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Fall Festival of Flavors

 In Food & Drink

Fall is my favorite time on the Outer Banks. The light has changed. The air is crisp. I see it as a comfortable transition from the lighter table fare of summer to the heartier meals representative of the season, using fall produce from my garden and local seafood.

 

Fall-RecipesRosie’s Cioppino

For my first course, I’m serving cioppino, a fish stew popularized in San Francisco in the mid to late 1800s by immigrants. After a hard day’s work, the fishermen would gather and throw different pieces of fish and shellfish into a communal pot for supper. There was no set recipe. It was the daily catch. A cioppino comes about from the various ethnic tastes of its inventors and the largesse of the ocean. Depending on whatever the ocean is serving up, cioppino is a happily versatile dish. Clams, mussels, shrimp, scallops, and some type of firm white fish can all be used. It’s a matter of preference and availability. Get the Recipe 


 

Kale-Salad-ChipsKale, Butternut Squash and Wheat Berry Salad

For a side dish, I’m picking kale and butternut squash from the garden and combining them with wheat berries for a healthy, earthy, sweet, and nutty treat. Top with crumbled bacon and serve on Parmesan crisps to counterbalance all that health and you have a lovely and hearty fall dish. Get the Recipe

 


 

Pom-CranCranberry and Pomegranate Cream

For the ultimate fall dessert, I recommend Cranberry and Pomegranate Cream. Get the Recipe 

 

 

 

Rosie Hawthorne
Author: Rosie Hawthorne

Rosie Hawthorne is a blogger, gardener, wanderluster, and mother of three.  She learned to cook by watching Julia Child every Saturday afternoon on her 11-inch black and white TV with legal pad and pen in hand. For the Hawthornes, every meal is a celebration of life.

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