Thursday, June 27, 2013

Spirited Vinegars

What are spirited vinegars?  They are vinegars infused with herbs, spices, flowers or fruits.  You can read more about spirited vinegars from Mountain Rose Herbs.  

Chef Gaby introduced them to me.  You can use them a few different ways.  The most common is marinades and salad dressings.  In this photo are L-R, Rosemary Vinegar, Coriander/Tarragon Vinegar, and Dill Vinegar.  They need to infuse for at least 2 weeks.  

Check out the Grilled Tarragon Marinated Steak for one way to use a spirited vinegar.

Tuesday, June 25, 2013

Bread and Butter Pickles

This is Aunt Martha's recipe for some easy pickles!! 

Bread and Butter Pickles

3 quarts cucumbers, sliced
1/2 cup salt
3 cups vinegar
3 cups sugar
3 onions, sliced
1/4 cup mustard seed
1/2 teaspoon celery salt

Monday, June 24, 2013

Bac'n Beans

I think these taste just like pork and beans but with bacon (which is technically still pork) so my husband came up with the name Bacon Beans but to take out the "o" and make it an apostrophe. 

Bac'n Beans

1 pound dry Great Northern beans
4-5 slices bacon, chopped
1/3 cup diced onion (1/2 cup if you chop instead of dice)
1 teaspoon dried sage
Two good pinches of red pepper flakes
4 Tablespoons tomato paste
2 Tablespoons honey
2 cups chicken broth
15 oz can tomato sauce



Place beans in large pot and cover with water.  Bring to boil and boil for 2 minutes.  Turn off heat and let sit covered for an hour.  Drain the beans and return to pot.  Cover with at least 2 inches of water and return to boil.  Simmer, covered, until the beans are soft.  Takes approximately an hour.  Drain.
Meanwhile in a smaller pan cook the bacon until nearly done. Drain off most of the fat.  Add onions.
Cook until golden brown and soft. 
Add red pepper flakes and sage.  Cook for 1 minute. Add tomato paste, honey, chicken broth, and tomato sauce.  Stir to combine and then pour into beans. 
Stir well. Cover the pot with an oven proof lid or two layers of foil. Cook at 325 degrees for 1-1/2 hours, removing cover for last 15 minutes.


Thursday, June 20, 2013

Foodie Friends Friday Linky Party #49

Welcome to Foodie Friends Friday Fresh Fruit Party! 







Last week's recipes that received the MOST CLICKS. I was honored to have my dad's favorite dessert, CHERRY TORTE, chosen as one of them!

Please take a moment to read through the rules before getting started, Thank You!

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Thank you to everyone for making last week's Foodie Friends Friday Sweet Treats party a huge success. Did you see all the recipes that caught OUR attention last week? Check out the Host Favorites on the Daily Dish for links to all the recipes.








Garden Chowder

Garden Chowder

1-1/2 teaspoons dried sage
1/2 teaspoon dried thyme
1/3 cup flour
2 cups milk
2 cups chicken broth ***
2 Tablespoons grated onion
1 cup thinly sliced carrots
2 cups diced sweet potatoes
3/4 cup frozen sweet corn (from the can is also acceptable)
2 cups thinly sliced fresh spinach
salt and pepper to taste


Slice carrots thin (thinner than my photo here!) and dice sweet potatoes
In medium size pot add the sage (rub between your fingers to break up as needed), thyme, flour, milk, and chicken broth.  Whisk to disperse the flour. Dump in carrots, sweet potatoes, and onions.
Bring to boil, turn down to simmer stirring occasionally.  Simmer until veggies are soft.  My carrots took longer than the sweet potatoes so check them.  Slicing them thinner than I did will speed them along.  Look how the soup starts to turn a beautiful orange.   Takes about 30 minutes.  Be sure to stir here and there so it doesn't stick to the bottom.  Your chowder will lose a little liquid and thicken up nicely.
Add spinach (make sure to the cut the opposite way so they are not long strips) and corn and cook for 5 minutes more.  

Serve.
My husband likes meat in his soups so he added some grilled chicken to his.  

***Use vegetable broth for a vegetarian version.

Saturday, June 15, 2013

Sauerkraut Gratin

So, what to do with all that homemade sauerkraut?  Ask Chef Gaby! After trying my homemade sauerkraut and declaring it was the best she had ever had she emailed me this recipe. A modified version of Paul Grimm's version.

Sauerkraut Gratin

1 leek, finely chopped (I used 1/4 cup finely chopped onion)
1 bay leaf
1/4 teaspoon juniper berries, crushed (I used my spice grinder)
4 Tablespoons salted butter
2 pounds sauerkraut, drained and chopped (I used 2 quart jars full of mostly drained fresh kraut)
2 cups heavy cream
1 cup milk
4 large eggs
salt and white Pepper
3/4 cup Panko crumbs

Melt 2 tablespoons of the butter in a large skillet and cook the onion until translucent. Add the juniper and the bay leaf followed by the kraut. Cook down until the kraut is hot. While that cooks, combine the cream, milk, eggs and season with salt and pepper.

Remove bay leaf and transfer the kraut mix into a 9x13"baking dish. 
Pour over the custard mix. 

Bake at 350 degrees for 45 minutes. **
Meanwhile melt the remaining butter and toss with panko crumbs.
Sprinkle crumbs on top and baked an additional 15 minutes until the crumbs are golden brown and the gratin doesn't jiggle when wiggled.

**The recipe called for putting the buttered Panko crumbs on at the beginning of the cooking time but I was afraid it might burn so I added them later.  

Tuesday, June 11, 2013

Squash Pancakes

My friend Rachel gave me this recipe.  What a great way to get your kids to eat veggies! We eat these as a side with supper.

Squash Pancakes

4 cups shredded squash (zucchini and/or yellow squash are best)
1 cup shredded cheese (pick your favorite)
1/2 teaspoon salt
few dashes of pepper
2 eggs
1-1/2 cups Bisquick (GF also works!)

Stir all the ingredients together. (I pulled my veggies out of the freezer but fresh can certainly be used.)
I used Mexi-blend here.


Drop by scoopfuls onto hot griddle.
Cook until golden brown on the outsides and done on the inside.

Friday, June 7, 2013

Homemade Taco Seasoning


In one of my classes with Chef Gaby we talked about whole spices and grinding our own.  We put together rubs, vinegars, oils, and other dry spices. One was this, taco seasoning.  She threw together spices I would never have thought to put together for true "taco" seasoning.  This is nothing like those taco packets.  It's better!  Why?  First off, they are whole spices that are ground.  A WOW! Bam! Burst of flavor! Second, whatever combination this is, works!!  

I only took basic notes on the spices so I figured up measurements and we liked this combo. 


Taco Seasoning

1 small cinnamon stick (broken up a little)
1 Tablespoon whole cumin seed
1/2 Tablespoon whole coriander 
1/2 Tablespoon whole fennel seed
1 Tablespoon ground chili powder
1 Tablespoon ground paprika

Wednesday, June 5, 2013

Macaroni Salad with Peas

Quick and easy pasta dish ready in 30 minutes or less!  It's versatile so feel free to chance up the seasonings.

Macaroni Salad with Peas

5 ounces dry macaroni (I used GF)
1/2 cup mayonnaise (I used a canola based)
3 Tablespoons buttermilk
1/4 cup grated Parmesan
1 teaspoon dill
1-1/2 cup frozen peas (more if you like)

Cook your pasta, drain, rinse under cool water to cool pasta.  Allow to drain while you mix other ingredients.

Mix mayonnaise, buttermilk, Parmesan, and dill together.  Add pasta.

Put your frozen peas in a strainer.  Run cool water over them until any ice crystals on them melt away.  This will also thaw your peas.  Stir into pasta. Enjoy!

If you do not eat it all in that sitting or make ahead to take someplace you will need add a little milk as the pasta will absorb liquid as it sits.

Tuesday, June 4, 2013

Homemade Yogurt using Dry Culture

Homemade Yogurt using Dry Culture

1 gallon milk (We use our own goat milk)
6 vanilla beans
1/8 teaspoon dry yogurt culture (We use ABY-2C - see below)
1/4 cup pure maple syrup

Resident yogurt maker!  Carl does all the yogurt biz in this house!
In a double boiler, dump in milk.  Add the vanilla beans which should be split and the "cavier" scraped out into the milk. Heat to 180 degrees and hold for 30 minutes.  Normally we don't like to heat our milk so high but this time we want to take out the bacteria and add in our own to take on this yogurt's flavor.
Strain to get all the vanilla bean pods out.
Feel free to use your clean fingers to press the goodies around to get all the milk thru the strainer.
Cool to 115 degrees by placing the jar in cool water/ice.  When it reaches 115 degrees add your culture and stir to incorporate.
This is the culture we use from Dairy Connection  It it meant to be a thicker sweeter yogurt.
Place in a cooler filled part way with hot water.  The temperature of the air inside the cooler with the lid shut should be 110 degrees.  If not add more hot water or change out some of the water but don't let them go over the glass dishes you will set in there. Carl has now put the yogurt into two half gallon containers.  He places his jars into glass dishes so the hot water does not directly touch the glass.
Place lid on top and let sit for 9 hours.  When it is done, stir in maple syrup and place in fridge.

We enjoy ours with homemade granola and fruit or in smoothies.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Blueberries, granola, and yogurt.
Apples, granola, and yogurt.
Berry Smoothie