Dill-Infused Yogurt Sauce or Dressing

Dill’s strong flavor goes a long way, and with a self-seeded crop, I can harvest plenty of fronds without running short on dill heads. Learn more at TwiceasTasty.com.
Dill may be an annual herb, but it self-seeds so readily that I think of it as part of my perennial collection. Like cilantro, I save some seed to use each year in the kitchen, letting the rest drop in the garden for next year’s crop. Dill seed isn’t quite as versatile as cilantro seed (better known as coriander), but I keep a bit on hand to use in pickles and mustards.

Fresh dill fronds can find more uses, as I share this week in my Twice as Tasty column for the Flathead Beacon. Sometimes called dill weed to distinguish it from full dill heads or individual seeds, its strong flavor goes a long way, although I do pile it on when making gravlax. With a self-seeded crop, I can harvest plenty of fronds without running short on dill heads. We recently discovered another bonus of growing dill: a brood of black swallowtail caterpillars. They’re such beautiful and effective pollinators I’m happy to share some of my dill with them.
Learn to make Dill-Infused Yogurt Sauce or Dressing

Chocolate Pudding Cake, Snack or Stacked

I’m celebrating 7 years of writing this blog by sharing my favorite chocolate cake recipe. Learn more at TwiceasTasty.com.
Seven years! Seven years ago, I started writing the Twice as Tasty blog. What started as a personal project led to workshops and house concerts, a cookbook and a column, and the launchpad for so much of the other food writing I do today. I’m especially appreciative of those of you who have been following my journey from the beginning, and I’m thrilled that so many more of you have joined in over the years.

To celebrate, I share my favorite chocolate cake recipe this week in my Twice as Tasty column for the Flathead Beacon. When I say “my favorite,” really I mean that unless I have a surplus of zucchini, this is the only chocolate cake I make. My mom discovered the original recipe when I was still a teenager. I’ve made a few tweaks but I’ve never needed another technique because this one is that good.
Learn to make Chocolate Pudding Cake, Snack or Stacked

Kitchen Favorites: Oyster Knives and Other Fish Tools

I paired my latest pieces for The Spruce Eats with a recent coastal trip and fresh seafood from my favorite farms and fisherfolk. Learn more at TwiceasTasty.com.
When it comes to tools for prying open oysters, filleting and grilling fish, and making stock from shrimp shells, I’ll take any excuse to pull out my favorites. I was able to pair my latest pieces for The Spruce Eats with a recent trip to the coast, so I took advantage of fresh oysters from Westcott Bay Shellfish Co. and black cod and other shellfish direct from fisherfolk at Bellingham Dockside to capture the photos I needed. I highly recommend checking out both if you’re ever on San Juan Island and in Bellingham, respectively.

My mini-reviews have landed in roundups of other oyster knives and tools, giving plenty of ideas for ways to prepare and cook seafood. My recent Health.com article on backyard and portable grills aligns nicely with these pieces, since grilling is my favorite way to cook fish.
Learn about choosing and using oyster knives and other fish tools

Cheese- and Bacon-Stuffed Burgers

Mitchell Farm, where I garden, raises and sells all-natural, purebred Red Angus beef and shares a favorite recipe for meat-loving followers. Learn more at TwiceasTasty.com.
One of the perks about writing my Twice as Tasty column for the Flathead Beacon is that I learn about food I don’t eat personally. Mitchell Farm, where I garden, raises and sells all-natural, purebred Red Angus beef. So I was excited when the owner and my garden partner, Leah Mitchell, offered to share a favorite recipe with my meat-loving followers.

On a recent evening, I learned the ins and outs of burger making and how to get the right sear on a Traeger Grill, a tool I’d never used and was eager to try. My contributions to the meal were mainly burger toppings: German-Inspired Spicy Mustard, Half-Sour Dill Pickles, Grilled Onion Relish, and other options from my pickling cookbook. I also found my own spin for the main recipe: The cheese filling, without the bacon, makes a delicious pescatarian-friendly topping for grilled salmon.
Learn to make Cheese- and Bacon-Stuffed Burgers

Strawberry-Rhubarb Shrub

I usually find strawberries too sweet to pair with rhubarb, but the vinegar in a drinking shrub balances the combination for my taste buds. Learn more at TwiceasTasty.com.
If you’d walked into my kitchen late last night, you would have found me turning some of summer’s first fruit into a batch of shrub. A drinking shrub, as I share this week in my Twice as Tasty column for the Flathead Beacon, is an old DIY beverage that fans of today’s sparking water and hard seltzers should have on their radar. The combination of fruit, vinegar, and sugar into a concentrate that is then diluted with fizzy water to taste packs a flavor punch and quenches thirst of hot summer days. Mix in a couple of shots of alcohol and you end up with a sparkling evening cocktail.

I usually have several shrub flavors in my fridge, made with the current bumper crop of fresh fruit or whatever I squirreled away in the freezer for the off-season. Although I find strawberries too sweet to pair with rhubarb in desserts and jams, the vinegar in a shrub balances this popular combination for my taste buds.
Learn to make Strawberry-Rhubarb Shrub

Gluten-Free Scallion Pancakes

Savory pancakes can be eaten any time of day and make a delicious light summer meal that features seasonal veggies. Learn more at TwiceasTasty.com.
If you think of pancakes as sweet breakfast treats, think again. Savory pancakes can be eaten any time of day and make a delicious light summer meal that features seasonal veggies—in and on them. This week, in my Twice as Tasty column for the Flathead Beacon, I share one of the first variations I make each summer. It’s easy to make, delicious, and—bonus—gluten-free, dairy-free, and vegan.

You can make scallion pancakes with store-bought scallions (also called green onions), but if you grow your own bulb onions, you can swap in small ones as you’re thinning your onion bed. I make them even earlier in the season with walking onions and then later in summer with just the green tops from nearly full-grown bulb onions that I pull early to use fresh.

Other vegetables and herbs work well in savory pancake batter, including zucchini with basil and grilled peppers with chives. I then pile on more vegetables as toppings, especially pickled ones like Tangy Radish Rounds, Ripe Cherry Tomato Pickles, Pickled Avocado Slices, and other quick pickles from my cookbook.
Learn to make Gluten-Free Scallion Pancakes

Arugula Salad with Asparagus and Shaved Parmesan

Homegrown greens have flavor that is muted or missing from store-bought ones. Learn more at TwiceasTasty.com.
One of my favorite things about the start of garden season is clipping the first homegrown spring greens. If you grow lettuce, spinach, arugula, or other greens, you know what I’m talking about. If you don’t, I highly recommend getting a few seeds and giving it a try. Homegrown greens have flavor that is often muted or missing from store-bought ones, and you can buy seeds in varieties that grocery stores won’t carry. These seeds grow easily in the ground or in pots. My sister seeds two “lettuce bowls”—wide, low plastic pots—for my parents each year that sit in the shade on their porch all summer. When the supply gets low, they simply pull the straggly plants and tuck in a few new seeds.

My homegrown lettuces and other greens mainly land in salads, as I share this week in my Twice as Tasty column for the Flathead Beacon. I also tuck them into tacos and sandwiches, fold them into hot pasta or curry, and pair them with eggs.
Learn to make Arugula Salad with Asparagus and Shaved Parmesan

Compound Herb Butter

I save homegrown herbs in many ways, but one of the easiest may be mixing them into butter. Learn more at TwiceasTasty.com.
I save homegrown herbs in many ways, but one of the easiest may be mixing them into butter and freezing them, as I share this week in my Twice as Tasty column for the Flathead Beacon. This technique for making compound herb butter is also ideal for a bunch of fresh herbs you’ve purchased but won’t use up before they start to fade, since you only need 2–4 tablespoons for each stick of butter.

I typically mix up small, fresh portions of flavored butters to use immediately, like my favorite lime butter for grilled corn. Small batches of compound butter keep well in the refrigerator for a few days. For longer storage, freeze “logs” of herb butters and use them throughout the year.
Learn to make Compound Herb Butter

Homemade Baked Mac and Cheese

My mom’s kid-friendly mac and cheese and my more flavorful version are just the beginning for cheesy pasta ideas. Learn more at TwiceasTasty.com.
We’ve had a spate of cool spring weather here in northwest Montana, including days when I woke up to snow on my just-emerging crocus and scilla, so I’ve been in comfort food mode. That means—along with other recipes that satisfy filling, fatty food cravings—mac and cheese.

I grew up eating homemade mac and cheese baked in the oven until the center was gooey and the top was a crunchy cheese crust. My mom’s version was kid-friendly and simple: elbow pasta, butter, flour, milk, and mild Cheddar. I’ve tweaked it to bring in more flavor and better texture. But when it comes to making mac and cheese your own, the recipe I share this week in my Twice as Tasty column for the Flathead Beacon is just the beginning.
Learn to make Homemade Baked Mac and Cheese

How To Make Cheese, Step by Step

For the Old Farmer’s Almanac website, I created a basic cheese making guide and a recipe with step-by-step photos for Farmer’s Cheese. Learn more at TwiceasTasty.com.
I’m excited to share my first pieces for The Old Farmer’s Almanac website—all about cheese! I created a basic cheese making guide to help beginners make their first cheese and experienced cheese makers learn some of the history and details about the process. It includes a recipe for a classic cheese from pioneer days: Farmer’s Cheese. You’ll also find that recipe in a separate post that includes step-by-step photos of the process.

I’m just as excited that by creating these pieces for Almanac.com, the editors have added more recipes to their website for making cheese and other dairy products. The website’s collection now includes recipes for homemade ricotta, yogurt, and butter. I have another piece in the works for their website, too.
Learn how to make cheese, step-by-step