Serenbe Style and Soul

with Marie Nygren

Author Archive

Wednesday

13

January 2010

0

COMMENTS

Building has begun!

Written by , Posted in Miscellaneous

The past two days has been very busy and exciting. Shopping at the America’s mart in Atlanta for furnishings for our new Nest homes. The model home has now begun. How exciting to see building begin again in Serenbe.

The frame of our new model home is beginning to go up. The planning has begun and now the hunt is on to get it furnished just perfectly.

I have lots of pictures to post of great finds from the mart and plan to post tomorrow.

Stay tuned!

Friday

8

January 2010

3

COMMENTS

Southern Trifle

Written by , Posted in marie nygren, Recipe Articles, southern trifle

This is an easy and tasty dessert for a Southern Sunday dinner. It is lovely to use a homemade pound cake but in a pinch, I use Entemann’s.













Items needed for the trifle:
a loaf size pound cake
chocolate pudding (recipe below, it is very easy so don’t let it worry you)
whipped cream- recipe below
glass bowl/pyrex

Chocolate Pudding

  • 3/4 cup sugar
  • 7 tbsp flour
  • 1/4 tsp salt
  • 2 eggs
  • 3 cups half and half cream, scalded
  • 1 tsp vanilla
  • 1 cup semi- sweet chocolate chips
Mix together sugar, flour, salt, and eggs. Stir in scalded milk. Return to heat and simmer stirring constantly for 2-3 minutes until thickened. Remove from heat, add vanilla and cool to room temperature.
Whipped Cream
  • 2 cups heavy cream
  • powdered sugar
  • vanilla
Beat heavy cream in mixer on high until thickened. Add powdered sugar and vanilla to taste.
**Note: Please never use Cool Whip, click attached link for all the reasons I do not ever use Cool Whip!
Have all ingredients ready for assembly.
Slice pound cake into 1/2 inch slices. In bowl, line bottom with cake. Then spoon 1 1/2 cups of pudding over the cake slices. Spoon 1/2 cup whipped cream over the pudding. Make another layer as before.

Finish with remaining cream and dust with cocoa powder for the finishing touch.

Wednesday

6

January 2010

0

COMMENTS

My current inspiration

Written by , Posted in "frank stitt", marie nygren, serenbe

I was cleaning around my kitchen the other day and began looking at all of my cookbooks. It reminded me that I haven’t written about any of my favorite cookbooks lately.

One that is so wonderful and a great source of inspiration for me is Frank Stitt’s Southern table. (click on this link to take a peek inside the book)

What most inspires me about Frank is that he was the first Southern chef to take Southern food and elevate it beyond the level of meat plus three.

Several of my favorite dishes come from his cookbook. Sometimes I follow them to the tea (why mess with perfection) or sometimes it’s fun to add my own twist on things. To me, that is what makes cooking fun, experimenting with ingredients to change a recipe and make it your own. Frank’s Buttermilk Vinaigrette is still one of my personal favorites and used quite often at the Farmhouse.

When Inn guests ask me about my favorite Southern recipes, what comes immediately to mind are Frank’s restaurants in Alabama. A great road trip for me is to visit Bottega Restaurant and Café and hang around and enjoy dinner at Highland’s Bar and Grill. I would encourage all of you to visit both restaurants for a true culinary treat.

Frank’s food inspires me on a daily basis because it is so amazingly delicious and to me he is a master Southern Chef.

Monday

4

January 2010

5

COMMENTS

Farmhouse Biscuits

Written by , Posted in biscuits, marie nygren, Recipe Articles, Serenbe Farmhouse

The first Monday of the New Year has been a good day. I feel like I was finally able to catch my breath today. After the last two weeks of the holidays, cooking at the Farmhouse, interviewing since I lost my weekend fried chicken cook, helping with new recipes for the Daisy, holiday decorating and several family holiday dinners….. life here in Serenbe has been very full.

This week I am excited about trying out some new recipes the girls want to use at the Blue eyed Daisy. We will try many and have multiple taste testings……. sounds like a lot of fun.

For now though, my thoughts go to the biscuits at the Farmhouse. My plan was to post this recipe this week once I settled back into blogging and by coincidence, we received a comment the other day from a Farmhouse guest who requested the recipe. Perfect timing.

Upon the first bite of a Farmhouse Biscuit, the sound we most hear from guests is always the same…. “YUM”.

They have become a regular favorite at the Farmhouse, and I am happy to share the recipe for you to also enjoy them at home.

The ingredients are few but the flavor is delightful.

After mixing together the flour, butter, sour cream and chives in a large bowl, the muffin tin is ready to fill.

Just out of the oven, the muffins should be a nice golden brown.

Ready to serve!

Farmhouse Biscuits

  • 2 cups Lily White Self Rising Flour
  • 1 cup sour cream
  • 2 sticks melted butter 
  • 1/4 cup chives
Preheat oven to 375º. Melt butter. In a bowl, combine flour, sour cream and chives and melted butter. Stir gently until combined. Put 1/4 cup mixture into greased muffin tin. Bake for 12-15 minutes until lightly golden brown.

Makes approximately 12 biscuits.

Thursday

31

December 2009

2

COMMENTS

Happy New Year

Written by , Posted in marie nygren, serenbe, Steve Nygren

New Year’s eve day was spent with my family and I in the kitchen preparing for dinner at the Farmhouse. Steve and Quinn helped by making chocolate roulade as our Farmhouse staff and I worked on breakfast, lunch and dinner for the day.

From my entire family, we want to wish you a very Happy New Year and all the best in 2010. We hope to see you at the Farmhouse and around Serenbe in the coming year.

For the next several days, I am taking some time off from blogging as my focus will be in the restaurant. We have a full house at the as the year comes to a close, and the new year begins.

I want to thank each and every one of you for your support since my blog began and looking forward to being with you all next year!

Thursday

31

December 2009

0

COMMENTS

Wednesday

30

December 2009

0

COMMENTS

Decorating contest

Written by , Posted in Miscellaneous

I am very excited to tell you that we have so much creative talent in Serenbe that we didn’t have just one winner for the holiday decorating contest….. we had a four way tie!
The winners were the Newell’s, the Nevins’, the Fitzgerald’s and the Reed’s.

Pictures will be posted shortly of the winning participants.

Thank you to all who helped Serenbe look so festive and to all those who voted for their favorite house.

Tuesday

29

December 2009

1

COMMENTS

The "NEW" Blue Eyed Daisy

Written by , Posted in "scott's antique market", Blue Eyed Daisy, marie nygren, serenbe

The Serenbe bakeshop, the Blue Eyed Daisy has undergone a makeover and I must admit to being a proud mom as my daughter Kara and Serenbe resident Raina Newell have taken over management.

Our friends, Dana and David Widmer, Christy Bacon, Smith Hanes, and my family got together for a 12 hour re-do of the restaurant. Items were cleaned and rearranged, walls were displayed and stocked with Serenbe merchandise, and jars were filled  with “old-fashioned” candy.

                          

The green cabinet was a great find from Scott’s antique market.

                          

“You gotta do what you’ve got to do!”

I know everyone remembers this candy from their childhood, candy necklaces, saltwater taffy, rock candy and more….. what fond memories.

Cecilia Winston, another Serenbe resident will be making lots of decorated cookies, cupcakes and her fabulous homemade cheesecakes.

I hope you come by to try out the new menu featuring many new additions that many of you missed. More soups, egg salad sandwiches, new salads and lunch combos are just a few of the changes. Prices have been lowered too so drop by and let them know what you think.


Enjoying breakfast at the new Daisy.

Sunday

27

December 2009

0

COMMENTS

My mom’s Seafood soup

Written by , Posted in "margaret lupo", "mary mac's", Recipe Articles, seafood soup

Makes about 15 cups
Bring to a boil in heavy Dutch oven:
  • 5 cups chicken stock or canned chicken broth
  • 6 tablespoons butter
  • 1 tsp salt
  • 1/2 tsp freshly ground white pepper
  • 2 dashes Tabasco sauce
  • 2 dashes Worcestershire sauce
Add:
  • 1 bunch (about 12 ounces) well-washed fresh leeks (all but browned leaves), chopped
  • 1 bunch scallions, chopped
  • 2 large garlic cloves, minced fine
Simmer for 30 minutes and add:
  • 3 large Idaho potatoes (about 1 1/2 pounds), peeled and diced

Simmer for another 30 minutes. Mash potatoes and onion mixture in the stock thoroughly with a potato masher.

Add:
  • 4 cups milk
  • 2 cups heavy cream

Taste and reseason. This should be a thick, heavy, creamy soup. If too thick, thin with milk and taste for seasonings.

Add:
  • 2 cups cooked crabmeat, shrimp, or scallops**

Simmer soup for 5 minutes, and you have my favorite meal.

To steam crabs, place in pot with 2 inches of boiling water, 1 teaspoon of vinegar, and 2 teaspoons of salt. Cover and steam on high heat for approximately 30 minutes. Cool crab under cold tap water. Pick crab and drop crabmeat into soup.

If you use shrimp or scallops, sauté them quickly in butter, then add to the soup.

**my favorite addition is crabmeat. Steam live crabs and pick the meat from them or use pasteurized or frozen crab meat as a last resort. No canned seafood, please. The soup would be better with no seafood at all than with canned seafood.
From the cookbook: Southern Cooking from Mary Mac’s Tea Room by Margaret Lupo.

Saturday

26

December 2009

0

COMMENTS

Christmas Traditions

Written by , Posted in "Stan Topol", "yule log", inn at serenbe, marie nygren, Steve Nygren

As the holiday rush continues Marie is prepping in the kitchen for 150 reservations for Sunday’s fried chicken lunch at the Farmhouse. Because of this, I am filling in for a couple of days as a guest blogger and am excited to tell you about the Nygren’s family Christmas dinner tradition.

A small group of close friends joined the Nygren family last night to enjoy Christmas dinner. The house was magical with decorations everywhere, and two beautifully set tables courtesy of their friend, Stan Topol.

Before dinner began we were asked to pick a number and then choose the seat which matched our number. What a fun way to meet new people.

Dinner was delicious and began with Margaret Lupo’s seafood soup. The seafood soup is a yearly tradition at the Nygren Christmas dinner and Marie continues to serve it in her mother’s china bowls. Whenever Margaret had a dinner party the first question that was always asked was, “Are you serving your seafood soup?”

After tasting it last night for the first time I fully understand why that question was asked. It was one of the best soups I have ever had. I had asked Marie for other soup recipes in the past and she told me when she and her mom cooked soup they always “just added a little of this and a little of that”. This soup was so popular that they finally sat down to create the recipe which is now featured in Margaret’s cookbook.
(it will also be served on New Year’s eve at the Farmhouse).

The next course featured beef tenderloin with Marie’s homemade horseradish sauce, scalloped potatoes (my personal favorite), butter pea and kale gratin, parsnips, leeks and homemade bread.

Dinner was delightful, conversation was lively and the dessert presentation was amazing. Every year Steve and their youngest daughter, Quinn make the yule log, buche de noel and meringue cookies. The log reached almost the entire length of the kitchen island and it was truly a work of art!

It is obvious that tradition plays a treasured role in the Nygren family and with a picture perfect Christmas dinner, it is a tradition that I hope I continue to be a part of every year.

     ~guest blogger: Dana Widmer