadent dessert – decadent is an understatement. But if you’re looking to level up your Holiday meal game, this is the place to start. We definitely felt the need to eat one and a half slices….. Pairing. For dessert, @whiskey_CA_mmelier wanted a really luxurious and unique bourbon to complement the salty pecans, salty crust, and sweet filling. We narrowed it down to two, both from Calumet Farm. The 15 year was treating us all well but the general consensus ended up being the Small Batch. 

🥧

what you need

Dough

**this is the Serious Eats pie dough recipe and we will be using it again

2 1/2 cups all purpose flour

2 tablespoons of sugar

1 teaspoon of salt

2 1/2 sticks salted butter, cut into pats

6 tablespoons (ish) ice cold water

Filling

3/4 cup granulated sugar

1/4 cup maple syrup

1 cup light corn syrup

1 teaspoon salt

1 teaspoon ground cinnamon

4 eggs

1 teaspoon vanilla

1/2 cup salted butter

3 cups pecans; coarsely chop 2 cups and leave the third cup whole

To Serve. Pour half a cup of heavy whipping cream into a mix bowl and mix with a hand mixer on high until loose peaks form. Add 1 tablespoon of maple syrup and a dash of cinnamon powder, and mix for another ~30 seconds until well combined. This is your maple cinnamon cream for serving. 

Pairing. Calumet Farm Small Batch Kentucky Straight Bourbon Whisky.

how to make it

Dough.

Place about two thirds of the flour, all of the sugar, and the salt into a food processor and pulse twice to mix. Then spread the butter pats evenly across the surface and pulse until the dough just begins to come together. Sprinkle the remaining flour on the surface and pulse again until just incorporated. 

Transfer to a bowl and sprinkle with the water 1-2 tablespoons at a time. Using a rubber spatula, work the water into the dough so it begins to hold together. Do not overwork your dough. 

Once incorporated, divide into two disks, wrap in plastic wrap, and refrigerate for ~2 hours. Remove from fridge, roll out, and place in pie pan. *Note: you want this crust slightly salty as the pecan pie filling is quite sweet, so if you don’t use salted butter, be sure to add a little extra salt.

Pie.

Heat oven to 400. Par bake the pie crust for 15 minutes in heated oven using pie weights (or dried beans in my case) to weigh it down. Remove from oven and lower temperature to 350.

Whisk together sugar, maple syrup, corn syrup, cinnamon, salt, and vanilla. Add eggs and whisk thoroughly until combined. Brown butter in saucepan over medium-high heat (until it turns brown… stirring so as not to burn). Gradually pour butter into the egg mixture (slowly… so as not to scramble your egg!).  Mix in the two cups of chopped pecans.

Spoon pecan mixture into pie crust. Now you’re going to use that last cup of whole pecans to get super fancy, placing them around the top of the pie so the end product looks as pictured. 

Bake for 20 minutes in the oven, then remove from oven and cover with tinfoil so the crusts do not burn. Another 30 minutes in the oven and the middle should be set. Let cool and serve at room temperature with the fresh maple cinnamon cream!

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This is the main course for the Whiskey Pairing Dinner and, my, what a deep, flavorful pot roast this is! Let me start by saying that I sourced a 4.6 pound chuck roast from the Spring House Farm Store to feed the four of us and had no regrets. A simple pot roast is easy enough to pull off especially if you have a slow cooker, but this really takes the flavor profile up a notch to make this velvety, sinful, fall-off-your-fork roast with plenty of fall veggies.

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Brussels Sprouts are one of our favorite falltime veggies, especially when they’re made crispy. There are so many unique toppings for sprouts (sprouts!) that they’ll never get boring. Here they are paired with a round, fruit-forward Orkney Island Scotch Whiskey to really accentuate their sweetness.

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This is the opening cocktail for the Whiskey Pairing Dinner. The Rye Sazerac is one of the oldest, prohibition-era cocktails. It’s classic, elegant, and simple. With rye whiskey, lemon, absinthe, and bitters, a Sazerac is as refined as a cocktail can be. Here we present this  simple cocktail recipe as a forward to the rest of a classic meal. The absinthe on the nose provides an interesting twist to a classically whiskey-based cocktail. We used Sazerac Rye as the base.

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