Caramelized Onion & Apple Tart

This was perhaps my favorite new recipe of the night, found online somewhere.  Purchase pre-made puff pastry (Pepperidge Farms is the one in our grocery store), top with crème fraîche, the onion/apple mixture and bake.  I slid them over onto a rack to cool for a minute, then sliced it up into squares.  I plan to make this one often; it’s easy and it went really quickly–both in the making of and into people’s mouths.

Ingredients:

2 tablespoons olive oil
2  and 1/2  medium onions, sliced
2 red apples (such as Braeburn or Gala), cut into very small dice
salt and pepper
2 sheets frozen puff pastry (from a 17.3-ounce package), thawed
1/2 cup crème fraîche (you can substitute sour cream, but check Trader Joe’s for the crème fraîche before you do)

Heat oven to 400º F. Heat the oil in a large skillet over medium-low heat. Add the onions and cook, stirring occasionally, until soft and golden brown, 12 to 15 minutes. Stir in the apples, some salt, a shake of pepper and cook until just tender, 2 minutes.

Place each sheet of pastry on a parchment-lined baking sheet and prick all over with a fork. Spread with the crème fraîche, leaving a one-quarter inch border. Top with the onion mixture and bake until the pastry is crisp and browned, approximately 30 minutes. Cut into pieces before serving.

Elizabeth’s Chili (via my mother)

My mother used to cook up great huge vats of chili on cold winter nights.  In hindsight, as an adult, I’m sure it was a regular-sized pot, but to a child, it seemed bottomless.  This was a good thing, because my mother’s chili was delicious and I loved plopping in oyster crackers, lifting up the spoonful to my mouth in a perfect combination of crunch, heat, and rich meaty-tomato taste.  I hadn’t made it for a while, then our church had a chili cook-off. I brushed off her recipe, modified it, added a few things and cooked it up for the Halloween celebration.

I made it again this past week for my husband’s holiday department party, along with a series of toppings.  It was very popular, surprising me.  The weather that night was cold and rainy–was that it?  Or is it because I’m noticing a huge trend towards all things Retro–and maybe this recipe qualifies.

I do think chili is best the next day.  After you stir the beans in, cool it down, stirring often to release the heat and steam (I always pour half off into another dish to quicken the process).  Store in the refrigerator in a sealed container until the next day; reheat either in crockpot or in microwave.

Ingredients:

2 Tbls. olive oil
1 pound stew meat, trimmed of most (not all) fat, and cut into half-inch (approx.) cubes
1/2 pound Jimmy Dean’s Sage sausage
1 yellow or red bell pepper, seeded and chopped into small dice
1 onion, peeled and chopped coarsely
1 large can Contadina Whole Italian Tomatoes (29 oz.)
1 8 oz can tomato sauce
1/2 cup water (if needed)
1 Tablespoon chili powder
3 whole cloves
salt and pepper
3 small cans red kidney beans

Heat olive oil in large stewpot and brown the stew meat.  Be careful not to crowd it; do in two batches if you need to.  Remove to the side, then brown the sausage, with the onion and pepper.  Add back the stew meat (and any juice).  Chop the canned tomatoes (this is messy–keep scraping it all into the pan as you go, esp. the juices), and plop those in.  Add the tomato sauce, the spices and stir well.  Simmer for 2 hours, adding water if necessary.  Skim the fat as it rises, if desired, or stir back in (don’t tell the Cholesterol Police!) for more flavor.  Add in the drained cans of red kidney beans, add more salt and pepper if needed.  Serve.

Toppings (listed in order of what was most popular):

Shredded cheese

Diced avocado, tossed with some lime juice to preserve the color

Sour Cream

Chopped green onion

Cilantro, chopped

Oyster crackers (hardly touched at all, but this was a West Coast crowd)

Note: Contadina tomatoes really do make a difference.  For an experiment, I bought Hunt’s, the Contadina, and a store brand.  Contadina won out by a mile in terms of color, ripeness and flavor.

Cheesy Sourdough Loaf

I stopped by our favorite little eatery, Jammin’ Bread, to pick up a loaf of their sourdough bread, as it’s flavorful, but not overwhelming, and has a good crust on it.  This is another one of those recipes found online.  It’s best eaten right after it’s brought out of the oven; if not, microwaving the chunks will restore the cheese to its melty consistency.

Preheat the oven to 350 degrees.

Ingredients

1 round loaf of sourdough bread, unsliced
½ yellow onion, cut into thin slivers
½ cup chopped parsley
½ pound of grated jack cheese ( one 8 ounce package)

Grate the cheese onto wax paper, then with your fingers, mix the chopped parsley, onion slivers and cheese together.

Cut bread into diagonal slices, about 1 inch apart, stopping before you cut through the bottom of the loaf.

Cut bread in the opposite direction in the same manner, creating diagonal shaped cubes, taking care not to cut through to the bottom.

Carefully stuff the space in between each cube with cheese mixture.

Wrap in heavy-duty foil and place in the oven for 20 minutes. Leave wrapped until ready to serve, but really, you should serve immediately.

Skewered Vegetables

I’m a party planner by accident, not by trade, and finding recipes mostly consists of opening every cookbook in my house and then looking online for whatever they may have.  If the website’s too complicated, I skip it (no time, of course).  This year for Dave’s department party, I realized we needed some vegetables but was just not up to blanching and arranging vegetables, so I went for these skewered vegetables instead.

Ingredients:

red or white-skinned baby potatoes
heirloom tomatoes (in a variety of colors)
fresh mozzerella cheese
olive oil and salt & pepper

Cook the baby potatoes in boiling salted water until just tender, about 10 minutes, then put into an ice-cube cold water bath.  Pat dry, then quarter (or half them if they are really tiny).

Twisting the skewer, ease the potato on first, skin-side up, then an heirloom tomato (they’re slightly crunchy), a cube of fresh mozzerella (the old packaged kind in your grocery store is not really good for this use–get FRESH), then a sweet grape tomato.  You can skewer more or less items, as you like.  Place on a pan, and lightly drizzle then with olive oil, then salt and pepper.  I arranged them on a platter, and nearly all were eaten.

Pumpkin Spice Bundt Cake with Buttermilk Icing

One day last month when I was trolling through my Google Reader, link led to link led to a site where a librarian for the Los Angeles Library System had determined to make better use of her bundt pan, and so was posting a bundt cake a day.  I found her early in the cycle and never returned, but did harvest this recipe, orginally published in November 2005 in Gourmet Magazine (may it Rest In Peace–and I was just about to subscribe to it, too!).

The other night we had three guests for dinner and I needed a quick dessert.  I whipped this up (yes, it’s really easy, though the mixing of the pumpkin with the buttermilk is unconventional), drizzled the frosting over the top and it was a hit at dinner.  I cut up the extra pieces, gave some away and Dave’s been taking a slice in his lunch all week.

yield: Makes 12 servings

For cake

1 1/2 sticks (3/4 cup) unsalted butter, softened, plus additional for greasing bundt pan
2 1/4 cups all-purpose flour plus additional for dusting pan
2 teaspoons baking powder
1 teaspoon baking soda
1 teaspoon cinnamon
3/4 teaspoon ground allspice
1/2 teaspoon salt
1 1/4 cups canned solid-pack pumpkin (from a 15-ounce can; not pie filling)
3/4 cup well-shaken buttermilk
1 teaspoon vanilla
1 1/4 cups granulated sugar
3 large eggs 

For icing
2 tablespoons plus 2 teaspoons well-shaken buttermilk
1 1/2 cups confectioners sugar

Special equipment: a 10-inch nonstick bundt pan (3 quart)

Preparation

Make cake:
Put oven rack in middle position and preheat oven to 350°F. Grease bundt pan generously, then dust with flour, knocking out excess.

Whisk together flour (2 1/4 cups), baking powder, baking soda, cinnamon, allspice, and salt in a bowl. Whisk together pumpkin, 3/4 cup buttermilk, and vanilla in another bowl.

Beat butter (1 1/2 sticks) and granulated sugar in a large bowl with an electric mixer at medium-high speed until pale and fluffy, 3 to 5 minutes, then add eggs and beat 1 minute. Reduce speed to low and add flour and pumpkin mixtures alternately in batches, beginning and ending with flour mixture and mixing until batter is just smooth.

Spoon batter into pan, smoothing top, then bake until a wooden pick or skewer inserted in center of cake comes out clean, 45 to 50 minutes. Cool cake in pan on a rack 15 minutes, then invert rack over cake and reinvert cake onto rack. Cool 10 minutes more.

Make icing:
While cake is cooling, whisk together buttermilk and confectioners sugar until smooth. Drizzle icing over warm cake, then cool cake completely. Icing will harden slightly.

Cooks’ note: Cake can be made 3 days ahead and kept in an airtight container at room temperature.

Creamy Chocolate Fudge

One year I was in charge of the Universe.  Just kidding.  But I was in charge of a Christmas event at church which included a video broadcast and Those In Charge wanted a big turnout.  So I hit on the idea of singing Christmas Carols before, then having a giant cookie feast afterward.  I think desserts is always a category where church-goers excel.

The tables were covered with all different plates and kinds of cookies, and then this one tin of fudge. I slipped a piece into my mouth.  Mmmm. It wasn’t the least bit sugary or dry.  It was creamy with the right amount of crunch from walnuts.  Manna, I thought.  I watched as the hoards of children hit the first table, piling up cookies in their napkins in spite of my best-practiced Withering Glance, the swarm getting closer and closer to this Bit of Heavenly fudge.  Just as the leading edge hit my section, I snatched up the tin.  “No,” I said.  “This is just for the adults.”  I then walked around offering a piece at a time to the grown-ups, trying to locate the owner and maker of this perfection.  I found her, and she sent me the recipe.  So, Monique–if you’re reading this blog–many thanks!

Creamy Chocolate Fudge

1 jar (7 ounces) of marshmallow creme
1  1/2 cups sugar
2/3 cup undiluted evaporated milk
1/4 cup butter or margarine
1/4 teaspoon salt
1 package (11 1/2 ounce) milk chocolate chips (~2 cups)
1 package (6 oz.) semi-sweet chocolate chips (~1 cup)
(Note: I have reversed the proportions of the chips on occasions for a slightly less-sweet fudge.  It works fine.)
1 cup chopped walnuts
1 teaspoon vanilla extract

In a large saucepan over medium heat, combine marshmallow creme, sugar, evaporated milk, butter and salt; bring to a full rolling boil, stirring constantly.  BOIL FOR 45 SECONDS ONLY!!  Otherwise it will be too grainy.  Remove from heat and stir in chips until melted, stirring vigorously.  Add vanilla and nuts and pour into buttered 9 x 13″ pan.  Cool 2 hours or until firm.

Christmas Caramels

When I was nineteen several young women in my acquaintance were married and at each of their weddings was  large basket of wrapped, homemade caramels.  More than a few found their way into my purse for the drive home.  A older woman in our church, Mrs. Woodruff, made them.  She was our orthodontist’s mother, interestingly.

Right after Thanksgiving one year I called her up and asked her if she would teach me to make them.  I drove up to her house, bringing the butter, whipping cream and other ingredients with me.  The first thing she did was open up the cream and dump it all over the sugar. “Whoops,” she said.  She shook her head.  “That’s not right.”  She put the pan in her pantry and said, “That’ll be for something else later on,” and we started again.  I think of that now as I’m approaching her age.  Just say “Whoops,” when a kitchen mistake is made, and move on.

The trickiest thing about these caramels is finding the correct pan.  You need those cheapy pans from your local store–nothing fancy.  They’re a little smaller than the typical baker’s half-sheet that I normally use.  Known as a jelly-roll pan, it’s nice and shiny, and when it gets old, rusty and too full of cutting lines, toss it and start again.

Here’s the recipe, step by step.  The version without pictures is at the bottom of this post.

Caramels

2 cups granulated sugar
1/2 pint whipping cream
1/2 cup evaporated milk (1 small –5 oz.–can)
1 small bottle clear Karo corn syrup (2 cups)
1 cube of real butter
1 1/2 cups chopped walnuts
1 buttered jelly roll pan
1/2 teaspoon vanilla extract
 

First step: butter the pan.  With real butter.

Combine the sugar and corn syrup. Cook until full boil and it turns a creamy color.

Add cream and evaporated milk (it will foam up; be careful, but keep stirring).

Bring to a boil, then add butter.  Normally most people would know what adding butter looks like, but this picture is for my friend Judy, who loves lots of photos in her recipe steps.

Is it done yet?  No.  If you yank them too early, they’ll be mushy-too-soft caramels. Like your neighbor’s.

Now it’s done.  Color is a good cue, but really it’s the caramel-into-the-glass-of-water test that really is the determinant.

Cook until caramel hardness (3/4 to 1 hour) keeping it at a low boil the whole time, and stirring occasionally.  We test our caramel with the old-fashioned water-in-a-glass method.    Drizzle a bit of the caramel into the water, feeling it into a ball, and seeing if it’s the texture of a caramel.  (It doesn’t hurt to pop this sample into your mouth to see.)  Don’t get the water ice cold, or you can’t figure it out. With practice, you’ll know exactly when its ready.

Remove from heat, then stir in nuts and vanilla and pour into the pan.  I always pour a little bit out on one end to give to those who don’t like nuts (I place a spoon underneath the opposite edge of the pan to keep it tilted), then after adding the nuts to the main caramel batch, I pour the rest in (and remove the spoon from underneath).  Let sit 24 hours, covered with a sheet of wax paper.

Cut pieces of wax paper, by ripping a three-inch strip off of the roll, then slicing into into half, then half again.

I do about 6 little strips at a time, making 24 little squares of wax paper.

Cut across the short end of the pan making a long strip about 3/8″ wide.  No wider.

Cut this into about 7 equal pieces and wrap in squares of wax paper.  (Mine are usually longer and skinnier than this photo shows.)

They keep for a season, if they last that long.

Merry Christmas!

************************

Caramels  Yield: 2 1/2 pounds

2 cups granulated sugar
1/2 pint whipping cream
1/2 cup evaporated milk (1 small –5 oz.–can)
1 small bottle clear Karo corn syrup (2 cups)
1 cube of real butter
1 1/2 cups chopped walnuts
1 buttered jelly roll pan
1/2 teaspoon vanilla extract

Combine the sugar and corn syrup.  Cook until full boil and it turns a creamy color.  Add cream and evaporated milk (it will foam up; be careful, but keep stirring). Bring to a boil, then add butter.  Cook until caramel hardness (3/4 to 1 hour) keeping it at a low boil the whole time, and stirring occasionally.  We test our caramel with the old-fashioned water-in-a-glass method.  Don’t get the water too cold, or you can’t figure it out.  Drizzle a bit of the caramel into the water, feeling it into a ball, and seeing if it’s the texture of a caramel.  (It doesn’t hurt to pop this sample into your mouth to see.)  With practice, you’ll know exactly when its ready.  Remove from stir in nuts and vanilla and pout into the pan.  I always pour a little bit on one end to give to those who don’t like nuts, then after adding the nuts, I pour the rest in.  Let sit 24 hours, covered with a sheet of wax paper.

Cut across the short end of the pan making a long strip about 3/8″ wide.  No wider.  Cut this into about 7 equal pieces and wrap in squares of wax paper.  It keeps for a season, if it lasts that long.

Turkey Gravy

Another inexact science.  If you want exact, Google it.

Generally it goes like this.  Start with the giblets: in a medium saucepan, place the celery florets, half of an onion studded with a couple of cloves, a carrot, scrubbed and broken into a couple of pieces, the giblets (we always added the liver, but some say it gives a bitter taste), the neck and cover with water.  Simmer gently for 45-60 minutes or until the neck meat is tender and done.  Reserve the giblets and neck, strain the liquid into a container.  I chop up the liver, the neck meat and add to my stuffing.  The cooking liquid is for the gravy.

Turkey drippings are really fatty, and you don’t need all of them otherwise you’ll be making VATS of gravy.  So drain off all but about 1/2 cup.  I save the rest just in case I want it. I place the turkey pan, with its drippings on a couple of burners, and start scraping and stirring while adding an equivalent amount of flour to the pan, start with about 1/2 cup.  Stir, stir, mixing it in and letting this roux cook and brown (but not too fast–don’t have the heat too high).  When all the flour is incorporated, start adding the giblet brew first, 1/2 cup at a time, mixing it in, adding more, and when you run out of that and if the gravy is still too thick, add chicken broth.

If you over-added and it’s soupy, don’t despair.  Put 1/2 cup cold water into a Tupperware-style container, add 3-4 tablespoons cornstarch, and shake well.  Add this a little at a time until you see the mixture thicken up.  Note: some use flour in that water mix, but mine always is lumpy and then I have to strain it, which is doable.  I just prefer the ease of the cornstarch.

Salt and pepper to taste and get someone to help you tilt the pan to pour it into the gravy boat.

Note: It’s optional to cut up the giblets and add it to the stuffing.

Roast Turkey

It took me many years to figure out how to roast a turkey.  For as long as I could, we went to Mom’s house, where she had it down.  But the time came.  At first I’d follow the directions on the wrapper of the turkey, the plastic saved from year to year in the gadget drawer in the kitchen.  Later I turned to my go-to cookbook: The Joy of Cooking.  I guess I should say something poetic about the food, the holiday, the company, the gathering, but this post is just about turkey, not the event.

Basics: Purchase a FRESH turkey a few days before Thanksgiving, keeping it refridgerated.  (Some recommend brining, and if I every try it, I’ll post that, but not today).  My favorite stuffing–yes, I still stuff the bird–is Pepperidge Farm in the blue box: Herbed Seasoned Bread Stuffing.  Buy a head of celery, a pound of butter, onion (white or yellow), chicken broth, and make sure you have a large enough pan (with a rack, hopefully) to roast your bird.

Set a rack or a clean towel (or scrub the sink) in the kitchen sink and put the turkey in there: remove the bird from the wrapping, dig the giblets out of the neck area (save them), check the cavity to make sure you got all the treasures out of there, then rinse the bird thoroughly in cool water several times.  Do not let it soak. Drain.  Pat it dry with paper towels, inside and out and set aside–it’s okay to set it in the roasting pan you’ll use.

Put on the music to keep you company–no one else will.  Preheat to the oven to 450 degrees F.

Chop about 4-5 stalks of celery, saving the leaves for the giblet brew (more on that later) and 1 large onion.  Place a cube of butter in a large pan, and add these vegetables to the pan, sauteeing them until golden.  Add the amount of chicken broth you need to this mix (see the back of the bag for proportions), bring to a simmer.  Rip open the bag of stuffing and place in a large bowl.  Pour the hot vegetable mix over the dry stuffing, toss to mix well.  (Since you haven’t had breakfast yet, this is really good breakfast food for the cook–slightly crunchy and warm.)

Maneuver the turkey around and stuff the neck area, making sure not to pack it in–it needs room to expand–then skewer the flap closed.  (Skewers are sold in grocery stores right now and they look like giant corsage pins.)  Maneuver the turkey around again, gently, and set it on it’s end and spoon the stuffing into the large cavity, again loosely, but enough.  Get a crust of bread and place over the opening, then wangle the legs back into their wire holders, if the turkey comes that way.  If it doesn’t, skewer the skin closed, then tie the legs over the opening with some kitchen twine.

I tuck the wings back under the turkey, then set the whole thing in the rack.  Since you’ve stuffed it, you need to quickly get it into the oven (for food safety reasons).

Two ways to do this:  One way is to put the turkey upside down so that the drippings saturate the breast area throughout the cooking time. Invert the bird the last 20 minutes of cooking to brown the breasts.  I’ve done it both ways and if you are diligent about basting the bird every 20-30 minutes, you should have a moist bird if you place it breast side up in the rack.  Either way, as soon as you put it in the 450-degree oven, reduce the heat at once to 350 degrees.

When you baste, put the pan on top of the stove so you don’t let all the heat escape from your oven.  I usually start by stroking the bird all over with a cube of real butter, then after that I use the pan drippings, tilting it so I can get at it with my spoon.  I’ve used the turkey basters and they’re okay, but I got tired of the spitting (you’ll find out) and the cleaning, so now I just use a spoon.

The USDA has charts for roasting fresh turkey (thawed frozen ones take about 50% longer). I think turkeys take even less time than these charst; sometimes they’ll have a roasting chart printed on your wrapper.  Some say allow 20 minutes per pound in smaller birds and 15 minutes per pound for the larger tom turkey, adding 5 minutes per pound for stuffed birds. However you figure it, just know that it’s inexact and that it will always be done when you least expect it–usually too early.

Meanwhile in a medium saucepan, place the celery florets, half of an onion studded with a couple of cloves, a carrot, scrubbed and broken into a couple of pieces, the giblets (we always added the liver, but some say it gives a bitter taste), the neck and cover with water.  Simmer gently for 45-60 minutes or until the neck meat is tender and done.  Reserve the giblets and neck, strain the liquid into a container.  I chop up the liver, the neck meat and add to my stuffing.  The cooking liquid is for the gravy.

Back to the turkey: toward the end, as it gets browner and browner, you can shield some parts with tin foil (like the tips of the legs, or even the breast).  Some say it’s done when they jiggle the drumstick to see if the hip joint is loose.  Others prick the skin of the thigh to see if the juices run clear.  The legs and thighs will generally always take longer than the breast–this is when you use foil if you have to. I use a meat thermometer to check for doneness–about 165-170 degrees (according to the USDA), taking care that the tip is not in contact with the bone when I check.

Remove Mr. Turkey from the oven, and IMMEDIATELY remove the stuffing from both cavities into an oven proof dish.  I usually mix the stuffing from the bird with the extra stuffing, the chopped bits from the above giblet brew, cover it and keep it warm in the oven.  You can add canned chicken broth if it looks dry. Then tent the turkey and let it rest for a few minutes.

Then dress up the husband in the apron (or whoever is carving it), hand him the knife and fork and let him at it.  Happy Turkey!

Elizabeth’s Zucchini-Whole Wheat Bread

Zucchini Cranberry Walnut Bread

I had been making that same old zucchini bread recipe that we all have: vats of oil, overly sweet, soggy.  I wanted to find a new recipe that used whole wheat flour, so one day I did some internet searching and found five.  I began with one and modified it so much that I now call it my own, rich with nuts and cranberries.  I never moved on to the other four, satisfied with this one.  When I took my friend Judy a slice or two, she gave it a thumb’s up.  She never lies, so it must be good.

About the flour: measuring the zucchini is never a science, more of a hit-and-miss.  Because of this, the amount of flour you’ll add in is also less of a science.    I have added up to the full 4 cups at some times.  If your bread is too wet, it will be soggy when cooked. If you add too much flour, your bread will be a brick.  I realize this assumes some experience in making fruit breads; just do your best.

Elizabeth’s Zucchini-Whole Wheat Bread

Yield: two loaves
3 eggs
2 cups sugar
1 Tablespoon vanilla
approximately 4 1/2 cups shredded zucchini
1 cup butter, melted
1 Tablespoon baking soda
1/4 teaspoon salt
3/4 teaspoon nutmeg
1 Tablespoon cinnamon
1 and 1/2 cups unbleached white whole wheat flour, from King Arthur (can also use whole wheat flour)
2 1/2  to 3 cups white flour (first add in 2 and 1/2 cups, then add more if your bread is too wet)
1 and 1/2 cups chopped walnuts
1 and 1/2 cups dried cranberries

Optional: zest and juice of 1 lemon (about 3 Tbls)

Preheat the oven to 350 and grease two loaf tins.

In a large bowl, mix together the eggs, sugar and vanilla until well-blended.  Mix in the shredded zucchini, then the melted butter, and the lemon juice and zest (if you are using it). Stir together the whole wheat flour, spices, salt and baking soda and add to the zucchini mixture.  Check to see if your bread is too wet.  Depending on the size of my eggs (I use either large or extra-large) or how moist your zucchini is, you may need all of the flour listed.  You don’t want it flopping around in the bowl, but you don’t want it too dry, either.  (Perhaps it should be the liquidity of a fresh icy milkshake? if you’ve never made bread before; I’m just guessing here.)  Fold in the nuts and cranberries.  (If yours are in the freezer like mine are, because you bought the giant bag from a Big Box store, then un-glob them before adding.)

Pour into the two loaf pans and bake for 10 minutes.  Then lower the temperature to 325 and bake for 55-60 minutes longer, or until a wooden toothpick inserted into the center comes out clean.  (If you are like me, one may have to cook longer than the other one.)  Cool in pans for 10 minutes, loosen edges with spatula and turn out onto wire racks to cool thoroughly, if you make it that long.

On all my fruit breads, I slice a thin layer off of each end, then cut the rest into slices.  I wrap them 4 slices at a time in waxed paper, then place them in a zipper plastic bag to store.  I also place three walnuts halves on top before baking, not only to indicate that they have nuts in them, but also because we love to eat nuts in our fruit breads.

Updated July 2013