We are all about doing cute things to keep our girls believing in the magic of youth and feeling special. So this is our latest idea. I saw THIS post on Pinterest about Valentine's envelopes and thought, "Why do that just in February?"
So we installed mailboxes for the girls right outside their bedroom doors.
I found the mailboxes in the dollar section of Target last year around Valentine's day. (On a side note: does anyone love Target's dollar section as much as I do? I always find something fabulous there.) So I bought letter stickers and put the girls' names on the boxes and then mounted them with "L" brackets. We didn't want the pointy ends of screws to be anywhere near the girls so we screwed the brackets into the wall and then hot glued the boxes onto the brackets. Worked wonderfully.
So Sweet and Charming and I now write notes, or do something special for them at least 5 times a week. We shoot for every day, but sometimes life just gets in the way and it just doesn't happen. :/
Any way, the girls just love them. They wake up in the morning and run to their boxes first thing. D even leaves little gifts for K during the day. :)
It also is really helpful on days where the girls....let's go with try our patience. This allows us to sit and really think about them and what they would like. It is really a great way focus on the amazing people they are and forget the silly things that really shouldn't matter.
:)
Wednesday, December 19, 2012
Monday, December 17, 2012
Christmas Treats (Part 2)
If you missed Part 1 of this post, you really need to check it out. That toffee is way too good.
But this peppermint bark? It is pretty amazing itself.
But this peppermint bark? It is pretty amazing itself.
Ingredients:
- 2 cups dark chocolate chips
- 2 cups white chocolate chips
- 8 peppermint candy canes
- Peppermint essential oil or extract (the EO is way better, but the extract is OK. It can make the chocolate grainy, though)
What To Do:
- Unwrap the candy canes and place them in a large Ziploc bag and seal tightly. Use a rolling pin to roll/smash the candy canes until they are very small pieces.
- Prepare a cookie sheet by covering it with smooth aluminum foil and either spraying it with cooking spray or brushing it with canola oil.
- Melt the chocolate in the microwave on HIGH in 30 second intervals. Stir between heatings to make sure the chocolate doesn't burn. Pour the chocolate onto the prepared cookie sheet and use an offset spatula or knife to spread it to the edges and an even thickness. Once it is smeared around, tap it on the counter to get is even and to get the air bubbles out. Place the tray in the refrigerator, or outside to firm.
- While the dark chocolate firms, melt the white chocolate as you did the dark. Once it is done add 5 drops of the peppermint EO or 1 1/2 tsp of the peppermint extract.
- Remove the tray from the refrigerator and spread the white chocolate in an even layer over the dark chocolate.
- While the white chocolate is still wet, sprinkle the candy cane pieces over the entire surface evenly. Press down very slightly to ensure they stick. Place the tray back in the refrigerator to firm up for 30 minutes.
- Once the peppermint bark bark is completely set, break into small, uneven pieces by hand or cut into squares. Make sure that the chocolate is set before you begin cutting. If it is not firm the chocolates with separate. No bueno.
Sunday, December 16, 2012
Christmas Treats (Part 1)
I am like probably every other person on Christmas Planet as I make food gifts for my neighbor's and friends during the holidays.
I usually make a few staple things. Molasses cookies, assorted nuts, and sugar cookies. For my sugar cookies I make the ones from Bee In Our Bonnet. I would talk about them here, but really there's no point. Ashleigh from Bee In Our Bonnet does such a great job with her pictures and details, that I just couldn't do it justice. Also Her cookie and frosting recipe is divine and probably one of the only recipes I don't mess with.
Anyway.... This year for treats I decided to do something different. My sister and I teamed up and she made the pecans (because I am allergic) and I did the others. I still did the sugar cookies. Mostly because Christmas isn't Christmas without sugar cookies. I also did biscotti, peppermint bark, and chocolate almond toffee. This post is about the toffee. The peppermint bark will be in Part 2.
I usually make a few staple things. Molasses cookies, assorted nuts, and sugar cookies. For my sugar cookies I make the ones from Bee In Our Bonnet. I would talk about them here, but really there's no point. Ashleigh from Bee In Our Bonnet does such a great job with her pictures and details, that I just couldn't do it justice. Also Her cookie and frosting recipe is divine and probably one of the only recipes I don't mess with.
Anyway.... This year for treats I decided to do something different. My sister and I teamed up and she made the pecans (because I am allergic) and I did the others. I still did the sugar cookies. Mostly because Christmas isn't Christmas without sugar cookies. I also did biscotti, peppermint bark, and chocolate almond toffee. This post is about the toffee. The peppermint bark will be in Part 2.
Ingredients
- 2 cup2 (4 sticks) butter, cut up
- 3 cups granulated sugar
- 2 tablespoon light corn syrup
- 1 cup chopped almonds plus 1/4 finely chopped almonds
- 24 ounces (4 cups) dark chocolate chips
What To Do:
1. Line a half-sheet jelly-roll pan or 2 15 x 10 x 1) with foil and either spray it with cooking oil or brush it with canola oil. In a medium saucepan, heat butter, sugar, corn syrup and 1/4 cup water. Heat over medium heat to melt butter. Increase heat to medium-high and insert candy thermometer.
2. Cook mixture about 12 minutes until golden brown and temperature reaches 300 degrees F. Do not stir. Remove from heat and remove thermometer.
(I used a pot that was *almost* too small. Be careful not to make this mistake!)
3. Quickly pour toffee onto prepared pan(s) and spread to edges with an off set spatula. The toffee sets pretty quickly so you will need to work fast. Let stand in pan on a wire rack for 30 minutes. The wire rack part is pretty important as the bottom of the pan needs to cool as well as the top.
4. Melt half of the chocolate in microwave on HIGH in 30 second intervals. Stir to smooth after each heating. Spread over top of cooled toffee with the offset spatula. Refrigerate (or put it outside in winter) for 20 minutes until firm.
5. Once firm, flip entire bar over onto waxed paper and remove the foil. Microwave remaining chocolate just as before. Spread over the toffee and sprinkle with almonds. Press the almonds gently on the the chocolate. Refrigerate 20 minutes more.
6. The chocolate needs to be very firm before breaking. If it is not firm, the chocolate will separate from the toffee. Break into 2-1/2-inch pieces. Store airtight at room temperature. It stays good for about a month. But it never lasts that long. :)
Thursday, December 13, 2012
Vegetable Shepard's Pie
This is a favorite dish of mine. It calls my name as soon as the temperature dips below 60. I hope you enjoy it as much as I do.
Ingredients:
- 2 pounds sweet potatoes, peeled and cut into 2" chunks
- 1 Tbs + 1/2 tsp salt
- 2 Tbs butter
- 2 Tbs olive oil
- 1 Large yellow onion, chopped
- 2 parsnips peeled and sliced into 1/4" thick pieces
- 2 medium fennel bulbs cut into 1/4" dice
- 2 cups brussel sprouts quartered
- 2 garlic cloves grated of pressed
- 2 Tbs chopped parsley
- 1/2 tsp black pepper
- 16 oz veggie broth (chicken is fine too)
- 3 cups spinach, kale or chard
- Pinch nutmeg
- 2 stalks celery sliced 1/4" thick
Put sweet potatoes in just enough water to cover them with 1 Tbs salt. Bring to boil. Reduce heat and simmer until potatoes are tender (approx 20 mins).
Meanwhile in a large saucepan, heat the olive oil over medium low heat. Add onion and cook for 10 mins. Add parsnips, celery, fennel, brussel sprouts, garlic, parsley, pepper, and remaining salt. Toss.
Add broth and increase heat. Simmer 15- 20 minutes until veggies are tender. Add spinach and stir until wilted. Remove from heat.
With a slotted spoon transfer veggies to a 9" pie plate/casserole dish. Drain the potatoes , add butter, and mash until smooth. Spread potatoes over the veggies. Broil on high until lightly browned (2-3 minutes). Sprinkle with nutmeg. Serve hot.
I tried to get a picture of this when I made it for some friends, but by the time I got the camera here's what was left. :-/
Wednesday, December 12, 2012
Chicken Soup with Matzo Balls
I think every family has a "sick plan". You know, the things that parents do to make their kids feel better. Well growing up my family's sick plan was matzo ball soup. My grandmother would have my grandfather make the soup for us. It was funny actually, because he was never allowed to make any food other than chicken livers and matzo ball soup. And boy how he made them. Now I don't make chicken livers. I leave that up to my Aunt Marcia. And I don't make my matzo ball soup from scratch (boiling the whole chicken and all). I know. I know. Alert the presses! There is something I take a shortcut with!!
But I just don;t have all day to make up soup especially if I have small people or Sweet and Charming asking to have it for dinner at 3:00 pm.
So here's my recipe. I call it chicken soup with matzo balls because I since I take a shortcut I can;t bring myself to call it matzo ball soup.
NOTE: There are 2 types of people in the land matzo balls. There are those that like "sinkers" and those that like "floaters". The difference is just like it sounds. Sinkers are matzo balls that are dense and sink straight to the bottom of the bowl. And floaters are light pillowy balls that...well...float. I am a floater.
The problem is that I always made sinker matzo balls. No matter how hard I tried. Sinkers they were. So last Spring Sweet and Charming and I went to a Passover Seder at the house of a long standing family friend. She has floaters. I picked her brain during dinner and behold!! Floaters. (Yay!!)
At long last, the recipe:
Matzo balls:Ingredients:
- 4-6 eggs
- Matzo meal
- Few pinches of salt
- 1/2 tsp Garlic powder
- 1 Tbs dried dill
Beat the eggs lightly with a fork in a bowl. Add spices and salt. Then you add matzo meal stirring lightly (think dragging your fork through the mixture, not really "mixing"). Keep adding matzo until it looks like slightly runny oatmeal. I know there is no measurement for the matzo meal. Sorry. But it depends on so much. The size of your eggs, the moisture in the air... So no measurement. Just keep adding in little bits until you get the slightly runny oatmeal. Then toss the bowl in the fridge and let it sit for about 30 mins. During that time it will firm up enough so you can handle it.
Wet your hands with cold water and form the matzo balls into small walnut size balls. These things plump a LOT when cooked, so be mindful of that when you decide how to big to make them. Then put them in a pot of salted boiling water and cook for at least 40 minutes.
While the matzo balls are doing the firming and boiling thing make the soup!
Soup:
Ingredients:
- 2-3 Tbs olive oil
- 8 chicken thighs (or 4 breasts- thighs taste better) skinned and boned
- 3 carrots, sliced
- 2 cups (or 1 large) onion
- 4 ribs celery, sliced
- 3 garlic cloves, minced
- 1/4 cup white wine
- Salt
- Pepper
- Oregano (optional)
- 6 cups chicken stock
- 1 lb dried egg noodles
Heat the oil in a large soup pot. Slat and pepper the thighs. Brown the chicken on all sides, working in batches if necessary. You do not have to cook the chicken all the way thorough, just brown it. It really gives the soup SO much more flavor. (I guess you don't have to brown the meat, but you're missing out.)
Remove the thighs from the pot and put it on a plate.
Add the veggies and sweat them for a few minutes. Add the garlic and oregano. Bloom for 30 seconds. Add the white wine and deglaze the pot. Reduce by half.
Add the stock and chicken pieces. Let simmer for 30-40 mins.
You can add the noodles and the matzo balls to the soup pot about 10 minutes before serving. I recommend cooking the noodles in a separate pot until they are just shy of al dente. Then add them to the soup pot just before serving.
Monday, December 10, 2012
The Amazingness of Kale
I love kale. Actually my whole family does. When I go grocery shopping D asks for kale as we go by the produce section. If for some reason we don't need it that visit (which is rare), K will cry and scream. It's a charmed life I live. :) My favorite time of year is at the end of the summer when the bunches of kale are enormous. It makes me happy.
There are also a lot of times I will be in line at the grocery store and people will ask me "What do you do with all that kale?" Here are my answers:
Side note- You can do all of these with collard greens, turnip greens, or chard. The turnip greens are a little spicier. :)
Side note- You can do all of these with collard greens, turnip greens, or chard. The turnip greens are a little spicier. :)
Kale Salad:
I love salads. Like really really love them. I was at a restaurant in Phoenix and had a baby kale salad with lemon vinaigrette. The following is my recreation of that. It is now one of my favorites.
- 1 tablespoon Dijon mustard
- 1/4 cup fresh lemon juice
- 1 1/2 teaspoons kosher salt
- 3/4 teaspoon fresh ground black pepper
- 1/2 tsp dried thyme
- 1/2 cup olive oil
- 1 tsp lemon zest
- 4 cups chopped fresh baby mixed kale
- 1/4 cup freshly-grated Parmesan
- Homemade croutons (optional)
Whisk together the mustard, lemon juice, thyme, salt, pepper, and olive oil. This will make more than you need for your salad. I make mine in glass bottles and keep it in my fridge.
Mix the kale, Parmesan, and lemon zest. drizzle dressing over and top with croutons. Yum-O!
Kale chips:
- 1 bunch kale, washed, stems removed and leaves cut into 1.5 inch pieces
- Olive oil
- Kosher salt
- Garlic powder
- Black pepper
Drizzle about 2 tablespoons of oil over the kale and turn to coat. Sprinkle with garlic powder, salt, and pepper. Lay out in a single layer on a baking sheet and bake at 325 for 20 minutes. They should be crispy but not brown. The single layer part is pretty important. If they are not in a single layer they won't crisp, and no one likes a soggy chip.
Also- The temperature really depends on your oven. The oven we had at our last house we baked the chips at 300. Here 325. So I would play around with it. Maybe start low and work your way up.
Kale Pasta:
This is my go to meal for busy nights when I don;t have time to cook. It is done in the amount of time it takes to cook the pasta. Dinner in under 15 minutes? Yes please.
1 pound penne pasta
2 tablespoons, extra virgin olive oil
1 a bunch of kale, finely chopped
2 handfuls of baby spinach
3 clove garlic, minced
1/4 cup sun-dried tomatoes, chopped
3/4 teaspoon, crushed red pepper flakes
2 tablespoons, extra virgin olive oil
1 a bunch of kale, finely chopped
2 handfuls of baby spinach
3 clove garlic, minced
1/4 cup sun-dried tomatoes, chopped
3/4 teaspoon, crushed red pepper flakes
2-4 Tbs white wine
1/4 cup Chicken stock
handful of toasted pine nuts
salt, to taste
salt, to taste
Parmesan for sprinkling
Start the water boiling for the penne. While the water heats heat olive oil in a medium skillet over medium heat. Add garlic and pepper flakes cook gently for about 30 seconds to let the spices bloom. Add the kale, spinach and salt. Cook until greens are wilted. Add wine and deglaze the pan. Reduce by half. Then add chicken stock and sun-dried tomatoes. Cover and let simmer until pasta is done.
Reserve 1 cup of pasta water. Drain pasta. If the veggie mixture needs more liquid add the pasta water. Add kale mixture to pasta. Sprinkle with pine nuts and Parmesan.
Friday, December 7, 2012
Sour Milk Pancakes
I hear you out there. With your nose wrinkled and a look of "gross". But would I lie to you? Have I EVER lied to you about food? Have I?? No. And I am not lying to you about these. So there.
These pancakes are amazing. They are light, fluffy, and soft. They are a little labor intensive, but so worth the effort. A little butter. Divine. A little maple syrup. Heaven.
The bast part is that one batch makes more than my family of 4 can eat. So I use the extra to make half dollar pancakes for the girls to eat on weekday mornings. It's pretty much a win-win. They get tiny pancakes and I can make sure they aren't eating food from a box that has ingredients I can't pronounce. I should thank my sister, who can thank her friend for the recipe. :)
Ingredients:
2 eggs, separated
2 cups (scant) milk
2 Tablespoons white vinegar
2 cups all purpose- flour
1 Tbps sugar
1 tsp salt
1 1/2 tsp baking soda
1/2 stick butter melted
What To Do
Put the 2 tbs of vinegar into a measuring cup. Add milk so it equals 2 cups. Let sit for ten minutes. Beat the egg yolks and add to milk mixture. Mix all dry ingredient together in a bowl. Add milk mixture and mix until dry is just absorbed. Try not to over mix. Add melted butter and mix again. Beat egg whites until stiff but not dry. Fold into batter.
Now this part is a matter of preference I put my batter in a old ketchup bottle. It makes it easier to make Mickey Mouse shapes, letters, numbers or half dollar size pancakes. It is all up to you.
A Twist:
If you are feeling fancy you can add chocolate chips, raspberries, or blueberries (or any combination) to these. Just pour the batter on the griddle and then add pieces of the desired item(s). Then flip them and viola!! A super yummy pancake! My favorite is raspberry chocolate.
What I do with the extra:
I put them on a cookie sheet and then stick them in the freezer.
Once they are frozen, I stick them in a bag and pop them back in the freezer. Then on a crazy Tuesday morning all I have to do is microwave them for 30 seconds add butter and maple syrup, and I'm done!!
Thursday, December 6, 2012
One for the Road...
I lost my job a few weeks ago. (This is recipe relevant, I swear.) Every week for the last 6 months or so I brought treats and put them on the end of a table in my cube for people to eat. I brought all sorts of treats: Rice Krispie Treats, Caramel covered shortbread, cream puffs, molasses cookies, and so many more. And I would always have a funny saying with them on a white board. This last one, the Cherry Almond Biscotti, simply said "One For the Road"
My biscotti is a variation of Anne Burrell's which you can find HERE. On a side note, have you seen her cookbook Cook Like a Rockstar? If you haven't, it is the greatest. Not a bad recipe in the bunch. If you need a gift for a foodie in your life, buy it.
Anywho- on with my version of the recipe:
Ingredients:
- 1 stick room temperature butter
- 1 cup sugar
- 2 eggs
- 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
- 2 cups flour
- 1 teaspoon baking powder
- Pinch salt
- Zest of 1 lemon
- 1/2 cup whole toasted sliced almonds
- 3/4 cup dried cherries chopped
- 1 cup dark chocolate chips
- 2 tsp coconut oil
What To Do:
Preheat the oven to 300 degrees.
Cream the butter and sugar until light and fluffy. Add the eggs 1 at a time mixing thoroughly between additions. Add the vanilla.
Mix the flour, baking powder, salt, and lemon zest in a separate bowl. Add to the butter mixture and mix just until it is combined. Fold in the almonds and cherries.
Divide the dough in half and roll into 2 logs. Roll the logs to the length of a half sheet pan. You either need to place them at least 3 inches apart (it spreads) or bake on 2 different sheet pans.
Bake for 30 minutes.
Bake for 30 minutes.
Remove from the oven let cool for 10 minutes. Move logs to a cutting board and slice with a serrated knife on the bias while warm. If you wait until they cool they will be too crumbly.
Put the biscotti back on the sheet pan cut side up and return to the oven for another 10 minutes to harden. Cool completely on a rack.
Put the biscotti back on the sheet pan cut side up and return to the oven for another 10 minutes to harden. Cool completely on a rack.
While the biscotti is cooling, melt the chocolate in the microwave or in a double boiler. Stir in coconut oil. Now you have 2 choices in your chocolate approach. You can dunk it in the chocolate if you want a heavy chocolate side. You can smear it with the back of a spoon (time consuming). Or you can drizzle.
I drizzle. Scoop some in a spoon and go back and forth over the tray of biscotti. This gives you a variety of chocolate covering. Some have a little, some have a lot. If you want to get really fancy, you can do half white chocolate and half dark. It looks smashing.
I also have done a blueberry version of these. They are sooooo good. I don't do chocolate on those, though. I brush the logs with egg white and sprinkle with turbinado sugar before baking. Really the possibilities are endless with these puppies.
I hope you enjoy them.
Wednesday, October 24, 2012
There's a monster in my soup!
I know. I know. I'm on a soup kick. But it's getting colder and as I've said before, to me Cold weather begs soups. The Munchkins love soup. They love the dipping, the spoons, and the fact that they can drink right from the bowl (which we reserve for soup nights and cereal milk).
What I love? Hearing KK say "soup". I know full and well that to others it will just be a little kid saying a word but to me it is a treasured auditory experience. I really wish you could hear her say it. Her little voice wraps around the word, but blends the sounds together in a way that I will never be able to replicate and my mommy heart will never forget. In fact, I may be on a soup kick just so I can hear her say "soup" over and over while we eat. Maybe...
Anyway...back to food. We have a soup that I found years ago through Better Homes and Gardens' 100 Days of Holidays e-newsletter series. If you haven't subscribed to this series, you should. It sends you an e-mail every day for 100 days starting from before Halloween to about New Years and gives you suggestions on food, decor, costumes, crafts, and much more. Parents magazine does one as well, so I actually get 2 emails every day. And while I HATE spam, I LOVE those emails. Wait wasn't I supposed to be talking about food???
Oh right! The soup. We call it Monster Soup because it is green and when my nephews were younger we told them we caught wild monster in Arizona and made them into soup just for them. I love how something that is totally gross to adults makes kids want to gobble it up.
Here's the original recipe
And here's what I do:
What I love? Hearing KK say "soup". I know full and well that to others it will just be a little kid saying a word but to me it is a treasured auditory experience. I really wish you could hear her say it. Her little voice wraps around the word, but blends the sounds together in a way that I will never be able to replicate and my mommy heart will never forget. In fact, I may be on a soup kick just so I can hear her say "soup" over and over while we eat. Maybe...
Anyway...back to food. We have a soup that I found years ago through Better Homes and Gardens' 100 Days of Holidays e-newsletter series. If you haven't subscribed to this series, you should. It sends you an e-mail every day for 100 days starting from before Halloween to about New Years and gives you suggestions on food, decor, costumes, crafts, and much more. Parents magazine does one as well, so I actually get 2 emails every day. And while I HATE spam, I LOVE those emails. Wait wasn't I supposed to be talking about food???
Oh right! The soup. We call it Monster Soup because it is green and when my nephews were younger we told them we caught wild monster in Arizona and made them into soup just for them. I love how something that is totally gross to adults makes kids want to gobble it up.
Here's the original recipe
And here's what I do:
- 1 medium onion, chopped
-
6 cloves garlic, minced, pressed or grated
-
2 teaspoons
dried Italian seasoning, crushed
-
2 tablespoons
butter
- 4 tablespoons
dry white wine
-
32 ounces
veggie broth
-
1 large
potato, peeled and chopped
-
1 pound fresh spinach, washed and trimmed (The big box from Costco is the perfect amount)
-
Salt
-
2 cups arugula
-
2 ounces
Parmesan cheese, sliced with a veggie peeler
- 2 small tomatoes, quartered, seeded, and thinly sliced
- Slowly add white wine and cook while stirring until reduced by half about 1 minute. Add broth and potato. Bring to boiling. Simmer, covered, for 10 minutes or until potato is tender. Remove from heat.3. Stir spinach, half at a time, into soup just until wilted. Cook about 5 minutes.4. Transfer soup, half at a time, to a blender; cover and blend until smooth. Return to pot and heat through. Season with salt to taste.5. To serve, top with arugula, Parmesan, and tomatoes.
Wednesday, October 17, 2012
We Have House Guests
We have new house guests. Fairy house guests to be clear. At least we think we have fairy house guests, We aren't sure they have moved in just yet. But we did find a fairy door and both girls are convinced that a fairy has moved in. Which, of course, was the whole idea.
Here's the scoop. We bought a door from our local hobby store (the lobby kind) and painted it white. We then glued door trimming around it and glued door furnishings on (also bought at the hobby store). We then used double side tape (of the 20 lb variety) to hold it in place. This is what it looked like in the end:
We then waited until the girls saw it and asked us about it. It took all of 24 hours for them to see it. And let me tell you, they LOVE the idea of a fairy living in our house. We told them that they couldn't pull on the door because fairies sleep during the day and don't like to be disturbed. If we bug them, they might get angry and move out.
Here is D waiting for the fairy.
And waiting...
And waiting.
I finally convinced her that it was time for bed, but she is determined to see the fairy. =D
The plan now is to begin decorating the fairy door for holidays and provide convincing evidence that fairies have moved in.
I can't wait!!! Don't worry I'll keep posting with updates.
Here's the scoop. We bought a door from our local hobby store (the lobby kind) and painted it white. We then glued door trimming around it and glued door furnishings on (also bought at the hobby store). We then used double side tape (of the 20 lb variety) to hold it in place. This is what it looked like in the end:
We then waited until the girls saw it and asked us about it. It took all of 24 hours for them to see it. And let me tell you, they LOVE the idea of a fairy living in our house. We told them that they couldn't pull on the door because fairies sleep during the day and don't like to be disturbed. If we bug them, they might get angry and move out.
Here is D waiting for the fairy.
And waiting...
And waiting.
I finally convinced her that it was time for bed, but she is determined to see the fairy. =D
The plan now is to begin decorating the fairy door for holidays and provide convincing evidence that fairies have moved in.
I can't wait!!! Don't worry I'll keep posting with updates.
Tuesday, October 16, 2012
When Mother Nature Gives You Fall... Make soup
Ah soup. It is the purpose of fall. OK. Maybe not THE purpose. But it certainly is one of the better parts of Fall and Winter to me. And after 7 years in Phoenix where "Winter" is a relative term, I am thrilled to be able to make soup and not have Sweet and Charming complain that the house is too hot.
During one of my many stints in food service I learned about soups. Glorious soups that intrigued the palate and satisfied the soul. One of my favorites is a Green Chilli Cheese Soup. It has potatoes at its heart and begs to be dipped with crusty breads. For those of you that are in a soup mood, here you go:
Green Chili Cheese Soup
2 Tbs olive oil
2 stalks celery
1 medium onion chopped
2 cloves garlic
2 medium potatoes peeled and chopped
1 cup of montery jack cheese, shredded
3 oz cream cheese
4 cups of chicken stock, or veggie stock
4 ounces fire roasted green chilies (mild)
In a large soup pot, saute the onion and celery over medium heat util the onions are soft, about 5 mins. Add the garlic and saute until fragrant about 45 seconds. Add stock and potatoes and boil until potatoes are tender (15- 20 mins depending on how small they are). Ad cheese and stir until it's melted. ad chilies and blend until smooth. Serve garnished with cilantro. Or if you are like my husband and the Munchkins, with bacon. :)
During one of my many stints in food service I learned about soups. Glorious soups that intrigued the palate and satisfied the soul. One of my favorites is a Green Chilli Cheese Soup. It has potatoes at its heart and begs to be dipped with crusty breads. For those of you that are in a soup mood, here you go:
Green Chili Cheese Soup
2 Tbs olive oil
2 stalks celery
1 medium onion chopped
2 cloves garlic
2 medium potatoes peeled and chopped
1 cup of montery jack cheese, shredded
3 oz cream cheese
4 cups of chicken stock, or veggie stock
4 ounces fire roasted green chilies (mild)
In a large soup pot, saute the onion and celery over medium heat util the onions are soft, about 5 mins. Add the garlic and saute until fragrant about 45 seconds. Add stock and potatoes and boil until potatoes are tender (15- 20 mins depending on how small they are). Ad cheese and stir until it's melted. ad chilies and blend until smooth. Serve garnished with cilantro. Or if you are like my husband and the Munchkins, with bacon. :)
Monday, October 15, 2012
Cookies!!!
My family loves cookies. But cookies from a bag or a box are not desirable to any of the other people that share my house (except Oreos. Oreos are always welcome... but not the birthday cake ones. Those are gross). What that means for me is that I have to make cookies. A lot. Now I do not have the time nor the energy to make a batch of cookies when the cookie fancy strikes Sweet and Charming or the Munchkins. So I make a bunch and freeze the unbaked dough in gallon bags. This way if someone wants a cookie or two all that has to be done is grab a few frozen cookie balls and throw them in the oven! I can be free of the kitchen in no time.
Not every cookie takes well to this approach. But here are a few of my favorites that I keep "in stock"-
Chewy Crinkle Molasses - makes about 18 cookies using my #30 disher
This is my #2 most requested cookie. (#1 is snicker-doodles, but those are a family recipe that I am not ready to give to the internet)
1/2 cup butter softened
1/4 cup molasses
1 cup sugar
1 egg
1/4 tsp salt
1 tsp baking soda
1 tsp cinnamon
1 tsp allspice
1 tsp powdered ginger
2 cups white flour
1/4-1/2 cup of raw demerara sugar (or large baker's sugar)
Cream the butter, sugar, and molasses on high. Add egg and mix well. Mix the spices, salt, baking soda, and flour in a separate bowl. Add the butter mixture and beat until incorporated.
Put remaining sugar on a plate and keep close at hand. Scoop dough and roll into balls with your hands. Then roll the ball in the sugar.
To bake: 350 degrees for 13-15 mins. Rotate them 3/4 of the way through for even baking. These cookies should be firm on the edges but soft in the middle. They firm up when they cool, so if they are firm when you get them out, they will be HARD when they cool.
To freeze: Put balls in a mini muffin tin (this makes sure they retain their shape and don't smoosh each other It also keeps them from rolling about while in your freezer. I can't tell you how many times I've had a cookie dough rainfall when I put cookie sheets in there.... Place tin in the freezer until the dough is hard (about 10 mins). Then transfer to a bag and freeze. They will last a few months in the freezer. The longest we've done is about 3 months and they were still great! Follow baking instructions above adding a minute of baking time due to the freezing.
Heavenly Chocolate Chip- makes about 2 dozen with a #30 disher
1 cup butter
1 cup packed light brown sugar
1/2 cup granulated sugar
2 eggs
2 tsp vanilla extract
2 1/2 cups flour
1 tsp baking soda
1 tsp salt
1 Tbs instant coffee granules
2 cups chocolate chips (dark chocolate is the best for this recipe, but semi sweet is fine)
Cream the butter and sugars on high. Add egg one at a time and mix well. Add vanilla. Mix salt, baking soda, coffee, and flour in a separate bowl. Add the butter mixture and beat until incorporated. Fold in the chips.
To bake: Put dough balls in the fridge for 10-15 mins. This will help them stay gooey and soft after baking. Then put them in a 350 degree oven for 13-15 mins. Rotate them 3/4 of the way through for even baking.
To freeze: Put balls in a mini muffin tin. Place tin in the freezer until the dough is hard (about 10 mins). Then transfer to a bag and freeze. Follow baking instructions above adding a minute of baking time due to the freezing.
Dark Chocolate Peppermint Cookies- makes about 2 dozen with a #30 disher
1 cup butter
1 cup packed light brown sugar
1/2 cup granulated sugar
2 eggs
3 tsp peppermint extract
2 cups all-purpose flour
2/3 cups cocoa powder
3/4 tsp baking soda
1/4 tsp salt
2 cups dark chocolate chocolate chips
Cream the butter and sugars on high. Add egg one at a time and mix well. Add peppermint. Mix salt, baking soda, cocoa, and flour in a separate bowl. Add the butter mixture and beat until incorporated. Fold in the chips.
To bake: Put dough balls in the fridge for 10-15 mins. This will help them stay gooey and soft after baking. Then put them in a 350 degree oven for 13-15 mins. Rotate them 3/4 of the way through for even baking.
To freeze: Put balls in a mini muffin tin. Place tin in the freezer until the dough is hard (about 10 mins). Then transfer to a bag and freeze. Follow baking instructions above adding a minute of baking time due to the freezing.
Hope you enjoy them!
Sunday, October 14, 2012
How You Know It's Loved
Many years ago I bought a cookbook. At the time I bought it because it was cheap (on discount at Borders) and it had pretty pictures. Little did I know that this random purchase would become one of my all time favorite cookbooks. It's Good Housekeeping Baking- More than 600 recipes for homemade treats (1999).
Well today, my cookbook died. It has been long in the tooth for sometime. The pages are worn and some stuck together from spilled extracts or remnants of frosting that jumps from the bowl as it gets mixed. But today it fell from its home on top of the fridge and shattered. I know. I know. It's a book. How can it
shatter? But it did. It hit the ground and nearly every page went splashing out all over the kitchen. So sad. See?
Luckily all the pages are still there and readable. But still, I am sad. My very sweet husband looked up the book to see if he could get me another copy (What a sweet guy! I am so lucky.). I told him no. There is something about this one, this copy. This book that I bought over a decade ago when my cooking skills were in their infancy. Something about my 19 year old self thumbing through this book and thinking of all the dinner parties I would have someday and treats I would make for my future husband and children.
I do not remember the exact day I bought this book, but I do remember wanting to fill my house with the kind of yummy food that invites sense memories and begs to become tradition. Somehow I thought that filling my kitchen with cookbooks could do that for me. What can I say? I was young.
Funny enough, I rarely use cookbooks now. Recipes at all for that matter. When I do they are more like guidelines or suggestions. I have gotten rid of most of my cookbooks as a result. But not this one. Many of the recipes in this cookbook (and a few rare other recipes) have been so good that there is no need to change them. In fact changing them at all would be a terrible injustice.
Maybe one day I'll want to get another copy. But not today. Today I will go through this old book page by page and tape it back together. Remember the times I've made the treats contained in its pages and look forward to the next time I bring it out with my Kitchen-aid.
For those of you that are curious enough to find this book here's a link to Amazon's page for the book.
For those of you that just want a really good recipe, here's the Fresh Berry Tart from page 248 (Yes this post was originally about brownies, but apparently I posted about that recipe already. You can find it HERE.) But don't worry, this Cream Tart is faint-in-your-chair good. I have never had anyone eat just one piece. Ever. Try it and you will know what Heaven in a pastry crust is like.
Please note: This is not a make in advance dessert. After more than 3 hours the cream seeps and the sugar absorbs into the berries. It still tastes AMAZING, but leaves something to be desired for looks.
For the crust:
1 1/2 cups of all-purpose flour
1/4 cup sugar
1/4 teaspoon salt
10 TBS COLD butter cut up (no margarine! Only real. life. butter.)
1 large egg yolk
1/4 cup cold water
Mix together the flour, sugar, and salt in the bowl or a food processor. Add butter and pulse until the butter is cut in and resembles coarse crumbs (you can also do this with knives or a pastry blender, but using a food processor is so much easier. Don;t use a blender though. It doesn't work. Trust me. I know.) Beat yolk and water together and add to butter/flour mixture. Pulse again until the dough just forms a ball. Shape into a disk, wrap in plastic wrap, and refrigerate at least an hour or overnight. (Now you can cheat a little here and put it in the freezer for 15-20 mins if you are in a rush. But if you do so, make sure your dish is pretty thin. This is not ideal, but life happens! The idea is that the dough needs to get cold so it doesn't get greasy.)
Once out of the fridge, let it sit on the counter for about 5 mins and then roll into a 14" circle on a floured surface turning often to prevent sticking. If the dough becomes too soft, put it back in the fridge to firm up. Place in a tart pan with a removable bottom and form to edges. A really easy way o do this is to run the rolling pin over the top of the tart pan. It will cut the dough right along the scalloped edges! So easy. Ifyour dough cracks, press it back together gently. Refrigerate or freeze for 15 mins. Then prick all over the bottom. Line the tart shell with foil, fill with dry beans or pie weights and bake for 20 mins at 375. Then remove weights and foil and bake additional 7-10 mins or until golden brown. Remove from oven and let cool.
For the creme filling:
3 large egg yolks
1/3 cup granulated sugar
2 TBS cornstarch
1 cup milk
2 TBS butter
1 tsp vanilla extract
1/2 cup heavy cream
2 cups each of blueberries, strawberries, and raspberries. ( I have also used: peaches, nectarines, and blackberries.
powdered sugar for dusting
Make sure tart crust is baked and cooled. In a small bowl, beat the egg yolks and granulated sugar with a wire whisk until blended. Stir in cornstarch and mix until smooth. in a 2 qt saucepan heat milk over medium heat until simmering. While constantly beating with a wire whisk pour about 1/2 the milk into the egg yolk mixture. Then pour the egg-yolk mixture back into the pan and whisk constantly until it has thickened and boiled. Reduce heat and cook while stirring for 1 minute. Remove from heat and stir in butter and vanilla. Transfer to a bowl and place a piece of plastic wrap directly in the surface of the pastry cream. This will prevent a nasty skin from forming. Refrigerate until cold about 2 hours, at least.
Up to 2 hours before serving, beat heavy cream until stiff. Whisk pastry cream until smooth and fold in whipped cream. Spoon pastry cream mixture into tart shell and top with berries. Sprinkle with powdered sugar.
:)
For the record, you may want to make 2. One for your guests and one for you to eat while hiding in a closet away from everyone else.
Well today, my cookbook died. It has been long in the tooth for sometime. The pages are worn and some stuck together from spilled extracts or remnants of frosting that jumps from the bowl as it gets mixed. But today it fell from its home on top of the fridge and shattered. I know. I know. It's a book. How can it
shatter? But it did. It hit the ground and nearly every page went splashing out all over the kitchen. So sad. See?
Luckily all the pages are still there and readable. But still, I am sad. My very sweet husband looked up the book to see if he could get me another copy (What a sweet guy! I am so lucky.). I told him no. There is something about this one, this copy. This book that I bought over a decade ago when my cooking skills were in their infancy. Something about my 19 year old self thumbing through this book and thinking of all the dinner parties I would have someday and treats I would make for my future husband and children.
I do not remember the exact day I bought this book, but I do remember wanting to fill my house with the kind of yummy food that invites sense memories and begs to become tradition. Somehow I thought that filling my kitchen with cookbooks could do that for me. What can I say? I was young.
Funny enough, I rarely use cookbooks now. Recipes at all for that matter. When I do they are more like guidelines or suggestions. I have gotten rid of most of my cookbooks as a result. But not this one. Many of the recipes in this cookbook (and a few rare other recipes) have been so good that there is no need to change them. In fact changing them at all would be a terrible injustice.
Maybe one day I'll want to get another copy. But not today. Today I will go through this old book page by page and tape it back together. Remember the times I've made the treats contained in its pages and look forward to the next time I bring it out with my Kitchen-aid.
For those of you that are curious enough to find this book here's a link to Amazon's page for the book.
For those of you that just want a really good recipe, here's the Fresh Berry Tart from page 248 (Yes this post was originally about brownies, but apparently I posted about that recipe already. You can find it HERE.) But don't worry, this Cream Tart is faint-in-your-chair good. I have never had anyone eat just one piece. Ever. Try it and you will know what Heaven in a pastry crust is like.
Please note: This is not a make in advance dessert. After more than 3 hours the cream seeps and the sugar absorbs into the berries. It still tastes AMAZING, but leaves something to be desired for looks.
For the crust:
1 1/2 cups of all-purpose flour
1/4 cup sugar
1/4 teaspoon salt
10 TBS COLD butter cut up (no margarine! Only real. life. butter.)
1 large egg yolk
1/4 cup cold water
Mix together the flour, sugar, and salt in the bowl or a food processor. Add butter and pulse until the butter is cut in and resembles coarse crumbs (you can also do this with knives or a pastry blender, but using a food processor is so much easier. Don;t use a blender though. It doesn't work. Trust me. I know.) Beat yolk and water together and add to butter/flour mixture. Pulse again until the dough just forms a ball. Shape into a disk, wrap in plastic wrap, and refrigerate at least an hour or overnight. (Now you can cheat a little here and put it in the freezer for 15-20 mins if you are in a rush. But if you do so, make sure your dish is pretty thin. This is not ideal, but life happens! The idea is that the dough needs to get cold so it doesn't get greasy.)
Once out of the fridge, let it sit on the counter for about 5 mins and then roll into a 14" circle on a floured surface turning often to prevent sticking. If the dough becomes too soft, put it back in the fridge to firm up. Place in a tart pan with a removable bottom and form to edges. A really easy way o do this is to run the rolling pin over the top of the tart pan. It will cut the dough right along the scalloped edges! So easy. Ifyour dough cracks, press it back together gently. Refrigerate or freeze for 15 mins. Then prick all over the bottom. Line the tart shell with foil, fill with dry beans or pie weights and bake for 20 mins at 375. Then remove weights and foil and bake additional 7-10 mins or until golden brown. Remove from oven and let cool.
For the creme filling:
3 large egg yolks
1/3 cup granulated sugar
2 TBS cornstarch
1 cup milk
2 TBS butter
1 tsp vanilla extract
1/2 cup heavy cream
2 cups each of blueberries, strawberries, and raspberries. ( I have also used: peaches, nectarines, and blackberries.
powdered sugar for dusting
Make sure tart crust is baked and cooled. In a small bowl, beat the egg yolks and granulated sugar with a wire whisk until blended. Stir in cornstarch and mix until smooth. in a 2 qt saucepan heat milk over medium heat until simmering. While constantly beating with a wire whisk pour about 1/2 the milk into the egg yolk mixture. Then pour the egg-yolk mixture back into the pan and whisk constantly until it has thickened and boiled. Reduce heat and cook while stirring for 1 minute. Remove from heat and stir in butter and vanilla. Transfer to a bowl and place a piece of plastic wrap directly in the surface of the pastry cream. This will prevent a nasty skin from forming. Refrigerate until cold about 2 hours, at least.
Up to 2 hours before serving, beat heavy cream until stiff. Whisk pastry cream until smooth and fold in whipped cream. Spoon pastry cream mixture into tart shell and top with berries. Sprinkle with powdered sugar.
:)
For the record, you may want to make 2. One for your guests and one for you to eat while hiding in a closet away from everyone else.
Monday, April 2, 2012
It's Coming To An End...
My time as a Stay At Home Mom that is. I've been home with my girls since June 10th. And it has been the best and (at times) most harrowing time I've ever had. I've gotten to see them all day, make their lunches, do art projects, sing songs, put them down for their naps. I've also been totally maxed out, touched out, near tears, and totally overwhelmed. But I love it. Every minute of it.
What can I say? I'm totally mixed about this. I know that I am a better mother if I work. Really I am. It's important for me to use my grown up brain and to engage in an intellectual way with other adults. I've known for a long time that I do better with my girls when I am working. But I just want to stay home. And there's the guilt...
I feel guilty about knowing that I'm better if I work. That I can manage their meltdowns and their personalities easier. I have time to miss them. I have time to do things with out them *literally* climbing all over me. But I want to be with them and I think, I think if I could fold them up and put them back inside me to take along, I would. I'm not sure how I'd manage my wardrobe or my body image, but I would.
Maybe I'm getting ahead of myself. I mean I don't have a job offer yet, just interviews. So the end is drawing nearer, but it's not here yet. Soon though. And sooner than I want it to be.
Sunday, January 1, 2012
The Enemy: Diaper Rash
My littlest miss has a diaper rash. The really terrible kind that makes kids scream every time they pee. It's terrible. I feel so bad for her.
A long time ago I had a small beauty and health product business. I made all sorts of things. My favorite to this day is the "Intense Moisturizer". I use it on my hands all the time. In the winter my hands get so dry that they crack an the skin across my knuckles breaks. Bah!
The other amazing use for this fabulous little lotion is for diaper rash and eczema. Things that happen around here pretty frequently.
Important note: Do not use essential oils for babies under the age of 6 months. Just leave it out, no need to substitute.
Ingredients
o ¼ Cup Cocoa Butter
o ¼ Cup Sweet almond oil (or Grape seed oil)
o ¼ Cup Olive oil
o 1 Tbs Beeswax
o 5-6 drops Essential oils
Melt the cocoa butter, almond oil, olive oil, and beeswax over a double boiler or in the microwave heating in 30 second intervals. Stir well. Add the essential oils and pour into an airtight container. It will harden together as it cools.
You only need a small amount for great results. It absorbs super fast and isn't greasy. Good stuff!
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