Of Cookies, Cake Pops and Pinecones

The girls and I have had some fun in the kitchen this past week.  Our culinary inspiration has been fueled by a few editions of Christmas with Southern Living I picked up inexpensively at a flea market a few months ago, as well as Pinterest.

It goes without saying that the amount of inspiration far outweighs the amount of time I have right now to devote to such creative endeavors, but we do enjoy trying out new recipes and techniques, especially this time of year.  Here are some highlights.

You may recall this recipe I posted last Christmas-time, which I have waited an entire year to make. They’re too cute!  You can’t go wrong with peanut butter and chocolate.

The girls enjoyed helping me make these peppermint shortbread cookies too.

Mmm.  Tasty and festive.  You can’t go wrong with peppermint and chocolate.  (See a pattern emerging??)

They also helped me with our first-ever attempt at cake pops, which are all the rage lately.  We kind of cheated and made inverted ones in candy papers, which was much easier and no doubt less messy.

If you are looking for some serious holiday cake pop inspiration, you’ll want to get Angie Dudley’s (Bakerella’s) new book, which is loaded with delightful ideas and fantastic tips I would not have thought of, had I decided to just wing it making them.  She is the QUEEN of cake pops.

And lastly, here’s a fun idea I found on Pinterest.  I just used my regular cheese log recipe.  Mine didn’t turn out quite as nice as the original; I should have packed in those almonds more tightly to fill in all the spaces.  Still, it was cute and easily recognizable as a pinecone, at least after we added the evergreen embellishment.  You need the greenery; otherwise, someone may think it’s a porcupine.  Trust me.  ;)

What fun things have you been making in the kitchen?

Perfect Pie Crust

I enjoy baking pies in the fall season especially, so I thought I would share my pie crust recipe.  This mixes up quickly in a food processor, but if you don’t have one, just use a pastry blender or even a fork.

Perfect Pie Crust

1 1/4 cups all-purpose flour (I use King Arthur)

1/4 tsp. salt (I use Real Salt)

1/2 cup chilled butter (I use Land of Lakes), cut into pieces

ice water

Add flour and salt to food processor, then add the chunks of butter.

Blend until mixture resembles very coarse meal.  Sprinkle in water, 1 T. at a time, blending just until pastry is moist enough to hold together.  I think I used at least 4 T.  It’s hard to recommend an exact amount, however, because differences in flour and humidity affect how much is necessary.

You’ll want to blend until the mixture begins to hold together, but do not overprocess.  It should look similar to this, and it may also begin to ride up the sides of processor bowl.   You can pinch the dough to see if it holds together well.  It should not feel sticky or wet.

Remove from food processor onto piece of plastic wrap.  Flatten dough into disk shape, wrap in the plastic wrap and refrigerate for an hour to allow the dough to relax and chill.  Honestly, though, I don’t always have the time to chill that long, and you probably don’t either.  Try to chill for at least 20 minutes if you can.On lightly floured surface, roll pastry into a 1/8-inch thick circle.  You may have to allow the dough to warm up a bit to roll it more easily.  You can also press the heel of your hand into the dough before rolling, to get it started.  Just make sure you don’t work the dough too much (and toughen the dough) or use your hands too much (and warm the dough.)  The dough should always be cool.  If it begins to warm, pop it back in the fridge for a while.

When I’m ready to place the dough into the pie plate, I like to flip it over the rolling pin like this and then scoot it overtop the pie plate.  This is a 9-inch pie plate, by the way.

Gently fit dough into bottom and sides of the pie plate, then trim it about 1/2 inch or so past the rim.  I use my kitchen shears for this, which makes it really easy to do.

Then tuck the overhanging dough underneath and press so you have a nice, smooth edge.

Next is the fun part.  Flute the edge however you like.  This is the way I normally do it.

When you’re all done, put the crust back into the fridge to chill until you’re ready to fill and bake.

I used this crust to make my favorite apple pie last week.  I’ll share the recipe soon!

Buttery Einkorn Wheat Drop Biscuits

If you read my last bread-baking post, you know I recently bought some einkorn wheat to try in bread.  Still experimenting, I made some yummy biscuits last week.

I bake with barley flour a fair amount, and the einkorn seemed rather like it to work with, except less crumbly in the finished product.  They seemed to absorb about the same amount of liquid, and I have used the following recipe for both, with very good results.

I am a big barley fan, but I preferred the flavor of the einkorn here, and the whole family raved when I made them.  These buttery biscuits were delicious with the nutty flavor of the wheat, and they made for really good eating with a bowl of soup.

BUTTERY EINKORN WHEAT DROP BISCUITS

4 cups einkorn wheat flour

2 T. baking powder

1 t. baking soda

1 T. sugar

2 tsp. salt

1 cup cold, unsalted butter, cut into chunks

1 1/2 cups buttermilk

Preheat oven to 450 degrees.

In food processor, pulse together flour, baking powder, baking soda, sugar and salt to combine.  Add butter and pulse until mixture is the texture of coarse meal.

Transfer mixture to large mixing bowl and stir in buttermilk until evenly moistened.  Scoop out mounds of dough with a 1/4 cup cookie scoop, dropping them onto parchment-lined baking sheets (mine are insulated.)

Bake until biscuits are puffed and golden, 13-15 minutes.  Makes 16-18 biscuits.

My Einkorn Wheat Bread Experiment

I have been reading lately about einkorn wheat.  Have you heard of it?  It is an ancient variety and much more digestible than our modern strains of wheat and even spelt.

This detailed post by Sarah, The Healthy Home Economist, is what prompted me to order some.  If you’re at all interested in einkorn wheat, do take a minute to read her post.  Sarah is one very knowledgeable, thorough lady, and I have learned a lot from her over the years.

Something Better Natural Foods has a better price than Jovial, but compared to my standard Prairie Gold, it still makes for some pretty expensive sandwich bread.  I’m sure a bulk price would be a bit more reasonable, but the biggest bag I could find was only 5 lb.The wheat berries are noticeably different from the four or five other wheat varieties I am familiar with, being smaller and flattened.

I should have read up on the specifics of working with einkorn flour instead of assuming that since one can make loaves of bread from it, it would be similar to regular hard wheats.  It is definitely not, and I learned that the hard way. This busy mom should have slowed down for a minute to read a little further, like maybe some einkorn-specific baking tips or even an einkorn bread recipe like you’ll find here.

Einkorn dough handles much more like spelt, except it’s even more challenging to work with, especially when you’re not expecting it to be.  It’s very, VERY sticky (think chewing gum all over your hands.)  I attempted my usual recipe in which only the amounts of liquid, salt and yeast are actually measured.  I eyeball the other ingredients and stop adding flour when I judge the consistency to be right.  I should not have tried this for my first time with einkorn.

I am not sure how much flour I added, but it was a good deal more than I’m used to adding.  (I later learned that einkorn dough does require a bit more flour.)  It was still sticky, though.

Then my Bosch up and quit on me after about a minute of mixing.  I have LOVED my Bosch, mind you, and am not blaming it.  In fact, I am pretty sure it konked out on me due to last week’s mother of all kitchen blunders, which was entirely my fault, not its, and I do hope it’s fixable.

I know what you’re wondering, and the answer is no.  Wild horses could not drag those disastrous details from my memory to my keyboard all for the sake of an interesting blog post.  However, now that I think about it, I could possibly be bribed to fess up by a large enough sum of cold, hard cash—either that or a case of Ghirardelli bittersweet chocolate chips delivered to my doorstep.  Any takers?

But back to my dough . . . my really sticky dough . . . my really sticky dough which had to be scooped out of my busted Bosch and onto a floured counter and got all—and I do mean ALL—over my hands.  Working with dough that is over-floured and thick and heavy but still really, really sticky is a very frustrating and somewhat confusing experience, to say the least.

As I was becoming irritated, I gave up on this dough.  It was too expensive to toss, that’s for sure, so I decided to oil a large bowl and plop the whole thing into it, cover it, let it rest for a while, and hope for something edible when all was said and done.

Of course, I knew the dough would not rise, given that it had not been kneaded, but I turned out to be wrong.  (I have since learned that einkorn requires very little kneading.  Whew.)

The dough did rise.  I pressed it down, and would you believe it did not stick to my hands?  I let it rest again for a while, then plopped it out onto an oiled countertop (wasn’t going the flour route again) and shaped it into three beautiful loaves.  The dough was easy to work with and no longer sticky.  Yes, really.  I could hardly believe it.

It didn’t bake up into nicely domed loaves like I’m used to getting, but hey, I was just happy not to get bricks.  Expensive bread is one thing; expensive bricks would have really been a bummer.

The finished product had a deep color like pale pumpkin bread (the picture is a little over-exposed), and it’s packed full of a delicious, nutty flavor.  And nutrition.  The texture was dense but not tough, so maybe I didn’t do so badly after all.

Here are a few things I learned after the fact, which I wish I had known at the get-go:

  • Einkorn wheat flour needs some time to absorb the liquid, so give the dough time to rest before adding all the flour; otherwise, you’ll probably add too much.
  • It WILL be sticky to work with, initially.  If you’re kneading by hand, this will be seriously aggravating, so do not attempt it when any other aggravating factors are present and already pushing you to your limits.
  • Einkorn flour doesn’t have the type or amount of gluten we’re used to with regular wheat flour, and it only needs a few minutes of kneading.

Next time I’ll know what I’m doing.  Hopefully.

 

Fair Entries for Kids: A How-To

Several folks have asked me about fair entries recently, so I thought I’d post a little primer.  We have only done this for the past two years (unless you count the handful of times I baked for the fair as a teen just a few short decades years ago,) so we’re far from being experts.  I know some of my friends have been doing this for a lot longer, so I’m hoping they’ll chime in too to give you a better idea of what to expect.

Every fair is probably a little different, so I can only tell you about ours.  You’ll want to find your fair’s website and look for a pdf of their premium book.  Our fair also publishes a magazine-size paper copy and makes it available at local businesses and the library.  Hopefully, yours will too because a paper copy is much easier to use since you can highlight potential entries and rules and dog-ear the pages.

At our fair, entry forms are due two weeks before opening day, and you can download them from the website and fax or mail them in or drop them off at the fair office.

The actual entries are due the day before the fair starts.  When we drop off our entries, we first stop at the fair office to pick up the entry tags (to be placed on each entry,) then we take them to whichever building they’ll be exhibited at so they can be tagged and shelved.

All entries remain in place throughout the duration of the fair.  We can pick them up, along with any ribbons, after closing time on the final day of the fair or the following morning.  Premiums (prize money) are paid by check and mailed out following the fair.

The premiums for the categories our kids have entered are $2 for a blue ribbon and $1.50 for a red.  It’s pocket change, yes, but I can assure you that your children will be thrilled to receive a check of any amount in the mail.

Our fair does not charge anything to enter kitchen items or domestic arts/fine arts items and the like, but I’m not sure about the other categories.  You can find information on entry fees in your fair’s premium book.

You’ll want to make sure to carefully read the rules for whichever category you’re entering, because after working on a project it would be a shame to be disqualified on a technicality.  I have pickle story I could tell you about that, but thanks to a nice lady at the fair, it has a happy ending (not to mention a red ribbon.)

You’ll also want to double check that you have marked the correct department, section and class number on your entry form.  Make sure to list your children in the correct age category and provide the entry exactly as required.  Is there a certain number of cookies specified?  Do they need to be on a certain type of plate?  What about artwork?  Does a drawing need to be framed?  Or matted?  How should it be prepped for hanging?  Some categories have a lot of rules to follow, so read carefully.

If you’re not sure about something, there is probably the phone number of a very sweet old lady who has been doing this for about a hundred years, and you can call her to find out the answer to anything and everything.  For instance, I made one such call to our fair’s kitchen superintendent because I didn’t know if the judges expected Hannah’s cutout cookies to be frosted or not.  Then I made another call to the handicrafts superintendent and learned that Elisabeth’s bead design should be entered in “plastic craft” not “bead work” and that yes, “paper crafts” includes both quilling and origami.

I loved entering baked goods at our county fair as a teen, and I now live vicariously through Hannah (which you’ve undoubtedly noticed if you’ve read my fair posts.)  It has been a wonderfully positive experience for her.  In the weeks prior to the fair, she has a big growth spurt in the area of kitchen skills and enthusiasm as she makes practice batches of various goodies.  And her big brothers will tell you that has been a wonderfully positive experience for them.  ;)

You can read about this year’s fair adventures here, here, here and here, as well as last year’s big day here.

Have your children entered baked goods or arts and crafts in your county fair?  What would you tell someone entering for the first time?

Our Day at the Fair, Part III

If you’ve read Part I and Part II, you know that we played a waiting game the morning of the fair.  We’d walk around for a while to see who was selling what, then we’d walk around some more and visit the animals, and every five minutes someone would inevitably ask, “Do you think they’re done judging yet?”

We went back and forth a few times, then finally the wait was over.  As we entered the baked goods building again and sheepishly peeked around the corner again, we were happy to see that the judges’ tables and chairs were put away and we were allowed to storm the bakery cases admire the entries and look for any ribbons attached to familiar names.

All eyes hopefully scanned the 7-11 year old section.  More cheering, more jumping up and down, more hugs.  Our good day got even better!

This was Joseph’s first time entering anything, and he won a red ribbon for these . . .

and I’ll tell you he had some stiff competition.  Great job, Joseph!  He loves to eat bake brownies!

Hannah had more baked goods entries too.  She won a blue ribbon for her blueberry muffins

and her cutout cookies.

Our fair mascot is a pig, so we had plotted to subconsciously influence the judges.  It must have worked—that, along with the best buttery cutout cookie recipe ever, compliments of Martha Stewart.

Hannah also won a red ribbon for her bar cookies

and icebox cookies.

That was a lot of fun!  Just how much excitement can one single day hold?!

Join me for the next post, where we’ll visit the domestic arts building and check on the handicrafts entries there.

Fun in the Kitchen

I love learning new things in the kitchen.  Whether it’s the excitement of trying out a new recipe and having it be SPECTACULAR or learning a new-to-me skill that our foremothers commonly employed, I enjoy it all.

With that in mind, I have some fantastic links to share with you.

I found this great recipe on Pinterest.  And even though it’s still on my “Recipes to Try” board, let me assure that I have indeed tried it and it is definitely a keeper!  If you’re a fan of chocolate-peanut butter combinations, you simply must make this.  Thanks to the extra fat from the peanut butter, it’s also one of the creamiest homemade ice cream recipes I’ve made.  Mmm.

It’s not as healthy as the last ice cream recipe I shared, but I’ll bet you could easily substitute some honey for the sugar to improve it in that area.

I also learned how to make cottage cheese this week, thanks to my friend Dawn at Roberts’ Farm.  I told you before about how much cream is in their milk right now and how I like to pour off some of it for use in all sorts of things (like ice cream.)  Well, now I know what to do with skim milk if I use up all the cream in part of the milk from our herdshare.

I made some wonderful cottage cheese, following Dawn’s directions.  It’s so delicious and not terribly difficult.  Time actually does most of the work for you.

Now the question is what to do with all that whey.  This isn’t a problem I’m used to encountering, but I recalled some ideas on one of my favorite blogs, The Prairie Homestead.  Sure enough, I found what I was looking for—16 Ways to Use Your Whey.

What kind of fun have you been having in the kitchen this week?

~

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Elisabeth’s Rainbow Cupcakes Cake

Okay, so if you’re a regular reader, it should be clear that I’m a little inconsistent when it comes to food.  One minute I’m all-natural, whole, healthy ingredients, and the next minute I’ve got a picture of artifically-sweetened, artifically-colored, sugared up junk food slapped up here on the blog.

But you all have been very sweet in pretending not to notice.  :)    No explanation for now; I just wanted to say that the irony is not lost on me either.

So, jumping right in . . . I wanted to show you this trick I did with cupcakes for the first time ever.  I’ve seen cupcakes cakes in stores and online and had an opportunity to make one earlier this month for Elisabeth’s birthday.

She wanted a rainbow cake, and I wanted to make her a BIG rainbow.  I don’t have a large enough pan, though, so I thought if I put some cupcakes together I could get the look we wanted.

First, I’ve got to say that one of my pet peeves is rainbows with the wrong colors or the colors in the wrong order.  Science degree, ROY G BIV, and all that, you know?  Normally, it would bother me, but when your sweet, turning-4-years-old daughter wants pink and purple sprinkles at the top, you can lay aside your visible spectrum convictions, save the physics lesson for another day, and just go with it.  See how laid back and easygoing I am?  heh heh

But back to the technique.  It was fun to do, and this is the tip that made it possible.  The gigantic Wilton #789, with one smooth edge and the other with teeth.  I used a decorator bag along with the tip’s smooth side to frost the cupcakes all together in long ribbons of icing. I applied the sprinkles, made some poofy clouds, and that was it.

What’s nice about this technique is that you can cover a cake that’s any shape, and placing cupcakes together is a whole lot easier than trimming cakes to make your shape if you lack the right pan.  Also, there are no sides to frost, which made things go more quickly.  And finally, serving time is quick and easy too.  Just pull the cupcakes apart and there you go.

The birthday girl was delighted, and cleanup was a cinch.

Our Valentine Chocolate-Making Day

We enjoy making these special treats to give away, and the creating is almost as much fun as the clean-up.  Just ask the kids.

Heart-Shaped Napkin Fold Tutorial

Here’s a special napkin fold you can make this Valentine’s Day, and your kids will love helping because it’s fun and simple to do.  What’s also nice is that for this particular fold your napkins do not have to be perfect squares.  You can even make this with paper napkins if you like.

If you want to make it really special, use cloth napkins then iron the finished product.  Not only does ironing results in a more crisp, professional-looking fold, but it also helps thicker napkins not come untucked at the top corners.

I didn’t take the time to do that here, but depending on the occasion, I’ll fold the napkins right on my extra-wide ironing board and press as I go.

Begin with a napkin placed seam-side up.

Fold it in half, bringing the top edge down to meet the bottom edge.

Now bring up both layers of the new bottom edge to almost meet the fold at the top.  Depending on the size and shape of your napkin, you’ll want to stop about 1/2 inch short of the fold.

Place a finger at the bottom center, and fold up the left side, as shown.

Repeat with the other side.

Some people find it easier to flip the napkin over at this point before doing the next step.  But either way, you’ll want to tuck down the two corners on each side.

Flip the napkin back over, if necessary, and there you go.  Now all you need is a sweet little favor to place in the middle.

It’s an easy way to say “I love you” this Valentine’s Day.

For more napkin-folding inspiration, click here.