August 2008

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I never thought I was a greens person.  They’ve just never seemed terribly appealing, but then I decided I would try.  It wouldn’t hurt to have a little more variety in my diet, would it?  No, and certainly not when prepared in this fashion along with some tasty roasted chicken.  Yum!

This serves two.

Chicken:

2 chicken breasts or thighs, patted dry

1 t dried herbs – I used a combination of rosemary, thyme, sage, basil, and oregano

1/4 t ground garlic

1/4 t salt

Greens:

1 large bunch of collard greens – about 1 pound

1 large clove garlic, minced

1/4 cup diced onion

1 T butter

1 t olive oil

salt and pepper to taste

Start heating the water for the greens – 3 quarts worth in a large pot.  Combine herbs and salt in a mortar and pestle, grind until very fine (optional).  Rub chicken with herb-garlic-salt mixture and bake at 375 until juices run clear, about 15-20 minutes.  Prepare the greens while the chicken bakes.

Make a chiffonade of the greens and rinse thoroughly to remove any dirt.  Add greens to the boiling water, and boil on low with the lid on for fifteen minutes.  Drain the greens thoroughly in a colander, set aside.  Heat a skillet over medium-high heat, add butter, olive oil, garlic, and onion.  Saute just until the onion softens before adding the greens.  Stir until garlic and onion are evenly distributed and the greens are heated through.  Add salt and pepper to taste.  For extra flavor, pour the pan juices from the chicken over the greens before adding the chicken.

Sit out on the lawn and enjoy!

Here’s another of my all time favorite movies, Amelie (hmm…wishing I could figure out how to make proper accent marks, tant pis).

Anyhoo, Amelie has all the elements I enjoy in film:

A good and believable story.  Who hasn’t dreamed of ways to bring people happiness, make others behave with kindness, or fall in love?  It is told with wit, charm, and occasionally, a sharp knife-edge!  The characters are like people we know – eccentric, obsessive, dreamers, do-gooders, and curmudgeons, all with their own flair.

Beautiful cinematography – heavens to Betsy!  The use of saturated colors, beautiful set decorations, ace camera angles all make this story a gem to behold.

Top shelf acting – every character fully embodied by the actor, no kidding.   Audrey Tautou, the adorable Matthieu Kassovitz (he looks a little like the G-man), crotchety Serge Merlin as Mr. Dufayel, “et Lady Di…” Jammel Dubbouz, to mention a few.

A fine soundtrack – Oh yes, yes, yes!  Yann Tiersen is quite good at making kiddie pianos and everyday sounds like flipping paper charming.  I also love the old French standards like “Si Tu N’etait pas La.”  I hum and sing along every single time.

Watch it and prepare to be charmed!

 

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