
Here are some Rotorua-area favorites:





Here are some Rotorua-area favorites:




Filed under Fun Photo Friday, Photography, R. Doug Wicker, travel, vacation
Here’s my annual Super Bowl Super Dip Recipes (Jalapeño Pesto and Lipton’s® California Onion dips):
First up: Jalapeño Pesto Dip:
The great things about this recipe are:
Ingredients:
Step 1. Bring to boil just enough water to immerse the jalapeños. Once the water is boiling, add the jalapeños and bring the water back to boiling. Gently boil the jalapeños, stirring occasionally, for fifteen minutes. Drain the jalapeños and set aside until they are cool enough to handle.
Step 2. Slice the jalapeños in half lengthwise and remove the stems. Now, this next procedure is where you control the heat to some extent. On most of the jalapeños, remove the seeds and the ribs to which those seeds are attached. Keep the seeds and ribs on approximately one-third of the jalapeños, choosing in particular those jalapeños with very white, healthy-looking seeds and discarding those seeds that are dingy or brown in color. Increasing the number of seeds and ribs retained will increase the heat; decreasing that number will help to tame it.
Step 3. Place the jalapeños, cumin, garlic, and salt into a food processor. While pulsing, slowly drizzle in the olive oil. Do no overdo the processing or you’ll destroy those beautiful white seeds and lose texture, but you do want a fairly smooth consistency.
Other uses: In addition to the suggested uses below (besides as a chip dip), I’ve since taken to using this Jalapeño Pesto recipe also as a pizza sauce and in macaroni and cheese.
Serve either warm or cold with your favorite chips (my choice is good quality tortilla chips). Warm is particularly interesting, especially if you contrast that with a well-refrigerated . . .
Lipton’s® California onion dip:
Ingredients:
Step 1. Mix together thoroughly in a bowl, preferably the day before the Super Bowl; wrap tightly or put back into the sour cream container and chill
Step 2. Serve with the chip of your choice; my favorite for this is Fritos® Scoops!®
Variation: Try mixing together some of the California Onion Dip with my Jalapeño Pesto dip, but go easy and taste frequently until you arrive at just the right kick to suit your tastes.
And since this is listed under Wine & Food the next question would have to be, what kind of wine would you serve with this? Well, first of all, this is definitely an accompaniment to beer, especially a good, fairly strong ale. Or, one of my favorite Mexican beers, Modelo Negra™. But if you would like wine with this, it’ll have to be one that helps tame the fire. That suggests a semisweet white. Think: Johannisberg or German Rieslings, Chenin Blanc, or Gewürztraminer. The cooler white wine serving temperatures supply immediate relief and the sweetness helps neutralize the capsaicin (the compound that gives peppers their “heat”) in the long term.
Comments Off on Bonus Blog, Recipes — Super Dips for the Super Bowl
Filed under R. Doug Wicker, recipe, Social Networking, Wine & Food

Yes, our ship was still in port over in Tauranga. And, yes, today was a very busy day, as you’ve seen these past two weeks. So far I’ve shown you the Rotorua geothermal area, the Living Māori Village, the redwood forest of Whakarewarewa, and rafters going over the falls at Okere. Can’t be a whole lot left to do, right? Wrong. Today we begin with Kiwifruit Country, a tourist attraction north of Okere Falls.

We arrived there courtesy of our tour hosts at Custom Day Tours.

Here, everything is kiwi. Even the tourist train:

But Kiwifruit Country is first a foremost a kiwi farm:

One last look at Kiwifruit Country before we head on up the road toward a bit of local indigenous flavor:

We now head back south toward Rotorua arrive at Te Puia. Last week we took a look at the geothermal area here, but today we’re going to take in some Māori culture and traditions.

It’s time for us to head over to the Te Puia Opera House, where a very special event awaits us:

But before the show begins, let’s take a closer look at the interesting building to the left:

Uh, oh . . . this fellow looks ominous:

Before this show began, the audience were advised to take this seriously. Laughter is not appreciated during this welcoming ceremony. And, despite the stern look of our greeters, we were in fact being welcomed in the traditional Māori manner.

Once welcomed into the opera house we were entertained with traditional Māori folksong, dance, and storytelling:



This week’s Fun Photo Friday concludes our look at the Tauranga and Rotorua areas of New Zealand. Next Monday we head to one of my favorite cities, Auckland. Here we disembark from our cruise, and I shall spend the next several weeks showing your around the city.
Filed under Photography, R. Doug Wicker, travel, vacation