Form submitted successfully, thank you.

Error submitting form, please try again.

Boots McBlog bio picture

bonjour, y'all!

I'm a dash of Jackie O.  A pinch of Elly May.  A splash of Quelques Fleurs.  A jigger of pickle juice. My friends call me Boots. My name is JoBeth.  I'm just a southern girl who adores a great tune, a delicious meal, beautiful flowers, a frilly dress, and the perfect shoe. I'm married to a curly haired boy I call "The Angler".   By day, I'm a healthcare stategist with a passion for NonProfits.   I have a Masters degree in food.  Literally.  I am a registered dietitian, but I do love burgers and chocolate chip cookies.   I survived being President of the Junior League.  I'm a daydreamer, an avid i-pod shuffler and a novice photographer.  I love to laugh.  I'm often silly with a heapin' helpin' of sappy. I'm blessed beyond measure and amazed by God's grace. I try to keep my high heels walking in faith one step at a time, It's my prayer to help other women live beautiful, gracious lives. 

Like all true southerners, I come from a long line of storytellers. My favorite stories paint pictures.  And great pictures tell stories. I hope to accomplish both on this blog.  So,  grab yourself a glass of sweet tea, kick off your Manolo's and sit a spell on my virtual veranda. Flair and folly awaits.  

Do tell!


{ for my style files and daily favorites come visit my tumblr:  bootsmcblog.tumblr.com }


Category Archives: food find

epicuriousity: Grill-laxin’ ~ Part 1

Summer is here!  Time to fire up those grills.    Here are just a few of my favorite seasonings sure to give your chicken and fish a KICK in minutes.

Potlatch Seasoning by Williams Sonoma is one of my best food discoveries lately.      As a dietitian,  I recommended my clients consume salmon twice a week for the generous amount of heart healthy  Omega3 Fatty Acids.   To be honest,  working it into our diets here in the McCottage has proven difficult at best… until now.   While the spice mix seems like a small fortune at $9 per can,  I can guarantee you will not have tasted anything better.    Apply this rub liberally to salmon fillet or salmon steak.   Grill atop a cedar plank over hot coals.    Voila, perhaps the best salmon fillet in town.

Soy Vei Very Very Terriaki -  available at your local grocer in the Asian foods section.    This sweet, sesame terriyaki glaze is delicious on chicken or pork.    I often marinate boneless, skinless chicken thighs in this sauce.  Throw on a hot grill.   Before serving,  glaze chicken with fresh sauce.  Serve with couscouse and grilled summer squash or atop fresh spinach, red onion, almonds, orange slices, avocado with Ken’s Steak House lite Asian Dressing.   Delish!      (I also use this to roast whole chickens in the oven with onions & carrots in a dutch oven in the winter months.   If my experiment goes well today,  you’ll see a crock pot use for it in the coming days)

Caribbean Jerk Seasoning –  perhaps, my favorite spice mix in my grill arsenal.    McCormick Spices Company and several store brands market this AMAZING spice mix found in the spice aisle.      Marinate your favorite chicken in 3 Tablespoons Jerk Seasoning, 3 Tablespoons Soy Sauce,  2 Tablespoons Rice Vinegar for 30 minutes – 3 hours prior to cooking on a hot grill.  Can’t get to the islands this summer.  No problem, mon.  This chicken will transport your tastebuds there in no time.    The seasoning is also a great rub for hamburgers or steak served with grilled pineapple, blue cheese coleslaw, and baked beans.   YUM!

No need to stress over being the grill master this summer.   Grab these seasonings, a cool drink,  and grill-lax.

 

Cheers, Y’all!

 

 

favorite things friday: sweet tea

France has champagne.   Germany has beer.   Italy has wine.   The South,  well,  we have the most potent elixir of  them all…Sweet Tea.   Step into most any restaurant south of the Mason Dixon line and you are sure to find it on the menu.   In fact,  as part of an April Fool’s prank,  legislators in Georgia presented a bill in 2004 requiring any restaurant serving tea must serve Sweet Tea, and refusing to do so would result in a misdemeanor of  the code.   The bill never made it to vote, but the sentiment stands:  Sweet Tea is serious business.

Tea has a legendary status in the U.S. since we dumped  it in Boston Harbor in the late 1700′s — I do believe those leaves hitting the frigid northern waters was the first iced tea,  although the history books do not corroborate my hypothesis.   However, the recipe heralded as the first printed “sweet tea” recipe appeared in 1879 in a community cookbook  ”Housekeeping in West Virginia”  contributed by Marion Cabell Tyree.

“Ice Tea. – After scalding the teapot, put into it one quart of boiling water and two teaspoonfuls green tea. If wanted for supper, do this at breakfast. At dinner time, strain, without stirring, through a tea strainer into a pitcher. Let it stand till tea time and pour into decanters, leaving the sediment in the bottom of the pitcher. Fill the goblets with ice, put two teaspoonfuls granulated sugar in each, and pour the tea over the ice and sugar. A squeeze of lemon will make this delicious and healthful, as it will correct the astringent tendency.”

If like me, you read the recipe and thought , “Green Tea?! – That’s not at all how you do it”  Well,   green tea was the preferred tea of households until World War II, when rations made the more economical black tea, which we use today, more commonplace.   Growing up my grandmothers and mother always served sweet tea with all of our meals.    My grandmother would often sweeten to the point my dad would ask,  ”Did you stump your toe when you were adding the sugar”.  She made THE BEST iced tea.      The trick to delicious sweet tea, which my grandmother knew, is to add the sugar while the tea is still hot.   This allows super saturation of the sugar.   Sweetening after the tea is chilled can possibly be accomplished using simple syrup or artificial sweetener.  It’s impossible to achieve the proper sweetness if trying to add granulated sugar to the cold beverage.   You basically end up with a pretty little snowglobe of sugar and ice cubes.

The Proper Southern Sweet Tea Recipe

3 Family size tea bags – ( I prefer Luzianne)
2 Cups of cold water
1 Cup of sugar

Place the two cups water in a saucepan or teapot and add the tea bags. Bring to a boil, do not continue boiling.

Remove from heat and let steep. Pour warm tea into empty pitcher. Add the sugar and stir until the sugar is dissolved. Fill remaining pitcher with cold water.

If that is just too much work for a relaxing beverage,  there are some great ready-made options waiting in your grocer’s chiller in gallon jugs. In fact, my favorite is a no-calorie option that lets me indulge without the guilt- Milo’s Sweet Tea sweetened with Splenda.  Milo’s was introduced to Little Rock and other southern markets  last summer.  It’s been an Alabama favorite since the 1940′s.  Their company history is worth a read. ( Not to mention it is certified as  a woman owned company)   The taste is amazingly crisp and  one would never guess it is (hush yo mouth) sweetened with splenda.

www.milostea.com

Now if you love sweet tea so much, you, like me, think you can bathe in it,   well guess what –  you can!   Elizabeth W.  Indulgences from San Francisco makes a line of sweet tea body wash, lotion, bath salts, and home fragrances to. die. for.

Starting mid May until Labor Day,  I soak away my summer days in a tub full of the Elizabeth W Sweet Tea Bath Salts, followed by a good slather or Sweet Tea Body Cream.   The aroma is “gracious, spirited, elegant. An enticing marriage of oriental black teas, juicy fresh Amalfi lemons, and the sweetness of almond honey”.

www.elizabethw.com

ANd if you think,  ”this tea is so delicious, I could eat it with a spoon”,  again you are in luck.    Martha Hall Foose,  a great southern culinary /storytelling wonder,  has a cookbook just for you.   This gorgeous book is riffled with stories of the south and recipes that would make a “bulldog hug a hound and a preacher lay his Bible down”.  In other words,  they are yummy!   Especially her Sweet Tea Pie Recipe which makes purchasing the book well worth it.

I would be remiss, if I did not disclose perhaps the greatest beverage discovery since… well sweet tea.   For those of you who like a little more sass in your sweet tea,  let me introduce you to my friend Jeremiah Weed.     JW is well  known among the Air Force for his bourbon.  Last summer,  he became quite a hearthrob amongst my  southern girlfriends when he created Jeremiah Weeds Sweet Tea Vodka. Adding 1 1/2 ounces Sweet Tea Vodka to 6-8oz of lemonade makes a fun, delicious cocktail.  Served with a wedge of lemon in a crystal ice tea goblet, I’m convinced Carrie Bradshaw can keep her cosmo.

Lastly,  if I haven’t given you enough reason to enjoy a cool refreshing beverage,   tea contains antioxidants that have been linked to improved immunity against diabetes, cancer, and arthritis.  A slice of lemon ( the asorbic acid) helps increase the antioxidant absorption.    So what are waiting for,  it’s the weekend.  Kick off those manolos, sit a spell,  and relax with a hot bath and ice cold sweet tea  (vodka optional)

Cheers y’all!

P.S.

~ Enjoy a little music by listening to my sweet tea playlist below :)

boots camp: laughternoon break

It’s been awhile since I’ve made an entry under “boots’ camp”.   Frilly dress /bathing suit season is frightfully near.   The warmer weather reminds me that comfort food of the winter has made my spring duds a little less comfy to wear.   Never fear,  its a great time to make some more tweaks to my habits.   Confession – I’m a snacker.   I honestly could live on party food,  snacks and sweets.    Thankfully there are so many healthier options out there these days to make my afternoon crunch time – a little less guilt ridden.   I plan to start sharing a few more of my recipes and food finds along the way.  

In a complete about face from my previous ladylike post,  I have the sense of humor of a fourth grade boy….which is why I find this snack not only delicious – but  the name makes me giggle.       Pirates Booty is an all natural rice / corn puff.   No trans fats  ( those yucky globules that gum up your arteries)  and they are gluten free.  ( Gluten is a protein in wheat to which many many folks are developing an allergy signified by intestinal pain, joint pain, and/or skin rash).   I’ve been lovin’ the Aged white cheddar flavor for over a year now after I noticed my health conscious best friend feeding it to her two year old.   If you’ve never seen it, it is usally over in the “healthy/ natural” section of your local market.  When I shopped Whole Foods last week,  I was ecstatic to find the myriad of flavors available.   Salt & Vinegar, Veggie, Cheddar, BBQ.    They also have them available in snack bags of 1oz serving making them perfect for packing a lunch for kids or yourself or toting to the pool or ballfield.   A 1 oz serving has 130 calories and 5 gm fat which is comparable to baked chips – but these little puffs provide more volume and crunch time, plus all the flavor and NO orange dust all over your fingers when you are finished.      Just like the package says “thar be good”.    Silly name, low in calories  means  a perfect snack for a laughternoon break.

Disclosure: the FCC  prefers me to tell you that Pirates Booty nor Whole Foods is paying me to write this.  Of course,  I would be thrilled if they would.  But they aren’t  - these are strictly my lil ol opinions.

Cheers, Y’all!

Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...