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This is a blog where whatever comes to mind will find its way onto the screen. Hopefully, there will be bits and pieces you enjoy or can use. And, when something neither appeals to you nor applies to you, you are most welcome to skip that post or comment on your own point of view. I hope you are looking forward to this as much as I am.
Wednesday, December 31, 2014
Wednesday, December 24, 2014
Holiday Cooking Marathon - Pumpkin Mascarpone Pie, Pumpkin Soymilk Pie, Broccoli Casserole with cheese sauce
Holiday Cooking Marathon:
Pumpkin Mascarpone Pies –
3 ½ cups cooked, mashed pumpkin
1 ½ cups honey
6 large eggs
2 cups milk/cream mixture
12 ounces mascarpone cheese
8 ounces apricot preserves/jam
1 ½ teaspoon vanilla extract
½ teaspoon sea salt
Mix all until smooth.
Pour into glass or ceramic pie pans (at least 2). Bake at 350 for 60-90 minutes until dry on
top and starting to crack.
Pumpkin Soymilk Pie
8 ounces cooked, mashed pumpkin
1 tablespoon lemon juice
1 ½ teaspoon vanilla extract
1 cup honey
4 eggs
8 ounces vanilla soymilk
Mix all until smooth.
Pour into metal pie pan. Bake at
350 for 1 hour until dry on top and starting to crack.
Broccoli Casserole with cheese sauce
Broccoli
3 bunches broccoli cut into
bite-sized bits.
3 cups thick chicken broth (chicken
broth boiled down to at least ½ original amount to concentrate flavors and to
make freezer storage easier)
½ onion, finely minced
3 cloves garlic, minced/crushed
1 cup water
Put all ingredients in large stock
pot. Bring to boil. Cover.
Boil 4 minutes until broccoli starts to soften and turns bright green. DRAIN – SAVING THE BROTH!!. Run cold water over broccoli to stop
cooking. Set aside.
Return broth to stock pan to use in
cheese sauce.
Cheese sauce
8 ounces Colby cheese, shredded
8 ounces cheddar cheese, shredded
4 ounces feta cheese, shredded/crumbled
4 ounces finely shredded Asiago
cheese
4 cups full-flavor broth (ex. Broth
from the broccoli, thick chicken broth, chicken broth plus extra bouillon cube,
etc.)
1 cup 50/50 bean flour (Besan
flour) and starch (I used a blend of tapioca starch and sweet potato starch)
2 cups cold water.
16 ounces sour cream
6 eggs
Bring broth to boil. While broth comes to boil, mix water and
flour/starch until smooth (Important that there are no lumps!!).
Set cheeses in bowl beside
stove. Set sour cream beside stove.
Once broth boils, drizzle flour/starch/water
mixture into broth STIRRING CONSTANTLY.
It should thicken quickly. IF too
thick add more water. If too thin add
more starch/flour/water mixture. Target
is thick gravy consistency.
Once thickened, still stirring
constantly, start dropping handfuls of cheese into the pot. Stir until melted. Add another handful. Continue until all cheese is added and melted.
Stir in sour cream. Bring to simmer. Remove from heat.
In a large, metal bowl - Whisk eggs
until smooth. Slowly add hot cheese
mixture ¼ cup at a time to temper the eggs.
When cheese mixture is completely added, sauce is complete.
Put cooked broccoli in casserole dish. Pour over cheese sauce until covered. Bake in oven at 350 until browned and bubbly
on top.
TIPS AND DISCUSSION
I had a ton of extra cheese sauce, so I also cut up a
casserole dish worth of baby potatoes and covered those with the cheese
sauce. Still had a quart left, so am
going to see if it mixes into mashed potatoes well.
My hands get sore because of fibromyalgia and osteoarthritis
– so I did all mixing with a mixer.
I have allergies, so I used safe for me ingredients. Because so many of my friends and family have
allergies, there are no brands listed here – too much possibility of reactions.
Thick broth – I make my own broth from chickens I stew. When the bones and skin have had all the
wonderful nutrients stewed out, I strain out the solids and then boil the broth
down to about 1/6 of what the original volume was. This creates something like a gel, which has
an intense and wonderful flavor. I use
this for my base in lots of things that other people might use bouillon.
Pies- the pies would probably be more flavorful with
cinnamon, nutmeg, ginger, clove, and other sweet spices – however I am now
reacting to cinnamon and clove. L However, if this is not the case for you, go
for it!
There are no crusts on the pies because I am cooking for
myself and several family members so I am working around multiple food
restrictions. If I were making this just
for myself, I would use ground nuts, honey, bean flour, and butter to make a
crust.
Still to make – grain-free bread which will then be made
into stuffing. Roast. Wild Turkey.
Devilled Eggs. Sweet Tea. Mashed potatoes.
I think the cooking is my favorite part of ANY holiday!
I think the cooking is my favorite part of ANY holiday!
Labels:
apricots,
besan flour,
broccoli,
broth,
cheddar,
cheese sauce,
colby,
feta,
Holidays,
honey,
mascarpone cheese,
potatoes,
pumpkin pie,
recipes,
soy,
soymilk,
sweet potato starch,
tapioca,
thick broth
Saturday, December 13, 2014
A Holiday Wish
During the Holiday season, I hear so very often people feeling despair due to their family having fractured connections, money being less than needs and nothing near what presents might require, real life not resembling anything close to television glitter or facebook stellar moments.
Please remember you have both family of blood and a family of the heart. When one is cracked or broken, the other is there to love, sustain, and care. Holidays, regardless of which religion to which you belong or you abstain, are there to celebrate the miracles of life in all the myriad possibilities it has. And that which is illusion will never anchor you when challenges arise. Instead, that which is real will serve as your foundation to build something that echoes through the ages.
You each are real. You each matter. And to everyone who breathes - there are connections which bind you into the tapestry that makes life. Celebrate that which you have, that of which you dream, and the family you have chosen to make within this world.
My Holiday Wish is this:
May each of you find yourself to be enough;
May each of you find the courage to step outside whatever box has been placed around you in order that you find what your potential truly is;
May each of you find peace in your life and love within the connections you have to others.
Be kind to yourselves and to each other.
Please remember you have both family of blood and a family of the heart. When one is cracked or broken, the other is there to love, sustain, and care. Holidays, regardless of which religion to which you belong or you abstain, are there to celebrate the miracles of life in all the myriad possibilities it has. And that which is illusion will never anchor you when challenges arise. Instead, that which is real will serve as your foundation to build something that echoes through the ages.
You each are real. You each matter. And to everyone who breathes - there are connections which bind you into the tapestry that makes life. Celebrate that which you have, that of which you dream, and the family you have chosen to make within this world.
My Holiday Wish is this:
May each of you find yourself to be enough;
May each of you find the courage to step outside whatever box has been placed around you in order that you find what your potential truly is;
May each of you find peace in your life and love within the connections you have to others.
Be kind to yourselves and to each other.
Thursday, December 4, 2014
Roasted taters and cheese. Beeswax lip & Hand balm - 2 recipes
Roasted Taters and Cheese
Last night, I was hungry, but really did not want to do much cooking and DEFINITELY did not want to do many dishes. So, I thought about some sort of twist on a baked potato. This is what I ended up with:
2 large (baking) potatoes - scrubbed clean.
8 ounces mozzarella (or any other) cheese
1 tablespoon butter
I sliced the scrubbed baking potatoes into rounds that were 1/4 inch thick. It is important to get all rounds about the same thickness.
I put down a layer of potato rounds in the bottom of a glass casserole dish. I then laid out a second layer on top of the first, offsetting the potatoes so the second layer lay over the edges of the potatoes below it.
I dotted the entire top layer with very thin slices of butter.
I put this into a cold oven and turned it onto 400 degrees fahrenheit, let it bake for 20 minutes.
At 20 minutes, I took the potatoes out of the oven and topped with thinly sliced mozzarella cheese (could use shredded cheese, but why bother with the work of shredding it when slices work just as well??). I put the potatoes back into the oven for another 15-20 minutes. When the cheese was toasty browned on top and crispy, I took them out of the oven.
It was a lovely meal to eat with salmon and green peas. And, the amount of dishes - 1 casserole dish and 1 knife (I sliced the cheese in the casserole dish before layering on potatoes so I did not have to dirty a cutting board).
AWESOME!
BEESWAX LIP/HAND BALM
2 ounces of beeswax
1/2 cup castor oil
1/4 cup apricot kernel oil.
Put all ingredients in a double boiler (or if you don't have one as I do not, make one by sticking a smaller pot suspended in a bigger pot and fill the bigger pot so water covers the bottom 1/3 of the smaller pot's depth).
Heat OVER LOW HEAT (takes about 30-45 minutes) to melt the beeswax. Stir frequently. Time to completely melt beeswax is reduced if you chop the beeswax into thin chunks/slices prior to heating.
Once completely melted, turn out into glass dish with sides or into containers. Once cool, use sharp, oiled knife to cut into small squares. Wrap in waxed paper and then in foil. Tie a little bow on it. Give as gifts for hands/lips over winter.
Last night, I was hungry, but really did not want to do much cooking and DEFINITELY did not want to do many dishes. So, I thought about some sort of twist on a baked potato. This is what I ended up with:
2 large (baking) potatoes - scrubbed clean.
8 ounces mozzarella (or any other) cheese
1 tablespoon butter
I sliced the scrubbed baking potatoes into rounds that were 1/4 inch thick. It is important to get all rounds about the same thickness.
I put down a layer of potato rounds in the bottom of a glass casserole dish. I then laid out a second layer on top of the first, offsetting the potatoes so the second layer lay over the edges of the potatoes below it.
I dotted the entire top layer with very thin slices of butter.
I put this into a cold oven and turned it onto 400 degrees fahrenheit, let it bake for 20 minutes.
At 20 minutes, I took the potatoes out of the oven and topped with thinly sliced mozzarella cheese (could use shredded cheese, but why bother with the work of shredding it when slices work just as well??). I put the potatoes back into the oven for another 15-20 minutes. When the cheese was toasty browned on top and crispy, I took them out of the oven.
It was a lovely meal to eat with salmon and green peas. And, the amount of dishes - 1 casserole dish and 1 knife (I sliced the cheese in the casserole dish before layering on potatoes so I did not have to dirty a cutting board).
AWESOME!
BEESWAX LIP/HAND BALM
2 ounces of beeswax
1/2 cup castor oil
1/4 cup apricot kernel oil.
Put all ingredients in a double boiler (or if you don't have one as I do not, make one by sticking a smaller pot suspended in a bigger pot and fill the bigger pot so water covers the bottom 1/3 of the smaller pot's depth).
Heat OVER LOW HEAT (takes about 30-45 minutes) to melt the beeswax. Stir frequently. Time to completely melt beeswax is reduced if you chop the beeswax into thin chunks/slices prior to heating.
Once completely melted, turn out into glass dish with sides or into containers. Once cool, use sharp, oiled knife to cut into small squares. Wrap in waxed paper and then in foil. Tie a little bow on it. Give as gifts for hands/lips over winter.
Labels:
apricot oil,
bees,
beeswax,
casserole,
castor oil,
cheese,
easy recipe,
hand balm,
hand cream,
lip balm,
one pot meals,
potatoes,
quick and easy recipes,
recipe,
recipes,
roasted potatoes
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