Monday in Michigan: Remembering Mom

There’s really not too much to say other than this time of year Mom is even more so on my mind than usual. It was on November 1st, 2012 that she passed away, due to complications from a stroke on October 30th. It could’ve been the 29th, sometimes I can’t remember clearly, that whole time is a blur – so, instead of trying to remember those things, I wish to remember THESE things:


Here are a few faves of mine of my Mom’s late teens/early 20’s. My how things have changed since record players!


There’s something about this photo I love – newly married to my dad, I believe their first Christmas, as I see the Barbie in his stocking she put in a joke. I love that you can tell she was taking a cleaning break – the mop is a giveaway, lol.


Few more favorites: I love her with the Brandy Alexander in her hand; she and I after she gave me a sink bath I’m sure; Mom, myself and my doll Mrs. Beasley in Atlantic City (me looking quite a bit like Harry!); and one from our snowy beach after we’d move north to the area I’m still in, from the Detroit area.


This was one from one of those “glamour photo shoot” things. I remember she was so upset because her sinuses were acting up and it had a tendency to give her these horrible puffy eyes, but I’m  still glad we had this done!

  Favorites of Mom and Harry

 


Visiting Mom in the skilled nursing/rehab center after she’d broken her ankle. Harry and I took her plenty of Valentine’s Day treats! And on another visit Harry just had to bring his newest cars!


A few more random shots I love. Some while visiting her, and the one while at home. Harry convinced BooBoo (his nickname for her instead of grandma) she too needed a special Easter “Bonnet”, lol.


And finally, a photo that always makes me laugh when I see it – even as a child I was working on my photography with our Polaroid camera and driving everyone crazy!!

Those are the memories that I love and that I love to remember!

Food Friday – Say Cheese!

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from Tracey G.

Presenting the King Arthur Flour Everything-Cheddar Pastry Twist – easy to make and easy to eat. I was a bit intimidated by it when I read it, but once I actually started the doing, it was really painless to make something that looks pretty fancy and labor-intensive.

I will admit it, I’d bought a couple of the special ingredients needed for this few months ago for other purposes. The Vermont Cheese Powder I’d bought for making my own homemade cheese popcorn with my air popper to dress up my healthy snack a little and the Everything Bagel Topping, I’d bought to well, make bagels with. But after reading and making the recipe, if you wanted to use other flavors etc, the technique would still be suitable. It also called for the Pastry Flour Blend, which I happened to have, but it also gives you the option to use regular all-purpose flour as well.

The recipe is executed in a few steps, but easy ones they are. First you make your pastry dough, which consists of: flour (either the Pastry Flour Blend or AP flour), salt, baking powder, Vermont Cheese Powder, butter and ice water. Once you get it made, divide it into two equal portions, and then refrigerate for at least 30 minutes.

While that’s doing it’s thing chilling in the refrigerator, you make up the filling. This involves: Vermont Cheese Powder, Everything Bagel Topping, water, a bit of butter and grated sharp Cheddar cheese. I only had shredded Cheddar, so I went over it quickly with a knife to make the pieces smaller and closer to a grated-style. The cheese powder, bagel topping, butter and water get mixed together. The grated cheese stays separate.

To start the assembly, you roll out one of the disks of dough, to approximately 11-inches. It then gets trimmed down to a 10-inch circle via using a pie plate or a dinner plate that’s 10-inches as a template. Once you’ve done that, you pop it onto a piece parchment paper. Spread the dough with the filling mixture within about a 1/2-inch from the edge, then sprinkle on the grated cheese. At this point, you beat an egg with a tablespoon of water and brush the edge of the disk with it.

Next is to roll-out the other disk of dough, in the same manner: roll to an 11-inch circle, then trim to a 10-inch one using pie plate or dinner plate as guide for a perfect circle. This now gets placed on top of the other, and over the filling.

Now here’s where it gets interesting and rather fun! At this point you use a 2 1/2 to 3-inch round cutter (or anything you happen to have that could substitute for that, maybe a glass?) and set it in the center of the circle, it’s a guide so don’t cut with it. Working from the center out, you now cut the pastry circle into 32 wedges. I marked it off in quarters, then divided those up into 8 to make sure I stayed fairly even. You cut through both layers from the edge of the circle cutter all the way to each edge. Once you’ve done that, you take each little wedge and twist it in the same direction 3 times. That’s it. Proceed all the way around doing that with each little wedge.

This is before it’s baked, brushed and sprinkled with the remaining seasoning. You can see where the cutter was in the center – how it leaves a hub.

Lastly, once you’ve twisted them all, brush the whole with some of the beaten egg and sprinkle it with the remaining Everything Bagel Topping. Bake for 30-35 minutes, let cool for 15 and serve!! I should note here that in the actual recipe, it doesn’t mention sliding the parchment onto a baking sheet for baking – but after I did the cutting, I put it on a baking sheet, then did the twisting – and then the baking while on the sheet.

This recipe has a lot going for it – especially if you need an appetizer/snack. It’s simple and very stand-alone, meaning it doesn’t need a dip or anything of that nature to go with it. It would be easy to transport and plate for serving and look pretty as well! They mention it would go well with beer, cocktail or any beverage – with or without alcohol – that you choose or are serving, and I agree. Once I started taste-testing this, I couldn’t stop! I am so excited to find something this easy that looks like you know what you’re doing as far as pretty presentation!! Don’t be intimidated like I was at first, do try it, and now that I’ve gone through it once, it will be even easier/faster the next time! And on that note, you could vary the fillings anyway you like, just keep it fairly dry so it doesn’t ooze out while baking. I imagine you could leave out the cheese powder in the dough, that’s something I’d like to experiment with. You could use your own mixture of seasonings instead of the Everything Bagel Topping for example – I see lots of possibilities for this recipe technique.

But, this is one yummy snack/appetizer just as it is and I can highly recommend it!

Everything-Cheddar Pastry Twist

 

from Kris B.

This week’s offerings are from King Arthur Flour’s broad category, “Entrees, Sides, and Appetizers.”  To me, that translates to “real” food, something beyond sweet treats.  I think it says something about the way that Tracey and I think in that we both chose recipes that rely heavily on cheese.  This was not a planned theme for the week, but it sure is nice when it happens this way!

I often feel like a child when it comes to my food choices.  I still love simple foods, finger foods, comfort foods.  And, despite having eaten many a box of ten for a dollar “fake” macaroni and cheese when I was in college, I still love Mac and Cheese.  I am happy to say though that my palate and my wallet have “upgraded” from the poor college student version of this deliciousness!

I have been in several nicer restaurants lately where “gourmet” mac and cheese has been offered on the menu.  What makes it “gourmet?”  Usually it is the type of cheese or cheeses used and the specialty “add-ins.”  Gruyere, asiago, Roquefort, Fontina, and even smoked Gouda, my personal favorite, add a bit of grown-up flavor to this traditional comfort food dish.  Add-ins such as crab meat or bacon to any number of different kinds of vegetables also help to “adult” your mac and cheese.  The truth is that any macaroni and cheese made from scratch rather than from a box takes a huge leap in its gourmet factor.

I tried King Arthur Flour’s Garlic-Herb Mac and Cheese this week.  Made from scratch macaroni and cheese is definitely more time consuming than that from the box.  It took me more time to make this recipe than it took my husband to cook two rotisserie chickens on the grill, but, it was well worth the time.  Some of my extra prep time was because I always grate my own cheese; and the recipe calls for garlic oil, which I did not have so I had to make that too.  To do that, I used this simple recipe for garlic oil from Ina Garten.  It makes much more than you need for this mac and cheese, but since I know you will be making King Arthur’s Garlic-Herb Mac and Cheese again, having extra will save you a step next time!

Any type of smallish shaped pasta can be used in making this Garlic-herb Mac and Cheese.  It’s funny to me how the shape of the pasta can elevate the dish from looking like child’s food to a grown-up side.  Small shells are a favorite at my house because the cheesy goodness works its way into the center of the pasta, but this time I used a 12 oz. bag of orecchiette, ear-shaped pasta.  They acted like little cheese scoops  I should note that the recipe calls for 8 ounces of pasta.  The ratio of cheese to pasta was just fine despite having used four ounces more pasta than called for.

The pasta is cooked to al dente, drained, rinsed with cold water and set aside.

The cheese sauce begins as a basic béchamel, but it has no additional fat (butter).  The base is 2 3/4 cups of milk and 1/4 cup of flour.  I have to confess here that I used two cups of whole milk and 3/4 cups of heavy cream because I only had a pint of milk on hand.  Thus, I had a little extra fat in mine. 🙂  The recipe calls for you to add 1/2 cup of King Arthur Flour’s Vermont Country Cheese Powder to the white sauce as it thickens.  I did not have any so I used an equal amount of grated Parmesan, but waited to add it at the same time as the grated cheddar, salt, pepper, and ground mustard powder, which are stirred in after the white sauce has thickened and been removed from the heat.

Once all of the cheese has melted into the sauce, the pasta is stirred in.  The Mac and Cheese is then poured into baking dishes.  It can be baked in a small casserole dish or individual ramekins.  By using the 12 ounce bag of pasta, I made eight 3/4 cup ramekin servings.

It is the topping that kicks this mac and cheese recipe up a notch! The topping consists of panko, butter, the garlic oil, and King Arthur Flour Pizza Seasoning (or rosemary and thyme).  The butter and oil are melted together.  The panko and seasoning is then stirred in.  A generous layer of this crispy topping is then spread on top of the macaroni and cheese and the dishes a placed in the oven to bake for 25-35 minutes.

When they come out of the oven you have piping hot creamy cheesy goodness.  This recipe is most certainly worth the time.  It will also serve as a great base for trying your hand at some of your own sideside dishgourmet mac and cheese combinations.  I often add spinach to mine, tossing the fresh spinach in with the pasta in its last two minutes of cooking.  Kielbasa is a favorite meat add-in here.  Be creative!  Make it your own!  Experiment with different cheeses.

If you create a combination that you’d like to share, we’d love to post it here!

Garlic-Herb Mac and Cheese

Say cheese!  And, enjoy your weekend.

Tuesday In Texas – Nothing But the Kitchen Sink

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I teach seven different classes.  Six of them are in an “old school” classroom, meaning it has no technology.  It has a green chalkboard with the music staff painted on it and good old-fashioned chalk and erasers. The other room is high-tech all the way – document camera, video monitoring of the instructor keyboard, projectors, speakers, individual communication with students through headphones and microphones, and so on.  It is supposed to make teaching more efficient and thus “better.”  This is so not true!  All it does is stress me out because half the time, when I prepare a lecture that relies on said technology, it does not work.  Someone has flipped a switch they shouldn’t have; or pulled a cable they shouldn’t have; or the district server is down; and the list goes on and on.  Chalk never fails me!  The only possible glitch in my no-tech classroom is a lack of chalk. But, since I have friends in high places who give me my own secret two-box stash of good old white chalk at the beginning of every semester, this is not an issue for me.  I am always good to go!

Don’t get me wrong; I do like my personal technology.   I rely on my phone and iPad as much as anyone else, but even they stress me out sometimes.  If I’m honest, I have to admit that, in many ways, life without technology was so much simpler.  Lately, the real “why” behind this thinking has been on my mind.

Yes, I spend too much time on Facebook.  That is definitely time taken away from other things, though it is also time when I sit down in one place and come as close to slowing down as seems possible these days.  In my head, that redeems my Facebook time a little.  Slowing down, however, is more than sitting in one place, slowing down physically.  We also need to slow down our minds.

The other night I was standing at the kitchen sink washing dishes.  I have a perfectly good dishwasher, but I was washing dishes by hand just because.  Because why?  I wasn’t exactly sure until I realized, mid way through my dishwashing that I was experiencing a Zen moment.  A moment of being fully in the present.  I was completely in tune with the feeling of the warm water running over my hands, the fresh smell of the soap.  I was able to fully appreciate the satisfaction of making the dishes clean. I was able to live into the pure sense of peace and calm in those moments because I was totally focused on what I was doing…just washing the dishes. Nothing more.  Nothing less.

As a result of my dishwashing experience, I had an epiphany.  The reason that so many of us are totally stressed out these days is because we no longer do these  “menial” daily tasks and therefore no longer experience moments of being totally in the now, free from the burdens of always looking to what’s next.  It takes longer to wash and dry dishes by hand than it does to place them in the dishwasher.  We think that we need that “saved” time, but all we do is fill it up with more busy-ness.  Think about laundry. It takes less than a minute to move a load of clothes from the washer to the dryer. What would our lives be like if we all returned to hanging clothes outside on a clothesline.  Quiet time and fresh air.  Stress-free moments.  Time to de-clutter our own interior.  Who doesn’t want these things?  For some of us, unfortunately, this is not even an option.  My city has an ordinance banning outdoor clotheslines.

Baking, sewing, farming, cooking…all things that have “down time” built into them are seen as time-consuming chores by many these days.  I long for the day where all that is on my to-do list is to bake bread or knit a hat.  Right now, such and existence sounds like pure bliss.  Even vacuuming and dusting have the potential of offering that Zen-like experience I had while doing dishes.  I crave that.

I know that I need more time spent in the now, time spent not worrying about all of the things I have to do in the future.  Most days, I feel like a toddler who bounces from one activity to another never fully appreciating any of them.  I get things done and then move on.  On the surface, this looks great.  I give the appearance of being productive and responsible.  On the inside though, I feel like a robot.  Do robots have feelings?  I guess what I mean is that most of the time  I am just cruising through life on auto-pilot.  I know this is not a good plan for me.  It’s not a good plan for anyone.

I wonder what life would be like if we all slowed down.  If we all lived in the now.  If we all appreciated the little things in life, which really are the big things.

I know one thing, if this were the case, I would have a much cleaner house and a much clearer mind.  Perhaps it is worth the effort to make some changes in my life. Bring on those dirty dishes!  I need that time at the kitchen sink to free my mind from its normal daily clutter long enough to create space for stillness, for calm, for peace,  for enlightenment.

Mix It Up Friday – Just Treats and No Tricks!

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Before I get going on this week’s mix, Apple Cinnamon Doughnut Mix from King Arthur Flour, I have to get something off of my chest.  As delicious as these things are, by definition, they are not doughnuts.  “Real” doughnuts are deep-fried.  These are baked, not deep-fried, which is a good thing because I don’t deep fry anything at home.  I don’t each much fried food, but when I do, I want it to be worth the fat and calories and cooked properly.  I save the occasional order of sweet potato fries or chicken tenders for a meal out.

Since King Arthur Flour’s Apple Doughnut Mix does not really make doughnuts, the nerd in me tried to figure out a better name for them.  The best that I could come up with is  torus muffins.  The word torus comes from geometry.  It is a “surface of revolution generated by revolving a circle in three-dimensional space about an axis coplanar with the circle.  If the axis does not touch the circle, the surface has a ring shape and is called a torus of revolution.  A bagel is also an example of a baked torus.

Now that we have that clear, there is not too much to this week’s mix. To the mix, eggs, milk, and butter or vegetable oil are added.  The ingredients are mixed, poured into a doughnut pan, and baked for 8-10 minutes.  I found that baking for eight minutes yielded a more moist “doughnut,” which is my preference.

Each boxed mix comes with two individual pouches that each makes a half-dozen doughnuts or twenty-four mini doughnuts.  The one potential stumbling block with this mix is that you do need a doughnut pan.

Once baked you can add your own toppings to your doughnuts torus muffins.  The recipes for various options are included on the box as well as on the King Arthur Flour website.  I made the Easy Vanilla Glaze to which I added some cinnamon.  My glaze did not run and make a pretty topping, but it tasted good! 🙂  Other options include a cider glaze or just topping sugar or cinnamon sugar.

For those of you whose nerdiness tends toward etymology rather than geometry, I have something for you too.  Torus is the Latin word for cushion.  Now this all makes sense!  All of these torus baked goods – bagels, torus muffins, and real doughnuts – provide a torus for my clunis!!!

 

from Tracey G.

First, I’d like to say that this was the perfect week for our Mix Food Friday to land – it’s been hectic! I had Harry’s class Halloween party to make treats for by this Friday, and help out at the party too. So, trying to make sure that everything was accomplished in a timely manner was important all the way around – especially to my sanity! And a mix always (well, most always!) fits the bill for get-it-done-quick.

I chose the Coconut Cupcakes + Frosting Mix from the King Arthur Flour Essential Goodness line. That’s the line where they donate a bit of the proceeds from the sale of the mix, to donate a meal to Feeding America.

Since I was making cupcakes this week for the mix offering and I was in the Halloween spirit  – I transformed them into fun treats for home or for a party! These cupcakes with their yummy white vanilla and coconut milk frosting are wonderful blank canvases for any way you want to go! Change up sprinkles and cupcake wrappers and you could do any holiday or celebration you wanted, quickly and easily. Sky is the limit with these lovelies!

The mixes are super simple to prepare, and involved ingredients I always have on hand anyway – butter, milk and an egg. Butter, milk and the egg for the batter, and butter and a couple teaspoons of milk for the frosting mix. That’s it. The cupcakes are easy to prepare and bake, and the frosting mix is a snap to put together. Let me say here too about the frosting mix – not only is it yummy, but it makes a generous amount as well. I didn’t even use all of it in the frosting of mine, and I wasn’t shy about piping it on!

If you want to try something a little different – these coconut cupcakes are wonderful. I could’ve eaten the cake plain, it was nice and moist, and, I could’ve eaten  the frosting out of the bowl with a spoon and been happy. But combine the two together and it’s fabulously scrumptious happiness!

P.S. If you visit the Coconut Cupcakes + Frosting Mix product page, they have some fun twists on other things you cam make using it!

 

Tuesday In Texas – To Delete, Or Not To Delete, That Is the Question

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For all practical purposes I am a minimalist.  I don’t function well amidst chaos or clutter.  That is not to say that I don’t have some clutter and a bit of chaos at my house.  I do…and it keeps me from maneuvering through my days in the most efficient way, something I really don’t like.

My basic belief about “stuff” is that if it doesn’t have an immediate use or provide joy or beauty in the present moment, then I don’t need it.  And, if I don’t have a permanent place for it, I don’t need it.  This makes me choose carefully those things with which I surround myself.

My minimalist attitudes affect my photography as well.  I am not talking to composition here, although I suspect that I could; but rather how many of my photos I keep and how many I delete.  Like most people who have a camera and/or a phone, I take a lot of photos; but perhaps unlike many, I don’t keep most of them.  If I keep every photo that I take, I know that I will become overwhelmed by the sheer numbers and thus will not be able to enjoy any of them.

On a trip, at a special event, or even with my daily photos, I will take as many shots as anyone else.  I try to process my photos as soon after taking them as I can.  I look for the images that best convey the story and emotions at the moment I took them.  If I wait too long to go through my shots, I may not select the ones that are most true or a genuine representation of whatever the occasion was.  I don’t want to consciously or subconsciously rewrite history; I want to preserve real life.

Also, I usually keep only a few shots of any one thing, unless of course there is a good reason to do otherwise.  This process causes me to go through each shot, look at it carefully, introspectively, and choose with intention those that I will keep.  What I have discovered over time is that I have a more intimate relationship with the photos I keep than I would had I uploaded everything to a hard drive.  I have a similar approach to “stuff.”  If a thing doesn’t serve a purpose in the present, or provide beauty or joy in the every day, I don’t keep it.  What this means at our house is that nothing gets “stored” in the attic or other outside facility.  Again, the decision about what finds a place in our home and what is donated is made with intention.  Thus far, I have had no regrets about anything I have let go.

I’m sure that I have deleted some “good” photos in technical terms, but the reality is, keeping everything is not practical for me.  Because I choose to live in the present, the likelihood of me ever going back and slogging through thousands or even hundreds of images sometime in the future is non-existent.  For good or for ill, I have learned to be content with what speaks to me when I take and then edit my shots.  This process also demands that I make a commitment to being fully in the moment even when I am behind the camera.  I don’t want my only memories from an event to be two-dimensional, only in my photos.  I need them to be vivid in my head and heart as well.

The good thing about taking as many photos as I do is that I can’t possibly remember every image that I take; so once removed by a few days, most of the time I don’t even remember what I have deleted.  Again, I have never regretted this practice, though I know a minimalist approach is not for everyone.

Are you a keeper or a deleter?  If you are a keeper, how often do you go back through all of your archived photos?  If you are a deleter, what is your criteria for which photos are kept ?

Food Friday – King Arthur Flour October 2017 Bakealong Challenge: Rugelach

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from Kris B.

Several weeks ago, I wrote about being a rule follower.  Apparently this week I am embracing my rebellious side.  Not only did I not follow the recipe as written, I also took this week’s photo with my phone camera.  Just so you know, Tracey and I together made a conscious decision to work outside our usual parameters with this week’s images.  We had a conversation about both feeling like our food photos were becoming more and more uninspired and boring.  We came to the realization that perhaps that’s what happens when you have taken as many food photos as we have.  How many creative ways are there to photograph cookies or a loaf of bread or a piece of pie?  And on the King Arthur Flour Bakealong weeks, there is an extra challenge in that we attempt to each photograph the week’s offering differently.  So this week, in an effort to spice things up a little, we agreed that we’d shoot our recipe photos and edit them using only our phones.  I think this may have been a subversive plot of sorts.  Tracey got the new iPhone and was just looking for a good excuse to try out all of the new camera options. 🙂

My photo was taken with the phone’s resident camera and then I edited using Hipstamatic and Rhonna Designs.  In some ways, editing the food shots with my phone proved more difficult than I thought it would be.  I was hoping that I could “snap and app” and call it done.  Many of the phone filters tend to over-process images.  That is the last thing you want with a food photo.  Food needs to look real, edible, and delicious when you are finished!  Hopefully I came close to that with my edits because the truth is that I was not at all happy with my photos when I was taking them.  I think that may have been a result of my overall feeling that I lacked any semblance of serious creativity at the time.

When it came to actually making the Rugelach, I followed the dough recipe as written, but opted to use a raspberry and almond filling that consisted of 1/2-3/4 of a cup of seedless raspberry jam and a cup of sliced almonds.  Also, rather than making the three disks of dough and slicing them into twelve wedges each to make individual pieces, I rolled the dough into four 12×8 rectangles, spread the filling on top of each one, rolled the rugelach jellyroll style (rolling the long side), and then sliced each rolled rectangle into nine equal pieces. The slices are roughly 1 1/3 inches each.

This rich pastry, especially with the raspberry and almond filling, is a favorite at my house.  It is a good thing that I finally decided that I could use one of my original photos because the Rugelach was disappearing quickly.  I am learning to figure out more quickly the look I want for my photos because I often have hungry people breathing down my back ready to be the taste-testers for the week’s recipe!

With the holidays fast approaching, this is a perfect recipe for the office brunch or lunch, your holiday party, or gift giving.  Visit the King Arthur Flour recipe site for even more filling options for your Rugelach.

Happy Baking!

from Tracey G.

Last year for Christmas, I was looking for a fast, filled-cookie, that was like these fig things I used to make. The fig cookies were a bit of work, and for some reason figs became hard to find in the grocery. So I was on the hunt for something reminiscent of that, but with easily-obtainable ingredients and time-saving. I found the Rugelach on the King Arthur Flour website. The raisin filling with the seasoning etc, was a lot like the fig cookie! And since that flavor/style cookie is a favorite in the family, I decided to try it. I should say right now – I do not like raisins, lol. Oh, they’re ok on their own occasionally or in Raisin Bran cereal but that’s as far as it goes for me, do not bake them in cookies etc! No! But then I tried this recipe, and the raisins in combination with the nuts, cinnamon and brown sugar is a wonderful thing. I was um, actually “quality” taste-testing it with a spoon, which is definitely something for this anti-raisin person!

Needless to say, I was super duper excited to see the Rugelach recipe as the October Bakealong! It’s yummy and crazy easy. Once you get “rolling” on it (yes, pun intended!) you can crank them out fairly quickly. One thing I noticed though, is that they’ve updated the recipe since I printed mine out last December. They’ve included optional dried fruits to use instead of just raisins. I followed my old print-out, so I was chuckling when I thought I was being clever with my dried cranberries in one batch as they are now included in the dried fruit options. Oh well, at least I’m glad to see I’m on the same page with them and the recipe! There was another difference, the original recipe called for cutting the circle of dough into 8 triangles, and now it’s been changed to 12. I did 8, makes a great size for going with a cup of coffee! But next time, I will try 12 for some smaller sized fun, and probably make some in  the style Kris went with as well!

The dough combination of flour, butter, cream cheese, sour cream and a bit of salt is one of the easiest pastry doughs I’ve ever worked with. After making it, you divide it into 3 pieces, shape into disks and refrigerate for bit. While my dough was in the fridge, I whipped up the filling in my little 3 cup food processor. Once your dough is chilled, you roll it out one piece at time, into a 10-inch circle. Brush the dough with water (or in the updated version they recommend trying Boiled Cider or a warmed jelly or fruit preserve if you like), then sprinkle on 1/3 of the filling, lightly pressing down. Cut the circle into 12 or 8 wedges, and roll up from the wide end, then place them on a parchment lined baking sheet for easier clean up. If you like you can now brush them with milk (or cream) and sprinkle with Coarse Sparkling Sugar, I didn’t because for one thing, it wasn’t in my version of the recipe (it is now included in the updated version) and for another thing – no one but me around here likes the crunchy sugar! Bake 25-30 minutes or until golden brown. Serve warm or cooled – either way they are wonderful and will disappear quickly! I am so glad I made a double batch, at least I had them for a day or two, lol!!

This is a recipe that I am so glad I’d found last year, it’s one that has found a permanent home in my bag of Holiday baking tricks, lol. Everyone loves it – and I am definitely going to experiment with other fillings and even the suggestions of savory fillings that KAF shared as jumping off points in the their blog post Baking Savory Rugelach. You do have to give these a try – shaping is easy either way you go, the way Kris did hers or the way I did mine, you can’t go wrong!

And if you’re baking gluten-free: They recommend using their Gluten Free Measure-for-Measure Flour!

P.S. Yep, I’ll admit it – part of using the phone for photos was wanting to put it through its photo capabilities trials! And the other part was just to switch it up as Kris said – needed to try a different avenue! For my photos, I went with my native camera and my Snapseed app for tweaking the brightness/sharpness. Then I added the text for the one in my Rhonna Designs app, and the the close-up shot I added the text and graphic while I was still in Snapseed! 😉

Monday In Michigan – Simple Trick To Make My Kitchen Life Easier

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It is so simple – and I can’t believe it took me so long to come up with it! Ha! As I’m sure you’re aware, I print out a lot recipes. The ones I choose for our King Arthur Food Fridays alone can be overwhelming – not to mention recipes I print out just for making for the family! It can get a bit unruly. And that’s not the only thing – they can get messy. And if it’s something I like and want to make again, I don’t want to have to print out another copy for keeping, and I don’t always want to put them in My Recipe Book where certain keepers get handwritten entries.

So, nope, I don’t want to have to do extra work if I decide I like it. Enter my idea of buying a 3-ring binder! I bought a bunch of sheet protectors and a binder from Amazon (very inexpensive!). I immediately inserted my favorites that I’d printed out into the sheet protectors and got them happily ensconced in the binder. Then, when I’m ready to make a new recipe, I go through my already-printed “to-be-made” recipes, that I keep in a folder, choose the one I’m making, pop it right into a sheet protector and take it in the kitchen with me. This way, if it’s a recipe I decide I’ll keep, all I have to do is wipe off the sheet protector (I’m guaranteed to slop something on it, lol) and add it to my binder! Recipe is nice and clean, and still readable – despite what  may have spilled on it!

It’s also easy when I want to make a favorite, I take it out of the binder, head into the kitchen with it and proceed to make the recipe. Then when I’m done, it gets popped back into the binder! I do this for all the recipes I print, not just King Arthur Flour ones, but that is the majority in my binder, lol.

I know it’s just a simple little idea, but I wanted to share it because it’s one that I’ve discovered works better than I’d imagined it would!!

Food Friday – Food and Memories

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from Kris B.

It’s funny how seemingly random choices and decisions made really are not random at all.  Again, Tracey and I create the baking schedule for these posts several months in advance.  Back in July when I slotted in Baked Apple Dumplings this week, I’m fairly sure that what was on my mind was that fall is apple season and I should make something with apples.  Now that it is October and time to make the apple dumplings, my thoughts around them are completely different.

It is hard for me to believe that I am approaching the third anniversary of my dad’s death, October 17, 2014.  And, he actually passed away on a Friday making this whole scenario even more poignant for me.  My dad loved anything apple.  He ate a fresh apple almost every afternoon, sometimes with a little cheese, as a snack.  In fact, the knife that he used to slice his daily apples was still sitting on the side table next to his chair after he was gone.  As a treat, he wanted apple pie or apple dumplings.  He had discovered some kind of frozen apple dumplings that he was ordering from Omaha Steaks, or someplace similar.  That way he didn’t have a whole pie sitting around; he baked one dumpling at a time.  It was a gift to me to have the opportunity to bake for him on my visits during his last few months.

So this week as I am making Baked Apple Dumplings, my dad is on my mind.  I wish that he was here to share some of these Baked Apple Dumplings with me.

There are three basic steps to making King Arthur Flour’s Baked Apple Dumplings – the dough, the syrup, and the filling.  All are easy and can be done concurrently,    The dough is made first and put in the freezer  While it chills, the syrup is made and let to simmer for ten minutes.  While it’s doing that, the apples are peeled, sliced, and cored. The apples are sliced around their “waistline; not in the direction that you think of when slicing pieces.  I used a melon “baller” to then scoop out the seeds in the center.  This leaves a nice well for the filling.  The apples are then coated with lemon juice to prevent browning.  The cinnamon filling is also mixed while the syrup simmers.  By the time you are finished, all of the ingredients are ready to be assembled.

The dough was divided in half when put in the freezer.  When you are ready to assemble the dumplings, remove half of the dough and roll it into a 12 inch by 12 inch square.  Cut the square into four equal parts.  Place an apple half in the center of the square and fill its center with a tablespoon of the cinnamon mixture.  The sides of the dough are then moistened to hold the edges together when they are folded up around the apple.  The ends of the dough are tucked into the center of the apple.  This process is repeated with all of the remaining dough.  The recipe makes eight servings.

I did have a little difficulty rolling the cold dough because it kept cracking.  Perhaps it was a little too dry either from not using enough milk when I mixed it.  The recipe calls for 3/4 to a cup, directing that you begin with the lesser amount adding a little at a time until the dough comes together.  I probably added two tablespoons beyond the initial 3/4 cup.  It’s also possible that I had too much flour on my board when I started rolling out the dough.  As I worked the dough and it warmed, working with it became much easier.

The apple dumplings are placed in a greased baking dish, the syrup is poured over them, they are topped with sparkling sugar, and then baked for 45-50 minutes.  I did place my baking dish on a cookie sheet because I had this feeling that the syrup might bubble over and end up all over the bottom of my oven.  We all know that burnt sugar has a terrible smell and is the absolute worst thing to have to clean out of an oven.  I’m glad that I did this.  Now all I have to clean is a baking sheet, not the entire oven!

My family was pretty much standing in the kitchen with their forks ready to try the dumplings when they came out of the oven.  No one was disappointed!  They are delicious!  And, in the big scheme of things, relatively easy to make.  Many people serve Baked Apple Dumplings with a side of ice cream.  We are not big ice cream eaters, so we ate them plain and they stand on their own just fine.  And no one really needs ice cream for breakfast.  Oops!  Did I just say that?  Confession time.  We had the Baked Apple Dumplings for breakfast the next day.  They are breakfast food.  The dough is kind of like biscuits.  Fruit goes with any meal.  And the syrup is the repurposed brown sugar that you put on your oatmeal!  Think of it is  kind of a grown-up Pop-Tart and voila!  Baked Apple Dumplings are the perfect breakfast food. 🙂  If this line of thinking doesn’t work for you, serve them as dessert with a scoop of vanilla ice cream.  Either way, this recipe will not disappoint!

 

from Tracey G.

This time of year always turns me toward thoughts of my mom, she’ll have been gone  for 5 years now on November 1st. Hard to fathom it’s been that long! Time flies for sure, and I’ve noticed how life events become ways of marking time, like a calendar of sorts – sometimes it’s measured by how old Harry is or was at the time of whatever I’m trying to remember, and sometimes it’s marked by how long Mom’s been gone. It’s funny how that seems to happen.

But, anyway, with thoughts of Mom on my mind, when I chose this recipe from King Arthur Flour for Lemon-Blueberry Streusel Pie, it didn’t dawn on me immediately that this pie is actually a combination of my favorite pie – blueberry, and Mom’s favorite – lemon meringue, minus the meringue. It was when Kris and I were talking about what recipes we were making, and the recipe she had chosen brought along thoughts of her Dad, that I then mentioned that for me the anniversary of my Mom’s passing was coming up as well, that it dawned on me she’d would’ve loved this pie! It’s part of her all-time favorite, the lemon part! She loved any and all things lemon, and I must admit she did pass that love the lemon on to me too!

When I discovered this recipe, I was intrigued when I read it. A lemon pie layered by a blueberry pie – then topped off with a streusel topping. Sounded good to me and different, so it became my recipe for this week. It was very easy to do, it just has a couple steps along the way that might make it seem that it’s bit difficult. I am here to say that it is NOT difficult at all! There are three parts: the lemon filling, the blueberry filling and the streusel. Each have their own methods, and are very easy. It doesn’t have a recipe for a crust, but I used their recipe for Classic Single Pie Crust, and it was perfect for it, even though my pastry was less than perfect! I apparently didn’t add quite enough liquid so it ended up a bit dry and falling apart as I tried to get it rolled out and in the pie pan, lol. Oh well, the patches didn’t show once it was filled and it still tasted yummy!

So once you have your pie pastry sorted out and partially baked, you start on the lemon filling. It’s a combination of butter, lemon juice, small amount of cornmeal, cornstarch, salt, sugar and eggs. Once it’s mixed up, pour into your prepared crust and bake for about 20-25 minutes on the bottom rack of the oven. It will still be a bit wobbly when you pull it out, but as it sits and cools it is still cooking and doing it’s thing.

The recipes moves on, once the lemon layer is out of the oven, to making the streusel topping. The topping is a simple combination of flour, melted butter, sugar, vanilla, cinnamon and salt tossed together to form irregular crumbs.

Next up is the blueberry filling. Here you have you an option to use either fresh berries or frozen. I used frozen as that’s what I had on hand. You combine the frozen berries with sugar, a bit of salt and thickener. Now, if you use fresh berries you’re to toss the berries, still wet from washing with the other ingredients. They specify for them to be wet still, or if using frozen, you toss the frozen berries with the other ingredients and allow to thaw, stirring occasionally to mix it all properly.

When the lemon filling is almost done (cooled) you start cooking your berries just until they’re bubbly then spoon them gently over the fairly cool lemon filling layer. Top the whole off with the streusel topping crumbs and bake for another 15-20 minutes or until the topping is lightly browned. When it’s reached that stage, remove to a rack to cool completely then it gets refrigerated to set. It doesn’t specify how long to “chill to allow the pie to set”, but I imagine until it’s completely chilled. I let mine sit overnight due to the fact I wouldn’t have time to get it’s photo the day I made it.

As for how it tastes, this is by far one of the best things I have ever eaten. It’s such a simple combination of lemon and blueberries, but it’s a fabulous taste creation with the two. I know my mom would have loved this pie as much as I do! I have decided it’s going to be my go-to pie/dessert thing. It’s also beautiful when cut for serving, the colors are lovely – but the taste is even lovelier! I can’t describe how wonderfully they all go together, the streusel topping was the wild-card for me –  I knew I’d love the lemon/blueberry combination, but was really unsure if I’d like streusel with the whole thing. I would like to say that I wouldn’t like it any other way – it’s just too perfect as it is. This kind of reminds me of a pie you might find at an obscure diner, thought up by some creative cook needing a dessert. I am so glad I ran across it, and every time I eat a piece, I think of Mom, and really wish she were here to enjoy it with me because I know she would, and I have a feeling she’d ask me to make it often!

Lemon-Blueberry Streusel Pie

Tuesday in Texas – What’s in Your Cart?

’m not much on chores like dusting lamp shades, cleaning under the bathroom sinks, and closet purging all of the last season’s clothes that have shrunk while hanging in the closet, but I do love grocery shopping. To me, it’s more of an experience rather than another chore. I enjoy meal planning, list making, and sometimes even coupon clipping, Most of all, though, I love going to the store and walking the aisles looking for the ingredients I need for the week’s menus. The colors and textures of the produce section make me happy. The smell of the bakery makes me want to go home and break out the flour and bread pans. Even perusing the meat and cheese counters makes me think of new recipes that I’d like to try. On the flip side, I don’t like the fish section and I loathe all of the prepared food aisles. Does that make me a purist? Or a food snob?

It makes me sad that so few people regularly cook meals at home these days. Don’t get me wrong; we eat out more than I’d like to admit, but it is for the social connections rather than because no one at our house can cook. A “tradition” that seems to be disappearing with today’s lifestyle is inviting people to our homes to share a meal “just because.” Having no specific reason to celebrate, but gathering simply to share a homemade meal and enjoy the company of friends at home instead of going out to a restaurant. In my case, it is not the preparing of the meal that keeps me from this, but the fact that I don’t like those other chores – the vacuuming, dusting and clearing the newspapers off of the dining room table in between recycle days. Maybe I need to remedy this situation as one of my goals for 2018. *Note to self.

Back to the grocery store…

I am lucky that I have two grocery stores within walking distance of home. One is a little more convenient in that I pass it on my walk home from school. Lately, however, this one has become a disappointment. They seem to no longer carry a lot of the basic ingredients that I use all the time – King Arthur all-purpose flour, Red Mill rolled oats, smoked Gouda, which is my all-time favorite cheese, and often times they have no tahini. How can I make hummus without tahini? None of these is a “specialty” ingredient. And, they have carried them all in the past. Something has changed.

Over the last several months, we have been doing our regular grocery shopping at “the other” store. It is almost as close to home, but not on the way home from school. This store regularly stocks all of the ingredients that I use most. They carry bigger bags of dried beans and rice, the full line of King Arthur flours, and their meat and dairy cases are always full of fresh things. Weber made the observation that it seems like the first grocery store is catering to people who just want to eat and the second one to people who want to cook and eat. Yes. I think his observation is correct. The first store has a whole section of heat and serve foods and they are all right inside the doors.. The second one does not. The fresh produce is the first thing that you see. Marketing is a fascinating thing. 🙂

I’ve always heard that if you are buying healthy and wholesome foods that you only need to shop the outer perimeter of the grocery store. At the second store, this is true except for rice, beans, baking items, and oatmeal. I find that I only walk down one or two aisles during each shopping trip. Maybe this is why I enjoy grocery shopping. This particular chore really doesn’t take very long, especially if I go with a list written out in the order that I encounter things in the store. I come home with bags of ingredients ready to become something delicious and nutritious.

It’s simple. If I don’t buy junk food, I don’t eat junk food. If I want cookies then I have to make them. If I have to make them, sometimes I decide that I really don’t want them bad enough to stop what I’m doing at that moment and make them; or, I get up and make them and have hot delicious cookies rather than store-bought. It’s a win-win for me no matter how I look at it.

Do you like grocery shopping? Have you ever thought about it as an experience rather than just a chore?

If you are looking for ways to rethink your grocery shopping experience, perhaps some of these ideas from the Zen Habits blog may help.

 

Food Friday – Whole Grain Goodness

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from Tracey G.

This cake has become a favorite around here, so I was happy when this week’s topic came around to Whole Grain, and I could share this one! You of course can use all-purpose flour, and actually it’s listed first in the ingredients. But I go with the “or White Whole Wheat” option, I like knowing I’m sneaking in a bit more nutrition in a super yummy delivery system! And the Old-Fashioned Apple Cake with Brown Sugar Frosting,  from King Arthur Flour, is definitely yummy!! And also, if you’re needing to bake gluten free, they recommend replacing the all-purpose/White Whole Wheat flour, with KAF’s Gluten-Free Measure-for-Measure Flour!

This cake has a nice texture, thanks to the bits of apple in it, and it’s apple pie-esque flavor is thanks to the apple pie spice that’s used. Then, it gets topped off with a fantastic brown sugar frosting, that you partially cook to create. And admittedly, even though it calls for  nuts, I make with or without. Depending on my mood and their availability in my kitchen. One of my favorite aspects of this cake is that it’s baked in a 9×13″ pan AND served out of the pan too. It doesn’t get any easier or any more casual than that!

When you begin putting it together, it’s batter is very stiff. But once you add the chopped apples, and start mixing, once they start to add their juice to it, it starts to resemble more of a cookie dough or brownie batter. For me, it depends on how juicy my apples are as what kind of batter I end up with. Spread it in your prepared (greased and floured) pan, and smooth it. They recommend using wet fingers to do so. When it comes out of the oven about 45 minutes later, you put the pan on a rack to cool completely.

To make the Brown Sugar Frosting, you melt the butter in a small saucepan, and add the brown sugar and salt, and cook, while stirring to melt the sugar. Now, the milk gets added and you bring the mixture to a boil. The next step, is adding it to a mixing bowl and letting it cool for about 10 minutes. After the 10 minutes you add the powdered sugar and vanilla, and beat well. At this point you can adjust thickness – if it seems too thin, add more powdered sugar etc. As soon as it’s made, spread it on the cake, while it’s still warm.

At this point, there’s’ nothing left to do but serve it up and enjoy! I think I’d be happy to have this cake around all the time, and no one ever makes a peep about it being made with White Whole Wheat flour, there’s never any complaints and it goes fast!! If you’ve got some apples you want to use up and in a fun and tasty way, do give King Arthur Flour’s recipe for Old-Fashioned Apple Cake with Brown Sugar Frosting a try, you won’t be disappointed!

 

from Kris B.

I always tell my students to “read all of the words” when it comes to test taking and studying. This week, I should have heeded my own advice. As Tracey and I were mapping out our schedule for the fall, I was guilty of judging a book by its cover…er, a recipe by its name. As I have said before, I am good for making anything that involves oats, so this week’s No-Knead Oat Bread found its way into the recipe schedule no questions asked.

I knew that I was going to be away on a retreat this weekend. One of my “gifts” to the community was to bring a big pot of soup for one of our Saturday meals. Perfect! I’d make the bread to go along with the soup; but, that meant that I’d have to bake the bread the Thursday before writing my Friday post and then be prepared to leave town the next day. I had the time to do that even though it was pushing everything until the eleventh hour. I had a plan.

And then I got home from school at 2 pm on Thursday ready to make bread.

For the first time, I read ALL of the words of the recipe. Right at the top is says:

Plan ahead for this easy bread; an overnight or all-day rise gives a terrific flavor.

Uh oh. As I continued reading, the recipe said that an eight hour rise was sufficient. It was 2 pm. I needed 30 minutes to get the dough made. Now it’s 2:30. An eight hour rise brings us to 10:30. OK. That’s not too late. Then shaping and another hour rise. 11:40. And then bake for 50-60 minutes. 12:40 am. That’s doable. I can watch the couple TV shows from the week that are on the DVR and I can knit. All will be fine. I can take the photos first thing in the morning.

Things went as planned. Whew! And I went to bed with the smell of freshly baked filling the house. The only thing that kept me from wanting to eat the bread right then was that at this point I had been awake for twenty hours and was most certainly ready for bed.

When I awoke and got ready to begin again Friday morning, I realized another minor issue with my plan. I didn’t want to slice the bread for the photos because I wanted it as fresh as possible for the weekend’s meal. And if I didn’t slice the bread, then I couldn’t taste test it. I figured I could work around the photo issue, but was it reasonable to write a post about a recipe that I have not personally tasted?

Maybe I can sneak just a little bite. No one will notice, will they?

Ok. This bread is delicious and so easy to make! Oats are always good. Add to that a mixture of all-purpose and whole wheat flour and brown sugar for a subtle hint of sweet and, in my opinion, you get perfection!

All the ingredients are mixed together in an electric mixer bowl. They then sit and think undisturbed for at least eight hours. Then, the dough is shaped and placed in the covered baking pan of your choice. (I used a cast iron Dutch oven.). Let it rise for another hour. To bake, place the bread in a cold oven that is then turned on to 450 degrees. The bread is baked for 45 minutes covered and then another 5-10 uncovered.

I think next time, I will make this at night and bake it’s Friday thing in the morning. It will make delicious toast. Have the butter and red plum jelly ready!

No-Knead Oat Bread`

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