Wednesday, November 27, 2013

Thanksgiving's Eve, a few more ideas.

There are a few more things you can do ahead of time, especially if you like your meal earlier in the day like we do.

The day before I try to do as much as I can to free up the oven for that long turkey roast.

Tonight I will make my favorite yam casserole, this has become a family favorite. The sweetness of the yams, apple cider and maple syrup are set off by the sprigs of fresh rosemary.


I will also saute the vegetables and put together my stuffing so it will be ready to bake tomorrow when the turkey comes out of the oven to rest. Remember to let it rest at least 20 to 40 minutes depending on the size. Cover it with foil  loosely to retain the heat.

Here's what Alton Brown says about cooking your stuffing in the bird.

" When it comes to turkey, Stuffing Is Evil. That's because stuffing goes into the middle of the bird and is extremely porous. That means that as the turkey around it cooks, juices that may contain salmonella bacteria soak into the stuffing, which then must be cooked to a minimum of 165°F in order to be safe. Getting the stuffing to this temperature usually means overcooking the turkey.
The way I see it, cooking stuffing inside a turkey turns the turkey into a rather costly seal-a-meal bag. If you're a stuffing fan, I suggest cooking it separately (in which case it's "dressing," not stuffing) and inserting it into the bird while it rests. Odds are no one will notice the difference."

Personally I like the crusty edges that form when you cook the stuffing in the baking dish. I do like Alton's compromise of stuffing the bird after it and the stuffing have cooked.

Pies: they can be made ahead as well. In fact pumpkin pie is better the next day in my opinion.

For me Thanksgiving is about being thankful for the people in my life. Enjoy !!

There's the crew form last year's gathering.

Monday, November 25, 2013

Thanksgiving: thing to do ahead of time.

Thanksgiving is Genna's favorite holiday, true foodie that she is. And while there will only be four at our table, we will have the complete classic menu: turkey, gravy, stuffing, mashed potatoes, sweet potatoes, cranberry sauce, brussel sprouts and pecan pie. It's all about the leftovers for us ;-)

There are a few thing you can do way ahead of time to make your Thanksgiving eve and day less stressful.

This morning I baked cornbread for stuffing. You could also make the pumpkin cornbread I blogged about recently. We usually make my sister's cornbread stuffing.

This year we plan to make a hybrid that combines bread and cornbread.
I cubed the whole wheat sourdough bread, so it could begin to become stale. With stuffing stale is a good thing  and an easy thing to do ahead.

I plan to put some of our lovely Granny Smith's into the stuffing.

Cranberry sauce is the other easy thing to make ahead. Every year I plead for homemade cranberry sauce. IT IS SO EASY TO MAKE, THERE IS NO EXCUSE !!

And that way you can tailor it to your own tastes.
This year I decided to go with oranges and cinnamon.


Into my saucepan, I tossed, one 8 ounce bag of organic cranberries, 3 inches of cinnamon stick...
one half of an orange with peel, 2/3 cup water ( orange juice is good too), 2/3 cup sugar.


Mix together, bring to a boil and simmer for about 10 minutes. Taste and adjust for sweetness. Cool and store, there, it's done and only gets better as it sits.

Here a another post I did last year about cranberry sauce.

So now you have your bread getting stale and your cranberry sauce made, doesn't that feel good ??

Saturday, November 23, 2013

Thanksgiving side dish ideas...

Wow, Genna sent me this link with 101 side dishes for Thanksgiving dinner. Like she said "overwhelming but awesome. "

I haven't looked through them all, let alone tried any...but I do hope to find some inspiration.

Thursday, November 21, 2013

Pumpkin Cornbread...yes, more orange squash.

For some reason I am having a love affair this fall with winter squash. I have made it into soup, stuffed it and baked it into cake, cheesecake, and pie. And still I want more...so why not pumpkin cornbread !! Actually, Genna turned me on to this recipe.

With Thanksgiving a week away it seems appropriate. This would be great as a side dish to your turkey day feast, made into stuffing or to go with turkey soup you might be making next weekend. It has a nice spice accent without being too sweet. Genna says to have your butter ready when it comes out of the oven.

Pumpkin Cornbread

Ingredients

1 cup all purpose flour
1 tablespoon baking powder
1 teaspoon kosher salt
1/2 teaspoon ground cinnamon
1/4 teaspoon ground nutmeg
1/2 cup light brown sugar
1 cup cornmeal
2 large eggs
1 cup pumpkin puree
1/4 cup canola oil
1 tablespoon molasses

1) Preheat your oven to 400 F. Spray with oil, a muffin pan or 8 X 8 cake pan.
2) Put all your dry ingredients into a bowl and whisk together.
Note: I highly recommend grating your nutmeg fresh if possible. It comes with outer light coating and a hard outer shell, inside is the nutmeg which grates easily with the micro plane.
Most natural food or gourmet grocery store should carry them.
3) In a separate mixing bowl, add the eggs, pumpkin puree, brown sugar, oil and molasses, beat until smooth.
4) Stir the wet ingredients into the dry stuff and mix until just combined, best not to over mix.
5) Spoon into your prepared pan, I made muffins.
6) Bake for 12-15 minutes for muffins, 20-25 minutes for the cake pan. Do the old toothpick test, if you are unsure.

7) After 5 minutes, remove the muffins to a rack to cool .

 I served them with my curried chickpea soup and Asian slaw.








Tuesday, November 19, 2013

Kabocha Spice Soup

Kabocha squash are not really pumpkins although they look very similar. Kabocha are another variety of delicious winter squash. We had some last year, dumped the seeds in our compost and had volunteers this year in our front yard.
The other day I decided to bake the kabocha along with a butternut and delicata squash.
We ate the butternut straight up, it was so rich and creamy.  I stuffed the delicata, I had forgotten how good stuffed squash is. 

The kabocha was destined for soup. I didn't have a recipe, so I decided to riff off the carrot ginger soup we love so much. I was very happy with the results.

Kabocha Spice Soup

Ingredients

1 baked squash, peeled and cubes
1 onion chopped
1 tablespoon olive oil
1 inch fresh ginger, sliced
1 large bell pepper/ roasted bell pepper*
 6-10 cups broth/water
2-4 teaspoons salt
1-2 teaspoons cumin
1/4 teaspoon cayenne
1/2 teaspoon coriander
1 tablespoon apple cider vinegar

* I used a roasted bell pepper I had frozen. You can use a fresh bell pepper, just be sure to add it to the onion to cook.

1) As I mentioned above, I baked the squash first, you can also steam it. In fact for this soup that might be the best bet. However you cook it, let it cool down, then peel it.

2) Cut into chunks and set aside.

 3) Chop and saute one onion in olive oil. If you are using a fresh bell pepper, chop and add to the onion. Cook both until soft.
 4) I used a pepper I had roasted, so I added it when I added the sliced ginger and broth.
 5) Once you add the sliced ginger and broth, simmer for 30 to 40 minutes, until the squash is very soft and mushy. The amount of broth you use will depend on the size of your squash and how thick you like your soup. You can always add more liquid when you puree it.
6) Allow the soup to cool enough to puree without chance of injury ;-) I like to add the rest of my spices then, as well as the vinegar, salt and more water or broth if needed.
The soup is rich and thick with a nice kick of heat from the cayenne. Perfect for a cold winter evening or lunchtime. 

 I served it with the tomato galette....

 and a green salad with apples, radishes, carrots and cabbage.

Thursday, November 14, 2013

In the Garden Art Show and Sale this weekend.

I will be selling my wares this weekend in the beautiful garden at Rigg St. in Santa Cruz.

You will be able to buy my homemade almond toffee, pear ginger chutney and much more !! To see what else I have to offer look at the Laurie's Little Store pages on this blog.

Hope to see you there.

Wednesday, November 13, 2013

Pumpkin, it's not just for pie.

I wanted to make a cake recently for Genna's belated birthday celebration here at home.
She was complaining because no one in LA baked her a cake. That was all the excuse I needed. I had several small pie pumpkins left over from a friend's wedding.

I processed one these pumpkins the same way as I did for pumpkin cheesecake. You can certainly use canned pumpkin if that's what you have.

I looked at several pumpkin cakes recipes on line, some of which has some rather grim reviews. I finely found one at the Joy of baking website, here is my version.

Pumpkin Spice Cake

Ingredients
1/2 cup butter, at room temperature
1 1/4 cup brown sugar
2 large eggs
1 cup pumpkin puree
1 teaspoon vanilla
2 cups sifted flour
1/4 teaspoon baking powder
1 teaspoon baking soda
1/4 teaspoon salt
1/2 teaspoon ground cinnamon
1/4 teaspoon ground ginger
1/8 teaspoon or a dash of ground cloves*
1/2 cup milk
1 tablespoon lemon juice
* Be careful not to put in too much clove it can overpower the flavor.

1) Preheat the oven to 350 F, spray two 8 inch round cake pans with oil, then cover the bottom of each with a piece of parchment. This makes it very easy to remove the cakes from the pans.

2) Place the butter and brown sugar in your mixing bowl and beat until fluffy, about three minutes.
3) Add the eggs one at a time, beating well each time
4) Add the pumpkin puree and the vanilla, beat some more. It will look curdled.
 5) Mix the milk together with the lemon juice in a small bowl, set aside to let it curdle.

6) I like to sift together in a separate bowl my dry ingredients: flour, baking soda and powder, salt and spices.


7) Add the flour mixture and milk alternately to the batter, starting and ending with the flour mixture.
8) Divide evenly into the prepared cake pans.

9) Bake for 25 minutes or until the toothpick comes out clean.

10) Cool on a wire rack for 10 minutes.

11) Remove from pans and allow to cool completely before frosting.
      They may look uneven but after frosting they will be fine.

12) You can frost them with your favorite butter cream frosting or a cream cheese frosting like the one I used for my carrot cake or the honey ginger butter cream I used on the pumpkin cupcakes.

I happen to have some leftover caramel sauce which I used as the filling. This was a great idea !!

13) When you go to frost the rest of the cake, do remember to start on the top and work to the sides.


Voila !

 
 This cake turned out much better than I expected, it wasn't too sweet, so it offset the frosting and filling, it was moist but not too dense. Genna was very protective of it, she took the leftovers back to LA much to Bob's chagrin.






Thursday, November 7, 2013

Mom and beef stew.

Today is my mom's birthday, she's been gone since 1999, I still miss her. This post is dedicated to her.

Food was important in our family, my mom enjoyed cooking and baking. She was my first inspiration. In fact, she inspired all three of us kids to be the main cooks for our families.

I have some of the diaries she wrote as a teenager, she mentions in detail the cakes she baked.

I can remember being in the kitchen with my brother, he was seventeen and I was eight. He loved to make lemon meringue pie without the meringue and huge chocolate chip cookies.
He is still a very accomplished baker and home cook, so is my sister. My mom must have made the kitchen an inviting place.
Not that any of this has anything to do with beef stew...just some background.

This was my first attempt at making beef stew, on impulse, after seeing a recipe in Sunset magazine. I didn't use their recipe but cobbled together my own from a Food Network version, what I had available and the advice of my sous chef. Bob says beef stew is very adaptable, he claims to be an expert :-)

This is not a meal you can whip up after work, it takes some planning and longer cooking times. It would be perfect to make on a day off, with lots of leftovers for the week to come.

We don't eat a lot of meat but when we do I want it to be raised as close to home as possible. Lately I have been getting my meat at the farmer's market from Left Coast.
Beef must be organic and grass fed, if you want to know why read Omnivore's Dilemma by Michael Pollen.

This beef stew is warm and comforting just like my mom was.

 Laurie's Beef Stew

Ingredients

2 lbs chuck roast, cut into chunks
4 cup broth: beef or vegetable
2 cup wine, red or white
bacon grease/butter/olive oil for browning the meat and the onions
2 onions, peeled and cut into sixths
5 cloves smashed garlic
1 tablespoon tomato paste
1/2 tsp. dried thyme
2 bay leaves
6-8 whole tomatoes, peeled
4 cups peeled and cubed, red or yellow potatoes
6-8 medium carrots, cut in inch chunks
1/3 whole wheat pastry flour
2-4 teaspoons salt
pepper to taste

1) If your meat doesn't come in chunks, have your sous chef cut it for you. While the original recipe called for two inch chunks, my sous chef had his own ideas. I have to admit I like the smaller less regular size chunks just fine.
2) Peel and slice the onion into sixths.

3) Peel and smash the garlic.

4) Preheat the oven to 325 F for later.

5) In a large Dutch oven on the stove top, heat bacon fat, olive oil or butter (your choice) to brown the meat. Do it in batches and set aside.
6) Add more grease/oil/butter to brown the onions. Add the garlic and cook another minute or so.
7) Add the tomato paste, stir and cook for another minute.

8) Now add the meat with any juices, and mix well in the pot.

9) Sprinkle the meat and veggie mixture with the flour, a little at a time, stirring as you go. (This was the weird part for me, even though I understand why, you are basically making a roux.)

10) Add the broth, wine, herbs, salt and pepper. Bring to a simmer and put the pot, covered into the oven. Cook for 1 1/2 hours.

11) Peel and chop the potatoes, and slice the carrots.
12) Remove the pot from the oven, add the carrots, potatoes and tomatoes.
13) Bring to a simmer and cook for 1 to 2 hours more on the stove top, with the pot mostly uncovered. The timing will depend on how mushy you like your veggies, and the size of your pot. I checked every half hour for doneness. It took the whole two hours for my stew to be ready. It was well worth it.

I served it with my millet muffins and a green salad. Luckily we have leftovers,  Bob pronounced it the best he has ever had, coming from a Midwest man, that's a compliment.

So here's to you, Mom, thanks for the inspiration !!