Beet Marmalade: The Easiest Homemade Condiment
/Want to impress your friends? This homemade beet marmalade should do the job. It's incredibly easy to make, and a great flavor combination.
Read Morea lifestyle website featuring food, family, adventure (even going to the corner store with your toddler can be considered an adventure), life (including but not limited to politics, current news and trending topics), crafts and above all cooking.
Want to impress your friends? This homemade beet marmalade should do the job. It's incredibly easy to make, and a great flavor combination.
Read MoreI made a variation of Marion Cunningham's great coffee cake this morning. I used gluten-free flour and lactose-free sour cream. Maybe that makes the cake sound less tasty, but believe me, if turned out very well, and tasted almost like the real deal.
Read MoreHere we are again, it's Cook the Book time. This chapter of Marian Cunningham's The Breakfast Book is all about breakfast meat. Somehow, I found a fish dish.
Read MoreHash brown potatoes are a quick and easy side dish.
I don't buy much that's frozen, but I've always used frozen hash browns. They seemed like a tough dish to get right so I figured I'd stick to the packaged variety.
Read MoreWe had gluten free chocolate chip pancakes for dinner tonight.
Working all day, cooking two to three meals a day and making sure my teenage daughter is taken care of is a huge amount of responsibility. I love all of it, but sometimes, I just have to give in to a nice and easy dinner: gluten-free almond milk chocolate chip pancakes (way more words in that name than the actual effort took to make them).
This is another installment of my cook the book project with these lovely ladies: Rachel, Aimee, Emily, Sammy and Claudie. We are cooking our way through Marion Cunnignham's The Breakfast Book. Chapter six is all about pancakes!
My daughter was thrilled with the choice. I didn't have any bacon, so she had roasted chicken and cauliflower alongside her pancakes. Sort of like she ate dessert at the same time as dinner.
Look at that batter. The warm milk and butter mixture melted the chocolate chips into delicious strips of chocolatey goodness.
I made them with almond milk and gluten-free flour so I could eat them, too. So yummy!
adapted from Marion Cunnigham’s The Breakfast Book, Copyright 1987, Alfred A. Knopf
Look at these here baked donuts, made with almond milk and gluten free flour. Delicious, right?
It's our twice monthly Cook the Book. We are cooking our way through every chapter of Marion Cunningham’s The Breakfast Book. There are six of us participating in the project: Rachel of Ode to Goodness, Sammy of Rêve du Jour, Emily of The Bon Appetit Diaries, Aimee of Homemade Trade and Claudie of The Bohemian Kitchen.
My mom, Gran Fran, made fried donuts just once that I can recall. She has a big fear of somehow burning down her kitchen while working with hot oil, cooking anything fatty in the oven, or, come to think of it, anything other than pasta or potatoes. For a woman who spends so much time in the kitchen, she certainly isn't comfortable with any kind of volatile cooking.
When I mentioned I was making donuts, she, in NY, said to me, in SF:
"Make sure you open all the windows, have the fire extinguisher handy, and maybe let the neighbors know you're frying something, so in case there's some kind of fire, they can help you."
I'm the youngest of five, two of us live 3,000 miles away from Gran Fran. She has been giving me these long distance words of wisdom for 20 years. I can only image what kind of in-person guidance my NY siblings get from her.
When I was in New York for my parents 50th wedding anniversary, one of the granddaughters made a list of all the Gran-Fran and Joe-isms she could think of, along with some input from the other 10 grandkids and my sisters and brother. Let me tell you, there were a good number, none of which included any reference to the fire extinguisher. Wish I had remembered to bring that one up when the list was put together.
Two quotes stand out in the lineup:
1. "I'll make you a plate."
2. "Make sure you lock the top lock."
The first quote is a straightforward example of Gran Fran always making sure we are well fed, to the point of needing to switch into our stretchy pants.
The second refers to always locking all the locks on the door, especially the top lock. Whenever she would leave us alone, she'd lock the door behind her and get in the car. Next thing you hear is her banging on the back door yelling "Make sure you lock the top lock." This inevitably scared the heck out of us as we had already locked the top lock, and were not expecting a re-appearance of Gran Fran. (A friend sent me this link of S**t Italian Moms Say. Make it to the very end, you'll see why).
With Gran Fran's warning in my ear, I opted out on frying the donuts and instead chose a baked donut recipe. This is the second time I've tried baking donuts. The consistency is more like a cake donut, not so air filled, denser. I prefer a nice cake donut, so it's perfect for my taste. If you like an airier donut, you probably want to stick to frying.
adapted from Marion Cunnigham’s The Breakfast Book, Copyright 1987, Alfred A. Knopf
Sprinkle the yeast over the warm water in a small bowl and let it dissolve for 5 minutes. Put the milk and shortening in a saucepan and heat until the shortening is melted. Cool to lukewarm. Pour the yeast mixture into large mixing bowl and add the milk mixture. Stir in the ¼ cup sugar, salt, nutmeg, eggs, and 2 cups flour. Beat briskly until well blended. Add the remaining 2½ cups flour and beat until smooth.
Cover the bowl and let double in bulk, about 1 hour. Dust a board generously with flour and turn the dough mass onto it. The dough is soft and needs enough flour on the board to prevent sticking, but is easy to handle. Pat the dough into a round about ½ inch thick. Use a 3-inch doughnut cutter to cut out the doughnuts, placing them (and the doughnut holes) on greased baking sheets, 1 inch apart. These don't spread much; they rise.
Preheat the oven to 450ºF. Let the doughnuts rest and rise for 20 minutes, uncovered. Bake about 10 minutes, or a little longer, until they have a touch of golden brown. Remove them from the oven.
Have ready the melted butter and a brush. On a sheet of waxed paper spread the cinnamon sugar. Brush each doughnut and doughnut hole with butter and roll in the cinnamon sugar. Serve hot.
Glazed cinnamon rolls are so very tasty. Welcome to the first installment of my very first Cook the Book. The idea here is that I will cook a recipe every other week from Marion Cunnigham's The Breakfast Book. I'll give you a flavor of what the book is like and will inspire you to cook up some of the tasty breakfast treats yourself.
Up first is a very good glazed cinnamon roll recipe. I'm not much of a baker. I fully acknowledge my shortcomings in this area. The requirement to follow an actual recipe with precise measurements is next to impossible for me. I've been at this recipe since 7:30am this morning. The rolls went into the oven at 5:15pm. To be fair, the dough rested for six hours in the refrigerator.
I chose to do the cinnamon rolls because I have the fondest of memories of Gran Fran whipping these up for us on weekends. I now have an even greater respect for the process she went through to give us fresh baked pastries. Gran Fran was known for being up at all hours of the day and night cooking and baking. I'd come home well after midnight to be greeted with the smell of beef stew or foccacia bread with garlic and rosemary. Gran Fran was to be found somewhat asleep, sitting up on the couch with the TV on. She'd awake with a start saying "Oh, I was just resting my eyes. Let me make you a plate." It was never asked as a question. It was a given that when you came in she'd feed you.
Why'd I wander off on that tangent? Because I just figured out that she must've been up making the dough so it could rest in the fridge overnight to be ready for baking soon after we got up. I wasn't that smart. Isabella will be having cinnamon rolls as her dessert tonight (with many more leftover for breakfast). Regardless of when we eat them, they are amazing, and I am proud to say that I made my first successful batch of glazed cinnamon rolls (it only took me 42 years!).
As per Isabella's instructions, I made one dozen with the glaze and dusted one dozen with cinnamon-sugar.
I'm doing this project along with five other wonderful food bloggers: Rachel of Ode to Goodness, Sammy of Rêve du Jour, Emily of The Bon Appetit Diaries, Aimee of Homemade Trade and Claudie of The Bohemian Kitchen.Click on through to their sites to see which recipes from the Yeast Breads chapter they made.
from Marion Cunningham's The Breakfast Book, copyright 1987, Alfred A. Knopf