Easter Brunch Menu 2016

Join us Sunday, March 27th, 9 am to 2 pm

Sweet Breads

Doughnuts . Scones . Blintz . Cinnamon Rolls . Sourdough Pancakes . Tiramisu French Toast

Eggs
Spring Veggie Scramble . Baked Eggs on Avocado . Quiche . Crab Cake Benedict . Huevos Rancheros

House Favorites
Biscuits & Gravy . Corned Beef Hash . Grilled Asparagus Flatbread . Breakfast BLT
Extras                                                                                                     Roasted Pots . Half Avocado . Bacon or Breakfast Sausage . Grapefruit Brulee . Pimento Biscuit or Toast . 2 Eggs
Drinks
Cappuccino & Latte . Mimosa . Drip Coffee & Tea . Fresh Juice

Crispy Bean Salad by Maeme Rasberry

1 bunch Tuscan kale or greens of choice, stems removed
3 tablespoons extra-virgin olive oil and butter
1 can pinto beans
2-3 tablespoons liquid  from pinto beans, reserved
1/4 teaspoon fine grain sea salt
1/2 avocado, diced
2 organic vegetables of choice
1/3 cup freshly crumbled goat cheese (optional)
Zest of 1 lemon 

DIRECTIONS

1. Drain can of beans, reserving 2-3 tablespoons of liquid. Rinse beans and shake off as much as water as possible.

2. Lay beans out on a paper towel in a single layer and gently press another paper towel on top of them to get off even more water.

3. Chop the kale, wash it, and shake off as much water as you can. Set aside.

4. Heat the olive oil and butter over medium-high heat in the widest skillet you own.

5. Add the beans in a single layer. Stir to coat the beans, then let them sit long enough to brown lightly on one side, about 3 or 4 minutes, before turning to brown the other side, also about 3 or 4 minutes. The beans should be golden and a bit crunchy on the outside.

6. Add vegetables and saute until tender-crisp. Add the kale and salt to the pan and cook for less than a minute, just long enough for the kale to lose a bit of its structure. 

7. If the mix seems too dry, add the reserved liquid from beans and stir, then remove from heat.

Recommended Mix-ins

Brown Rice, Quinoa, Cheese, Salsa, Cilantro, Basil, Thyme

Planting garlic in Sun Valley

Ketchum and Sun Valley have started to see the first signs of spring.  The massive snow piles are melting, the sun is becoming more intense and temperatures are warming.  Spring is on its way to the Wood River Valley!  

This time of year makes us anxious to get outside and play in the dirt.  We love gardening and are excited to start the 2016 growing season.  While our mountain climate delays the ground thaw (longer than other parts of the country), we love starting with a few bulbs in the spring.  

Garlic is our favorite.  You can never have too much garlic!  Garlic is one of the easiest things to grow.  You can plant in pots, in the ground or even empty milk jugs.  Really, any container will do.  Regular water and fertilizer are all it needs.  

The first step is buy garlic bulbs.  Freeze the bulbs or leave outside in the cold for a few days, to simulate winter.  Next, separate the cloves, but do not peel them.  Each clove will become a head of garlic.  Then, add some organic garden soil to a container that has drainage or plant in the ground.  Caution: do not buy potting mix, it will not work.  It needs to be potting soil.

Now for the hard part. Take your be-gloved finger and poke a hole in the potting soil that is approximately twice the depth of the garlic clove.  Then, place the garlic clove pointy-side up in the hole. Cover with dirt. Water. Fertilize occasionally. Wait.  

A week or so later you will have some shoots sprouting.  Each clove will bloom like a chive plant.  Then a curly green with a bulb in the green will shoot off.  Snip this and use in your cooking.  This will allow the most nutrients to go towards the growing of your bulb.    

Harvest your garlic cloves in late July or early August when the greens turn brown and the tops fall over. Store in a paper bag, in a dark, cool and dry place like onions and potatoes.  Enjoy for months to come.

Once you've had fresh, home-grown garlic, you will never go back.