Wednesday, April 15, 2026

Hazelnut Vodka

If you love Frangelico but think it’s a bit too sweet, like I do, this is the drink for you! This Hazelnut Vodka is perfect for sipping straight or over ice.

Food Lust People Love: If you love Frangelico but think it’s a bit too sweet, like I do, this is the drink for you! This Hazelnut Vodka is perfect for sipping straight or over ice.

I’ve mentioned before about the amazing cherry tree in our back garden in Paris years ago but I don’t think I’ve written about the prolific hazelnut tree out front. It was actually in our neighbor’s yard, Madame Coucou we named her because that is what she shouted over our party wall to get my attention. 

The tree grew right up near that wall so a goodly portion of it hung over our side. It took me a while to figure out what they were because I had never seen a fresh nut in its little fuzzy green outer coat. As they ripen, that turns brown and the nuts are ready for harvest, often falling to the ground on their own. During the season, hazelnuts were literally everywhere.

Unlike the cherries that we turned into jam and pie and cherry bounce, we just shelled and ate the hazelnuts. I wish I had had this recipe back then! 

Hazelnut Vodka 

If you have hazelnuts with the shells still on, it will take about 8 ¾ oz or 248g to get the required amount shelled for this recipe. This recipe is adapted from one in Abundance: Eating and living with the seasons by Mark Diacono.  

Ingredients
3 ½ oz or 100g shelled hazelnuts
¾ cup or caster sugar 
4 cups or 946ml vodka 
¼ teaspoon ground allspice

Method
Preheat your oven to 375°F or 190°C. Spread the hazelnuts out on a baking pan and roast them for about 15 minutes or so, checking after 10. The skins should darken but you don’t want them to burn!

Remove the pan from the oven and pour the hazelnuts into a towel.  


Wrap them up and leave them to steam for a couple of minutes. 

Rub them through the towel, squeezing and rolling to remove most of the skins. 


Pick the hazelnuts out of the skins and put them into a food processor. Use a few short pulses to grind them into a coarse rubble. You want some small bits and some medium bits. Nothing too fine. 


In a large, wide-mouthed jar, stir the sugar into 1 cup or 240ml of the vodka until it dissolves. 


Add the chopped hazelnuts, allspice and the rest of the vodka and stir together. 


Stir well! 


Screw the lid on and set it someplace out of direct sunlight, where you’ll see it. 


Shake the jar once a day. 


I left mine for about a week before tasting it. Divine! Very hazelnutty! Leave it another week or two if you’d like – I did - but it’s very drinkable after one week.

Strain through a fine sieve and/or muslin and funnel into a sterilized bottle or jar. 


Enjoy!

Food Lust People Love: If you love Frangelico but think it’s a bit too sweet, like I do, this is the drink for you! This Hazelnut Vodka is perfect for sipping straight or over ice.

I made this last Christmastime and after we sipped a bit, I stashed it behind the bar and forgot about it. I pulled it back out when I was writing this post to discover that sediment had settled to the bottom. I decanted it, leaving that sediment behind and it's much less opaque now. Still delicious though! 

Food Lust People Love: If you love Frangelico but think it’s a bit too sweet, like I do, this is the drink for you! This Hazelnut Vodka is perfect for sipping straight or over ice.

Welcome to the 8th edition of Alphabet Challenge 2026, brought to you by the letter H. Many thanks to Wendy from A Day in the Life on the Farm for organizing and creating the challenge. Check out all the H recipes below:


To check out the Alphabet Challenges for 2024 and 2025, click here.



Pin this Hazelnut Vodka!

Food Lust People Love: If you love Frangelico but think it’s a bit too sweet, like I do, this is the drink for you! This Hazelnut Vodka is perfect for sipping straight or over ice.

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Tuesday, April 14, 2026

Sfincione Siciliano

Sfincione Siciliano is a staple street food of Sicily, with a fluffy bread base topped with strong cheese and a rich onion anchovy tomato sauce, finished with breadcrumbs, more cheese and oregano.
 
Food Lust People Love: Sfincione Siciliano is a staple street food of Sicily, with a fluffy bread base topped with strong cheese and a rich onion anchovy tomato sauce, finished with breadcrumbs, more cheese and oregano.

Sfincione is pronounced sfeen-CHOH-neh (IPA: /sfin'tʃoːne/) in Italian. From what I can discern, it’s like if focaccia married cheese pizza with a little nod to Ligurian pissalandrea in the sauce but without the black olives. Yeah, a little mixed up maybe but the Sicilians are on to something! It’s delicious. 

I shared four pieces with my brother- and sister-in-law and when she sent me a thank you text, she called them pizza squares. Perfect name! If you can't say sfincione, just tell your family you are making pizza squares for dinner. 

Sfincione Siciliano 

The traditional cheese for this dish is called Siciliano Caciocavallo but the interwebs assure me that the best substitute is an aged provolone for both taste and texture. This recipe is adapted from one on Tavol Arte Gusto and makes one sfincione in a 12x17 in or 30x43cm pan. Start this recipe early in the day to allow for the three rising sessions. 

Ingredients
For the base:
1 teaspoon dried active yeast
1 ½ cups or 355ml warm water
1 teaspoon sugar
3 cups or 380g 00 Italian flour
2/3 cup or 100g re-milled durum wheat semolina
2 teaspoons fine sea salt
1 tablespoon olive oil, plus a little extra for greasing the pan

For the onion sauce:
3 medium-sized onions
2 tablespoons olive oil (use the oil from the anchovies and top up if needed)
2 anchovy fillets in olive oil
1 can (1 lb 12oz or 800g) peeled Italian tomatoes
½ teaspoon baking soda
½ teaspoon fine sea salt

For the toppings:
7 oz or 200g Sicilian Caciocavallo or Provolone Stravecchio
5 – 6 anchovy fillets in oil
2 tablespoons breadcrumbs
2-3 sprigs fresh oregano

Method
Dissolve the yeast in the warm water, along with the teaspoon of sugar. Within a few minutes, it should start to create bubbles and foam up. This is how you know your yeast has been activated.

Measure your 00 flour, semolina and salt into a large mixing bowl or the bowl of your stand mixer, if using. 


Add the yeast dissolved in water, and knead until you’ve created a soft dough. 


Little by little, add the oil—continuing to knead throughout.


The dough should appear smooth and well-developed (forming a cohesive elastic mass.) Finally, shape the dough into a ball.


 Cover the bowl and let the dough to rise for at least 3 hours; it should quadruple in volume.

In the meantime, prepare the sauce. First, thinly slice the onions.
 

Place them in a pot with the oil and anchovies. Let them heat through for 5–6 minutes over high heat.


Puree the tomatoes in a blender (or with a hand blender), then add them to the onion pot. 
 

Fill the tomato can up about a quarter with water to make sure you get all of the tomato out and add it to the pot as well. 

Bring to a low boil then the sauce over low heat for about 45 minutes.


The result should be a rich, thick sauce. Add the baking soda and salt and stir well. 


Remove from the heat and set aside and to cool.


Finally, take the risen dough and spread it out in a 12x17 in or 30x43cm baking pan lightly greased with oil. Spread the dough using your fingers, gently tapping it with your fingertips trying your best not to pop any air bubbles.


Add the anchovy fillets broken into bits.


At this point, cover the pan with plastic wrap and let the dough rise for another hour or so.

Cut most of the cheese into pieces and grate a little, about 3-4 tablespoons. Mix the grated cheese with the breadcrumbs.


After that rise in the pan, add the remaining toppings to the dough: first the pieces of cheese.


Followed by the sauce.


Then finish with the grated cheese/breadcrumbs, and a handful of fresh oregano leaves.


Finally, let it rise for another hour. Near the end of rising time, preheat your oven to 475°F or 246°C.


Bake the sfincione in the hot oven, on the lowest rack or, if possible, in direct contact with the oven floor for 10 minutes. Move the pan to the middle-upper rack, to bake for another 20 minutes or so. The topping should be dry and the base nice and puffy and golden.


Remove from the baking pan. 


Cut in squares to serve. Golden bottom! I was a bit concerned by the dark edges, but the bottom was lovely and crunchy.


So fluffy! 

Food Lust People Love: Sfincione Siciliano is a staple street food of Sicily, with a fluffy bread base topped with strong cheese and a rich onion anchovy tomato sauce, finished with breadcrumbs, more cheese and oregano.

Enjoy!

Food Lust People Love: Sfincione Siciliano is a staple street food of Sicily, with a fluffy bread base topped with strong cheese and a rich onion anchovy tomato sauce, finished with breadcrumbs, more cheese and oregano.

It’s the second Tuesday of the month which means it’s time for my Bread Baker group to share their recipes. Our theme this month is Italian bread. Many thanks to our host, Karen of Karen’s Kitchen Stories. Check out the links below.

#BreadBakers is a group of bread loving bakers who get together once a month to bake bread with a common ingredient or theme. Follow our Pinterest board right here. Links are also updated each month on this home page. We take turns hosting each month and choosing the theme/ingredient.


Pin this Sfincione Siciliano!

Food Lust People Love: Sfincione Siciliano is a staple street food of Sicily, with a fluffy bread base topped with strong cheese and a rich onion anchovy tomato sauce, finished with breadcrumbs, more cheese and oregano.

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Sunday, April 12, 2026

Sprouted Spelt Everything Bagel Crackers

Crunchy, flavorful and more-ish, these sprouted spelt everything bagel crackers are a lovely snack on their own or served with a spread or dip. 

Food Lust People Love: Crunchy, flavorful and more-ish, these sprouted spelt everything bagel crackers are a lovely snack on their own or served with a spread or dip.

I usually try to bake or cook well ahead of the publish date for Sunday FunDay posts because the hosts plan the theme months in advance. This week, it didn’t happen because I misread the theme! 

“Make a recipe using sprouts,” the title said. Sooooo, I duly bought some Brussels sprouts and got busy. Then just a couple of days ago, I read the whole description which was “Using sprouted grains / legumes.” Oh, no! Back to the drawing board. Fortunately, I already own sprouted spelt flour. 

After the debacle that was trying to get the big cracker off the pan once baked, I wasn’t sure I was even going to share this recipe. But I put the plate between my husband and me on the sofa yesterday and before I knew it, the plate was almost empty! These crackers are good, y’all. Follow my updated method and you’ll love them too! 

Sprouted Spelt Everything Bagel Crackers

This recipe was adapted from one in the New York Times magazine from way back in 2008. That recipe itself was adapted from one created by Eli Winograd at Hungry Ghost Bread in Northampton, MA.

Ingredients
1/4 teaspoon fine sea salt
1/2 cup or 120ml cold water
1 1/2 cups or 180g sprouted spelt flour
Generous sprinkling everything bagel seasoning mix

Method
Preheat the oven to 350°F or 180°C. 

In the measuring cup, dissolve the salt in the cold water. Add the water to the spelt flour and stir until combined. 


Knead the dough a few turns until a ball forms.


The original instructions said to flour an overturned 12-by-17-inch cookie sheet and use a floured rolling pin to roll out the dough on top of it - using as much flour as needed to prevent sticking - until the dough covers the sheet from edge to edge. Which is what I did. (See below.) I am here to tell you that this is NOT A GOOD PLAN.


Never mind my photo. Here is what you REALLY NEED to do: Roll this dough out on a piece of nonstick baking parchment or a silicone pan liner. Otherwise, as I mentioned, the dough will stick to your pan and you will struggle to release the middle bits once it is baked. 

Using a spray bottle filled with water, spray the rolled dough to give it a glossy finish. If you want neater crackers, you can also score the dough into grids. Otherwise, we are just going to break this sucker apart into chaotic shards once crispy. 

Sprinkle with an elegant sufficiency of everything bagel seasoning mix. Some people prefer more, some less. For once, I won’t tell you how to live your life. 


Bake in the preheated oven until the big cracker is crisp and golden and snaps apart, 20 to 25 minutes, turning the pan around halfway through. Check frequently to make sure it doesn’t overcook and burn. Ovens heat unevenly and these crackers are thin! 


Since you did the right thing and rolled the dough out onto a nonstick sheet of baking parchment or a silicone pan liner, the only thing left is to break into pieces and serve. I promise, the crackers will disappear in no time.

Food Lust People Love: Crunchy, flavorful and more-ish, these sprouted spelt everything bagel crackers are a lovely snack on their own or served with a spread or dip.

Enjoy! 

It’s Sunday FunDay and today we are sharing recipes using sprouted grains or legumes. Many thanks to our host, Sneha of Sneha’s Recipe. Check out the links below. 

 
We are a group of food bloggers who believe that Sunday should be a family fun day, so every Sunday we share recipes that will help you to enjoy your day. If you're a blogger interested in joining us, just visit our Facebook group and request to join.



Pin these Sprouted Spelt Everything Bagel Crackers!

Food Lust People Love: Crunchy, flavorful and more-ish, these sprouted spelt everything bagel crackers are a lovely snack on their own or served with a spread or dip.

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