Now On To The Leftovers

I hope your Thanksgiving was great and that you were surrounded with positive people and of course, tons of food.

We had the best Thanksgiving in recent years. Now, I say this not because previous ones were bad in any way but mainly because I didn’t have any hiccups in the meal preparation and I even had time after dinner to play some cards which I really enjoy.

Last year the rolls were a little over done and the bottom of the pumpkin pie cake was burned. Those are two of my kids’ favorite things and I was happy this year both items came out as they should have. I also didn’t forget anything for the meal. No trip to the store at the last minute is a plus. Last year I forgot to take the family picture which I take every year and use in my Christmas cards. This year we took great pictures!

Now, we are onto the leftovers. Everyone loves leftovers from the Thanksgiving feast. I purposely make extra so that each person goes home with a plate to enjoy later. My brother, Doug, even comes to the dinner with his own containers to take some home. I told you, WE LOVE LEFTOVERS! Items from the dinner included, turkey, gravy, mashed potatoes, sweet potato casserole, butternut squash, green bean casserole, rolls, cranberry sauce, stuffing, corn, pumpkin pie cake, sweet potato pie,  and mixed berry pie.

Even after I had a couple of meals from my leftovers I still had some items in the refrigerator that needed to be put to use. I had an abundance of mashed potatoes and quite a bit of sweet potato casserole. I decided to make potato soup (I love soup!) with the mashed potatoes and I found a recipe for using leftover sweet potato casserole to make biscuits. I am sharing them below.

Leftover Mashed Potato Soup

  • 4 cups of mashed potatoes
  • 4 cups chicken or vegetable broth
  • 1 Tablespoon olive oil
  • 1 medium onion, chopped
  • Salt and pepper, to taste
  • Chives, bacon crumbles, and grated cheddar for garnish

In a stock pot  heat the olive oil and then add the chopped onion. Saute the onion until it was translucent. Next, add the mashed potatoes and the broth.  Then add salt and pepper to the pot. Simmer these on medium until the mixture is warm, the flavors have a chance to combine and many of the lumps of potatoes have been incorporated. Finally, use a submersion blender to get all of the lumps out and fully incorporate all of the mashed potatoes with the broth. Just for good measure I simmered the soup for a few more minutes with the lid on. I left the lid on because I didn’t want the liquid to reduce any further. After ladling the soup into bowls garnish with chives, bacon, and grated cheddar.

*Notes: This recipe was a combination of several that I found online. I just used the parts of recipes that sounded good to me. It was outstanding!

 

Sweet Potato Casserole Biscuits

2 cups all-purpose flour
3 tsp. baking powder
1 tsp. baking soda
1 tsp. salt
2 oz. (4 tablespoons) cold butter
1/8 cup milk
1 cup sweet potato casserole
Preheat the oven to 450 degrees.
In a large bowl combine the dry ingredients. Add the cold butter which has been cut into chunks. Use a pastry cutter  to incorporate the butter into the dry ingredients. If you don’t have a pastry cutter,  use a fork. It can be done, it just isn’t as easy. Once this is done add the milk and the sweet potato casserole. Form a ball with your dough and using a rolling pin roll it out until the dough is 1/2 inch thick. Cut with a biscuit cutter or the top of a glass. Place on a baking sheet lined with parchment or sprayed with pan spray. Bake in the oven for 9 to 11 minutes.
*Notes: This recipe was from the Pinterest board, Home Cooking Memories.
I followed the recipe exactly but set my timer for 7 minutes instead of 9-11. The first time I make a recipe I want to make sure I don’t over bake it. As it turned out, the biscuits were done perfectly in 7 minutes. The difference in baking time is most likely due to each oven being different.
As you will likely notice in the pictures, I put chopped pecans in my sweet potato casserole and they are a really nice addition to the biscuits. I will definitely make this again!
I want to add a little something about the parchment paper I use. I have for many years used parchment or baking paper that came in rolls like foil. Recently, a friend, Linda, told me that they now sell sheets of the paper. That is nice since if you have worked with this product before you know that it is a struggle to get the parchment paper that is in a roll to lay on the baking sheet without curling. When the paper is in sheets it lays nice and flat. That is so much more convenient! It can be quite expensive but I happened to stumble upon it one night with Linda at our local Dollar Tree store. They sell it in packages of 10 sheets for a dollar. That is a bargain!
Odd Item
This morning while washing dishes I was cleaning my spatula from breakfast with the dishcloth and it just snapped in half! I have only had it for a couple of months and I use it exclusively for making eggs. To say I was surprised is an understatement. I have decided I am going to write the company since it is a rather well known one and let them know what happened. I think it must be a design flaw.
I once wrote about a kind of large set of utensils (you know, large and small spatulas, ladle, slotted and solid spoons, etc.) They weren’t cheap.
I loved them except for one thing. Apparently, when I washed them, water would get into what must have been hollow handles and then when I would use them water would come running out. This happened several times and that water went right into whatever I was cooking. I tried draining them at every angle but it didn’t work. It was very unsanitary to say the least.
I wrote the company about this flaw. They totally surprised me by allowing me to pick out a new set from their website. I still have that set and they must have corrected the design flaw since it doesn’t happen with the new ones.
Just to be clear the small spatula I used for eggs and the other set are not made by the same company.
Christmas Idea
Wrapping paper can be quite expensive. There are alternatives to using traditional wrapping paper. When I was a kids I can remember my Mom saving the colored comics from the Sunday paper to use as wrapping paper for a child’s gift. For a person who loves to read, even the black and white pages make a great wrapping! Other items might include fabric scraps ( you can also use fabric scrapes to make bags just by stitching 3 sides together), maps, butcher paper, paper bags, pillow cases ( just add a drawstring or tie with a ribbon), or use part of the gift as wrapping such as a baby towel or blanket or a sheet. When using plain paper the sky is the limit to how you can embellish it. You can stamp on it, paint on it, autograph it, tie it with colorful twine or add a sprig of pine or a cinnamon stick. Use your imagination. Look in your drawers and your sewing basket!
Gift tags can also be re-imagined. One year I used an old deck of cards, cut the edges with pinking shears, punched a hole in one corner, used a black sharpie to write the name on it and a ribbon to attach it to the gift. Another year I used old photos from my Mom’s photos that were of landscapes, cars, and other items like that. They had no special meaning to me. I punched a hole in the corner and used twine to attach it to the gifts. The bonus was that my family loved they they were Grandma’s pictures!
Christmas Decor
This year I had seen an idea on Pinterest to use a ladder and decorate it like a tree with lights and all! I thought I would try it out. I bought lights, large ornaments, and a large gold bow for the top.
My one quandary was how to keep it anchored so the wind didn’t blow it over. The ladder was my Mom’s and is an aluminium one which is very light. I decided to use tent stakes, supplied by my daughter, Sara, and zip ties (gosh how I love zip ties!) I used two on each side. Well, it was windy yesterday and a couple of the stakes pulled right out of the ground. In desperation, I grabbed a brick and put it hidden out of sight on the bottom step! Necessity really is the mother of invention! I think it turned out nicely.

 

 

Thanksgiving: The Best Holiday Ever!

Happy Turkey Week! All the preparations and family gathering makes this an exciting time. Thanksgiving really is better than Christmas in some ways. You have everyone together. You’re almost expected to be gluttonous. There are no presents to buy. WIN! WIN! WIN!

Little Life Hacks

-This first one is a financial hack. Experts say that when you pay off a credit card you shouldn’t close the account. That action has the potential to negatively effect your credit score. (Side note; did you realize that your credit score and credit report are used for much more than obtaining credit? Employers occasionally use them for making hiring decisions. Landlords may use them for evaluating potential renters. Also, some insurance companies use them in setting rates.) The better alternative to closing the account is just to cut the card up!

-The other hack is about your health. Many of us are getting our flu shots as we head into flu season. Negative moods like stress affect how well vaccines work. This has been established since 1996 by researchers. The trick to getting the most out of your vaccine is to get it when you’re happy! Vaccines are more effective if your immune system is strong enough to react and form antibodies. Boost that immune system with some SMILES!

Thanksgiving and Christmas – The Decorating Debate

I firmly believe in not decorating for Christmas until after Thanksgiving. Some people really decorate for Christmas very early. That’s fine. I just try to languish in one holiday before enjoying another. Please leave comments on your preference.

I have to confess that this year I did decorate one 4 foot tree already and Thanksgiving is till a couple of days away. My friend Linda gave me a 4 foot, green, flocked tree that she no longer wanted.  (The reason she no longer wanted it has to do with two mischievous cats and their propensity take over the tree.) I decorated this tree early because Linda and her sister, Gina, were coming for dinner and I wanted them to see it. It isn’t traditionally decorated but I like it. I used a single strand of red cardinal lights and a stick star with red berries to decorate it. You can see one of the cardinals below.

My Family’s Favorite Thanksgiving Dessert

This little gem has replaced pumpkin pie for my kids. They actually prefer it.

Pumpkin Pie Cake

Crust –

one yellow cake mix ( reserve 1 cup)

1 stick of butter(melted)

1 large egg

Filling –

2 cups of pumpkin

1/2 cup brown sugar

2/3 cup milk

1 teaspoon cinnamon

3 eggs

Topping

1 cup cake mix (reserved from crust)

1/2 cup chopped walnuts

1/2 stick of butter (cold)

1/2 cup sugar

Preheat oven to 350 degrees.

Combine all of the ingredients for the crust and pat into the bottom of a

13″ X 9″ greased pan.

Thoroughly mix all of the ingredients for the filling and pour over the crust.

The ingredients for the topping should be mixed into a crumble (that’s why the cold butter) and sprinkled on the top of the cake.

Bake for 50-55 minutes. Test in the center of the cake for doneness with a toothpick.

*Notes – I often don’t use the walnuts in the topping as my kids aren’t wild about them. You also could add a dash of cloves and or pumpkin pie spice to your filling if you want that sort of flavor. I start testing for doneness early, around 40 minutes or so. I don’t like this to over-bake.

Enjoy your family and your feast! Happy Thanksgiving! See you next week.

 

 

Winter Has Arrived

Winter has hit our neck of the woods with cold temps and a few flakes flying in the air. It had to happen. We knew it would. It does every year. It is sometimes an early Winter and sometimes there is a late start to the season but it always arrives.

In The Kitchen

This time of year is when my mind always turns to baking. Maybe it is to keep warm (especially when I try to last as long as I can before turning the furnace on). Maybe it is just that baked goods taste best with a hot cup of tea or coffee and cooler temps! Whatever the reason, I baked.

One of the things I made was some homemade corn bread from a recipe that was on a bag of mill ground corn meal that I bought while in Massachusetts. My friend, Darcy, and I went to the Brewster General Store while in Cape Cod. It is a classic general store with the original wooden floor, music from a player piano and homemade fudge, etc. If you would like to learn more about this endangered species, the general store,  click on the link below.

The Thanksgiving display outside of the Brewster General Store in Brewster, Massachusetts.

https://www.brewsterstore.com/

The corn bread turned out beautifully. It was moist and sweet. I think you would really like it. We ate it while it was still warm which is best. It does microwave well so you can warm it up at a later time.

Golden Corn Bread

1 cup cornmeal

1 cup flour

1/4 cup sugar

4 level teaspoons baking powder

1/2 teaspoon salt

1/4 cup soft shortening

1 egg

1 cup of milk

Cream shortening, egg and sugar until light. Blend sifted cornmeal, flour, salt and baking powder in bowl. Stir in milk. Add shortening mixture and blend just until smooth. Bake in a greased 8″ square pan in 400 degree oven for 20 to 25 minutes. Makes 9 servings.

*Notes – I baked mine for 18 to 19 minutes and it was perfect. The corn meal had to be sifted because it is mill ground and there are dried larger pieces of corn in there that you wouldn’t want in your bread.

I mentioned above that we went on a road trip to Massachusetts. When Darcy and I go on a road trip we have certain requirements. One of them is our favorite road trip food, salami roll-ups. I am drooling now as I type. Darcy introduced me to these simple, little wonders a few years ago. I can’t be in on a road trip with her without these little bundles of yumminess!

Salami Roll-Ups

All you have to gather is cream cheese (you can use the fully loaded fat kind, the low-fat or fat-free), rather thinly sliced hard salami and sweet baby gherkins (drained). Spread some cream cheese on a slice of salami, put a little baby gherkin in the center, roll it all up and stick a toothpick in it to hold it together. You might not need the toothpicks if they hold together without them.

*Practical note – while driving and eating these, make sure to remove the toothpick before lifting roll-up to your mouth. I almost lost an eye or two.

Viola, road-trip finger food!

     

New Product

I, like many other women, have some constant struggles. Sometimes I think that I have an overabundance of them. One that has been at the forefront the last few years has been how to have the best looking eyebrows. I am so very sorry for taking my eyebrows for granted in the past. If I could speak to those full, beautiful eyebrows right now I would tell them that and also tell them how beautiful and how much less work they were than they are now.

I have used an eyebrow pencil, eyebrow powder, an eyebrow stamp (which I talked about in a previous post) and now finally I have discovered something new. It is from Maybelline and structured like a mascara tube and wand. It is doing a great job for me. I just use the wand over the eyebrow and it darkens and increases the volume of the hair that is already there. Unfortunately, I have one eyebrow that has little to no hair at one point in the arch and I do have to fill in with a pencil. This item is definitely on my recommended list!

Currently, my house is all decorated for Fall and I am making my Thanksgiving list for the grocery store. However, Christmas is not that far off in my thoughts. I am hatching some new additions to my decor for Christmas this year and I have been collecting the things I will need to put them together. In my posts between now and Christmas I want to show you what I am doing. It would be great to see and hear about your holiday crafts, decor, baking and shopping.

I’m doing a survey and want to hear your thoughts on Christmas card sending. I still do it but some people I know have stopped sending them. What do you do? Let me know in the comments.

Have a wonderful week!

 

 

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