This recipe for a perfect roasted turkey has moved to my new website! Please visit it at Winning Thanksgiving Turkey!
Eating local saves the earth, supports small business owners, and I think it's the most delicious way to eat. This blog is all about recipes and photos of my local food adventures, based in Salt Lake City, Utah along the beautiful Wasatch Front.
Friday, November 23, 2012
Tuesday, November 20, 2012
Crockpot: Hot Buttered Rum
Crock pots are truly wonderful inventions, and there is no need to limit their use to meals. This toasty warm drink simmers for several hours and fills the kitchen with a welcoming holiday aroma. The rum is added just before serving so it doesn't cook off. I cut the amount of rum in half from the original recipe (2 cups) since that was too overwhelming for me, but it's nice to have some extra on hand for guests who like it stronger. For the non-alcohol-drinking crowd, the rum can be skipped or experimenting with adding apple cider would be a nice twist.Some tips on this recipe:
Crock pots don't all go to the same temperature at "Low" so if it seems too buttery, bump it up to high for a little bit and see if that helps. Stir just before serving.
Straining out the spices isn't absolutely necessary but it does prevent people from accidentally eating them. :)
Hot Buttered Rum, Crockpot-style
Adapted from Allrecipes.com
8 servings
INGREDIENTS
2 cups dark brown sugar
1/2 cup butter (only real butter!)
1 pinch salt
2 quarts hot water
3 cinnamon sticks
6 whole cloves
1 to 2 cups rum (I use the spiced kind)
1 cup whipped cream, for serving
Ground nutmeg for garnish
DIRECTIONS
1. Combine the brown sugar, butter, salt and hot water in 5 quart slow cooker. Add cinnamon sticks and cloves. Cover and cook on Low for 5 hours. Stir in rum.
2. Use a fine mesh strainer and fish around to get the cloves and cinnamon sticks out.
3. Ladle from the slow cooker into mugs and top with whipped cream and a dusting of nutmeg.
Monday, November 19, 2012
Preserving: Freezer Apple Pie Filling
Tis the season to preserve the last of the local apples! It's also time to start thinking about the upcoming holidays, guests visiting, parties and potlucks. I love this season! Always up for trying something new, I wanted to know if it's possible to make apple pie filling and freeze it... and it sure is! I have a nifty apple peeler/corer/slicer contraption that makes preparing the apples a snap (only about $20 on Amazon if you don't have one yet, they are amazing!).
Use some cheap aluminum pie plates for this, the ones that are a little smaller than a regular pie size, and line them with aluminum foil for easy filling removal.
The amount of water in this recipe is variable depending on how juicy your apples are and whether you want extra "apple syrup" to put over pancakes or waffles or ice cream... or to eat with a spoon... we made some into pie-flavored ice cream! For no extra syrup, about half to two-thirds of the ten cups of water will probably work fine, and cut the corn starch down proportionally. 13 small apples makes enough for 3 pies.
Freezer Apple Pie Filling
INGREDIENTS
18 cups thinly sliced apples
3 tablespoons lemon juice (optional, to prevent browning)
4 1/2 cups white sugar
1/2 to 1 cup cornstarch
2 teaspoons ground cinnamon
1 teaspoon salt
1/4 teaspoon ground nutmeg
5 to 10 cups water
DIRECTIONS
1. Prepare pie tins: line aluminum pie tins with foil. (13 small apples makes 3 pies)
2. In a large bowl, toss apples with lemon juice and set aside. Pour water into a large pot over medium heat. Combine sugar, cornstarch, cinnamon, salt and nutmeg. Add to water, stir well, and bring to a boil. Boil for 2 minutes, stirring constantly.
3. Add apples and return to a boil. Reduce heat, cover and simmer until apples are tender, about 6 to 8 minutes. Cool for 30 minutes.
4. Ladle into prepared pie tins. Cool at room temperature no longer than 1 1/2 hours.
5. Freeze, then transfer frozen discs out of pie plates into zip-lock freezer bags. Can be stored for up to 12 months.
MAKING PIE
Baking the frozen pie filling is a lot like baking a pie from the store except you can proudly announce that it was homemade. I like the frozen pre-shaped pie crusts, and the frozen filling discs fit perfectly inside! I use a crumbly oat topping instead of a top crust. Bake in a 350 oven for 45 minutes and test for done-ness. This made the crust a little soggy so I might play with the time and temp a little, but the apples were completely thawed and cooked through and it's always nice to have the house smell like apple pie. Only thing better is having the house smell like apple pie and hot buttered rum.
Use some cheap aluminum pie plates for this, the ones that are a little smaller than a regular pie size, and line them with aluminum foil for easy filling removal.
The amount of water in this recipe is variable depending on how juicy your apples are and whether you want extra "apple syrup" to put over pancakes or waffles or ice cream... or to eat with a spoon... we made some into pie-flavored ice cream! For no extra syrup, about half to two-thirds of the ten cups of water will probably work fine, and cut the corn starch down proportionally. 13 small apples makes enough for 3 pies.
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| Freezer apple pie filling, ready for pies! |
Freezer Apple Pie Filling
INGREDIENTS
18 cups thinly sliced apples
3 tablespoons lemon juice (optional, to prevent browning)
4 1/2 cups white sugar
1/2 to 1 cup cornstarch
2 teaspoons ground cinnamon
1 teaspoon salt
1/4 teaspoon ground nutmeg
5 to 10 cups water
DIRECTIONS
1. Prepare pie tins: line aluminum pie tins with foil. (13 small apples makes 3 pies)
2. In a large bowl, toss apples with lemon juice and set aside. Pour water into a large pot over medium heat. Combine sugar, cornstarch, cinnamon, salt and nutmeg. Add to water, stir well, and bring to a boil. Boil for 2 minutes, stirring constantly.
3. Add apples and return to a boil. Reduce heat, cover and simmer until apples are tender, about 6 to 8 minutes. Cool for 30 minutes.
4. Ladle into prepared pie tins. Cool at room temperature no longer than 1 1/2 hours.
5. Freeze, then transfer frozen discs out of pie plates into zip-lock freezer bags. Can be stored for up to 12 months.
MAKING PIE
Baking the frozen pie filling is a lot like baking a pie from the store except you can proudly announce that it was homemade. I like the frozen pre-shaped pie crusts, and the frozen filling discs fit perfectly inside! I use a crumbly oat topping instead of a top crust. Bake in a 350 oven for 45 minutes and test for done-ness. This made the crust a little soggy so I might play with the time and temp a little, but the apples were completely thawed and cooked through and it's always nice to have the house smell like apple pie. Only thing better is having the house smell like apple pie and hot buttered rum.
Monday, October 29, 2012
Cheesy Zucchini Biscuits
![]() |
| Cheddar Zucchini Biscuits |
I put most of them into the freezer for future enjoyment when I am craving cheesy bready things. This would be another easy and delicious recipe for autumn potlucks. The original recipe was published in a magazine but I don't know which.
Cheesy Zucchini Biscuits
Makes 12-18 small biscuits
INGREDIENTS
3/4 cup shredded zucchini
1/2 tsp salt, divided
1 cup shredded aged cheddar cheese (sharp white cheddar is excellent)
1/4 cup sliced green onions (optional)
2 cups plus 1 Tbsp flour, divided
2 tsp baking powder
6 Tbsp butter, chilled, cut up
1 cup milk
DIRECTIONS
Heat oven to 450.
Line baking sheet with parchment paper or aluminum foil (or spray with cooking spray).
Combine zucchini and 1/4 tsp salt in small bowl; let stand 20 minutes. Place zucchini in strainer; press on zucchini to drain any liquid.
Combine zucchini, cheese, green onions and 1 Tbsp flour in medium bowl.
Whisk remaining 2 cups flour, baking powder and remaining 1/4 tsp salt in medium bowl.
With pastry blender, cut in butter until mixture resembles small peas.
Stir in zucchini mixture.
Stir in milk just until soft dough forms.
Drop dough by Tablespoonfuls onto baking sheet.
Bake 10-13 minutes or until light brown on top and bottom (13 minutes in my oven). Serve warm.
Make extra to wrap in plastic in the freezer, they are great re-heated.
Thursday, October 25, 2012
Polenta (Northern Italian Style)
I am a food collector. I like buying food and don't necessarily have any intention to cook it or eat it, I just like having it in the pantry. Sometimes I fight this by picking an ingredient that has been ignored and finding a dish that I can use it in. Today's winner: coarse corn meal from Bob's Red Mill! After reading about things to do with corn meal, I decided on Polenta. I have had it fried in little sticks at restaurants but it's a lot more like oatmeal or malt-o-meal if you don't fry it. Also, super easy!
I served it sprinkled with Parmesan and paired with a basil tilapia (thanks Costco) and Moscato wine (the Barefoot winery has a great one) to round out the Italian theme. Getting the consistency I wanted meant undercooking it a little, so it was perfect for spooning out of the pot rather than something slice-able. Why? Well, it tasted good and I was hungry so that usually means declaring it dinner time.
Later note: This made great leftovers! Not everything tastes good reheated but this one does so make extra.
Northern Italian Style Polenta
Source: Cooks.com
INGREDIENTS
5 1/2 cups water
dash of salt
1 3/4 - 2 cups coarse yellow corn meal
DIRECTIONS
Pour water into large heavy pot, add salt and bring to a boil. Reduce heat so water is just simmering. Pour the corn meal slowly in a steady slow stream, while churning the corn meal and water with the whisk to minimize lumping of corn meal. Stir with whisk a few times, then cover and cook at low temperature. Stir mixture thoroughly every few minutes for about 30 to 45 minutes or until mixture stiffens and pulls away from the sides of the pan. The polenta is ready.
Slowly invert the polenta on to a wooden or plastic serving board or large dish, shaping to resemble a cake. Using a double strand of white sewing thread begin slicing polenta into "bread slices" by cutting from one side and then from the other side. To keep polenta warm, cover with a clean, white dish towel. Serve.
I served it sprinkled with Parmesan and paired with a basil tilapia (thanks Costco) and Moscato wine (the Barefoot winery has a great one) to round out the Italian theme. Getting the consistency I wanted meant undercooking it a little, so it was perfect for spooning out of the pot rather than something slice-able. Why? Well, it tasted good and I was hungry so that usually means declaring it dinner time.
Later note: This made great leftovers! Not everything tastes good reheated but this one does so make extra.
Northern Italian Style Polenta
Source: Cooks.com
INGREDIENTS
5 1/2 cups water
dash of salt
1 3/4 - 2 cups coarse yellow corn meal
DIRECTIONS
Pour water into large heavy pot, add salt and bring to a boil. Reduce heat so water is just simmering. Pour the corn meal slowly in a steady slow stream, while churning the corn meal and water with the whisk to minimize lumping of corn meal. Stir with whisk a few times, then cover and cook at low temperature. Stir mixture thoroughly every few minutes for about 30 to 45 minutes or until mixture stiffens and pulls away from the sides of the pan. The polenta is ready.
Slowly invert the polenta on to a wooden or plastic serving board or large dish, shaping to resemble a cake. Using a double strand of white sewing thread begin slicing polenta into "bread slices" by cutting from one side and then from the other side. To keep polenta warm, cover with a clean, white dish towel. Serve.
Friday, October 19, 2012
Pad Thai
It is a new and different experience cooking something when you don't know the end result. I'm not talking about "will this recipe be good" results. I had never tried Pad Thai or any non-curry Thai dish and would not recognize it other than knowing not to eat it (I have allergy issues). What is it supposed to look like? What is it supposed to taste like? The strangest part was that at the end, I didn't know if it had come out well or not. Most things you know when they are right. Does it look like a cookie and taste good? Success! Does it look like something you've never seen and taste like nothing you have ever tasted? Yes, but are those good qualities?
Thankfully my husband, whose birthday the Pad Thai was for, declared it great with a few minor recipe tweaks. I made it without lime juice so that I could eat it too and was pleased to not be allergic to any of the other ingredients. I've been avoiding limes for so long that I forgot what they smelled like. Of course that is one of the best parts, so I've read, so I made sure to have a fresh one on hand so my husband could drench his in lime juice and beam with pleasure. I also learned a trick to enjoying it *almost* the way it should be: smell is very closely related to taste, so I can smell the fresh cut lime wedges and take a bite of Pad Thai, which is darn close to drenching it in lime juice and won't kill me. Hooray!
The original recipe came from AllRecipes.com
Pad Thai
Makes 6 servings
INGREDIENTS
16 oz rice noodles
2 tablespoons olive oil
3 cloves garlic, minced
1/8 tablespoon crushed red pepper
4 boneless, skinless chicken breast halves, cut into bite-sized pieces*
1/4 cup safflower oil (or vegetable or sesame)
4 eggs
2 tablespoon white wine vinegar or rice vinegar
2-3 tablespoons fish sauce
6 tablespoons white sugar
2 tsp peanut butter
1 tsp paprika
1/2 cup grated carrots and/or bean sprouts
1/4 cup crushed peanuts or cashews (for serving)
2 green onions, chopped (for serving)
1 lime (for serving)
NOTE about the chicken: To use frozen chicken, cook it part-way until it's soft enough to cut to bite-size. Cut up then use in the recipe as called for.
1. Make Noodles: Follow the instructions on the package of noodles for cooking. Finish cooking noodles before starting on the chicken. Rinse noodles well under cold water to prevent sticking together.
2. Make sauce: Mix together in a small bowl: vinegar, fish sauce, sugar, peanut butter, and paprika.
3. Cook chicken: Heat olive oil in a wok or large heavy skillet. Add garlic, red pepper flakes, and chicken; saute chicken until browned. Remove from wok and set aside.
4. Heat safflower oil in wok over medium-high heat. Crack eggs into hot oil, stirring to break the yolks and half-scramble, and cook until firm. Stir in chicken and cook for 5 minutes. Add cooked noodles and sauce. Adjust seasonings to taste. Add carrots and mix for 3 minutes until they are warm; do not over-mix or the noodles break into little pieces.
5. Sprinkle crushed nuts and chopped green onions over the top and serve with a lime wedge.
Thankfully my husband, whose birthday the Pad Thai was for, declared it great with a few minor recipe tweaks. I made it without lime juice so that I could eat it too and was pleased to not be allergic to any of the other ingredients. I've been avoiding limes for so long that I forgot what they smelled like. Of course that is one of the best parts, so I've read, so I made sure to have a fresh one on hand so my husband could drench his in lime juice and beam with pleasure. I also learned a trick to enjoying it *almost* the way it should be: smell is very closely related to taste, so I can smell the fresh cut lime wedges and take a bite of Pad Thai, which is darn close to drenching it in lime juice and won't kill me. Hooray!
The original recipe came from AllRecipes.com
Pad Thai
Makes 6 servings
INGREDIENTS
16 oz rice noodles
2 tablespoons olive oil
3 cloves garlic, minced
1/8 tablespoon crushed red pepper
4 boneless, skinless chicken breast halves, cut into bite-sized pieces*
1/4 cup safflower oil (or vegetable or sesame)
4 eggs
2 tablespoon white wine vinegar or rice vinegar
2-3 tablespoons fish sauce
6 tablespoons white sugar
2 tsp peanut butter
1 tsp paprika
1/2 cup grated carrots and/or bean sprouts
1/4 cup crushed peanuts or cashews (for serving)
2 green onions, chopped (for serving)
1 lime (for serving)
NOTE about the chicken: To use frozen chicken, cook it part-way until it's soft enough to cut to bite-size. Cut up then use in the recipe as called for.
1. Make Noodles: Follow the instructions on the package of noodles for cooking. Finish cooking noodles before starting on the chicken. Rinse noodles well under cold water to prevent sticking together.
2. Make sauce: Mix together in a small bowl: vinegar, fish sauce, sugar, peanut butter, and paprika.
3. Cook chicken: Heat olive oil in a wok or large heavy skillet. Add garlic, red pepper flakes, and chicken; saute chicken until browned. Remove from wok and set aside.
4. Heat safflower oil in wok over medium-high heat. Crack eggs into hot oil, stirring to break the yolks and half-scramble, and cook until firm. Stir in chicken and cook for 5 minutes. Add cooked noodles and sauce. Adjust seasonings to taste. Add carrots and mix for 3 minutes until they are warm; do not over-mix or the noodles break into little pieces.
5. Sprinkle crushed nuts and chopped green onions over the top and serve with a lime wedge.
Tuesday, October 16, 2012
October Chicken Soup and Stock
One autumn in Portland, I discovered a magic place. I was taking a tax preparation class and needed a good place to study, and happened upon a little deli/restaurant downtown that played soft jazz music, had beautiful wooden tables, and made the best soup. I never got around to trying the sandwiches, they looked great but I couldn't bear to trade the soup for anything else. The combination of squash, cabbage, and turmeric stayed in my mind and I am pleased with my best duplication of it. This brings to mind the dark stormy afternoons of bright wet yellow leaves, and of running in the rain with my books under my bright red raincoat, with the pleasing soft jingle of the bell on the door and reading the entire chalkboard menu before ordering my favorite soup.
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| October Chicken Zucchini Soup |
October Chicken Soup
INGREDIENTS
*NOTE: Save all of the cuttings from the veggies for making stock!
1 Pre-cooked cornish game hen
4 cups chicken broth
1-2 yellow crookneck squash and/or zucchini, cut in half-slices
5 small white potatoes, cut to bite-size
3 handfuls of baby carrots, cut to bite-size (in thirds is a good size)
3 handfuls of fresh spinach leaves, washed
1 round slice of cabbage, broken into large bite-size pieces
1 bay leaf
1/2 tsp turmeric
Salt & pepper to taste
Additional water to cover ingredients
DIRECTIONS
Strip the meat off the chicken bones and break or cut meat into bite-sized pieces. Add meat, broth, all veggies, and bay leaf to large soup pot. Add enough water to cover the ingredients and stir carefully. Bring to a boil, then simmer until all veggies are cooked. Add turmeric and salt and pepper to taste. Serve with a big chunk of crusty bread.
Chicken Stock or Vegetable Stock
INGREDIENTS
1 poultry carcass, all good meat removed (obviously leave this out to make vegetable stock)
Veggie discards: This includes onion peel, garlic peel, ends of zucchini or carrots, stems from broccoli or kale, etc. The more the merrier, this is all flavor!
Enough water to cover everything, and as much as you want to make into broth
** Ingredient note: Don't use potatoes.
DIRECTIONS
Put everything into a large soup pot and cook on low to medium for several hours. Do not add seasoning other than what may have been on the poultry skin. Refrigerate or freeze until needed.
This can be used to make future chicken soup or anything else that calls for chicken stock - pumpkin soup, pot pies, risotto, etc.
(Photo by me)
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