Friday Faves – Motherhood: One Of The Best & One Of The Worst

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from Tracey G.

It is really hard in a way to narrow down to one of each – a best and a worst of being a mom, lol. It’s just a good thing that “the bests” outweigh “the worsts”!!

So if I had to chose one of each at this point I guess it would be these:

The Best – Witnessing or finding out somehow that your child did something in a way you’ve been trying to instill in them, and have been hoping it was working. For example, showing kindness, compassion, tolerance etc. This also tied with “I love you” and squishy hugs…

The Worst – Ugh, the worry. The worrying about your child in ways you never even thought about worrying before! Will they be safe (and will they be safe at school in these crazy times), is he/she kind to people, and on and on and on. Whew. It is stressful!!! But, it comes with the job, occupational hazard I guess!

from Kris B.

The Best – The best thing about being a mother is realizing that you have raised happy, healthy, productive adults who still like you and actually tell you that you do a good job as their mom!

The Worst – Vomit.  Without a doubt, the worst thing about being a mother is vomit!  I kid you not…When Brooke, my oldest, was born, I told her “I don’t do vomit.  Remember that.”  I told Erin the same thing three years later.  In the nearly thirty years that I have been a mother, I’ve only had to clean up vomit one time.  They listened pretty well!

As Tracey said, the good parts of being a mother far outweight the bad!

Happy Mother’s Day to all of you who are mothers or who are mother figures!

Mix It Up Monday – It’s Cookie Time!

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from Kris B.

Vanilla White Chocolate Chip Drops

I love it when it’s cookie week in the Sifted Together world.  I like to make them.  I like to eat them.  And I like to share them.  When I take cookies to school to share with my students, I’m always surprised by how many of them are amazed at the fact that I actually make, from scratch with my own little piano-playing hands, cookies.  They are always most appreciative, though I think they’s be almost as happy, just not as amazed, with store-bought cookies.  They are starving college students, after all.

I am amazed at not only my cookie choice recipes lately, but my dessert choices in general.  I was always a “head for the chocolate” kind of girl – brownies, chocolate cake, French silk pie, chocolate chip cookies.  Not so much anymore.  Maybe my taste buds are finally maturing.  Who knows.  All I know is that I surprised myself when I really wanted to make the Vanilla White Chocolate Chip Drops for this week’s post.

Everything about these “drops”, from the ingredient list to the making and baking, is super easy.

INGREDIENTS

The slight oddity in this list is the use of bread flour, although there is a note that says an equal substitution of all-purpose flour will work just fine.  I can’t say that I’ve ever run across a basic cookie recipe that specifies the use of bread flour.  Perhaps the recipe’s creator needed to use up a stash of bread flour and gave it a whirl.  Who knows?  Anyway, don’t let that keep you from trying the recipe.  I used the bread flour because I had it.  I may try another batch with all-purpose flour just to see if I can tell any difference.

There are no fancy steps to the preparation of the dough.  The butter and sugar are creamed together.  The eggs are added one at a time.  When they are fully incorporated, the vanilla, baking powder, and salt are stirred in.  Finally, the flour is mixed in a little at a time.  The last step is to stir the chips in by hand.

I also about a 1/4 tsp of King Arthur Flour’s Princess Cake and Cookie Flavor.  One of the criticisms of these cookies on the King Arthur website was that they didn’t have enough flavor.  The Princess Cake and Cookie adds a hint of citrus.  The recipe instructs you to refrigerate the cookie dough for at least two hours and up to forty-eight hours.  It says that the chill significantly enhances the flavor of these cookies.  I refrigerated mine for twenty-four hours.  Their flavor is excellent!

Weber and I like this recipe as is, but if you are looking for a bolder flavor, this recipe can be a point of departure lots of experimentation.

Try:

  • Using different flavored chips – cinnamon, butterscotch, or chocolate
  • Drizzling the cookies with a flavored icing – lemon, orange, chocolate
  • Partially dipping the cookies in chocolate
  • Adding crushed peppermints or other candy pieces instead of chips
  • Experimenting with different extracts and flavorings

All this to say that this recipe is a fantastic basic recipe to get you started with thinking beyond the recipe card!

I hope your share your suggestions with us!  Happy baking.

from Tracey G.

Flourless Peanut Butter Chocolate Chip Cookies from King Arthur Flour

It was funny because when I opened the KAF website to find a recipe for this week in the cookie section, this was the first recipe to pop up! And I didn’t look any further!

I love peanut butter cookies, this recipe makes 18, so I doubled it figuring the boys would eat a few and I’d still have plenty left for photos. Interestingly I’ve since found out peanut butter cookies are not one of Jeremy’s favorites, so now I have way too many cookies! I can’t be trusted with all these cookies. I’ve already had 3 for breakfast…

But, anyway, they couldn’t be simpler to make.

The ingredients you need are:

• Peanut Butter (they do say that the results aren’t as good with a “natural” peanut butter as with standard store-bought)

• Egg

• Brown Sugar

• Vanilla

• Salt

• Baking Soda

• Chocolate Chips

That’s it. You combine the peanut butter, brown sugar, baking soda & salt in your mixer and mix until it’s well blended. Next you add your egg and vanilla. Lastly, stir in your chips.

I used my tablespoon-sized scoop to place the cookies on a parchment-lined baking sheet and bake for 8-10 minutes at 350° F. When they’re done, you cool them right on the baking sheet.

For as easy as these are, the problem I had was deciding when they were done. The first batch that I thought was underdone, ended up being the just right ones compared to the subsequent batches I made. Not to mention I slightly flattened the other batches too much I think. Oh well, easy enough things to fix/adjust the next time!

These are really yummy, super easy and are earning a space in my recipe favorites book!

Have fun and cookie on!

Friday Faves – M&M&Ms

It is May already!  How did that happen?  In honor of the start of this month, which begins with the letter “M” and has three letters, and because today is the 3rd of May, we are sharing our three favorite things that begin with the letter “M.”

  • Music – Music is not a favorite because it is what I do for a career.  in fact some days that might be a reason for it to be removed from my favorites list. 🙂  I included music here because it has such a power over us.  It can change our mood in an instant.  It can conjure up memories.  It can help us create memories.  It can put a crying baby to sleep.  It can put a stressed out adult to sleep.  Playing music on an instrument can block out all of the ugliness in the world.  And playing music with other people is the ultimate manifestation of teamwork.
  • Macaroni and Cheese  – What can I say?  I am a kid at heart.  Macaroni and Cheese is the ultimate comfort food for me.  I’ll eat the stuff right out of the blue box or a fancy “Adult” version. I’m not picky.  My favorite adult versions are Cauliflower Mac and Cheese in which the roux is replaced with pureed cauliflower.  This gives the illusion of being a bit healthier.  My other current favorite is a Pesto Mac and Cheese.  I may have to share that recipe on the blog at some point.
  • Mail – I still like to get good ol’ snail mail.  Just like with real books, I like to be able to hold a letter or a card in my hands and read it again and again.  I like to know that if it gets lost, it is my fault, not the cyber-world conspiring to hide my memories.

from Tracey G.

It appears our lists would’ve overlapped a couple times, if not completely, soooooo I had to get a little bit creative. And I must say, I thought this would be so very easy to come up with 3 M things. I was wrong. Aside from the ones Kris mentioned, I was stumped and forced to look up lists of “Things That Start With M” to help jog my memory. I love Monkeys but didn’t think I’d actually list them on a list of 3 things.

Well, here it goes;

Mayonnaise – Yes, it might sound odd, but I really do love the stuff. It’s so versatile. I think my favorite thing to do is transform store-bought into flavored varieties. And my favorite one to whip up for burgers or to dip fries in is Balsamic Mayo. I just mix in balsamic vinegar to a cup or so (more or less, depending on amount needed/wanted) to taste.

Movies – I love watching movies. I don’t get too much time these days to indulge, but I do like to watch a good movie either home or at the theater! I really enjoy mini-marathons at home with either Star Wars or Harry Potter Movies!!

Mobile Devices – I have come to do more on my phone these days than my laptop! It’s so convenient – I can learn things via video, watch a tv show, watch a movie, read a book, take & edit photos, find recipes, talk with a friend either via phone or text and even pay my bills! And I can do all these things (and more!) wherever I happen to be!

What are your favorite things that begin with the letter “M”?

Midweek In Michigan – Ugh, Deadlines

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It seems that it’s that time of year again, for both Kris and I actually, where breathing seems to feel like it has a deadline. Well, it kind of does, but that’s another thing entirely.

It’s the point where you start to resent anything, and I mean anything that remotely feels like there’s a specific time it has to be done. We were chatting about our food post and got discussing the whole “deadline” thing. Normally I work well with one – for some reason they help me manage my time (or mismanage it as well). But I know I’ve reached the point where I’m now feeling rebellious.

Dinner has a deadline. Getting Harry up, dressed, fed and driven school all have their own little deadlines. Picking him up from the bus stop. Paying the bills. It’s really feeling like all the “have-to’s” are overtaking the “want-to’s” and my brain is on overload.

When this happens, I get into ruts. I can’t think of a darn thing to make for dinner. At all. Looking for new recipes feels like a “have-to”, instead of a fun “want-to”. It manages to touch everything I do. Even some of my “want-to’s” start to feel like they’ve gone to the Dark Side of “have-to’s”!

It tends to make me feel like a toddler who’s going to sit in her chair, cross her arms, make the sassy face and just say NO – to everything I don’t even remotely feel like doing. Nope. Not gonna do it. I’m going to sit here, in my chair, drink coffee and maybe read or work on my knitting. That’s it. Speak to me at your own risk – and risk my wrath if you ask me for something that has a specific time frame!

And in all honestly, I think that exact thing can be the cure for these kinds of feelings. A day to do ONLY what you want to – everything else can wait. I come first. If I’m not happy it taints everything I try to do, plagues them with mistakes, mishaps and the like.

So maybe my inner toddler DOES know what’s best for me sometimes!!!

Mix It Up Monday – It’s Mix Week!

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Frontier Soups Illinois Prairie Corn Chowder

I’ve had this soup in my mix stash for a while. Other mixes seemed to come along that I’d want to make, so this one kept getting put on the proverbial “back burner”. This week being kind of crazy with deadlines, I decided a nice easy soup mix that could take care of itself was the mix of choice. As I did have a couple of soup mixes to choose from, I decided this one was getting its chance!

I will admit I was a bit fuzzy on the ingredients needed – so, I made a few substitutions. were emergency ones and one that I’d planned on.

The first sub I made was in the use of a couple fresh cubes potatoes. I didn’t have any, so I searched the cupboard and found a can of cubed potatoes – perfect! I just waited until near the end of cooking before I added them so they wouldn’t turn to mush with the long cooking time.

Next, grabbed the 32 ounce carton of low-sodium chicken broth and dumped it into my saucepan. Then, I re-read the ingredients-I-supply list and I needed TWO 32 ounce cartons. Oopsies. I didn’t have two, just the one. So, I used 4 cups of water instead and hoped it would work out and not be too bland etc. It worked out wonderfully! I did not miss the extra broth at all!

The final substitute I made was using 1 1/2 cups half & half instead of the 2 cups of heavy/whipping cream it called for. It worked really well and I’d even be brave enough to try using milk next time to lighten it a bit!

As an optional ingredient, you can add corn cut from a couple of cobs, if it’s available. I didn’t do this but it would add another layer of yum to it!

It’s easy to make, if you use fresh, diced potatoes you cook them in the broth first. So, you add your 8 cups (64 ounces) of broth (or half water like I did, lol) and bring it yo boil, add your potatoes, and you let them cook a bit. Next your mix goes in and it simmers covered, for about 45 minutes. At this point you add your cream (or half & half as I used) and let it cook on low about 30 minutes. And then you have yourself a super tasty soup that you have to do very little in making it!

I will definitely be stocking this soup mix in my pantry, I’ve yet to be disappointed by one of these soup mixes, and this one is no exception! Give it a try!

Frontier Soups Illinois Prairie Corn Chowder

 

from Kris B.

Essential Goodness Super Grain Pancake Mix

I have this rule in the kitchen that I don’t buy one-purpose gadgets or appliances.  The reason?  I love such things; if I bought all of the “one-hit wonders” out there, I would need a kitchen ten times larger than the one I have.  Since, when I cook, we almost always have leftovers since it is just the two of us, I am developing similar feelings about food.  Food should work for at least two meals – breakfast and lunch or lunch and dinner.  If something will work for all three, like pizza and cake, all the better! 🙂   Pancakes are that perfect food.  In our house, they may show up on the table for breakfast, lunch, dinner, a snack , or even dessert!

I almost always have some kind of pancake or waffle mix in the pantry “for an emergency” when I don’t have a meal plan or the day doesn’t go as planned.  At some point, I ordered a box of King Arthur Flour’s Essential Goodness Super Grain Pancake Mix.    The super grains are: sorghum, oats, teff, buckwheat, spelt, as well as chia seeds.  They are definitely packed with grainy goodness!

To the boxed mix, you add vegetable oil, milk, and eggs.  The recipe does not specify what kind of milk to use.  I ended up using a mixture of whole milk, because I had some that needed to be used, and almond milk.  Since I have never made these pancakes before, I’m not sure if this mixture had any affect on the outcome.  The ingredients are stirred together and poured by 1/4 cup measure onto a preheated griddle.

At first, I was  disappointed that these pancakes didn’t “fluff up” like typical buttermilk pancakes.  This may have been caused by my milk substitution???  However, because they are so packed with grains that once I tasted them, I didn’t feel cheated.  Just a couple of pancakes with the traditional butter and maple syrup topping or with syrup and the fruit of your choice were filling and satisfying.

The box made 20 pancakes.  This is 4-5 meals for Weber and me so I packaged and froze the extras, a bonus for busy days.  All I have to do is pop them in the toaster oven!  With a little fruit and whipped topping, one pancake will also make a filling and healthy snack or dessert.

As a bonus to a the healthy meal that these pancakes provide for us, the purchase of King Arthur’s Essential Goodness products help to fight domestic hunger.  Through their partnership with Feeding America, King Arthur has provided over 2.5 million meals.

Give this mix a try!  Feed your family a healthy meal and help someone who might otherwise go hungry!

 

 

 

 

Friday Favorites: In The Garden

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from Tracey G.

It’s been a LONG time since I’ve actively taken care of my various gardens around the yard. Once Harry was born, the hobby Jeremy and I avidly did together and spent almost every weekend working on (I swear o spent more time outside in the spring/summer than I did in the house!) kind of fell by the wayside. It’s a good thing I’m a huge fan of perennials, because it allowed my garden to keep on trucking without much input from me!

But I do have my favorites that I look forward to seeing come up every year!

* Coneflowers/Shasta Daisies – I love any daisy-type flower really, but these two are my #1 favorites. I lumped them together because as far as performance abc looks they’re very close!

* Catmint – Not only is it a big, fluffy mounded plant, that has the prettiest little flowers (and a lot of them!), but cutting it back usually gets you another round of it and my cats love this cousin to Catnip!

* Garden Phlox – And of this beautiful, wonderful smelling and tall plant, my favorite variety is “David”. I love the white blooms and I swear I’d have them all over the place in ever flower bed I have! I think they’re in 3 now…

 

from Kris B.

Since Weber and I got married in 2010, we have remodeled our house, completely landscaped our yard, and built the greenhouse.  Though each was a major accomplishment and got checked off of “the list,” each is also still a work in progress, particularly the landscaping and the greenhouse.  Theoretically, those two things should work together.  This is a big part of our work in progress.  What we have growing in the greenhouse and what we want and need in the yard are not the same things. 🙂  The greenhouse is filled with bonsai, tropicals, a few bromeliads, and some hanging baskets that we wintered over from last year.  The yard needs perennials that flower and a few splashes of annual color.  We should have started the annuals from seeds in the greenhouse several months ago.  Oh well.  Next year.

So like everyone else, I made my spring trek to the garden center to get a few of my favorite plants to fill in some holes in the landscaping.  Some of my favorites – both old and new are:

  • Hydrangea – I love hydrangea, but was not sure how well they would do in the heat of the Texas summer.  Last year I had one in a pot on the patio.  It did well over the summer, with a lot of water, and spent a happy winter in the greenhouse.  This year, I am going to try planting a couple of them in the ground.  Their big blooms makes me smile!
  • Gerbera Daisies – Gerbera Daisies never disappoint.  I have bright oranges ones and they come back year after year.  They are the first flowers to bloom each spring and the last to stop blooming in the fall.
  • Blue Salvia – It’s blue.  Need I say more?  I love the blue, but we planted the blue salvia, along with Lantana and Butterfly Bush to attract bees, hummingbirds, and, yes, butterflies. The different colors of the flowers when they are all in bloom and the fluttering of the colorful winged critters is  glorious.  This spot in our yard is our little corner or paradise.

I still have a lot to do outside in the garden to make it like I want it, but I look forward to planting and weeding and pruning; this never feels like work.  Any time I get to spend outside (without mosquitoes and 100+ degree temps) is a true gift.

What do you enjoy in your garden?

 

Tuesday In Texas – A Good Laugh

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I have a pretty realistic view of my personal strengths and weaknesses.  One thing I know about myself is that I cannot multi-task very, well really not at all.  I am a serial do-er.  I work on one thing, get it done, and then move on to another.  Every now and then, however, I seem to forget this fact and venture into multi-tasking madness.  This never ends well.  My latest experience with trying to do too many things at once was no exception.

My (very pregnant) daughter offered to have our family Easter celebration at her house this year.  This kept her close to home (and the hospita) and also meant that she didn’t really have to get dressed to be in public.  Yoga pants and bare feet were perfectly acceptable.  She offered to prepare the all of the food and I was responsible for our family’s traditional Easter egg game….that’s a story for another post.  I should have been good with this arrangement and gone along with my business.  But, I didn’t.  I decided that I was going to make Hot Cross Buns.  I’ve done it many times before.  No big deal.

Getting the buns made took a little bit of planning because, though they are not difficult to make, like any bread, they are time-consuming because they require two rises.  Finding a long enough stretch of time in between church and other obligations took some thought.  I also wanted them to be as fresh as possible on Sunday when we ate.  After some strategic planning, Saturday morning was designated as bun baking time.

The dough making process went as planned as did the first rise, which took the expected hour.  I then shaped the buns and placed them on the baking pans for their second rise.  This is where my issues started.  For whatever reason, the second rise took longer for the dough to double than did the first.  This was a problem because I had budgeted just enough time for the buns to rise and then bake before we had to leave the house to take Simon to puppy school.  The buns weren’t ready to go into the oven at the point I needed them to be.  I was faced with a dilemma – Go ahead and bake them even though they hadn’t risen enough; or, let them rise for another hour or so and bake them when I got home.  Because I wanted things done, I opted to go ahead and bake them even though they hadn’t risen quite enough.

Bad decision.

Even though I had shaped the buns into smooth balls, they baked off in such a way that they looked more like drop biscuits…or moon rocks.  It was very strange.  I assume this was because of their abbreviated rise time, but I’m not sure.

I took the buns out of the oven and let them cool while we were gone for dog school.  When I got home and looked at them again, they were officially deemed ugly!  My older daughter said that they weren’t necessarily ugly, they were “rustic.”  That’s it.  Rustic Hot Cross Buns.  Looks aren’t everything, so I decided to taste one.  At this point they did not have the icing “cross.”  They tasted better than they looked, but there was definitely something “not quite right.”  Despite that, our jury of three decided that they were edible.

I placed them in a covered container so that I could ice them Sunday right before we left to go to my daughter’s house.

The icing is a simple powdered sugar and milk mixture that is piped on the buns in a cross shape that was scored into the buns before baking.  As I have done before, I used a “squirt” bottle like a fast food ketchup bottle, to “pipe” the icing.  All was good until the very last bun.  Instead of grabbing a bottle with a screw on lid, I grabbed the ONE bottle that I have that snaps on.  Because I was at the end of the icing, I had to squeeze it a little harder to get the last of the icing to come out.  I squeezed just hard enough that the lid popped off and I discovered that there was a whole lot more icing left in that little bottle than I thought!  Several of the buns were now fully iced.  Again, not a deal breaker in terms of their edibility, but things definitely were not going well.

Because Weber is such a good sport, he offered to take one of the icing drenched buns off of my hands.  When I asked how it was, he took a big gulp of coffee and said that they were super dry, even with all the icing.

With that, I called this year’s Hot Cross Buns experience a dismal failure.

I pulled leftover cinnamon rolls that we made for Christmas out of the freezer and put them on my stack of stuff to go with us for lunch…and threw the Hot Cross Buns in the trash.

Another reminder to myself that I can only do so much.  And when I push that “so much” over the limit to “too much,” the result is not pretty.

I am happy to report that we had a great family Easter celebration even without the #&*% Hot Cross Buns!

Our original plan was for me to share this recipe alongside Tracey’s Carrot Cake yesterday, but that just didn’t seem appropriate!  I may try to make the Hot Cross Buns again, for no particular occasion, with the hope of better results.  When I do, I may share the recipe then.

I am glad that I can laugh at my failures.  Life would be really tough if I couldn’t!  Let’s just say that I have A LOT of laughter in my world. 🙂

Mix It Up Monday – Throwback Recipes: Lighter Carrot Cake

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Food Friday – Have Your Veggies and Eat Your Cake Too!

from Tracey G. 

Kris and I discussed doing occasional “Throwback” posts from our “training blog”, lol, the one that got us started on this team-blogging journey! So, every now and then we’ll pull in a recipe from Pixels, Plates and LOLs! Should be fun, because although some may not be King Arthur Flour recipes, they are all yummy and generally family favorites!

I made this particular recipe this past weekend for a treat – it’s been awhile since I made it, so everyone around here was happy to see it!! Enjoy!

This time of year gets me thinking carrot cake, lol. It’s not something I’ve always liked – as a kid it wasn’t my cup of tea, I didn’t like spiced cakes etc. It wasn’t that I minded veggies in my treats, not at all, I love vegetables in any form, but it was the fact of the cake being too “busy” with spices and potentially nuts in it too. (It’s also a recent thing that I like nuts in my baked goods, but still don’t like them in my cookies, lol) But then one day, it was like a switch flipped and I decided I liked carrot cake, lol.

I’d never made it myself, always just had it out or whatever, but a few years ago, when I was trying to lose the weight that came along with having Harry, I decided I wanted to make one. Well, I was appalled at the amount of fat that went into the average carrot cake recipe! Wow – I think one recipe I ran across had a full cup of oil in it, no thanks. Those recipes gave me sticker shock in the calorie information department, lol. And I didn’t have any canned pineapple around  – every recipe I ran across had pineapple in it. Then, I found this one. Now, I’ve modified it, of course, because while I may like nuts these days in my baked goods – I still don’t like raisins, lol. But I thought this sounded like just what I was looking for – a lighter version with no pineapple involved 😉

So, I made my first carrot cake. A light one at that too – and it was super yummy!! I was so happy with it, I could have my cake and eat it too! LOL Since then, I’ve made it into cupcakes and followed the recipe and made it in a 9×13″ pan. I like to do the cupcakes because then they are portion controlled that way, I am not tempted to cut a bigger piece which would throw off my per serving numbers. I can make the perfect 18 servings by making 18 cupcakes 🙂 I didn’t care for the cream cheese frosting recipe that came along with it, so I just used my favorite one, and lightened it up a little bit, best I could without losing its integrity.

First, you combine the first 5 ingredients – the sugar, eggs, egg whites, oil and applesauce, in a mixing bowl and mix until smooth.

In another bowl, combine the dry ingredients – the flour,  spices, salt and baking soda (if using nuts, those will get stirred in later when carrots are added).

I like to use a whisk whenever I need to combine dry ingredients when I am baking, it’s easy and works well.

Next,  get your carrots ready – I use my mini food processor to shred up the 3 cups needed.

Add the flour mixture to the wet ingredients in the mixing bowl, then stir in your carrots and nuts if using.

Pour into a 13×9″ baking pan coated with non-stick cooking spray or line cupcake pans with liners and divide batter amongst them to make 18 cupcakes. Bake at 350° for 30-35 minutes or until a toothpick inserted near center comes out clean. Whether it be in a 13×9″ pan or cupcakes, allow them to cool completely before frosting them.

Lighter Carrot Cake

preheat oven to 350°

1 1/3 c sugar

2 eggs

2 egg whites

1/2 c unsweetened applesauce

1/3 c canola oil

2 c flour

1 1/2 tsp baking soda

1 tsp salt

1 tsp cinnamon

1/2 tsp allspice

1/4 tsp ground cloves

3 c shredded carrots

1 c chopped walnuts, optional

In a large mixing bowl combine the first 5 ingredients until smooth. Combine the flours, baking soda, salt and spices; add to the egg mixture and mix well.

Stir in carrots and nuts. Pour into a 13×9″ baking pan coated with non-stick cooking spray. Bake at 350° for 30-35 minutes or until a toothpick inserted near center comes out clean. Cool on wire rack. Frost as desired.  Makes 18 servings.

The Cream Cheese Frosting recipe I used for this batch is as follows:

1 8oz. package cream cheese, softened (I usually use Neufchatel, but of course the store didn’t have any today, so it was the full calorie/fat deal today)

2-3 tbsp butter, softened

4 c powdered sugar

1 1/2 tsp vanilla

2-3 tsp milk

In a mixing bowl, add the cream cheese and butter, mix until well blended. Add the vanilla; then add the powdered sugar 1 cup at a time. Add 2-3 tsp milk to get it to the desired consistency for frosting the cake/cupcakes. Makes enough to frost about  24 cupcakes.

All that’s left to do is enjoy! 🙂

Friday Favorites: 10 Ways You Know The Dust Bunnies Have Won

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We are still working on returning our lives to a normal, productive, and rhythm.  While many other things have been chaotic, housekeeping also has taken a back seat.

And then you wake up one day and think, “Oh my goodness!  What is going on here?!?!”

Today we are sharing…

10 Ways You Know The Dust Bunnies Have Won

10 You consider firing the maid and then realize that YOU DON”T HAVE A MAID…

9. All of the laundry baskets are full and you’ve lost track of what is clean and what is dirty.

8. If you’re wondering where your kid’s missing socks are you start hunting…in the living room.  When checking for said missing socks (or underwear!), you find a candy wrapper and leave it because it’s not what you were looking for…

7. The newspaper, magazine, and catalog stack looks like part of the National Archive.

6. You have convinced yourself that dog and cat hair is a design feature.

7. Spring spiders have ready-made homes in the old cobwebs.

6. The broom and vacuum are considering suing for neglect.

5. You realize that you don’t have cataracts, you just need to clean the windows.

4. The dust is writing “dust me” itself.

3. The bathtub, like the coffee pot, has a fill line.

2. The dish ran away with the spoon.

1. The dust bunnies have names on their food bowls.

 

Happy Easter weekend to us.  We will be spring cleaning!

We hope that you all have a great weekend, spending it with family and friends rather than with dust bunnies!

Mix It Up Monday – It’s Cake Simple & Easy!

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from Tracey G.

Vanilla Cake Pan Cake from King Arthur Flour

I’d had my eye on this cake for awhile, in fact I’d printed it off to make for fun right before the flu struck. It never got made, so I was happy to see cake recipes come up in the recipe rotation! Finally! I’d get to make this cake!!

There is a chocolate version of this cake that I’ve made before and can be found in our post Food Friday – Cake Anyone? , and it’s called King Arthur Flour’s Original Cake Pan Cake. It’s super easy and yummy as well!

But, anyway, back to the Vanilla Cake Pan Cake! This cake was a HUGE hit with my boys and myself! The hint of almond extract really gives it a great flavor. Harry has asked for seconds each time we had it, as did Jeremy – and I’m here to say it didn’t last long around here! It was gone in 2 days! I was sweating it after I took the photos, hoping at least one turned out, because the cake was already history!

I did do a double-take when I read through the recipe the first time – the cake doesn’t use eggs, milk or butter! (And you can make it gluten free too!) My kind of cake when I’m interested in my cholesterol numbers! The frosting (optional) does use butter, but they state you can use a vegan version too.

The cake ingredients are:

*Flour

*Salt

*Baking Powder

*Baking Soda

*Water

*Vegetable Oil

*Granulated Sugar

*Cider or White Vinegar

*Vanilla Extract

*Almond Extract

That’s it! It’s mixed a little differently, combine all dry I ingredients, except for the sugar, in a medium bowl. In another small bowl (I used my 2 cup liquid measure) combine the water, oil, vinegar, granulated sugar and the extracts. Then, add that mixture to the dry ingredients, and pour into a greased 8″ square pan or 9″ round pan. Bake at 350°F for 30-35 minutes. Allow to cool completely before frosting or skip the frosting and serve warm out of the oven!

The frosting is super simple and yummy as well. My guys don’t like a lot of frosting (which really kind of takes some of the fun out of my cake decorating hobby!), and this makes the perfect amount for the cake!

The frosting ingredients are:

*Butter

*Powdered Sugar

*Salt (if using salted butter omit the salt)

*Vanilla

*Water

I combined the powdered sugar, salt and butter in my stand mixer, and beat until combined. Add the vanilla and enough water to make spreadable – that’s it! Frost the cake right in the pan – that’s one of the best aspects of this cake, it’s frosted and served right out of the pan!

This cake is SO easy! It’s one of those recipes that’s fabulous to have on hand for when you need a yummy cake fix now! And if you’re out of eggs, or milk or butter (or all 3!) it doesn’t matter – you can still make and enjoy this cake!

 

from Kris B.

Brown Sugar Sour Cream Pound Cake

After a crazy month or so, we are almost back on track…and it feels good.  I must say, however, that I almost postponed writing my part of writing this post to go bake Tracey’s Pan Cake.  It looks so cheerful and delicious!  But, I am being a good adult.  I’ll get my work here done first.  Then eat Brown Sugar Sour Cream Pound Cake.  And then maybe make and eat Vanilla Pan Cake. 🙂

Pound cake is probably my favorite kind of cake to both make and to eat.  I like the making of it because it is not a fussy cake in terms of ingredients or the making process.  It is a mix it up and pour it in a pan kind of cake.  If you want it to look fancy, you can make it in a fancy pan.  No expert cake decorating skills needed.  Pound cakes also are versatile when it comes to serving them.  Serve a pound cake with fruit, with ice cream or flavored whipped cream, glazed, sprinkled with powdered sugar, or plain.  None of these possibilities is a bad choice.

The one twist to this recipe is its use of brown sugar.  The recipe calls for light brown sugar.  I had only dark and that is what I used.  This gives the cake a slightly richer flavor…and a slightly darker color.

Ingredients:

  • butter
  • light brown sugar
  • granulated sugar
  • eggs
  • baking powder
  • salt
  • baking soda
  • All-Purpose Flour
  • sour cream
  • vanilla extract

To give you an idea of how easy and low stress this recipe is, I made it at 10:00 at night after a full day of work, book group, and having had only five hours of sleep the night before.  I can honestly say that I actually enjoyed the process.  This may be because it seems like forever since I have baked something.  It may also be because I was looking forward to eating a piece of cake.

The butter and sugars are creamed together for two minutes in a stand mixer.  The eggs are then added one at a time, followed by the baking powder, salt, baking soda, and half of the flour.  The sour cream is then stirred in and the rest of the flour is added.  A one-bowl recipe, another plus!

The batter is poured into a prepared 9 or 10 cup bundt pan and baked for 55-60 minutes.  My pan may have been a little too big because my pound cake was done in 55 minutes, which is unusual for my oven.  I always have to bake things for at least the maximum time suggested and often longer.  I’m afraid that if I had left this cake in the oven any longer, it would have been on the dry side.  As it is, it’s perfect!  The Brown Sugar Sour Cream Pound Cake has a great texture; it is full but not too heavy.  I would suggest checking your cake at the 55 minute mark, or perhaps sooner if you have a “hot” oven.

It definitely feels good to be cooking and baking again!  I had a small slice of cake after I finished the photos.  Yum!  I’m looking forward to a bigger piece with some berries for dessert tonight!

Happy baking!!!

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