This recipe is so easy because the chocolate chips melt on their own after you sprinkle them on top. There's no need to pull out the double boiler or risk the microwave to melt them. Also, the original recipe calls for pecans and that's how I usually make them, but I've made them with walnuts before and they were still delicious. I'm pretty sure they'd be great with almonds too. Peanuts might be icky though.
A blog about my love of really delicious food, surviving cancer, being a single mom, travel, reading, sewing, obscure references, and interesting tidbits.
Friday, November 30, 2007
Mrs. Eder's Toffee Bars
This recipe is so easy because the chocolate chips melt on their own after you sprinkle them on top. There's no need to pull out the double boiler or risk the microwave to melt them. Also, the original recipe calls for pecans and that's how I usually make them, but I've made them with walnuts before and they were still delicious. I'm pretty sure they'd be great with almonds too. Peanuts might be icky though.
Thursday, November 29, 2007
Baking with Grandma
Wednesday, November 28, 2007
Tahini cookies?
The Brain, who typically categorizes things as, It's good, or It's OK, or Can I have some more, didn't say a lot. I'm not worried though. Those are his fingers in the photo.
Lightly coat hands with cooking spray. Shape dough into 36 balls (about 1 inch each). Place granulated sugar in shallow bowl. Roll dough balls in granulated sugar; place 2 inches apart on baking sheets lined with parchment paper. Flatten balls with the bottom of a glass. Bake at 375° for 10 minutes or until lightly browned. Cool on pans 2 minutes. Remove cookies from pans; cool completely on a wire rack.
Tuesday, November 27, 2007
Thank God for Pork
Monday, November 26, 2007
Just Like Grandma Used to Make
* Next time I would definitely reduce this to 2 cups.
Sunday, November 25, 2007
My delicious oops
Saturday, November 24, 2007
Cracked Pepper Biscuits
But I'll gladly take a turkey carcass off your hands. Those turkey bones and bits and pieces left stuck to them are a flavor goldmine for making turkey stock and from that turkey soup. Now everyone knows how to boil the carcass for 3 hours with an onion, a bay leaf, some carrots, celery and parsley. And then strain it and add some noodles. The question then becomes how do you take your simple turkey soup and turn it into a meal?
Cracked Pepper Biscuits, that's how! These biscuits are really easy. They are light and flaky and buttery and just melt when you take a bite. The black pepper shines through and makes these have a little zip. They're not the kind of biscuits to eat with jam, that's for sure! There aren't any complicated ingredients either. I even put my coat on, went outside and found that my thyme plant is still alive and kicking despite the chilly weather of late. The only problem with them is that I keep eating them and the soup isn't done.
Cracked Pepper Biscuits
from the Bon Appetit Cookbook
2 Tbsp unsalted butter
2 Tbsp chopped fresh thyme
1/2 tsp coarsely cracked black pepper
1/2 cup whole milk
1 large egg
2 cups unbleached flour
1 Tbsp baking powder
1 tsp salt
3/4 cup chilled unsalted butter cut into 1/2 inch cubes
Preheat oven to 475°F. Melt 2 Tbsp butter in heavy small skillet over medium heat. Add thyme and cracked black pepper. Saute until fragrant, about 2 minutes. Transfer thyme mixture to small bowl. Whisk in milk, then egg. Chill until mixture is cold.
Blend flour, baking powder, and salt in processor 10 seconds. Add 3/4 cup chilled butter. Using on/off turns, process until mixture resembles coarse meal. Add milk mixture. Using on/off turns, process just until moist clumps form. Transfer dough to floured work surface. Knead just until dough holds together, about 6 turns. Roll out dough to 1/2 inch thickness. Using 2 inch biscuit cutter, cut out biscuits. Reroll dough scraps and cut out additional biscuits, until all the dough is used.* Transfer biscuits to large ungreased baking sheet.
Bake until golden brown, about 12 minutes. (Can be prepared 6 hours ahead. Cool completely. Wrap in aluminum foil and store at room temperature. Before serving rewarm unwrapped biscuits in 350°F oven just until heated through, about 8 minutes.) Serve warm.
I got 20 biscuits. The cookbook says it makes 16 and the recipe on Epicurious says it makes 12.
Friday, November 23, 2007
Leftovers and Shopping
In the tradition of the day after Thanksgiving, I also had leftovers for lunch. I had the Moroccan Stew over pasta because I didn't cook dinner yesterday and so I have no turkey. Well, that's kind of a white lie. I have a turkey breast in the oven now. I pushed about 3 Tbsp of butter with 1 Tbsp chopped fresh sage and 2 Tbsp chopped fresh parsley under the skin and salted and peppered it inside and out. Hopefully it will be tasty, but it looks like I'll have to wait 'till later to eat my turkey sandwiches.
And now for a nap...
Thursday, November 22, 2007
Happy Thanksgiving!
Wednesday, November 21, 2007
Maple Pumpkin Dressing
Tuesday, November 20, 2007
And now for something completely different
This week is your standard week of gluttony so I decided to go healthy. Of course, there's the old formula, vegetables = healthy. However there's a difference between iceberg lettuce and turnip greens. Iceberg lettuce is pretty much nutritionally decrepit. Turnip greens on the other hand are crazy healthy. They're high in Vitamins A, C, E, B6, Folate, Copper, Calcium, and dietary fiber. They're like my little spot of healthy in a week of mashed potatoes and sweet potatoes and marshmallows and pie. OK I'm totally busted again, I really don't like pie. It's kind of a double whammy, fruit and crust. Bleh. I do however like pumpkin pie filling and whipped cream. So the plate with just an entire piece of bottom crust on it is usually mine.
SO turnip greens provide one little point in the week where I can feel like I'm not slowly turning into Jaba the Hut. Well that and my Friday morning Spin class got moved to tomorrow morning so everyone else can go shopping, and I had to sign up for a Friday morning step class. So thank you Alton Brown for this delicious turnip green recipe, corny name aside.
Vlad's Very Garlicky Greens
Alton Brown
5 to 7 cloves garlic peeled
one clove garlic sliced
one clove garlic minced
enough olive oil to cover the bottom of a wide saute pan
1 bag turnip greens, cleaned and roughly shredded
salt and freshly grown pepper
Place saute pan over medium heat and then lightly crush the whole garlic cloves. When the pan is hot, add just enough oil to cover the bottom of the pan and add the garlic. Cook, stirring frequently until golden brown (3 to 5 minutes). Remove from the oil.
Thinly sliver the sliced garlic clove and add it to the pan stirring constantly. Once the slivers turn golden, add the greens and toss to coat with hot oil. Season with salt and pepper as soon as the greens start to wilt. Add the minced garlic during the last 30 seconds of cooking and toss the greens to distribute. Keep the pan and the greens moving constantly, if you can.
Serve as a side dish or toss with pasta and serve as a main course.
Monday, November 19, 2007
Maybe
Crock pot 2 Me 0.
Sunday, November 18, 2007
Stew in Fall- What a match!
Saturday, November 17, 2007
There's Always Next Year...
Friday, November 16, 2007
Yay Pumpkin! Vote for me!
Ah look at those delicious curlicues of pasta coated with creamy pumpkin sauce. So tender. So yummy. But first, a shameless plea for votes, and a teeny rant.
OK, so you remember the super delicious Thanksgiving Ice Cream Terrine? How the flavors meld so deliciously into a medley of fall ice cream flavors? Well, the roundup is up at Running With Tweezers. She's got eleven terrines there. I think they all look pretty spectacular, but there's a prize involved and I'm a sucker for a prize. So I urge you to go there and vote for me! (I'll never go into politics, so this is the only place I'm going to tell people to vote for me. It's a little weird.)
Now on to my teeny rant. I am no longer able to buy ground lamb here. I could buy it last week. But now my local grocery tells me if I want ground lamb I have to buy an entire shoulder and then they'll grind it all and sell it to me. That's a load of hooey. (Meijer doesn't have it either here.) So I called one of the local custom butchers around town and they told me they didn't know where I could buy ground lamb by the pound. They said they would sell me a half a lamb if I found someone else to buy the other half. But I don't have a deep freezer. Shoot. And I seriously don't know anyone out here who wants half a lamb. Where are the Jewish people out here? Or the Hindus? Middle Easterners? Anyone who eats lamb? Well if they're here I don't think they're buying lamb either. How annoying. Maybe next year I'll buy one at the county fair and have it butchered. Or maybe I'll try to convince the Brain's parents to raise one on their property. OK I'm done with my rant
Now the delicious pasta. This was not my original plan for dinner. Originally I had planned a ground lamb and peas Indian dish. But because of the problem with the grocer, I was suddenly planless. I hate being planless. Let's just say I don't function so well planless. SO with no meat thawed and already posting about spaghetti this week I had to scramble for something else to cook. Stoopid Nablopomo. So I took a look around my pantry and cupboards and realized I had some heavy cream, a can of pumpkin, an onion, and fresh sage. My sage plant that I repotted is not looking like it's going to pull through, so harvesting sage is a good idea right now. As an update, the parsley plant however seems to be hanging in there, and the rosemary is smelling up the living room in a good way.
But I digress, in actuality I'm a food hoarder, so I have ridiculous amounts of things like dried beans and canned beans and pasta and tomato sauce and pickles and canned tomatoes, but it sounds better if I say oh look I just happened to only have exactly the ingredients I need on hand! Anyway, this pasta is pretty delicious and creamy.
Creamy Cavatappi, Sausage and Pumpkin
adapted from Pumpkin: A Super Food for All 12 Months of the Year
1 pound bulk sweet Italian sausage
1 medium onion thinly sliced
4 cloves garlic minced
1 bay leaf
2 Tbsp fresh sage, chopped
1 cup dry white wine
1 cup chicken broth
1 cup canned pumpkin
1/2 cup heavy cream
1/2 tsp nutmeg
1/2 tsp salt
freshly ground black pepper
1 pound Cavatappi
grated Parmesan to sprinkle on top
1) Cook the sausage over medium heat for approximately 5 minutes until it is no longer pink and the remove from the pan.
2) Saute the onions in the fat left from the sausage for 3 minutes or until softened. Add the garlic and cook for another 3 minutes, or until the onion and garlic are soft and beginning to brown.
3) Add the bay leaf, sage, and wine to the pan. Bring to a boil, then reduce the heat. Do not cover. Simmer and stir to scrape up the browned bits until the wine is reduced by half, about 5 minutes.
4) Whisk in the broth and pumpkin and bring to a low boil while stirring. Stir in the cream, add the sausage, and cook over low heat for several minutes. Add the nutmeg, salt, and pepper to taste. Adjust the seasonings, if necessary.
5) Meanwhile cook the pasta until al dente. Drain and add the pasta to the skillet. Toss the sauce and pasta together while cooking over low heat for 1 to 2 minutes. Sprinkle with Parmesan cheese.
Disclaimer:
OK so I adapted some things here. It is probably better for your heart if you follow the way the recipe originally is written and brown the sausage in olive oil then wipe out the pan after removing the sausage and saute the onion and garlic in more olive oil. But really c'mon people. Does this look like a low calorie, heart smart meal? Puh Lease. This is as fattening as I cook. But like I said in the heretofore mentioned rant, I went with what was in the cupboards.
Thursday, November 15, 2007
Chocolate Cranberry Cupcakes
"At Ocean Spray we take a lot of pride in our cranberries. Only the best make it into our products. But how does one judge a cranberry? Well, we start by judging their color, size and freshness. And, surprisingly enough, by their ability to bounce. That's right. Bounce. You see, an early New Jersey grower, John "Peg-Leg" Webb, first noted this special property of the cranberry. Because of his wooden leg, he couldn't carry his berries down from the loft of his barn where he stored them. Instead, he'd pour them down the steps. He soon noticed that only the firmest and freshest berries bounced down to the bottom; the soft and bruised ones didn't make it. This led to the development of the first cranberry bounce board separator, a device we still use today, to remove damaged or sub-standard berries."
I didn't want to do your standard spice cake type cupcake, and I didn't want to just add dried cranberries to some average cupcake recipe. So I went fancy. The cupcake is chocolate Chambord cake with a cranberry puree filling and frosted with a chocolate ganache. It's rich. It's decadent. It is not the cupcake to eat at 7 o'clock in the morning. The ladies at Catholic Charities who were the happy recipients of a dozen of them gushed. The Brain was annoyed that I left with a dozen and didn't bring them into the office. These are cupcakes that are best served as dessert for dinner with a strong cup of coffee.
Chocolate Cranberry Cupcakes
Cake:
10 oz bittersweet chocolate, chopped
1 cup sugar
3/4 cup (1 1/2 sticks) butter room temperature
6 large eggs, separated
2 Tbsp Chambord
2 tsp vanilla
1/2 cup flour
1/4 tsp salt
Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Line cupcake pan with paper liners. Stir chocolate in metal bowl set over saucepan of simmering water until melted and smooth. Cool slightly. Using electric mixer, beat sugar and butter in large bowl 2 minutes. Beat in egg yolks, Chambord, and vanilla. Stir in cooled chocolate. Add flour and salt; stir to blend. Using clean dry beater, beat egg whites in another large bowl until stiff peaks form. Fold whites into chocolate mixture in 3 additions. Fill cupcakes papers 2/3 full. Bake for 20 minutes or until a toothpick inserted in the center comes out dry. The centers of the cupcakes will fall while cooling.
Cranberry puree filling
1 cup fresh cranberries
3/4 cup water
1/3 cup sugar
1 Tbsp Chambord
Bring cranberries water and sugar to a boil in saucepan over high heat, stirring until sugar dissolves. Reduce heat to medium; cook until cranberries burst, about 5 minutes. Transfer to blender; puree. Strain puree into bowl; discard seeds. Mix in Chambord. Cover; refrigerate at least 2 hours or overnight (sauce will thicken some).
Chocolate Ganache
7 ounces bittersweet chocolate, chopped
7 Tbsp butter, cut into 1-inch cubes, room temperature
2/3 cup whipping cream
Place chocolate and butter in medium metal bowl. Bring cream to boil in small saucepan. Pour hot cream over chocolate mixture; stir until mixture is melted and smooth.
To Assemble:
Once the cupcakes are cooled, fill a squirt bottle with cranberry puree. Insert tip of squirt bottle into center of cupcake and squeeze in about a teaspoon of puree. Spoon frosting into divot in center of cupcake and let cupcakes sit for 30 minutes to let ganache set.
Wednesday, November 14, 2007
Eh What's Up Doc?
Tuesday, November 13, 2007
Moody me.
Monday, November 12, 2007
Mmmm spaghetti
Spaghetti
Spaghetti, spaghetti, all over the place,
Up to my elbows - up to my face
Over the carpet and under the chairs,
Into the hammock and wound round the stairs
Filling the bathtub and covering the desk
Making the sofa a mad mushy mess.
The party is ruined, I'm terribly worried,
The guests have all left (unless they're all buried).
I told them "Bring presents." I said "Throw confetti."
I guess they heard wrong
'Cause they all threw spaghetti!
Friday, November 9, 2007
Sweet Dumpling Squash
I am a giant fan of easy. Sometimes a meal I can come home from work and stick in the oven and be done with it is right up my alley. So, when I was grocery shopping and ran across these cute individual sized sweet dumpling squashes, I was hooked almost instantly. OK, I admit, for about 2 seconds I thought ooooooh how cute would these be filled? But instead, I came home from work, cut off the tops, and scooped out the insides. The only filling these got was a pat of butter and some salt and pepper. I then stuck them in the oven for about 35 minutes at 350 degrees. They were perfect next to simple baked chicken.
I love easy.