Some friends asked if we wanted some rhubarb. I said yep and my husband went to get it. He came back with a ginormous pile! I processed and froze most of it...but not all of it! One of my favorite pies is rhubarb custard pie. It is super easy and a delicious way to get your veggies? I added a pistachio for no real reason but to do something different. It is just fabulous without it, and I am not sure it added anything to it, but it looked interesting and pretty and that is important...right?
I am back to using my mom's pie crust recipe. I have tried others, but they just don't do the job as well as this one!
Rhubarb Custard Pie
1 unbaked pie shell
3-4 cups of rhubarb, cut up into nice little pieces
1 1/4 cups sugar
3 eggs beaten to within a inch of their lives
1 cup heavy whipping cream, ya boy!!
3 Tbsp flour
1/2 tsp salt
Put the rhubarb in the pie shell.
Mix all the other ingredients together and pour over the rhubarb (yes, it is seriously that simple)
Bake for 10 minutes at 400 and then lower to 350 and cook another 40.
Pull it out and cool and put vanilla ice cream on it and devour!
When I use my frozen rhubarb I will make sure it is thawed and patted extra dry and maybe add another tablespoon of flour.
Pie Crust
Combine
2 1⁄2 cups flour
1 tsp salt
1 cup shortening
Cut into flour with a pastry cutter or knife until it looks like cornmeal
Combine
1⁄4 cup cold water
1 Tbsp vinegar
1 egg, beaten
Add liquids to dry ingredients with a fork until dough sticks together. Divide into two balls. Place ball
between two pieces of waxed paper. Place upside down pie pan on top of rolled out dough and flip over.
Remove last piece of waxed paper. Fit loosely into pan and trim edge 1⁄2 to 1 inch beyond edge. Crimp
edges with fingers. Fill and bake according to recipe. If baked pie shell is needed, prick bottom and sides
well with a fork and bake at 375 degree for 10-12 minutes or until golden brown. Yield: 2 9-inch
pie crusts.
I struggle following directions, coloring in the lines and wreak havoc on my kitchen, but my super powers have given me the ability to have extra sensitive taste and smell receptors, helping me to create tasty food out of the kitchen chaos.
Thursday, July 11, 2019
Friday, July 5, 2019
Buttery Onion Soup
You heard me. Butter+Onion+Soup...oh and + mozzarella cheese....this is what heaven tastes like. That sounds weird, but whatever. It is sooooo goooood! I have always liked french onion soup, but I have to say I love this onion soup even more! So if you like soup and butter, and onions aaaaaannnndddd mozzarella cheese...then here you go!
Buttery Onion Soup
2 cups thinly sliced onions ( I used sweet onions)
1/2 cup of butter, cubed
1/4 cup flour
2 cups chicken broth
2 cups milk (I replaced some with cream...boy howdy)
2 cups mozzarella cheese (you can use less if you are boring)
salt and pepper until it tastes awesome
I also added a couple dashes of savory, because it smelt good. Other herbs would be great in it also. experiement a little.
Buttery Onion Soup
2 cups thinly sliced onions ( I used sweet onions)
1/2 cup of butter, cubed
1/4 cup flour
2 cups chicken broth
2 cups milk (I replaced some with cream...boy howdy)
2 cups mozzarella cheese (you can use less if you are boring)
salt and pepper until it tastes awesome
I also added a couple dashes of savory, because it smelt good. Other herbs would be great in it also. experiement a little.
- In your favorite soup pot...cook onions in the butter on low heat until tender and transparent, about 20 minutes. I always add a dash or two of salt also. Because I love the to taste test and tast testing buttery salted onions is like majorly rad.
- Stir in the flour and cook for another minute. Slowly add broth and milk; cook and stir over medium heat until bubbly. Reduce to low and add cheese, salt, pepper and other herbs. Stir until melted but do not boil.
- See that was easy!!
Tuesday, June 4, 2019
Roasted Chicken in my Oven makes me Happy!
I always loved buying a rotisserie chicken. They were hot and tasty and you could make a wonderful bone broth with them. Out here in rural r us, reasonably priced groceries are just not as available. I started buying whole chickens at Costco and freezing them to roast in the oven. I had been using a very good recipe from Barefoot Contessa, but then this one came up from New York times that caught my eye. It said to use rhubarb, but I didn't have any, but I had blackberries and thought they might go well with chicken....and boy howdy they did! So my husband declared this chicken a triumph and bonus it made an incredible broth for what become chicken noodle soup. So Bon Appetite!
Roast Chicken with Blackberry Sauce
For the Chicken:
2 1/2 teaspoons salt
1 1/2 teaspoons ground coriander
1 teaspoon finely grated lemon zest
3/4 teaspoons finely grated fresh ginger
1/2 teaspoon pepper
1 large garlic clove, grated or minced
1 whole chicken, cleaned out (which means reach in that cavity and pull out the neck and gizzards..so gross)
3 thyme sprigs (I just used dried thyme..but I am going to plant lemon thyme and use that!)
1 purple onion, sliced into rings, salted and put to the side.
In a small bowl, combine salt, ground coriander, lemon zest, ginger, pepper and garlic. Rub it all over chicken, including inside the cavity and under the skin. Stuff Thyme springs into the cavity (or just shake some dried herbs in it)
Place chicken in pan, and marinate, uncovered, in the refrigerator for at least 1 hour or preferabley overnight (I did 3 hours and it was awesome)
When ready to roast the chicken, heat oven to 425 degrees....that's hot baby...generously pour olive oil over the chicken. Put blackberry sauce on top of the chicken. Roast for 20-25 minutes and then lower the temperture in the oven to 400 degrees. Place onions around the chicken. Roast for another 25 -30 minutes until the skin is golden and the internal temperature in the breast registers 165 degrees.
Let rest for as long as you can stand it up to 10 minutes. Slice and add gather the blackberry sauce as a garnish. mmmmmm.....
Blackberry Sauce
1/2 cup blackberries, crushed
1/8 cup chicken broth
2 Tablespoons brown sugar
1 teaspoon white wine vinegar
1 teaspoon olive oil
1/8 teaspoon lemon thyme
Boil together. and simer until thick. 5 minutes.
I am not adding a picture, cuz the ones I took look terrible...but I will add one when I do it again.
Roast Chicken with Blackberry Sauce
For the Chicken:
2 1/2 teaspoons salt
1 1/2 teaspoons ground coriander
1 teaspoon finely grated lemon zest
3/4 teaspoons finely grated fresh ginger
1/2 teaspoon pepper
1 large garlic clove, grated or minced
1 whole chicken, cleaned out (which means reach in that cavity and pull out the neck and gizzards..so gross)
3 thyme sprigs (I just used dried thyme..but I am going to plant lemon thyme and use that!)
1 purple onion, sliced into rings, salted and put to the side.
In a small bowl, combine salt, ground coriander, lemon zest, ginger, pepper and garlic. Rub it all over chicken, including inside the cavity and under the skin. Stuff Thyme springs into the cavity (or just shake some dried herbs in it)
Place chicken in pan, and marinate, uncovered, in the refrigerator for at least 1 hour or preferabley overnight (I did 3 hours and it was awesome)
When ready to roast the chicken, heat oven to 425 degrees....that's hot baby...generously pour olive oil over the chicken. Put blackberry sauce on top of the chicken. Roast for 20-25 minutes and then lower the temperture in the oven to 400 degrees. Place onions around the chicken. Roast for another 25 -30 minutes until the skin is golden and the internal temperature in the breast registers 165 degrees.
Let rest for as long as you can stand it up to 10 minutes. Slice and add gather the blackberry sauce as a garnish. mmmmmm.....
Blackberry Sauce
1/2 cup blackberries, crushed
1/8 cup chicken broth
2 Tablespoons brown sugar
1 teaspoon white wine vinegar
1 teaspoon olive oil
1/8 teaspoon lemon thyme
Boil together. and simer until thick. 5 minutes.
I am not adding a picture, cuz the ones I took look terrible...but I will add one when I do it again.
Monday, May 6, 2019
Chicken Pot Pie for the Family
Chicken Pot Pie
You know what I love? Yes, I do love that, and that and yes,
lots of things…but I really love chicken pot pie! Just ya, soooo good. Luckily
my family likes it also, so whenever I have leftover chicken, I make an excuse
to make chicken pot pie. So tonight, I am making chicken pot pie (yes, I am
just typing chicken pot pie as much as possible)
Planting taters! |
Of course I like anything that starts with sautéing an
onion, garlic and various and sundry vegetables. Sometimes I add potatoes from the huge bags that keep showing up from generous famers, but I didn't this time. I don't know why? I got to watch them plant potatoes last week in the field next to me! So cool. So anyways...here we go!
Recipe and stream of consciousness commentary:
In a large saute pan on medium heat add:
1 teaspoon of oil and a pat of butter (I just love the taste
of vegetables and butter)
½ onion, chopped (and if you can hunt and gather it from a field
near by your house, go for it …ps it was legal they had already harvested…we
just hunted and gathered what was leftover)
2 garlic cloves, minced or pushed through that cool garlic
press thing…I guess it is called a garlic press, who knew?Probably you...
Sauté those for a bit and then add:
3 carrots peeled and diced
3 celery stalks, chopped
½-1 cup of peas (just depending on your love of peas and how
much is left over in the freezer
Once all these veggies are soft and fragrant (ps I add a
pinch of salt to them as they cook down)
Add:
¾ cups of flour and stir it into the vegetables for a minute
Stir in:
2 cups of chicken
broth
½ cup milk (I had some sour cream so I put a dollop of it in
also
Add salt and pepper to taste and viola! You made your own
cream of chicken soup with vegetables!
Turn to medium-low and stir until thick and bubbly. If too
think add some more milk and cream.
Add 2 cups of shredded or diced chicken and stir baby stir.
Pour into pie crust. Add top crust and put 4 slits in the top
so it won’t explode.
Cook at 425 degrees for 30-40 minutes, and leave it warming
in the oven until your husband comes home from work.
Butter Pie Crust
I usually make a different pie crust that you can find on
here somewhere. But, I didn’t have shortening and did I mention I love butter…so
I am trying this one.
It works for one 9-inch double pie crust…aka the top and the
bottom, or two bottoms or two tops
Start with 2 ½ cups flour
Add:
1 teaspoon of salt
1 Tablespoon sugar (the recipe says optional…whatever, sugar
is never optional in my world)
Mix it a bit and add:
1 cup very cold butter, cut into ½ inch cubes
Use a pastry cutter thing or a couple of knives and cut the
butter into flour mixture until crumbly and pea size
Add 8 tablespoon of ice water
Press the dough into itself using a rubber spatula. The
crumbs should begin to for larger clusters. The dough should start holding
together.
Remove the dough from the bowl and place in a mound on a semi
clean surface. Kidding! It should be mostly clean and move the magazines and
mail a little further away from where you plopped the dough, or they will be
doughy too…maybe a friend had this experience. Perhaps.
Work the dough just enough to form a ball. Cut ball in half
and wrap in plastic wrap and put in the fridge
When thou art ready to roll, place the dough on a lightly
floured surface. I like to put it on parchment paper, cut parchment paper is
the bomb and make it easier to transfer to a pie pan without a disaster. (See
title of blog)
Roll, roll, roll that dough until nice and round. Make sure
it fits upon the pan and slowly slide in on. (you can sing the entire last
sentence to the tune of row, row, row your boat…just sayin’)
For better directions see the originator of the recipe at:
Friday, May 3, 2019
Blackberry Pavlovas and me
I have never ever not ever heard of a pavlova until...duhn duhn duhn duhn...Great British Bake-off. I still didn’t plan on making one because if it was on GBBO (wonder if that is the acronym they use or if it’s GBBo or GBB-O WTBBCS...we the bomb cooking show) it is probably over my head. Nevertheless, after each episode I go through and Pinterest the heck out of stuff they made...cuz dreams.
So back to the today...sort of...I made my own pasta last week. It uses a lot of egg yolks and I had a egg whites left over...what to do with them?? Hmmmm.... google how to use egg whites? Great idea. It says pavlovas....go to Pinterest and see if you pinned any after GBBO? Another superb idea....ahhhh yes...there it is!
So in conclusion, I decided on this pavlova recipe and it was so much easier than I imagined and so much more difficult to eat cuz...it’s crispy and marshmallowy and blackberry-creamy. So what I’m saying is...make it and revel in the messy deliciousness! Ps pavlovas were named after Anna Pavlova a Russian Ballerina...but why tho’?
Yes, I used my finger to clean the extra cream off the plate...it’s the right thing to do. The wrong thing is I didn’t get all of it!
Pavlova with blackberry compote from fifteen spatulas
1/2 cup egg whites at room temperature (for seriously and I was unbelievably patient and did get it to room temp. Go me!)
1/8 tsp cream of tartar
1/8 tsp salt
1 cup granulated sugar
1.5 tsp red or white wine vinegar
1/2 teaspoon vanilla extract
Chantilly Cream (aka whipped cream with vanilla)
1 cup heavy whipping cream (I accidentally grabbed half and half and had to run out in the middle of cooking pavlovas to grab cream!😮)
1 Tablespoon sugar
1/2 tsp vanilla extract
Blackberry compote (aka cooked berries with sugar)
12 oz blackberries (or whatever berries you have or desire!)
1 Tablespoon sugar (the author said optional...hahaha)
1 Tablespoon of lemon juice
Zest of lemon (I didn’t do this because I used bottled juice)
To make he pavlova:
First position
Preheat oven to 350 degrees F, and use parchment paper to line a baking sheet cuz parchment paper is the bestestestest.
Second position:
Whip those egg whites....with the cream of tartar and salt. Stand, hand or real hand mixer...whatever just mix until foamy. About 60 seconds for those using electricity.
Third position (do you get me hilarious reference to ballet yet?)
Time for the rest of the stuff! Add sugar, cornstarch, vinegar and vanilla and whip on high until it is irresistibly glossy with stiff peaks.
Plié (hey, it only takes one person to think I’m funny and I count as 1)
Take a big soup type spoon and get a big ol’ dollop of this silky, creamy stuff and make a nice round nest. Swirl it and make it look purty. Only about 1.5 inches tall and 3 or 4 inches across. You should be able to make six. Try to keep them far apart from each other because honey, they grow!
Allégro
Bake these puppies aka pavlovas for 10 minutes and then turn down the oven to 300 degrees and cook for another 40 minutes (and if you need to run out and buy your heavy cream, now is the time)
The pavlovas will expand turn lightly toasty tan and crack a bit.
When the 40 minutes are up, turn off the oven but prop open the door and let the pavlovas slowly cool in the oven ( and don’t keep opening and closing the oven door because you keep forgetting you are leaving it open on purpose and remembering you are leaving it open and then forgetting again...maybe true story)
Chantilly cream and a pretty face...or something
Pour the cream into a bowl and mix it until thick and then add the sugar and vanilla and mix until you can’t stand it any longer and have to taste test it...I mean until it forms nice soft peaks that need to be tested repeatedly with your finer...I mean spoon, I mean...just lick the beaters.
Blackberry Compote (not to be confused with compost)
Combine all ingredients in a saucepan and cook on medium for 8-10 minutes until soft and juicy. I also mashed them down.
Now for the fun part...Plating!
Place each fancy pants pavlova onto a plate. Dollop your delicious chantilly cream on top and then add the compote. Ta-da!
Now you feel all fancy and stuff!
Ps we eventually used a knife to cut through the marshmallowy inside. Just a tip!
Let me know if you try it!
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