Saturday, January 16, 2010

ARE YOU WHAT YOU APPEAR TO BE?

Includes recipes for homemade slice and bake cookies, Asian Marinade, and Marinated Garden Vegetables

Janurary 17, 2010
As I prepared my elegant lunch I laughed a bit. Our finances are at an all time low right now, but I was having what would have been considered a high dollar lunch by some. Butterflied shrimp, marinated vegetables, herbal tea and artisan bread, with hot from the oven plump large oatmeal raisin cookies for dessert was my lunch menu for the day. A $15 lunch easily at your better restaurants, but not here at home.


The four shrimp were from an on sale purchase months before the big lay off. I had vacuum packed them in individual serving bags. I’m the only family member that eats shrimp so when it was purchased I divide it up in 4 shrimp serving sizes. The bulk purchased shrimp, for under $12 made 11 lunches for me over the months that followed.

The marinated vegetables were broccoli, cauliflower, carrots and cucumber that I had put in a jar of bread and butter pickle juice when I finished the jar of home canned pickles. More of those same fresh vegetables would show up that evening to be added to forty-nine cent a pound chicken leg quarters meat that had been cooked and deboned, then mixed with a homemade stir fry marinade to serve over bulk purchased home cooked rice for a fine Chinese meal.

The herbal tea was unfortunately store purchased tea bags, but I am putting in a fine herb garden this year to get past that for next year. Even though it was purchased tea, it had been bought on sale with a coupon.

As I have mentioned before I love the cookbook “Artisan Bread in Less Than Five Minutes a Day”. The bread was leftover from a previous meal. The Oatmeal Raisin Cookies were homemade slice and bake cookies. It’s so handy to just slice off a few cookies and bake what you want for a hot, fresh treat.

The point to all this is, even when you are down on your finances you can still eat elegantly and well with just a little pre-planning and scratch cooking. The two meals I described could have cost as much as $30 per person in a restaurant, I made both for less than $5 person and as a dear lady I correspond says “have encores.”

As with any S.H.E. (Sidetracked Home Executive) one thought lead to another. I started thinking about how we each go through our lives and sometimes forget how different we look to the outside world in comparison to the reality that is us.

Yesterday is a prime example of this. I did movie theater and restaurant mystery shops all day. I appeared to be a well dressed business woman who had a good lunch at a “sit down” restaurant with her husband, that she cheerfully paid $40 for.

Later that day we saw a movie together then ate a $10 hamburger meal at an upscale burger restaurant. Of course during the day we stopped by a bank to cash a check and chat with the tellers. Anyone following us around would have thought us an affluent couple.

The reality check is this. I was working for about minimum wage after all the expenses were taken out. My fine wardrobe consisted of hand-me-up clothing from my sister-in-law, thrift shop finds, and on sale purchases. The outfit was several years old and had originally cost me less than $10.

I would be reimbursed the entire $40 lunch meal, including tip but would not receive any pay for my report. The company figures the two meals more than pays for your time. I cashed the check while doing a bank shop, and then placed it in my mystery shopping budget envelope as per my monthly budget. If I did not have enough money in my budget for the envelope that shop would not have been accepted.

I got paid a small amount for taking time out of my day to cash that check and then report on the teller’s performance.

The $10 burger meal was paid for by another mystery shopping company, only they generously paid me a small amount for my time as well.

Fantasy vs reality. Today people waded mud to come to my home to purchase items I have up for sale so I might cover my bills. In the aftermath of winter storms, visits from Murphy and mud sucking at our boots we looked like Ma and Pa Kettle I am certain. Yet to us the cut but not stacked firewood, the dead hot water tank sitting on the back deck and the mud all represent a future that looks good.

We will be warm and have hot water to wash that mud off with. The mud is the result of a good solid soaking that will help make our spring gardens rich. Those gardens will produce food to feed our bodies while sharing the adventure of this new chapter of our life will feed our souls. The old hot water tank is waiting for a friend who home processes chickens to pick up to turn into a scalder for that job.  A recycling project that is good for the enviroment and helps out a friend with their own family goals.

As I finished cooking my shrimp I thought “My grandmother was right. It is not how others see you that counts. It’s how you truly are that does.

So that this isn’t a total think piece I am including a couple of the recipes that I mentioned earlier for those of you who are following the blog mainly for the recipes.

Oatmeal Raisin ( or any flavor) Slice and Bake Cookies.

Make a double, triple or quadruple batch of your favorite cookie dough. Lay out flat a piece of aluminum foil the length you can comfortably store in your freezer.

Next lay a sheet of waxed paper the same size on top of the foil.

On the wax paper place a solid roll of the cookie dough the size you would like your raw cookies would be. Be sure to mold it smooth and solid.

Roll the dough in the wax paper, twisting the ends shut . Then wrap in the foil. Repeat until you have all the dough packaged up.

I use file folder labels to make my labels for home canned, dried or frozen foods. They stick well and are cheap. Even cheaper is if you have access to the paper discarded from making CD labels it works equally as well, is self adhesive and helps in recycling efforts.

Labeling should include the date made, the cooking time and temperature. Freeze until needed then thaw slightly, slice to the desired thickness and bake. Fast, quick, cheaper than store bought and so delicious!

MARINATED VEGETABLES and PICKLED EGGS

The next time you empty the pickles out of a pickle jar, no matter the flavor slice up any vegetable you like pickled and add them to the jar until the jar is packed and the pickle juice completely covers the vegetables. Keep refrigerated. You can also pickle boiled eggs this way. Pickled beet juice makes for a wonderful pickled egg.

ASIAN STIR FRY MARINADE

I make this up by the big batch and freeze it in 1 cup containers to use with anything I want to add an Asian flair to.

6 TBL cornstarch

¾ tsp garlic powder

2 ¼ tsp instant beef bullion granuals

¾ tsp onion powder

6 tbl wine or rice wine vinegar

6 TBL water

1 ½ tsp grated fresh ginger (JP NOTE: I keep my ginger root in the freezer and it makes grating so much easier)

¾ C low sodium soy sauce (regular soy sauce makes this marinade too salty)

¾ C dark corn syrup

2 2/3 C water

Mix all the dry ingredients together. Using a wire whisk add the vinegar, 6 TBL of water and ginger. Stirring until the cornstarch is dissolved. Whisk in the remaining ingredients. Makes approximately 5 Cups marinade. If you are going to use it within 4 weeks in can be stored in a single five cup container in the refrigerator. It also freezes well. I divide it up between 6 containers, date, label and freeze. Once it’s froze rock hard I pop it out of the plastic container I froze it in and place it in a vacuum sealed bag. Label and freeze for long term storage.
USES: JP NOTE; when you use this be sure and stir it well before using as the cornstarch will settle to the bottom of the bowl.

Marinade any meat you would like to broil or grill in it for a great taste.

I marinade meats(either cooked or raw) that I’m going to stir fry in it for about 30 minutes. Stir fry the meat briefly, add the vegetables of choice and the remaining marinade to the skillet and stir fry quickly until marinade has thickened. As always use common sense and caution when using marinades you have had raw meats in. When in doubt throw out the batch you marinated the raw meat in and use a fresh container for cooking.

Substitute for teriyaki sauce in any recipe for a slightly different taste.

Jan who should not be left alone with her thoughts too long in OK

Thursday, January 7, 2010

PUTTING THE BREAD MACHINE THROUGH ITS PACES

Includes recipes for bagels and Almond Poppy Seed Bread

January 7, 2010

I confess, I’m a lazy bread maker. My family loves the goodness of homemade breads, but I’m simply too lazy to knead it out by hand. So I tend to make recipes from the “Artisan Bread in Less Than Five Minutes a Day” cookbook or use my two bread machines. Yep two, one of them is part of my toaster oven, but I often have both of them going at once. This last few days I’ve been using them one at a time, but I’ve still been using that one pretty regularly.

On the fifth I made Almond Poppy Seed Bread, and boy was it good. We ate some of it hot with butter immediately, but it toasted up yummy for breakfast the next day too. The recipe will of course follow. I am also including how I create my own Master Mixes.

I didn’t bake on the sixth because it was my 60th birthday and I had mystery shops to do. Of course Murphy came to wish me a Happy Birthday and killed both of the batteries on our dually truck as a gift. There went the profits from those few shops. OH WELL, this too shall pass.

Today I had a new experience for me. I decided to make bagels. I had always shied away from doing this because they are time eaters to make. While I worked at them for a while the results were well worth the effort and now I’m anxious to come up with variations on them. The recipe for those follow as well.

I’ve got shops to do tomorrow, so there will be no baking tomorrow, but I’m thinking I may try my hand at pita bread during this next week.

Jan who is keeping this post short but sweet in OK

ALMOND POPPY SEED BREAD

(JP NOTE) The recipe I used had it broke down for various size machines in flour equivalents, meaning that if you normally use X cups of flour in your bread machine to make a normal loaf of bread this is what you would use to make the proper size loaf. The 3 sizes it used as a comparison are 2, 2 ½ and 3 cups. For this recipe I will list the ingredient and then in that order (smallest to largest) list the amount for the corresponding size. Pick the column that is right for your machine..



Buttermilk-- ¾ C, 7/8 C, 1, 1/8 C

Butter—3 TBL, 3 ½ TBL, 4 TBL

Almond Extract—1 TBL, 1 1/3 TBL, 1 ½ TBL (JP NOTE—we felt the recipe actually needs a little more of this ingredient, but adjust to your tastes)

Brown Sugar-- 1 1/3 TBL, 1 ½ TBL, 2 TBL

Salt—1/4 tsp, 1/3 tsp. ½ tsp

Poppy Seeds—1 TBL, 1 1/3 TBL, 1 ½ TBL

Baking Soda—1/4 tsp, 1/3 tsp, ½ tsp

Bread Flour—2 C, 2 ½ C, 3 C

Yeast—1 tsp, 1 ½ tsp, 2 tsp

Chopped Almonds—1/3 C, ½ C, 2/3 C

Put your ingredients in the order your manufacturer recommends. Bake on the white/sweet bread light to medium setting.



IF I were to make this into a Master Mix what I would do would pick the size bread I would be making. Then from that list of ingredients I would decide on how much mix would fit in my biggest mixing bowl (13 cups of mix for the white and green one, 16 cups for my big red one). Since my bread machine is the largest size I would then use the big red bowl and multiply all the dry ingredients (except the yeast) by 4 (which allows for stirring neatly with the wire whisk in that particular bowl). In those dry ingredients I would include using dry buttermilk. Then the proper amount of water for the recipe would be added with the almond extract, butter and yeast on the baking day.

So the ingredient list would then look like:

ALMOND POPPY SEED BREAD MACHINE MASTER MIX

1 C dry buttermilk (JP NOTE: from the package 4 TBL of the mix to make 1 cup of buttermilk 4 TBL = ¼ cup so 4 x ¼ c= 1 cup)

½ C brown sugar, packed

2 tsp. salt

6 TBL poppy seeds

2 tsp baking soda

12 C. Bread Flour

Mix all the ingredients together well. I recommend using a wire whisk to do this. Store in an airtight container, date and label. Store in a cool, dry place. Use within 6 months.

To make Almond Poppy Seed bread

Use:

2 Cups Mix

1 C warm water

4 TBL butter

1 ½ TBL Almond extract

2 tsp yeast

2/3 C chopped almonds

Place in the machine via the manufacturer’s recommendation, bake on the sweet bread setting.

Now for the bagel recipe.

BAGELS

Again this had 2 sizes 1 ½ pound (9 bagels) and 2 pound (12 bagels), I’ll put the two pound ingredient amount in ().

1 C (1 1/3 C) milk

2 tsp (1 TBL) water

3 C (4 C) bread flour

1 TBL (4 tsp) sugar

¾ tsp (1 tsp) salt

1 tsp (1 ¼ tsp) yeast

1 (1) egg white, slightly beaten

1 (1) TBL water

Poppy Seeds, or Sesame Seeds, optional

Add first 6 ingredients to bread machine per the manufacturer’s recommendation. Use the dough cycle. At the end of the dough cycle remove dough from bread machine and punch down the dough. Let dough rest for 10 minutes. (If your machine has a bagel cycle use that and you don’t need to punch down and rest because the machine will do this for you).

Working quickly divide the dough into 9 (12) equal parts. Shape each into a smooth ball. Punch a hole in the middle of each ball and pull it gently to enlarge the hole to about 2”. Place on a greased large baking sheet. Cover and let rise for 20 minutes (timing from the forming of the first bagel).

Broil, 5 inches from the heat for 3 to 4 minutes (DO NOT ALLOW TO BROWN—WATCH CLOSELY)

While they are broiling bring 4 C water and 1 TBL sugar to a boil. Reduce the heat and add bagels 4 or 5 at a time. Simmer for 7 minutes (turning over once). Drain on toweling. The bagels might fall slightly when doing this, but will rise again during the baking process. Place on a well greased large baking sheet. Mix egg white with water and brush on the top of the bagels. IF desired sprinkle with either poppy seeds or sesame seeds. Bake at 375 for 25 to 30 minutes or until tops are golden brown. Remove from baking sheet, cool on racks.