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04 April 2009

Recipe: Cornmeal Waffles with Savory Butter

cornmeal waffle with pecan butterImage by Marilyn M via Flickr



Photo of a cornmeal waffle with pecan butter, yum! We have wonderful pecans here in Louisiana - a favorite brand is Bergeron's.

From Denny: Louisiana has a large German population from the past century. We love sausage down here be it French, German or even Polish versions. These easy waffles are just the ticket for a savory side dish for an easy weekend meal combined with grilled sausages.

From: Eating Well in a Busy World by Francine Allen

Yield: Serves 8


Ingredients for Waffles:

3 eggs

1½ cups buttermilk

6 Tablespoons unsalted butter, melted

¾ cup cornmeal

1 cup self-rising flour

1½ Tablespoons sugar

1 teaspoon baking soda

½ cup grated Cheddar cheese


Ingredients for Savory Butter:


½ cup unsalted butter, softened

1 teaspoon dry mustard

1 Tablespoon or more fresh snipped chives

Dash of Tabasco sauce (more if you are from Louisiana!)


Directions for waffles: Preheat the waffle iron. Put a large platter in the oven to heat.

Mix together the eggs, buttermilk and butter. In a separate bowl, stir together the flour, sugar, soda and cheese. Add the dry ingredients to the liquid; stir gently until the ingredients are combined. Cook the waffles in the waffle iron according to manufacturer’s directions. Cut the waffles into pieces that can be handled like bread. Transfer each to the warm platter as they are cooked, loosely covering with foil so they don’t dry out.

Directions for Savory Butter: Meanwhile, blend together the butter, mustard, chives and Tabasco in a food processor or blender. Serve the waffles with the butter.

Per serving: 366 calories, 26 grams fat, 145 milligrams cholesterol, 438 milligrams sodium.





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Video: Simple Pleasures Help in Tough Economic Times

Chocolate and other small expense simple pleasures still a comfort in tough economic times, from NBC News Making a Difference segment.



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03 April 2009

Recipe: Fig Preserves Cake

Brown Turkey fig split in half.Image via Wikipedia


Fig Preserves Cake

From Denny: Folks in Louisiana love to grow their own fig trees, often right in their front yard for all to see and often share, as these trees, once mature, produce quite a bit of fruit. This is one of those favorite kinds of cake so loved in Louisiana as it is a bit of French heritage handed down over the generations: soaked syrup cake!

Fig Preserves Cake


From:
Debbie Malone


Ingredients:


2 cups flour

2 ½ cups sugar, divided

1 ½ teaspoons baking soda, divided

1 teaspoon salt

1 teaspoon nutmeg

1 teaspoon cinnamon

½ teaspoon ground cloves

1 cup vegetable oil

3 eggs

1 ½ cups buttermilk, divided

2 teaspoon vanilla, divided

½ cup chopped pecans

1 cup chopped fig preserves

1 stick butter (1/2 cup)

1 Tablespoon corn syrup


Directions: Sift together the flour, 1 ½ cups sugar, 1 teaspoon of baking soda, salt and spices. Add oil and beat well.

Add eggs, 1 cup of buttermilk and 1 teaspoon of vanilla and beat well.

Stir in nuts and fig preserves.

Pour into a 9x13-iinch baking pan that has been sprayed with nonstick vegetable cooking spray. Bake in a preheated 325 degree F. oven for 45 minutes. Leave in pan.

To make sauce, combine 1 cup of sugar, ½ cup of buttermilk, butter, corn syrup, ½ teaspoon of vanilla in a large saucepan. Bring to a boil and boil for 3 minutes.

Pierce cake all over with a fork and pour hot sauce over warm cake.




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Mixing traditions makes Easter cake twice as tasty



From Denny: Did you know that long before there was a reason to celebrate Easter the ancient Romans used to put cheese in their cakes and make cheesecakes for their fertility rites of Spring?

From the Milwaukee-Wisconsin Journal Sentinel comes a wonderful food article with two recipes, one for Dark and White Chocolate Cheesecake and the other for the 1942 traditional Devil's Food Cake.

This is one gorgeous version of Easter cake I can't wait to make this weekend!

***

Mixing traditions makes Easter cake twice as tasty

By NICK MALGIERI

Long before there was an Easter, the Romans used cheesecakes and cakes bound with cheese in their fertility rites.

This was natural. Spring gives birth to new grass-lined pastures, and cows graze contentedly on fresh greens again, after a winter diet of straw and hay. The milk is richer and more plentiful, and cheese-making begins again in earnest after the long winter.

Cheesecakes are associated with Easter in many cultures. In Italy, ricotta cheese figures in Easter pies and pastries. In Russia, an elaborate dessert called pashka is laced with freshly made ricotta-like cheese and often accompanies kulich, the traditional Easter bread.

Right here at home we can combine these two Easter traditions in a spectacular dessert to serve for the holiday. It's a layered cheesecake in which white and dark batters are separated by a moist and flavorful devil's food cake.

Here are a few hints for success:

• Bake the cake layer a day or two before you intend to assemble the cheesecake, wrap it in plastic and refrigerate it. It will be firmer and easier to slice through when you are ready to assemble the finished cake.

• Make sure the pan you use is at least 3 inches deep or the batter will not have room to puff slightly, as it often does.

• Finally, make your life easier by baking the cheesecake a few days in advance and storing it wrapped in plastic in the refrigerator.

To unmold the finished Dark and White Chocolate Cheesecake successfully, set it on a heated burner (turned off) on the stove top to warm for a few seconds, then run a sharp paring knife between the cake and the inside of the pan. Unbuckle the side and remove it. Slide a wide spatula under the cheesecake and ease it onto a platter.

Allow the cake to come to room temperature before serving. Cut the cake with a sharp, thin-bladed knife dipped in hot water and wiped between each cut.

Then sit back and accept all the praise for making the perfect Easter dessert - one that is steeped in tradition and also delicious.

Dark and White Chocolate Cheesecake

Yield: Makes 12 to 16 servings

1 layer 1942 Devil's Food Cake (see recipe below)

2 pounds cream cheese, room temperature (divided)

1 cup sugar (divided)

5 ounces bittersweet or semisweet chocolate, melted

2 teaspoons vanilla extract (divided)

6 large eggs (divided)

5 ounces best-quality white chocolate, melted (see note)


Directions: Butter bottom only of 9-inch springform pan that is 3 inches deep. Line bottom with parchment or wax paper. Have available a 15 1/2 by-10 1/2-inch jellyroll pan. Heat a kettle filled with warm water to be used for baking the cheesecake.

Make 1942 Devil's Food Cake. Slice one layer in half horizontally to make two layers and place one of those sliced layers in the bottom of the prepared springform pan.

To make dark chocolate batter: With paddle attachment of a heavy-duty standing mixer set on the lowest speed, beat half the cream cheese until smooth, no more than 30 seconds.

Stop mixer and scrape bowl and beater. Add half the sugar in a stream and beat no more than 30 seconds. Stop and scrape bowl and beater. Add melted dark chocolate and beat only until absorbed, no more than 30 seconds. Beat in half the vanilla.

Add 3 eggs, one at a time, mixing only until each is absorbed. Stop and scrape sides and beater after each addition.

To make white chocolate batter: Use another bowl and follow the same procedure as for the dark chocolate batter, using remaining cream cheese and sugar, the melted white chocolate, and remaining vanilla and eggs.

Wrap aluminum foil around bottom of springform pan to come at least 1 inch up the sides. Pour dark chocolate batter into pan over cake layer already in pan. Place other sliced cake layer on batter and pour in white chocolate batter. Place pan in the jellyroll pan and pour warm water into pan to a depth of ½ inch.

Bake cheesecake on middle rack of preheated 350-degree oven about 75 minutes, or until lightly colored and firm except for the very center.

Remove from oven and carefully remove cheesecake from pan filled with hot water. Remove foil and cool completely on rack. Wrap cheesecake and chill overnight before unmolding.

Note: Make sure to use the best-quality white chocolate you can find or it won't impart much chocolate flavor to the batter.

-----

Only one of the layers is used to make the cheesecake above. You may freeze the other layer and keep it until the next time you prepare the cheesecake. Or simply serve it with whipped cream.

1942 Devil's Food Cake

Yield: Makes two (9-inch) round layers

6 tablespoons (¾ stick) unsalted butter, cut into 6 pieces, plus butter for greasing pan (divided)

3 ounces unsweetened chocolate, coarsely chopped

Water

1 ½ cups sugar

6 tablespoons sour cream

1 1/3 cups bleached all-purpose flour (see note)

¾ teaspoon baking soda

½ teaspoon salt

2 large eggs


Directions: Butter two (9-inch) round pans and line with parchment or waxed paper. Preheat oven to 350 degrees.

Melt chocolate in large heat-proof bowl set over hot but not simmering water. Let cool. Add the 6 tablespoons butter to bowl of chocolate, then pour in ¾ cup boiling water. Stir well to mix. Whisk in sugar and sour cream.

In separate bowl, stir together flour, baking soda and salt to mix well. Stir flour mixture into chocolate mixture. Whisk in eggs last.

Pour batter into prepared pans and smooth tops. Bake on middle rack of preheated oven about 25 to 30 minutes, or until well risen and firm. Cool cakes in pans on racks 5 minutes, then unmold and finish cooling.

If you are going to finish the cake on the same day you baked it, wrap layers in plastic and keep at room temperature. Freeze for longer storage.

Note: To measure, spoon flour into dry-measure cups and level off.

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01 April 2009

Even More April Fools Day Funnies



More April Fools Day funnies over at another one of my blogs, hike yourself on over there: The Social Poets, go here.

What started out as a dumping ground for my poetry and other serious writings ended up a Wild Wild West place for human interest news and lots of humor too.

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