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Pop Tart Family

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We are a Pop Tart family.

Over the Christmas holidays, we ended up playing a family game with a group of relatives that was focused on products and brands. My boys were on a team with a third person and a card came up that had to do with cereal. I knew they would be at a loss as the only one in our house that will touch cereal is me.

When my wife and I were first living together I found that she had the same breakfast every day: one package of unfrosted strawberry pop tarts. Me, I needed variety, but she was perfectly fine having that same breakfast every day for years.

Those years went by and after making a conscious decision to eat healthier came, the pop tarts were replaced, but by that time my kids were hooked. They liked a variety of pop tarts, but still wanted those rectangular pastries for breakfast. They still do today, unless I force an outage and drive them to other items.

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I came across this recipe a while back and saved it until just recently. These were pretty straightforward to make.

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The recipe called for grape but it will work just as easy with any flavor.

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Making the dough.

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Resting in the fridge.

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Rolled out and cut. Use a ruler.

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After I started making the tarts I realized I had just used up all the parchment paper in the house with another recipe. As a consequence and not wanting to burn the tarts, I baked them on a baking stone. Unfortunately the stone does not have a lip to it and as some of the jelly ran out during baking, I made a mess in the oven.

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Noticed the edges crimped via fork? Fancy….

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Making the glaze.

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The glaze had a distinct orange flavor (I did add the optional orange liqueur). I think next time, I would choose a less sticky choice and go with a standard glaze.

Grape Jelly Breakfast Tarts

Prep Time: 1 hours 30 minutes | Cook Time: 0 hours 30 minutes | Makes: 5 tarts | Difficulty: Intermediate

Ingredients:

For the Tarts:

  • 3 cups all-purpose flour, plus more for dusting
  • 2 teaspoons granulated sugar
  • 1 teaspoon salt
  • 4 tablespoons cold shortening, cut into small pieces
  • 2 sticks cold unsalted butter, cut into small pieces
  • 1/2 cup grape jelly
  • 1 large egg, beaten
  • 1/3 cup milk

For the Glaze:

  • 1 tablespoon granulated sugar
  • Juice of 2 oranges
  • 2 tablespoons orange liqueur (optional)
  • 3/4 cup confectioners’ sugar
  • Grated orange zest, for topping

Directions:

Make the tarts: Pulse the flour, granulated sugar and salt in a food processor until combined. Add the shortening and about one-quarter of the butter and pulse until they disappear into the flour, about 30 seconds. Add the remaining butter and pulse a few times, until the mixture looks like coarse meal with pea-size bits of butter. Add 1/2 cup ice water and pulse once or twice, until the dough just comes together. Turn the dough out onto a piece of plastic wrap, form into a disk and wrap tightly; chill at least 1 hour and up to 1 day. (For quicker tarts, use refrigerated pie dough and skip this step.)

On a lightly floured surface, roll out the dough into a 10-by-14-inch rectangle, about 1/8 inch thick. Cut out ten 4-by-3-inch rectangles using a toaster pastry press or a paring knife. Transfer to a parchment paper-lined baking sheet. Chill at least 15 minutes.

Spread 5 of the dough rectangles with a heaping tablespoonful of jelly each, leaving a 1/2-inch border all around. Brush the edges with the beaten egg, then cover with the remaining 5 dough rectangles. Crimp the edges with a fork or use the toaster pastry press to seal. Chill at least 30 minutes. Meanwhile, preheat the oven to 400 degrees F.

Bake the tarts until flaky and golden, 20 to 25 minutes, brushing with the milk after 10 minutes. Transfer to a rack to cool.

Meanwhile, make the glaze: Bring the granulated sugar, orange juice and liqueur (if using) to a simmer in a large skillet over low heat; cook until reduced by half, 5 to 7 minutes. Remove from the heat and whisk in the confectioners’ sugar until smooth. Let cool. Brush the glaze on the tarts, sprinkle with the orange zest and let set, 5 minutes.

Source: http://m.foodnetwork.com/recipes/recipe/560315

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Guest Post: German Pancake Bowls

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Today we have another guest post from Diana at Food n Thought Peddler. Unlike Diana, I am a morning person. It is rare that I am not awake and up before my alarm goes off as equally rare that I’m not in bed before 11PM. Take a look at Food n Thought Peddler and Diana’s post below…

I don’t know how about you, but I’m not a morning person, at all. When I was very young and had to get up early, my mom would always say “you’ll get used to it as you grow older”. Nope, mom, decades later, and I’m still not there. Maybe I should give myself another 10-20 years, right when insomnia settles in. Though knowing me, I’d probably be even grumpier, that I didn’t sleep well AND had to get up early.

Plus some people are able to get up as soon as their alarm goes off. Nope, not me. I need another 15 minutes in bed to even pry my eyes open, and then at least an hour to get ready as the first 20 minutes are usually spent on a customary morning meltdown that I had to get up in the first place. So by the time I’m finally at work and sitting down to have breakfast, a couple of hours have passed, and I’m feeling more human. Mornings really should start sometime around noon!

And I guess it’s no wonder that I happened to create a child who is not a morning person either (that on top of the usual pleasantries you’d get from a teenager), so some early weekday hours are really charged and full of sparks flying. It’s better to just spend them in silence I think, or you may lose the last drop of sanity even before the workday has begun.

Weekends then become our “moderation” days, to sleep in, have a leisurely breakfast along with some civilized conversations. Yes, it does help that it’s all happening around noon. And no matter what, a nice breakfast food is usually making its appearance to lure the sleepy teenager out of bed. The dish below has been “an eye opener” on weekend mornings these past couple of months, it’s pretty quick and fairly versatile to satisfy many moods and make any morning a good one indeed.

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German Pancake “Bowls”

Makes 18 pancake bowls:

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1 cup of milk (I used unsweetened almond milk)
1 cup of flour (I used Cup4Cup gluten free mix)
4 Tbspoons of butter, melted
6 eggs
1 tspoon of vanilla
1 tspoon of orange zest
1/2 tspoon of sea salt
Berries or other cut up fruit or jam
Powdered sugar and mint for garnish

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Combine all ingredients except melted butter in a blender gradually adding flour to make sure that no clumps are left. Then blend in butter a little at a time to temper the eggs. The mix will resemble a bit thinner pancake batter.

image (5)Preheat the oven to 400 degrees. Butter the muffin pans really well to make sure the pancakes won’t stick, fill them just about half full.

image (6)Bake for about 15 minutes or until the tops are golden and look puffy. Once you remove them from the oven, they deflate a bit or you can gently push the tops in to make them look like a bowl.

imageRemove them from the pans and fill in with berries, cut up fruit or jam, sprinkle with powdered sugar and garnish with chopped mint leaves.
image (7)And you can play with other possible toppings since the pancakes are not sweet, like chopped tomato and bacon crumble topped with shredded mozzarella or salmon roe and scallions.

And since the pancakes are kind of hollow inside and resemble cream puffs, I think it’d be fun to inject them with jelly or the actual cream. That could be my next morning project! :)

Diana

Guest Editor: Passover Recipes

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We have a guest editor for a collection of Passover recipes. Naomi is a Rabbi and has been a guest blogger several times here on the blog. I’d asked for a few recipes from the list and she has produced this great post. Take a look and even if you do not celebrate Passover, there are some great recipes here.

The Ranting Chef thought it would be fun and helpful to have a post recommending recipes for the upcoming holiday of Passover (this year from the eve of March 25 – April 2). With over a year’s worth of posts, his blog has quite a few options that are able to be eaten with the Passover dietary laws or easily modified. As I’m beginning to prepare my kitchen for the holiday and plan meals, it seemed like perfect timing to go through the blog. (See below for my take on Passover and food.)

My basic advice for cooking for Passover is as follows:

- Don’t overuse prepackaged foods (no offense to Manishewitz and its factory in Cincinnati)

- Don’t eat or try to make what really can’t be made well

- Modify favorite dishes

- Be creative, innovate!

- Use fresh fruits, vegetables, and eggs (and for non-vegetarians, meat, fish, and poultry)

- Use the wonder-food quinoa as a substitute for rice or couscous

- Use spaghetti squash as a substitute for pasta

- Creatively use matzo or matzo meal as a flour substitute (best for breading an ingredient or creating a topping, not so much for baking)

Recipe Recommendations:

Here are the recipes I identified that can be made koksher for Passover and are a combination of traditional Jewish Ashkenazi (Eastern European) cuisine and new tastes.

Breakfast

Photo Nov 26, 6 04 44 PMQuinoa Eggbake

Appetizers:

Mushroom DiMushroom Dip

(use matzo meal instead of flour)

10-servedPickled Herring

Soups:

Tomato Soup (either the awesome way I presented it in

photo6Roasted Tomato Soup

or in the Ranting Chef’s modified version in

Photo Dec 01, 12 36 56 PMSpicy Roasted Tomato Soup)

Main Dishes:

Photo Apr 14, 4 59 30 PMSpicy BBQ Brisket

Photo Nov 07, 6 03 03 PMMatzo Meal Chicken Tenders

Photo Sep 06, 5 39 28 PMQuinoa Broccoli Casserole

(use matzo meal; Ashkenazi tradition would eliminate

the chickpeas and use another vegetable oil instead of sunflower oil)

Sides:

Photo Apr 05, 6 10 38 PMBrocolini w Matzo Crumble

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Apple Sweet Potato Bake

fetass6Spaghetti Squash with Honey and Feta

(spaghetti squash can be used as a pasta substitute in numerous ways)

Desserts:

photo6Matzo Toffee Cookies

Apple Crisp 6Apple Crisp

(made with Matzo meal instead of flour)

IMG_2145Lemon Curd

Passover & It’s Elaborate Approach to Food

Passover is a holiday celebrated through eating. It is the Jewish holiday par excellence for infusing its cuisine with symbolic meaning. All for the purpose of telling the Biblical story of the exodus from slavery and for spiritually examining themes of bondage and freedom as they are experienced today, Vegetables are dipped in salt water for tasting the bitterness of slavery. Charoset (a mixture of crushed apples, cinnamon and red wine) is eaten to taste and feel the texture of the mortar slaves used for building. Passover is a family holiday in which it is incumbent upon parents to tell the story of the Exodus from slavery to their children and many of the traditions and food are playful and intended to prompt questioning from even the youngest child. One more extreme tradition for trying to connect with the themes of the holiday and to prompt questioning is a Persian Jewish custom of whacking one another with scallions at one point during the Seder (festive meal) to reenact slave drivers whipping their slaves.

More recent Passover Seder innovations have included placing an orange on the Seder Plate as a statement of advocacy for gay rights and the use of a Miriam’s Cup filled with water for women’s rights.The most well-known food is matzo, an unleavened bread usually made from water and flour (of any of the five major grains) that have been carefully tended from harvest through the baking process to make certain that they have no leaven in them. This flat bread symbolizes the bread of the escaping slaves who did not have time for their bread to rise. Mystical and psychological interpretations of the holiday encourage using this time to get rid of whatever “puffs up” our personalities – whether it is ego or arrogance. Matzo then symbolizes being more down to earth.

Besides the foods eaten with intentional symbolism, religious Jews also observe a food restrictions throughout the 8 days of the holiday. (In the State of Israel and in the Reform Movement, 7 days are observed; the Bible calls for 7 days and rabbinic Judaism added an additional day). One can think of it as a spiritual version of Chopped (or Diced!). The basic food restriction is to avoid foods or drinks made by five grains – wheat, rye, barley, oats, and spelt – unless they have been prepared according to specific guidelines. Except for the wheat in matzo and matzo meal, most Jews avoid these ingredients altogether.

Ashkenazic Jews (who trace their ancestry and customs to Eastern Europe) additionally follow a custom of also not eating rice, corn, peanuts, or other vegetables in the pea family, treating them as hametz (leven) because these products swell when cooked and so resemble a leavening process. Middle Eastern and Sephardic Jews (who trace their ancestry and traditions to Spain and Portugal] allow these products to be eaten.

Naomi

The Foodie Smash

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Food is a great way to connect with others. Most people like to talk about food (what their favorites are, what they had last night, etc…) and often times you can find some shared experience around food. While I realized this long ago, once I started writing the blog it has become a much more common occurrence for me to have food discussions with friends, family and co-workers.

Recently, while I was waiting for a meeting to start, I struck up a conversation with a former boss of mine. She is quite the foodie herself and we quickly went to recently made items. One of her recent menu items, Smashed Roasted Potatoes, intrigued me. I not only hadn’t had them before,I don’t think I’d heard of them. She walked me through the (very easy) recipe and after I got home, I found the recipe online.

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These were so easy and sooooo good.

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The standard recipe is pretty straightforward in its limited ingredients. I think in the future I may play around a bit with additional spices, or maybe even throw some shredded cheese over them at the end.

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You have to cook the potatoes first. A key is the smashing. You want to get the potatoes as thin as possible as long as you retain enough integrity that they hold together. The thinner they are, the quicker they will crisp up.

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I like how the colors of the broken skin look on the potatoes.

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Crispy Smashed Roasted Potatoes

Makes: 4 as a side dish

Ingredients:

  • 12 to 15 baby red or yellow potatoes (about 1-1/2 oz. each; 1-1/2 to 2 inches in diameter)
  • 2-3/4 tsp. kosher salt
  • 1/2 cup extra-virgin olive oil

Directions:

Put the potatoes in a large saucepan (preferably in one layer) and cover with at least an inch of water. Add 2 tsp. kosher salt to the water. Bring the water to a boil over high heat, reduce to a simmer, and cook the potatoes until they are completely tender and can be easily pierced with a metal or wood skewer. Make sure they are cooked through but don’t overcook. The total cooking time will be 30 to 35 minutes.

While the potatoes are cooking, set up a double layer of clean dishtowels on your countertop. As the potatoes finish cooking, remove them individually from the water, and let them drain and sit for just a minute or two on the dishtowels.

Fold another dishtowel into quarters, and using it as a cover, gently press down on one potato with the palm of your hand to flatten it to a thickness of about 1/2 inch. Repeat with all the potatoes. Don’t worry if some break apart a bit; you can still use them.

Cover a large rimmed baking sheet with aluminum foil; put a sheet of parchment on top of the foil. Transfer the flattened potatoes carefully to the baking sheet and let them cool completely at room temperature.

Remove the pan of potatoes from the refrigerator, if prepared ahead. Heat the oven to 450°F. Alternatively, if you have a convection function, turn it on and set the temperature at 400°F. Sprinkle the potatoes with about 3/4 tsp. salt and pour the olive oil over them. Lift the potatoes gently to make sure some of the oil goes underneath them and that they are well coated on both sides. Roast the potatoes until they’re crispy and deep brown around the edges, about 30 minutes if using a convection oven, 30 to 40 minutes if roasting conventionally, turning over once gently with a spatula or tongs halfway through cooking. Serve hot.

Nutritional Info:

Size : based on four servings; Calories (kcal): 270; Fat (g): 20; Fat Calories (kcal): 180; Saturated Fat (g): 3; Protein (g): 2; Monounsaturated Fat (g): 15; Carbohydrates (g): 20; Polyunsaturated Fat (g): 2; Sodium (mg): 520; Cholesterol (mg): 0; Fiber (g): 2;

Source: http://m.finecooking.com/recipes/crispy-smashed-roasted-potatos.aspx

Two Out of Three Ain’t Bad

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Some recipes sound really good, some look really good and finally, others taste really good. How about Croissant French Toast with Strawberry Syrup? As the singer Meatloaf says, “Two out of three ain’t bad!”

I saw this recipe and fell in love with the idea of making it. Two of my nephews were home from college for the holidays and after a long night of video game playing with my sons, a motley crew stumbled to the table for breakfast. Waiting for them was a platter of the croissant French toast. It looked glorious.

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It did not taste bad. In fact the taste was pretty good. What was surprising was the texture. Think of croissants. They are made with many very thin layers of dough. Horizontal layers. After turning them into French toast, they were tougher than I would have thought and required more effort to cut and chew than I would have guessed. Of course by the time I made these, they were day old (bought them the morning before) and that might have had something to do with it.

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I had some frozen strawberries, so I thawed them out. During the summer, I would have used some fresh ones for sure.

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Dipped and frying up.

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Isn’t that a glorious looking platter?

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Yum!

Croissant French Toast With Fresh Strawberry Syrup

Prep Time: 15 minutes | Cook Time: 4 minutes | Makes: Makes 4 servings

Ingredients:

  • 4 large day-old croissants
  • 3/4 cup milk
  • 2 large eggs
  • 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
  • 2 tablespoons butter
  • 3 tablespoons powdered sugar
  • Sweetened Whipped Cream (optional)
  • Fresh Strawberry Syrup

Directions:

Slice croissants in half lengthwise.

Whisk together milk, eggs, and vanilla. Pour into a shallow dish. Dip croissant halves into egg mixture, coating well.

Melt 1 tablespoon butter in a large nonstick skillet over medium heat. Add four croissant halves, and cook about 2 minutes on each side or until golden brown. Repeat procedure with remaining butter and croissant halves. Sprinkle with powdered sugar; top with Sweetened Whipped Cream, if desired, and Fresh Strawberry Syrup.

Source: http://m.myrecipes.com/details/searchR.rbml?id=10000001057279.xml&bcat=search&cat=Search%20Result&fl=recipe/croissant-french-toast-with-fresh-strawberry-syrup-10000001057279/

 

March 1st is National Peanut Butter Lover’s Day

In honor of today’s food holiday, please revisit the following recipes that use or feature this ingredient:
Buckeyes,   Peanut Butter Banana and Jelly French Toast, Peanut Butter Chocolate Brownies,  Peanut Noodles With Edamame, Slow Cooker Mongolian Beef

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