Strawberry Lavender Ice Cream
If you are looking for a slightly different ice cream for summer you might think about spicing it up. I added lavender blossoms to my strawberry ice cream but you can get creative and add other seasonings to make it special. Cinnamon, nutmeg, allspice, basil, lemon peel can all add interest to your frozen desserts. Open your mind up to experimenting and see what you can come up with. I made this the other day and wanted to share the recipe with you. Can’t wait to make it again.
Strawberry Lavender Ice Cream
2 c. chopped strawberries
1 c. sugar
1 T. lavender blossoms
1 T. vanilla
2 c. cream or half and half or a combination. You can also use some milk or even almond or rice milk.
Additional sugar to taste
Place strawberries, lavender, vanilla and sugar in saucepan and bring to a simmer, stirring occasionally. Remove from heat and chill. Combine chilled berry mixture with cream. Add additional sugar if you like. Remember that once it is frozen the ice cream will not taste as sweet so make this mixture a little sweeter than you want the final product to be. How much sugar you add varies with personal taste and how sweet the berries are. Place in an ice cream maker and process according to manufacturer’s directions. Once finished put in an sir- tight container and place in freezer. Makes about 1 quart.
Lilac and Lavender Recipes
Here are the recipes I did for New Day Cleveland.
Chicken and Asparagus with Fresh Herbs
1 lb. chicken, sliced into thin strips
2 T. sherry
2 T.oil
2 c. chopped fresh asparagus
¼-½ c. fresh chopped herbs, I used chives, parsley and lovage
Salt and pepper to taste
Place sliced chicken in a bowl and stir in the sherry. Cover and refrigerate for 2-24 hours. Heat oil in skillet. Sauté asparagus for 2 minutes. Add the chicken and cook, stirring often until no pink is visible on the chicken, about 4 minutes. Add the herbs and seasonings and cook, stirring often for another 2-3 minutes. Spoon chicken over lilac salad. Serves 3-4.
Lilac Salad
4-6 cups mixed salad greens, washed and spun dry
Olive oil
Lilac vinegar*
Salt and pepper to taste
Edible flowers, optional
Place greens in a salad bowl. Drizzle with a little olive oil and toss until leaves look glossy. Drizzle with a little lilac vinegar and toss. Season with salt and pepper and toss again. Add flowers, if desired and place in serving bowls.
* To make lilac vinegar take clean, organic lilac blossoms and place them in a jar. Pour in red wine vinegar to cover flowers completely. Place lid on jar and store at room temp, out of direct sunlight for at least a few days. The longer the blossoms steep in the vinegar the stronger the flavor you will get. You can use any vinegar you like as long as it is 5% acidity. Before using, strain out the blossoms and discard. Strain vinegar through a coffee filter to get out any sediment. Can be stored at room temp but holds it color longer if stored in the fridge.
Lavender Shortbread
1 c. sugar, plus extra for sprinkling
2 c. butter
4 c. flour
2-3 T. lavender blossoms
Cream together the one-cup of sugar and butter. Stir in the flour and lavender blossoms. Press mixture in to a greased 9×13 inch-baking dish. Cut or score into small squares, or on the diagonal for diamond shapes. Sprinkle with extra sugar and bake in a preheated 300-degree oven for 50-55 minutes or until lightly browned around the edges. Re-cut the squares as soon as you remove the shortbread from the oven. Cool before removing from pan. Make about 100 small squares
Cooking on New Day Cleveland
I did my cooking demo on New Day Cleveland this morning. All the cast and crew were great to work with. Thanks to Carl Skalak from Blue Pike Farm for the purple asparagus. It worked out perfectly with the chicken and herbs. Carl tells me he still has some for sale. Here is the link so you can watch the show.
Lilac Vinegar
Since the lilacs are in bloom I decided to preserve some of them and make lilac vinegar. As long as they are grown where chemicals haven’t been sprayed lilacs blossoms are edible. I just place clean blossoms in a jar and cover with red wine vinegar.* Put a lid on the jar and store in a cupboard for 10 days or longer. When ready to use, strain out the blossoms and discard them. Pour the vinegar through a coffee filter to get out any remaining plant material. Use in salad dressings and marinades. You can transfer the lilac vinegar to a decorative bottle. It can be stored at room temperature but will hold its color longer if kept cool, even refrigerated.
* always use vinegar that is 5% acidity. You can use white wine vinegar, cider vinegar or whatever vinegar you like.
Frozen Mocha Cheesecake
This is one of the cheesecakes we will be having in my cheesecake class in Mentor tonight. No baking so a great dessert choice for summer.
Frozen Mocha Cheesecake
1 ¼ c. chocolate cookie crumbs
¼ c. sugar
¼ c. butter or margarine, softened
8 oz. cream cheese
1 (14oz.) can sweetened condensed milk
2/3 c. chocolate syrup
2 T. instant coffee crystals
1 t. hot water
1 c. whipping cream, whipped
Combine crumbs, sugar and butter and press into 9-inch springform pan. Chill. Beat cheese until fluffy and beat in milk. Stir in syrup and dissolve coffee in water. Add to cheese mixture and fold in whipped cream. Pour into prepared crust and freeze until solid, at least 6 hours. Garnish with additional cookie crumbs if you like or with shaved chocolate. Keep leftovers frozen and use within a week for best flavor.
Cornbread Salad
If you are looking for a fun and easy salad recipe for dinner here is one I really like. It is a cornbread salad. Tasty and easy to make it has another perk- it is a way to use up day old cornbread that may be a little too dry to just eat.
Cornbread Salad
4 c. crumbled cornbread or corn muffins
1 c. shredded mild cheese
1 sweet red pepper seeded and diced
1 c. diced celery
½ c. diced green onion
4 hard-cooked eggs, peeled and chopped
¼ c. chopped parsley
1-1 ½ c. mayonnaise or salad dressing, sometimes I use potato salad dressing or even slaw dressing
2 c. diced fresh tomatoes
1 c. toasted pecans
paprika for sprinkling on the top, optional
Place cornbread and next 6 ingredients in a medium bowl. Stir in dressing until desired moistness is achieved. Chill and stir in tomato and nut just before serving. Sprinkle with paprika if you like. Serves 6.
Note: You can add whole kernel corn also if you like.
Blue Pike Farm and Pink Lily of the Valley

Free is good, right? I will be at the Blue Pike Farm Open House tomorrow (May 4) and I will be giving away pink Lily of the Valley. That’s right- free. Wanted to thin them out and thought this might be a way of finding them new homes and to say “thank you” to those who attend. It will be held from 10-2 at Blue Pike Farm which is located at 900 E. 72 street. I’ll also have some free food samples. For sale will be my books including the new edition of The Charmed Garden (perfect for Mothers’ Day), herb seasoning packets, some jellies and baked goods. Baked goods will include chocolate beet cake (big hit last year), zucchini bread, Swedish Limpa Bread (rye) and Whole Wheat Herb Braids. Depending on the time crunch I also plan to have the pumpkin scones everyone seemed to like last season. I will also have ramps. Carl will have plants and trees for sale along with honey, honeycomb, eggs and more.There will also be some new faces this year. So stop on by and say hello and don’t forget to get your free plant!!
Ramp Soup
Ramp Soup
Ramps, or wild leeks, are celebrated as a sign of spring in Appalachia. This creamy soup captures the briefly flourishing vegetable’s essence: Cooking the oniony plants brings out their sweetness, and bright green stems lend a cheerful color.
1 lb ramps
1/2 sweet onion such as Vidalia or Walla Walla, thinly sliced
1/4 teaspoon white pepper
2 tablespoons vegetable oil1/3 cup dry white wine
3 1/2 cups reduced-sodium chicken broth
1/4 cup grated Parmigiano-Reggiano
2 tablespoons unsalted butter
Garnish:extra-virgin olive oil
Trim roots from ramps and slip off outer skins if loose. Cut green tops from ramps and coarsely chop enough greens to measure 3 cups (reserve remainder for another use). Thinly slice ramp bulbs, including pink stems. Cook ramp bulbs, onion, white pepper, and 1/2 teaspoon salt in oil in a large heavy saucepan over medium heat, stirring occasionally, until softened, about 10 minutes. Add wine, then boil over high heat, stirring occasionally, until evaporated completely. Add broth and simmer, partially covered, stirring occasionally, until onions and ramps are very soft, about 20 minutes. Stir in ramp greens and boil 1 minute.Working in batches, purée soup in a blender until very smooth, about 1 minute per batch (use caution when blending hot liquids), then strain through a fine-mesh sieve into a large heatproof bowl, pressing hard on and then discarding solids. Return soup to cleaned pot and bring just to a boil. Whisk in cheese and butter until smooth. Season with salt. Serves 4.
Dandelion Gravy
One of my favorite recipes using dandelions is dandelion gravy. There are a lot of recipes out there but the idea is the same. Bacon is cooked, sometimes onions are added and then dandelions are added and wilted down. After flour is added and then liquid- usually milk but you can use stock, water or even use sour cream or some wine the mixture is cooked until thickened and served over boiled or baked potatoes. The addition of dairy helps cut the natural bitterness of the dandelions. Here is a recipe I use and like a lot.
Dandelion Gravy
4 strips bacon
3 T. flour
1 c. water
1 lb. dandelion greens, washed and chopped
½ c. sour cream
1 T. sugar
1 T. vinegar
Salt and pepper to taste
Hot boiled or baked potatoes
Fresh chopped parsley, optional
Chop bacon and cook in skillet until crisp. Leave bacon in the pan. Remove all but 3 tablespoons of the bacon fat and stir in the flour until smooth. Add water and dandelion greens and cook over medium heat until greens are tender- about 5- 10 minutes. Add more water if mixture is too thick. Turn off heat. Combine sour cream with sugar and vinegar and stir into dandelion mixture. Adjust seasonings. Spoon gravy over potatoes.
Serves 4.









