Showing posts with label tablescape. Show all posts
Showing posts with label tablescape. Show all posts

Christmas Chez Nous



Lovely Christmastime is here again! This year I was inspired by the light... since we've had a nice little run of really good weather,  the light has not been gloomy and dark, even for Winter Solstice time. I wanted to capture the pretty light of day and infuse our home with it's cheerfulness even at night. 

Using things found, I pulled together our Christmas home in no time at all... the perfect setting for our Christmas Eve dungeness crab feast and Christmas morning brunch. 

Hoping your holiday is filled with light, warmth, love and peace!



this simple green wreath adorned only with pinecones
is a refreshing sight in front of the mirror




the Christmas tree peeking around the corner to 
see what all the fuss in the dining room is!




the mantel holds fresh white tulips in vintage glass




the mid-century star keeps company with the
rare pink coral and the silver fish on the
windowsill




the lovely Christmas Tree 2011! I just wanted to use
green and white, and these giant balls were the
perfect choice (from my stash of ornaments, that is!);
I tucked white starfish in the branches
and we're done!



this old French painting of a battle scene (inherited!) 
sets a somber & serious tone... so I used
antique paper Chinese lanterns,  pink peonies and
Mexican angels 
to lighten the mood; flanking the painting are
 wrought iron peacock door panels




silver pitchers holding peonies reflect
the light and bounces in back into the room



dining room is ready for the festivities! 



I started to create a flowery centerpiece then I decided I 
really like the simple beauty of the
way the bottles of water capture and disperse the light
and left it at that



Christmas place settings using vintage pieces:  
French flea market silverware,
 the dishes (you've certainly seen a lot of those Minton
dishes I scored at l'Isle sur la Sorgue last Easter!)
 and the heavy 60's goblet




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thank you for visiting, today and always!

Kit







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Au Nom de la Rose Gâteau!


Perhaps you have something extra-special to celebrate this Christmas season (an anniversary, birthday, wedding, baptism?). This incredible rose-covered gâteau would be a stunning centerpiece for your magical fête. What on earth could be more appealing than fresh roses tiered with ladyfingers all tied up with a shiny ribbon?

The best part is that this showstopper is not difficult to make. Really.

Au Nom de la Rose, the fabled shop on Rue du Bac in Paris, has provided us with a quick little instructional video, below. Yes it is in French, but just take a look at how simple this is to construct. Hey, you could make a couple of them, non? :) If you do, you MUST send me pictures!

And, non, cherie, you may not actually eat this confection! It is a feast for the eyes and nose only!


this looks almost impossibly beautiful, non? perfect
for a rustic-chic celebration as well as something
more elegant... and you could use different colored
roses & ribbon combinations, bien sûr!


a singularly lovely rose

masses of roses

the storefront on rue du Bac, Paris

a basket casually dripping with roses, luscious!


as you can see, the ladyfingers are held
onto the form with rubber bands that
mademoiselle has tied together then
covered with a wide ribbon

won't your family and friends just
be floored when they see your masterpiece?

46 rue du Bac, 7e, Paris

see the short, brilliant video here


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thanks for visiting! Kit



We Seriously Considered Lobster {anarchy!}...


...for this Thanksgiving, but, as Dani put it so well, obligation to tradition overwhelmed whim, so dinde rôti* it was, albeit butterflied this year.

We gathered around a table that had been hastily put together for a wonderfully casual family style celebration (with all the cooking to be done, the table kind of took a back seat until the last minute!) and enjoyed what all agreed was one of the very best Thanksgivings ever!

And with the menu's nod to our southern US roots (dirty rice dressing, to die for!) and our love of the other South, the south of France, (duck rillettes with prune/armagnac sauce), we truly feasted and lingered long at the table!

Here, then, à table!


we quickly gathered purple sage and
hydrangea from the garden, then put
colorful leaves from our neighbor's tree under
our autumnal centerpiece

Gala's cream china with gold borders, the
Minton plates from the flea, country French
goblets and silver on a table laid
with old French sheet and gorgeous
silk embroidered overlay,
another flea market find!


my caterer/events daughter Lisa was aghast at
how I just "rolled" the napkins! they should have
been laid flat and hanging off the edge of the
table to be perfectly "au courant"!


assorted silver serving pieces stand ready (to be polished)
for the feast to come! They are all cherished gifts or
flea market finds



we chose the same wine for dinner, serendipitously,
that Steven chose for his prune/armagnac sauce for
the incredible Duck Rillettes he made for us!



another view of the centerpiece... our Thanksgiving
table comes very close to looking quite
Christmasy this year!! except for the autumn leaves!



***

we all had a wonderful day,
except, perhaps for this
little fella:

*butterflied turkey... it cooks so
fast this way, I must confess it
almost burned... but was
delicious!!


***

I hope you had a WONDERFUL THANKSGIVING
and are enjoying our only decently long
holiday weekend of the entire year!



merci pur la visite! ... Kit



Over Lunch: Planning Provence Printemps 2012



May 2012 seems a long while away, but it is just around the corner
when you are planning a week-long, inspiring Chic Provence Design Tour in the south of France! Yes, we are so excited to about our next tour! The team took a little time out this weekend from all our other busyness to sit down together and plan the wonderful things we are going to offer next spring. Of course, we had to do this over a little repas to keep our strength up and our brain cells optimized!

We set the table with... flea market finds from Provence, bien sur! We sharpened our pencils and got out the maps... and we have a fabulous tour planned for you. We listened to what our lovely participants last year said, and we have come up with an incredible journey for anyone who loves Provence, or would like to just find out once and for all if they do or not!

All the details will come soon along with the brochure, the dates, and you can start planning and dreaming about the trip of your lifetime!




vintage Minton china, old lace, lavender, rare pink
coral all inspire our planning session for our
next Chic Provence Design Tour in 2012!


***



these stunning French scenes are in the hotel La Mirande,
on the tour last year... a castle
built for the Cardinal when the Pope lived
in the Palace next door... in Avignon
circa 1309 AD


all photos by Kit Golson
using Nikon D70



***


thanks for visiting! ... Kit


Dessert Blanc Bleu

















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HELLO EVERYONE!


{Blogger has been driving me crazy lately. What is UP with Blogger? anyone else having nightmares with fonts, formats, etc?}


This evening is the first real summer one we've had. All summer long we have been freezing as soon as the sun goes down. But this evening... at le crepescule, it was lovely.


How could we NOT have dessert in the far back corner of the garden? How could we not use the beautiful hand-stitched blue and white throw over the table? how could we not cut dahlias and roses from the garden and toss them into a silver pitcher? and of course we had to bring out the beautiful Rosenthal bone china we use so infrequently. Then we realized we must bring out the old French fauteuil that is covered in needlepoint blue & white by Chris's own grand-mere with her own two hands. Incroyable!


The result is this little vignette that will forever remind me of our first warm evening of 2011.




merci pour la visite! ... Kit


I'm linking up with Between Naps on the Porch
for Tablescape Thursday!




French Comfort Food


We had a cheerful Mother's Day brunch last Sunday! We set the table with a vintage French grain sack as a runner and used colorful accessories, including gold crowns to symbolize all mothers, and roosters to symbolize all fathers (without whom there would be no mothers :). Garden roses, lavender, orange blossoms and lilies filled a Deruta pitcher. In addition to a luscious quiche, we served a piquant ruby red grapefruit & avocado salad, spring asparagus, blood orange lemonade and a chilled rosé Bandol, along with a basket of croissants and strong café au lait. A wonderful family gathering!

The quiche was inspired by all the wonderful little 4" quiches we had in Provence at Easter...convenient, nutritious and delicious, these little quiches are truly the eat-out-of-hand comfort food of France! I was missing those delectable morsels, so for Mother's Day I decided to try the Tartine recipe. If you have been lucky enough to visit their bakery in San Francisco, you will understand! In this amazing book, some of the best secrets of French bakers are revealed, and they work beautifully!

Oh, and the pretty strawberry cake? Easy street...store bought vanilla cake embellished with the most delicious strawberries found at the farmers market.


these little out-of-the-hand quiches are the
comfort food of France...and they are
irresistible!


our Mother's Day brunch table: simple and rustic with vintage
grain sack runner and old crockery






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Bacon & Langostino Quiche

1 (10 inch) quiche or 6 to 8 servings


adapted from Tartine (buy it here)



There are two small but important differences between this quiche filling and most others. The first is that part of the liquid is creme fraiche, which makes the filling smoother and slightly tart. The other is the presence of a small amount of flour. This idea comes from Boulangerie Artisanal des Maures, a bakery in the Var region of France.



1 fully baked and cooled 10-inch tart shell (recipe below, it's worth it!)


5 large eggs


3 tbs all-purpose flour


1 cup Creme fraiche


1 cup whole milk


1 tsp sea salt


1/2 tsp ground fresh black pepper


1 tbs finely chopped fresh thyme


6 slices well-cooked bacon, crumbled


3/4 cup langostinos, cooked lightly


3/4 cup grated aged gruyere


3/4 cup slivered kale



Have pie shell ready for filling. Preheat the over to 375 degrees F.


Place 1 egg and the flour in the bowl of a stand mixer or in a large mixing bowl and mix at high speed or by hand with a whisk until smooth. Mix or whisk in the remaining 4 eggs until blended. In a medium bowl, whisk the creme fraiche until it is perfectly smooth and then whisk in the milk. Pour the egg mixture through a fine-mesh sieve held over the milk mixture. Whisk in the salt, pepper, and thyme. (you can prepare the custard up to 4 days in advance before baking; cover and refrigerate)


Scatter the bacon, then the langostinos, then the kale, then the cheese evenly over the bottom of the pastry shell. Pour the egg mixture into the shell and gently press down any solids that have floated on the top. Place in the oven and bake for 10 minutes. Reduce the oven temperature to 325 degrees F and bake until the filling is just set, about 30 minutes longer. The center of the quiche should feel slightly firm, rather than liquidy, when touched. Let cool on a wire rack for at least 20 minutes to allow the custard to set up, so that it will slice neatly. It can be served warm or at room temperature. To serve a fully coled quiche warm, cover it with aluminum foil and reheat it in a 325 degree F oven for about 15 minutes.




Flaky Tart Dough
two 9-inch or 10-inch tart or pie shells


1 tsp salt
2/3 cup very cold water
3 cups + 2 tbs all-purpose flour
1 cup + 5 tbs very cold unsalted butter

In a small bowl, add the salt to the water and stir to dissolve. Keep very cold until ready to use.

To make the dough in a food processor, put the flour in the work bowl. Cut the butter into 1-inch pieces and scatter the pieces over the flour. Pulse briefly until the mixture forms large crumbs and some of the butter is still in pieces the size of peas. Add the water-and-salt mixture and pulse for several seconds until the dough begins to come together in a ball but is not completely smooth. You should still be able to see some butter chunks.

On a lightly floured work surface, divid the dough into 2 equal balls and shape each ball into a disk 1 inch thick. Wrap well in plastic wrap and chill for at least 2 hours or for up to overnight.

To line a tart pan or pie dish, place a disk of dough on a lightly floured surface and roll out 1/8 inch thick, rolling from the center toward the edge in all directions. Lift and rotate the dough a quarter turn every few strokes to discourage sticking, and work quickly to prevent the dough from becoming warm. Lightly dust the work surface with extra flour as needed to prevent sticking. If lining a pie dish, cut out a circle 2 inches larger than the dish. If lining a tart pan with a removable bottom, cut out a circle 1 1/2 inches larger than the pan. Carefully transfer the round to the pan (fold it in half or into quarters to simplify the transfer if necessary), easing it into the bottom and sides and then pressing gently into place. Trim the dough even with the rim of the tart pan with a sharp knife, or leave a 1/2 inch overhang, fold the overhang under, and flute or crimp the edge.

Preheat oven to 375 degrees F. Line the pastry shells with parchment paper and fill with pie weights.

For a fully baked shell, bake the shells until the surface looks light brown, about 25 minutes; to check, lift a corner of the paper. Remove from the oven and remove the weights and paper. Return the shells to the oven and bake until golden brown, about 5 minutes longer.

Let the shells cool completely on wire racks before filling. They will keep,well wrapped, in the refrigerator for up to 1 week or in the freezer for up to 2 weeks.



Enjoy!!


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Thanks for visiting! ... Kit



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