Monday, March 25, 2019

Scotch Eggs

Tiny Eggs (ask for them from a friendly egg farmer)
Gimme Lean Vegetarian Sausage
Flour 
Egg
Panko Breadcrumbs
Oil for Frying

Hard boil the eggs, approximately 6 minutes. Peel the eggs and then chill them. Take the Sausage out of its wrapper and form a ball slightly smaller than the hard boiled egg. Flatten out the ball and place the hard boiled egg inside. Wrap the sausage around the egg, sealing it completely. Once you have the eggs wrapped, chill them again. I personally don't mind all the "chilling steps" because it gives me time to clean up between steps. Prepare the oil for frying, you can deep fry or pan fry, just make sure you have enough oil that you will be able to reach halfway up the wrapped egg. Set up three bowls, 1 with flour, 1 with raw egg, and 1 with breadcrumbs. Roll the sausage wrapped eggs in the flour, then the egg and lastly the breadcrumbs. Make sure each step covers the egg completely, we are really trying to seal it well. Place the egg ball in the oil and fry until golden brown. Drain on paper towels. You can eat right away, or put in the refrigerator for later. They can be eaten cold, or warmed back up. My favorite is to warm them up and eat with a green salad. Or stick them in my kids' lunches.

Tuesday, July 11, 2017

Super Quick Dinner rolls

Found this on allrecipes.com Miss Betty's Rolls

Needed a quick roll to go with soup for dinner when I had not been shopping for a while. Adapted this recipe and the family loved it.

1 cup Flour
1 tsp Baking Powder
1/2 tsp Salt
1/2 cup Milk
2 Tbsp Mayonnaise
Dried Chives
Dry Mustard

Preheat oven to 350° 
Spray 5 muffin tins with nonstick spray.
Mix all ingredients together in a bowl and spoon into the prepared muffin tins.
Bake around 15-20 minutes, until puffed and brown.

The original recipe did not have any spices, but several people suggested adding some. I added chives and mustard to go with the soup I had made, but you can play around with the spices to suit what your needs are.

Tuesday, June 27, 2017

Greek Cous Cous Salad (Changed 10/25)

Just made this tonight and everyone loved it. Of course I was playing around and didn't measure anything so I have no particular amounts but will try to fix that later.

Cucumber
Tomato
Black Olives
Green Olives
Feta
Red Onion
Pearl Couscous
Zesty Italian Dressing

While Preparing approx. 1 cup of pearl Cous Cous, I put approx. 1/4 cup of zesty Italian dressing in a bowl. I chopped some red onion and threw it in the dressing (almost marinating it). Then I threw in peeled and chopped cucumber, chopped tomatoes and a mix of halved black and green olives. I tossed all that together in the dressing. Then added chopped feta. Lastly I added the couscous and mixed it all together. Very quick and very tasty.  Youngest says the 2 kids of olives is the most important part.

Saturday, January 21, 2017

Popovers

I don't know why I don't do these more often. I made them for breakfast this morning and everyone was crazy for them. I do not have a fancy popover pan I just do them in a regular cupcake tray. They were amazing with the cinnamon simple syrup, but the kids loved filling the empty center with maple syrup, powdered sugar or chocolate chips as well. This recipe is from The Joy of Cooking

1 cup of milk
1 Tablespoon melted butter (and extra butter for greasing the pan)
1 cup of all purpose flour
1/4 teaspoon of salt
2 beaten eggs

Preheat the oven to 450° F. Grease a cupcake/muffin tray with cold butter. Melt 1 Tablespoon of butter in the microwave. Pour 1 cup of milk into a measuring cup, leave it to the side to take the chill off - you don't want any of the ingredients too cold. Measure 1 cup of flour and 1/4 teaspoon of salt into a bowl, I stir it with a whisk, or you could sift it at this point, just make sure there are no lumps. Stir in the melted butter and milk and mix until there are no dry spots. Crack 1 egg into the measuring cup and beat slightly, then stir into the batter. Repeat with the second egg. (Beat the eggs before adding because you only want to stir enough to mix everything in, extra stirring will make them extra tough.) You should end up with a really wet batter. Pour the batter into the greased muffin cups only 1/2 to 3/4 full. The less full the cup the more the popovers will open up. Bake at 450° F for 15 minutes and then reduce heat to 350° F to finish cooking (around 20 more minutes). They are done when Light brown and the sides can support themselves. The steam from the wet batter will pop out all the batter to make a "hollow" muffin that tastes a bit like a pancake.


Cinnamon Simple Syrup

Found this at Framed Frosting and had to try it out. Cinnamon Syrup just sounded so delicious. I have tried it on a couple of things and my husband has even used it in his coffee, but my favorite use so far is on popovers. This is so easy to make, and well worth it.

2 cinnamon sticks
3/4 cup of water
3/4 cup of sugar

Boil the cinnamon sticks in the water for around 10 minutes. Remove the cinnamon sticks and stir in sugar until it dissolves. Store in the refrigerator. (I did pour it through a mesh strainer to get any stray cinnamon out.) It is a very pretty color and smells like heaven.

Tuesday, February 16, 2016

Odd but favorite Sandwiches

Seriously I hadn't thought about adding these sandwiches. I don't even know what to call them, but since they are everybody's favorite, I figured I better write them down.

Bok Choy
Mushrooms
Onion
Savory Baked Tofu
Sliced Baby Swiss
Tortillas

In a frying pan sauté onion in olive oil/butter. Then add mushrooms. Slice the bok choy into ribbons and add to sauté. Season with salt and pepper. When everything is soft, then add chopped tofu. I have no measurements for any of this, I just kind of eyeball it. I use whatever type of mushrooms, onions I have on hand. It works without the tofu, but I think it is better with.

Steam a tortilla over the sauté. When the tortilla is soft lay it flat and place two slices of baby swiss on it. Scoop the sauté mixture into the tortilla and roll it into a sandwich.

This is a weird mix of flavors, but it always works and has definitely become a house favorite.

Apple Rose Pastries

Made these for Thanksgiving, complied from several different websites. Pretty happy with what I ended up with. Not very sweet, excellent with vanilla ice-cream.

3 Apples
3 Tablespoons Sugar
2 Tablespoons Lemon Juice (fresh squeezed)
1/4 teaspoon Cardamom
2 sheets thawed Puff Pastry

Preheat Oven to 400°F

Core the apples and slice very thinly.
Put apple slices in a saucepan with 4 cups of water, sugar and lemon juice. Simmer until apples are semi soft. (Bendy not mushy.)
Remove the apples from the saucepan, reserve a few Tablespoons of the syrup. Stir Cardamom into the reserved syrup.
Cut the puff pastry lengthwise into thirds (you'll get 6 strips from 2 sheets). Lay the sliced apples along the top edge of each pastry strip, slightly overlapping. Fold the bottom half of the strip the apple slices and then roll the pastry up lengthwise. Place each roll (the apple slices should be poking out the top like rose petals) into a muffin tray and brush with the cardamom syrup.

Bake for 25 minutes or until the pastry is fully cooked.

Cool slightly before removing from tray. I have made these ahead and then quickly reheated for dessert, sprinkled with sugar.

Look online to see how to put the roses together. There are lots of variations on this recipe, this is just mine.