Showing posts with label food. Show all posts
Showing posts with label food. Show all posts

Sunday, October 2, 2011

Rainy Sunday

What better way to start your day on a dreary October morning than with a hot cup of coffee (or tea; pick your poison) and a pumpkin doughnut?


I'm not normally a big doughnut fan, but come October, these hit the spot (and the early morning pumpkin craving). Turns out there's plenty of people in my knitting group with the same love of all-things-pumpkin as myself. 

In addition to some sample knitting, I decided to shave a sweater today (oh the things you say when you're a knitter). The Essential Cardigan was finished back in May (on my birthday, no less) and how foolish I was to be concerned that I might not get to wear it until fall. It's been in regular rotation anytime I was headed to a chilly movie theater or classroom and, while I love the yarn it was knit in (Naturally Harmony 8 Ply), it has managed to pill something fierce.


Luckily I have an electric sweater shaver that I bought at Target ages ago. I've used it on not only woolens, but tee shirts and more.  I bought it before I was a knitter and am so grateful to have it now because it makes keeping my knitwear in tip-top shape much easier.

Monday, January 3, 2011

Ravioli

Yesterday's ravioli turned out wonderful! They took about three hours total to make and looked like darling little cheese stuffed pillows.
 
From this:

To this:

Sorry about the tiny pictures. I forgot my camera so Adam took these on his phone. 

And for those who were asking, the tamale recipe is posted

Saturday, January 1, 2011

Too Many Tamales

One of my favorite things about Christmas and the week leading up to New Year's Day is the crazy amount of cooking that gets done. When I moved to Ohio from California and was preparing to celebrate my first Ohio Christmas, I had a shocking realization that one special food would be missing from our holiday dinner: tamales. Growing up, my grandma on my dad's side made tamales for Christmas every year. Having only sons, the family was never really involved in her holiday cooking (I did offer once but she said she didn't need help). On my mother's side, despite there being 4 sisters, after my grandmother passed away in 1992, the tamale tradition went with her. Since I desperately wanted tamales I did the only thing I could think to do: Google a recipe. Along with my Googled recipe I talked with my parents and my grandma trying to figure out what the best way to go about everything would be. They turned out surprisingly well that first year and better each year since (this is my fourth tamale year!). 

Rainy day = dark pictures

Tamale assembly is quite the process, especially when you're going at it alone (and I only made 4 dozen). Then the steaming where you have to make sure you don't boil the pot dry. I started at around nine thirty this morning and finally, at three thirty this afternoon, the tamales were cooked and ready for consumption. I should mention that I cook the meat overnight in the slow cooker in order to save some time.  As I like to tell Adam, I'm trying to preserve our heritage. Tomorrow I'll be learning to make ravioli with his grandma in the same way she learned from her mother-in-law who immigrated from Italy. Yum!  

I did utilize the steaming time to get some knitting in. I'm a bit more than halfway done with the back of Adam's sweater which I will definitely finish and block tonight. That will leave me with the sleeves and seaming left. Not too shabby. 

Happy New Year! 


Andrea's Tamale Recipe or Tamales de Andrea
Just FYI: I cook the meat overnight, soak husks before making filling, make filling, make the masa, then assemble and cook.
  
Corn Husks (hojas)
1 bag corn husks (I buy these at the Mexican food store)
  • Before you begin to make the meat filling, fill your sink with warm water and soak your husks. You will need approximately 48 large husks. If you find you have a lot of smaller husks, soak more. You can always soak more as you need but they will need to soak in the water at least a half hour to an hour.

Beef Filling
2-2.5lb beef roast 
  • Cook meat on low overnight in slow cooker (approximately 8-9 hours). Cool in bowl. Remove excess fat and save meat broth. Shred with fingers.

1/2 c. corn oil
4-6T chili powder
2-3T garlic powder
1-3T cumin
1T black pepper
2T salt.
  • Mix all dry ingredients together in small bowl. Warm oil in microwave. Mix both oil and seasoning (a bit at a time) into shredded meat with hands until all is evenly distributed.
Tamale Masa (dough)
~2lbs. MASECA (this is like a corn flour. I found it at my local grocery store in the ethnic food isle. 1 bag is over 4lbs so this is about half a bag)
3T paprika
1T cumin
3T chili powder
3T garlic powder
2c. corn oil
2 quarts warm water
leftover meat broth

  • Mix all dry ingredients in a large bowl (I use a whisk to make sure spices are evenly distributed). Slowly mix in oil and meat broth using your hands (a spoon just doesn't cut it. Sorry). Add water, mixing until it is about the consistency of thick peanut butter (You probably won't use all the water. It should be thick but sticky enough to spread)

Assembly
This is where things can get tricky. Use a dish towel to dry your husks. I set mine in a strainer for a bit then dry about a dozen at a time. Using a pastry spreader (I don't know what it's really called but it's about 2 inches wide and you might use it to scrape the bowl while your making a batter or something) you will spread a small scoop of masa onto the dried corn husk (it won't stick if it's wet). You will know that your masa is moist enough if it spreads easily and does not break apart. I spread masa over the widest half of the husk only two thirds across. The two thirds covered in masa will be folded in half and the plain third will be wrapped around the others. Make sense? Here is a helpful link:

South of the South: Making Tamales: an excellent resource! This is the website I used the first time.

I use about 1 tablespoon of meat filling in each tamale. Wrap them up so the meat is enclosed in the masa, stack them and set aside. This takes some time! 

Cooking:
I use a regular large pot with a steamer tray and a electric steamer that has a basket insert. Stack the tamales standing upright in steaming basket. You don't want them to get wet while they cook or when your put more water in. Cover the tamales with any leftover corn husks or a cotton dish towel. Make sure you will be able to add water throughout the cooking process. Steam the tamales for approximately 1.5-2 hours. I check mine about every 20 minutes adding water as needed. At about 1.5 hours, take one out and let it cool for 5 minutes. Unwrap.  If the masa is solid and comes away from the husk easily, they're ready! I cooked mine for about two hours.

Yields about 4 dozen

Good luck! Feel free to email me if you ever try this and have any questions.

Thursday, November 25, 2010

Thanksgiving Pies

I love to bake pies. I'm not really sure what it is, but it makes me feel very Midwestern. I didn't grow up making pies (Sarah Lee did most of the pie work in our house) but since moving to Ohio, I've taken up pie baking. At Christmas and Thanksgiving gatherings, I'm in charge of the pies. My father-in-law even gave up his king of pies crown and said that mine are better. Now that was a moment.

My plan for this Thanksgiving was to make the pies last night. Instead, I had some sort of nasty stomach bug and spent most of yesterday afternoon and evening in bed, fighting a fever, and sipping peppermint tea. I woke up this morning with a lot of work ahead of me. My parents are coming in from California today (yay!) which leaves all the cooking in my hands (not really yay). I got to baking first thing, thinking it would be best to get the pies out of the way. I made the filling and rolled out my dough. I took my beautiful pies out of the oven and let them cool on the counter. Now, let me preface this with I'm already short one pie. I had planned to make two pumpkin and one apple but since I didn't cook yesterday I didn't realize that I would not have enough cinnamon for all three. So I went ahead with the two pumpkin only. Anyway, as I said, pies were cooling on the counter. I am sitting at the dining room table, knitting, when Adam walks into the kitchen and yells, "NO!"
"Hazel's eating the pies!" 
I ran into the kitchen saying, "what!?" And sure enough, Hazel was eating the pie.


Thankfully, I'm feeling better today and can laugh at this. And thankfully I made two pumpkin pies. I love that girl, but she's never been easy to live with.  I'll continue to be thankful to have her and Timber in my life (although Timber would never eat a pie). 

Happy Thanksgiving! 

Sunday, October 24, 2010

Pumpkin Muffins

One of my favorite things about fall is the chance to eat all the yummy pumpkin goodies. Pumpkin bread is a fall staple in our house. Last year I made a pumpkin stew (stewed in the pumpkin!) which was savory and delicious. This year I decided to try a new recipe for pumpkin muffins.

I got the recipe from the Pioneer Woman website, which I had never been to before. This website will definitely keep me busy through this holiday season.


Anyway, the muffin recipe, as given, only yields a dozen muffins. One dozen muffins in my house will last maybe two days (keep in mind, my husband may only have one). I doubled the recipe and got a full two dozen. The frosting recipe however, makes more than you'd think. I didn't double this recipe, and I've had enough to frost all of the muffins that I've eaten so far, with a lot still left. These turned out so moist and yummy. They're not terribly big so I don't feel too guilty eating two (or three) in one sitting. Maybe they'll last through Wednesday.

Tuesday, September 7, 2010

End of Summer

This weekend I tried to do some things I had hoped to do all summer. I made my own pasta sauce (from scratch!) on Friday which turned out delizioso, if I don't say so myself. I love pasta and tend to cook it once a week. Lately, however, I've gotten extremely tired of the jar sauce. It's all starting to taste the same. My sauce was much more flavorful than the jar stuff and I'm sure it had to do with the fresh basil. I plan on making more and promise to share the recipe with you when I do (if I can remember). It's really very simple. 

I also got some zucchini bread made this weekend. It turned out much better than my last loaf which, if I'm being really honest with myself and my readers, turned out too hard, too dry, and too not tasty. It was not moist at all. I'm thinking I may have forgotten to add the vegetable oil. Whoops. So I remembered this time. Much better. We're already halfway through the first loaf.

I also started knitting a new pair of socks. If you recall, I've only ever knit 3 socks: one is currently a duster and the pair I gave away.  This pair is for me. I really like the idea of handknit socks, but I guess I've felt like I'm not a good enough knitter, yet. I prefer dpns but then I get ladders. After I brought this up at knitting group a couple weeks ago, Amy gave me the "everyone gets ladders!" speech. This helped me to reevaluate the sock knitting and I cast on for a pair on Friday. I'm not a super speedy knitter but I knit on this sock all weekend and by Monday afternoon, I had one whole sock

and it fits perfect! I pulled as tight as I could between needles and there isn't too much laddering which makes me very happy. So now my next task is to make the second sock. I also joined the Sock Knitters Anonymous group on Ravelry with the idea that maybe this would give me some incentive to knit. They're just starting their Sockdown which I'm considering participating in. I like the idea of knitting one pair of socks a month for a year and having a drawerful of handknit socks at the end. But first, I still need to finish my swap project since the birthday swap is around the corner. Let's not get ahead of ourselves.  

Tuesday, June 22, 2010

Slow Going

I had fully intended to have some knitting to show you this week. However, Adam and I spent a long weekend on the coast of North Carolina visiting friends and enjoying the beach.


I suppose I could have taken my knitting to the beach with me but with the humidity as high as it was every day, the sand was sticking to everything. I took my book to the beach and even that came home full of sand.

I did a little work on my Spring Garden Tee during the long ride back to Ohio. And I do mean little. Waking up at 3am for a 10 and a half hour drive isn't quite as conducive to knitting as you would imagine. 


This is how it looked when I got home on Monday. It pretty much still looks the same. On Sunday night I had encountered a knot in my yarn. This was the second knot in the fourth skein. I kept knitting and didn't think too much of it since it was hidden on the wrong side. Today however, I was knitting and suddenly came upon a giant hole in my fabric. The knot had come apart and undone my knitting about an inch and a half up. I had to frog back, fix the hole and knit on. So like I said, I'm pretty much in the same place as I had been. 

In the last post, K. asked where I got my tiramisu recipe from. It is from a cookbook called Williams Sonoma Italian Favorites. The recipe calls for pound cake instead of lady fingers so I make my own pound cake for this. Also, to keep the pound cake from being too soggy, I use a pastry brush to dampen the cake with the coffee/sugar mixture instead of soaking it. This also helps it to keep better in the fridge. This is my all time favorite desert and I love to make it!  

Thursday, June 17, 2010

Something Sweet

Last night I hosted Wednesday night's Stitch n' Bitch meeting. It was great to have these ladies over and see some faces I hadn't seen in a while. For an extra special treat, I decided to make a tiramisu. Yum. I made this once last summer and it was SO delicious that I ate the entire thing by myself over five days. I thought it better to share this time.

And if you're thinking "Could it really be that good?" Yes. It is.