Posts from the ‘Food’ category

Almond shortbread

After I made the Pecan Pie Shortbread …and by the way, it freezes beautifully … I wanted to try a version with candied pecans. I found a recipe for oven baked candied pecans that I thought would work. Then I got to thinking about almonds.

So, while not as pretty visually and I still don’t have a tart pan with pretty fluted edges … the almond version is VERY good.

I modified Sue of The View from Great Island’s Pecan Pie Shortbread recipe by using 1/4 tablespoon of almond extract and 3/4 tablespoon of vanilla extract. For the almond topping, froth 1 XL egg white, 2 tablespoons of sugar and 1 cup sliced or slivered almonds – spread on the shortbread before baking. Per Sue’s recipe, I covered loosely with foil to keep the almonds from getting too brown, removing it for the last 10 minutes.

Maybe next round some red and green sugar lightly sprinkled to give it a bit of a Christmas look.

My kitchen helper this morning…

The last time he tried to use this chair as a jungle gym, it tipped over: crash, bang, boom and surprised Auggie! He’s about 9 1/2 pounds now and longer so the play chair has become the nap chair when I’m in the kitchen.

Happy Day before Thanksgiving and Hanukkah and safe travel to all on the move.

Pecan Pie shortbread and the ramifications of hunting

I like Pecan Pie.

I like a small sliver of Pecan Pie…more than a sliver is too rich, too sweet … for me.

I saw Sue of The View from Great Island’s Pecan Pie Shortbread .

I don’t have a tart pan but I DO have a springform pan…why, I’m not sure as I’m not a fan of cheesecake which is the usual springform pan thing…

Not as pretty as a tart pan…

But taste was not affected at all.

re the ramifications of hunting…as I was preparing this post, there was a commotion in the living room…and a mostly dead mouse…

Bear and Auggie were upset.

Bear was the mouser.

Still.

Death is upsetting – even to natural hunters. We all sat and I tried to assure both that we definitely needed to keep mice and voles and other rodents OUTSIDE. For all of our health’s sake. But, I do understand their upset. And I am glad that neither take death lightly.

Weekend cooking: Cranberry Marmalade and Homemade Marshmallows

This morning, the first real taste and jell test of the marmalade – a perfect batch. My last batch of marmalade jelled to the consistency of gummy bears. This batch I used the cold plate test as well as the recipe timing and stopped as soon as the mix jelled on the cold plate.

I really enjoy making small batches of jam or marmalade. I used 8 ounces of cranberries, 1 orange and 1/2 lemon with equal weight sugar getting 5 half pint jars with not much fuss and no giant canning pot. This marmalade was in the jars at 8:03 a.m. Sunday morning and the pots and implements washed by 8:30.

After Friday’s sunshine, a cold and wet front moved in and it is supposed to be some form of cold and damp for the week before getting cold enough to snow next weekend.

We are down to less than 10 hours of daylight with the first and last hours being fairly dim between the clouds and the low southern arc of the sun.

Perfect “puttering in the kitchen” weather!

Next up: Peppermint marshmallows

Homemade marshmallow recipes have been making the food blog rounds and I wanted to try. All of the recipes were for stand mixers with the whisk attachment – partly due to a 12 minute mixing time and also incorporating air into the mix.

I don’t have a stand mixer. I DO have a KitchenAid “ultra power” hand mixer. No whisk attachment but I can make meringue with it so thought I had a chance with the marshmallows.

I set up the work area with everything ready. Unflavored gelatin in water is sitting in the mixing bowl while a sugar, corn syrup & salt mix is heating on the stove. A zip loc bag is waiting to be filled with the mix which I planned to pipe dollops onto oiled parchment ala this recipe: Sue of The View from Great Island’s DIY Marshmallow Dollops

After the mix comes to a boil and reaches a temp of 238, it gets added to the gelatin-water mix and that’s when the 12 minute beat to stiff peak procedure gets under way.

I’d read several funny blog posts about how stringy, gooey and VERY sticky the mix is… well, gelatin, corn syrup and sugar = very sticky! One post had dire warnings about resisting temptation to try to scrape bowls, clean beaters or taste with a finger swipe because of the danger of getting stuck to everything and the futility of getting every last bit. Thankfully, they also all said not to worry as everything cleaned up easily in hot water.

I did fairly well. I dipped 1 little spoon in to try a taste and kept a bit of marshmallow souvenir on my upper lip :) !

The hand mixer did fine and I had stiff peaks at about 9 minutes.

Those blobs ??? – they are supposed to be the dollops.

I’m not sure if I didn’t mix long enough, if the hand beater did not incorporate enough air, if I had too large a snip in my zip lock “pastry bag” or ???

After my dollops became blobs, I regrouped and put the rest of the mix in a bread pan to be cut into squares.

Only a partial defeat.

I will try again if I ever finish all of the current batch. I made a 1/2 recipe and have quite a lot of marshmallows!

Flavor-wise and consistency of the squares, I am VERY happy.

There is another recipe, actually an adaptation of a 1998 recipe that uses egg whites folded in at the end, reportedly increasing the light and fluffy. I used a mix of vanilla extract and peppermint extract but there is a peppermint crunch recipe that might be fun to try also.

Hey, you guys want a marshmallow?

I guess not.

*** Edit 11/15 (5 days later): WOW, these got better over time and today, Friday, I am down to 3 left. Although I grabbed several to have a bit of sweet with a cup of tea, mostly I put them in a hot coffee/cocoa/milk mix and blended them. This makes a frothy, thick mocha. The gooeyness of the melty marshmallows plus their flavor makes a perfect mocha. I have tried various combinations of sugar, honey, agave to get the flavor and consistency I wanted. Marshmallows do the trick! And, I read that these freeze beautifully.

Clouds and other good things

Bear and I took a late morning run to town for dog and cat food!

The clouds…

The clouds and sliver of lake…

And the breakthrough sun on the golden larch pine trees!

Beautiful.

Other good things…

A full jar of Linda’s (Savoring Every Bite) Pumpkin Ginger Biscotti.

I’ve made these twice. They are subtly spiced and include pecans…perfect Fall biscotti.

Bits of snow have come and gone.

It has been cold.

It has been damp.

It has been cold and damp.

This time of year, the cold and damp feel colder than the dry cold of deep winter.

A fire in the woodstove.

Clouds, biscotti, woodstove fire: good things.

Three years of my daily “no knead” bread

A bit over three years ago, I made my first high moisture, no knead, artisanal bread.

Despite having made traditional kneaded doughs for over 25 years, the high moisture, no knead method was the FIRST time I was successful at making an artisanal crispy crusted, custardry crumbed bread…the kind of thing I had been paying $6.00 a loaf for!!!

Over these past three years I have enjoyed perfect bread, english muffins, grilled flatbread, pizza crust, bagels and pastries from simple mix and stir and store recipes from: Artisan Bread in Five Minutes a Day.

This past week a revised edition of the book was released and it is ON my Kindle Fire and with me wherever I go: The NEW Artisan Bread in Five Minutes a Day

Flatbread and boule: Peasant Bread dough

The crumb.

The golden larch and the blue sky.

The beardog.

Three years.

Oven bacon and sausage

I can’t believe it is Thursday already.

It is Thursday, isn’t it?

My week fell apart a bit on Monday afternoon when I suddenly felt bad, slight fever which led to not much sleep. A dental appointment on Tuesday morning and then I tried to work but finally gave up and went to bed. Wednesday was better and today I feel 100%, but now it is Thursday!

Anyway.

So, oven bacon.

I read about making bacon in the oven earlier this year. I LOVE this – was I the last to know of this? You put the bacon on a foil lined cookie sheet, put it in a cold oven, turn the oven on to 375 and 15-20 minutes later…BACON !!

AND, there is still some nice bacon grease to save for tortillas, frying onions, etc.

This worked in the motorhome gas oven as well. There is no splattering, no fry pan to clean and the bacon can be “baked” crisp or tender – whatever your preference.

This morning I was frying some of the sausage my folks sent me – my birthday and Christmas present. This is a wonderful spicy sausage that they hunted high and low for in Louisiana. I don’t know what’s in it and maybe I don’t want to know. I do know that I like it – a LOT. It is fully cooked and good cold, but I also like to fry it up a bit crispy for adding to soups, salads and pasta dishes.

This morning as I was standing there with fat flying, turning little circles of sausage… I got to thinking about the oven bacon and decided to try the next batch of sausage by that method.

Success!

The 2 batches mixed together – no difference except the oven batch method is hands off and cleanup is throwing away the foil.

Hoo – rah!

Auggie kept me company as I was experimenting.

This is the least blurry photo I’ve been able to take of him on this chair. He has been using it as a kind of “jungle gym”. I have to try to get a video. He goes to the top, hangs over, leaps down or weaves through the ladder back. And again and again and again.

I hope he, Bear and I survive his kittenhood…