Friday, February 6, 2015
EASY MOIST POUND CAKE
This cake is not only easy to make, but it is super moist and flavorful. It is great just to snack on, or for shortcake or even petit fours. When its cooled, it cuts beautifully.
3/4 cup butter (room temperature)
6 ounces cream cheese (room temperature)
5 eggs (room temperature)
1 1/2 cups sugar
1 teaspoon baking powder
2 teaspoons vanilla extract
1 teaspoon coconut extract (see note)
3 tablespoons milk
1 3/4 cups + 2 tablespoons all purpose flour
Spray a 9" x 5" x 2 3/4" loaf pan with cooking spray and then line the bottom only with parchment paper (waxed paper will work in a pinch) then spray the paper too..
In large bowl, beat the butter, cream cheese, sugar, baking powder, milk and extracts until smooth.
Add the eggs, one at a time, beating well after each egg. When the eggs are all in there, beat batter on high for 3 minutes.
Sift the flour, then add it (while the mixer is running on LOW) 1/4 cup at a time, beating only until the flour is well incorporated, but don't over mix.
Bake in prepared pan in pre-heated 350° oven for 70 to 75 minutes or until a toothpick tests clean. My electric oven takes 70 minutes.
Let the cake cool in the pan for 15 minutes, then run a knife around the edges and tip it out onto a cooling rack.
While the cake is still VERY hot, wrap it tightly with plastic wrap and let it cool that way. This makes a huge difference in the moisture any cake will have. I do ALL of my cakes this way.
NOTE: The coconut extract gives this cake a wonderful flavor (you won't taste the coconut) but it really adds to the vanilla flavor. If you don't have coconut extract, use the required 2 teaspoons of vanilla and 1 more teaspoon of your favorite extract, like rum, or orange or almond.
Friday, January 30, 2015
Requiescat in Pace -- Colleen McCullough
Colleen McCullough died on 29 January. She was Australia's best selling author, a neurophysiologist, and for us, a cookbook author. She was boisterous, witty, and more accomplished than most. So it was quite shocking and in profoundly bad taste that The Australian began her obituary, not with her remarkable gifts, but by stating she was "plain" and "overweight." Screw them!
Take a few moments to read our Famous Food Friday on Colleen McCullough from several years ago.
Take a few moments to read our Famous Food Friday on Colleen McCullough from several years ago.
Wednesday, January 28, 2015
The Great British Breakfast
There is a famous quote by Somerset Maugham about the British breakfast. He said, "If you eat well in England, you must eat breakfast three time a day." We are very fond of eating breakfast for dinner and while we do love pancakes at supper, the traditional British breakfast can top that. While the actual items on the plate vary, breakfast usually consists of the following:
A nice marmalade on the table for extra toast is a must. In fact, this edition of The Great British Breakfast was published in association with Frank Cooper, who most probably made the marmalade on the table.
Jan Read and Maite Manjon have written a good bit about wine, food and history, but in The Great British Breakfast they take a historical view of the English breakfast. If there was a prime period of breakfast, it was during the nineteenth century when country houses were flourishing. During the end of the century and into the very beginnings of the twentieth century, many cookbooks were published specifically for preparing breakfast. Some ideas for a proper breakfast for gentlemen included a menu of:
While men might never pass on a breakfast option, women were much more particular and required a lighter fare such as:
The Great British Breakfast is one of our favorite kinds of food books. It has a bit of history, a bit of story, and some recipes all mixed together. While the English loved a scone, a slightly different version existed in Scotland. While their potato scones featured boiled potatoes there was push for cooks to invest in a patented potato steamer. Steamed or boiled, potatoes are the key.
A far cry from the usual breakfast of -- coffee!
fried eggs
sausage
black or/and white pudding
bacon
mushrooms
baked beans
potatoes
toast
tomato
A nice marmalade on the table for extra toast is a must. In fact, this edition of The Great British Breakfast was published in association with Frank Cooper, who most probably made the marmalade on the table.
Jan Read and Maite Manjon have written a good bit about wine, food and history, but in The Great British Breakfast they take a historical view of the English breakfast. If there was a prime period of breakfast, it was during the nineteenth century when country houses were flourishing. During the end of the century and into the very beginnings of the twentieth century, many cookbooks were published specifically for preparing breakfast. Some ideas for a proper breakfast for gentlemen included a menu of:
Kedgeree of Cod
Devilled Pheasant
Broiled Ham
Mutton Chops
Eggs aux Fine Herbs
While men might never pass on a breakfast option, women were much more particular and required a lighter fare such as:
Broiled Salmon
Roast Larks
Eggs
The Great British Breakfast is one of our favorite kinds of food books. It has a bit of history, a bit of story, and some recipes all mixed together. While the English loved a scone, a slightly different version existed in Scotland. While their potato scones featured boiled potatoes there was push for cooks to invest in a patented potato steamer. Steamed or boiled, potatoes are the key.
Potato Scones
1 lb (450g) potatoes, peeled
1 teaspoon salt
1 oz (30g) butter or margarine
3-4 oz (80-110g) flour
Boil, drain and sieve the potatoes, Add the salt and butter and knead into a stiff dough with as much flour as it will absorb. Roll out to about 1/4-inch thick on a floured board, cut into triangles and prick with a fork. Bake on a hot greased griddle for about five minutes each side until browned.
A far cry from the usual breakfast of -- coffee!
Tuesday, January 27, 2015
OVEN POACHED EGGS !!
A dear friend of mine, posted a video (from Foodstyle.com)about
poaching eggs in the oven and I was quite intrigued. Not only can poaching eggs, in the traditional method,be a disaster be challenging but you can only make 2-3 at a time!!
Here is what I found:
The video said to put about a tablespoon of water in each cup of a regular muffin pan, then crack an egg over the water and bake at 350° for 8 to 10 minutes.........well, that ALMOST worked.
I DID use the scant tablespoon of water, and I DID preheat my electric oven to 350°, but when I tried it using a standard cupcake (muffin) pan, the egg + water filled it to overflowing and took a full 20 minutes to cook, not 8 to 10.
On my second attempt, I had excellent luck using a jumbo size muffin pan (I think they call them Texas size?) and I gave it a light mist of vegetable spray, then put in the scant tablespoon of water and a large egg. I baked them at 350° for exactly 12 minutes (not 8 to 10)
and they lifted right out of the pan with a spoon.....YUM!!!
poaching eggs in the oven and I was quite intrigued. Not only can poaching eggs, in the traditional method,
Here is what I found:
The video said to put about a tablespoon of water in each cup of a regular muffin pan, then crack an egg over the water and bake at 350° for 8 to 10 minutes.........well, that ALMOST worked.
I DID use the scant tablespoon of water, and I DID preheat my electric oven to 350°, but when I tried it using a standard cupcake (muffin) pan, the egg + water filled it to overflowing and took a full 20 minutes to cook, not 8 to 10.
On my second attempt, I had excellent luck using a jumbo size muffin pan (I think they call them Texas size?) and I gave it a light mist of vegetable spray, then put in the scant tablespoon of water and a large egg. I baked them at 350° for exactly 12 minutes (not 8 to 10)
and they lifted right out of the pan with a spoon.....YUM!!!
A PERFECTLY POACHED EGG !!
Whether you are making one or 30, this method (with my tweaks) really does work and it couldn't be easier!!
The difference in cooking time (between my oven and the Foodstyle video) COULD be that their oven simply runs hotter than mine or maybe they were using smaller eggs (?)With so many variables, I suggest you do a "test egg" to see how long it takes in your oven before you make a whole pan of these.
One other note: When your eggs are done to your liking, take them OUT OF THE PAN right away or they will continue to cook.
Don't you just want to
dunk your toast in this one?
ENJOY !!!
Monday, January 26, 2015
Food For The Greedy
An oldie goldie on this snowy day. Not only is this book old, but it is a reprint of an even older version. Why Nancy Shaw chose to title this cookbook Food for the Greedy is beyond me. She states in her introduction:
The very first recipe in the book is for a dish called Potassium Soup. This hardly sounds like a dish served for some greedy foodie. It also calls for canned okra. I can honestly say that I have never seen canned okra, but, in my defense, I rarely spend time in the canned vegetable isle of the grocery. I was so interested that I checked to see if there was still such a thing as canned okra. To my surprise, there is indeed canned okra and now I feel obliged to buy a can for my own edification, but I digress...
Well, it turns out that "Okra" can be bought at good class grocers who stock less well known canned goods or at Amazon. Clearly, with the help of Amazon we can all be greedy!
The receipts which I have assembled in this small book are ones which I use regularly in my own home. I think that, at any rate, half of the receipts could not be met with elsewhere, as I have collected them for many years, from many people, in many lands.They are indeed as strange mix of recipes culled from a lifetime of thinking about food. The Cambridge Guide to Women's Writing in English posits that food writing or cookbooks, as one would think about them today, began in the 1920's. During this period, society ladies began to organize their recipes into collections and they often wrote columns in local papers. Cambridge is quick to point out that virtually none of these women could actually cook. This was a trend that continued through the 1930's when Food for the Greedy was originally published.
The very first recipe in the book is for a dish called Potassium Soup. This hardly sounds like a dish served for some greedy foodie. It also calls for canned okra. I can honestly say that I have never seen canned okra, but, in my defense, I rarely spend time in the canned vegetable isle of the grocery. I was so interested that I checked to see if there was still such a thing as canned okra. To my surprise, there is indeed canned okra and now I feel obliged to buy a can for my own edification, but I digress...
Potassium Soup
Cut up small: 3 carrots, 2 onions, 1 large head of celery, 1/2 can of okra and one kernel of garlic, and place them in 2 quarts of water. Boil for 17 minutes. Then add one handful of parsley and one green pepper, and boil again for 7 minutes. Add a large tin of tomatoes and boil up again. Strain through a sieve to the desired thickness.
American receipt, said to ensure longevity!
The "Okra" can be bought at good class grocers who stock less well known canned goods.
Well, it turns out that "Okra" can be bought at good class grocers who stock less well known canned goods or at Amazon. Clearly, with the help of Amazon we can all be greedy!
Sunday, January 25, 2015
Death & Co
Death & Co is how I have been feeling lately, but I won't bore you with the details. But I will try to start posting on a regular basis.
So Death & Co was a Christmas gift. Every year my friend, Ann, goes to my Amazon Wish List and buys me cookbooks. But in the last few years, she has also gone a bit rogue by choosing an extra book she pick on her own. This year, that book was Death & Co.
When I opened it, I told her that I was, indeed glad to get the book. It had sold out at many bookstores shortly before Christmas and was quite a find. Ann said proudly, "I know you like books about offal." Now here was a dilemma. Do I say but this is not a book about offal, it's a cocktail book? Do I ignore the comment? Does it matter?
Not really. While Ann loves to eat, she is not a big cook, so it really didn't matter. "It's a cocktail book," I said and Ann seemed pleased as she will drink cocktails but won't eat offal, so it was kind of a "win/win" for both of us.
Death & Co is the cocktail book from the bar of the same name. It has been that IT place to go in New York for grand chefs, hipster dudes, and other mere mortals. The reason that there is so much respect for this bar is because they know their stuff. David Kaplan, Alex Day, and Nick Fauchald have committed to paper the aesthetics of the bar.
In the old days of cocktails, a gin and tonic was a gin and tonic. Now days, there are hundreds of gins and more than a few different tonics. (As the owner of over 15 gins and and a handful of tonic options, let me just say how happy I am about the proliferation of independent spirits, but I digress....) Today's world is filled with craft spirits, each having its own taste and flavor. Add hundreds of new spirits to an equal number of new bitters and mixers and cocktails are exploding every where.
Death & Co like a good cocktail offers up a base of history, a bit of technique, a dash of science and mixes it together into a cocktail book that will stand the test of time. Yes, fifty years from now, your grandchildren will be thumbing your old copy of Death & Co in their first apartment in Brooklyn...or probably Hoboken, as Brooklyn is already too expensive for you to live there! The real question is how many of these specific "craft" spirits will still be here fifty years form now or even ten years from now?
My very favorite of all time gin, Veranda, had only a brief run over a decade ago in Vermont. It was before every other disgruntled business owner opened a distillery. It was before anyone ever mentioned craft spirits or cared that much about cocktails. Still, it was sublime. Then it was gone. What makes Death & Co such a comprehensive work, its detail to specific ingredients, might just be the death of the book in the future. So before we lose this wealth of glorious ingredients, get out there and have a drink. While you may not be able to afford Brooklyn, you may be able to still drink one.
Brooklyn
2 ounces Rittenhouse 100 Rye
3/4 ounce Dolin Dry Vermouth
1/4 ounce Amaro Ciociaro
1 teaspoon Luxardo Maraschino Liqueur
Stir all the ingredients over ice, then strain into a coupe. No garnish
Friday, January 23, 2015
PEANUT BUTTER ECLAIR CAKE
The Éclair Cake idea has been around for years. It is a magical dessert that starts with pudding mix and graham crackers, and when it sits in the fridge overnight, something magical happens. The graham cracker layer "softens" and sort of turns into a "cake" layer (people are shocked when they find out its just graham crackers). The whole thing is delicious and I've made it a billion times. But todays post is a new and simple twist to the Éclair Cake: peanut butter!!
Yes, peanut butter is mixed into the pudding and it takes this simple dessert in a whole different direction. The next time I make this variation, I will use chocolate graham crackers (I only had regular ones this time)....you've gotta give this one a try.
(2) 3½ ounce instant vanilla pudding
1 cup creamy style peanut butter
8 ounce Cool Whip thawed
3 cups of milk
1 pound of graham crackers
CHOCOLATE FROSTING
6 tablespoons butter (melted)
6 tablespoons boiling water
6 tablespoons baking cocoa
2 cups powdered sugar
1 teaspoon vanilla
Place a single layer of graham crackers in the bottom of a 9x13 dish (breaking to fit if necessary). With an electric mixer, beat the instant pudding, peanut butter with 3 cups milk until very smooth (about 2 minutes) then fold in the Cool Whip. Immediately pour half of this mixture over the 1st layer of graham crackers, spreading it out evenly.
Put another layer of graham crackers on top of the pudding and then another layer of pudding mixture. Top second layer of pudding with a final layer of graham crackers.
Cover the dish tightly, with plastic wrap, and refrigerate for about an hour before you frost it.
After an hour of chilling, whisk together the melted butter, boiling water, cocoa and vanilla until well blended. Add powdered sugar and whisk until smooth. Immediately pour the frosting over the chilled pudding dessert and gently smooth it out.
Place dessert (uncovered) in fridge for an hour or so (until the frosting feels dry to the touch),then stretch plastic wrap over the pan(stretching it tightly so that it doesn't sag and touch the frosting)or just snap a lid onto the dish.
NOTE: After this "cake" has been in the fridge, overnight, it is easy to cut into squares to serve because the graham crackers are soft.
Yes, peanut butter is mixed into the pudding and it takes this simple dessert in a whole different direction. The next time I make this variation, I will use chocolate graham crackers (I only had regular ones this time)....you've gotta give this one a try.
(2) 3½ ounce instant vanilla pudding
1 cup creamy style peanut butter
8 ounce Cool Whip thawed
3 cups of milk
1 pound of graham crackers
CHOCOLATE FROSTING
6 tablespoons butter (melted)
6 tablespoons boiling water
6 tablespoons baking cocoa
2 cups powdered sugar
1 teaspoon vanilla
Place a single layer of graham crackers in the bottom of a 9x13 dish (breaking to fit if necessary). With an electric mixer, beat the instant pudding, peanut butter with 3 cups milk until very smooth (about 2 minutes) then fold in the Cool Whip. Immediately pour half of this mixture over the 1st layer of graham crackers, spreading it out evenly.
Put another layer of graham crackers on top of the pudding and then another layer of pudding mixture. Top second layer of pudding with a final layer of graham crackers.
Cover the dish tightly, with plastic wrap, and refrigerate for about an hour before you frost it.
After an hour of chilling, whisk together the melted butter, boiling water, cocoa and vanilla until well blended. Add powdered sugar and whisk until smooth. Immediately pour the frosting over the chilled pudding dessert and gently smooth it out.
Place dessert (uncovered) in fridge for an hour or so (until the frosting feels dry to the touch),then stretch plastic wrap over the pan(stretching it tightly so that it doesn't sag and touch the frosting)or just snap a lid onto the dish.
Refrigerate overnight (important).
NOTE: After this "cake" has been in the fridge, overnight, it is easy to cut into squares to serve because the graham crackers are soft.
Sunday, January 11, 2015
REDUCED CALORIE SWEET & SOUR PORK
We love sweet and sour pork and chicken (this recipe would work for either), but once you bread and DEEP FRY the meat, you are talking about A TON OF CALORIES. Well, this quick and easy little recipe does away with all of that breading AND all of that DEEP FRYING and it is STILL delicious !!!
MARINADE
2 teaspoons soy sauce
1/8 teaspoon sugar
3 teaspoons corn starch
1 teaspoon sesame oil
black pepper to taste
Mix the above ingredients in a large bowl. Cut 1 1/2 pounds of pork (or chicken) tenderloin into bite size pieces and put in the marinade. Stir to coat all of the pieces, then let sit for 20 minutes.
SAUCE
1 cup chicken broth (not bullion,it's too salty)
2 tablespoons rice wine vinegar
1/4 cup ketchup
1/2 cup sugar
1/4 teaspoon salt
2 SLIGHTLY rounded teaspoons of corn starch
1/4 teaspoon cayenne pepper
pinch of black pepper
Cook all of the sauce ingredients together until it thickens, then turn the heat down to a VERY LOW SIMMER and let it barely bubble while you brown the meat.
In a large skillet (I use my electric fry pan), heat up a tablespoon of vegetable oil and a tablespoon of butter until HOT (I turn my electric skillet all the way up). Add the marinated meat and spread it out so that none of the pieces are on top of each other. Let the meat brown (about 3-4 minutes?), then stir and put a lid on the pan so that everything gets cooked through (you want to get some nice brown crusty color on the edges of the pieces).
Once the meat is 99% done (keep lifting the lid to check for doneness), add the cooked sauce to the meat and keep stirring until everything is well coated. Reduce the heat and cook it all together for about 2 more minutes (watch carefully so the sauce doesn't burn).
Serve over hot rice. Couldn't be easier!!
Picky-picky husband is VERY SHY of spicy food, so 1/4 teaspoon of cayenne is just perfect for him. If you like extra heat, just add a little more cayenne when you cook the sauce.
MARINADE
2 teaspoons soy sauce
1/8 teaspoon sugar
3 teaspoons corn starch
1 teaspoon sesame oil
black pepper to taste
Mix the above ingredients in a large bowl. Cut 1 1/2 pounds of pork (or chicken) tenderloin into bite size pieces and put in the marinade. Stir to coat all of the pieces, then let sit for 20 minutes.
SAUCE
1 cup chicken broth (not bullion,it's too salty)
2 tablespoons rice wine vinegar
1/4 cup ketchup
1/2 cup sugar
1/4 teaspoon salt
2 SLIGHTLY rounded teaspoons of corn starch
1/4 teaspoon cayenne pepper
pinch of black pepper
Cook all of the sauce ingredients together until it thickens, then turn the heat down to a VERY LOW SIMMER and let it barely bubble while you brown the meat.
In a large skillet (I use my electric fry pan), heat up a tablespoon of vegetable oil and a tablespoon of butter until HOT (I turn my electric skillet all the way up). Add the marinated meat and spread it out so that none of the pieces are on top of each other. Let the meat brown (about 3-4 minutes?), then stir and put a lid on the pan so that everything gets cooked through (you want to get some nice brown crusty color on the edges of the pieces).
Once the meat is 99% done (keep lifting the lid to check for doneness), add the cooked sauce to the meat and keep stirring until everything is well coated. Reduce the heat and cook it all together for about 2 more minutes (watch carefully so the sauce doesn't burn).
Serve over hot rice. Couldn't be easier!!
Picky-picky husband is VERY SHY of spicy food, so 1/4 teaspoon of cayenne is just perfect for him. If you like extra heat, just add a little more cayenne when you cook the sauce.
ENJOY !!!
Tuesday, January 6, 2015
Happy, happy...
Christmas, Holidays, Hanukkah, Kwanzaa, New Year, Birthday whatever else there is out there...
(Sorry in advance as no one cares about others illnesses but... )Woke up Christmas Eve morning with a bit of a cough. Escalated from there. Still a bit puny. How puny one might ask? Well pictured above is my Christmas haul of new cookbooks. (Thanks Ann, for checking the Wish List and to Catherine for a surprise.) I finally got around to looking at them today! Yes, today.
Needless to say, there will be much to write about in the coming year...
(Sorry in advance as no one cares about others illnesses but... )Woke up Christmas Eve morning with a bit of a cough. Escalated from there. Still a bit puny. How puny one might ask? Well pictured above is my Christmas haul of new cookbooks. (Thanks Ann, for checking the Wish List and to Catherine for a surprise.) I finally got around to looking at them today! Yes, today.
Needless to say, there will be much to write about in the coming year...
Thursday, January 1, 2015
SWEET BACON-CHICKEN BUNDLES
We discovered these delicious little bundles over the holidays. They are quick to fix and are absolutely perfect for potlucks, buffets, or a quick supper. They are totally addicting, so make lots of them!!
SWEET BACON-CHICKEN BUNDLES
1 pound boneless, skinless chicken breast (we like thighs better)
2/3 cup dark brown sugar
2 teaspoons chili powder
1/2 teaspoon ground cumin
1/4 teaspoon salt
bacon (regular, not thick)
Preheat oven to 375° and bake the bacon for 10 minutes only. After 10 minutes, drain the bacon and set aside. You will need one half slice of bacon for each chicken bundle.
Cut the raw chicken into 1" cubes, then wrap half of (a partially cooked) slice of bacon around each cube of raw chicken, and secure it with a toothpick. Next, mix the brown sugar, chili powder, cumin and salt together and roll the bacon-chicken in this mixture. Make sure you get it into all the folds of the bacon.
SWEET BACON-CHICKEN BUNDLES
1 pound boneless, skinless chicken breast (we like thighs better)
2/3 cup dark brown sugar
2 teaspoons chili powder
1/2 teaspoon ground cumin
1/4 teaspoon salt
bacon (regular, not thick)
Preheat oven to 375° and bake the bacon for 10 minutes only. After 10 minutes, drain the bacon and set aside. You will need one half slice of bacon for each chicken bundle.
Cut the raw chicken into 1" cubes, then wrap half of (a partially cooked) slice of bacon around each cube of raw chicken, and secure it with a toothpick. Next, mix the brown sugar, chili powder, cumin and salt together and roll the bacon-chicken in this mixture. Make sure you get it into all the folds of the bacon.
Place the bundles on a baking screen or cooling rack that you've liberally sprayed with vegetable spray. Set the sprayed rack on a rimmed baking sheet that you have lined with foil (important for easier clean up). If you have any sugar left over, spoon a teaspoon or so on top of each bundle.
Bake for 30-35 minutes. Delicious hot or room temperature. If you like a little heat along with your sweet, add some cayenne to the sugar mixture.
Bake for 30-35 minutes. Delicious hot or room temperature. If you like a little heat along with your sweet, add some cayenne to the sugar mixture.
ENJOY !!!
Friday, December 26, 2014
MAKE BUTTER IN YOUR STAND MIXER
Do you have a lot of heavy whipping cream leftover from the holidays like I do? If so, consider turning it into butter with your stand mixer. It only takes about 15 minutes tops, and the mixer does all the work.
This isn't something I would make on a regular basis, but it IS perfect for very special occasions (try mixing in your favorite herbs or spices). It is also a fun project you can do with your kids.
All it takes is some heavy whipping cream + salt, + a stand mixer + 15 minutes .... and "hocus-pocus", you will have butter!!
Start out with a quart of ICE COLD heavy whipping cream
Whip it, on medium high, in your stand mixer, using the wire whisk attachment. It will try and splatter a little, so I usually cover my whole mixer with a dish towel.
Whip until you get nice stiff peaks, like this (should take about 4-5 minutes.
Now this next step is where the "butter" starts to happen. Change from your whisk to your paddle attachment. Let the mixture beat for a few more minutes (at medium high speed,)and it will start to look a little more yellow and it will "loosen up" considerably. This is when you need to make a serious plastic wrap cover for the top of your bowl because it starts to splash.
The mixture will start to separate like this:
Don't freak out, this is what its supposed to look like. The buttermilk is starting to separate from the butter.
After it has whipped a little longer, the mixture will completely "break down" and separate, like this: (click on the photo to get a better look).
Although this liquid is called buttermilk, it is very thin and nothing like commercial buttermilk.
You are now done with the whipping stage (the whole process takes about 12-15 minutes) but there are a couple more steps:
Put the butter into a strainer, and drain off the liquid, It will look like this:
Rinse the "chunks" under VERY COLD running water (the water will not effect the butter as long as it is very cold). Squeeze the pieces together as you rinse the butter. You are basically trying to rinse out any little pockets of milk liquid.
Work 1/2 teaspoon table salt into the butter (or you can leave it unsalted). To do this step, I put the butter back in the stand mixer and beat it for a few seconds, so the salt would be evenly distributed.
This isn't something I would make on a regular basis, but it IS perfect for very special occasions (try mixing in your favorite herbs or spices). It is also a fun project you can do with your kids.
All it takes is some heavy whipping cream + salt, + a stand mixer + 15 minutes .... and "hocus-pocus", you will have butter!!
Start out with a quart of ICE COLD heavy whipping cream
Whip it, on medium high, in your stand mixer, using the wire whisk attachment. It will try and splatter a little, so I usually cover my whole mixer with a dish towel.
Whip until you get nice stiff peaks, like this (should take about 4-5 minutes.
Now this next step is where the "butter" starts to happen. Change from your whisk to your paddle attachment. Let the mixture beat for a few more minutes (at medium high speed,)and it will start to look a little more yellow and it will "loosen up" considerably. This is when you need to make a serious plastic wrap cover for the top of your bowl because it starts to splash.
The mixture will start to separate like this:
After it has whipped a little longer, the mixture will completely "break down" and separate, like this: (click on the photo to get a better look).
Although this liquid is called buttermilk, it is very thin and nothing like commercial buttermilk.
You are now done with the whipping stage (the whole process takes about 12-15 minutes) but there are a couple more steps:
Put the butter into a strainer, and drain off the liquid, It will look like this:
Rinse the "chunks" under VERY COLD running water (the water will not effect the butter as long as it is very cold). Squeeze the pieces together as you rinse the butter. You are basically trying to rinse out any little pockets of milk liquid.
Finally you have butter !!
A quart of heavy cream will make 10 ounces of delicious butter. It will keep in the fridge for about a week, or you can freeze it.
This sounds like a LOT of steps, but they are really
very simple and straight forward.
ENJOY !!!
Wednesday, December 17, 2014
Friday, December 12, 2014
The Pastry Queen Christmas
Christmas is upon us and we have yet to feature a Christmas cookbook, so allow us to rectify that oversight. Many years ago, we featured the Rebecca Rather's first cookbook, The Pastry Queen. She returned in 2007 with The Pastry Queen Christmas.
Rather owns the Rather Sweet Bakery and Cafe in the land of Texas. Like much of Texas, everything is big. Her first cookbook, features on its cover, meringue tarts with meringue that towers over the actual tart. Because frankly, meringue should run about three or four times as high as the pie it is sitting on.
The book does try to skews toward Christmas, with recipes including peppermint, cranberries, pumpkin, spiced claret and the like, it is really a fine cold weather cookbook. Yes, Texas stays pretty warm, but go with us on this. It also leans toward the spirit of place, featuring such Tex/Mex faves as Frito pie, quesadillas, sopaipillas, and cowboy coffee. Combining two traditions offers up some fun ideas for holiday entertaining.
Every holiday season has its signature cake. That cake that gets baked only once a year. that cake that disappears in one sitting. That cake you crave all year long. For Rather it is a coconut cake. It is a long and somewhat involved recipe, but one that have heads turning. Like most of these cakes, Rather's comes from a recipe by her Great-Aunt Molly. Various cousins have changed the recipe a bit, but this is the one Rather is sticking with.
Christmas Coconut Cake
1 cup (2 sticks) unsalted butter at room temperature
2 cups sugar
3 cups all-purpose flour
4 teaspoons baking powder
1/2 teaspoon kosher salt
1/4 cup whole milk
1/2 cup unsweetened coconut milk (available canned in the Asian section of most grocery stores, or see Tip)
1/4 cup coconut cream (Coco Lopez)
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
8 large egg whites at room temperature
Whipped Cream Filling
1 cup cold heavy whipping cream
2 tablespoons coconut cream (Coco Lopez)
1/2 cup grated fresh coconut (optional, see Tip)
Frosting
2 large egg whites
1 1/2 cups sugar
1/3 cup cold water
1/4 teaspoon cream of tartar
1/4 teaspoon kosher salt
1/2 cup mini marshmallows
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
3 to 4 cups unsweetened flaked coconut for decorating
Preparation
Place an oven rack in the bottom third of the oven and another in the top third of the oven. Preheat the oven to 350°F. Butter three 9-inch cake pans, then line each with a parchment paper round. Butter the paper and dust the pans with flour; knock out the excess.
Using an electric mixer fitted with the paddle attachment, cream the butter and sugar on medium-high speed until light and fluffy, about 3 minutes. Use a rubber spatula to scrape down the sides of the bowl. In a medium bowl, stir together the flour, baking powder, and salt to blend. In a small bowl, stir together the milk, coconut milk, and coconut cream until smooth. Add the flour mixture in 3 increments, alternating with the milk mixture in 2 increments, starting and ending with the flour mixture. After each addition, mix at low speed just to combine the ingredients. Stir in the vanilla.
Using an electric mixer fitted with the whisk attachment, beat the egg whites on high speed until stiff peaks form. Gently fold the egg whites into the batter until evenly blended. Divide the cake batter evenly among the prepared cake pans. Set two layers on the top rack and the third on the lower rack. Stagger the cake layers on the oven racks so no layer is directly under another. Bake for 35 minutes, or until a toothpick inserted in the middle of the cakes comes out clean. Monitor the layers carefully for doneness; each one may be done at different times. Remove from the oven and let cool in the pans for 10 minutes, then unmold onto wire racks to cool completely.
To make the whipped cream filling:
Using an electric mixer fitted with the whisk attachment, beat the cream on high speed until soft peaks form. Beat in the coconut cream and the fresh coconut, if using.
To make the frosting:
Whisk the egg whites, sugar, water, cream of tartar, and salt in a large stainless-steel bowl until thoroughly combined. Place the bowl over a saucepan filled with 2 inches of barely simmering water. Using a hand beater or handheld electric mixer, continue beating the egg white mixture for 4 minutes. Add the mini marshmallows in 2 increments while continuing to beat. Wait until the first batch of marshmallows has melted before adding the second. Continue beating for 2 to 3 minutes more, until stiff peaks form. Remove from the heat, stir in the vanilla, and continue beating until the frosting is thick enough to spread.
To assemble the cake:
Stack one cake layer on a serving plate and spread the top with half of the whipped cream filling. Repeat with a second layer. Stack the final cake layer on top of the first two and cover the cake’s top and sides with the frosting. Sprinkle the coconut on the top and sides of the cake.
Cover the cake loosely with plastic wrap and store for 1 day at room temperature or up to 3 days in the refrigerator. Bring to room temperature before serving.
Tip:
It's challenging to press coconut into the sides of the cake. When pressing the coconut in, the icing invariably sticks to my fingers and mars the frosting's finish. I've discovered that throwing small handfuls of coconut toward the side of the cake makes it adhere quite well—a messy but effective technique for creating a gorgeous-looking cake.
Tip:
For those who want to follow Aunt Molly's original recipe, here are her directions for extracting coconut meat and liquid from a fresh coconut: "First buy a fresh coconut. To select the best one, shake it to listen for a lot of milk inside. Prepare the coconut by first making a hole or two in one end with a hammer and ice pick. Stand the coconut up over a small bowl or glass measuring cup to catch the milk as it drains out. Next, crack the hard outer shell with a hammer, then pry off the pieces. The inner white coconut meat can then be grated [with a handheld microplane grater]. Refrigerate both the milk and grated coconut until ready to use."
If you are looking for s showstopping Christmas recipe, this one will do it!
Friday, December 5, 2014
Never In The Kitchen...
When Company Arrives
When we moved into those sexy, swinging Sixties, everyone wanted to party...and everyone wanted to be at the party. No one wanted to man the kitchen. With that in mind, a slew of cookbooks were published to make you a great hostess without spending time in the kitchen. Theresa Morse's Never In The Kitchen When Company Arrives is just one of those cookbooks.
Morse pulls no punches. This is not a cookbook that tells you to put on lipstick and order out. She has a strict game plan that is as viable today as it was in 1964.
What to serve for that cocktail interval? How about...
What else is there to say? How about, "Make mine a double!" Happy cocktail interval.
When we moved into those sexy, swinging Sixties, everyone wanted to party...and everyone wanted to be at the party. No one wanted to man the kitchen. With that in mind, a slew of cookbooks were published to make you a great hostess without spending time in the kitchen. Theresa Morse's Never In The Kitchen When Company Arrives is just one of those cookbooks.
Morse pulls no punches. This is not a cookbook that tells you to put on lipstick and order out. She has a strict game plan that is as viable today as it was in 1964.
It stands to reason that if your kitchen is a well-planned workshop rather than a booby-trap filled with pitfalls, your lot will be an easier one.
A reliable oven...sharp knives...are as vital to a hostess-cook as an oxygen mask to a diver.
"A place for everything and everything in its place."
Open shelves, in tiers along the wall, close to the work space, are better than tranquillizers.
A recipe box is to a cook what a Stillson wrench is to a plumber.
Don't be stingy with your recipes. Give them to anyone who asks for them.
The cocktail interval before dinner not only provides immediate, warming hospitality, but it enables the hostess-cook to serve the equivalent of a first course, which otherwise would be difficult to manage.
What to serve for that cocktail interval? How about...
Balls Tartare
1/2 pound top round or sirloin, minced twice
1/2 pound fresh sauerkraut
Salt and pepper
1/2 teaspoon caraway seeds
Chopped chives or parsley
Season the meat and form into 24 flat rounds. Drain the sauerkraut, chop very fine, and add caraway sees. Place 1/2 teaspoon of this mixture on each meat round and fold the meat over so that it entirely encloses the sauerkraut. Shape into small balls and roll in finely chopped chive or parsley. Chill in refrigerator until ready to serve. Have a small glass filled with toothpicks on the platter.
What else is there to say? How about, "Make mine a double!" Happy cocktail interval.
Thursday, December 4, 2014
THIN MINT CHRISTMAS COOKIES
It is time to start planning your Christmas cookie list, isn't it? Today's cookie is truly a five star keeper!!
These festive cookies taste just like Thin Mint Girl Scout Cookies(only better!!) and they only take TWO INGREDIENTS to make!!! People will think you've been working on them all day.
The chocolate wafers come in a 9 ounce package and I found the Andes Mints (those creamy little chocolate mints with the green center) in a 4.67 ounce package. There are 28 mints in the package and one package will do a dozen cookies (I found the mint packages for $1.60 here in Alaska, so hopefully you can find them even cheaper.
I unwrapped and then melted the chocolates in my microwave for about 30 seconds...stirred and then microwaved them for another 10 seconds (stir until the chocolate is smooth and shiny). Dip the chocolate wafers in the melted chocolate (both sides) and place on some parchment paper (or waxed paper).
Stick them in the fridge (I used the freezer) for about 5 minutes to "set" the chocolate......that's it!!
These festive cookies taste just like Thin Mint Girl Scout Cookies(only better!!) and they only take TWO INGREDIENTS to make!!! People will think you've been working on them all day.
I drizzled some white chocolate
decoration on these, just for fun,
decoration on these, just for fun,
but it certainly isn't necessary. You
can use holiday sprinkles instead.
can use holiday sprinkles instead.
You will need some Nabisco Famous Chocolate Wafers and some Andes (creme de menthe) chocolates.....that's it!!
I unwrapped and then melted the chocolates in my microwave for about 30 seconds...stirred and then microwaved them for another 10 seconds (stir until the chocolate is smooth and shiny). Dip the chocolate wafers in the melted chocolate (both sides) and place on some parchment paper (or waxed paper).
Stick them in the fridge (I used the freezer) for about 5 minutes to "set" the chocolate......that's it!!
NOTE: If you are having trouble finding the Andes Mints, just use the Andes Mint baking chips (next to the chocolate chips) they will work just as well.
MERRY CHRISTMAS!!!
Tuesday, December 2, 2014
Prune
We really wanted a cookbook from Gabrielle Hamilton, so when she signed a book deal, we were ecstatic. But then she published Blood, Bones, and Butter. Now that was a great book, but it was a memoir -- without recipes. So needless to say, we were bummed. When we found out her second book would, indeed, be a cookbook, Prune, it made our wish list, immediately.
When it arrived, it came out of the box pristine, encased in shrink wrap. That was a problem. you see, we couldn't bear to open it. It was so lovely, and new, and wrapped in shrink wrap. So it sat on the table for weeks until we could stand it no more and tore into it.
Since pink is our signature color, we loved it right away and we do love any book with that elastic band on the side to keep it closed. (Full disclosure, as much as we love those things, they almost always break, come loose, rip, or stretch out of shape, so really we should have kept the whole thing shrink wrapped!)
The book has all of Hamilton's "don't screw with me" style. The book is printed to look like it has been bounced around a kitchen for years. The pages are smudged, their are written notations, and portion conversion on what are supposed to look like torn post-its.
The recipes are written as though you are in the Prune kitchen and she is telling you how to do the dish. So it is chatty while being "chefy," as though you are part of "in" joke -- Prune is a restaurant book for a home cook, but we are pretending that you are one of us and here with us at Prune. Some people might not get the joke. But if you have read a lot of precious restaurant cookbook and thought to yourself, "What does this mean?" you will love this book.
The best way to illustrate this is to look at this recipe. It has been printed several places with directions that are rather straightforward and boring. But take a look at how Hamilton explains the dish.
Spaghetti alla Carbonara
2 1/2 ounces pancetta, in neat 1-inch cubes
4 ounces dried spaghetti, (dried weight)
1-2 egg yolks
1/4 cup grated Parmesan
1 teaspoons freshly ground black pepper
kosher salt
Evenly scatter cubed raw pancetta into a cold large cast-iron skillet. Set over medium-low flame and render slowly, stirring occasionally until crisp and golden brown on all sides and sitting in significant amount of its own rendered fat, and cubes reduced in size by half.
Transfer to metal 1/6 pan, including fat, and leave in warm area of your station.
Cook spaghetti in a big stockpot of boiling salted water -- stir during cooking to be sure the strands are separated.
When pasta bends without snapping but is still significantly undercooked, drain immediately in a large colander and hose down thoroughly with cold water, running your hands through each strand and making sure you have stopped the cooking process. Pasta needs to be cool to the touch throughout. Drain very well; store in your reach-in.For the pick up:Drop para cooked pasta into boiling water. Move swiftly from here to finish--pasta only needs 90 seconds--2 minutes at most-- in the reheat.In clean stainless bowl, put 2 yolks and a hearty spoonful of rendered pancetta and some of its fat.Sprinkle black pepper over egg and fatty pancetta until light dusting obscures the yolks.Pull hot pasta, drain briefly over pot, turn out onto the yolk/pancetta, letting some of the cooking water drip in, too.
Stir rapidly and vigorously to cook the yolks with the residual heat of the pasta and to coat each strand with egg and fat.
Season with salt and generous/liberal sprinkle of grated parm and continue stirring to evenly distribute cheese and salt.
Make neat spiral in center of pasta bowl as best you can when plating. Plate quickly.
Don't let this sit in the pass.
Given that this is already a bastardy version of real Spaghetti alla Carbonara, pulled together to accommodate the realities of busy brunch and the confines of a sauté station, please take care not to compromise the dish any further than we've already had to make it work in the restaurant setting.
Pay attention to the toothsome was of the pasta – don't get lost in your timing and let this just boil away in the pickup until it is flabby and bloated and disgusting.
Don't "creamy up" the yolk and parm with extra hot pasta water or extra cheese or by adding the cheese early so that it melts – sometimes I have been dismayed to see it go out looking like creamy white pasta Alfredo.
Ideally, we want the strands slick with yellow, eggy egg yolk and smoky, salty, uriney pancetta fat, with all the granules of sweet, nutty, grated parm clinging to the strands. You want to see the black pepper, taste the floralness of it, and feel the warm heat of it in the dish – but don't obliterate.
Ask yourself what other chef you know that would describe pancetta as "uriney." We do love Hamilton.