Showing posts with label recipe. Show all posts
Showing posts with label recipe. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 19, 2013

Sweet Tooth Tuesday

Soooo, last week's sweet tooth attempt didn't pan out. In the event you ever want to try chia seed chocolate pudding... you've been warned.

This week I tried a single serving cookie. After the brownie in a mug my mom showed me a screenshot of this and I thought I'd better try it out. I didn't mean to have this series of posts centered on microwavable desserts served in mugs.. but so far these are a hit.

Without further ado, here is the single serving microwavable cookie saga.

In reading about the brownie in a mug, reviews said that the egg-less version was best. So I started with an egg-less recipe and jumped right in with a healthy version (whole wheat flour, sucanat).
First you melt the butter, then stir in the sugar and vanilla. Then you mix in flour, baking soda and salt. Now you look all around for your camera. I mean ALL around. Then you give up and just take pictures with your cell phone (this is your warning.. the pictures aren't pretty).



I got this:
Yikes. If you have a tongue that only tastes but doesn't feel texture,
then this is for you. Ya, I ate it.


So then I tried the same recipe but as written, with standard flour and sugar. I got this:

Looks a lot better but it was pretty firm. Ya, I ate it too.
So I thought I might have cooked it too long (I only cooked it for 40 seconds, but our microwave is hot). I decided to make it again and only cook it 30 seconds. I got this:

It's pretty good. Taste and texture are there but it was a little dry
and I had to add extra butter before baking. When the recipe says
1.5-2 TBSP butter and scant cup of flour... go with more butter
and less flour. It also got pretty hard when it cooled,
so 25 secs might have been plenty.

Just to be thorough, I tried a recipe with egg. It goes together pretty much the same, except of course the separating of the egg. I cooked it for 30 seconds and got this:

You can see the added yellow from our farm fresh eggs :)
I tried this one but Blake ate it.
Conclusions: Both the egg recipe and the final trial of the no-egg recipe are edible and cookie like. The egg-less one is a little finicky with the balance of moisture. However, I think that an entire egg yolk in one sitting is a lot. Now, egg yolks are extremely nutritious (particularly raw) but I think the flour and sugar cancel out the nutrition here and I wouldn't really count this as health food, even with the egg yolk. If you think about it, there are two whole eggs in a full batch of cookies.. so one egg yolk in one cookie seems like a lot. Plus then you have the egg white to deal with.

Blake tried both of the better versions and said that the egg recipe had better texture and was a little closer to a cookie, but the egg-less recipe was good too. No matter what, go on the underdone side of cooking times. Microwaves vary greatly and in my experience underdone is better than over done here.

Enjoy!

Tuesday, November 5, 2013

Sweet Tooth Tuesday

I'm not promising that I'll make this a weekly thing.. but I saw that title on another blog and I thought it was cute :). You might hate me for this.. but I have to share a little treat I discovered.

Single serving brownie in a mug. Bam.

I had the craving, thought there had to be a recipe, googled it, and had a warm brownie in my mug ten minutes later. Here's where I got the recipe.

It's so easy it is dangerous!

Ingredients:
2 Tablespoons butter, melted
2 Tablespoons water
1/4 teaspoon vanilla
1 dash salt
4 Tablespoons sugar
2 Tablespoons unsweetened cocoa powder
4 Tablespoons flour

Directions:
1. In a coffee mug mix butter, water, vanilla, and salt. Mix well.
2. Add sugar and mix. Add cocoa and mix. Add flour and mix.
3. Microwave 60 to 90 seconds. Allow to cool slightly before eating.

I've been making it with 3 Tablespoons of sucant instead of sugar and whole wheat flour to make it feel a little healthier.  Even with those changes it is still delicious, heavenly and rich. I also add a pinch of espresso powder, to bring out the chocolate flavor more. The first time, I made an unhealthy one for Blake and he approved that too (but on our second indulgence he agreed to whole wheat flour) :). Normally I try not to use the microwave because it kind of kills nutrients in food, but I'm not sure there's much to kill here!

The batter, just before getting zapped.

Steaming, right out of the oven microwave

You can see the fiber of the whole wheat.. see, it's practically a health supplement. 

Wednesday, June 13, 2012

Weeknight Tamales

I came across a recipe in the free magazine edibleSEATTLE while waiting for a ferry during our last visit to Bainbridge Island. I try to be careful with the amount of literature I bring into the house and hold onto because I have a problem with making piles of things that 'I'm going to read someday'.. but I don't know when 'someday' will ever come.

I decided to hold onto this magazine because of the cover photo and the recipe that went with it: Cheater Pork Chipotle Tamales. Making tamales has been on my list of foods to try making someday (there's that someday again). The thought of easing into the typically all-day process made me pretty happy.

So last night I gave them a shot. The author claimed these tamales to be so simple that you could make them on a week night and I decided to put it to the test. I will say that they didn't take all day, but they weren't a quick fix meal either. However, if you check "white - not of Hispanic origin" on a race/culture survey.. this is the tamale recipe for you!























The original recipe is in the link above, here is my version:
Makes 8 tamales (I doubled this)

Weeknight Beef Tamales

For the dough
16 dried corn husks
2 cups masa harina
1 1/4 cups boiling water
2 tablespoons unsalted butter, softened
1 teaspoon baking powder
1/2 teaspoon kosher salt
3/4 to 1 cup beef broth (use the liquid from the roast beef as part of this)

For the filling
1 tablespoon olive oil
1 small onion, finely chopped
3 cloves garlic, minced
1 12oz can roast beef
kosher salt and freshly ground pepper
1 1/2 teaspoons dried oregano
2  TBSP chipotle peppers in adobo sauce, pureed or minced (more or less to heat preference)*


Steps to do ahead:
Place the corn husks in a large pot, add water to cover, and bring to a boil over high heat. When the water boils, remove the pot from the heat, submerge the husks (a couple of ramekins or jars filled with water), and let sit for at least 1 hour (or longer if you're doing this in the morning). Drain before use.



In the work bowl of a stand mixer fitted with the paddle attachment, beat the masa harina and boiling water on low speed until blended. Set the mixture aside in the bowl until cool, about 1 hour, if longer - cover.



Make the filling:
Heat a large skillet over medium heat. Add the oil, then the onion and garlic, and cook, stirring, for 10 minutes, or until the onion begins to brown. While that cooks, drain the canned beef, reserving the liquid. Stir in the roast beef chucks and pureed peppers and adobo sauce, breaking the meat chucks up as you go so that it begins to shred. Taste the filling, and add more seasonings or adobo sauce, if desired. Set aside to cool. **you can also use ground meat instead of the canned roast beef, which is what the original recipe calls for**

We bought this at Costco to see what it was like.
It is perfect for things like this. 


Make the dough:
Add the butter, baking powder, and salt to the mixing bowl, and beat the dough until crumbly. On low speed, add 3/4 cup of the broth in a slow, steady stream—it should become smooth, like a thin cookie dough. If the dough cleans the sides of the bowl, add a bit more liquid, a tablespoon or two at a time, until the masa looks more like batter than like bread dough. {I don't have a photo for this because I did it wrong. I forgot I had doubled the recipe and only added one cup of liquid at first, then had to add more later because it just didn't seem anything like a batter. Moral of this story - it's hard to screw it up}

Make the tamales:
Choose the 8 biggest corn husks, and spread them out on dish towels, drying them a bit on the towels. Rip a few of the remaining long husks into 1/2”-thick strips. (You’ll use these to tie the tamales closed.) Divide the masa dough into 8 roughly equal sections, and dump one section onto the fat part of each husk. Using wet hands, spread the dough into a roughly 5” square, leaving at least 1/2” of empty space on the top and sides of each husk.

{I'm not going to lie here, and I'm probably not going to surprise any of you either... I weighed out the entire dough ball and divided the total grams by 16 (I made a double batch) so that I wouldn't have to roughly guess how much was supposed to go on each tamale. However, I only did this for the first eight when I had lots of dough. After that I did as directed.}



Spread 1/3 cup of the meat filling over the masa dough, in a strip parallel to the husk.



Working with one tamal at a time, fold the long sides of the husk together, so they touch, and tuck one side of the husk under the other, like you’re wrapping a present.



Next, fold the skinny end of the husk up and over the tamal, and tie it closed with one of the reserved husk strips. (Leave the remaining end open; this is the top.)

Pretty little packages, tied up with string corn husk

Pour about 2” of water into a pot large enough to fit the tamales upright. Add a steamer basket, a vegetable steamer, or a few small bowls and a small plate to the bottom of a pan—anything that will allow the tamales to steam without touching the water. Place the tamales in, tops up. (If needed, fill any extra space with crumpled aluminum foil.).

Steam for 75 minutes, or until the husks peel away from the dough neatly, adding a bit more boiling water if it gets low. Remove the tamales and let them sit, covered with a towel, for 20 minutes before serving.

Peel off the husk wrapper and enjoy with a side of mashed black beans and a healthy drizzle of hot sauce: my preference - Franks Red Hot; Blake's preference - Tapatio.




*Chipotle peppers in adobo sauce come in a can with whole smoked jalapeno peppers in a deliciously spicy and smokey adobo sauce. They are pretty hot and best used when you dump the whole can in a blender/food processor and strain the puree through a fine mesh sieve to get out all of the chucks and seeds. Use sparingly until you know how much you can handle. It's a bit of work but the flavor this strained paste provides is unmatched.

Thursday, May 24, 2012

Slow Cooker Ham Steak

I found another great slow cooker recipe that I thought I'd share. (The last one I found was from my friend Julie's blog, Slow Cooker Oriental Chicken - also fantastic and easy - try it!) I'm always looking for the kind that you can just dump in the ingredients, turn it on, and go. This is one of those recipes. It has been a very busy week and this was the perfect dinner to come home to.

Slow Cooker Ham Steak (source)

Ingredients:
1-2 pounds ham steak
1 tsp garlic powder
1 tsp salt
1/4 tsp pepper
1/4 cup brown sugar
1/4 cup tarragon vinegar
3/4 cup water
1/4 cup Worcestershire sauce
3 cans green beans

Directions:
Combine garlic powder, salt, pepper, brown sugar, vinegar, water and Worcestershire sauce in a bowl.  Poor a little in the bottom of the slow cooker.  Place the ham in and dump any remaining mixture over the top.  Drain the green beans and add them to the crock pot.  Cook on low for 10 hours.

My changes:
I used fresh garlic and I added fingerling potatoes - whole. I also put the green beans and potatoes in the bottom and the ham on top, but the ham got a little dried out. I think next time I'll put the potatoes on the bottom, ham in the middle and then green beans on top.

It was so delicious!! Sorry no picture, maybe next time ;) I was too busy eating it!

Friday, May 11, 2012

Strawberry-Lemon Puddings

For the record, I can not claim this recipe and therefore had no part in naming it. I got the recipe from my newest beach cookbook: Dinner at My Place. Here is an online copy of the recipe, which has the same picture as the cookbook and shows these made in cups or ramekins. To me, these are not puddings so much as they are little cakes. You can let me know what you think.  Here is my take on it.

I started by making my own lemon curd but the original recipe is intended to be easy and quick and calls for store bought lemon curd. Absolutely acceptable. Lemon curd is pretty easy to make, but should be done ahead. I wanted to make it so that I would have extra to give to a friend. Sorry... no photos but here's the recipe I use:

   1/2 c. lemon juice (about the juice of 2 large lemons)
   1 tsp. lemon zest
   1/2 c. sugar
   3 large eggs
   1/2 stick (1/4 c) butter, cubed

Whisk together zest, juice, sugar and eggs in a 2-quart heavy saucepan. Add butter and cook over moderately low heat, whisking frequently, until curd is thick enough to hold marks from the whisk and when the first bubbles appear on the surface, about 6-10 minutes - depending on your stove.

Force lemon curd through a fine-mesh sieve into a wide shallow dish, scraping bottom of the sieve, then cover the surface with plastic wrap (so it doesn't form a film). Cool completely, stirring occasionally if using the same day, about 30 minutes. If preparing ahead, stir before using.

: :
I would call these Strawberry-Lemon Cream Stacks



   2 cups strawberries, hulled and halved (I made these smaller, because I was making mini cakes)
   1 Meyer lemon, juice only (I only had a regular lemon)
   2 tablespoons powdered sugar - or to taste
      (I also added 3 Tbsp of granulated sugar, it was tart - probably because I used regular lemon).
   1 pint heavy whipping cream 
   1 cup powdered sugar, plus 1 tablespoon for garnish 
   1/2 cup store-bought lemon curd (see above)
   1 store-bought pound cake (yes, I totally used store-bought pound cake)

 

Cut up the strawberries into a size that suits your serving method. Save at least one strawberry to cut up for garnish.












Tricky, tricky. I learned that I can balance my camera on my
shoulder, set the timer, and take a picture with both hands.


Add lemon juice and sugar to strawberries. Mix and cook on medium low heat for 4 minutes, or until strawberries begin to soften. Remove from heat and cool.
Meyer lemons are a cross between an orange and a lemon, which results in a sweeter orangey tasting lemon. I'm sure this would have added a nice element to the dish, but alas, I forgot to get one.



 


Whip heavy cream in a large mixing bowl until soft peaks form.







 





Fold in the 1 cup powdered sugar and the lemon curd, a little at a time, until combined. Set aside in the refrigerator while you prepare the cake.









 

Preheat oven to 350 degrees F. 
Cut pound cake into 1/4-inch-thick slices (the rounds should fit snugly inside whatever you are serving these in). 
Break the remaining scraps of pound cake into coarse crumbs and toast on a baking sheet in the preheated oven about 5 minutes, until golden brown and fragrant. 





I was in a hurry to finish this and didn't realize these
pictures were turning out blurry. Sorry. This was the
least blurry, and you can mostly see the layers in there.


To assemble, start with a cake round, followed by some strawberries, and lemon cream. Add another layer of cake, strawberries and cream. Add a final layer of cake. Drizzle the final cake layers with syrup from the strawberries and then top with a swirl of lemon cream and some toasted pound cake crumbs. Garnish each cake with a reserved strawberry slice and dust with powdered sugar. Enjoy!

I assembled in a mini cheesecake pan with removable bottoms. Essentially using the pan as a mold.  





Saturday, March 24, 2012

The Way the Cookie Crumbles

In our family we have a cookie conundrum. With chocolate chip cookies, specifically. I grew up in a house with butter-only chocolate chip cookies. Blake grew up in a house with shortening-only chocolate chip cookies. Yes, now you see the conundrum.

Now, in my point of view, there are so many delicious desserts to be had, that the familiar chocolate chip cookie does not rank too high on the list. I like almost any dessert, from the old-fashioned apple pie to the pretentiously rich pot de crème and everything in between. The chocolate chip cookie, for me, is just another dessert among the masses and only has value if it is chewy-soft and butter-fatty delicious.

Blake, however, likes two things. Chocolate chip cookies and ice cream. Sure, he's broadened his palate over the years and will claim some new favorites like dark chocolate soufflé, crème brûlée and the Samoas Girl Scout Cookie (his choice, not mine.. the mouth wants what the mouth wants). However, the chocolate chip cookie will be, and always has been, his first choice. For Blake, the only real chocolate chip cookie is his mom's and every other cookie is just trying to be like it.

I think that we can all agree that while the chocolate chip cookie has some culinary merit, the primary value in a chocolate chip cookie for most people is nostalgia.

This is where the butter vs. shortening plot thickens. If you grew up with your mom making chocolate chip cookies with either form of fat, it is hard to fully enjoy a cookie that contains the other type of fat. There's just something missing, it just isn't like mom's cookies.

So in our house, Blake's cookie desires rule. It's just not that important to me (because really, I just eat the dough), so I make them how he likes them, or as close as I can anyway. There's still some mom magic that I can't recreate, and that's okay.

Yes. I did just talk about desserts and chocolate chip cookies for six paragraphs. That's how deeply the chocolate chip cookie conundrum has impacted our lives.

The real issue is this. Blake likes them how he likes them because it's how he grew up - nothing wrong with that - but I have a health conscience that takes issue with eating things filled with shortening and really want to find a cookie recipe that uses a less processed fat and possibly less sugar... yet still bakes up fluffy, soft and chewy (instead of melting out flat like so many butter-only cookie recipes). Something that I can get my kids hooked on and that will make their future families have their own cookie conundrum.

I THINK I HAVE FOUND THAT RECIPE and I am going to share it with you today, along with a few pictures, of course.

Best-Ever Chocolate Chip Cookies
(Recipe and directions directly from here)



Ingredients:
3/4 c. unsalted butter, softened
3/4 c. brown sugar
1/4 c. granulated sugar
1 egg
2 tsp. vanilla extract
2 c. all purpose flour
2 tsp. cornstarch
1 tsp. baking soda
1/2 tsp. salt
1 c. bittersweet chocolate chips

Directions:
1. Preheat oven to 350 degrees F.

2. In the bowl of a stand mixer fitted with a paddle attachment, cream together butter and sugars until fluffy and light in color. Add egg and vanilla and blend in. *(I did this by hand)

3. Mix in flour, cornstarch, baking soda and salt. Stir in chocolate chunks.

4. Using a standard-sized cookie scoop or tablespoon, drop dough onto a prepared baking sheet. Bake for 8-10 minutes, until barely golden brown around the edges. (The tops will not brown, but do NOT cook longer than ten minutes.)

5. Let cool, on the sheet, on a wire rack for five minutes. Remove from baking sheet and let cool completely. Makes approximately 3 dozen. Try not to eat them all.




And unrelated to cookies.. but just for good measure.. some photo experimentation from my first full evening of daylight on Friday night...







Saturday, December 24, 2011

Christmas Cookies

Blake and I both have a bit of Norwegian in us. It is really the only specific recognizable heritage that we both share. His grandma is also Greek and my grandma is Italian, and I'll claim a little bit of that too. However, the predominant cultural influence in both of our childhoods was the Norwegian. My grandma always made Lefse during the holidays and to this day I look forward to smearing butter and sprinkling sugar on that potato flatbread. Last year I tried my hand at making it myself.. turned out pretty good (if I may say so myself) ;).

I've been trying to make a new Norwegian dessert each Christmas. Last year I made små brød (small bread) that is kind of a scone dough in a pretzel/wreath shape. It was pretty good.

This year, thanks to my recent acquisition of a mysterious Jøtul iron during our most recent beach trip.
(Remember this?)
                        

Tonight, I put it to use! Through some research (Google) I discovered that this old cookie press is intended to make the following cookie:

Goro, also called Goro Kake

Ingredients:
  3 eggs
  1 cup sugar
  1 Tbsp. vanilla sugar (or 1 tsp. vanilla)
  1 cup whipped cream, whipped to firm peaks
  1 cup butter, melted
  1 Tbsp. brandy or cognac (optional - I didn't use)
  6 to 7 cups all-purpose flour
  1 tsp. freshly ground cardamom
  1/2 tsp. cinnamon (optional - I did use)

Preparation:
Trace a rectangular pattern the same size as your goro iron onto parchment or other paper; cut out. Spray goro iron lightly with cooking spray and heat, closed, over medium-high burner until a drop of water sizzles on the surface when opened.

Beat together three eggs, sugar, and vanilla sugar (or vanilla). Fold in whipped cream and melted butter. Stir in cognac, if using. Sift together 6 cups of flour, cardamom and cinnamon, then mix into batter. Add additional flour, if needed, until dough is very firm (it should be about the consistency of pizza dough).



Separate the dough into thirds, and roll each portion out on a floured surface to a 1/8" thickness. Place paper pattern on dough and cut squares the size of your goro iron.

Transfer each dough square to the goro iron, close iron, and cook the first side for 3-4 minutes, pressing the iron's handle together lightly to impress pattern upon the cracker (Note: keep a wet towel on hand to immediately wipe up any butter than leaks from the press). Flip iron and cook for an additional 3-4 minutes, until both sides of cracker are golden brown.




Transfer cracker to rack to cool; while still warm, cut into the individual sections and trim off outside edges (if desired). Repeat process with remaining dough (rerolling scraps as necessary).



These cookies originate from the 1700's and were considered an expensive cookie because of the specialty iron and all the butter, cream and sugar needed for the recipe. It was fairly time intensive and I can't say that I'm super excited to make these more than once a year! They remind me of a cardamom scented waffle cone. Kind of a cross between a sweet cracker and a cookie. Fairly plain and simple, but also elegant and tasty.

Wednesday, October 12, 2011

Soupe Oignon

That's French for onion soup.

On my drive to Pendleton I pass several onion trucks and pass countless more onions that have fallen from the trucks onto the roadside. Every onion I see makes me crave some French Onion Soup. So I finally made some.

Here's the journey:

Ingredients
1/2 cup unsalted butter
4-6 onions, sliced (purchased from a store)
2 garlic cloves, chopped
2 bay leaves
2 fresh thyme sprigs
Kosher salt and freshly ground black pepper
1 cup red wine, about 1/2 bottle (or chicken/veal stock if you don't cook with alcohol)
3 heaping tablespoons all-purpose flour
2 quarts beef broth
1 baguette, sliced
1/2 pound grated Gruyere

Directions

Prep and slice the onions.

Late Night Scones

I'm back at it with The Great Australian Pumpkin Recipe Book (the GAPRB).

I had some left over pumpkin puree from making ice cream and thought it was time for some pumpkin scones.

I had planned on making these for my monthly SLP meeting. All day I thought about it, a little concerned that I would be up late because I worked in Pendleton tonight. I walked in the door and... completely forgot I was supposed to make them. It wasn't until I was climbing into bed at 11:00 that I remembered. Now, I am better at staying up than I am at getting up... so I opted for making them tonight and going to bed late.

So here I sit, warm, fluffy pumpkin scone in hand at 1:00 am, waiting for them to cool enough to be covered.

Here's the recipe (adapted from the GAPRB and this recipe):


Pumpkin Scones
2 Cups Flour
2 tsp baking powder
1 egg
1 TBS vanilla
½ tsp kosher salt
¼ cup Plus 2 TBS sugar
½ cup ice cold butter cut into small cubes
½ cup chopped pecans save some for the top (optional)
½ cup ice cold pumpkin puree
½ cup of golden raisins (optional)
2 T cinnamon


For the glaze
2 TBS cream/milk
1 cup plus 1 TBS powdered sugar


For the spice drizzle:
1 cup plus 3 Tablespoons powdered sugar
2 Tablespoons milk
½ teaspoon ground cinnamon
¼ teaspoon ground ginger
1 pinch ground nutmeg
1 pinch ground cloves


Directions:
Cut butter into cubes and refrigerate until ready to use

Sift the flour, salt, baking powder and sugar into a large bowl

Cut the butter into the flour mixture with pastry blender until resembles coarse meal (or use food processor).

It looks powdery, but will hold its shape when squeezed.

In a smaller bowl whisk the pumpkin puree and the egg, and vanilla
My new favorite kitchen gadget. A tiny adjust-a-cup!

I added a little spice to this too - optional.

Add to the dry mixture mixing with a fork (or processor), and stir until just combined.
Careful not to over mix it.
Then gently add the nuts and raisins (if desired).
I made a double batch, so I ended up mixing it in a big bowl.
No nuts for me, just golden raisins.


Pour the dough mix onto a lightly floured board and pat into a 7 inch 1 to 1 ½ inch high disk.

Cut into in half then quarters and then in eights as evenly as possible.
Again, this is a double batch and I made minis.

Place the scones on a baking sheet with sil-pat or parchment paper – this ensures even browning on the bottom.

Bake at 375 degrees for 17 minutes and take them out, it’s easy to over bake them.
If making mini scones – bake for 15 minutes.

Make glaze by combining ingredients.


Brush on plain glaze when they come out of the oven.

Drizzle with spice glaze when they are cool (I put spiced glaze in a zip top bag and snip the corner). See this post about the spice glaze.

Pick the goofiest looking one and test it out for quality!

Mmm. So very, very pumpkin good!