I first saw this loaf from Tartine on Mark’s blog and bookmarked it to try. It is a different matter that it has taken me over a year to actually make it and then a little over a month to post about it! That’s what happens when you have list of bookmarked recipes that is a couple of miles long. One tends to lose track of what’s on that list.
I had never really forgotten this particular loaf for
Sometimes when I’m going through my cookbooks I say things out loud: things like “I am so making this”, or “I’ll make this next weekend”, and so on; just so you know it, the hubby doesn’t find it weird. ![]()
A couple of weeks ago I was “talking” to my books again when I said I was going to make a banana cake. “Another one?” Joao asked. I smiled back at him and said nothing, but thought “hey, don
<!–[if !supportEmptyParas]–> I had a lot of cranberry sauce left over from Thanksgiving which I promptly froze till I figured out what to do with it. I pulled it out of the freezer recently when I had some leftover ricotta cheese. I decided to use both cheese and sauce in some kind of a cake. Loosely inspired by this recipe from Inside The Kaganoff Kitchen, I gathered my ingredients
This vegetable loaf came about as the result of the challenge that we, the 4 Velveteers, set for ourselves this month. One thing I really enjoy about being in this group is the sheer variety of challenges, which really make us go beyond our comfort zones and explore possibilities we probably wouldn’t otherwise. I also like the creative freedom that allows each one of us works on one theme but