A Tropical Heatwave

I think the title just about says it! I have never been a fan of air conditioning but ………….. here I am luxuriating in its cold beauty! I mean, a lady can only take so much (said in a deep southern drawl with a glass of sweet tea in my hand. Disclaimer, I hate sweet tea. It’s just an image folks!)

Some of you may be wondering when is the best time to water my outdoor plants in this blistering heat. The answer is early evening. This gives the plants enough time to dry out but there is still enough of a chance for the roots to soak up the water. If you can’t do it in the evening then your second best time is very early morning.

Recipes

This time of year I am all about fresh locally grown produce so I would like to share a couple of simple recipes to enjoy when local harvest of these items begins.

Whole Roasted Cauliflower

The trick with this recipe is to use a medium size head of cauliflower. If it is too large it won’t get done all the way through.

You need to start by rinsing and drying off your cauliflower head. Then take off all the green leaves and cut the off the bottom so that it sits flat. In addition you can cut out some of the woody stalk but be careful as this technique calls for the cauliflower to stay intact.

Spray a Dutch oven and place your cauliflower in it. You can use a baking sheet too but I prefer the Dutch oven. Preheat your oven to 400 degrees.

Mix up a sauce which includes the following ingredients;

Parmesan cheese

garlic

olive oil

Italian seasoning

sea salt

pepper

There are no real amounts of each ingredient. Just do it to your liking.

Drizzle half of the mixture onto the underside of the cauliflower head and allow it to drain down into the head. Then turn the head over and brush with the remaining sauce.

Place the lid on the Dutch oven and roast for 30 to 40 minutes until head is fork tender. Then remove the lid and allow the cauliflower head to brown for around 10 minutes. Viola!

Cabbage Steaks *thespruceeats.com

  • For the Cabbage:
  • 1 head green cabbage
  • 1/4 cup olive oil
  • Salt (to taste)
  • Ground black pepper (to taste)
  • For the Dressing:
  • 1 clove garlic (finely minced or grated)
  • 3 tablespoons olive oil
  • 1 tablespoon mayonnaise
  • 1 tablespoon lemon juice
  • 1 teaspoon Dijon mustard
  • Salt (to taste)
  • Ground black pepper (to taste)
  • 1 tablespoon fresh parsley (chopped)

Steps to Make It

  1. Gather the ingredients.
  2. Preheat oven to 400 F.
  3. Place the green cabbage with the root end up on a cutting board. With a sharp knife, cut into approximately 1-inch thick slices, trying to keep the leaves together as much as possible. Keep the core intact to help the cabbage steaks hold together.
  4. Transfer the cabbage rounds to a large sheet pan and brush both sides generously with the olive oil. Drizzle any remaining olive oil over the top and sprinkle with salt and ground black pepper. Roast in the oven for about 20 minutes, flip them over and continue roasting for an additional 15 to 20 minutes or until tender and lightly caramelized.
  5. To make the dressing: add the garlic, olive oil, mayonnaise, lemon juice, Dijon mustard, salt, ground black pepper and fresh parsley to a bowl. Whisk together until smooth.
  6. Once the cabbage steaks are cooked, drizzle them with the dressing and serve hot.

*Did you know that you can make ricotta cheese in your microwave? I didn’t either until recently. This would be handy if you had a hankering for stuffed shells or the like and didn’t have any ricotta on hand.

Microwave Ricotta

2 cups whole milk

1/4 teaspoon salt

2 Tablespoons vinegar or lemon juice

Mix all ingredients in a 4 cup microwave safe bowl or measuring cup. Microwave for 4 to 5 minutes. It depends on the wattage of your microwave. Mine is 1100 and was ready in 4 minutes. You can also use a food thermometer. It has to read 165 degrees for the curds to separate from the whey.

Using a fine mesh sieve or colander lined with paper towels or cheese cloth. Pour or spoon the curds in to drain. This should be stored in your refrigerator until use.

Hacks

*I have always struggled with making a nice looking bow. I have just recently discovered a great way to do it. It is called the re-fab bow. Follow the link below to learn all about it.

How to make a bow the SUPER DUPER easy way! This tutorial is literally so simple, and the bows are gorgeous!



*You can make your own laundry stain remover with one part Dawn dish soap with two parts hydrogen peroxide. Pour or spray it onto the stain.

*If you soak a cotton ball in apple cider vinegar and hold it on a bruise for a couple of minutes it will noticeably fade the bruise. I have tried this and it really works.

*Did you know that you can add 2 eggs and a half cup of vegetable oil to any cake mix to make cookies? Yep, it can be done! Mix the ingredients together in a bowl. Form approximately two tablespoons of dough into a ball. Bake on a baking sheet (parchment lined) at 350 degrees for 8 to 10 minutes.

That’sssssssssssssssssssss all folks (said in my best Porky Pig voice). Stay cool. Please comment and share your thoughts and remember to let me know if you try any of the recipes or hacks. See y’all soon! (Throwback reference to southern drawl and sweet tea. Didn’t your writing teacher always tell you to tie your closing back to your opening?

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Jingle All The Way

Preparing for the Christmas holiday season is always exciting and also worry producing! Baking, decorating, gift shopping, holiday cards (if you still do them) and planning your family get together.

On the topic of baking I can say that I have changed a great deal. When my children and grand children were little I would let them each pick a favorite baked good or candy that I would make. My brother and mother each picked one as well. If they didn’t pick one of my personal favorites then I would make that too! The end result was at a bare minimum 12 to 13 different items.  In recent years I have cut back considerably. People today, in general, are just not eating the sweets that they used to. My family certainly isn’t. When my children were little, my oldest always wanted cut-outs. My oldest son always wanted jello cookies of which I always made a red and a green variety. Other favorites were my peanut butter chocolate ripple fudge, chocolate oatmeal no bakes, and snicker-doodles with green and red sprinkles. Things have progressed to the point where this year I am making one type of cookie and the fudge. Each of my daughters are making a type of cookie as well. We are down to 3 kinds of cookies and the fudge. There will still be leftovers, I’m sure.

Now, decorating, that’s a topic! I absolutely adore decorating! I have more holiday items than any one human should have. However, I love them, each and everyone! Some years I don’t put everything out for one reason or another and over the years I have refined my decorating taste. One item that is usually out is the collection of nutcrackers that my Mom had. She started collecting them when she visited me in Germany (nutcracker central!). Each year one of my kids or another family member would add to it from state-side venues. Since my mother passed I inherited her collection and it has been added to over the last 15 years. I must say it is quite impressive! My taste for decorating runs in the vintage realm and I love to honor the Christmas I remember as a child.

This year I .am having some work done on my floors right after Christmas so the decorating will be limited this year. The tree for sure and some of my favorite ctchotch·kes. Since the nutcracker collection is so large now, sadly it will wait until next year.

The most worrisome part of this whole season is the gift thing! I am sadly behind this year. As your children and grandchildren get older it is more difficult to find just that right central gift. The struggle is real, folks! Somehow or other it will all come together. I have 3 weeks to go and ready or not I will be done.

Our family gets together to celebrate the holiday on Christmas Eve. We eat homemade lasagna, laugh, talk and open gifts. There are the above mentioned candy and cookies and of course, more than we need to eat!

Finally, the cards. I am sending or passing out nearly 60 cards. That really isn’t very much compared to what some people do. Many people will get a family photo in their card. This picture we take at Thanksgiving when we are all together. Our family has grown so that we need two pictures. We take one my children and spouses, my brother, brother-in-law and I. The second picture is the grandchildren and includes just this year, my precious little great-grand daughter! I really enjoy the cards, both sending and receiving them. It is a tradition that grounds the holidays for me and reminds me of the people who are important to me and my family.

In the above paragraph I mentioned the Thanksgiving get together. We were all together at my oldest son’s house where we have more room to spread out. As I was nearing completion of the cooking, I looked around for the beaters I had brought for my hand-held mixer to mash the potatoes. Where the heck were they? Well, they were at home in the sink! My son didn’t have a masher. There was a moment of panic! Then I started to think of what I could use. In the end I used the bottom of a coffee mug to mash the potatoes. It worked very well and mashed potatoes were on the table.

There is always a bump or two in the road. I have had a couple lately. My toilet has been difficult to say the least. Today it is finally in tip-top shape again. While trying to iron out the difficulty myself I used a couple of old techniques that work well. The first is using Dawn dish detergent and hot water. You put about a half of a cup of Dawn in the toilet bowl and let it sit for 20 to 30 minutes. The dish soap is heavier than water and will sink to the bottom. After it has set for the required time, fill a pitcher with hot water (not boiling) and pour it into the toilet bowl. Allow this to sit. You may have to do this process twice. It should clear the clog.

The other method I tried is with vinegar and baking soda. Does that sound familiar from the kids’ volcano science projects? Anyway, you put a cup of baking soda in the toilet bowl. It again is heavier than the water and will sink to the bottom. Next put a cup of vinegar in. It will bubble and froth. Put the lid down and let it sit for 30 minutes. This works very well!

In my case neither worked because it wasn’t your normal clog. When the toilet was finally cleared it turned out to be a piece of wax. Wax, of course, would not dissolve with either of the methods written above. However, they are worth keeping in your knowledge banks if you should ever need them.

Have you ever been in the car heading out somewhere and check your car mirror and see a stray hair somewhere or many? Perhaps you have one in the mustache area or on your chin or even a stray one in the brow area. Why is it always in the car, in the clear light of day while hurrying off that you see such intruders?! Other people may not ever notice when you get to your destination. You will know though, and it will bother you. I have one recommendation that has saved me countless times. In your purse, bag or car console you have to carry a pair of tweezers!!! Word to the wise.

Recipes

This is what to do with leftover sweet potato casserole.

Sweet Potato Casserole Muffins
*magnoliadays.com
2 Eggs
1 1/2 cups All-purpose flour
2 tsp Baking powder
3/4 tsp Cinnamon, ground
3/4 cup Granulated sugar
1/4 tsp Nutmeg, ground
1/4 tsp Salt
1 1/4 cups Sweet potato casserole filling
1/2 cup Pecans
1/2 cup Butter, unsalted
5 tbsp Milk

 

Topping                                                                                                                                                         1/4 tsp cinnamon                                                                                                                                 1  1/3 Tbsp Turbinado sugar

Allow the eggs and milk to reach room temperature.                                                        Preheat the oven to 400 degrees.

In a large bowl cream together the butter and sugar until light and fluffy. Add the eggs one at a time. Then add the milk and sweet potato casserole until well combined. In another bowl mix all of the dry ingredients except the cinnamon. Add them to the first mixture until well combined and then stir in the pecans. Scoop the batter into greased muffin tins or use cupcake papers. Mix together the Turbinado sugar and cinnamon and generously sprinkle on the muffins. Bake for 22 to 25 minutes. Use a toothpick to test for doneness. Allow to cool a few minutes and then remove from the muffin tins to a rack to cool fully.

*You may use mashed sweet potatoes instead of the casserole. You will just need to increase the cinnamon.

*I did not have Turbinado sugar on hand when I went to make the muffins and used regular granulated sugar instead.

Hassleback Potatoes

Preheat the oven to 425 degrees.

I used large baking potatoes. I cut off any imperfections. Then I placed each potato between two small wooden spoons. This was done so that I could cut the potatoes as required for this style without cutting completely through the potato. The wooden spoons stopped the knife from going too far.

Then I used a mixture of olive oil, melted butter, salt and pepper to brush each potato between the slices and all over the top. I placed the potatoes on a baking sheet lined with foil.

I placed the potatoes in the oven and baked for 45 minutes.

They were delicious. My son said that in a way they reminded him of the way potatoes are in scalloped potatoes.

I could see adding onion and/or garlic powder to the oil and butter mixture. You could also sprinkle chives on top or perhaps stuff the slices with any great mixture of cheese or meat. Time to get creative!

Crockpot Ham and Bean Soup

This recipe is great for a winter lunch or supper.

1 lb. white beans

ham bone and/or diced ham (as much as desired)

3 or 4 carrots peeled and sliced

6 cups of chicken or vegetable broth or stock

1 onion diced

2 or 3 stalks of celery sliced

1/4 to 1/2 cup of brown sugar

1 bay leaf

salt and pepper to taste

First you need to soak the beans in water for at least 3 hours or overnight. Make sure they have enough water to remain covered as they swell.

Drain the beans and add all ingredients into your slow cooker. If there is not enough liquid to cover the rest of the ingredients add water until this is achieved.

Cook on high for the first hour and then on low for 3 to 4 hours. The beans should be mushy. Remove the bay leaf and serve. I served with crusty bread such as Italian or French.

I would love it if you would leave a comment about your family’s holiday traditions and favorite recipes! Let’s share.

Happy Holidays to All!

Sunshine Superman

Hello! My title is mainly because of the sun shining so nicely today and it makes you feel good. However, the Superman part is an allusion to something from my past. Anyone my age should remember. If you do please leave a comment!

Before I get started I wanted to explain the timing of my blog posts. First off, I aim for once a week and try for Saturday or Sunday. However, sometimes life gets in the way (more often than I would like) and I am too busy. The second factor is that I aim for approximately 1000 words and this can be difficult to do since it takes some time to collect enough material.  I set that as a goal  because I feel it allows me to share some varied content that, although all of it might not appeal to you, there will be enough that does. The object for me is to make it worth your while to read.  Consequently, I have a hard time sticking to the “once a week on a weekend day” plan. This bothers me because I want to be dependable and there on a regular basis for those of you who tell me you look forward to the posts. I am still working on this and am considering doing twice a month instead. I welcome any thoughts you might have.

I do have some hack to pass on to you today and a couple of recipes. Hope some of the information is of use to you!

Recipes

I have recently started making my own dog food. For those of you who have dogs or know people who do I thought it would be worth sharing. (You can make your own cat food also.)

Making my own dog food came about at the urging of my daughter, Sara, and the desire to give my dogs a better diet that would, hopefully, allow them to be healthier and live longer. After Sara make the suggestion to me I did a lot of research online as to vet approved homemade food. I combined a couple of recipes which overlapped a little as far as ingredients and my dogs seem to really like it. They are small dogs so I give them approximately 1/2 cup twice a day.

Homemade Dog Food

2 pounds ground chicken, turkey or beef

8 ounces broth ( I use vegetable, chicken or beef depending on the meat I use)

8 ounces of water

1 can of low sodium peas and carrots (drained)

1 can of kidney beans (drained and rinsed)

3 eggs (beaten)

2 medium apples (peeled and diced)

1 cup rice (uncooked) or 2 slices of bread broken into small pieces

I put everything in the Crock Pot and cook on low until the rice and meat are cooked thoroughly. The apples and bread completely dissolve in the mixture. You may have to add a little more broth and water if the mixture becomes too thick. In the dog food I have used drained mixed vegetables which is nice because they do like the green beans but I always pull out the potatoes. The dogs don’t like them and they don’t need that starch. I never use corn. It only adds starch and is not easily digested. In place of the kidney beans I have used cannellini beans and the dogs like them just as well.

Now, on to human delights!

Soft Oatmeal Raisin Cookies (from Sprinkle Some Sugar)

1 3/4 cup all-purpose flour
3 cups old-fashioned rolled oats
1 tsp baking soda
2 tsp cornstarch
pinch salt
2 tsp cinnamon
1/8 tsp nutmeg
1 cup unsalted butter, softened
1 cup light brown sugar
1/2 cup granulated sugar
2 large eggs
1 large egg yolk
2 tsp vanilla extract
1 tbsp molasses
1 cup raisins

 

Mix dry ingredients in a medium bowl and set aside. Combine the butter and both sugars with a mixer until light and fluffy.  To this mixture add the vanilla and molasses. Now, add the eggs and thoroughly combine. With the mixer on low add the dry ingredients a little at a time. Once they are incorporated add your raisins. Chill your dough for 30 to 60 minutes.

Line your cookie sheets with parchment paper and preheat your oven to 350 degrees. When dough is chilled using your hands roll balls of approximately 2 Tablespoons of dough. ( I probably used more. I make everything bigger!) Place them on the prepared pans at least 2 inches a part. Bake for 10 to 12 minutes.

* Notes: I was out of cornstarch and I looked up what to substitute. You can sub flour or instant mashed potatoes.  I chose the flour.

I divided my dough in half and used raisins in one half and Craisins in the other. I loved them both but must say that the Craisins edged out the raisins just a little bit!

As I have said in the past, I always check my baking items early at least the first time I make them. I set my timer for 8 minutes. They were not done so I let them bake for 2 more minutes and they were perfect. At least in my oven, 12 minutes would have been way too long.

 Before  After

Hacks

  • My niece, Nicole, uses a natural fruit wash that she wanted to share. Fill your sink with water, add 1 cup of vinegar and stir well. Add all of your fruit and soak or 10 minutes. You can even use this for berries. The water will be dirty but your fruit will sparkle. This helps your fruit last longer as well. Thanks, Nicole!
  • When you have a meal outside sometimes (for me, often) you struggle with keeping any table covering from blowing around which is super annoying. I have discovered that if you use a twin bed fitted sheet on your table the fitted corners keep that from happening. This works for most tables.

  

  • You know how you can get those pesky weeds growing up between sidewalks? You can use apple cider vinegar on them and they turn brown and die! I put my vinegar in a spray bottle (of which I always keep one or two under my sink for use with various hacks) and spray those little buggers!
  • One spring/summer I had a little mama garter snake that lived under my porch and nurtured her babies there. I know everything is just struggling to live and get by in this world but snakes give me the creeps and I just wanted her to go live her life somewhere else. Besides, my dog, Rudy, wanted to play with them! I kept trying to picture how I would get one of them out of his mouth if I had to. I never came up with a plan so the snakes really had to go! So, here I go with a spray bottle again (I told you they come in handy) but this time it is filled with ammonia. Turns out that ammonia is a cheap and easy snake repellent. They find elsewhere to live because they don’t like the smell. No one gets hurt and I lose the snakes! WIN
  • Recently, I have been making fruit infused water in my never ending quest to add more water to my days. I have tried grapes (cut them first), cantaloupe, watermelon, cucumber, and strawberries. The strawberries are by far the best in adding flavor to the water. I have it today and it is only lunch time and I have almost fulfilled my water quota!

Have a great week! Hope you enjoyed this post.

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