Monday, September 29, 2014

Crock-Pot Pumpkin Spiced Lattes

It's National Coffee Day today and what kind of blogger would I be if I didn't blog about coffee today, especially with "coffee" in my title!  I love coffee.  I love the smell, the taste, the various blends, but mostly I love the fuzzy feeling it gives me when it is just mentioned.  I love coffee! 
That being said...  I recently had a Pumpkin Party with some girlfriends where we all made various pumpkin or apple recipes.  I tried several new recipes, but one that I was super excited to try was this one.  Pumpkin Spiced Lattes!  We have Starbucks here, but they are super limited on the amount of pumpkin spiced goodness that they get, so you have to get it while you can.  But have a found the answer to such a problem?  I think I have!  These mugs full of happiness were just as good as the S-bucks and I knew exactly what was in them.  And you know what else?  They were super easy to make and made my house smell delicious!  Give them a try!



Ingredients:
6 cups of milk (I used whole)
4-6 cups of strongly brewed coffee
1/2 cup of pumpkin puree
1/2 cup of vanilla extract
 1/2 cup of sugar
2 teaspoons of cinnamon
3 cinnamon sticks

Instructions: 
In your crock pot, combine the milk and coffee.
Whip together the pumpkin, vanilla, sugar and cinnamon and pour into the crockpot. Mix together well. Toss in 3-4 cinnamon sticks.
Cover the crockpot, and cook on high for 2 hours.
Ladle into cups, top with whipped cream, cinnamon or just insert a straw to the pot and drink!

*If you don't have a large group, you could easily halve the recipe.



Sooo Good!

Monday, September 22, 2014

Homemade French Fries with Cheese Sauce

Sorry for falling off the grid for a little while!  Since moving here things have not gotten dull, that's for sure!  The kids are in school and each have an activity during the week and we jumped in full force in getting involved in our church.  It's a good thing though, it helps keep from getting homesick and missing family and friends as much. 
Life in England....  There's something new all the time that we discover.  Being here, one thing is for sure, you can find potatoes, carrots, parsnips and onions anywhere.  Even on the side of the road.  They are so cheap and so fresh and so delicious!  It's going to be hard to leave some of these things behind in a few years.  About a month ago we bought a 25 kg bag of potatoes from a side vegetable stand.  They are so fresh that they are still covered in dirt.  I had to buy a veggie brush to clean them.  I love it!  We are finally at the bottom of the bag, but they have lasted and not gone rotten and have been cooked in just about every way.  One way that we enjoy a lot as a treat on Sunday's after church is to come home and fry up a bunch of French Fries.  If you haven't made French fries at home before, you have to do it at least once in your life.  They are so yummy!

Our giant sack of potatoes.  :)

Homemade French Fries
Wash, Peel, Cut and Pat Dry the desired amount of potatoes you want.
Heat oil in a heavy pan to 350 degrees.  Drop cut potatoes in carefully!  Give them a slight stir so they don't stick together.  Let fry until golden brown, about 15-20 minutes per batch.  Take out and drain on paper towel lined baking sheet.  Sprinkle with salt and/or other seasonings as desired.  If you aren't eating them right away or are making multiple batches put the baking sheet in oven at about 200 degrees to keep warm.  Heat oil back up to 350 before adding next batch.  If you like crispier French fries you can double fry them.  That's what a lot of places do, but we like them like this. 


Cut potatoes.  I like to make mine thick, but if you like thinner
ones, go for it! 
Be patient while the oil heats.


Bubbly fried goodness when you add in the
potatoes.
Fresh batch of French Fries!





Cheese Sauce

-First you need to make a roux. 
- In a sauce pan melt 4T butter and then add 4T flour (I used GF flour).
-Whisk the butter and flour a little to get it combined, it will be like a paste at first.  Let it simmer and bubble for 2-3 minutes or until it begins to brown and/or has a nutty smell.
-Whisk in 3-4 cups of milk slowly.  Bring back to a slow simmer until it begins to thicken.  If it gets too thick, add a little more milk.
-Stir in about 2-3 cups worth of cheese.  I used a little bit of everything, but you can use all cheddar or whatever mixture you want.  I did cheddar, mozzarella, swiss and pepper jack.  Add more cheese if you want it cheesier!  Add salt, pepper, cayenne pepper if you'd like to taste.
- Once it is your desired taste and thickness, remove from heat and pour into small bowls to dip your freshly fried fries into.  Delish!



Roux just before adding in the milk.
Finished Cheese Sauce!  Pour over cooked
macaroni and bake for 20 minutes for
fresh mac n' cheese too!
Cheese!










Monday, August 4, 2014

Rainbow Color Fun

We've continued our theme weeks and last week we had a lot of fun with rainbow colors.  Pinterest helped with finding different themes, but with my girls rainbows was always at the top of the list.  There are so many things you can do with colors.  We tried some really fun new things and they had a blast with them! 
1. We colored with sidewalk chalk. 
2. They did a rainbow scavenger hunt and found things outside and in that matched their colored egg cartons.

3. We colored white flowers.  This took/is taking longer than I thought it would, but it's been fun to see the change in the flowers all week.


4.  Kool-Aid colored the girls hair.  This was a surprise and they loved it!  My oldest had gotten the new American Girl Doll Isabelle recently and she came with pink hair to put in.  She wanted to match her doll, so we dip dyed hers to match.  I found great directions HERE from Tips from a Typical Mom.  It was super easy!  For my little one, we just did a chunk of purple.  Now they say not to rinse, but it was REALLY dark, so we rinsed hers after we dyed it.  I used the instructions for that HERE from HolleewoodHair.com

5. Lastly, we made Spaghetti Slime.  This is fun and different and (again) easy.  They had fun just squishing it and braiding it.  I found that HERE from The 36th Avenue.

So, What kind of summer crafts have you been making??





Tuesday, July 15, 2014

Summer Craft Fun

We are just about half way through summer break.  Whew!  I love my children very much, but after so many days together the bickering and fighting kicks in.  I tried to be proactive this time and be better planned out.  I decided to very loosely make theme weeks.  We had a VBS/mail fun week, science and space week, Outdoors week and this week has been flower week.  We missed one week somewhere in there.  I've tried to gather craft ideas to have a day at home to play, an outing and a food to tie together and maybe a few others depending on the week or day.  It's been fun trying out new things and the kids have enjoyed having a few things that are out of the ordinary to try too.  Here's some of the things we've made!

Ingredients
  • ½ Cup Warm Water
  • 1 Tb Borax
  • 1 Tb of Cornstarch
  • 2 Tb White Liquid Glue
  • Food coloring
  • Optional: Disposable rubber gloves.
Instructions
  1. In a cup mix the warm water and the borax.
  2. In another cup mix the glue, cornstarch, and food coloring.
  3. Pour the glue mixture into the water-borax cup.
  4. The glue mixture will harden after 10 seconds; use a fork to take it out of the water. If the glue mixture is still sticky, squish it with your hands and dip it back in the water.
  5. Roll the mixture in your hands to make a ball. The more you handle the mixture the firmer it will become.
  6. You are done!


Orange Bird Feeders There are so many fun ways to make bird feeders.  Peanut butter pinecones or toilet paper rolls rolled in bird seed and Cheerios on pipecleaners are the basics.  I thought this one would be fun and different to try.  Simply cut an orange in half, carefully take out the flesh of the inside of the orange.  (Save it for a snack!)  Poke small holes in 2 sides and tie string to hang the orange.  Fill with bird seed and hang on a tree.  That simple.  





1. Stack eight 20-by-30-inch sheets of tissue. Make 1 1/2-inchwide accordion folds, creasing with each fold.
2. Fold an 18-inch piece of floral wire in half, and slip over center of folded tissue; twist. With scissors, trim ends of tissue into rounded or pointy shapes.
3. Separate layers, pulling away from center one at a time.
4. Tie a length of monofilament to floral wire for hanging.









Coffee Filter Sunflowers

Take a coffee filter and scribble with washable markers.  Spray lightly with water to let colors bleed together.  Allow to dry.  Put a small layer of glue in the middle and pat bird seed in it.  Allow to dry and hang to display. 
These are fun to make butterflies too.  Same instructions to color the coffee filter, then pinch middle with clothespin and use a pipe cleaner as antennas.  These are a great craft for all ages!


Monday, June 23, 2014

Having our cake and definitely eating it too!

If you haven't figured it out by now, I love to bake.  I love all kinds of baking and trying all new kinds of baking.  But through the years I have learned that cake is not my forte!  I can bake cookies, brownies, breads, biscotti, but cake for some reason always gives me a hard time.  Frostings, ok, but cake...  I'll take that box of Betty Crocker.  So, why did I decide to make 2 challenging ones within a week?  I have no idea.  LoL! 
The first one happened for Father's Day.  I asked the hubs what he wanted me to make and he wanted burgers (I could do that!) and white cake.  If anyone knows this man of mine, then they know he is as simple as they come when it comes to food.  Every birthday its white cake and white frosting.  BORING!  So I made the suggestion for a Neapolitan Cake I found on Pinterest.  Remember me saying I'm terrible at cake?  Yeah, I guess I'm a glutton for attempting past failures over and over.  I figured three layers of three different flavors, I have three kids, each get a layer to make and all is happy and equal.  Ha!  I had my work cut out for me!  BUT.  All in all I think it turned out pretty darn good!  Probably one of the best cakes I've made.  :)
Now, where I got the recipe from, she makes 5 layers.  I did 3 whole layers instead of all the cutting layers in half and all that jazz.  Each flavored cake made 2 cake layers, so I used one and wrapped and froze the others.  So, quite literally, I have a whole cake in freezer.  She also used jam inbetween layers and did a strawberry buttercream.  I did regular buttercream between and all over our cake.  Without further ado, here ya go!

Neapolitan Cake
adapted from Sweetapolita
Strawberry Cake

Ingredients:
2 cups white sugar
1 (3oz) package of strawberry gelatin (JELL-O)
1 cup butter, softened
4 eggs, room temperature
2 3/4 cups all-purpose flour
2 1/2 teaspoons baking powder
1 cup whole milk, room temperature
1 tablespoon vanilla extract
1/2 cup strawberry puree made from frozen sweetened strawberries (or you could use unsweetened and add a tablespoon of white sugar) (I used fresh strawberries from the market, added 2 T sugar and processed them until they were fully pureed.)


Directions:
1. Prepare two 9″ round pans (butter and flour, or parchment lined).
2. In a large bowl, cream together the butter, sugar, and dry strawberry gelatin until light and fluffy. Beat in the eggs one at a time, mixing well after each. Mix vanilla and milk together. Combine and whisk dry ingredients, adding to creamed mixture and alternating with milk/vanilla until just combined. Blend in strawberry puree. Pour into prepared pans.
3. Bake in 350 F for about 25 minutes, or until inserted toothpick comes out clean. Allow cakes to cool in pans on wire rack for 20 minutes, then inverting onto wire rack to finish cooling.


Chocolate Cake


Ingredients:

  • 1 3/4 cups (220 g) all-purpose flour
  • 2 cups (400 g) granulated sugar
  • 3/4 cup (90 g) Cacao Barry Cocoa Powder - Extra Dark
  • 2 teaspoons (10 g) baking soda
  • 1 teaspoon (5 g) baking powder
  • 1 teaspoon (9 g) salt
  • 2 eggs, at room temperature, lightly beaten
  • 1 cup (237 mL) strong, hot black coffee or espresso
  • 1 cup (237 mL) buttermilk, room temperature
  • 1/2 cup (119 mL) vegetable oil
  • 1 tablespoon (15 mL) pure vanilla extract

  • Directions:
    1. Preheat oven to 350 F. Prepare 2 x 9" (or 3 x 8" for slightly shorter layers) cake pans with butter and flour or parchment paper.
    2. In bowl of electric mixer fitted with the paddle attachment, sift all dry ingredients. Add remaining ingredients to mixture and mix for 2 minutes on medium speed (you may need the plastic splashguard that comes with mixer). 
    3. Divide among prepared pans. Batter will be liquidy.
    4. Bake for 20 minutes and rotate pans in oven. Cakes are done when toothpick or skewer comes clean, about 35 minutes. Try not to overbake. 
    5. Cool on wire racks for 20 minutes then gently invert onto racks until completely cool.
    Vanilla Cake

    Ingredients:
    1/2 cup butter
    2 cups white sugar
    3 1/2 cups flour
    1 teaspoon salt
    3 teaspoons baking powder
    1 1/2 cups ice water
    1 teaspoon vanilla
    4 egg whites beaten stiff


    Directions:
    Add sugar to the butter and beat until light. Sift dry ingredients and add alternately with ice water and vanilla, beating thoroughly after each addition. Fold in the beaten egg whites. Pour into greased layer pans and bake at 350 degrees for about 30 minutes. Cover with Angel Feather Icing and be tactful about the number of candles.

    Vanilla Buttercream Frosting

    Ingredients:
  • 1 cup (227 g/2 sticks/8 oz) unsalted butter, softened
  • 6 cups (750 g/1 lb + 10 oz) icing sugar (confectioners')
  • 1/2 cup (125 ml) whipping cream (35%)
  • 2 tablespoons (30 mL) pure vanilla extract
  • 1 tablespoon (15 mL) water
  • a pinch of salt

  • Directions:
    1. In an electric mixer fitted with the paddle attachment, beat the butter and icing sugar on low speed until just combined. Increase speed to medium and beat until well-incorporated, about 3 minutes.
    2. Add the vanilla, water, whipping cream and salt, and whip on med-high speed until fluffy and smooth--about 3 more minutes. If consistency is too thick, add more water 1 teaspoon at a time, then whip again for 30 seconds or so. If your frosting is too thin, you can add more icing sugar a few tablespoons at a time until you achieve desired consistency.
    I used the buttercream inbetween each layer of cake and all over.  I had more than enough to be generous with it.  I had some left over so I used a ziplock bag, snipped the corner off and dotted around the bottom and top.  Then I took a cookie cutter I had of a helicopter and put sprinkled inside of it and when I lifted it back up we had a sprinkle helicopter on top.  It looked cute!  I baked 2 flavors of cake 1 day and did the third and frosting the next.  It worked out well and the kids had fun each baking their own special layer for daddy. 


    Next, I had my Bible study ladies over for a fellowship and fun night.  I asked everyone to bring a food that was something momma made, family tradition or something like that.  My mom is such an incredible cook, I wasn't going to try to copy her.  But every year for my birthday I would ask her to make German Chocolate Cake.  She isn't a big baker, but does have a few goodies up her sleeve!  This is one.  It is my absolute favorite!  And no store bought one can  hold a candle to it.  Yum!!  Just don't count the calories and double the frosting.  Yes, you heard me, double the frosting.  Just do it.  Eat it.  And never speak of it. 

    From Food.com
    Ingredients:

    CAKE
    1 (4 ounce) package Baker's German sweet chocolate
    1/2 cup boiling water
    1 cup butter
    2 cups sugar
    4 eggs, seperated
    1 tsp vanilla
    2 cups all-purpose flour (I used GF flour and it turned out perfect!)
    1 tsp baking soda
    1/2 tsp salt
    1 cup buttermilk

     FROSTING (this is a single recipe...  you know you want to double it.)
    1 1/2 cups evaporated milk
    1 1/2 cups sugar
    4   slightly beaten egg yolks
    3/4 cup butter
    1 1/2 teaspoons vanilla
    2 cups shredded coconut
    1 1/2 cups chopped pecans

    Directions:
    -Preheat Oven at 350ºF.
    - Melt chocolate in water, cool.
    - Cream butter and sugar.
    - Beat in egg yolks.
    - Stir in vanilla and chocolate.
    - Mix flour, soda, and salt.
    - Beat in flour mixture, alternately with buttermilk.
    - Beat egg whites until stiff peaks form; fold into batter.
    - Pour batter into three 9-inch layer pans, lined on bottoms with waxed paper.
    - Bake for 30 minutes or until cake springs bake when lightly pressed in center.
    - Cool 15 minutes; remove and cool on rack.
     COCONUT-PECAN FROSTING.
    - Combine evaporated milk, sugar, slightly beaten egg yolks, butter or margarine and vanilla in saucepan.
    - Cook and stir over medium heat until thickened. Remove from heat.
    - Stir in shredded coconut and chopped pecans. 
    - Cool until thick enough to spread.


    If you happen to find yourself in a world where you cannot find German chocolate or sweetened coconut like I did, here's what you do...
    For sweet German chocolate simply use semi sweet chocolate and add 1 T sugar per ounce of chocolate.  So for this recipe I added 1/4 cup sugar to the boiling water and 4 ounces of semi sweet chocolate.
    For sweetened coconut, I could only find dehydrated or desiccated coconut.  I followed the directions HERE and it worked perfectly!



    Happy Cake Making!!

    Saturday, June 7, 2014

    Gluten Free Sandwich Bread (that doesn't suck!)

    It's been roughly a year and half since I started this gluten free journey.  I still have no "medical reasons" for eating gluten free.  But I can tell you that now when I do eat it, I feel awful!  I started to have alot of stomach issues, I won't get into the details, and figured I'd cut out gluten to start and see how it helped.  I was amazed that within just a few days I felt so much better!  I've dabbled with paleo and clean eating and still just try to make as much from scratch and as chemical free as possible.  I am by no mean close to perfect or do this all the time with everything, but I sure try my best.  I fully admit that I am a coffee and sugar addict.  I'm ok with that.  I try to limit my sweets (and alcohol) to the weekends, but I don't always succeed with that either.  I'm a stress eater.  So food is my best friend and my enemy sometimes.  I've always had a love for baking and pastries.  I love them!!  When I started gluten free eating that was the hardest for me to deal with.  I could do without the pasta and bread, but to not be able to bake or eat my favorite hot chocolate chip cookies would have killed me.  I was determined to find a way to continue what I already did, just with a gluten free twist. 

    That's when I found my All-Purpose Gluten Free Flour Blend that I use for everything.  It is the best one out there and definitely beats any of the pre mixed blends at the grocery store.  Using that blend I have made everything from cookies, biscotti, biscuits, Thanksgiving gravy, sweet breads, angel food cakes and tons more!  I am yet to have a fail with it.  I highly recommend this blend! 

    Now that I've figured out the regular baking part of being gluten free I thought it was time to step up a notch and start trying "real" breads.  I want to try all kinds!  If you have ever had gluten free bread, you know it is not the same as real bread.  It is desert dry.  I decided to start with the basics and try a sandwich bread first.  I remembered a friend posting on Facebook that she found a good recipe by Googling "gluten free bread that doesn't suck."  So, that's exactly what I did.  First one that popped up was a blog that a woman wrote about the same thing I was trying to accomplish. 

    First I had to make a different flour blend than my usual one.  This was hard for me.  I have attachment issues when I find something I like.  (Just ask anyone that knows me about my chapstick attachment.)  But I did it.  Like her, I couldn't find potato flour so I used instant potato flakes and processed them to make them as fine as I could for the flour blend.  Here's what you  need to make that.  You'll need the whole recipe of flour to make the bread recipe.

    Brown Rice Flour Blend

    Makes 4 cups
    Ingredients
    1⅓ cups brown rice flour
    1⅓ cups tapioca flour/starch
    1⅓ cups cornstarch
    1 tablespoon potato flour


    Word of warning, it is a lot of starch so it will "puff up" in a cloud while mixing.  I had flour everywhere!  After a year and half of gluten free baking I'm sure that you have to have some scientific tendencies to bake this way!  Once you have that mixed up and ready you can get on with the rest of the bread recipe.  Here we go!


    Gluten Free Sandwich Bread (that doesn't suck)
    from One Good Thing by Jillee


    Ingredients:
    4 cups Brown Rice Flour Blend (see above recipe)
    1 tablespoon xanthan gum
    1 tablespoon gluten-free egg replacer
    2 teaspoons salt
    ½ cup powdered milk  (I omitted this and added 1/2 cup of warm whole milk instead)
    3 large eggs at room temperature (If you are allergic to eggs you can replace the 3 eggs with: 9 Tbsp. water and 3 Tbsp. ground flax seed)
    ¼ cup butter at room temperature
    2 teaspoons cider vinegar
    ⅓ cup honey
    1 package (2¼ teaspoons) active dry yeast (not INSTANT dry yeast)
    2 cups warm water (Since I used 1/2 cup of warm milk I only used 1 1/2 cups of warm water)


    Directions:
    • Spray cooking spray into two 8-inch bread pans.
    • Add the yeast to the 2 cups of warm water and stir until mixed. Set this aside to activate while you mix the rest of the ingredients.
    • Mix the flour blend, xanthum gum, gluten-free egg replacer, salt, and powdered milk together in a medium-size bowl and set aside.
    • Put eggs, butter, vinegar, and honey in the bowl of your mixer. With the paddle attachment, mix together for about 30 seconds. The butter will be chunky, that’s OK.
    • Add half the dry ingredients to the wet mixture in the mixer. Mix just until blended, and then add the remaining dry ingredients and mix for another 30 seconds, until blended.
    • With the mixer on low speed, slowly add the warm water and yeast mixture, then turn the mixer to medium-high speed and beat for 4 minutes.
    • After the 4 minutes your bread dough should resemble thick cake batter.
    • Spoon the dough into your greased bread pans. Dip your fingers in water to smooth the top of the dough, if desired. Set aside in a warm place to rise for approximately about 50 to 60 minutes.   While dough rises, preheat oven to 375 degrees.
    • When the dough has risen to about an inch above the top of the pans (My bread took closer to 1 1/2-2 hours to rise that much, but then had a big whole in it after baking that you can see in the picture below of it cut.  That usually happens when bread rises too long.  So use your judgment with this.), place the pans in your preheated oven on the middle rack and bake for 45 to 55 minutes or until the bread’s internal temperature reaches 200 degrees with an instant-read thermometer. (This is very helpful! It’s hard to tell when gluten-free bread is done. But if you don’t have an instant read thermometer you’re going to have to use your best guess based on your particular oven.)
    • Remove the bread from the oven and let cool in pans for 10 minutes. Then remove loaves from pans and place on a rack to cool. (As you can see, I brushed the top of mine with butter when they came out of the oven.)
    • After allowing it to cool COMPLETELY (this is important! Don’t rush it and cut into it while it’s still warm or you will flatten it.) I very, VERY carefully started cutting it into slices. This is ALSO very important…let your bread knife do the cutting for you! You provide the “sawing” action, but let the knife blade do the work. Don’t press down, just keep “sawing” across the top until you get all the way to the bottom of the loaf and hit the cutting board. The bread slices will keep their shape much better this way!





    This bread smelled sooo good while it was baking!  It came out gorgeous too!  It tasted like real bread.  It was soft and moist and delicious!  I will definitely make this more!  I can't wait to try French toast, grilled cheese and so much more.  My turkey sandwich was super yummy!  It did dry out a little by the next day.  I froze the second loaf.  We'll see how it is after it's been frozen. 

    I will leave  you now to your own opinion.  Give it a try and tell me what you think.  I don't think I'll be buying any at the grocery store again anytime soon.  :)

    Tuesday, June 3, 2014

    Rainy Day Fun with Homemade Play-dough and Brown Bag Popcorn





    We are coming up on our 3 month mark of living across the pond.  One thing we have learned is that we can't always tell the kids to go play outside anymore.  It rains here.  :)  For Memorial Day weekend we didn't have plans and pretty much stayed home.  The kids had a four day weekend from school and it poured rain the entire time.  By the time we hit day three they were getting antsy.  So, I did my usual and began to scroll through my Pinterest boards and found Play-dough.  I don't know why I hadn't thought of it earlier or why, up to until now, I have never made my own.  My kids all love Play-dough, especially my little one.  We threw out what we had before we moved and I hadn't gotten around to getting more yet.  So my girls and I hit the kitchen to try to whip some up.  It was so simple and we had everything we needed.  It was great.  They were even more excited to play with it since they made it and it kept all three of them busy for the next two days!  This is a great "recipe" if you haven't tried it before.  It is soft, not super salty, fast to make and the kids are guaranteed to love it.  :)  What do you do for rainy days??



    Ingredients: 1 C Flour
    1 C Water
    1/4 C Salt
    1 TBSP Vegetable Oil
    2 tsp Cream of Tarter
    Food Coloring (actual coloring or a kool-aid packet will do)
    Sparkles (If you wanna be a fun mom!)
    Sauce Pan and Wooden Spoon


    Pour everything in the saucepan, in not particular order.  Mix it well.
    Once the mixture is (mostly) clump free. Heat over MEDIUM heat.
    Stir. Don’t stop stirring. After a few minutes it will start to clump up.

    Stir, Stir, Stir.  Just keep stirring until the Play Dough is formed. It will  form one big clump.
    Remove from heat, and knead by hand.
    Once cooled it’s ready to go. Package it up for some party favors or stocking stuffers.  Or grab your cookie cutters, plastic scissors, rolling pin, etc.. and let your kids go to town.

    *This recipe yields about a cup and half of dough. 
    *I use this recipe for each color I make. 
    *Should last about 6 months


    

    We also love family movie night around here!  We try to have one at least once a month, if not once a week.  We, of course, always have to have popcorn.  I think my oldest could live on popcorn alone.  I hate microwave popcorn.  For me, it is always a last resort.  When I first saw my friend over at Change of Pace blog about making Brown Bag Popcorn, I knew she was a genius!  I love making it this way.  Each person gets their own bag, it is the perfect amount and there isn't any added junk to it.  Give it a try for your next movie night or even for an afternoon snack. 

    Brown Bag Popcorn

    Add 1/4-1/3 cup popcorn kernels to a brown paper bag, fold the bag over twice then heat in a microwave — folded side down — for 2-3 minutes.  And Ta-Da!  So simple and so good!  Add melted butter, salt or whatever you'd like and enjoy!



    Thursday, May 22, 2014

    Tacos in England with Taco Seasoning

    Life in England is far cry from the US, let along Vegas.  There are so many things that way different!  Rain, cell phone service, stores and restaurants not open past 7 or on Sundays, trees and grass... just about everything.  I had my first encounter with a plumber last week.  We had a pin hole in our en-suite bathroom tap, as they call it here.  After calling the first plumber to come look at it to confirm for our landlords, it took 2 weeks for the next one to come fix it.  It then took 3 hours for him to replace the faucet.  Not a fancy faucet, just a typical run of the mill faucet.  Crazy!  The hubs just kept asking me how it took so long and I honestly didn't have an answer.  Besides the 15 minute personal call he made half way into it, the guy seemed to be working the whole time.  Oh well, I guess we can all slow down from time to time.  Right? 
    My kids have discovered the wonderment of snails since we've been here.  They think they are the coolest things ever.  We see snail slime all over the place while we walk to the bus stop and sometimes after a rain will catch a little guy on his way or hanging out.  They try to collect empty shells when they can and some are pretty neat.  But even the snails, I swear, are slower! 
    Here's a little guy we saw this morning :)
    With everything changing and new and different to get to used to and figure out we try to keep at least some normalcy.  We all love Mexican food and learned to love it even more in Vegas.  We typically have "Taco Tuesday" that isn't necessarily always tacos, or always on Tuesday for that matter, but at least Mexican.  We'll have quesadillas, Chicken Tacos and Red Rice, tortilla soup or just regular ground beef tacos or taco salad.  We don't discriminate with our Mexican foods.  :)  As I have said though, everything is slower here, even the avocados take weeks to ripen.  I had never seen such a green avocado until coming here, not even in Ohio!  So, guacamole isn't made quite as easily or as often, but we make due. 
    This is my favorite basic Taco Seasoning recipe.  I like to make my own because then then I know what's in it, it tastes better and then I can add it to whatever I'm making too. 

    Taco Seasoning

    Mix Altogether:
    1 cup minced dried onion
    1/2 cup chili powder
    1/4 cup garlic powder
    1/4 cup cumin
    2 T oregano
    2 T salt
    1 T paprika
    2-3 T red pepper flake (optional)
    2-3 T cornstarch (optional) I like to add this to give it a thickener when it is cooked with the beef.  It helps give it that thicker sauciness that you get from the packets at the store if you like that. 

    Store in an airtight jar or container.

    Directions:  Cook 1lb ground beef.  Add 1-2 T taco seasoning to taste and 1/2 cup water, stir and let simmer 5-10 minutes.  Fill your taco and eat!

    Mason jars are great for storing stuff like this!


    Thursday, May 15, 2014

    Sausage Calzones with Freezer Friendly Pizza Dough

    Almost every family has a pizza night or that night that they need a quick grab and go meal or it's mom's night off or whatever your reasons are, you have it.  We don't tend to order pizza out much, we either buy the good old frozen ones or make our own.  But even my kids get tired of the same old pizza every now and then.  In steps Calzones!  I don't know what Italian momma came up with these babies, but she is one of my heroes!  (I don't know if it was an Italian mom, just figured because they are an Italian food and genius. :) )We've done the make your own pizza style ones, but my favorite are sausage and cheese filled.  Yum! 
    In making our pizzas or calzones I usually make our own dough.  You can buy premade dough to roll out in the can or even fresh sometimes, but homemade is so simple and really only uses a few ingredients that save you a butt ton of money.  Plus, it tastes better!  I love this recipe because you can mix up a bunch and even freeze the dough to keep for later.  Again, genius!


    Ingredients:
    2 cups warm water (105 to 115 degrees F.)
    1 Tablespoons active dry yeast
    1 teaspoons sugar
    2 teaspoons salt
    1 Tablespoons oil (vegetable, Canola, or olive oil)
    5 cups flour (can use all whole-wheat, half white/half whole-wheat, or all white) (plus more for rolling out if use right away)
    (I reduced the amounts of a few ingredients from the original and we tend to like the taste a little bit better.)
    Directions:
    Pour the warm water into a bowl and sprinkle the yeast over it. Stir to dissolve.
    Add the remaining ingredients and mix.
    Dump onto a floured surface and knead dough for two to five minutes until smooth and no longer sticky.


    To freeze: Cut lump of dough in half and place each half in an airtight freezer bag. Freeze for up to 4-6 weeks.
    To bake: Place frozen dough in a greased bowl and thaw at room temperature for at least 3-4 hours. Roll out and shape onto a greased pizza pan.
    Add pizza toppings of your choice. Bake at 450 degrees for around 15 minutes (until the crust looks crispy and lightly browned).
    If you don’t want to mess with freezing the dough, take the kneaded dough and roll out and shape onto a greased pizza pan. Add pizza toppings and bake as directed above.


    Now for the filling....

    Sausage Calzone Filling

    Ingredients:
    1 large Ricotta cheese
    2 cups Mozzarella cheese
    1 1/2 tsp Italian seasoning
    2 eggs
    1 lb sausage
    1 onion, chopped
    2 garlic cloves,  minced
    1 T olive oil
    1-2 recipes of Pizza Dough

    Directions:
    Heat oil in a skillet and cook onion and garlic until they are soft.  Add in sausage and cook and crumble until lightly browned.  Drain meat.  Let cool about 20-30 minutes.
    While sausage is browning, mix in a large bowl: cheeses, eggs and Italian seasoning.  Stir in slightly cooled meat mixture and mix well. 
    Roll out pizza dough and cut into small portions.  (I get about 12 out of 1 dough recipe, but this makes a lot of filling so I usually do a double dough recipe.)
    Spoon filling into 1 half of rolled out dough potion, fold over other half and pinch to seal shut.  Place on a cookie sheet and bake at 450 for 15-20 minutes or until browned.
    **You can bake, cool and freeze these too.  They are really good! 

    **To make gluten free ones I make my dough like this....
    Mix together:
    2 eggs
    1/2 cup water
    1/3 cup oil
    2-3 cups of gluten free flour or gluten free Bisquick.
    Gluten free pizza dough is much wetter and stickier than regular dough.  I always add more flour to make it a little easier to roll out in some way.  It will crack if you add too much flour.  You have to play with it a bit to get it how you like it.  Just remember that it is not going to look or work the same as other dough.  I got 4 calzone out of this 1 recipe.  Bake them the same as the others at 450 for 15-20 minute or until browned.  If you prefer or have a better GF pizza crust recipe you like, then by all means use that!  Then tell me what it is!  I'm still searching for that one that I love. 

    


    Pretty little calzones all in a row!

    Gluten Free Calzone for me!

    Now, I did 1 recipe of gluten free crust and got about 4 of those and then did a double recipe of regular dough and got about 18 calzones and still had some dough left over.  This is what happened with the leftover dough...  Cinnamon Rolls! Yes, I could have frozen it, or even just baked it like a free form bread to have, but no.  My family needed breakfast in the morning.  :)

    Cinnamon Rolls

    On a floured surface roll out your dough to make a thin rectangle.
    Melt 4-6 T of butter and pour over dough.  Spread evenly.
    Mix together 3/4 cup sugar and 2 T cinnamon (or just sprinkle it all on separate) and get dirty and spread it all together over dough to the edges.  Mix more if you need more.
    Start at one end and carefully roll until you get a log. 
    Slice in 1-2 inch disks and place in a baking dish to fit your rolls.
    Refrigerate over night or bake on the spot.  (If you refrigerate, let sit at room temp for about 1 hour before baking.)
    Bake at 425 for about 30-40 minutes or until browned and bubbly.
    Pour icing on and eat!

    **For the icing I just mixed 2-3 cups powdered sugar with 3-4 T milk and a little vanilla.  Use a can or make your own, whatever you like. 
    
    







    Monday, May 5, 2014

    Homemade Chicken Stock from a Cooked Rotisseri Chicken

    Not a surprise that I love to cook and that I love soups.  So many recipes call for chicken broth or stock, and I would much rather add that than some powdered stuff or water.  The flavor of a good chicken stock can add so much to a recipe.  Heck, even just to plain rice!  You can easily find a good stock in box, but anymore they keep getting more and more expensive.  And to make your own, the price of whole fryer chickens is getting more and more expensive too.  Then I remembered reading about using a rotisserie chicken.  Boom!  You know, the ones at the grocery store that usually cost $5-6?  Again, how that makes sense that it's cheaper to buy a cooked one compared to a raw one is beyond me.  Nonetheless, it is.  Rotisserie chickens are great for just eating as is, for a quick meal, using to make chicken salad, add to casseroles or soups.  Tons of things!  The meat is good and usually always quite flavorful.  Sometimes they even come in different flavors.  Ooo, fancy! 
    Ok, back on track....  I read a blog before about someone using rotisserie chicken bones (or carcass) to make homemade stock.  So you can use the meat for whatever and then make your own stock, all for $5.  Yes, please!  Here's what I did. 
     
    Step 1:
    Removed all the meat from the carcass of the bird.  Get down and dirty with it!  Save everything, skin and all.  You'll get roughly 4 or more cups of shredded to chicken.  Eat it, use it, freeze it. 
     
    
    Step 2:
    Take the whole carcass, and anything else you got and put it into a large pot. 
    Cut up any veggies you have laying around.  Onion, carrots, celery, zucchini, cauliflower, broccoli, even a lemon or whatever else.  You'll want about 4-6 cups worth of cut up veggies.  (I used a small onion, 2 carrots, 1 zucchini, and very small amount of cauliflower including it's leaves) 
    Also, add in a clove or two or three of garlic.  Smash it or cut it in half to make sure you get all the flavor out of it. 
    Next, add in some herbs.  If you have fresh ones, throw in a few leaves or sprigs of whatever you have.  If you have dried, like I did, add in what you got.  Sprinkle on some Rosemary, Thyme, Parsley, pepper, salt, whatever you like.
    Lastly, fill with water.  You want to fill it to just about covering all the veggies.
     
     
    Step 3:
    Put on the lid and let it come to boil, then lower to simmer.  Simmer for about 3-4 hours.  Your house will small amazing while it simmers!  You want to let it cook until the bones are soft and will bend.  Maybe not a leg bone, but a smaller rib bone will be able to bend in half.  

     
    Step 4:
    Use a large colander or strainer and drain OVER A LARGE BOWL to strain everything out.  Please don't forget the bowl and lose all the beautiful stock you just made.  If some of your spices go with the broth that's ok.  If you want it without, then use a fine mesh strainer after you strain all the bones and veggies.
     
    Step 5:
    Marvel at the beautiful rich stock you just made and how simple that was.  **Angels sing**

     
    Step 6:
    You can use it right away, store in the refrigerator for a up to a week or freeze it for later use.  With one chicken and recipe you should get about 4 cups of stock.  Remember that it is going to be richer than store bought broth, so you may even want to dilute it a touch with some recipes or leave it as is.  It is your preference, your kitchen, your stock. 

    I hope you enjoy it!!  How are you using your stock??