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Showing posts with label Autumn. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Autumn. Show all posts

Thursday, October 9, 2008

Delivering Harvest Treats to Harvest Workers

Twice this week we made  my Mother's Finnish recipe for  Old World Fresh Apple Butter Cake. Click on the title above and you'll find the recipe from a post I made last year.  

This year one of our sons helped his Dad make this as a bundt cake for my birthday.  We visited the place I first had my birthday cake during harvest time and ate my birthday cake there.  

Notice the white icing on it?  

Well, when I was 3 my Mother made me a beautiful white cake with white frosting and took it out to the field to share
 with the workers.  




When my Dad brought the combine to a stop, 
the white cake was suddenly a "chocolate" (dusty) cake!!  After that, my birthday cakes became bundt cakes.  This one is a favorite of mine.  I had to laugh when he put a white glaze on it because we were in the spud field after all.   Thankfully, this year, it had already been harvested there and we avoided the "chocolate".  
 


Then then we went to the spud cellars and delivered mini bundt cakes they'd made to the Harvest workers.  




Then I made them for the Young Women's activity where we deliver a treat one day of harvest to the other Young Women who are working in the Potato Harvest.  


I just love the memories, smell, sight, sound and touch of "Spud Harvest"!  

Monday, September 29, 2008

Autumn Pumpkin Pancakes and Cookies

It feels like autumn, so this morning we started off with Pumpkin pancakes.  I happened upon this sisters recipe blog and found the recipe. Our kids really liked them and want them on Halloween morning too.  I served them with applesauce and cinnamon sugar sprinkled on top.  

Since I had to open a can of pumpkin and didn't use it all, my son is making Pumpkin cookies for FHE.  My son and his friend are baking them.  I found it on one of those sister's linked blog of recipes with other friends.  

It's so handy to have the internet to look up recipe ideas from. 

The cookies called for pumpkin spice, which I didn't have, so I googled for a substitute and found this 
Pumpkin Pie Spice Substitute
1/2 teaspoon cinnamon plus 1/4 teaspoon ginger and 1/8 teaspoon EACH nutmeg and cloves can be substituted for 1 teaspoon pumpkin pie spice.

Wednesday, November 21, 2007

California Orchard Holiday Fruit Cocktail

My husband's Grandmother Zelda used to make Fruit Cocktail for each Thanksgiving dinner. When I married into the family, I tasted this yummy tradition for the first time and have enjoyed it each year. Her sister Aunt Beth used to make it as well. His Mom still makes it and now he and I make it.

This year I asked my mother-in-law how their "Fruit Cocktail" got started and she reminded me that since her in-laws lived on an orchard with peach trees, orange trees, pomegranate trees, etc., each fall Grandma would can peaches and squeeze orange juice, etc. At Thanksgiving, she'd make up a large batch of fruit cocktail and those hungry boys would eat it at Thanksgiving dinner and throughout the week and then make a new batch for them for Christmas too. Here's the recipe, as I've seen it made:

Fruit Cocktail
Make the night before, as the flavors blend together better. How much of each fruit you add, depends on how large your crowd is. It's also about balancing the amount of each fruit so that both colors and flavors are just right--and some ingredients don't overpower others.

In a large Tupperware bowl, put in one can of orange juice concentrate--do not add water. The citrus keeps the fruit from darkening. Slice into big bite size pieces, canned peaches and add without their juice. Add pineapple tidbits, without their juice. Cut red, seedless grapes in half lengthwise and add. Cut maraschino cherries in fourths and add. Also add about 1/8-1/4 cup of the juice. Now just put the lid on and chill and let the flavors blend overnight.

The morning before you serve it, add drained, mandarin oranges and halved, thickly sliced bananas. If you add the mandarin oranges too soon and stir it too much, they break apart too easily. The key is not to put in easily broken or squishy fruits. Buy slightly green bananas. When you slice the bananas, cut the entire banana once down the middle from one end to the other (halving it) and then slice crosswise to make thick slices--about 1/2 to 3/4 of an inch thick. Adding the bananas the morning of keeps them firmer, yet still lets the flavor in.

Other fruits can be substituted or added e.g. strawberries, pomegranates, pears, green grapes or tropical fruits like papaya. You may also use a purchased "fruit cocktail" as the base and add to it. Fruits that do not work well include raspberries, blueberries and huckleberries because of their juice residue coloring the mix and that they fall apart easily. If you add strawberries, then also add the green grapes to balance it out better both in taste and looks. It is best to wait until 1 hour before to add strawberries. Return it to its chilling spot until it's time to serve it.

When it's time to serve it, make individual servings in a small bowl or cup of it's own. It tastes great again later in the day with a turkey or ham sandwich too and the next day until it's gone.

Now what can one do with the drained juices? My Father loves to drink the drained fruit juices, whereas my Mother-in-law says, it's just sugar water! Guess you could use it as a base for smoothies.

Gobble, Gobble, Gobble up the Cookie Turkeys

Years ago, my Mother started the family tradition of making "Cookie Turkeys" to place at each place setting at Thanksgiving Dinner. I also like this tradition and am aware of at least one of her granddaughters who makes them. And my kids are helping me make them tonight.

Cookie Turkeys
40 cookies -- fudge striped or gingerbread
1/4 c. chocolate frosting
2 pkg. (5oz.) chocolate-covered cherries or Old Fashioned creme drops.
20 pieces candy corn
Place 20 cookies on a flat surface, solid chocolate side down. With frosting, attach a chocolate-covered cherry to the top of each base cookie. Position another cookie (some use half of a another cookie) perpendicular to each base cookie to form a tail. Attach with frosting. With a dab of frosting, attach one piece of candy corn (pointy side down) to the front of each cherry for the head. Let stand until set. Yield 20 servings (turkeys).
My husband has our camera tonight and my phone is full of pics, so I looked around for a picture and found it at http://www.tasteofhome.com/Recipes/Cookie-Turkeys

Thanksgiving Day Spreads

Below are two spreads I learned at our Christmas Enrichment Meeting. I'm posting them since I'm making them both for the first time right now to take them "over the river and through the woods" to Thanksgiving Dinner.

Here's the Pumpkin Dip or Spread Sister Renee W. made.
1 (16 oz.) larger, sugar free Cool-Whip
2 (1 oz.) for 1 large fat free-sugar, free instant vanilla pudding
1 (15 oz.) can pumpkin
1 tsp. *pumpkin pie spice
Mix well and refrigerate. Renee served it with apple slices and says it also good with other fruit, toasted bagels, and pumpkin bread.
*Pumpkin Pie Spice Substitute. 1/2 teaspoon cinnamon plus 1/4 teaspoon ginger and 1/8 teaspoon EACH nutmeg and cloves can be substituted for 1 teaspoon ...www.cdkitchen.com/features/tip/409/Pumpkin-Pie-Spice-Substitute

Sister Kelly E. made Lion House cran-raspberry butter to go with our yummy Potato Knot Rolls which were demonstrated and sampled.

Lion House

Cran-Raspberry Butter

1 cup canned whole-berry cranberry sauce

½ cup raspberry preserves

2 cups butter, softened

1 tablespoon powdered sugar

Combine all ingredients in a mixing bowl; beat on high for 5 minutes. Mixture should be creamy. Spoon into a dish; cover and refrigerate for 24 hours. Makes 3 ½ cups.

You can buy Lion House Recipe Books at www.desertbook.com or www.amazon.com.

Monday, November 19, 2007

Old World Fresh Apple Butter Cake Tastes Great

Using the same castle mold I bought at Wal-Mart, I made this recipe, for our sister-in-law's birthday. I was worried the apples, may leave holes in the turrets, but it came out perfectly again. Also, I really recommend Pam with Flour.


Categories: Desserts
Title: Old World Fresh Apple Butter Cake

Description:
My Mother made this every fall during apple harvest time. It is often my choice for my birthday cake.

Ingredients:
1 cup butter
2 cups sugar
3 eggs
3 cups flour
1 1/2 tsp. soda
1/2 tsp. salt
1 tsp. cinnamon
1/4 tsp. nutmeg
2 tsp. vanilla
3 cups peeled grated apples
2 cups chopped walnuts


Directions:
In a bowl, beat butter and sugar until well mixed. Gradually add the flour, soda, salt, cinnamon, and nutmeg. Stir in vanilla. Fold in apples and walnuts.

Pour into a greased tube pan or bundt pan. Bake at 325 degrees for 1 hour 15 minutes. Cool 15 minutes. Glaze if desired. I don't. I did sprinkle powdered sugar on it, so the castle looked like it had freshly fallen snow on it.

Tuesday, September 25, 2007

First frost calls for soup for dinner

Have you eaten Taco Soup? With our first frost on the windshield this morning and giving in to the need to turn the heater on last night, tonight seems like a great night for soup, so I'm fixing TACO SOUP and decided to share the recipe while it's cooking. My husband's cousin got me hooked on this. My Mother used to make it too, so I'll post hers below as well. I'll be trying a few different soups out the next 3 weeks trying to decide what "soup/stew" to take to a potluck with some girlfriends in October.

Also, I love the tortilla soup served at Robert Redford's Sundance Tree Restaurant.

Boy, I wish I had the recipe for the chicken, rice and salsa soup I had in the Phoenix airport a few years back when leaving a business trip with a nasty cold. It was so good and cleared my sinuses right up.

I enjoy Southwest and Mexican foods and flavors. Please share your recipes here from this genre.

Categories: Soups and Stews
Title: Taco Soup

Ingredients:
1 lb. cooked hamburger
onion
1 (l6 oz.) can chopped tomatoes
1 (l6 oz.) can red kidney beans
1 (17 oz.) can whole kernel corn
1 (8 oz. ) can tomato sauce
1/2 pkg. or 1 T taco seasoning

Directions:
In a kettle, brown 1 lb hamburger (1/2 lb meat will do) with 1 chopped onion and drain fat if necessary.
Add: 1 (l6 oz.) can chopped tomatoes
1 (l6 oz.) can red kidney beans
1 (17 oz.) can whole kernel corn
1 (8 oz. ) can tomato sauce
1/2 pkg. or 1 T taco seasoning
Do NOT drain any of the above!!

Stir and simmer for 15 minutes or longer. Serve in a bowl over Fritos corn chips. Top with cheddar cheese and sour cream, if desired. Very good and satisfying. I serve this plain as is, or with a green salad and sometimes also with potato salad. Corn bread or sour dough bread is very good with it. I ALWAYS double this recipe. If there is some leftovers, it keep well for days. You can even freeze it.

Number Of Servings:4-6 servings

Taco Soup

1 1/2 lbs ground beef
1 sliced or chopped onion
2 cloves, minced garlic
Brown together and drain.
1-2 Tbs. ground cumin
2-3 tsp. chili powder
salt and pepper to taste
1 large cans chopped tomatoes with green chilies
2 cups salsa
1 can whole kernel c orn, drain
2 Tbs. fresh cilantro

Can add fresh avocado cubes in soup just before serving. Also a dollop of sour cream. Serve with tortilla chips of your choice.