Archive | Baking RSS feed for this section

Thanksgiving 2009

15 Jan

Thanksgiving is my favorite holiday.  Nobody I know quite does Thanksgiving like we do.  40 loud, wonderful people somehow all fit into one house and we all sit down to dinner. Everyone brings a dish, and usually it’s the same dish for 50+ years.  I have been trying to write this blog for weeks (months) now, however, it’s quite a daunting task!  It’s never too late to talk about Thanksgiving though. What could be wrong with a holiday filled with family, food, and reminding ourselves to be thankful for the best things in our lives?

What’s amazing to me is that some of the cousins that are there are my 6th cousins (or something like that… it’s just too hard to calculate).  The discussion comes up every year that no one is quite sure how some of us are related and it’s always tossed around that we should make a family tree.  It never gets done… but no one seems to mind. (And if any of you should see any errors below or have any additions, please feel free to let me know! I know what an opinionated bunch we can be.)

I have to give special thanks to my sister the photographer for these amazing pics!  My point and shoot will never be able to capture what her good camera does and her eye is just fantastic!

So how does this work?  I’m pretty sure our gracious hosts begin prepping for the next Thanksgiving the day after the previous Thanksgiving ended.  I do know they collect takeout containers all year to ensure we can all take home some leftovers!

My dad usually brings an appetizer, but this year he wanted to do something different.  He went with toasted bread with guacamole and shrimp.  It was fresh and delicious.  I think I see a keeper! (At least for a few years)

A new addition this year was pigs in blankets.  How can you go wrong with tiny hot dogs in pastry?

I have to say, it is not Thanksgiving without the meatballs.  I don’t know how this Jewish family started the tradition of meatballs every Thanksgiving, but I’m sure glad they did!  As soon as I smell the sauce and see the little copper pot go on the warming stand, I know it truly is Thanksgiving.

I guess serving it with challah makes it more culturally fitting, but really it’s just the conduit for getting as much sauce as possible up from our plates.

We used to have one giant turkey, however, this year we had THREE smaller turkeys.  This is the one thing that isn’t cooked by the family.  We outsource this due to simple volume of meat.

Thankfully, we have many expert carvers in the family.


Mike attended his first Thanksgiving last year and I give him a lot of credit.  It cannot be easy to walk into our family, especially at Thanksgiving.  We are a loud, out going, crazy bunch.  And there are a LOT of us.  Mike managed to hold his own, however, and even brought a butternut squash souffle last year that was a hit. So of course we brought it again this year.  Unfortunately we had a bit of a collapse this year, so there was a little hole in the middle.  Nobody seemed to mind.



The cranberry sauce is homemade, and even I, who isn’t a cranberry fan, look forward to this every year.

The dinner spread pretty much never changes.  There is always turkey, gravy, string beans, sweet potatoes with marshmallows on top, baked turnips, cranberry sauce, corn bread (new arrival in the past few years) and stuffing.  This year the stuffing was a bit different than normal, however, I LOVED it.  Whichever cousin made this… take note!

The spread is so big that Stacey had to capture it in 2 shots and then put the panorama together.

Everyone is assigned seats each year, designated by a leaf with their name on it on their plate (see in the below picture on the left).  The plan for plates is the same for most people: take a little of everything.

To me, the desserts are epic.  My sweet tooth is never quite so satisfied as it is on Thanksgiving.  This is also filled with tradition, however, there are more change-ups in dessert than there are at dinner.  There are always items that remain the same: Dinah’s brownies and apple pie, marble cake, cheesecake, and chocolate chip cookies.  This year we had the addition of gooey pumpkin squares, a new (winning) recipe for the pumpkin pie, and I brought the pumpkin whoopie pies and the salted english toffee that I fell in love with this year.


Just looking back at these pictures is making my mouth water.

When it’s all over (and that is a sad, sad moment), the take out containers come out and everyone goes home with some leftovers.  As soon as Thanksgiving ends, I look forward to the next year.

My dad, sister, and I actually started a tradition a few years back of having an Annual Leftovers Party at my dad’s house the Friday night after Thanksgiving.  It’s a fun way to share some of our Thanksgiving with our friends and get to sample some of their Thanksgiving.  I added some new food to the Leftovers Party including a baked spinach and artichoke dip with roasted garlic in a bread bowl.  SCRUMPTIOUS!  Though I think some people were a bit alarmed at the amount of garlic! (look closely and you’ll see full cloves sticking out below)

We also had made a second squash souffle just for this occasion.

We always wind up with too little room for the food and then spend half the time shooing away the dog and cats. But everyone samples a bit of everything, drinks beer, and has a merry old time.



Stacey takes such beautiful photos that I have to share some more, even if they aren’t specifically food focused:





Can’t wait for next year!

Failed Bread and Tuna Noodle Casserole

8 Jan

I was watching Chef Academy, again, and they made this bread that looked heavenly stuffed with cheese.  How do you get better than baked goods filled with cheese?  I had never made bread, but having made many a baked good in the past, I figured I could get some kneading practice in.  They made it look so easy.

Literally the next day I pulled up the recipe online and it seemed simple enough.  I was careful to measure well and concentrate on what I was doing (I’m usually a pretty hap hazard baker… I know… hand slap for me). I followed the first 2 directions:

For the Bread:

1. In a large bowl mix together the flour, salt, butter and yeast.

2. Stir in the water and mix into a soft dough.

As soon as I added the water (1 quart) to the flour (1 pound) I knew something was wrong.  It just looked too much like paper mache and not enough like dough.  I thought maybe the flour would thicken it so I mixed… and mixed… and mixed.  Soft dough was not to be had.

So I looked back and determined it was the flour to water ratio that was off and added more flour.  And I mixed and I mixed… and I added flour and I added flour… and this is what happened:

I couldn’t even make it into a ball.  I think by the time I had realized the ratios were off and added more flour, the yeast had already reacted (or something) and it was an EPIC FAIL.  On top of that, I noticed that the ingredients list sugar but it didn’t say anywhere in the recipe when to add the sugar.  It was at this point that I cursed Chef Novelli.

It was a sticky mess that made a mess of everything.

Including my pretty brand new Kitchenaid.  ::Pout::

So I had now had my biggest cooking fail since hermetically sealing a pot in college (WHOOPS!) and I still had to do SOMETHING for dinner.  Luckily yet another cooking show (Top Chef finale… I’m such a food television sucker) had me craving tuna noodle casserole and I had everything in stock.  So total change of plans and I had this assembled in less than 10 minutes and I was thinking to myself “why don’t I make this ridiculously easy casserole more often?”

Mmmm… layers:

It turned out decent, though a little plain.  I think I need to find a way to spice this up a bit.  And add roasted garlic.  Mmmmm.

______________________________

RECIPE
______________________________

Since the bread recipe was obviously ENTIRELY WRONG, I won’t reiterate it here.  I have a new bread recipe from my friend, Lillian, so once I succeed with that, I’ll post it.

TUNA NOODLE CASSEROLE

Ingredients:

  • 1 (8 ounce) package wide egg noodles
  • 1/4 cup butter, cubed
  • 4 slices american cheese (I used shredded since it was on hand)
  • 1 (6 ounce) can tuna, drained
  • 1 (10.75 ounce) can condensed cream of mushroom soup
  • 1/4 cup bread crumbs
  • Optional: Canned peas

Directions:

  1. Preheat oven to 350 degrees F (175 degrees C). Bring a large pot of lightly salted water to a boil. Add pasta and cook for 8 to 10 minutes or until al dente; drain.
  2. In a 1 1/2 quart glass casserole dish, layer noodles, butter cubes, 2 slices of cheese, 1/2 of the tuna, and 1/2 of the soup. Repeat the layering with the remaining ingredients. Top the casserole with bread crumbs. (ok… I didn’t layer… I stirred it all together… oops.)
  3. Bake at 350 degrees F (175 degrees C) for 10 to 15 minutes. (mine took some additional time)

Cranberry Apple Pie/Cranberry Nut Cake

5 Jan

I love dessert.  Really… really love dessert.  I was given a recipe from my lovely cousin, Adena, when I sent out a Facebook request for how to use up leftover fresh cranberries in my fridge.  She sent a very easy recipe that I proceeded to modify for the sole reason that I do not love cranberries.  They are just too tart for me.  My solution? Add apples and more sugar!  It was a success.  The recipe also called to just put the berries into the pie plate and then top them, but I had a frozen pie crust in the freezer so I decided “why not?”

The fruit concoction was then topped with eggs, sugar, flour, butter, and oil.

We sprinkled the top with cinnamon and it browned up purrrrrfectly.

It was a perfect center too.

I’m pretty sure this was polished off in just a few days.  WHOOPS!

____________________________

RECIPE
____________________________

Cranberry Nut Cake/(My comments in parenthesis for how to change it to a Cranberry Apple Pie)

Ingredients:

  • 2 cups cranberries- 1 bag (or lessen this to add slices of 1-2 apples)
  • 1/2 cup brown sugar
  • 1/2 cup walnuts or pecans
  • 2 eggs beaten
  • Pinch salt
  • 1 cup sugar (or a bit more if you don’t love cranberries)
  • 1 cup flour
  • 1 stick butter, melted
  • 5 Tbsp Oil
  • (Pie crust)

Directions:

  1. Wash berries (and peel, core, and slice apples) and put in bottom of 8” or 9” pie plate (or pie crust if you’d rather)
  2. Sprinkle with brown sugar and nuts (or mix it all together in a separate bowl and then pour in. Add extra sugar directly to fruit if you want it sweeter)
  3. In a medium bowl, beat eggs and then slowly add sugar
  4. Stir in flour, butter, and oil
  5. Pour over cranberries (and apples)
  6. (Sprinkle top with cinnamon)
  7. Bake at 325 for 50 minutes