Monday, 21 December 2009

Corn Bread

I grew up eating corn bread that my Mother baked daily in a cast iron skillet for my Daddy. We always ate it warm with butter. Cold, it was wonderful crumbled in milk. My husband likes to eat it with honey. I have been using this recipe for years now, and it is my favorite even though it isn't quite how Aunt Lessie taught us to make it.

1 cup yellow corn meal
1 cup flour
2 Tablespoons sugar
1 Tablespoon baking powder
1 teaspoon salt
1/3 cup cooking oil
1 egg
1 cup milk

Combine dry ingredients in blowl and mix well. Blend in oil and egg beaten together with milk. Pour into 8" skillet, and bake in preheated oven 400 F for 25 minutes.

Friday, 4 December 2009

Tartar Sauce

Try:

1 cup mayonnaise
1/2 cup chopped dill pickle
1/4 cup chopped onion
2 Tablespoons chopped capers

Wednesday, 2 December 2009

Orange Vinaigrette

Used this on a salad of fennel (sweet anise), pieces of persimmon, chopped parsley, lettuce, and chopped almonds.

ORANGE VINAIGRETTE:

1/4 c. fresh orange juice
1 tsp. Dijon mustard
1 tbsp. red wine vinegar
1/2 c. mild olive oil

Saturday, 24 October 2009

Lois's Soup

PUMPKIN SOUP--It's "soup weather," and we're beginning to see pumpkin in the stores. As a matter of fact, a lot of them will be carved up for halloween next weekend. My friends have been making pumpkin bread and muffins and such for weeks now. I decided to try making soup--something I've not done with pumpkin before. It seems that pumpkin curry soup is quite popular right now, but we're not too fond of curry in our household. I decided to add my own choice of seasonings, and we loved the dish that emerged from the kitchen. The ingredients are estimates at this point as I didn't measure.
1 small can pumpkin puree
1 can coconut milk
2 T diced green chilies
1 vegetable stock cube
Scattering of celery seed
Garlic powder
Ground ginger
Ground cumin
Pinch of turmeric
1/2 pound leftover minced turkey cooked

Sunday, 14 June 2009

Salsa Chicken Sauce

Very easy sauce I used on chicken breasts tonight.  Tomato salsa with prepared mustard and brown sugar mixed in.  Can use on baked chicken or cooked on the stove-top.

Thursday, 11 June 2009

Balsamic Reduction

I found a wonderfully easy way to season/marinate/sauce many kinds of meat.  It is in a recipe on allrecipes.com called Lamb Chops with Balsamic Reduction.  Basically you season your meat with herbs, salt and pepper and let rest for at least 15 minutes.  You cook your meat in about 1 Tablespoon olive oil then remove to a plate to keep warm.  To prepare the Balsamic Reduction, you add 1/4 cup minced shallots to the pan, scrape any bits of meat and lightly brown the shallots.  Stir in 1/3 cup balsamic vinegar, add 3/4 cup chicken broth and continue to cook about 5 minutes until sauce is reduced by about half.  Remove from heat, stir in 1 Tablespoon butter, and serve over meat.  I like to serve the extra sauce on the side because my husband loves it.

Tuesday, 17 February 2009

Fish

Geoff was here on Saturday with us on his way to Barcelona.  He is an amazing cook!  That's why we have nicknamed him "Chef Grump."  He takes his cooking very seriously and may spend hours researching the "perfect" recipe or preparation technique for whatever he wants to cook.  He really concentrates on what he is doing and may not be very good company while he is working although he really enjoys the results as well as any compliments that he may receive.

Our Valentine's Day menu was delicious!  He prepared a wonderful Boston-style clam chowder using fresh fish broth and fresh clams.  We also had tomatoes and mozzarella salad.  He baked fennel and poached turbot.  We had cupcakes for dessert that I had baked for the Bible study on Thursday.  That recipe is a keeper for me from recipes.com.  They are called PHILLY Black Forest Stuffed Cupcakes.

Today I found another Fish recipe that I hope to try soon.  It is from Vital Choices Newsletter:
Hellenic Baked Halibut.

Tuesday, 10 February 2009

I Love Recipes

I started cooking in earnest when I was about 10 years old.  I joined 4-H Club, and the first two projects I was in were Foods and Sewing.  I had never really enjoyed eating.  In fact, my mother used to bribe me to eat breakfast.  I had favorite foods, of course, but a lot of things I ate simply because I had to.  We were in that generation that was taught "you have to clean your plate," "you'll sit at the table until you've eaten all your food because there are children starving in China", and you had to eat at least two bites of a new food, etc.

Learning to cook was a different story, however.  The first cookies I remember making were Snickerdoodles.  I also learned to make Sloppy Joes, which I liked because they included catsup which I always used to cover up the taste of beef anyway.  I kept taking foods each year and entered baked goods in the County Fair every year and usually won blue or red ribbons.  I entered as much as I could because I enjoyed earning the money that came with the prizes.

When I got married, one of my wedding gifts was a membership in a Cookbook Club, and thus began my love of Cookbooks.  I can spend hours of happy reading looking through cookbooks and dreaming of the wonderful foods that I could prepare if I ever get around to it.  I think my mother must have loved reading recipes too because she would regularly send me the food coupons she had cut out of the newspaper and recipes from the newspaper and magazines that she thought I might like.

Anyway, I still give in once in awhile and buy a new cookbook even though I definitely don't need it.  I often keep going back to the recipes that I've used over the years.  I've changed many of them to fit our tastes, and the availability of various ingredients.  I am not a gourmet cook, by any means.  I particularly enjoy fixing things that take a minimal amount of time and effort, but are nutritious and tasty.  My newest way to find new recipes is on the internet.  I think I might share some of the adventures I have using this venue.