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

Saturday, August 24, 2013

You need pie! BLACKBERRY PIE!


The last few Saturdays of summer are some of my favorite days of the year.  Today was one such example.  After washing and detailing our vehicles I remembered today was our town's annual "Blackberry Arts Festival" and asked Mark if he wanted to take a walk through it.  Sure! So we jumped in the Jeep, which is perfect for a summer ride with the top off it right now. 



We walked around the festival noticing all the blackberry foods and even taste tested a few goodies: 
~blackberry fudge
~blackberry lemonade
~blackberry beef jerky
~blackberry pies, cobblers, and crisps
~blackberry jam
         And so much more!

            (Search Pinterest for Blackberries recipes here!)


Before we went back home we stopped on one of our country roads and picked some blackberries, as I really wanted to make a blackberry pie and some blackberry lemonade.  We picked the best tasting blackberries ever, while a couple of horses kept us company.



Then back home for the lemonade.  I made a pitcher of lemonade then added some blackberry puree  from the fresh blackberries. We ate some Summer Sausage (we bought at the festival), Colby Jack cheese and crackers, sipping on our iced blackberry-lemonade. 



 Then I moved on to my Baking Corner and made a blackberry pie.  I realized I haven't made a blackberry pie in a couple years.  Back when there were always kids around here I'd make SEVERAL a WEEK!  I'd tell the girls, just bring me four cups of picked blackberries and I promise to always make a pie for you.  I can whip up a pie and get it in the oven in less than 5 minutes.

 
And back out of the oven in 45 minutes....


When the pie was baking I painted a quick little sign, "You need pie!"


I could barely get the pie out of the oven before I just had to take a teaspoon and taste test my blackberry pie.  Perfect....Yummy.  "Mark, do you want to try a piece?"  "Best pie you've ever made!"  LOL We have fun here at Sweet Woodruff Acres.


It's time for dinner, but no one is hungry...

Enjoy these sweet summer days...
             Blessings, Heidi

Friday, November 4, 2011

Another Really Good Cookie and Another Really Fun Sign

"Another really good cookie" means trouble here.  It means Mark and I can't stop eating them!  I do love to share cookies, but sometimes I'm not fast enough to get them out of the house.  A couple days ago I made the "Spiced Apple Cookie", which I found via Pinterest.  I loved them. 

Then Mark said, could you make an Oatmeal Raisin Cookie but replace the raisins with diced apples? Sure can!


Here's the cookie recipe. I don't give instructions on how to actually "mix the ingredients", such as the order, you can follow any cookie recipe or just start mixing as the ingredients are listed:

HEIDI'S SPICED APPLE OATMEAL COOKIE
1 cup butter (2 cubes)
1 1/2 cups dark brown sugar
2 tsp. vanilla flavoring (or extract)
2 large eggs
2 cups quick cook oatmeal (uncooked)
1 1/2 cups flour
1 tsp. baking powder
1/4 tsp. baking soda
1 tsp. cinnamon
1/2 tsp. ground nutmeg
1/2 tsp. ground cloves
1/4 tsp. salt
1 cup diced apples (peeled, cored first)
*if desired: 1 cup chopped walnuts

Pre-heat oven to 350 degrees.   Mix the ingredients as a cookie dough.  Drop by rounded tablespoons, spacing evenly.   (On Silpat matt, or greased cookie sheet.)  Bake for 10-13 minutes or until golden brown.  Cool cookies,  then enjoy!


I use a Silpat baking matt--you must get!  I have four, so I can make lots of cookies quickly, if I need to.  Also, when I make gingerbread houses for a Gingerbread House Making Party here, the Silpat matts make the baking so much easier.  I bought mine at our local Fred Meyer store, when they had a BOGOF (buy one get one free) sale.  You can find them online as well, such as here at Amazon.

We've working on making rustic layered board signs.  Here's a couple examples. 
"GRATITUDE:  turns what we have into enough."

"House Rules: 1. Be KIND 2. Always follow rule #1."


These are listed in my Etsy shop here (GRATITUDE) and here (House Rules).

Today I'm going to make and can applesauce and apple butter. I'm still all about apples right now!

Don't forget to change your clocks tomorrow night:  Fall Back! 

Have a blessed weekend,
      Hugs, Heidi

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Tuesday, August 16, 2011

Save the Date - Save the Day - Save the Recipe

Summer doesn't mean slower days, I guess, as it seems we're busy as ever.  The only difference is we are adding into our days so many more outdoor activities.  So every weekend we try to "play" one day, and "work" the other, with Sunday as our resting day (although there's still plenty we do on Sundays!)  We are so fortunate my Mark has Friday's off, and I am usually able to sneak away from work as well. 

Last Friday we drove through the Rogue Wilderness, on U.S. Forest Service logging roads.  What a blast that was with the top off our Jeep.  I couldn't stop looking UP at the beautiful tall trees, so majestic.  We did make our way down at one point to the Rogue River, and got a chance to talk to some of the people rafting and camping the river.  Also, it was...mighty hot!  We got to go through the Rogue River Ranch,  which has a museum and more.  Oh, it was...mighty hot! 

We sat under a huge old black walnut tree and ate our lunch.

Our lunch included tuna sandwiches, made with home canned tuna.  Melissa and I had spent a day or so earlier canning tuna, after Mark cut and filleted about ten large tuna fish.  We can buy them right off the boats here on the coast.


Back to the Rogue River Ranch...


I loved the table and bench set inside, I think it was made of madrome wood....


I also loved the shade of red they had painted the main house, with the white trim....

Back home....I realized how much cooler we are here on the coast, even on our "hot" days!  The next day we were splitting firewood, after an hour or two (with me at the wood splitter), I said, "I need to stop and go play in the kitchen!"  Off to the kitchen to make something!  I made a yummy sour cream pound cake, and then a batch of cream puffs. 

When it came time to fill the cream puffs I whipped up the whipping cream in my KitchenAid, as I always have, but it just would NOT whip.  That was a first for me.  As a quick stand in we filled a few of them with canned whipped cream---I know, not very Martha-Stewartly.  Have I ever mentioned we don't live close to grocery stores?


The sour cream coffee cake recipe I use is included in my "Taste of Oregon" cookbook.  I *highly* recommend this cookbook. 
















Here's the recipe for you to try out.  I made mine in a round bundt cake pan, but you can use any cake pan you have.

SOUR CREAM COFFEE CAKE
2 cups sugar
1 1/2 cups butter
2 eggs
1 cup sour cream
1 teaspoon vanilla
2 cups flour
1/2 teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon baking powder.
    TOPPING:
    1/2 teaspoon cinnamon
    3 Tablespoons brown sugar
    1/2 cup chopped nuts (I used walnuts)

Cream together the sugar, butter, and eggs.  Add the sour cream, vanilla, flour, salt, and baking power; mix together.  Combine topping ingredients. Pour half the batter into a greased tube pan. Cover with half the topping.  Add the rest of the batter and top with the remainder of the topping.  Bake at 350F degrees for 1 hour.  Cover with foil for the last 15-20 minutes to prevent the top from getting too brown. 

Serve warm or cooled---great either way...

I've been having fun painting some "SAVE THE DATE" signs for Etsy buyers.  I needed a photo of a couple holding my sign, to show as an example, but only had Mark and I to use.  I laugh everytime I see this photo, as we're holding the SAVE THE DATE sign and we've now been married over 30 years.  We still save OUR date as one VERY SPECIAL DAY!


Blessings!   ~Heidi

(EDITED to change the recipe name.  It was sour cream coffee cake, not pound cake as I originally had written in error!)

Thursday, January 6, 2011

Scottie Dog Cookie Cutter Project #3: Easy Felt Coasters

What's on my table today? My Scottie Dog coasters!   (Click any photo to enlarge to see details!)


This is the third of what will be over 30 craft or cooking projects, all using cookie cutters! Every project will use a cookie cutter in one way or another. For most of them I've selected my favorite cookie cutter, the Scottie Dog! I hope you will be able to join in the fun and make some (or all) of the projects. And my desire to inspire you to think like a cookie cutter, making a "cookie" daily in a fast and fun way. Many of the projects are easy enough to do with children, though various precautions should be taken (ie: scissors, pins or hot glue guns).

PROJECT #3: Scottie Dog Felt Coaster

The ease of working with felt makes this project fun for novices and experts. A set can be crafted in just an hour, making it the perfect craft to make for gifts when you are short on time. As always my Scottie Dog cookie cutter jumped front and center to my craft table and offered his services as my pattern.

I first traced the cookie cutter onto a piece of cardboard. This way I could turn the cutter back and forth to fit in the most cuts per piece of felt. If your cookie cutter doesn’t have a “handle” as my Scottie Dog cutter does, you can just use the cutter to trace back and forth, skipping the cardboard pattern cutout.

Select your contrasting colors, I used red and white. I figured these could be used all year long, but especially at Christmas and quickly again for Valentine’s Day. Plan to make sets of four (or six), as coasters usually come in those size sets. I used a thicker white felt for the coaster, and a thinner red felt for the appliqué cutout. To trace on the red felt you could use a pencil, but I used a white Dress Maker Pencil so that it would show up nicely for my cutting. Cut 4 Scottie Dogs (or your chosen pattern) from the red felt.


If you use a pencil for tracing, plan to turn the pattern over to use on the coast so there is no evidence of pencil led. Also, if you mark your best pair of scissors for “Fabric Only” it helps keep them sharper long. Unfortunately I break my own rule and use these for everything. I was good at first….


Next cut 4 squares of the thicker white felt. I cut mine to 4 ½ inch squares. You can adjust your size as desired to fit your chosen pattern. Use a pair of Fiskars’ Scallop scissors for the squares, which makes a fun edge. If you don’t have a pair of these, maybe you have a zig-zag pair? Or, just cut them out with a flat edge. If you cut with a flat edge you could add red embroidery thread as a trim later. But, do put the Fiskar Scallop scissors on your “wish list”, they are load so fun and cut fabric, paper and more.



  
Now place your cut red felt pieces on your cut white felt coasters. Put a small dab of felt glue on the back of the red piece and set on the white coaster, centering and placing the pattern in the direction you want it to be. You can use a fabric glue or even a tacky craft glue as well. Let this set about ten minutes to hold the pattern in place. You can skip this step, but it makes it easier to sew on if attached somewhat.

Next, pull out a contrasting thread color. I used a red and white bakers’ string. Sew on your pattern using a running stitch and then you are finished!

If you feel like doing a little more stitching you could stitch around the perimeter of the white coaster, too.  Now tie up the set in a sweet little bundle and go to the kitchen for some White Hot Chocolate.



Heidi’s White Hot Chocolate Recipe

(Makes 4 cups)
2 cups whipping cream
3 cups milk
6 ounces white chocolate, shaved or chopped for easier melting
½ tsp. vanilla extract

In sauce pan on stove top mix all ingredients on medium high until white chocolate melts. Bring to near boil, but do not boil. Pour into four mugs and top with a dab of whipped cream and a sprinkling of cinnamon.


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Here is another hot white chocolate recipe I found at “about.com”:
White Hot Chocolate Mix by Linda Larsen
Ingredients:
• 2 cups grated white chocolate
• 1 (3-ounce) package white chocolate pudding mix
• 2 teaspoons vanilla powder
• 1-2 teaspoons dried orange peel, finely ground, if desired

In a small bowl, combine all ingredients. Store in an airtight container in a cool dark place.

To make White Hot Chocolate for Two:
 1-1/2 cups milk 1/4 cup White Hot Chocolate Mix
 In a small saucepan, heat the milk until bubbles form around edges. Add the White Hot Chocolate Mix and whisk until the chocolate is melted and beverage is blended. 2 servings
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 As an additional gift to give along with the coast you could mix up a batch of White Chocolate Hot Cocoa Mix, put in pretty bags. Be sure to give a tag with directions, too.

Here's another mix recipe:

Heidi’s White Hot Chocolate Cocoa Mix

2 cups instant nonfat dry powdered milk
1 cup powdered sugar
1 cup nondairy powdered cream (one with your favorite flavor is a bonus!)
8 ounces cup shaved or shredded white chocolate

Mix first three ingredients and place in a plastic bag. Put the shaved white chocolate in a smaller bag; place that bag in with the powdered mix, to keep it fresher longer. Seal the bag, attaching the instructions for making the hot white chocolate drink.
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Another even easier way to give out White Hot Chocolate mix with your coasters is to buy the mix premade here. This mix is the Big Train mix (this link is for prepacked individual servings) we use here in the summer for blended iced coffee drinks. It also mixes up great as a hot drink. I buy this in bulk at our local grocery outlet store. Around here we use this all summer long for blended drinks, saving tons of money over going to the coffee shops. Plus, when you live in the country it’s not economical to drive into town for a blended iced coffee at your whim.
Big Train Blended Ice Coffee, White Chocolate Latte, 2.8-Ounce Bags (Pack of 25)

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White Hot Chocolate Tags:   Add this to your packaged mix using red rick-rack:
White Hot Chocolate Mix TAGs for Scottie Dog Cookie Cutter Project Number 3

Cut tags out with scalloped scissors and attach to bag of mix. Pre-measure 16 tablespoon per bag, enough for 4 cups of white hot chocolate to go with your Scottie Dog felt coasters.


This felt coast craft can be made with any of your favorite cookie cutters.  For Valentine's Day use a heart:


Here’s a set of coaster I made a few years back for autumn, using a leaf cookie cutter. I doubled up the coaster felt for contrasting colors, and used brown embroidery thread to sew on the leaf appliqué to the first coast layer before attaching the two layers. The coaster layers were attached with felt glue.


So, go sew, create, craft, mix stuff up in the kitchen and enjoy the new year!
   Blessings, Heidi

(Linked with Romantic Home's Show & Tell Friday)

Friday, December 31, 2010

Look at what we built! Gingerbread houses!


Working on homes  is one of my skills.  Mark and I have always worked on the homes we've bought and sold.  I'm pretty good at setting windows, putting up cedar siding and so much more.  So it's only natural for me to take this home building skill into the kitchen....for Gingerbread Home Building!  I organized a party for 10 to build away, with sugar and spice, and everything nice! I had to limit it to ten becuase more than ten kids (big &/or small) was all I thought I could handle eating so much candy simultaneously!  I invited family, friends and very special neighbors.  My only instructions were for them to bring candy of any sort and any amount.  That's what really added to the fun.  I had a huge tray of candy and various pretzels, etc.  What the guests brought added to what I had made for a gold mine of building supplies!  (Note:  this is one way to use up saved Halloween candy!  One guests brought a big bowl full and it all worked wonderfully!)  I realize it's now after Christmas, but I wanted to post about it and I just know this post will be read again for Christmas 2011! 

My "Gingerbread House Making Party" was one of my favorite events this 2010 Christmas season.  I'm thinking now that a "Love Shack Making Party" might be fun for Valentine's Day.  What do you think?  For privacy reasons I'm only going to show photos of my family here on my blog, but there were others here as well.  

Remember, you can click on any photo to enlarge....to see every sugar crystal and gingerbread crumb!
Here's where I started packing the pounds, I ate all the trimings....oops....

I ended up making batches of gingerbread dough, each batch making 2 houses.  The houses were cut from cardboard cutouts I had drawn up from my gingerbread house making party last year.  They seem to be the perfect size, not too small and nothing like Martha Stewart's grand masion! If you decide to do this, do not double the recipe, it really does turn out better if you just make one batch at a time.  Immediately after taking the pieces from the oven, re-trim them, using the original cardboard cutout as a guide. My Mark is going to make a set of cookie cutter cutouts for me, which would make it fast than hand-cutting each piece. Oh, did I mention you can eat the trimed pieces as you go?  Yes, I do...yes, I did. 

Can you just smell how good my kitchen smells?
I had to use every inch of counter space for my productions....it sure smelled good in my kitchen!

I loved "building" the houses...

Next step is to "build" the houses.  I make mine simple, no windows or doors cut out, so the framing of the house is easy.  Using royal icing, (made with merangue powder, powdered sugar, and warm water), I "glued" the houses.  This is very fast and easy when the icing is a good consitancy.  If it's too wet, the pieces slip around, but at that point you can use long pins to pin the pieces together until it dies.  But, as I said, easier than that is to get the icing to the correct consistancy!

A clean table....not for long!

I covered pieces of cardboard with aluminum foil to set the houses on, that way the guests could have "grass" or "snow" around their house bases.  Last year I used all white plates, but I think the covered cardboard works best.  And I don't loose any of my white plates!

Gather supplies, candies, dyed coconut (for grass) and anything you can find,
these houses look great with any food items!  Gather up books for guests to get ideas from, too.

I gathered up my gingerbread house books from my collection, and also check a couple out at the library.  The very best book as far as directions is the "Gingerbread House" book by Christa Currie (1992).  She has only included hand drawn illustrations, but the information she presents is great.  The other book that's pretty old (1984) is "The Gingerbread Book", which is packed with ideas for creations even beyond the houses.  There are color photos in the is book, so I also highly recomment if you're doing any gingerbread house making research. 

You can see the tray filled with some of the goodies I was beginning to set out.  Once all the guests arrived it was overflowing like crazy.  The tray is an old metal refrigerator tray that I "picked" off my brother's inherited junk yard  years ago.  I spray painted it white and it works for so many things.  For this party I layed some Christmas napkins on it.  (Oh, and my brother's property is all cleaned up now...I brought home more than my fair share of "treasures", though, to help him out!)

Ellie worked long and hard at decorating her house. She's three and I thought she did very well.
Then she spent the rest of the day pulling her candy off just as meticulously to eat it!

I had the tubes of white royal icing ready for each guest. I made yellow, red and green as well.  For next year I need to find better coloring for red.  When I set the "red" on the table one little boy said, "hey that's pink".  You see why I need better red coloring paste for next year!  At that point I said, "I think I should make "spring" themed gingerbread houses, as I 'm better at making pastel colors!"  Hum, and "Easter Gingerbread House Making Party" sounds like fun!

John Mark also worked long and hard on his house.  He is 4 1/2, and talked non-stop the whole party.  It was funny, he told us all about how he and my son-in-law built their house and barn (he really did help with the barn!).
Melissa even had Claira in on the building.  Melissa made a darling house.  Last night she had us over for a turkey dinner and there on her kitchen counter was the house....ALL goodies had been picked off and eaten!  I'm not sure who ate all that candy....maybe all 5 of them did!

She was very serious...

This sweet guest had piped on "PEACE" and "JOY" on her rooftops.

A neighborhood of gingerbread houses.  The one on the far right was Ellie's, she packed so much on her house that a sidewall caved in. At that point she just started loading the house inside with candy!

                             
Melissa inspecting the homes.  The tree in our kitchen was one Mark grew on our property. When one young guest first saw it he said, "Wow! I've never seen a tree like that before!"  It made me realize we've had homegrown trees for so long I had forgotten what the lot/store bought trees even looked like.



Here's the gingerbread recipe:

GINGERBREAD RECIPE FOR HOUSES
1 cube margarine (or butter)
1/2 cup brown sugar (dark or light, but dark will make the dough darker)
1/2 cup molasses
3 1/2 cup sifted flour (it really does help to sift, but don't worry if you don't)
1/2 tsp. salt
1 tsp baking soda (make sure it's fresh, not old!)

1 1/2 tsp. ginger
1 tsp. cinnamon
1/4 tsp. cloves
1/3 cup warm water


Mix up the margarine, brown sugar and molasses. Add all the remaining dry ingredients, alternating with the water until nicely mixed into a dough that sticks together. You may need to add a little more water, or possibly a little more flour. Wrap in plastic wrap and chill for about 20 minutes, if you chill longer the dough gets too stiff.


Lightly flour work surface, rolling one half of dough at a time. Cut out house shapes, re- left over dough pieces. Dust flour off pieces as you place on cookie sheet. The best way to bake is to use Silpat baking mats. If you don't have those, use parchment paper. If you don't have that, lightly spray or grease cookie sheets before placing cut-out pieces on it.


Bake in a 350 degree oven for 10 to 15 minutes. Don't under bake, as you need them to be solid enough to hold their own shape. Remove from oven and cool slightly. Then re-cut the shapes, so they are all the original size. (The dough often expands a little as baking.)

Note: A lot of people recommend rolling the dough and cutting it out right on the back of a cookie or baking sheet. I didn't find success that way. My best success was cutting on the work surface and then transferring to a Silpat mat. Those mats are worth their weight in gold!






Here's the royal icing recipe:

ROYAL ICING (Meringue method)
4 cups powdered sugar
3 Tblspn Wilton meringue powder
6 to 8 Tblspn warm water


Mix and beat for 6 to 8 minutes.  Put tips in Wilton disposable decorating bags, screw on sealing cap outside (okay--just follow the directions on decorating tips package!) and away you go!  Set your filled decorating bags in tall cups, with damp napkin on bottom to keep tip moist.


Here's an alternative royal icing, this works just as well if you don't have meringue powder:


ROYAL ICING (Egg white method)
Begin beating 3 egg whites in mixer,
then slowly add (or your kitchen will look like a snow storm) 3 1/2 cups powdered sugar.
Beat 6 to 8 minutes, until thick but not too stiff.  It's an art...you learn it as you go!


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That's it.  Please have fun.  Please make sure you have a couple days to do it all, as this is not a fast kitchen crafting event!  :)   You will be rewarded with BIG smiles and HAPPY hearts!


Here's Melissa's completed gingerbread house:
 

I also made houses for our newly weds and my brother and his wife. 
   


Here's a couple Photoshop coloring pages I made, too...I may use one  for next year's invitations!

                         



Tomorrow is a new day.  A new year.  My personal prayer is that in all I do, I give glory and honor to God.
Blessings, Heidi