Friday, May 21, 2010

Homemade Chocolate Syrup


I made this today, it was tweaked to taste from several different recipes I found online. I think it is better than Hershey's and contains no preservatives.

Ingredients:

1/2 C. cocoa
1 C. water
2 C. sugar
1/4 C. light corn syrup
1/8 tsp. salt
1 tsp. vanilla

Mix together the cocoa and water in a saucepan. Heat and stir to dissolve the cocoa. Add the sugar and corn syrup and stir to dissolve. Bring to a boil and turn back heat slightly to continue boil but to not have the mixture boil over pan. Stir constantly for 3 minutes. Remove from stove and add salt and vanilla. Cool and store in bottle or jar in refrigerator.

Soft Sub or Hamburger Buns



This is a really excellant recipe to make either submarine rolls or hamburger buns:

Ingredients

3 /4 C. Scalded milk
3 1/2 tsp. yeast
1 C. Mashed Potatoes
1/4 C. Warm Potato Water
3 to 4 C. Flour (unbleached)
2 Tbs + 1 Tsp Sugar
1 Tsp. Salt
3 Tbs. Butter

Scald milk, melt butter, sugar and salt in hot milk and set aside.

Dissolve 1 tsp sugar in warm potato water (from boiling the potatoes for mashing), 110 to 115 degrees on instant read thermometer, sprinkle in yeast and proof for 10 to 15 minutes until foam climbs sides of bowl.

Place milk mixture, yeast and 2 cups flour into bread machine and use dough cycle. Let that mix then begin adding more flour a little at a time until you get a sticky ball. Let bread machine do the rest through the dough cycle.

After first rise in machine, remove dough onto well floured surface and gently knead a little more flour until dough can be handled. Let rest for 5 to 10 minutes.

Grease bowl and place dough then turn so all sides of ball are greased. Let rise until double, from 30 minutes to an hour.

Divide dough into the sizes and shapes you want. I used a half cup of dough to make 7 big hamburger buns. Let rise again until double another 30 minutes to an hour.

Cook at 350 degrees for about 20 minutes or until golden brown and internal temperature is 190 to 210 degrees.

Brush on butter on tops and sides to make the rolls soft. You can put on your favorite seed after this if you like.

Enjoy

Wednesday, May 12, 2010

Spaghetti Sauce Using Dehydrated Veggies

I made spaghetti sauce today for dinner tonight using my dehydrated tomatoes, peppers, onions and garlic. It turned out really good:

ingredients:

3 cups dried tomatoes (or 4 cups peeled fresh tomatoes crushed with juice)
1/2 cup dried sweet peppers
1 tsp salt
1/2 tsp pepper
1/4 cup dried onion flakes
1 tsp garlic powder (I made this by blending my garlic)
2 tbs Italian seasoning
1 tbs parsley
2 tsp sugar
1 tsp basil
water
1/4 cup parmesan cheese

combine all ingredients except parmesan cheese in pan cover with water and bring to boil. Turn back heat to a simmer and cook for several hours. I added water as it was needed through the process. Cool and then blend until liquefied and add cheese.

Monday, March 1, 2010

Freezer Tip


I may have posted this before but this is such a good tip I want to tell you about it again. When freezing things like sauces, tomatoes, pork and beans etc. Fill freezer bag with the amount you will need for one meal or what you will use in one recipe such as one pint of tomatoes or two cups of pork and beans (one can). Lay bag flat and press the ingredients flat while getting out all the air. This saves so much space in your freezer you won't believe it.

Really Good Spanish Rice

I also made Spanish rice tonight to go along with the burritos. It turned out really good, but I made way too much and froze the leftovers for two more meals. This is the recipe:

1 cup rice
about 1 tbs oil (whatever kind is your favorite, I just used salad oil)
one diced bell pepper
about 1/4 medium onion finely chopped
pint of tomato sauce (mine is homemade from last summer's tomatoes)
1 tbs taco seasoning

Saute onion and pepper in oil for a couple of minutes add tomato sauce and the taco seasoning and then rice. Bring to boil and then reduce to simmer. Cover pan and stir every once in a while so rice is not sticking to pan. You may have to add water along the way if rice thickens too much before it is done. It took about 30 minutes to cook. The was the best Spanish rice I had ever made. Forgot to take a picture though.

Homemade Beef Cheese and Bean Burritto



I made these yummy beef, bean and cheese burritos from scratch and they were so good.

To start with you will need to make this taco seasoning recipe:

* 1 tbs chili powder
* 1/4 tsp garlic powder or granulated
* 1/4 tsp onion powder
* 1/4 tsp cayenne
* 1/4 tsp dried oregano
* 1/2 tsp paprika
* 2 tsp ground cumin
* 1 tsp course salt
I make big quantities of this and keep in a jar.

Now make the tortillas from my earlier post on breakfast burritos. The recipe makes about ten tortillas.

Now for the mix for the inside:

I cooked two cups of pinto beans with water and polish sausage along with one tsp salt and 1/2 tsp pepper for about 5 to 6 hours or until beans are tender.

Brown 1 lb. ground beef with chopped onion, I used about a 1/2 of a medium onion. Drain ground beef and add 2 cups of the cooked pinto beans with 4 tbs of the taco mix and one pint of tomatoes. Cook until mixture thickens. Let cool.

ready your tortilla for filling. Place 1/2 slice of pepper jack cheese, a pinch of shredded cheddar cheese, and a spoonful of the beef and bean mixture, another pinch of the cheddar cheese and a spoonful of the mixture, continue until burrito is full and wrap in plastic wrap.

Now you can freeze them and take out as many as you need for later use.

I made some tonight. Put them in a oven pan and smothered them in a tomato basil sauce I had made last summer, along with more shredded cheese on top. I cooked in a 350 degree oven for about 30 minutes. They were just great.

Friday, February 26, 2010

Home Made Pork and Beans

I have a bunch of dried white beans that I saved from my over-matured greens beans that I got from my garden last summer. I decided I would try making my own pork and beans yesterday. They actually turned out really great. I think possibly they could have been a little sweeter but since I'm only going to be using them to make baked beans which takes lots of brown sugar that won't really matter anyway. Here is the recipe I used:

2 cups dried white beans
3 tbs brown sugar
1 tsp salt
1/4 tsp pepper
16 oz tomatoes (I used my frozen ones from my garden)
handful onion flakes
clove garlic (mine was dehydrated and I crushed with the onions into a powder)
Pork (I used two pork steaks probably about 1/2 lb)
water

Combine all in large pot with enough water to cover beans by about 3 inches. Bring to a boil and then simmer covered until beans are tender and soup has thickened, you will have to continue to add water as it steams away. It took about 5 to 6 hours. This made about one quart:

Monday, January 4, 2010

World's Best Stew Better than Dinty Moore



I made this stew today for tonight's dinner and it was so amazingly good I wanted to share with anyone who loves Dinty Moore Stew, this is so much better:

1 lb stew meat
3 tbs. dehydrated onion flakes or one medium onion
clove garlic minced
potatoes pealed and cubed
carrots sliced
salt and pepper to taste
1 tbs. corn starch dissolved in a little cold water
2 pks brown gravy

In large pan or dutch oven cover meat with about 2 to 3 inches water and boil with onions garlic and cornstarch until tender. Add water if needed during cooking to keep juicy.

When meat is tender add potatoes and carrots (I used 3 medium sized red and two handfuls of baby carrots sliced) and cook until tender.

Add the two pkgs of brown gravy that has been dissolved in cold water bring back to boil then to a simmer

Have this dumpling recipe ready to add:

Dumplings:

1 cup flour
2 tsp. baking powder
1 tsp. salt
2 tbs soft margarine
1 cup milk

Mix together dry ingredients and cut in margarine until it looks like meal. Add milk and you should have a very sticky dough. If not add more milk.

Drop by spoonfuls on top of stew. Put lid on pan and cook for ten minutes. After 10 minutes cut through a dumpling to make sure they are done, if still doughy cook a little longer.

Enjoy your stew!!

Breakfast Burritos from Home Made Tortillas

These breakfast burritos are so good and the homemade tortillas are soft and tender. You will never use a store bought tortilla again after making and tasting these:

Tortillas:

3 cups flour
2 tsp. baking powder
1 tsp. salt
6 tbs vegetable shortening
about 1 1/4 cups warm water

Mix dry ingredients together add shortening and cut into flour until it looks like meal.

Add water a little at a time until your dough is soft and not sticky.

Lightly knead dough for a few minutes.

Divide dough into 10 sections.

Let rest for ten minutes

While waiting heat skillet to about medium high

roll out sections until paper thin

place in skillet and cook first side until brown spots appear

Turn and cook other side

Keep cooked tortillas in a kitchen towel until ready to use









Breakfast burritos:

10 tortilla shells
10 oz breakfast sausage
3 tbs dehydrated onion flakes
green pepper chopped
7 eggs scrambled
1 package shredded cheddar cheese
10 slices pepper jack cheese

Fry sausage together with onions and peppers simmer until onions and peppers are soft, drain

In large bowl combine sausage mixture, scrambled eggs and shredded cheddar cheese

Fold bottom of tortilla up and then one side over the other side. Place plastic wrap around about half of the tortilla.




Now fill first with the pepper jack broken into two pieces and then the sausage egg and cheese mixture and wrap up in foil.



These can now be frozen and used whenever you crave one. When heating wrap in damp paper towel and heat in microwave.

Friday, November 6, 2009

Harvesting and Threshing Popping Sorghum

We planted two rows of popping Sorghum in the spring this year. We harvested most of the grain the middle of September before our vacation to Texas and the grain has been sitting and drying in my grow room ever since.

We finally found time to remove the grain from the stalks. I had no idea how it was done and there was virtually no information on the internet about it. We finally decided to put the stalks in a pillow case and then hit it against something hard. This worked pretty good but then had to figure out how to get the seed from the chaff.

I finally decided to put it all in a bowl with water. I removed anything that floated and kept rinsing until nothing was left but the heavier seeds that stayed at the bottom of the bowl. This worked well. We laid the seeds out in trays to dry. I think we probably ended up with 5 or 6 lbs of sorghum seed.



The seed pops great. At first I used some oil in a pan and heated until smoking and then put in seed a tablespoon at a time. Now I have an air popper we found at the DAV store and it works even better. One tablespoon of seed makes about 10 tablespoons of popped sorghum. It tastes better than popcorn. I found a recipe that calls for popped popcorn flour and makes a loaf of bread. 6 tablespoons of seed makes about 2 1/2 cups of flour.

Here is the recipe for popcorn bread using either popcorn or popped sorghum:

1/3 cup popcorn or 6 tablespoons sorghum (popped and blended into 2 1/2 cups of flour)
1 1/4 cups water 110 to 115 degrees
3 3/4 t yeast
2 tbs sugar
1/4c oil
2 1/4 t salt
1 tbs butter or butter flavoring
3 to 4 c flour

proof yeast in hot water while at 110 to 115 degrees with the sugar added to water for about 15 minutes.

blend popped popcorn or sorghum in blender on liquefy and then sift to remove any kernels that do not get broken up.

add all liquid ingredients to bread machine and put on dough cycle. Mix for a few minutes then add salt, popcorn flour and 2 c flour. Add more flour until you have a smooth ball of dough.

When dough cycle is complete remove dough press out into a rectangle and then roll into a loaf pressing closed all seams.

Place on a parchment covered pan cover and let rise until double. Bake at 350 for 35 to 45 minutes or until bread registers 190 to 210 degrees. This made a huge loaf of bread and was the most moist tender and fine textured bread I had ever made. In the picture the loaf is on a regular sized pizza pan so you can tell how big it was. I also brushed on olive oil and put some poppy seeds on the loaf.