Wednesday, May 30, 2012

Eggs Benedict!

I have always been a breakfast lover, which is too bad because my family doesn't do big breakfasts (now, that is - don't worry, Dad; I remember your huge made-to-order breakfasts on Sundays!) and also because I don't usually even have time to eat my favorite meal.  On weekdays, I grab a yogurt or some cereal in a baggie (and those are the good days); on weekends, frankly I sleep late enough to consider my first meal lunch.  So breakfast for dinner is a very appealing topic for me.

Imagine my joy when I stumbled upon a recipe for eggs benedict casserole! I love eggs, I love hollandaise sauce, and I love casseroles.  Apparently I do not love reading recipes before  I run out to buy the ingredients, because when I got home, I noticed that it said "refrigerate overnight."  Crap.  But my heart was set on eggs benedict, so even though the casserole is significantly easier, I decided to try the real deal.

I made the hollandaise sauce first.  Who knew that you could make something so delicious out of a few ingredients?  I did have a moment of panic when I thought I had ruined the sauce.  You have to whip together egg yoks and lemon juice, then put that over a double boiler and whisk melted butter into it.  If you let it get too hot, you end up making scrambled egg yolks with lemon juice, and I was 100% sure that had happened.  It looked gross: curdled and clumpy and so not like hollandaise.In the picture, look at the sides of the bowl.... that is what it all looked like! I kept whisking it like crazy, in sheer denial, and before my eyes it actually turned into thick, glossy hollandaise sauce!  I was thrilled.  And this was by far the best part of the meal.  You could taste the hint of lemon, and it was so buttery and rich... I will definitely be making this sauce again.

Then it was time for the eggs, and that was a bit tougher.  I am not a fan of runny egg yolks.  In fact, I am not even a fan of yolks themselves.  Dad used to make me my egg sandwiches without yolks :) So, traditional runny-yolk eggs benedict is not my idea of something to go with my amazing hollandaise.  I was planning on just frying my eggs, but Mom was in the mood for real deal benedict.  We decided to work together on poaching our first eggs!  It was certainly an interesting process.  We boiled water in a skillet, and cracked eggs into it!  Then we realized that resting slotted spoons in the boiling water helped the eggs stay a little more together, hence the crazy photo to the right.  Bizarrely enough, it worked!  We tried to poach mine a little extra, but it was still a bit runny. I will stick with eggs fried hard from now on, but Mom and Alex both liked theirs just the way they were!

Unfortuntely, traditional eggs benedict calls for Canadian bacon, which our local grocery store did not have, so I bought ham steaks and cut them up.  Not the prettiest thing in the world, but it did the trick.  I tossed them and buttered English muffins into the oven and broiled them, and then assembled our dinners. 

Like I said, Alex and Mom were both very happy with all parts of the meal.  Alex even had 2 helpings!  I wished my eggs were fried, but Mom and I loved the dinner too.  Rachael said she "wasn't sure" about it, but she has never been a big eggs benedict fan.  All in all, I would say this dinner was a success. 

Recipes:
hollandaise sauce
eggs benedict

Monday, May 28, 2012

Kitchen Extravaganza

Now that I am back, I am back with a vengeance!  I've really missed being in the kitchen, and I think it is obvious in the fact that in the last 24 hours, I have made 3 different things!

First, today Tuck and Linda came to visit! We have not seen them in months (damn Florida!) so this was a perfect way to spend Memorial Day.  Tuck is on a bizarre diet because of his diabetes.  Basically he cannot eat anything delicious: no breads, pastas, fruit, sugar - essentially my favorite things.  Apparently everything is full of carbs, and carbs are really bad for diabetes.  So feeding him is always a bit tough.  Kenzie and Mark were in charge of lunch - grilled chicken and salad (and baked potatoes for the rest of us!) and I was in charge of his request for dessert of a low carb cheesecake.  Little did I know that low carb cheesecake means you make your own crust out of macadamia nuts, and you use Splenda!  Blegh.  But I love Tucky so I did it :)  Even though that meant dragging out the ancient food processor that my parents got for their wedding 34 years ago to get the macadmia nut crust, or blending together cream cheese, mascarpone, and ricotta, or zesting an orange....  not to mention baking the entire thing in a water bath.  I had to find a roasting pan big enough for the spring form to fit in, and fill the pan with water, but make sure that I had wrapped the spring form with enough aluminum foil to keep the water out.  Apparently, baking cheesecakes in a water bath is a must because the gentle heat prevents the cake from cracking.  Mine still had little dents, but no cracks.  The end result?  Well, I might be biased because I was so repulsed putting Splenda in it, but Tuck enjoyed it, and weirdly enough, so did Kenzie.  Mom ate only the crust.  It was not as sweet as a regular cheesecake, but it was refreshing with the orange zest and triple sec.  Definitely not something I care to make again unless Tuck requests it, but I was happy to make him something sweet that he could eat :)
Water bathing!

Then I knew I had to make something for Linny, and I remembered that she, as an avid blog reader, often texts me when I have made something that she wants to try.  I scrolled though my texts and found that she wanted to try my strawberry shortcake cookies.  Those are fairly easy, and we had strawberries, so I made those last night as well.  They are just as delicious as they were last time.  We all agree they are more like scones than cookies, which makes sense because the dough is very similar to scone dough (like you use the pastry cutter to cut the butter into the flour and everything!).  I love these cookies; they are great for a summer lunch.

Tonight I had no plans to make anything else, but Linny needed my laptop for something.  I passed it over, forgetting that I had left open my beloved Annie's Eats blog.  She spied in the "recommendation" corner mac and cheese bites, and immediately asked why I hadn't made them yet.  Since Annie posted them Monday, I have been very intrigued by these, so I thought it was a perfect time to try them out.  They are easy and quick to make, and very delicious.  You'd think they would be dry, but they really aren't.  The recipe calls for Boursin garlic and herb cheese, but our little grocery store didn't have any.  I bought our local Smith Country Cheese's garlic and herb gouda spread, which worked out absolutely perfectly.  I also used whole wheat Ritz crackers in a half-hearted attempt to give some health factor to these babies.  With a whole stick of butter and 3 cups of cheese, they are far from healthy, but they are fine for a splurge every now and then :)  Unfortunately when I ran to the store for ingredients, my family called for Chinese food, so they filled up a bit before the bites were done.  I ate one, and it was great: so cheesy and gooey and delicious.  Lots of leftovers! The recipe said it yields 18, but I easily made 24.  Who wants to come over for mac and cheese bites?

Recipes:
low carb ricotta cheesecake
mac and cheese bites

strawberry shortcake cookies
from http://jessicaburns.com/2012/02/strawberry-shortcake-cookies/

Ingredients:
12 ounces strawberries, hulled and cut into 1/4-inch dice or sliced thin  (2 cups)
1 teaspoon fresh lemon juice
1/2 cup plus 1 tablespoon granulated sugar
2 cups all-purpose flour
2 teaspoons baking powder
1/2 teaspoon coarse salt
3 ounces (6 tablespoons) cold unsalted butter, cut into small pieces
2/3 cup heavy cream (if your dough seems really dry, I have added another 1/3 cup)
Sanding sugar, for sprinkling

Directions:
1) Preheat oven to 375 degrees. Combine strawberries, lemon juice, and 2 tablespoons granulated sugar.

2) Whisk together flour, baking powder, salt, and remaining 7 tablespoons granulated sugar in a large bowl. Cut in the butter with a pastry cutter, or rub in with your fingers, until mixture resembles coarse crumbs. Stir in cream until dough starts to come together, then stir in strawberry mixture.

3) Using a 1 1/2-inch ice cream scoop or a tablespoon, drop dough onto baking sheets lined with parchment, spacing evenly apart.  My dough always needs a bit more working, so I make balls with my hands.  Work quickly though - you don't want to melt the cold butter that you cut into the dough, so this way is not the best!

Sprinkle with sanding sugar, and bake until golden brown, 24 to 25 minutes. Transfer to a wire rack, and let cool. Cookies are best served immediately, but can be stored in an airtight container at room temperature for up to 1 day.

Sunday, May 27, 2012

I'm BACK!

Great news: I am no longer on death's door, and that means that I finally can get myself back in the kitchen!  It has been a long, horrible, salmonella- and parasite-infested two weeks, but I'm back!  As soon as I was eating again, I went right back to my long lost Kitchenaid Mixer!

Yesterday I made red, white, and blueberry cheesecake cupcakes.  I was in the mood for baking a dessert, and since it is Memorial Day weekend, I thought these were perfect.  Even better, they are actually low fat, from the Skinytaste blog (definitely one to check out if you want delicious but low-fat food!)  You use low fat cream cheese and Greek yogurt, and only 1/4 cup of sugar.  The bottoms are vanilla wafers.  They are really easy to whip together too.  The only problem was that they are supposed to be mini cupcakes, but I didn't have any mini cupcake wrappers, so I ended up making only 9 regular-sized cheesecake muffins.  I love them.  They are not super sweet, and the fresh strawberries and blueberries on top are so pretty and patriotic!  I definitly recommend these little guys.

Today is Alex's graduation party, and Rachael asked me to make something sweet to bring.  I looked through my dad's old recipe files, and found the recipe for Betsy's black bottom cupcakes.  These are famous in my family, and they were handwritten both by my mom (the directions) and my dad (the ingredients), so I thought that  was cool.  They were fairly easy to make, although you have to make the black bottom cake batter, and the cream cheese topping.  I added the nuts and sugar to some of them to make Mom happy.  The recipe is a little weird (it has things like vinegar in it!). 

They just came out of the oven, and it seems like something has gone a bit wrong.  I am not sure what, but the tops of the muffins taste chemically somewhow.  And it's only the very tops!  No idea that this means.  I am perhaps a bit rusty in the kitchen :(  Hmph.


Recipes:
red, white and blueberry cheesecake yogurt cupcakes


Black Bottom Cupcakes

Ingredients:
6 ounces cream cheese
1  1/3 cup cugar, separated
1 egg
1 cup chocolate chips
1 1/2 cups flour
1/4 cup unsweetened cocoa powder
1 teaspoon baking soda
1/2 teaspoo salt
1 cup water
1/3 cup oil
1 tablespoon vinegar
1 teaspoon vanilla

Optional nut topping:
2 tablespoon sugar
1/2 cup nuts

1.  Preheat oven to 350 degrees and line 18 muffin tins.

2.  In a small bowl, mix the cream cheese, 1/3 cup sugar, and egg.  Mix well.  Stir in chocolate chips and set aside.

3.  In a large bowl, mix flour,  remaining 1 cup sugar, cocoa powder, baking soda, and salt.  Add water, oil, vinegar, and vanilla.  Beat 2 minutes on medium speed.

4.  Fill cupcake tins with black mixture 1/2 full. 

5.  Top with 1 tablespoon cream cheese mixture. 

6.  Mix sugar and nuts and sprinkle evenly on each cake.

7.  Cook 20-30 minutes.

Sunday, May 20, 2012

Not Forgotten!

Hello dear blog. Just a quick update to explain my absence. I have not forgotten about you, but I've had a stomach bug for basically a week! I have been sick since Tuesday and not wanting to eat, never mind cook. I'll be back later this week I hope. In the meantime, browse www.annies-eats.com . She's my blogging idol and always has excellent recipes.

Monday, May 14, 2012

Southwestern Pizza

Tonight I finally got around to making the pizza that I planned on making last Thursday.  I bought all the ingredients last week, so I didn't have to run to the store (and that type of planning-ahead never happens, so it was  nice!).  I made the dough, which is actually two doughs, but like last week, I decided to use both in one pizza.  It makes for such a soft, puffy crust, and I didn't have the ingredients for two pizzas, so one big one it was!

The good news is that this pizza comes together pretty quickly.  You sort of make your own refried beans by mashing black beans with spices, and spreading that onto the pizza with red onion, corn, tomatoes (except I used them all in the salad yesterday, so no tomatoes for us), and cheddar and monterrey jack cheese.  After it bakes, you add fresh cilantro (my love) and an avocado cream sauce.  I added a tiny bit too much lime juice so my sauce was a bit too limey, but it was really refreshing.  Since it was sour, I didn't spread it all over the pizza like I was supposed to, but I dotted it on and left the bowl  out on the table.  I was surprised when my picky mother not only liked the sauce, but added more!  There aren't many pieces of pizza left, so I think it was a hit.

With the thought that I only have 3 Mondays left of work, I will hopefully be able to limp my way through this last week of MCAS testing.  Here's to warmer weather, and more time both sleeping and cooking! :)

Recipes:
pizza dough
vegetarian southwestern pizza

Sunday, May 13, 2012

Happy Mother's Day!

It has certainly been a busy few days, but never fear: I have not abandoned the kitchen.  I spent a lot of time in there yesterday, in fact getting ready for our Mother's Day party at Gram's today.  I have two recipes to share today: our family's favorite old pasta salad recipe, and a new lemonade cake!


2 colors of cake!
First, the cake.  I wanted to bake something for the party that would honor the moms, feed everyone, and look amazing.  So when my mom got her issue of Better Homes and Gardens and I saw the cover, I knew I had found my cake: the pink lemonade cake.  The cover shows a tall white-frosted cake with four layers, alternating light and dark pink in color.  It was beautiful, and lemonade flavored, so my mind was made up. 

The good news is that the cake looks much more difficult than it actually is.  It's flavored with lemonade concentrate and lemon extract.  It gets red food coloring added to make it a light pink; then you pour half the batter into a cake pan, and add more coloring to the other half. Once the cakes are baked, each layer is cut in half horizontally to make 4 layers (thanks to Mom for help with that!  I would have made a huge mess out of it).  The frosting is also easy, because it tastes like and looks like a meringue buttercream, but with a shortcut: there is no simmering on the stove,  no whipping egg whites.  It's made with Fluff, butter, confectionary sugar, and lemon extract!  Easy, tasty, and beautiful?  I like that.  And I am happy to say that the cake was a hit.  Most of it went, and I got compliments from everyone except my youngest cousin, whose complaint was that the cake was for girls because it was pink :)

Then I also made pasta salad this morning.  We make this salad any time there is going to be a big cookout, party, or any time we are craving a delicious and healthy pasta salad.  No gross mayonnaise here!  It's made with a garlic vinegar olive oil sauce - way better than mayo.  Mom got the recipe out of a magazine about a zillion years ago, and we've made it (and doubled it) so much that Mom even has notes written on it (like the fact that it's better when you add a shredded carrot, and that you can use chives or scallions).  She has even written the measurements for doubling the salad, which we do nearly every time we make it.   The best part about it is that you can exchange or add ingredients; for instance, it calls for black olives but since we didn't have them, I added green (mmmmm.)  Last time we had it, we added radishes.  Basically you can be creative.  Make this the next time you have to bring a pasta salad anywhere, and people will be pleasantly surprised.

My 2 contributions to the party
Happy Mother's Day to all you moms out there!  I am very lucky to have the mother that I do, and also to be the "mother" to two gorgeous dogs, one sweet mouse, and a tiny snail:)

Recipes:

Pink Lemonade Cake
from Better Homes and Gardens May 2012 Issue

Ingredients:
1 cup (2 sticks) butter
4 eggs
3  1/3 cups all-purpose flour
1 tablespoon baking powder
1/2 teaspoon salt
2 cups sugar
red food coloring
1 1/3 cups milk
1/4 cup frozen lemonade concentrate, thawed
1 teaspoon pure lemon extract
1 recipe Lemonade Buttercream (see below)

1.  Allow butter and eggs to stand at room temperature for 30 minutes.  Meanwhile, grease 2  9x2-inch round pans.  Line bottoms with parchment; grease paper.  Flour pans, tapping to remove excess.  Set aside.  In medium bowl, stir together flour, baking powder, and salt; set aside.

2.  Preheat oven to 350 degrees. In extra-large mixing bowl, beat butter with mixer on medium to high for 30 seconds.  Gradually add sugar, about 1/4 cup at a time, beating on medium until well combined.  Scrape sides of bowl; beat 2 minutes more.  Add 1/8 teaspoon red food coloring; beat to combine. Add eggs one at a time, beating well after each addition.

3.  In bowl, stir together milk, lemonade concentrate, and extract (mixture will look curdled).  Alternately add flour mixture and milk mixture to butter mixture, beating on low after each addition until combined.  Remove half (4 cups) of tinted batter; spread in one pan.  In remaining batter in bowl, stir in 1/4 teaspoon red food coloring.  Spread in second pan.

4. Bake about 35 minutes, until tops spring back when lightly touched.  Meanwhile, prepare Lemonade Buttercream.

5.  Cool in pans on wire racks for 10 minutes.  Remove layers from pans; discard paper.  Cool completely on wire rack.  Trim off domed tops of layers so cake is flat.  Cut each layer horizontally in half to create four layers.  Brush crumbs from layers.

6.  Place one dark pink layer, cut-side down, on a plate,  Spread 1 cup frosting just to edges.  Stack final light pink layer following by another dark pink layer, frosting each just to the edges.  Stack final light pink layer, cut-side down; spread frosting on top and sides as desires.  Makes 18 servings.



Lemonade Buttercream
from Better Homes and Gardens May 2012 Issue

Ingredients:
3 cups (6 sticks) unsalted butter, softened (no, that's no a typo... 6 sticks of butter. It's worth it.)
2  16-ounce jars marshmallow creme
1/4 cup frozen lemonade concentrate, thawed
1 cup powdered sugar
2 teaspoons pure lemon extract

1.  In very large bowl, beat butter with mixer on medium until light and fluffy, about 30 seconds.  Add marshmallow creme and lemonade concentrate.  Beat until smooth, scraping bowl sides.  Add powdered sugar and extract; beat until light and fluffy.  If frosting is stiff, soften in microwave for no more than 10 seconds, then beat until smooth.  Use to frost pink lemonade cake.

The Best Pasta Salad
(that is literally the name... and I don't know where it's from.  I am giving the original-ish recipe, with some of our additions [like the carrot].  You probably don't need Mom's notes about how to double it, but if you plan on it, use 2 boxes of pasta, and do not double the oil)

11 ounces small shell pasta
3 cloves garlic
1/2 pint yellow cherry tomatoes
1/2 pint red cherry tomatoes (regular tomates are okay too)
1 handful of black or green olives, pitted
2 tablespoons fresh chives (or scallions)
1 handful of fresh basil
1/2 a cucumber
4 tablespoons white wine vinegar
7 tablespoons extra virgin olive oil
sea salt and freshly ground pepper
1 shredded carrot

1)  Bring a large pan of salted water to a boil.  Throw in the pasta and cloves or garlic.  Boil until al dente.  Drain and run under water to cool.  Put the garlic to one side to use for the dressing. Put the pasta into a bowl.

2.  Chop the tomatoes, olives, chives, basil and cucumber pieces about half the size of the pasta and add to the bowl. 

3.  Squash the garlic cloves and mush in a mortat and pestle.  Add the vinegar, oil, and seasoning.  Drizzle this over the salad, adding a little more seasoning to taste.

Thursday, May 10, 2012

Happy News for the Andersons

Today, we have a lot to celebrate.  We found out that my uncle's lymphoma is in total remission!  With amazing news like that, there was an immediate need for a celebratory dessert. It took me a while to find one I wanted; I knew I wanted to stick with my favorite blog, Annie's Eats, because she's never steered me wrong .  I also knew I wanted cupcakes or cakes, because I felt they are more festive than cookies or brownies.  Lastly, I felt like a challenge; today the kids had MCAS and so basically I sat around all day watching them (struggle), and I felt an urge to prove that I am not a waste of life!  Hence, we have the caramel peanut-topped brownie cake: a chocolate, bowl-shaped cake, topped with homemade caramel sauce and honey-roasted peanuts.  7 paragraphs of directions could not frighten me tonight!  Although, maybe they should have...


Looks perfect... tasted awful!
Looks too light... but tasted perfect!
The cake itself was simple enough; with a little bit of double boiling action to melt the chocolate and the butter.  That went into the oven in no time.  Then the caramel... I followed Annie's directions perfectly, boiling the sugar, water and corn syrup without stirring, and waiting for the color to turn to "dark amber."  When the color matched the picture on the blog, I turned the heat down and added butter and cream like the recipe said.  I mixed in the peanuts, and voila!.... burned caramel sauce.  It looked 100% like the picture, and yet it tasted chemically and bad... and burned.  I was depressed, but refused to let the celebratory spirit leave me just yet.  In fact, if I may be honest, I had earlier loudly bragged that I enjoyed baking difficult cakes, so even though Mom urged me to just top it with whipped cream, I went to the store for more ingredients to try again.

If you every decide to make this cake, here is what you need to know.  Do NOT let your caramel turn the same color as Annie's picture.  If you do, there is a teeny tiny fine line between perfection and burned horribly.  The second time around, a nervous Mark forced me to stop boiling the caramel earlier than I expected; it was still lighter than Annie's pictures, but we did not want to ruin another batch.  Once I poured it on top of the cake, it still looked a little lighter, but I can promise it tasted better!  So even though my beloved Annie says not to be afraid to wait till your caramel gets dark, I'd have to disagree!
Success!  A lighter caramel color meant a MUCH better taste

As someone who does not love sweets, I actually didn't even try a piece of this, but I ate a bite of Susie's, and it's pretty great!  The cake is soft and fudgy and turns slightly caramel-soggy.  The crunchy peanuts on top are a great texture contrast to the gooey caramel.  It was a big hit, and I am really glad I made it for the Andersons tonight.  Congratulations, you guys!  Love you :)

P.S. In between baking cakes and making caramel sauces,  I also made my favorite pizza dough recipe.  Mark made the pizzas for me so I could focus on my rather involved cake! He ended up making one pizza with both doughs; it was so soft and fluffy and delicious!  Nice work, honey!

Recipes:
caramel peanut-topped brownie cake

pizza dough

adapted from Bobby Flay at foodnetwork.com

This recipe makes 2 14-inch pizza crusts

Ingredients:
  • 3 1/2 to 4 cups flour, plus more for rolling (Using bread flour will give you a much crisper crust.  You can substitute it with all-purpose flour if you want a chewier crust.  That is the type I prefer!)
  • 1 teaspoon sugar
  • 1 envelope instant dry yeast (or 2 1/2 teaspoons)
  • 2 teaspoons kosher salt
  • 1 1/2 cups water, 110 degrees F
  • 2 tablespoons olive oil, plus 2 teaspoons
Directions:

1) Combine the bread flour, sugar, yeast and kosher salt in the bowl of a stand mixer and combine.
2) While the mixer is running, add the water and 2 tablespoons of the oil and beat until the dough forms into a ball. If the dough is sticky, add additional flour, 1 tablespoon at a time, until the dough comes together in a solid ball. If the dough is too dry, add additional water, 1 tablespoon at a time.

3) Scrape the dough onto a lightly floured surface and gently knead into a smooth, firm ball.
Grease a large bowl with the remaining 2 teaspoons olive oil, add the dough, cover the bowl with plastic wrap and put it in a warm area to let it double in size, about 1 hour.

4) Turn the dough out onto a lightly floured surface and divide it into 2 equal pieces. Cover each with a clean kitchen towel or plastic wrap and let them rest for 10 minutes.


Tuesday, May 8, 2012

To Daddy

When your dad is sick, small artifacts from life "Before" become incredibly important.  Coffee mugs that are way too small to fit even a Keurig coffee do not get thrown away, because they say DIGITAL on them, and Dad got them at work.  Ratty old tee shirts from his old road races or business trips become our favorite pajamas.  And anything, anything, with his handwriting on it, is crazy precious!  We don't get to see Dad's chicken scratch anymore, so short notes, grocery lists, tax calcuations, and recipes become treasured artifacts.  Tonight it was time to take a closer look at the latter. 

Dad had hand-written a recipe for blueberry muffins, and I remember them being the best muffins ever.  A few years ago, when we stumbled upon the page, Anne had it framed.  It's a mess: wrinkled, creased, stained (like all of Dad's favorite recipes!  He was a messy chef.)  It says "add vanilla" but never says how much (I did a teaspoon).  It says to add the dry ingredients alternately with the milk, but never says to mix the dry ingredients together first (thank god I ama  baking pro these days!  A newbie would have struggled here!) And yet, this sheet of paper means way more than a flashy new cookbook.  I love cooking things that Dad used to cook for us.  It makes me feel like I really am his daughter :)

It would be easier for you if I posted the recipe with my amendments, and typed it all up nice, but I am not going to.  It will mean more if you make these using Dad's words :)  Love you Daddy!

Recipe:
Dad's blueberry muffins

Sunday, May 6, 2012

Crazy Weekend

This has been an absolutely crazy weekend.  It has been full of Red Sox, cooking, walking, company, and gardening.  Now I finally have a few minutes to update my poor neglected blog before dragging my exhausted self to bed (how on earth is it already Sunday night!?)

Friday night, I had Red Sox tickets.  I had bought them for Kenzie for Christmas, so we went with Mark and Nick.  It was a bit stressful, because the whole time, I was remembering that I had cooking to do to after we got home.  Saturday was our Cure is Coming event, and I had invited the team over for breakfast.  I had already made energy bites, and I hate yogurt made, but I wanted to make a casserole.  We ended up leaving in the 2nd inning due to my stress (and luckily - the Sox lost in extra innings!) and thus, there I was, cooking up bacon at 2 midnight.  I am not going to lie that I was stressed about being up so late and having to get up quite early, but it was worth it in the end!  My hash brown casserole was a big hit with Team Tony in the morning.  Shockingly, it was from Cooking Light, but it does not taste light, with bacon, low fat sour cream, and low fat cream of mushroom soup.  It is creamy and potato-y - two things I love.  It was a nice filling way to get Team Tony ready to go support out favorite charity!  My energy bites were also a huge hit; I ended up whipping up a second doubled batch later that afternoon!  They are chocolatey, peanut buttery, and have a great honey taste too (in fact, we are officially out of honey).  Two successful breakfast dishes down!

Today, I let Kenzie pick dinner and she chose Thai chicken enchiladas.  I am always interested in anything with fresh cilantro, and add coconut milk and you've got me intrigued.  The filling is chicken, cabbage, carrots, onions, garlic, green onions, peanuts, sweet chili sauce and coconut milk.  It tasted great, and I had a lot left over because I tripled it.  The only weird thing is that the enchilada sauce is a mixture of cocout milk and chili sauce, so it's very thin.  It makes for a rather mushy bottom half of the enchilada, since while it bakes, the top dries out, but the sauce kind of sogs up the bottom.  Kenzie couldn't get past the texture.  Surprisingly enough, Mark, Nick and Mom - the pickiest and most texture-aware people - liked theirs and ate them, so who knows?  Probably not something I'd make again, but we all agreed the filling would be excellent on rice, so maybe I'll make the insides again and skip the enchilada part.

Tonight I have another batch of yogurt incubating.  My last batch came out too watery because I did not have a big enough strainer, but I picked one up today, so it's yogurt time.  In other news, my gardening hobby, while starting to get a bit too expensive, is going quite well.  My herbs that I planted over vacation are growing up nice and strong, and today I planted the strawberry plants we bought in a strawberry pot.  I am thrilled to announce that one of them even has a pinkish berry!  Very exciting.  Soon I will be able to plant my tomatoes in the garden and move my herbs into the buckets I bought to keep them in.  I am hoping this was the last time I had to buy cilantro :)

Recipes:
hash brown casserole with bacon, onions and cheese
energy bites
Thai chicken enchiladas

Thursday, May 3, 2012

Cereal Treat Mania

This is turning out to be a ridiculously busy week.  I have a lot of things that all seem to be happening at the same time, and that did not hit me until last night, around 11 PM.  And then 12... and 1... and 2... and you get the idea.  I am crazy tired tonight, but had the kitchen calling my name!  I am still working on stockpiling food for the Cure is Coming on Saturday, so I worked on energy bites for that.  I also made two batches of a snazzy version of Rice Krispie treats!

I had seen a recipe for Trix Krispies (which to me are wrongly named... should be Trix Treats). They were so beautiful, I felt an instant need to make them.  Not like rice krispie treats were my favorite or anything, but with the colors and everything - so pretty!  The first batch was supposed to be for a wedding shower breakfast at work tomorrow morning, but Mom, Mark and Rachael ate so much of them that I was forced to make a second batch, and allow them to devour the first!  I am actually glad that I started over, because I decided that the original recipe did not call for enough marshmallows and butter; the treats were not sticking together well at all.  For my second batch, I kept the amount of cereal the same, but doubled the butter and marshmallows, and it came out much better.  I will confess that this may be a strange thing to bring to a shower, and they are gorgeous but look a little childish.... but I do think that as soon as anyone bites into one, they will be happy.  You forget how great  Trix are until you eat them!  Not to be outdone, Mark ran to the store and bought some random cereals of his own; hence we also have Captain Crunch treats from him tonight as well!

For the runners on Saturday, I also made energy bites tonight.  I thought it would be a good breakfast for runners, because they are healthy and will give them the energy to run!  They have things like ground flaxseed, honey, and oats in them, along with peanut butter, vanilla, chocolate chips, and coconut.  I mixed up the ingredients, put them in the fridge, and then rolled it into little balls.  Hopefully Team Tony will feel energized after eating a couple Saturday morning :)

And now: a much-needed good night's sleep, I hope!

Recipes:
energy bites

Trix Krispies
adapted from Cravings of a Lunatic

Ingredients:
4 cups mini-marshmallows
10 cups Trix cereal
1 stick butter

Instructions:

1)  Place the butter and marshmallows in a glass bowl and microwave until melted, 3-5 minutes.  You may need to stir in between microwave sessions.

2) Stir well, until mixed.

3) Pour onto the Trix, and stir.

4) Pour into a large greased pan (9 x 13 or 9 x 11) and press down with a spoon.

5) Cut into squares once it has hardened.

Wednesday, May 2, 2012

Dos de Mayo

I have been in a frenzy of yogurt creation lately.  Yesterday I made a double batch of it - which by the way cannot happen again until I get a larger sieve, because it was a little scary pouring the yogurt in there this morning.  Also I can't make any more until I get a new candy thermometer.  Mine took the whopping 4-inch fall from the side of my pan onto the stove and shattered.  Cheap crap.  I was a little heartbroken but I guess I will have to add that to my kitchen supply wish list, along with a larger strainer! Anyway, in addition to the yogurt, I also made another fruit mix-in last night.  I found in our freezer a bag of frozen berries: strawberries, raspberries, blueberries, and blackberries, so I made what I am calling the quadruple fruit mix-in.  Haven't gotten to try it yet, but I am looking forward to it tomorrow morning for breakfast with some of my new yogurt :)  My last batch was delicious, and the sauce and yogurt were both devoured in less than 24 hours!

Tonight, I had a plan for dinner, but couldn't find any of the ingredients I needed in Westminster, and I was too lazy to go to Gardner, so I changed my plan and went with Mexican lasagna.  I figured that, with the busy next three days I have, this is our last chance to celebrate Cinco de Mayo before the actual day!  We can call it Dos de Mayo.  I had made this before a month or so ago and it was a big hit.  It was a big hit tonight too!  It is really quick to throw together - and it has fresh cilantro.  You know how I feel about fresh cilantro.  Serve it with some Mexican rice and you have an excellent meal on your hands.  I highly recommend it.

Recipe:
from Annie's Eats, adapted from A Couple Cooks


Directions

1)  Preheat the oven to 400˚ F. Have a 9 x 9-inch baking dish ready. In a large bowl, combine the black beans, corn, green onions, cilantro, oregano, garlic powder, cumin, and salt.

2) Spread a thin layer of tomatoes over the bottom of the baking dish (approximately one fifth of the total amount). Layer with a 3-4 lasagna noodles, breaking them as needed to fit the pan.

3) On top of the layer of noodles, spread about one third of the bean mixture. Layer evenly with about one quarter of the remaining tomatoes. Sprinkle with one quarter of the cheese.

4) Repeat the layering process two times more (noodles, beans, tomatoes, cheese, noodles, beans, tomatoes, cheese). The last layer will be noodles, tomatoes, and cheese. Cover the pan tightly with aluminum foil. Bake 35-45 minutes, or until noodles are tender and cooked through. Remove the foil from the top and bake 5 minutes more, until the cheese is melted. Remove from the oven and let stand at least 10 minutes before slicing and serving.