Monday, December 24, 2012

Christmas Cookies - Quickie




For my hubs fams xmas these m & m cookies were fab! Snuck a few to keep here for us. 


 These are America's Test Kitchens famed sugar cookies. They were indeed crunchy and chewy. As promised. 




OKAY! Thanks for stopping by! I'll add in a few more winter eats we made on my way out for your enjoyment. 







Monday, December 10, 2012

Less Common Cookware




There are some less common cooking items I want. Even if there are "one trick ponies". I know we try to keep a rule of multi-taskers in our kitchen, but sometimes you can't really get around it. 

Now not all on the list are one way devises. This list is just items we will eventually need. Or just want ;)


Aebleskiver pan


Silver dollar waffle pan


Crepe pans


Popover pans


Food mills


Flour mill


Meat grinder


Spice grinder


Coffee grinder


Ice cream pop molds


Ice cream machine


Food dehydrater


Yogurt maker


Pasta extruder/maker



Ravioli stamps



Pasta dryer



Pizza stone



Pizza peel



Calzone mold



Hand pie mold



Tortilla press



Tart pans



Mini tart pans



bundt pan



Mini bundt pans



Dough bands



Pie beads



waterbath canner



Set of jars, multi sized



Kitchen torch



Mandoline



Deli slicer



Flat and offset icing spatulas



Meat cleaver



Poultry shears



Tiered oven rack



Flour sifter



Sugar shaker



Bread machine



Deep fryer



Rotisserie 



Belgian waffle iron



Vacuum sealer



Immersion circulator 



All Clad or fancy Crockpot slow cooker



Small slow cooker



Waffle tongs



Popcorn maker



Juicer



Food processor



Kitchen aid mixer (copper)



Bialetti hot cocoa maker



Chefs choice electric kettle



Braun or Krups coffee maker



Rice cooker



Milk frother



Tea kettle



Tea  ball



Long slot toaster, proof glass



Cuisanart elite grill/griddle



Food scale



Meat thermometer



Oven thermometer



Whimsical mechanical kitchen timer




And more.
Like seafood tools, fruit and vegetable tools. I know I have missed some. But that's a pretty decent list ;)



Almost any of these can be found at our fave store : http://www.williams-sonoma.com/







Friday, October 26, 2012

Quickie post: Honey Nut Granola Bars



below, * indicates alterations.


Honey, *almond butter, oats, *oat bran, *walnuts, * olive oil, egg white, cinnamon, and * melted sugar free chocolate chips. 


Very good, next time I thought about using agave instead. We'll see. 


















Thursday, October 11, 2012

Mini cheesecakes - Healthified

Healthified Mini Cheesecake Bites!




  • 1 pkg fat free cream cheese room temp
  • 1 contanor fat free cottage cheese
  • 1/2 cup greek yogurt or sour cream
  • 1 cup (or to taste) brown sugar xyltitol
  • vanilla, lemon and salt to taste 
  • 2 eggs room temp
  • 2 tbsp bean flour
(1 tsp vanilla, 1 tsp lemon, pinch salt for me)





crust is oat bran, (ground up in chopper) oat shredded square cereal, flax, brown sugar xylitol, spices (cinnamon, apple pie spice), and butter (melted) or oil. 

preheat oven to 350 line muffin tin, spray cups

mix crust ingredients together, spoon in about 1/4 - 1/3 cup and squish down flat in each cup.

mix wet ingredients in top list, minus eggs, in chopper, add sugar salt flavorings, add flour, add eggs. 

the chopper adds less air than stand mixers do.

after well blended, gently add to each cup, get close to top without going over, not much rising here.

bake twenty minutes. cool in or on top of oven for thirty mins. place in fridge for hour or more, then gently remove cups and serve. 

second batch

i just made these recently, first batch got a tad over cooked (i did 30 mins) so beware not to overcook!




Tuesday, October 2, 2012

Unrecipe - Oat Bran Muffins

Oat bran, a Dukan staple. I love everything oat, but oat bran is a tad more challenging. Though, its health benefits make it way worth a look. 

I do not have a recipe, but ingridiants for the muffins I just made for my Dukan breakfast oat muffins. 
You can prob find a regular recipe and switch up or figure out.

- oat bran, more this than others
- oat flour
- cornstarch (tolerated food item)
- 2 eggs (why 2? idk)
- salt, baking soda and powder
- fat free cream cheese
- cinnamon and apple pie spice
- stevia in the raw
- honey/agave
- tad olive oil
- fat free/low fat buttermilk or yogurt, or sour cream, or almond, whatever (I used the first)

you could add fruit, replace oil with applesauce (except dukaners) or add nuts.


mix together whatever measurements of what you decide. bake 400 F for 15 mins or until done inside. 

Mine made six. 


For a full recipe of oat bran muffins here are a few options...


apple muffins


moist bran muffins


flax bran muffins


vegan oat bran muffins



blueberry versions :


&



Or just take a basic oat bran recipe and play switch up with healthier options and add in things like shredded carrots, sweet potato, pumpkin, apples raisins, whatever you want!

They say that muffin batter, being thin, should not contain any items larger than a blueberry or it might sink for lack of support no matter how much flour you dust it with. You could try adding in at halfway point or after long enough for batter to thicken in oven.

oh and I glazed tops of mine with a lite kiss of honey.

ok, bye bye now!


Wednesday, September 12, 2012

Strudels and Danish - History, Pictures and Recipes

Strudel History


Strudel

The Strudel is a pastry with a sweet or savory filling rolled up in a very thinly stretched dough. The name "Strudel" means Whirlpool since the dough is rolled and the center of the pastry resembles a whirlpool. 

Traditionally, Strudel dough is made from scratch out of high-gluten flour, water, and oil. Preparing the dough is manually intensive. It requires an intense kneading period to develop the gluten strands, followed by a resting period for the dough (and the baker!). This gives the dough the elasticity it needs to be stretched into a very thin sheet - so thin that it is almost transparent. Easier recipes replace this process by substituting the traditional dough with a ready-made phylo-dough or puff-pastry dough. 

 
Strudel Variations

The most well known Strudel is the Apple Strudel. However, both sweet and savory Strudels exist in German cooking. Some of the most popular Strudels are described below, but the number of variations are endless ... limited only by the creativity of chefs both in Germany and around the world.

Sweet Strudel

      Apfelstrudel (Apple Strudel)
Apple Strudel is a specialty of Austria and Bavaria (Bayern) and it is known worldwide. Its filling is made from chopped apples, cinnamon, raisins, and roasted bread crumbs. Other ingredients could include nuts (such as almonds or walnuts) and rum, depending on the recipe. The filling is spread out over the Strudel dough, which is then rolled up into a log. It is baked in an oven until golden brown and the ends become crispy. The Apple Strudel is best served warm, fresh from the oven. It is usually eaten with vanilla ice cream, whipped cream, or a vanilla sauce.

Mohnstrudel (Poppy Seed Strudel)
This Strudel is filled with poppy seeds, apples, raisins, powdered sugar, and milk.

Quarkstrudel
This Strudel is filled with Quark, butter, powdered sugar, raisins, semolina, eggs, and sour cream.

Walnuss-Strudel (Walnut Strudel)
The filling for this Strudel is made from ground walnuts, sugar, and whipped cream.

Kürbis-Apfel-Strudel (Pumpkin Apple Strudel)
Apples, pumpkin, powdered sugar, raisins, nuts, and cinnamon make up the filling for this Strudel.



Savory Strudel

      Blutwurststrudel (Blood Sausage Strudel)
This Strudel is a specialty of the Palatinate (Pfalz) region. It is made from a Potato-Strudel dough and filled with bacon,Sauerkraut, and Blutwurst (Blood Sausage).

Krautstrudel (Cabbage Strudel)

This Strudel is filled with white cabbage, salt, pepper, and sugar.

Quark-Dill-Strudel
Quark, butter, semolina, eggs, chopped dill, and sour cream make up the filling for this savory Strudel.

Gemüsestrudel (Vegetable Strudel)
The filling for this Strudel is made of carrots, celery, savoy cabbagecauliflower, grated cheese, butter, and seasoned with salt, pepper, and parsley.












Recipe for "Plum Strudel" here from Saveur!



danish.




Danish Pastries is a speciality that comes from Denmark that everyone has enjoyed at one time or another. Vikings invented the Danish Pastry in a flower shape to worship a tribe leader’s daughter and who ever made the best tasting pastry was the one who got to marry the daughter. Danish Pastries are made all over the world these days, but most of its origin does trace back to Denmark. The Danish Pastries that are consumed in Denmark can be topped with a number of different things. Some of those things can be chocolate, sugar and icing, and stuffed with jam or custard. Each country though as there own way to prepare Danish Pastries and they all taste a little different depending which country they are from.
Most Danish Pastries have the following ingredients in them flour, yeast, milk, eggs, and generous amounts of butter. You will need to chill the dough to make it much easier to roll out though. Danish Pastries over the years as seen many different changes from the original format that was made so many years ago. Today's Danish Pastries come in all shapes and sizes from flower shapes to crosses to circles these days. You can almost make any shape out of Danish Pastries dough anymore if you have enough talent and are very creative. Many people do not know that Danish Pastries are actually a lot like the croissant that originate in Vienna and is called the wiener bread in Denmark.

Over the years many different things have changed about the Danish Pastries besides the shape of it. many different countries serve it in a multitude of different ways. People in the United States will put almost anything on top of it and eat it at anytime of the day. While in other countries it has to be made a certain way. Danish Pastries has grown a following over time and certain types are more popular than others. Taste is a very big factor when we talk about Danish Pastries and people will tell you everyone has a little different taste depending on the cooking process that the implement. No matter what one thing is for sure Danish Pastries has grown a loyal following over the years and I do not see that ending anytime soon.
Where Danish Pastries were mostly a breakfast treat around the world many people in the United States use Danish Pastries as snacks all day long or a special treat for the young child that does well. No matter how you use Danish Pastries there is no doubting how good they do taste. Danish Pastries can be found in the finest hotels and the smallest restaurants. Can you imagine that such a small treat that was originally design to win the love of a women could end up everywhere in the world, but that is the story of the Danish Pastry. If you have never tried any Danish Pastries you sure are missing out on a lot.











I am a fan of the closet cooking guy...




WELL! I have never made either, but adore pastries! WHO DOESN'T???!!! 

With autumn coming, I have my mind on pies, pastries and warm spice cakes. 

And always on chocolate :)






Must Try Burger! The Ham and Cheese BBQ Burger




Thats the general Idea, not my image though. I'll try to get a pic later. 
(Mine looks a bit different, ham no onion and all)


Burger lovers = must try this burger "BBQ ham hamburger". I saw a pic once that inspired my creation (can not find it now). I mix BBQ, Worcestershire, Dales, etc. in the burger, Use spicy cheese of choice (or creamy), mayo (on butter toasted buns), and grilled ham (I use turkey ham) topped with BBQ sauce (we like    Weber's) and optional caramelized onions or mushrooms, even bacon. Jacob loved it and so do I (onion free of coarse for me!). I use either charcoal grill or smoke flavoring, it goes well with the BBQ and ham. 


SO good! 

Would be great with side of sweet potato fries. Tonight I did it Fresco melt style, yum.

Again, mine looks a tad different than the pic, but I don't have one.

Another bbq burger pic...


more burger recipes


Tuesday, September 4, 2012

Monday, September 3, 2012

Random Cooking Tips 2

There is a "part one" to this from the long long ago. 




So after thinking, reading, and trying new things, figuring out short cuts, tricks or switches, I decided to "part two" the tips post. In no particular order...


Gluten Free and Healthified Tricks

Ideal (xylitol) can be substituted for sugar in almost any recipe with good results. See the website for more info.  It helps control my candida actually. Plus its good for your teeth and (for those with constipation) it helps you "go". 

Honey can successfully be used to make whipped cream. I just did it. As can agave nectar. Don't buy the crap that has corn syrup if you do not have to. 

Oat flour (certified gluten free) hides well in most recipes. I have not gotten to where I prefer it. Also, it helps you "go", and lowers cholesterol. They say people who eat it regularly have a leaner body than those who do not.

Try Micro-plane grating certain veggies (carrots, zucchini, etc), or liquefying spinach, or adding avocado to certain recipes. Examples? I do this in my fish cakes (healthified off take of my mothers salmon patties) and in my chocolate muffins. Chocolate hides a lot of them very well. If your like me, and not fond of certain vegetables, you should try it!

Try cottage cheese or ricotta as an ice cream or cheesecake!

Fat content is not as bad as sugar or simple carb content. Simply to to limit over processed fats. Watch out for trans and saturated fats.

Baking Tips

Adding HOT water to recipes containing alkalized cocoa helps to activate the powdered chocolates flavors.

Room temperature ingredients make great cheesecakes! Also, try using you chopper/food processor instead of your mixer, as mixers are created to add air in. Refrigerate well, but after it cools down for a while in the oven. Never refrigerate a hot cheesecake. Never cook it until it "looks" done.

Try using higher grade flours, and "proper" flours when baking. Cake flours, pastry flours, etc. They are not all the same. They very in protein levels, which effects gluten production.

Grow your own yeast! Well, yeast stater for baking. Try.

To keep chocolate or other chips from falling in batter, coat them in flour before adding.

Did you know that roses, tulips, gardinas and daylilies are edible? You should look at all the edible flower options you have! and try out "sugared flowers" for decoration on cakes and baked goods!

Other Tips

Make sure your cooking (stove top) with the right temperatures, oils and pans. Know your oils "smoke point" and try to stay in that area! Also, I hear that the "hot pan, cold oil" chef mantra is actually NOT a myth. So try that out.

Store tomato sauce in glass containers if you can, the acidic nature of the tomato eats away at most plastic containers. Or try oiling it first, but not guaranteed to stop the staining.

Fresh herbs are fantastic. Fresh spices too. Try cooking with fresh when you can!

Melt Chocolate slowly, with liquids in at first melting. Adding water based or cold ingredients after can cause seizing.

Adding a bit of heavy whipping cream to hot chocolate makes it richer. Also try melting marshmallows in while its on the stove top also.

You can make butter with ultra pasteurized heavy cream. I've done it.

From my friend Luisa, use orange juice with jalapenos in your salsa for wonderful flavors!

Try adding lemoned butter to your steak after for "restaurant" like results.




I have quite a few more tips, but alas, I do not wish to make this longer than what people are willing to read. I'll do another later on. 

Saturday, August 4, 2012

Kebabys!


Lani had a little lamb.... and skewered him. 

Lamb kebabs. Super yummy! 

We chose a MEDITERRAINAN style marinade for ours. That whole region has great food!


I sprung board off this recipe from My Recipes - originally from Cooking Light.

Ingredients

  • 6 tablespoons plain whole-milk yogurt $
  • 5/8 teaspoon salt, divided
  • 1/4 teaspoon plus 1/8 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper, divided
  • 1 1/4 teaspoons grated peeled fresh ginger
  • 1 teaspoon Madras curry powder
  • 1/4 teaspoon ground cumin
  • large garlic clove, grated
  • 1 pound boneless leg of lamb, trimmed and cut into 1-inch pieces

Preparation

  1. 1. Combine yogurt, 1/8 teaspoon salt, 1/8 teaspoon pepper, and next 4 ingredients (through garlic); stir with a whisk. Place yogurt mixture in a large zip-top plastic bag. Add lamb; seal and marinate in refrigerator 45 minutes.
  2. 2. Prepare grill to medium heat.
  3. 3. Remove lamb from bag; discard marinade. Thread lamb evenly onto 8 (10-inch) skewers; sprinkle evenly with 3/8 teaspoon salt and remaining 1/4 teaspoon pepper. Place kebabs on a grill rack; grill 4 minutes for medium-rare or desired degree of doneness, turning once. Sprinkle evenly with remaining 1/8 teaspoon salt.

Edits made? I add a few extra spices. Turmeric, cinnamon, paprika, and cilantro (dried, just a tad).
Grilled ours on the stove on one of these -
Then after they were well seared, we stick them in the oven. We like our a pinch pink in the center for tender juicy yumminess! Medium, medium well. I prefer medium, medium rare, but hubby likes a tad less pink than I do. But never DONE. That to us is OVERDONE.



Make sure you get a decent cut of lamb too. We lucked out in finding some pre-cut that was actually VERY TENDER! :) Click here to read more on meat selections/grades. Prime is best. Look for good marbling. Feel the meat for tenderness. Remember its a muscle, toned ones are harder. You want limp, soft.


Ours was so tasty. We have made it more than once. Whenever we see a good deal on lamb, we buy and save for kebaby time! You really should try! 

I mainly chose this recipe for its lack of MINT used. Most recipes call for mint. I think its due to the fact that lamb cooked wrong tastes wrong. But cooked right it's great!





Friday, August 3, 2012

Chocolate Souffle Cookies

http://noblepig.com/2008/12/no-deflating-here/

XYLITOL FRIENDLY RECIPE! (make sugar free)



That recipe (linked title above) was fabulous!
So rich and chocolatey! So soft inside!
It's a quick minimal ingredient fix. 

Melt Chocolate



Whip up egg whites/tartar


Add sugar, vanilla, nuts (opt)


Blend chocolate and whites




Once blended, spoon onto prepped cookie sheet and bake in preheated oven. 


Ours were not as pretty as hers, but they were oh my gosh tasty!



I'm obsessed with thinking about them now. 
Definitely worth the mess I made. :)