
I owe it to Martha Goes Green, a recipe book like no other.
Most dishes have been worth the time and care to follow to the letter, until familiarity bred improvisation and I threw caution out of the pot, to create dishes of my own.
Mushroom risotto, carrot and lentil soup, pea and feta frittatas, but none has embedded into our lives, requiring no tweaking, like the vegetarian pho. A glance at the ingredients on first go read like a who’s who of the spice world. Writing the shopping list gave me cramps- it read longer than flash fiction.
Peeling, chopping, counting out pieces- the preparation was a meditation in beauty, as I composed a still life of cinnamon sticks, shallots, star anise, ginger, garlic, cardamon and cloves that spoke of goodness, an abundance of sensory delights.
Bubbling and boiling, filling the house with the scent of the seductive brew, we waited, salivating in preparation for the feast.
three little birds trill
final medley- spice of life
transcend sum of parts
I laid out finely chopped chilli, coriander, garden fresh Vietnamese mint, spring onion with equal parts bite and crunch, and a citrus tang of quartered lime.
Long thin strands of vermicelli floated in the steaming bowls before us, coloured with a sprinkling of this and that from the selection on the table. The chilli made us feel alive and we ate our fill, indulging till the last drop.
bowlful of fragrance
trill song of bird’s eye chilli
savoured final slurp
Many more enjoyable serves have followed, particularly once my partner was inspired to pick up the recipe and recreate the dish, meaning there are times I can wait idly as the pleasures of pho magically transpire, steam unfurling in a pattern of our signature dish.
Prompt courtesy of RonovanWrites’ Weekly Haiku Poetry Prompt Challenge two word prompt (trill, final).
Postscript: not wanting to breach copyright, I didn’t include the recipe in the original post, BUT, I have since found the very recipe published online which I assume has the authors’ okay, as they have been featured in that publication. Here it is: THE RECIPE!!! If you try it, let me know how you go. Bon appetit! or perhaps I should say Ăn nào!
My mouth is watering. Now I need breakfast!
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Mission accomplished! Your message was 8 hours ago, so I guess now it’s pho o’clock? 😊
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Just an hour away! 🙂
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😊
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Looks beautiful. So funny, I really wasn’t expecting this one to turn into a… Haibun…am I getting that right? Nicely done.
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Thanks. Pics actually from the first time I made it, about a year ago. Surprise- i snuck it up on you! Haha. Yes, haibun. What’s your favourite home made dish?
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Oh gosh, well certainly nothing I, or my mother ever made. Cooking does not run in my family. I did make some grilled vegetables once that were kind of delicious though.
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Your last line made me laugh. I think you wrote a poem once about a really bad cook. Well, you have the gift of comedy and wit- are they family traits?
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Yes, bad cooking, comedy and wit…all family traits. I guess that’s not too bad of a genetic make up! Ha, ha!
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You hit the jackpot! Plus musical skills!
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Well, thanks.
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Wait…what – you make pho too???
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Ha! Are we having another twin moment? 😊 what kind do you make?
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No, I don’t make pho…I meant you make pho too, in addition to being a great blogger, reading a lot, working, being a great mom and partner, and all around wonderful human being 😉 All that was in the “too.” I’ll have to work on my implications.
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That is very sweet of you, thank you for the kind words, but just to clarify: I don’t tend to post about my failings or areas needing work (it would be a looonnng post). What you get here is the best of haha. Also, the recipe is soo easy- if you have time (actually, after the first go when it isn’t familiar, it gets super easy to make)- I highly recommend you give it a go!!!
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Thank goodness you provided a link to the recipe after the enticing photos, story and haiku. We need more food haiku — it really fits the form–another form of nature (when vegetarian — that’s my bias) 🙂
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Yes, was glad to have found it. Let me know how you go if you try it out. Some other recipes from the book are in that link too- all vegetarian, some vegan. In fact, the pho is actually vegan. Food is a great inspiration for writing!
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Well I ‘ve started to assemble what I’m going to use. Decided to slow cook a vegetable base overnight in my slow cooker. Winter is a great time for doing that sort of thing. Thanks for letting me know about the other recipes..I’ll take a look.
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I buy stock cubes and use that. I’m sure it would be infinitely better with a slow cooked veg base- might do the same! Although i don’t have a slow cooker…
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I love using a slow cooker as the flavours blend while you’re sleeping, working or what not…it’s good when it’s cold. I don’t use it much in the summer as it would heat up the place.
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I’d always imagine slow cookers were worth the effort just for meat dishes. Might consider getting one- i like the idea of a hot pot of veg toasting the house in winter!
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Makes great vegetarian chili, tamarind sauce, veg stews etc 🙂 also I use it to cook dry beans such as chickpeas for hummus and kidney beans.
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Ok, you’ve sold the idea! I’ll look into getting a combined slow/pressure cooker in time for the cool change that is creeping upon us here…
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Have fun! Didn’t know there was a slow/pressure combo. I used to pressure cook–don’t have a pressure cooker now.
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Thanks!
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Reblogged this on ronovanwrites and commented:
A great, well put together article including two Haiku for the challenge this week. A MUST click through and read.
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This is so unique. The first haiku had a philosophical twist to it at the end that I quite enjoyed. Loved your whole post.
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Thanks Olga. I had to think a bit about how to get that meaning into 5 syllables
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It’s a creative wonder how we do it sometimes.
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I know! I think it is there in everyone- just differing degrees of interest and ir patience in coaxing it out.
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Love the post, the recipe, the comments!
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Thanks! The comments have made me smile. Let me know if you try out the recipe (in a link in the postscript) 😊
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Scrumptious.
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Thanks Vashti. Recipe in the link if you’d like to try it- let me know how you go! 😊
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I’m going to pin the recipe for sure. I’d love to try it some time. Thanks for sharing it. 😛
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Great! No problem- enjoy! 😊
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Brilliant haibun! Few people know of this style.
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Thanks Susan! I realised where I’d seen your blog name! I love the response you wrote to Robert Okaji’s ‘How to Write a Poem’ – particularly the last two stanza’s. Incidentally, it was through Bob’s blog that I came across the haibun which got me reading about it 🙂
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Lovely serendipities!
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It is indeed an interesting cooking haibun. Thanks for stopping by my blog and following me. I appreciate your support.
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Thanks Daniel, the pleasure is mine- I really loved that poem you wrote- looking forward to more 😊. Funny to have the vietnamese connection between this post and yours.
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I hope I can write more poems. I am not sure if I can craft them at will, or need inspiration to spark their genesis. I guess we will see in the days ahead.
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I’m sure there’ll be many more poems to come, Daniel 🙂
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