Saturday, February 11, 2012

Garbage Can Mix

I wanted to update the blog and I had a nudge from my daughter to be more regular in posting recipes, her favorites at least.

I just finished spending the day deep cleaning the house. Rearranged and vacuumed the furniture, washed all the blankets, throws and covers, vacuumed and mopped floors, dusted and did laundry. When that was done I started supper. I promised my husband to cook a "from scratch" one.

So here's our "from scratch" supper tonight.

4 pork chops with the fat trimmed off.
1 med-large onion
1 stick butter
4 medium potatoes
1 can cream of celery soup
1/2 can of Rotel tomatoes with lime and cilantro

Melt the stick of butter in a fry pan large enough to hold the above ingredients. Chop up the onion and sautee it in the butter. Take out the onions when done and put into a large bowl. Season pork chops with Lawry's salt to taste. Sear each side on high heat using the same fry pan as you sauteed the onions in. (leave the remaining butter in the pan)

 Place the cream of celery soup and Rotel tomatoes in the bowl with the onions. Add 1 tsp of celery salt. Stir well. Peel the potatoes, cut into pieces into the bowl with the soup and onion mix. Again stir well. Turn the fry pan down to 300. Pour potato mixture over top. Cover with a lid. Cook 20 minutes. Stir, turn the heat down to 200-250 continue to cook for 30 minutes.

This is one of Randi's favorites. It evolved during the holidays when parties abound. It freezes very well. It makes a HUGE batch and it so yummy.

Garbage Can Mix
1 Box Wheat Chex
1 Box of Crispix
1 Box Mini Multigrain Club Crackers (or the Club Cracker sticks crack these in half)
1 Box Wheat Thins
2 Bags Crunchy Cheetos
2 Bags Chili Cheese Fritos
1 Box Colby Cheese Cheese Its
1 Bag of Parmesan Goldfish Crackers
1 Bag of Pretezel Goldfish Crackers
1 Bag of Snyder Pumpernickel/Onion Pretzels break in half (Fareway)
1 Box of Pepperidge Farms Baked Sesame Sticks break in half (Walmart)
1 Large Bag of Bugles or 2 Small ones Plain or Nacho
1 Box of Quaker Graham Squares (hint of brown sugar)
1 Can of Dry Roasted Emerald Almonds (Walmart ?11 oz?)

Mix all the above together in a garbage bag. 

In a 4 cup measuring cup, melt 2 sticks of butter. Add Worchesteshire Sauce to the 2 ½ cup line. Add 4 pkgs of Chex seasoning mix, 2 tsps of garlic powder and 2 Tbsp of dry Hidden Valley. Whisk together. 

Pour over the dry mix and stir well. Once coated and damp, pour a container of Kraft dried cheese (orange, it’s at Fareway by the Parmesan cheese) and stir it over the damp mix.

Bake in a preheated 250 degree oven for an hour, stirring every 15 mins. 

Pour on waxed paper or parchment, cool and store in an airtight container.

Enjoy!

Saturday, January 21, 2012

Muffin Tops


Adult 9'X5' Double Fleece Blankets



Beef and Barley Stoup

Beef and Barley Stoup (Grandma D. style)
12 cups water
5 heaping Tbsp of Watkins beef soup base
5# potatoes peeled and diced
2# carrots peeled and diced or chopped in food processor
2 pkg of celery hearts, cleaned and diced in fine pieces
2 medium onions cleaned and chopped in food processor
¼ cup minced garlic
1 ½ tsp of celery salt
Place all of this in a large stock pot and bring to a boil. Turn heat to low - medium low and simmer. 

Add 2 quarts of canned beef after removing any fat that has settled at the top of the jar. This can be substituted with 4# of a less expensive cut of beef, with fat trimmed and pressure cooked to get the same tender consistency. Pull apart the larger chunks of beef before adding to the soup. Use approximately ½ cup water to rinse canned beef jars and pour that into the stock pot as well. If you pressure cook the beef, add that juice/seasoning to the stock pot when the beef is done. 

4# lean ground beef (this is the part that makes it Grandma D. style… her famous bolltjes)
2 Tsp Lawry’s salt
4 Tbsp Worchesteshire sauce
Mix together well. Roll into small balls and cook in fry pan until done. Drain and place on paper towel.

Stir all of the cooked meat into the vegetable base. Add 2 cups of Quick Barley. Simmer for 2-3 hours stirring every 15 minutes or so as the barley can stick to the bottom of the pan.
Season with Lawry’s salt or salt/pepper to taste when serving. 

This freezes very well and the flavor becomes fuller when reheating.

Sunday, January 8, 2012

Fresh Vegetable Salad

   I absolutely love this in the summer made with fresh veggies. Have to make do this winter with the others. Still yummy though. For a little extra color, you could add coarsely chopped orange and yellow peppers. This recipe is low carb and has healthy fat, just a touch. Enjoy!

Sabaro Salad
3 medium tomatoes, coarsely chopped
1 large cucumber, cut in chunks
1 medium red onion coarsely chopped 

2 Tbsp balsamic vinegar
2 Tbsp EV olive oil
1 Tbsp minced garlic
1 pkg dry all natural Italian dressing
Whisk the above ingredients together. Quickly pour over the vegetables. Stir. Marinate the veggies and chill at least 2 hours before serving.

Monday, January 2, 2012

Muffins

   My Mom used to make what I called refrigerator muffins. They were bran muffins that didn’t really taste like bran yet were healthy. Our family likes these so well that there’s usually a plate of these on the counter. I make a double batch of batter about every 3-4 weeks. They are a nice snack that satisfies the sweet craving and also work well for breakfast that you really don’t have time for, you can grab one as you run out the door.
   I used her recipe and made some alterations. The one thing I’ve found is that you really do not want to over mix when you add the flour. It effects the way the mix raises when you bake it at first. But even if you do, it resolves itself the longer you leave the dough in the refrigerator. 

Refrigerator Muffins:
4 eggs
1 quart buttermilk
1 cup canola oil
3 cups sugar
6 cups raisin bran cereal
½ cup raisins (I use a cup as we like raisins)
5 cups all-purpose flour
5 tsps baking soda
2 tsp salt
In a large mixing bowl, beat eggs, buttermilk, oil and sugar. Stir in cereal and raisins. Sift together flour, baking soda and salt; add to egg mixture. Stir just until all ingredients are moistened. If desired, store batter, covered in the refrigerator for up to 6 weeks. To bake, fill greased muffin cups 2/3rds full. Bake @ 400 for 15-20 minutes until golden brown. WAIT 24 hours before baking the first batch. DO NOT stir the batter in the refrigerator. Just take the amount of batter desired to make the amount of muffins you choose, recover and put back in the refrigerator. 

Notes:
  • Soak the dried fruit that in HOT water for 30 minutes, drain it and add to the recipe. This leaves the batter moist and the fruit plump in the muffin when you bake it.
  • I double this recipe as the muffins actually get better as the batter sits.
  • You can substitute melted butter for the oil and it works fine. We like the texture of the muffin with the oil better.
  • Use muffin paper cups to bake them in. It makes for easier cleanup.
Variations:
NO fruit muffins: Substitue regular bran for the raisin bran and don’t add extra raisins
Cranberry muffins: use regular bran and 3 cups of dried cranberries
CranRaisin muffins: use 1 ½ cups of raisins and 2 cups of cranberries

Thursday, December 29, 2011

Discovery Phase and Fleece

  During what I’ll call the “discovery phase” that I encountered when looking 50 in the face, I decided that I wanted to start sewing again. Sewing was something my Mom taught me to do at a very young age.
   It’s different now. Sewing your own clothing, depending on the article of clothing, sometimes is not very cost effective.  However, making fleece blankets for service projects has become an enjoyable pastime. Initially I wasn’t a smart shopper so the blankets cost more.  I soon became savvy by perusing the sales after the holidays and stocked up. So our bedroom not only became the sewing room but the store room as well.  We are renovating our son’s old bedroom into the sewing room now. It has a closet for all my sale material.
   I use 2 pieces of fleece and serge around it after trimming the edges and rounding the corners. The adult blankets are 3 yards and kid blankets are 1.5 yards. The kid size is awesome for the elderly as a lap blanket as well. They are light weight, warm and no fringes or knots to get caught in the wheels of their walkers or wheelchairs.
  Despite being slightly more expensive, my preference is the nonpill fleece and the cuddle fleece. It has a fuller, richer feel and look to it. When using the cuddle type, I usually pair it with a nonpill piece, serge the edge and then quilt the pieces together. In 2010, I made a total of 70 blankets for gifts, 17 of the adult size and the remainder in the kid size. The kid sizes all went to nursing homes as well as the domestic abuse shelter that winter.
   I just found team fleece on sale for the Hawkeyes, Vikings, Red Sox, Twins, Huskers and Green Bay.  An order has been placed. If you are in need of a gift for anyone, let me know. The blankets can also be personalized. I can email you the pricing once the invoices are received.

INSTRUCTIONS for do it yourselfers:

#2  3 yard pieces of nonpill fleece
Straight pins
Large area on a clean floor
Lay wrong sides together. Pin edges. Use a rotary cutter, mat and straight edge to trim uneven edges. Use a rotary cutter and a rounded template to round the edges.
Serge together using a 3 thread hemming stitch. Finish off the edge by tucking a remnant thread through the hemmed edged and apply Fray Check to prevent unraveling.
Throw in the dryer and tumble for approximately 15 minutes to remove stray threads and fuzzies.

Save the pieces of fleece that you trimmed to even the edges. Tie knots in the ends after cutting into a variety of strip lengths. Then tie the strips together. These make excellent dog and cat play toys.