Showing posts with label Recipes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Recipes. Show all posts

Friday, July 17, 2015

Blueberry Raspberry Jam

Adding the whole berries at the end of the cooking process makes for a nice chunky jam. Using the ratio of 1:2/3 cup (berries to sugar) allows the ripe fruit taste to come through. Estimate about 2 pints of berries for 1 pint of jam. Yields 6 pint jars. Refer to manufacturers instructions for specific canning details for either the waterbath or oven method. The National Center for Home Food Preservation is nchfp.uga.edu.

Ingredients
Fresh Ripe Organic Blueberries, 750 gm ( 26.5 oz) = 562 gm (20 oz) + 188 gm (6.5 oz) (set aside)
Fresh Ripe Organic Raspberries, 750 gm ( 26.5 oz) = 562 gm (20 oz) + 188 gm (6.5 oz) (set aside)
Granulated Sugar, 1000 gm (35 oz)
Organic Lemon, 1, zest & 1 Tbsp of Juice
Kirschwasser (Cherry Liquor), 2 oz (60 ml)

Useful Equipment
Long handled spoonLarge heavy bottom Dutch OvenZester for LemonMesh skimmer or spoon to skim off foam and small bowl of water to dump the foamJars for canning with lids and bandsCanning Pot for water bath

Directions
1. Place metal spoons or plate into freezer.

2. Wash inside and outside of canning jars with lids and bands (estimate a pint jar per two pints of berries).

3. Bake jars (tops open) at 250ºF (121ºC) for 30 minutes. In a small pot over low heat, simmer the lids until needed. Lay out a clean cloth to wipe jar rims after filling.

4. Pick over the fruit and discard any unripe berries, stems, leaves, critters, or mold. Fill a bowl with water and swish the berries around-- prevents damage from the faucet's stream to the delicate fruit. Arrange in a single layer on a paper towel-lined baking sheet to prevent bruising and dry.

5. Near the stove, set aside a quarter of the berries, 375 gm (13 oz), to add at the end.

6. In a large heavy bottom pot with a wide rim such as a dutch oven over low heat, add berries and occasionally stir to soften the fruit and draw out the pectin until it comes to a simmer, 5 to 7 minutes.
Continuing over low heat, add the sugar, lemon juice, and a bit of lemon zest. Stir into berries until dissolved, 1 to 2 minutes.

7. Increase heat (medium high to high depending on the heat source) to boil rapidly, stirring frequently to prevent sticking, until the jelling point is reached, 15 to 20 minutes- see the next step below. Skim foam off the top as needed.

8. After 15  minutes begin to test for the jelling point by placing a bit of the hot jam onto a spoon or plate from the freezer. If the jam runs, continue to cook and recheck after a minute, if the jam runs in a sheet and crinkles when pushed up, the jelling point has been reached.

9. Add the remaining whole berries and return to boil until the berries are translucent and just hold their shape, about 1 to 3 minutes. Remove pan from heat. Skim off any foam.

10. Gently stir the Kirschwasser into the jam.

11. Allow to cool and thicken to let the whole fruit pieces to remain disbursed, 10 to 12 minutes.

12. Ladle warm jam into clean sterilized jars with a 1/4-inch of head space. Wipe rims with clean damp cloth. Apply lids and seal with bands- tighten bands to just finger tight.

13. Place jars in a pot with a rack and enough water to cover the jars by about an inch. Bring water to boil and process for 5 minutes. Start the timer when the water begins to boil.

14. Remove jars from the water and place on a surface (wood, folded cloth, newspapers, silicon mat, etc.) to cool. Tighten the bands. Allow to sit undisturbed and to cool completely.

15. Check the seals. Any unsealed jars must be used within a few days and stored in the fridge. Store jars in a cool dry place and use within 1 year. Label jars/lids with the date and contents.

At the table
Eat jam on sandwiches with brie, french toast, oatmeal, yogurt, scones, waffles, salad dressing, etc.

Blueberries and Raspberries cooking


Monday, January 5, 2015

Making Ramen Noodles

It took the new year and several days off to chill for motivation to spike for an all out ramen fest. We used the recipes from the Ivan Ramen cookbook (they work great!) and enjoyed the feast.

Ramen refers to the noodles and soup which in our case was a triple broth mixture including chicken stock, pork stock, and dashi. We purchased back up frozen noodles from the nearby Asian store. My honey bunny did most of the work as he made the roast pork, stocks, menma (bamboo), and sofrito. I made the noodles, steam buns, and assisted with the dashi.

The ramen noodles were made using my kitchen aid mixer with a pasta attachment. These were the first try of Ivan's Toasted Rye Noodles.

Ivan's Toasted Rye Noodles

75 grams of Rye Flour
620 grams high protein bread flour
300 grams cake flour
10 grams Kansui powder (bake baking soda at 275ºF x 1 hour)
430 milliliters cool water
13 grams salt
Cornstarch as needed

1. Bake the baking soda x 275ºF x 1 hour. Cool.

2. Toast the Rye flour in pan over medium heat about 4 minutes, until you can smell the aroma. Use 70 GRAMS in the recipe.

3. Mix water, salt, and kansui until fully dissolved.

4. In the bowl of a stand mixer with a dough hook attachment, combine flours and add water mix. Mix for 10 minutes-- add a spoonful of water if it isn't coming together. It will be on the dry side. Dough should form into a ball of sorts. Cover the dough and allow to rest for 30 minutes.

5. Flatten dough into pieces and cover with a damp cloth.

6. Set up your pasta machine and adjust for largest size. Pass piece of dough through, fold onto self making a double sheet, run through thinner setting, and repeat for the thinnest setting. Run through 4th time without double sheeting for the thinnest you can get them. Set aside and repeat with the remaining pieces of dough.

7. Pass thin dough sheets through a cutter or cut by hand. As you work, toss the noodles with a little cornstarch to keep them from sticking together, shake off excess before cooking. Store the noodles in a container wrapped tightly with plastic (or individual portions in ziplock bags) for up to a day.

8. Cook in boiling water for about 50 seconds (varies with water and flour used). Drain. Place into bowl of hot soup broth. Garnish.


Making ramen noodles

Friday, July 25, 2014

Carbonara in 15 Minutes

If you eat swine, I recommend this recipe for carbaonara for two reasons-- it's great for a quick dinner and easy. 

In a big pot with a lid, over high heat bring to boil water with a fat pinch of salt. 

There are certain dishes that I love to eat when they are made with lots of bacon-- carbonara, pizza for adults, and fried rice. However, an early trek to the farmers market is necessary to get the local stuff so when I do manage to buy bacon, I stash it in my freezer. 

Pull out a frozen block of bacon, hack it to bits, and brown it. You'll notice that keeping bacon in the freezer is great for chopping it.

I buy local food, but for some items are some that have no substitute-- Dececco pasta, avocados, and pomegranates. Put the pasta into boiling water and set the timer. If you use Dececco, it's always al dente when it says it will be, ten minutes for spaghetti. Add frozen peas when six minutes have passed.

Crack two eggs and place the yolks in bowl to use. Pour out the cream.

Drain the pasta, keeping some of the pasta water. Return the pasta to the still hot pan. Using a pasta scoop or two forks, mix the pasta until it is coated with the egg yolks, adding cream slowly. Season with salt and pepper. Add Parmesan cheese and toss again. Add more cream to obtain desired consistency. Serve the pasta and garnish with the cripsy bacon bits.

You might find you have an emergency worthy of this dish, regularly.


Carbonara in 15 minutes

Ingredients
Box of Spaghetti (Dececo), cooked al dente 10 minutes
Bacon, sliced (I prefer the whole package but if you've more self control half is tolerable)
Frozen Peas, 1/2 cup (optional)
Egg Yolks, 2
Cream, 1 cup
Parmesean Cheese, 1/2 cup
Kosher Salt, to taste
Fresh Ground Black Pepper, 1-2 cranks

Directions
Cover and bring a large pot of water to boil over high heat. Add pasta and cook until al dente ( has a bite when bitten), about 10 minutes.

Chop bacon. In a sauté pan, brown bacon over medium low heat. Remove from heat and drain onto a paper towel. Set aside. 

Add peas to pasta when pasta has about 4 minutes to go.

When pasta is al dente, drain pasta but not too thoroughly, save a bit of the water. Return pasta to the still warm pot. Add the egg yolks and with a pasta scoop or two forks, toss until the pasta is coated. Slowly, add cream until desired consistency is reached. 

Add the cheese and continue to toss. 

Season with salt and pepper. Adjust to taste.

Serve pasta topped with crispy bacon bits.


Fresh off the Cob Corn Salsa

If you live in or near Ohio in the summer, fresh corn is on the menu. Over the years it has been consumed at our table, mostly, on the cob. However, my children don't eat corn like I did so there is often leftover. I'm more a fan of reusing leftovers in another dish than reheating, but whether you cut it off the cob or use frozen or canned corn kernels, this is a great way to serve corn. I used cherry tomatoes fresh from my garden in this batch.

Corn Salsa combines black beans and fresh tomatoes to make a tasty topping to Taco Rice Salad or corn chips. For me, it's really about the cumin and lime-- I'll eat most anything with that combination. Try it!

Fresh off the Cob Corn Salsa

Ingredients
Corn-- Fresh, frozen, or Canned, cooked and cooled, 1 1/2 cups
Cooked Black Beans, cooled and rinsed, 1 1/2 cups
Fresh Tomato, diced,  2 large
Sweet Onion, diced, 1 small
Fresh Cilantro, chopped, 3 Tbsp
Fresh Lime Juice, 3 Tbsp (1-2 Limes)
Ground Cumin, 1/2 tsp
Salt, 1 tsp

Directions
Prep vegetables. Toss all ingredients together in a bowl. Adjust seasoning to taste. Serve with taco rice salad or eat with Shagbark Corn Chips.


Sunday, July 20, 2014

Suan La Tang Chinese Hot & Sour Soup

Cravings for Chinese food hit randomly. We go on egg roll making sprees and stash them in the freezer. Egg rolls taste almost as good heated in the oven as they do fresh out of the fry oil . This is a favorite with egg rolls at my house. There is a stash of lilly buds and wood-ear ever ready in the pantry. Fresh tofu and ginger are often in our fridge so the ingredients are easy to gather together. Increase the heat by adding more black pepper. I go for middle of the road heat.

Suan la Tang Chinese Hot and Sour Soup
Serves 3 to 4

Ingredients
Tiger Lilly Buds, 20 buds
Cloud Ear Fungus/Wood-Ear/Ki-kurage, 2 Tbsp dried
Chicken stock, 3 cups
Garlic, 1 clove peeled & smashed
Fresh Ginger, 1 knob peeled & smashed
Soy Sauce, 1 Tbsp
Salt, 1/2 tsp
Black pepper, 2 grinds
Rice Vinegar, 1 Tbsp
Corn starch, 2 Tbsp + 2Tbsp Water (more for thicker soup)
Firm Tofu, 1/4 block finely cubed
Scallions, garnish, chopped 1 tsp per serving
Sesame oil, garnish with a splash

Directions
  1. Rehydrate Tiger Lilly Buds and Cloud Ear in hot water until softened, about 5 to 10 minutes.  
  2. Over medium heat, bring chicken stock to a boil with smashed garlic and ginger.
  3. Add soy sauce, salt, black pepper, and vinegar to stock.
  4. Mix the corn starch with water and slowly add to the soup stirring vigorously until you have the consistency you want.
  5. Dice tofu and scallions. Add tofu to stock and simmer 1 to 2 minutes until heated throughly.
  6. Turn off the heat. Garnish with scallions and a splash of sesame oil. Serve with egg rolls if you have them.
Suan La Tang Chinese Hot and Sour Soup

Crispy Kosher Dill Pickles

This recipe is based on the Bell Blue Book recipe but it does use less sugar. Do follow proper canning procedures and review a resource if you're new to canning or it's been a while. These pickles are great on burgers, as a side, and can be eaten the next day, but the point of making them is to put them up for later. 

I'm slowly learning how much to make of things in terms of a year's supply now that I have a basement. Pickles are best made with fairly small cucumbers, about 4 to 6-inches long. This size cucumbers can easily be found at farmers markets, roadside stands, and produce auctions. If you take up pickling to any degree, you'll likely find the best deals come from either your own garden or a produce auction. However, I did get this peck (a big box with a handle) at the Athens Farmers Market.


Crispy Kosher Dill Pickles

Yields 3 quarts.

Useful Equipment
Quart jars with lids and bands for pickling
Water bath Pot for canning + canning equipment

Ingredients
  • Cucumbers, 4 to 6-inches, 1 peck, wash, cut in half or quarters lengthwise (depending on size)
  • Water, 1 quart (4 cups)
  • White Vinegar, 1 quart (4 cups)
  • Sugar, 1/2 cup
  • Pickling Salt, 1/2 cup
  • Pickling Spice Mix, 1 Tbsp per pint jar
  • Dill head, 1 per jar
  • Bay Leaf, 1 per jar 
  • Ball Pickle Crisp, 1/4 tsp per quart jar
  • Clove of Garlic, 1 per jar (optional)
  • Dried Chili Pepper, 1 per jar (optional)
Directions
  1. Wash and clean jars and lids. Use new lids. Reuse bands.
  2. Heat jars in oven to 250ºF for 30 minutes.
  3. Bring lids to simmer in pot on the stove.
  4. Over low flame, heat pot for water bath with lid while preparing the pickles.
  5. Rinse, drain, and cut cucumbers.
  6. Add spice mix, dill head, bay leaf, pickle crisp, garlic clove (if using), and chili pepper (if using) to each jar.
  7. Bring pickling juice ingredients: water, vinegar, sugar, and pickling salt to boil over medium heat, stir until sugar and salt dissolve. Pour hot liquid into the jars over the cucumbers and spices. 
  8. Wipe rims with a clean damp cloth.
  9. Place lid.
  10. Seal with band to finger tight (just tight).
  11. Place jars into water bath and bring to boil. Start processing time from when it begins to boil, process for 15 minutes.
  12. Check seals. Anything that doesn’t seal, store in fridge and use within the week.
  13. Label jars.
  14. Use within a year

Ohio Summer Salad

Ohio Summer Salad should be made with fresh garden produce. It tastes best when made a few hours ahead of time or even with a day ahead so that the flavors can meld. My grandmother seemed to keep the same jar going all summer. It is great served with grilled meat, fresh bread, and corn-on-the-cob. It has long been a summer family favorite.

Ohio Summer Salad
Serves 6

Ingredients
  • Cucumber,  2, wash, peel, cut into rings
  • Sweet onion, 1 medium, sliced
  • Ripe Red Ohio River Tomatoes, 2 large, cut into chunks
  • Green Pepper, 1, rinse, remove seeds, cut into thin slices and then half
  • Salt, 1 1/4 tsp
  • Fresh Ground Black Pepper, about 8 cranks— enough to form a disc on the top
  • Sugar, 1/2 Tbsp
  • Cider Vinegar, 1 cup
  • Vegetable Oil, 4 Tbsp (use a light oil with little flavor— no olive oil)
Directions
  1. Wash and cut vegetables.
  2. Place vegetables into a large bowl. 
  3. Add salt, pepper, and sugar.
  4. Pour cider vinegar and vegetable oil over the top, should just reach the bottom of the vegetables.
  5. Toss all together.
  6. Adjust to taste— should taste vinegary.
  7. Set aside to macerate for 1 to 3 hours.
  8. Toss before serving.
  9. Store leftovers in fridge in a jar— it gets better!

Cheese Rice Casserole

Repulsed by the appearance of can condensed mushroom soup, I created this homemade version of cheese rice casserole to replace it.  The combination of the American brown and wild rice adds texture and chewiness. Please note that I use American short grain brown rice which is not washed and differs from Japanese short grained rice though I'm not sure why or how, but it does-- it's not so starchy so perhaps is more polished, but I'm guessing. Make this ahead of time and then bake it just before serving though I do not mix the rice into the sauce until I'm ready to put it in the oven as the rice absorbs too much of the sauce even though it's cooked. According to my daughter, there is no substitute for the Tillamook Sharp Cheddar Cheese. We go to great lengths (and distances) to keep this particular cheese in stock around our house. This dish is the most requested menu item in our household and was after Mama and Dada, the most missed thing from home while at summer camp.


Cheese Rice Casserole
Serves 4 to 5. *Japanese Rice Cup (JRC) equals 3⁄4 cup.


Ingredients
Short Grain Brown Rice + Wild Rice Mixture, 2 ¼ cup (dry)= 3 JRC*
Water, 4 ½  cups = 5 ½  JRC
Butter, ½ cup 
All-purpose Flour, slight ½ cup
Fresh Rosemary, ~½ tsp (1 sprig)
Chicken or Vegetable Stock, 4 cups
Salt, 2/3 tsp 
Pepper, 2 grinds or a pinch +
Tillamook Sharp Cheddar Cheese, 6 oz (170 gm), cut into 1-inch cubes
Breadcrumbs, 2 Tbsp for garnish
Broccoli, 1 cup finely chopped (optional and not Xan’s favorite)

Useful Equipment
Rice cooker or heavy bottomed pan with a fitted lid
Rice Paddle
Medium Sauce Pan
Food Processor or a sharp knife
Casserole Dish, 4 quart

Directions
Cook rice and water in either a rice cooker (follow device instructions) or use the stove top method. Stove top method: In a heavy bottomed pan with a tight fitting lid, bring water and rice to boil over medium heat. Immediately reduce heat to simmer and cover with the lid. Cook until the water is gone and rice is tender, about 20 minutes. Set aside. 

Make Sauce. In a medium pan, melt butter over medium low heat. Whisk flour into melted butter and cook about 2 minutes.  Add rosemary. Gradually whisk in stock and cook until thickened, about 5 minutes though it is still soupy. Season with salt and pepper to taste. Set aside. 

Cook broccoli (if using). Bring pot of water to boil and add broccoli until bright green, about 2 minutes. Plunge into cold water, and drain. Place into food processor and pulse until finely chopped or chop finely with a knife.

Cut cheddar cheese into cubes.

Mix together. Using a rice paddle, stir the rice into the sauce and gently break up any rice clumps. Add the broccoli, cheese, and gently fold together.


Bake in casserole dish. Grease a casserole dish, add mixture, and sprinkle bread crumbs over the top. Bake at 375ºF (190ºC) until bubbling and browned, about 35 to 40 minutes. 

Thursday, July 17, 2014

Eat Your Vegetables: Quick Pickles

Determined to eat well, we tramp off to the market, buy handfuls of luscious vegetables, and then we stuff the things into the crisper. Later, the once beautiful produce is wilted and no longer looks appetizing. The old veggies are composted, tossed, or maybe made into soup?

Having trouble keeping your vegetables in the edible state? Want another way to add vegetables to your diet? Japan to the rescue!

Pickles of varying types are traditionally eaten at every meal in Japan, yes, that includes breakfast. I had previously thought of pickling to be about cucumbers and water baths, but there is more to pickling, and quick pickling is a handy food preservation method. My cooking teacher, Nansai Sensei, demonstrated how to make quick pickles using a variety of vegetables all mixed together in a jar. This is a variation of her recipe then modified for the American pantry.

You can make and eat quick pickles the same day, though they do have a more intense flavor over time. It allows fresh produce to be stored in a ready to eat state that lasts beyond the usual day or two, and it adds texture and the zingy taste of vinegar to your palate.

Vegetables are best when cut into uniform shapes which is helpful for absorbing flavor. Some vegetables, such as cauliflower, beets, broccoli, carrots, and green beans, need a quick boil (1 to 2 minutes) followed by immersion into cold water to stop the cooking process, drain, and place into the hot pickling juice.  (TIP: Cauliflower will stay whiter if boiled with a slice of lemon).

Improvise with spices, use different types of vinegar, and tweak the recipe to your liking. Store quick pickles in a glass jar in the fridge up to 10 days. Now you can add vegetables to your lunch or easily eat them as a snack right out of the fridge. Heck, I serve them at parties. Combine the pickled vegetables with fresh vegetables for a textural and flavorful contrast in a salad.

Enjoy!


Eat Your Vegetables Quick Pickles
Yield 4 pints or 2 quarts

Useful Equipment
Clean glass jar with lid, pint or quart size

Ingredients for Pickling Juice
Water, 1 quart (4 cups)
White Vinegar, 2 cups
Sugar, 1/3 cup
Pickling or Kosher Salt, 2 Tbsp

Spice Options
Pickling Spice Mix, 1 tsp per pint jar
Dried Hot Red Pepper, 1 per jar (optional)
Bay Leaf, 1 per jar (optional)
Clove of Garlic, 1 per jar (optional)
Mustard Seeds, 1/2 tsp per jar (optional)
Ball Pickle Crisp, 1/8 tsp per pint jar, 1/4 tsp per quart jar (optional for cucumbers, beets)

Vegetable Options
  • Cucumber, wash, cut in half, cut to fit into jar
  • Carrots, wash, peel, cut in sticks, boil 1-2 minutes, plunge into cool water, drain
  • Cauliflower, wash, chop into pieces, boil 1-2 minutes with slice of lemon, plunge into cool water, drain
  • Turnips, wash, quarter, boil 1-2 minutes, plunge into cool water, drain
  • Beets, wash, chop, 1/4-inch slice, boil 1-2 minutes, plunge into cool water, drain (store by themselves-- turns the juice pink)
  • Green Beans, trim ends, wash, boil 1-2 minutes, plunge into cool water, drain
  • Daikon Radish, peel, slice into half moons, boil 1-2 minutes, plunge into cool water, drain
  • Asparagus, trim ends, wash, chop, boil 1-2 minutes, plunge into cool water, drain
  • Garlic, boil 1-2 minutes, remove peel and separate cloves
Directions
  1. Clean and prep vegetables.
  2. Add pickling spices and vegetables to jar(s). 
  3. Bring pickling juice ingredients to boil over medium heat, stir until sugar and salt dissolve.
  4. Pour hot liquid over prepared vegetables in clean jars. 
  5. Add pickle crisp (if using) to each jar of cucumbers, beets, etc.
  6. Label jar.
  7. Wait about 30-45 minutes before eating. Store in the fridge up to 10 days.


Tuesday, July 15, 2014

Red Raspberry Jam

I trekked out to the Chesterhill Produce Auction where I quickly became the owner of twelve pints of raspberries. What to do with so many berries? I'm making jam! 

Raspberry seeds are a natural thickener, but to bring out the pectin naturally in the berries, first bring the berries to a simmer and then add the sugar.  

A weight scale gets consistent results versus the measuring cup method. I use a metric scale I purchased in Japan, but  the ounces are also provided.

This looks beautiful, all shiny and red, plus it tastes awesome!

Red Raspberry Jam
Adding the whole raspberries at the end of the cooking process gives you a nice chunky jam. Using the ratio of 1:2/3 cup (berries to sugar) allows the ripe fruit taste to come through.  Estimate about 2 pints of berries for 1 pint of jam. Yields 6 pint jars.

Ingredients
Fresh Ripe Organic Raspberries, 1500 gm (53 oz) = 1125 gm (40 oz) + 375 gm (13 oz)
Granulated Sugar, 1000 gm (35 oz)
Optional add 3 drops of essence of violets at the end of the cooking process 

Useful Equipment
Long handled spoon
Large heavy bottom Dutch Oven
Mesh skimmer or spoon to skim off foam and small bowl of water to dump the foam
Jars for canning with lids and bands
Canning Pot for water bath 

Directions
Place metal spoons or plate into freezer.

Wash inside and outside of canning jars with lids and bands (estimate a pint jar per two  pint of berries). Bake the open jars at 250ºF (121ºC) for 30 minutes. In a small pot over low heat, simmer the lids until needed. Lay out a clean cloth to wipe jar rims after filling. 

Pick over the fruit and discard any unripe berries, stems, leaves, critters, or mold. Fill a bowl with water and swish the berries around-- prevents damage from the faucet's stream to the delicate fruit. Arrange in a single layer on a paper towel-lined baking sheet to prevent bruising and dry.

Set aside a quarter of the berries, 375 gm (13 oz), near the stove to add at the end.

In a large heavy bottom pot with a wide rim such as a dutch oven over low heat, add berries, 1125 gm (40 oz). Occasionally sitr to soften the fruit and draw out the pectin until it comes to a simmer,  5 to 7 minutes.

Continuing over low heat, add the sugar and stir into berries until dissolved, 1 to 2 minutes.

Increase heat (medium high to high depending on the heat source) to boil rapidly. Stir frequently to prevent sticking, until the jelling point is reached, 15 to 20 minutes- see the next step below. Skim foam off the top as needed. 

After 15 minutes begin to test for the jelling point by placing a bit of the hot jam onto a spoon or plate from the freezer. If the jam runs, continue to cook and recheck after a minute, if the jam runs in a sheet and crinkles when pushed up, the jelling point has been reached.

Add remaining whole berries. Return to boil on high until translucent and just hold their shape, 1 to 3 minutes. Remove pan from heat. Let jam settle. Skim off any foam, being careful not to disturb the jam underneath. Allow to cool and thicken to let the whole fruit pieces to remain disbursed, about 10 to 12 minutes.

Ladle warm jam into clean sterilized jars with a 1/4-inch of head space. Wipe rims with clean damp cloth. Apply lids and seal with bands-- tighten bands to just finger tight. 

Place jars in a pot with a rack and enough water to cover the jars by about an inch. Bring water to boil and process for 5 minutes. Start the timer when the water begins to boil. Refer to manufacturers instructions for specific canning details for either the waterbath or oven method. 

Remove jars from water and place on surface to cool (wood, folded cloth, newspapers, silicon mat, etc.). Tighten the bands. Allow to sit undisturbed for 24 hours until cool. With a permanent marker, label the lids with the date and contents. 

Check the seals the following day. Any unsealed jars must be used within a few days and stored in the fridge. Store jars in a cool dry place. Use jam within 1 year.


At the Table
Use jam with bread, sandwiches with brie, french toast, oatmeal, yogurt, scones, waffles, salad dressing, etc.

Friday, June 27, 2014

Home Cooking for Health

Despite my trail of letters here in the netherworld of the web, I do not see myself as an expert or to that end, using writing as therapy. It's about letting the sand flow through your fingers and occasionally finding a shark's tooth or a sand dollar. However, while I'm fumbling around in the dark and sharing the glimmer of light I've collected, part of me is embarrassed by my meager findings considering the time I've spend searching. Nonetheless, I can't resist so when something sticks or shows up that interests me, I share it.

Though I worked for many years as a registered nurse with patients suffering from cardiac and renal disease, nutrition expert I am not. I also know first hand the pain of weight gain, food prep, and the need to make healthy choices. I have been both plumper and thinner in my life as many have. I'm interested in health and health is partly about choices-- food and activity.

After college when I was at my meatiest, I promised myself to never diet again, but I realized that I had to cook. If I wanted sweets, making them myself slowed me down. I also gave up sweet tea and soda. Though I dislike strenuous exercise, I can usually manage a walk. My early cooking forays were mostly sweets, but slowly I came to cooking everyday foods that were better for me to eat. I'm still trying to get more there. Americans generally need to eat more vegetables, legumes, and fruit. We've got meats and desserts covered. Look for the recipes that encourage you to eat what will make you feel awesome and that means greens, vegetables, legumes, and whole grains for most of us. Knowing that I'm not alone, I share my interest and experiences.

I fell in love with flavor and when I discover a recipe that excites my tastebuds, I share it. My love of beautiful food is in recognition that my brain comes with a stomach, though I appreciate beautiful food, it is more often from the realm of magazines or restaurants than my kitchen table. I do like butter, yogurt, and eggs and shy away from substitutes for these items in particular. In short, I came to home cooking, kicking and screaming and with the hope to NOT have to exercise too hard to keep it all in check which just gets harder with age.

My cooking skills evolve with my tastebuds's desires. I am also warming up to the idea of adding vegetables, beans, and whole grains to the foods I cook because it is a simple way to get more of the healthy stuff into my diet. I don't need labor intensive recipes for every meal, but sometimes I cook for fuel and sometimes I cook for fun. I do work on recipes that I love to eat, and I tweak them over time to get a tad more nutrition added without overwhelming my tastebuds. Some cooks are further along this path than I.

What has worked? Cook what you eat. Exercise. Find ways to add vegetables and legumes into recipes. Use more herbs.

Herbs can be expensive, but oh boy do they add to the tasty factor of a dish. A sprinkle of fresh rosemary or a crush of Greek oregano can move the tastebuds from wanting only heavy salt toward a delightful and fresh herb taste with a pinch of salt. Growing the herbs makes them both handy and more economical. No one wants to dash out at dinner time for three dollar herbs that last a day or two, but if you do, tie them up and dry them that day, otherwise they tend to morph in to science projects in the fridge. Use them fresh or dried.

Recently, I listened to a talk by Michael Pollan, linked below. Some favorite quotes from it that stirred my thoughts because they hit upon things I've learned for myself and maybe you have too:

"The one diet for America. The one diet that would work? Eat anything you want, just cook it yourself." 
Harry Balzar as quoted by Michael Pollan

"Corporations cook very differently than people. They use vast amounts of salt, fat, and sugar, much more than you would ever use in your own cooking, and the reason they do that is that those are three incredibly attractive and incredibly cheap ingredients and when they are layered properly as in a chip or in various pastries and forms of junk food, they're incredibly addictive. In fact, people in the industry, they don't talk about addiction, in the food industry, even though they traffic in addiction, they talk about cravability, it's the same thing, and snackability is another term they use, it's a lovely word. Anyway, so I came to see that cooking has a huge bearing on our health. In fact, there's been a lot of research in America that shows that shows that even poor women who cook have healthier diets than wealthier women who don't." 
Michael Pollan


Fruit & Vegetable Muffins

INGREDIENTS

140 grams (1 1/8 cups) whole-wheat pastry flour
5 grams (1 teaspoon) baking soda
1 teaspoon ground cinnamon
1/4 teaspoon salt
2 large eggs
1/2 cup olive oil
1 tablespoon honey
70 grams (1/3 cup) packed dark brown sugar
1 small apple, grated, and juices reserved (1/2 cup)
1/2 cup grated carrots or butternut squash or parsnips
1/2 cup grated zucchini or beets
55 grams (1/3 cup) raisins
40 grams (1/2 cup) unsweetened shredded coconut

PREPARATION

Heat oven to 350ºF. Grease mini-muffin tins.

In a medium bowl, whisk together the flour, baking soda, cinnamon and salt.

In a large bowl, combine the eggs, olive oil, honey, brown sugar, grated apple and juices, and grated vegetables.

Using a spatula, fold the dry ingredients into the wet mixture until just combined. Gently fold in the raisins and coconut.


Fill each muffin cup 3/4 of the way up, and bake for about 15 to 18 minutes for mini-muffins and about 20 to 22 minutes for regular muffins. The muffins are finished baking when an inserted toothpick comes out clean.




Sunday, June 15, 2014

The Village Bakery & Strawberry Bruschetta

While touring local food places around Athens, Ohio, as part of Real Food, Real Local, I got to see behind the scenes of some of the local kitchens where I sometimes eat.

The Village Bakery and Della Zona owners served up bruschetta with strawberries drizzled with balsamic and basil. It was quick, in season, and delicious. This appetizer was a refreshing taste of summer in an unexpected combination. Try it! The oil can be purchased at the Village Bakery along with a loaf of bread.

Strawberry Bruschetta
Ingredients
Sliced Strawberries
Fresh Torn Basil Leaves
Olive Oil
Balsamic Vinegar
Fresh loaf of sourdough sliced

Slice bread and berries. Arrange berries and torn basil over the bread slices. Drizzle with oil and vinegar. Eat!
Behind the Scenes at Village Bakery and Della Zona

Sunday, June 8, 2014

Plump & Chewy Chocolate Chip Cookies

A friend posted a picture of the various states of Chocolate Chip cookies. I am intimately familiar with all of them. However, one recipe not mentioned uses cornstarch. See the recipe below. The addition of cornstarch makes these chocolate chip cookies plump and a bit chewy. It's my favorite! 

Plump & Chewy Chocolate Chip Cookies
Makes 24 cookies.

Ingredients
Unsalted Butter, ¾ cup (1 ½ sticks)
Granulated Sugar, ¼ cup
Light Brown Sugar, ¾ cup
Egg, 1
Vanilla, 2 tsp
All-purpose Flour, 2 cups
Cornstarch, 2 tsp
Baking Soda, 1 tsp
Salt, ½ tsp
Bitter (or Semisweet) Chocolate Chips, 1 cup


Directions
Use a standing mixer fitted with a paddle, blend butter and sugars until blended. Add egg, vanilla and salt, continue to blend until creamy, about 5 minutes.

In another bowl, stir together flour, cornstarch, baking soda, and salt. Gradually blend into the butter mix until just blended.

Stir in chocolate chips.

Roll into 1-inch balls. Makes about 24 cookies. Place onto cookie sheet lined with a silicon mat or parchment paper (for ease of cleaning).

Bake at 350ºF (170ºC) until golden brown and slightly soft in the center, 8 to 10 minutes.


Variations in Chocolate Chip Cookies


Monday, May 26, 2014

Scones for a Queen

Tea time is a civilized rite of relaxation best enjoyed with crustless sandwiches filled with vinegar soaked cucumbers, sherry from Jerez, Spain, and scones with homemade jam. If the queen comes for a visit or you need to feel like one for a moment, this recipe fits the bill. It can also be used for strawberry shortcake, a favorite summer dinner in my childhood.  In my home of origin, shortcake is served with cold milk. Let the milk soak into the cake and top it with piles of strawberries. It's also good with a dollop of whipped cream.

Scones for a Queen
Variation: Try using 1 ½ All-purpose flour + ½ cup Whole Wheat flour. Add dried fruit such as currants or cranberries, ½ cup, after cutting the butter into the dry ingredients.

Ingredients
All-purpose Flour, 2 cups
Sugar, 1/3 cup
Baking Powder, 1.5 tsp
Baking Soda, 1/4 tsp
Salt, 1/2 tsp
Lemon peel, 2 tsp
Cold Butter, 1 stick (8 Tbsp), cut in 1 Tbsp pieces
Fresh Cream,  ~1 cup
Large Suguar Crystals, 1/2 Tbsp to 1 Tbsp

Directions
In a large bowl, mix together the dry ingredients with a fork-- flour, sugar, baking powder, baking soda, salt, lemon peel.

Cut butter into flour using a pastry cutter or with a standing mixer fitted with a paddle until you have fine-sized lumps. After cutting the butter into the dry ingredients, add dried fruit, if using, and stir with a fork to coat the pieces.

When you have fine-sized lumps, add the cream and gently fold together until just mixed, add additional tablespoon of cream if needed. It should be very thick and stick together. Do not over handle the dough.

Pat the dough into a large circle with an even in thickness of about one-inch. Cut using a bench cutter into triangles and place about half an inch apart onto baking sheet lined with parchment paper or a silicon sheet. Sprinkle tops with large sugar crystals, as you like.

Bake 395ºF (200ºC) for 12-15 minutes, until golden on top and dough appears cooked in center. Serve warm with lemon curd, jam, fresh cut fruit, and/or whipped or clotted cream.

Scones for a Queen


Thursday, May 1, 2014

Nature's Magic & Foaming Hand Soap Recipe

Nature's MagicPhotos by Elizabeth Reyes.

Danielle Young chuckles as she relates her biggest business catastrophe. While pouring essential oil from a gallon container into a measuring cup, a small amount spilled, leaving an entire office building smelling like peppermint for several days. She adds, “At least it was near the holidays.” Danielle makes Nature’s Magic, non-toxic sustainable cleaning products. She has gone from mixing sixteen ounce bottles of the “magic” in her kitchen to five gallon buckets in her office— requiring considerably more heft. “You’ve got this,” her husband encouraged when she decided to expand. But it has taken more than mixing and gallon jugs to develop her line.

In 2008, Danielle, a professional social worker by training, decided to open a cleaning business to align her work hours with the demands of family life.

Given her concern for the safety of both her clients and herself, she began searching for cleaning products that were both effective and non-toxic. Her research into what was commercially available revealed products with long lists of chemicals -- including petroleum-based surfactants which are used to keep oils mixed into the liquids.  Even brands touting environmental tags contained toxins! Danielle, realizing the lack cleaners she felt safe using, decided to make her own.

Over a period of several years, using 100% pure essential oils, locally sourced vinegar, and organic castile soap for her products and friends and clients as guinea pigs, Danielle developed her plant based recipes for Nature’s Magic. She made the decision not to use surfactants and chose an easier, environmentally friendly solution. A tiny shake from users’ hands mixes the essential oils back into the liquids with ingredients that are easy to pronounce and understand.

The feedback from clients, friends, and family was, “not only is my house clean, but it smells good,” and “it’s safe for my kids and feels peaceful. Where can I get more?” The combination of feedback, several years of experience making and using her own products, and her awareness that the market lacked sustainable options pushed her out of her comfort zone and into the marketplace.

Having outgrown her space at home, she turned to an Athens, Ohio, business incubator ACEnet (Appalachian Center for Economic Networks) for help. With a larger storage area, dedicated work space, shared equipment, and access to technical resources, the process of bottling Nature’s Magic for sale began. The blue bottles with their hand applied labels protect the powerful cleaning capabilities of the pure essential oils. It was now time to see her products on the shelves of the local markets.

“One day I decided to go for it. I got my samples ready. I walked into the Athens Kroger. I walked back out. I stood outside and told myself to go in there and talk to the manager,”— which she did. Five months later, the next steps were completed, and Nature’s Magic is now on the shelf, but on a low shelf. “You have to start somewhere,” she told me.

Pitching her products is still difficult for Danielle, but she is gaining confidence. Danielle is a one-woman show. While comfortable with the creative side, she has had to learn the business aspects of accounting, public relations, and marketing. “Day to day is so incredibly different,” she says. Her husband’s words remind her of all the steps that have brought her this far.

Nature’s Magic, including multipurpose spray, deep clean spray, glass cleaner, and concentrates for refills, is made in Ohio from carefully selected ingredients, and is available in the Athens, Columbus, and Toledo markets. Nature’s Magic leaves behind a clean home that smells crisp and feels as peaceful as the hills surrounding Danielle’s office.


Danielle offered this simple recipe for foaming hand soap plus you will know what you’re putting on your skin. You can also customize the scent as you like or use her suggestions. Filtered water is recommended as it removes undesirable material from your water, but tap water works too.

FOAMING HAND SOAP

You will need
  • Foaming Soap Dispenser
  • Water, 2/3 cup 
  • Liquid Castille Soap (such as Dr. Bronner’s Baby Mild), 1/3 cup
  • 100% Pure Essential Oils, total of 1/8 tsp
    • Bathroom Scent: Lavender & Tea tree OR Peppermint & Rosemary, equal parts
    • Kitchen Scent: Lemongrass & Peppermint, equal parts
  • Label
Directions
  1. Pour water into container.
  2. Add liquid castile soap to the water (to avoid making bubbles).
  3. Add the essential oils.
  4. Screw on the hand pump and gently swish to mix.
  5. Dry container and apply label.
  6. Wash away!


I interviewed Danielle Young in hopes of getting an article published, but alas it did not find an outlet. After I interviewed her, she gave me a bottle of the Multipurpose Cleaner which I have happily been shaking and then spraying all over my house. I've also made the foaming soap to refill an empty foaming soap pump using the proportions in the recipe, but with Sweet Orange and Bergamot essential oils-- feel free to improvise. Photos by Elizabeth Reyes. Thank you Danielle and Elizabeth!

Nature's MagicPhotos by Elizabeth Reyes.

Thursday, April 10, 2014

Homemade Nutella (No Palm Oil)

Kiddos, like other consumers, impact the world by their choices. A research project on Bornean Orangutans, an endangered animal, lead to the realization that orangutan habitat is being destroyed to make room for mono-plantations of palms, for the palm oil, in South East Asia. This led to some label reading and the discovery that the beloved nutella was made with palm oil (20% from what I gather).

Not wanting to eat palm oil, led to researching palm oil free nutella recipes. This one is by Adrien Gontier, a French geochemistry student that gave up palm oil and was featured on PRI. Palm oil is in many products beyond foods-- soaps, shampoos, etc. This is going to make selling Girl Scout cookies interesting. In the meantime, I'm hoping to find a sustainably harvested kind of nutella and there are a few jars stashed in the pantry to finish off.

Consider that beyond health concerns, palm oil usage in processed foods is destroying unique habitat. Saving habitat and avoiding palm oil is a choice that will impact more than a momentary cookie break or the fifteen minutes you spend making your own spread, reading labels, and making choices that matter.


Homemade Nutella (No Palm Oil)
Powdered Milk, 25 gm (~1oz)
Cocoa Powder, 60 gm (~2.5 oz)
Powdered Hazelnuts, 95 gm (~3 oz)
Agave Syrup, 100 gm (~3.5 oz)
Sugar cane syrup: (50 g water et 100g cane sugar) = cane syrup made with 3.5 oz cane sugar and 1.75 oz water

Directions
Mix all ingredients together and eat it on bananas, bread, or with a spoon.


Friday, February 21, 2014

The Bread Diet & a Bun Recipe


I chuckled over a Facebook post about the number of loaves of bread to buy for a snow storm partly because though I think of going out for milk, toilet paper, and salt, I don’t think about buying bread. We make it at home because finding a decent loaf of bread in the States is difficult. The transition of where foods are prepared, from home to industrial food processors, means that the way food is valued, made, stored, and shipped has also changed.

Bread is about shelf life, not taste, in the States.

Despite having been the staff of life for thousands of years, bread's reputation has lost its luster in part due to the rise of gluten intolerance. Please note that the industrialization of bread baking with its reduced fermentation times has been noted to play a part in the increased prevalence of gluten intolerance. It’s therefore not merely the fault of gluten but also the quick fermentation and industrial processing that need to be avoided.


Last Thanksgiving while slicing up cheap white sandwich bread for stuffing, my husband noticed an odor emitting from the loaves. After seven years of making our own bread or buying sandwich bread from a baker in Japan, it was a revelation to then handle processed bread. It stinks.

On a recent morning, coming down the stairs, I spied the step ladder in front of open pantry doors. Flour coated the kitchen counter and floor. A bowl of barely mixed dough was sitting in front of my beaming child. Despite my frustration with the mess, I help him cover the dough and clean up while sharing in his delight for having just created something.

This child often rises with the sun in a cheerful manner and sometimes begins unsupervised projects like making bread dough. I’m not sure exactly what posses him, but his bread concoctions are amazingly good. He uses all-purpose flour with a high protein content and instant yeast because that is what is accessible in the pantry. (The long acting yeast is in our fridge and he’s yet to use it.) I tend to let the dough sit around all day, sometimes overnight, and then shape it right before he comes home from school because of course he wants to see if it turned into something. We bake it and voilà, it’s always tasty, moist, and somedays it even has lovely holes, think of the no knead bread method. I’ve decided that part of his bread’s success lies in the long fermentation process and the beauty of playing with food.

In these parts of Ohio, the vegan (CHIP) diet is heavily pushed. However, there are still plenty of us around who eat a few animal products and like our bread to contain gluten. I eat plenty of vegetarian fare, but I have an intense dislike of faux food or food that is vegan but is supposed to taste like meat or something else. I prefer eating foods that are what they are, and processed whatever food is usually not so good for you anyway.

When I worked as a cardiac nurse, I asked patients and their families about their diet. Americans eat too much processed food. It’s one of the reasons I learned to cook real food. It’s also the reason I eat butter, bread, full fat yogurt, and drink whole milk— it’s real food. I’ve also noted that people the world over who eat and cook what they like in reasonable amounts and that exercise to some degree are not always on a (calories restricted) diet. For the love of food, eat the real stuff and get it locally. If I was  dishing out diet advice, I would say consider this from Michael Pollan’s In Defense of Food, “Eat food. Not too much. Mostly plants.” I might add that wheat is a plant.

Do you remember the National Geographic article about longevity and diet that highlighted the blue zones where people lived for a long time which included the Sardinians, Okinawans, and the Seventh-day Adventists of Loma Linda, California? They ate diets that included bread, cheese, meat, and small amounts of alcohol along with the vegan and vegetarian fare. A National Geographic researcher, Dan Buettner, commented on blue zone diets in a later interview, saying, “Hanging out with unhappy people who drink and smoke is hazardous to your health.” My point here is that bread and cheese can be part of a healthy diet (and it helps to socialize and be part of a community).

Recently, I've been reading Pickled, Potted, and Canned: How the  Art and Science of Food Preserving Changed the World by Sue Shepard. I was shocked in the preface to read that in 1800 archaeologist in Egypt were eating honey thousands of years old until they found some hairs in it and then the perfectly preserved body of a small baby. Apparently honey keeps almost indefinitely and gives self-preserving new meaning.

The book is full of interesting bits on the competitive food chain— “if we don’t quickly take advantage of a food, something else will.” The history on the ways that this has been done is quite interesting. Think of travelers, refugees, soldiers, sailors, and long winters with no food and add to that the myriad locations around the world with varying conditions, food stuffs, and learning curves. The fermentation process and ingredients like vinegar, salt, honey, and sugar were found to transform perishable food stuff into storable and transportable foods like crackers, breads, cheeses, yogurts, and wines. It’s kind of interesting to realize that butter and yogurt weren’t about being healthy or unhealthy but about putting food by for another day.

Our industrious forebearers found that fermentation can make inedible foods edible. The Sudanese love of rotten meat evolved in a region plagued with food scarcity and benefits those that consume every last calorie available to them. Fermentation gives us cultural icons that are now eaten throughout the world— German saurkraut, Vietnamese fish sauce nuoc mam, katsuobushi and miso from Japan, thousand year old eggs from China, Korean kimchi, and even bread.  Allowing yeast to ferment is part of what makes gluten digestible.

If an eight year old boy can come downstairs and mix up a bowl of dough that turns into a delicious bread, so can you. Here's a recipe for buns that are delish. Put some jam on it. Live a little. Eat bread, but make it yourself.


Buns for Breakfast or Burgers
Make 8 to 12
These breakfast buns work with or without a burger. I adapted a recipe from the online The Bakers Circle hosted by King Arthur flour.

Ingredients
Whole Wheat flour, 2/3 cup
Bread flour 2 1/3 cup
Sugar, 1/4 cup
Salt, 1 1/4 tsp
Warm Water, 1 cup
Yeast (regular), 1 Tbsp
Egg, 1 large
Butter, 2 Tbsp melted & slightly cooled + 3 Tbsp for topping


Directions

  1. In a mixing bowl, whisk together whole wheat flour, bread flour, sugar, and salt.
  2. Melt 2 Tbsp of butter butter and set aside to cool slightly.
  3. In another mixing bowl, whisk together 1 cup of the flour mix, warm water, and yeast until smooth and shiny, about 1 minute.
  4. Add the egg and slightly cooled butter to the mixture and whisk again until smooth and shiny, about 1 minute.
  5. In a standing mixer fitted with a dough hook or by hand, add the remaining flour mixture to the dough mix and knead until smooth and elastic, about 10 minutes. Add additional bread flour as needed if extremely sticky, should just be tacky.
  6. Cover the dough, and allow to rise until doubled in bulk, about 1 to 2 hours.
  7. Gently deflate the dough, divide into 8 to 12 pieces (8 for burger size; 12 for bun size, 24 for slider size). Shape each piece into a round ball; flatten to about 3-inches across. Place the buns on a silicon sheet or parchment-lined baking sheet. Cover and let rise until noticeably puffy, about 1 hour.
  8. Brush buns with half of the additional melted butter. Bake 375ºF until golden, about 15 to 18 minutes, Remove from the oven and brush with the remaining melted butter.