Heirloom Tomato Bloody Mary

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Like I said yesterday, I could not resist the stunners that were these yellow heirloom tomatoes at The Green City Market and thus, they became a Bloody Mary too. What can I say? When Williams-Sonoma asks what unique spin you can put on a Bloody Mary, you go for it. And going for it is always a good move, in life and in cocktails. The proof is in the glass in this case.

yellow tomatoes

yellow juicer

yellow juice

First thing’s first: juice these bad boys. I felt like the yellow tomatoes were special in their own right so I kept the recipe pretty traditional on this Bloody Mary with one exception: Old Bay. I have always loved Old Bay but my husband grew up in Chesapeake Bay country and is deeply devoted to this combination of spices. We put containers of Old Bay in our wedding gift bags and I keep small packets of it in a majority of my purses because God forbid we’re out for brunch and a restaurant doesn’t have it for his Bloody Mary.

Anyways.

As a result, I absolutely had to include it in this recipe and I am so glad I did- it adds so much more flavor than celery salt does. To get mixing, I added 2 tablespoons lemon juice, horseradish, Worcestershire sauce to taste, a Tablespoon of salt, pepper and at least that of Old Bay. I finished it off with Sriracha because I like a little heat at the end of each sip. As always, add, taste and repeat until the flavor is where you want it!

bacon

I kept the garnish simple with a single piece of bacon but it was sort of special bacon. I tossed the bacon (turkey, in this case) in a ziploc with dijon mustard, brown sugar and a little bit of maple syrup. Once evenly coated, I put them in the oven at 400 degrees for 15 minutes. The brown sugar mixture caramelized and I had a stick of sweet bacon to pop in the drink instead it being curled up the way it ends up when you cook it in a pan. I also think a skewer with shrimp, maybe wrapped in bacon or prosciutto, would be great with this Bloody Mary and the seafood would play off the Old Bay well. Ooohh, maybe top the Bloody Mary with fresh crab.

Almost as great as the fact that Bloody Mary’s can be made from entirely fresh ingredients? That the weekend is upon us and it’s time for brunch. I’ll have a Bloody Mary, please…

Apple-Golden Raisin Bread

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Question of the Day: What do I have and what can I make out of it?

Answer: Apple-Golden Raisin Bread!

When it comes to baking, I’m a use-a-recipe-but-not-really kind of girl.  Sometimes this turns out well, sometimes it doesn’t.  Today’s bread was a winner so I wanted to share this fresh outta oven goodness with you!

(Adapted from Betty Crocker’s Banana Bread Recipe)

Apple-Golden Raisin Bread

2 Cups Flour

1 1/2 tsp baking powder, 1.2 tsp baking soda, 1/2 tsp salt

1/2 tsp cinnamon (add more to taste)

2 eggs

2 apples, thinly sliced

1 Cup Sugar

1/2 Cup Applesauce (instead of oil- reduces fat content and doesn’t change flavor or consistency of bread at all)

Mix all the dry ingredients together; set aside.  Combine sugar, eggs and applesauce; add thinly sliced apples and a handful (or 2!) of golden raisins.  Or maybe cranberries- cranberries could be a nice touch too!

I like the thinly sliced apples versus tiny chopped up apples because once baked, every bite contains a legit piece of soft, juicy apple.  Delish.

Combine wet and dry ingredients and mix well (no flour crumblies left at the bottom!).

Pour into a greased bread pan and bake for 45 minutes.  I usually put foil over it for the last 10 minutes- sometimes, the top crust of my bread can look super done but then I still have uncooked business going on on the inside.  I find the foil creates an oven within an oven and the inside gets perfectly cooked while preserving a perfectly brown crust.

A cup of tea, this bread…the perfect way to wait out this fog that has settled over our fair city today.