Archive | December, 2009

Cha CHING! It’s a GIVEAWAY, kittens!

31 Dec

That’s right, I wouldn’t lie to you, oh trusted 5 people that follow my blog (jk. I hope there’s more people out there reading!)

Starting Monday, January 4th, you’ll have the chance to enter to win a FABULOUS piece of Rachel Ray cookware, from the folks over at www.cookware.com.

I got to hand pick the piece for the giveaway (is this one or two words, I can’t decide!), and the moment I saw this precious stoneware casserole dish with it’s smooth lines and heavy lid, I was in love.

I wish I got to keep it for myself! BUMMER! But, yay for you guys!

Come back on Monday the 4th for details on how to enter and when a winner will be chosen.

I can’t wait to send a belated holiday gift to a faithful reader!

Until then, Happy New Year, kittens!

Things I’m making this week

30 Dec

Because seriously, if I don’t write it down somewhere, I’m bound to forget:

  • White chili (for Rose Bowl chow down on Friday day)
  • Pork Rolls (from my previous post: cinnamon buns and bacon)
  • baked-fried chicken (tonight at our friends’ house for dinner)

Now, I saw last night in the fridge that I have an OLD half loaf of gluten free corn bread that’s been in there for ahhhhhhh, I’d say about 4 weeks. What do we think? Is it still usable for something? Or do I toss it?  I’m trying to think of some sort of bread pudding…..but I don’t know. Any suggestions??

Get the handcuffs: Bacon Cinnamon Rolls. WHATTTT?!??!

30 Dec

If you think I’m not making these on New Years Day, think again.

For reals, you guys, WHAT is the deal with these? They look SO GOOD, my mouth is watering.

IMGP1201

I saw this today over at the genius Cake Spy blog and I’m totes MaGoats making these to nosh during the Rose Bowl.

IMGP1188

If you too can’t stop yourself from licking the screen, then please hop over to Cake Spy for the full recipe and notes!

Get the handcuffs: Ina’s White Chocolate Truffles

23 Dec

I was watching Barefoot Contessa (or as I call her, Paul’s other girlfriend) this weekend, and she actually made something that I thought wasn’t hideously fattening (I mean it’s made with chocolate and cream, so it IS really bad for you, but you’re only gonna have a couple, so no bigs).

I decided I’d make these to take to our little get together this Wednesday night (seriously the people that dont’ come are really going to be sorry!). They’re her White Chocolate Truffles, half she drizzles with a chocolate glaze, and the other half she rolls in toasted hazlenuts. YES TO THE PLEASE, KITTENS!

So, I wanted to share the recipe with you today, and then I’ll share pictures with you next week!  I really apologize to those of you that are anti-recipe, as I usually am, but that stupid Christmas bug bit me, and I can’t seem to control myself! I’m baking crazy, and most of the time that involves a recipe. Bear with me, and I promise to return to the land of regular cooking, sans recipes as soon as possible!

For Ina’s full recipe from the source, please visit the Food Network website!

Picture of White Truffles Recipe

(credit – FoodNetwork.com)

White Truffles

Copyright, 2006, Ina Garten, All Rights Reserved

Prep Time: 45 min Inactive
Prep Time: 1 hr 0 min
Cook Time: 10 min
Level: Intermediate
Serves: 20 truffles 

Ingredients
2 tablespoons heavy cream
7 ounces good white chocolate, chopped
2 tablespoons Irish cream liqueur (recommended: Baileys)
1/2 teaspoon good vanilla extract
1/2 cup chopped hazelnuts
6 ounces bittersweet or dark chocolate, chopped
Directions
Place the cream in a heat-proof bowl, and set the bowl over a pan of simmering water. Cook until heated through. Using a wire whisk, slowly stir the white chocolate into the warm cream until completely melted. Whisk in the liqueur and vanilla. Cover and chill for 1 hour or until pliable but firm enough to scoop.

Preheat the oven to 350 degrees F.

With 2 teaspoons or a 1 1/4-inch ice cream scoop, make dollops of the chocolate mixture and place on a baking sheet lined with parchment paper. Refrigerate for about 15 minutes, until firm enough to roll into rough spheres.

Place the chopped hazelnuts on a sheet pan and place them in the oven for 8 minutes. Cool to room temperature.

Melt the bittersweet chocolate in a heat-proof bowl, set over a pan of simmering water.

Drizzle the melted bittersweet chocolate over 10 of the truffles. Roll the remaining truffles in the chopped nuts. Chill until ready to serve.

Dinner Date: Dina’s Goat Cheese Strata – I did it!

22 Dec

Hi gang,

So if you recall, a few weeks ago, Lori (my friend and boss) sent over a great recipe for this goat cheese strata thingy (it’s not as complicated as it sounds).

Well, fast forward to a little over a week ago: I made it for our wine tasting holiday party here at the office, and wanted to share my experience with you!

First, let me remind you of the recipe:

Cut very top off head of garlic, drizzle with olive oil and wrap in foil, bake in oven at 400 for one hour until soft.

Ingredients:
One half pound cream cheese @ room temp,
One half pound goat cheese @ room temp
Salt and pepper
One half cup sundried tomato pesto,
One third cup basil pesto

How to make:
1. Mix the cheeses together well, divide evenly into three small bowls.
2. In first, squeeze the roasted garlic and mix well with the cheese blend adding salt and pepper to taste.
3. In the second bowl, add the sun dried tomatoes and salt and pepper to taste.
4. In the third, mix the basil pesto and add salt (*careful not to overdo if your pesto already is well salted) pepper.
5. In a 3 cup ramekin or bowl, line with dampened cheese cloth. Spoon basil mix onto bottom and smooth with spatula.
6. Next, put the roasted garlic on top of the basil layer and smooth with a spatula, followed by the tomato layer.
7. Fold excess cloth over the strata. Refrigerate at least one hour…better at 2 or 3 hours.
8. To serve, unfold the cloth and invert onto platter, carefully peel cloth off the cheese….serve with crackers, bread, bagels, pita, or veggies.
***makes three cups

Now, it says you can do this in a ramekin or bowl…I’m dumb, saw only the word ramekin, and thought, “I don’t have one, so I’ll improvise and use a tart pan! YAY!”

(first layer with pesto)

Dumb. So dumb. Don’t do this, okay?

(second layer that’s supposed to have roasted garlic in it, but I forgot it at the store and was too lazy to go back, so it’s just the two cheese mixture)

Here’s what happened, it turned out great, don’t get me wrong, but it made the layers incredibly thin and hard to spread. So I had to heat up each mixture to spread it over the top of the previous layer, and be VERY CAREFUL. It went fine in the end, and it was tasty, but I have to tell you, I could have really screwed it up easily.

(final, third layer with sundried tomatoes. This was supposed to be sundried tomato pesto, but I could not find that, and I bought my ingredients at Costco, so I just made do!)

So, my advice is to make this in a bowl, like Dina said, not do what I did, and completely ignore the directions. Right. Check. Done and done.

Also, because I’m a spaz, I forgot to take a picture of the final product, but really it just looks like the first picture, because the layers are so thin that you only see the pesto layer when it’s turned out.

Follow Up: Gramma Ginny’s Peppermint Cookies

21 Dec

I did it! I made my first solo batch of Gramma Ginny’s Peppermint Cookies this weekend, all on my own (okay, well I did have to call my mom, because for real, the batter was totally not sticking together. She reassured me this was normal….)

I wanted to share the pictures with you all, since we still don’t have smell-o-vision, or taste-o-vision yet (seriously, WHO is going to figure that out?!)

(credit – kitchen, butter, powder sugar and mixer provided by my #1 poodle, Adam Dahl)

Getting all my ingredients ready, making sure my butter is at room temperature.

Here we’re creaming the room temp butter and the powdered sugar together. This can be and was a very cloudy, messy endeavour, so I recommend if you’re using a mixer that you keep it on 1-2/low for a while, and you’ll need to scrap the sides and push the butter out of your whisk a couple times, until the two really begin to combine.

My secret to all great cookies lies here: in the creaming process. It’s imperative that you cream them together for 4-5 minutes on high. This really creates a new item in the mixer – sugar butter. The sugar really does dissolve into the butter, and that makes all the difference in the world.

When I start adding the flour and then the oats, I switch to a paddle attachment. If you’re using a handheld mixer, you don’t need to worry about this, and if you’re hardcore and mixing by hand this is not an issue.

The whisk attachment just doesn’t do the job very well here, so take the 5 seconds to switch, you’ll be glad you did!

Then you’ll take your peppermints, unwrap them, and put them into a double bag (sealed) so you can hammer/pound them into oblivion, like this:

(before)

(after)

Then you’ll mix that into your batter, only for a second. The batter won’t come together into a ball….it’ll just be the size of small peas. So you then have to use a spoon to grab enough to squeeze/roll into a ball the size of a walnut (as my mom said).

Then you have to go back and smoosh (technical term) the tops down with the bottom of a glass that’s been dipped in powdered sugar, to flatten a bit, like this:

 

Cook for exactly 8 minutes at 325 F, and take them out. If you don’t, you run the risk of your peppermint chunks melting and becoming an awful, sticky mess.

The result?

We took them over to Lori’s house for her and Mike’s annual holiday bash.

Not much to look at here, but boy were they tasty!!!

Thanks to Lori and Mike for having us over once again for another memorable party!

Now, tonight I start batch number 2 to take to our holiday gathering with Paul’s buddies and their wives on Wednesday night! I can’t hardly wait!

UPDATE: Get the handcuffs: Gramma Ginny’s Peppermint cookies

18 Dec

Hey gang.

My mom emailed me back today with a temperature correction on the cookies. They bake at 325 F.

She writes:

“Hi honey – The oven temp for the peppermit cookies is 325. Last night I finished up my batch of mustard and made almond roca bars.  That’s another of Ginny’s recipes that is one of Mike’s favorite. I tried to cut them after they had cooled a little but the chocolate topping was still too soft so I covered them and put them in the refer – will see how they cut tonight. Well, back to work.”

Thanks, mom! I bought my bags of peppermints at the store today during lunch, so I’m already to go for this weekend! YAY!!!!!

Side Kick: Moroccan Carrot Salad

18 Dec

I have been staring at this blue post-it note on my bulletin board for a few months now…it’s been taunting me like a school yard bully to do something about it since about September.

I couldn’t take it anymore, so I decided to share it with you all!

I apologize that I can’t remember where I got this from…Paul may have emailed it to me from some site or blog or email he received. If you recognize it, let me know please!

You could easily make this with items you have already in your fridge and cupboard…..and that’s the whole point of this blog, right? Giving you ideas for making new things out of the stuff you ALREADY have! There are a couple of ingredients here I don’t keep on hand, but I’ll address that inline.

Moroccan Carrot Salad

Ingredients
2 carrots
1 red pepper
1/4 c. minced cilantro
1/2 c. raisens
—–
1/4 c. almond butter
1tbsp. lime juice
1.5 tbsp. tamari (a wheat free soy sauce, it’s also a bit deeper in flavor, but go ahead and just use soy sauce if you have it)
1tsp. honey
1/4tsp. chili powder

Directions
-shred the carrots
-slice the red pepper really thinly (so your carrot and red pepper are almost the same thickness)
-mix the ingredients south of the line break (all sauce-like ingredients) and whisk together (can use a fork if you don’t have a whisk)
-put carrots, pepper, cilantro and raisens into a bowl and pour sauce over top, toss and serve!

Get the handcuffs: Gramma Ginny’s Peppermint cookies

18 Dec

 

(credit – istockphoto.com)

I have two parties in the next week to attend, and one is specifically a dessert party where we’re asked to bring our favorite holiday dessert.  The other is being thrown by my boss and her husband. They have a FABULOUS holiday party every year, and we try to make it (although I think we couldn’t last year for some reason….)  We always have a blast, and I thought it’d be fun to take along a batch of my favorite holiday cookies to each party!

So, of course I had to call my mom and ask her for her recipe for Peppermint Cookies….little did I know this recipe actually comes from her mother-in-law, my step-father’s mom.

I don’t have any pictures right now, because I haven’t made a batch in years, but at least I can pass on the super simple recipe for anyone who’s stuck in the snow, at home this weekend, or just wants a treat for themselves or their friends and family!

Enjoy!

(My mom writes):

Hi Honey:  Here is “Grandma Ginny’s” Peppermint cookies’ recipe (FROM MEMORY ??) – I will double check it when I get home tonight and if any corrections are needed I will give you a call – okay?
 
1 cup butter – softened
1 cup powedered sugar
1/2 tsp salt
2 tsp vanilla -OR- 1 tsp EACH vanilla and peppermint extract – this is the way I make them
1 1/2 cup flour
1 cup quick oats
1/2 – 3/4 cup crushed peppermint candy (I used 3/4 cups this year as Mike thought the 1/2 cup last year was not enough) (about 20 of the Brach’s round candys = 1/2 cup; and I used 30 which was about 3/4 cup) (Put all 30 in a quart-size freezer zip lock bag and pound with a hammer to crush!!)
 
Cream butter and sugar together
Add salt, vanilla/peppermint extracts
Add flour
Add quick oats
Add crushed peppermint candy
 
It’s a pretty stiff dough but I mixed it all with my rubber spatula.
 
Take a small spoonful and shape/roll between palms to make a ball about the size of a walnut. Place on ungreased cookie sheet about 2 inches apart.  Put a little powdered sugar in a small saucer; dip the bottom of a glass into the powdered sugar and press each ball of dough flat – don’t press too hard, just enough to flatten; they will spread and thin out as they cook.
 
They only cook for about 8 minutes; I think the baking temperature is 350 degrees – guess I will have to call you on that; if it’s not 350 then it’s 325.
 
So that’s that!! Will talk to you later honey. Love, Mom

Food Matters: mike’s hard humane tweetup!

17 Dec

Hi gang!

I wanted to make sure I posted today about a great local event being put on by the great peeps over at Mike’s Hard Lemonade:

Date: Thursday December 17th
Time: 6pm
Location: Sport Restaurant & Bar
140th 4th Ave. N. Suite 130
Seattle, WA 98109

Twitter#: #mikes or Hashtag:   #humaneholiday

What’s happening: For every guest, mike’s hard lemonade® will donate $5.00 to the Seattle Humane Society.
A rep from the Humane Society will talk about the good things they are doing in the community.  The Seattle social media community will announce a revamped seattle.socialcentral.net site.

Wanna go?!?!?!! Of course you do!

Here’s the Tweetvite: http://tweetvite.com/event/mikes

Of course, there’s drink specials, and all the proceeds from guest entry go to our furry friends! So, go, drink, enjoy, help! (as long as you’re over 21, of course!)