Croutons are one of those over looked things that anyone can make but not many do. If you have bread, oil or butter, and some seasonings you have the makings for a mighty fine crouton. Now I ask, why do people choose to buy them verses making them? The kind found in the grocery store are rock hard and salty, not to mention they just aren't very good for us. So here is a simple lesson on croutons. Try it and see just how easy it is to elevate even the most basic salad to something better.
Croutons
by A Cook's Quest
Stale Bread-Any variety just make sure it isn't flimsy sandwich bread. Many times your bakery will have the day old bread marked down. This is the stuff you want, still edible and not hard as a store bought crouton.
Butter or olive oil
Pepper
Parmesan Cheese
Dry Italian Herbs
Really whatever you think tastes good will work!
Cut the bread into desired size cubes.
Put the bread into a bowl, drizzle butter/oil over top and toss lightly. Add your seasonings tossing gently. Taste. Does it taste good? If the answer is yes dump your bread onto a cookie sheet in a single layer and toast at 400 F until the bread is light brown and a little crispy.
If the answer is no, keep adding "stuff" until you like the taste then proceed to the toasting step.
Add to your favorite salad and enjoy! We used ours with a simple iceberg/green leaf lettuce salad topped with homemade ranch. Delicious!
Total Cost-$.99
The seasonings were just pennies $.09 (ish)
Bread $.60 (1/2 of a marked down bakery loaf)
Parmesan Cheese $.30
Saturday, October 9, 2010
Friday, October 8, 2010
Breaded Garlic Chicken in Lemon Garlic Sauce
OK, first things first. Ignore the amount of butter in this recipe and don't judge me too harshly when I tell you I actually doubled the butter when I made it. After you have agreed to ignore those key points proceed to making this recipe, devouring eating it, and hiding the leftovers in the refrigerator so your family doesn't get to them before you do!
Another recipe from Mel at My Kitchen Cafe that I don't have to say much about. It is light and delicious. The sauce is great with pasta or rice and pairs wonderfully with any vegetable you want. I served our chicken over pasta noodles cooked in chicken broth and enjoyed every last bite. My family can't wait to have it again!
Breaded Garlic Chicken in Lemon-Butter Sauce
Recipe Source: My Kitchen Cafe who got it from one of her readers
*Mel's Note: if you prefer more sauce, since this makes a lighter, smaller amount of sauce, consider doubling the sauce ingredients.
**Cook's Note-I used chicken tenders instead and reduced the cooking times
4 boneless, skinless chicken breasts
1 cup seasoned flour (Flour, salt and pepper)
5 cloves of garlic, finely minced1 tablespoon parsley flakes or 1/4 cup chopped fresh parsley
2 tablespoons freshly squeezed lemon juice, from about 1 lemon
3 eggs
1/3 cup finely grated Parmesan cheese
1 tablespoon olive oil
5 tablespoons butter
Combine flour, salt and pepper. In a shallow pie plate, beat the eggs until mixed and add the Parmesan cheese. Whisk to combine. Set aside.
In a large skillet, melt one tablespoon butter and one tablespoon olive oil over medium heat. Let it begin to heat and sizzle while you prepare the chicken but be careful not to let the butter burn and turn brown.
Put the chicken pieces in the seasoned flour, and coat both sides of the chicken in the flour. One by one, dip the chicken into the egg/Parmesan mixture. Place the chicken carefully in the skillet with the hot oil/butter. Repeat with the other chicken pieces. Let the chicken cook on the first side, without moving or flipping the chicken, for 1-2 minutes until a nice, golden crust has formed. Turn the chicken and let it continue to cook for 1-2 minutes on the other side until it is golden brown. The chicken will flip easiest if it has had time to sizzle and cook to form a nice crust.
Remove the chicken to a 9X13-inch pan. Set aside while you make the sauce.
In the same skillet that you browned the chicken, melt the remaining four tablespoons butter. Add the minced garlic, lemon juice, and parsley. Simmer the sauce for 1-2 minutes, stirring and scraping up any browned bits that were on the bottom of the skillet.
Pour the sauce evenly over the chicken breasts and bake at 350 degrees for 35 minutes, until the chicken is cooked through. Serve over noodles or rice.
Total Cost $8.32 (with plenty of leftovers for hubby's lunch and mine too!)
Chicken Tenders $3.50
Flour $.08
Garlic $.20
Parsley $.09
Lemon $.50
Eggs $.57
Parmesan Cheese $1.00
Butter $1.50
Noodles $.88
Leave the Bagel . . . Take the Bialy!
Like almost everyone else in the world, I've never had anything that could truly be called a genuine bialy. Oh sure, I've tried the big puffy things sold in some bakeries and grocery stores that are labeled with the name but, unsurprisingly, those are sorry pretenders. Of course, my situation in this respect is not at all unique.
Why is that so? Because bialys--the real ones--exist today only in the fading memories of a few individuals. According to food writer Mimi Sheraton, who spent years traveling from country to country in her quest to uncover and document the culinary and social history of the bialy, this is true because the specialized culture that originally produced them disappeared into the mist of time. It vanished not by choice but, sadly, because the Nazis destroyed it in 1941. Most of its surviving inhabitants dispersed, and those were the people Sheraton sought out.
In The Bialy Eaters: The Story of a Bread and a Lost World, published in 2000, Sheraton takes readers along on a seven-year trek as she journeys the globe hoping to find and speak with emigres who once enjoyed the daily treat of this fragrant, poppy-seed and onion garnished roll. Ground zero for her quest? The diminutive bread's namesake of Bialystok, Poland.
I happened upon a copy of The Bialy Eaters at the library this summer and it intrigued me. My husband had asked me more than once to try making bialys at home and, not being too familiar with them, I thought the book might lend me insight. After reading it, I was hesitant to give them a try. Described as they were, with bittersweet emotion verging on reverence, I almost felt I'd be trespassing on hallowed ground were I to attempt them.
But my husband didn't give up asking and, last Saturday, I finally set aside time to make a batch. Except for their somewhat disappointing shape after being baked--too fat and rounded with no flat crispy section in the middle--I was pleased with them. I would, though, like to try again, and next time I'll take steps to help ensure a more authentic shape. Not that they could ever really be authentic.
The consensus seems to be that the closest thing to the original bialy--though still not quite like the original--can be found at a bakery called Kossar's in New York City. If I'm ever in the Big Apple, I'd like to stop in and give a Kossar's bialy a try. Until then, I think I can make do with homemade. I'll just have to work on my technique.
About this recipe . . .
I looked over a few contenders before settling on Jeffrey Hamelman's bialy recipe in one of my favorite cookbooks--Bread: A Baker's Book of Techniques and Recipes. I have never had anything but good luck with the formulas in this book, so I figured it was a good bet. I tweaked the onion filling, though. Hamelman's filling doesn't call for poppy seeds, nor does he advise readers to precook the onions at all. I think the inclusion of poppy seeds, particularly, lends something essential. I also added a smidgen of ground black pepper to the mixture.
Having made these once, I don't think the bialy dough-shaping directions are fully sufficient in Hamelman's book. (Sorry, Mr. Hamelman. I make this criticism with all due respect. Aside from this, I think your book is a real treasure, and I say that from the bottom of my bread-baking heart.) A novice bialy baker needs more detail in order to avoid having the bialys puff up, and close up, into little fat donut shapes. Not only that, the directions indicate that you should let the balls of dough proof on "1/4 inch of flour," but there is no explanation of why doing this is necessary. I was dying to know. I've read a couple of theories about it on the internet since last weekend, but don't you think a cookbook author should give such explanations up front? I do. Did I miss something? I desire enlightenment when I'm baking something new, not bewilderment, and that's especially true for me when we're talking about subtle details. Give me too much info versus not enough.
The verdict . . .
Overall, the taste and texture of these bialys was wonderfully satisfying. They're chewy on the outside without the leatheriness of bagels. They have that beautiful onion scent, and what about the yummy little crunch of the poppy seeds? Oh, man. Try one right out of the toaster and butter it while it's still warm, then bite into the crunchy crust. I predict you'll take the bialy, and leave the bagel behind.
Bialys
(For a printable version of this recipe, click here!)
This recipe makes one dozen bialys. I baked mine on a preheated, cornmeal dusted, baking stone set on the lowest rack of my oven.
5 and 1/8 cups of high gluten flour (That's about 1lb. and 6 oz. I actually used 4 cups of high gluten flour, and 1 and 1/8 cups of bread flour because I was a little short on the high gluten. I have found high gluten flour for sale at Whole Foods Market; you can scoop your own there and buy just as much as you need.)
13 oz. water (slightly over 1 and 1/2 cups)
2 tsp. salt (I used kosher, and actually used 2 and 1/2 tsp.)
3/4 tsp. instant yeast (not active dry)
Onion and poppy seed filling:
1 medium yellow onion, finely chopped
2 Tbsp. fresh white bread crumbs
2 Tbsp. poppy seeds
ground black pepper to taste
To make the filling:
In a small pan, heat 2 Tbsp. of vegetable oil and saute the onions until softened but not translucent.
Dump the onions into a small bowl and stir together with the bread crumbs, poppy seeds, and pepper. Cover this and set it aside at room temperature for at least a couple of hours.
To make the dough:
In the large bowl of your mixer, with the dough hook attachment, place all of the ingredients for the dough. (You do not need to proof instant yeast. You can just toss it in there with everything else right at the start--pretty neat, huh?) Mix on the lowest speed for 3 minutes to combine. Continue mixing for about 5 or 6 more minutes; if your mixer will let you knead yeast dough on second speed, use it now. If you're confined to using first speed for all kneading (as I am with my 6 quart KitchenAid mixer, per their dire warnings regarding this kind of thing), that's okay too.
The dough should be a dense springy mass when you're done, tacky but not sticky. (And, if you're into taking your dough's temperature, Hamelman says it should be about 76 degrees Fahrenheit at this point.)
Put the dough in a bowl that's been sprayed with vegetable spray or lightly greased with vegetable shortening. Cover the bowl with plastic wrap and cover that with a dish towel.
Let the dough rise at warm room temperature for two hours total, but one hour into the rising time, uncover it, put it on a floured surface and quickly give it a quick stretch and fold. It doesn't need any more than that at this point so don't overhandle. Put it back in the bowl, cover it again, and let it continue rising.
Divide the risen dough into 3 oz. pieces (very helpful to have a food scale on hand for this, but if you don't have one just try to divide it evenly into 12 pieces). Round each piece tightly into a smooth ball, creating a surface tension. Seam side down, place the balls onto baking sheets that have been covered with 1/4 inch of flour. Then cover the balls lightly with plastic that's been sprayed or greased so it won't stick to the dough, and cover that with a dish towel. Let the dough proof fully (ie., have its final rise), on the sheets for 1 and 1/2 hours.
Begin preheating your oven and baking stone at 480 degrees (yes, 480) at least half an hour before you'll need to bake. You want it to be completely hot when the dough goes in.
To shape the balls in preparation for baking, take each one in your hand and press both thumbs into its center, creating an indented hollow; don't make a hole through the dough. Rotate the ball of dough while turning it with your thumbs, stretching the middle so it ends up looking like a plate with a thick rounded rim. Make the bottom dough membrane a couple of inches wide, at least, and don't be shy about this. You want the bialy to bake up with a thin crisp middle section (do as I say, not as I did when I made these the first time!).
Place the shaped pieces of dough onto your cornmeal-dusted baker's peel (the thing you'll use to slide them onto your baking stone, if you're using one). Fill each one with at least one rounded teaspoon (more if you prefer) of the onion filling. Spread a bit of it up the sides if you like, getting some of the poppy seeds on the doughy rim.
Slide the filled dough pieces onto the preheated stone. Bake for 8 to 10 minutes. Look for bialys that are lighly golden, not overbaked or dried out. Take them out as soon as they're done, and enjoy!
(If you you'd like to comment on this post, or to read any existing comments, please click on the purple COMMENTS below!)
Sunday, October 3, 2010
Into the Clouds
Quote of the Day: Off we go into the wild blue yonder. Climbing high into the sun. - official song of the U.S. Air Force
My writer's journey is taking me into the clouds in many ways. The title of my WIP (work in progress novel) is War is Not for Girls. You can read an exerpt from the opening chapter here. I used it for a blogfest humor contest a while back. I'm packing that story up along with my new laptop, comfortable fall clothes, my Nikon camera, and boarding a plane for Honesdale, PA where I will spend some time being a writer. We have our own cabins for sleeping and writing and a main house for meals and meetings. I'm calling it my own "Walden" experience. My best writer-mama-pal Roxane will be my travel partner. Check out what she has to say about the experience here. Who knows what will happen when you send your dreams out like a hot air balloon, soaring into the clouds, ready for adventure, open to wherever the journey leads.
This is also a great quote for me and my novel because I've read so much about the women's contributions during WWII, including Women Airforce Service Pilots (WASPS), Army Nurses, war correspondents, Red Cross volunteers, and Women Army Corps (WACS). My MC (main character) is a senior in high school when the Japanese attack Pearl Harbor, her classmates get drafted, and she learns that she has more to offer the cause than fresh vegetables and letters from home.
Alright, Roxane, I've got my ticket printed, my bags (nearly) packed, arrangements set for the kids, and I'm ready to take off! How about you? (And, I'm not just talking to Roxane.)
I'm off! I'll be back next week to tell you all about it.
Go, Create, Inspire!
Journaling Prompt: What fears do you need to conquer to set your dreams afloat? Where do you need to go? What do you need to learn?
English Muffin Breakfast Pizzas
Mornings around my house are hectic. Typically my husband is just getting home from work and the rest of us are blow drying, dressing, searching for matching socks, and looking for the homework that was supposed to be put in the backpack last night, before rushing out the door. Somehow sleep feels so much better than the idea of getting up just a little bit earlier so we would all have time for breakfast. Until this year I didn't worry too much about breakfast. My older two ate breakfast at school and the youngest at daycare. But this year the kids just aren't as thrilled with school breakfast, nor am I after I heard some of the things they get to choose from. So I am making an effort to have portable breakfast options available; maybe this way we can all eat something hot, and homemade for breakfast each morning. Until now, we have been eating breakfast burritos because they are super easy to transport in a backpack and waffles heated up in the toaster oven (on the rare occasion we have time to eat at home.) But, then I found this idea at Our Best Bites and thought it was a great alternative to the burritos.
Easy to make ahead of time and easy to re-heat these little babies are not your typical breakfast sandwich. No siree! Instead of putting everything together between two pieces of bread, it is served pizza style. The muffins are soaked in egg first, French toast style, and then topped with your favorite toppings. After baking, just wrap them up place in the freezer until you are ready to eat. I find the oven is best for re-heating but the microwave will do in a pinch as well! Try these and enjoy a hot homemade breakfast :)
English Muffin Breakfast PizzasRecipeSource: Our Best Bites
6 whole wheat English muffins at room temperature
4 eggs, at room temperature
2 tablespoons milk
1/4 tsp. kosher salt
About 10 dashes Tabasco sauce
Your favorite breakfast meat, cooked (ham, bacon, sausage, chorizo etc.)
3/4-1 c. shredded cheddar or pepper jack cheese
Optional: Chopped vegetables like green onions, tomatoes, sliced olives, mushrooms, green peppers, etc.
Preheat oven to 400 degrees. Line a baking sheet with aluminum foil and spray liberally with non-stick cooking spray or brush with oil or melted butter. Set aside.
In a pie plate, whisk together the eggs, milk, salt, and Tabasco sauce. Gently pull apart each English muffin and soak each side (like you would for French toast) in the egg mixture--you want the egg mixture to soak into the bread, but you don't want the English muffin to be completely falling apart. Place the muffin, cut side up, on the baking sheet.
If using ham, slice the ham into thin strips and then place on top of the English muffins. If using bacon, just sprinkle the crumbled bacon on top. Add any additional desired toppings and then sprinkle with shredded cheese. Bake for 15 minutes and serve immediately.
FREEZER INSTRUCTIONS: After baking, loosen them from the baking sheet with a spatula and then allow them to cool completely. Transfer the baking sheet to the freezer. When the pizzas are solid, transfer them to a large Ziploc freezer bag. To reheat, place on a plate and microwave for 1 1/2 minutes at a time until the pizza is heated through (actual time will depend on how powerful your microwave is).
Total Cost- Will Vary depending on your topping choice-mine were about $5.00 to make with bulk sausage and bacon.
Saturday, October 2, 2010
Orange Rolls
These rolls turned out beautifully. I had to modify the dough recipe because I didn't have all the ingredients on hand but, it was tender and the filling a perfect balance of tangy and sweet with just enough orange flavor coming through. I may or may not have eaten four over the span of one hour (yes I realize I might have a problem.) I will be making more very very soon!
Orange Rolls
Recipe Source: Mel’s Kitchen Café modified by A Cook’s Quest1 recipe dinner rolls (below)
1/2 cup softened butter
1 cup sugar
2 T. freshly squeezed orange juice
Grated orange rind from two large oranges
Follow directions below for dinner rolls. Combine butter, sugar, orange juice and orange rind in a small bowl and mix well. When dough is ready to shape into rolls, punch down and divide in thirds. Roll each portion into large rectangle about 9 X 13 inches, 1/4 inch thick. Spread each rectangle with one-third of the butter/orange/sugar mixture. Starting with the long side, roll up jelly roll style. Seal edges well, then cut with a sharp knife or dental floss into 1 inch slices.
Twist and stretch each slice, then place on a well-greased baking sheet (the “twist and stretch” may be confusing but all you do is take the cinnamon-roll like circle you just cut from the log and stretch it while twisting it into a figure-8…if that is not your thing than by all means bake them cinnamon-roll style and they will still be very delicious and pretty). Let rise away from draft until dough doubles. Bake at 350 for about 20 minutes. Remove rolls from pans and cool on wire rack. When rolls are cool, drizzle with orange glaze: Mix together 1 1/2 cups powdered sugar, 3 T. freshly squeezed orange juice and 1/2 tsp. Grated orange rind.
Rolls
2 T. dry yeast
2 cups warm water
1/3 cup sugar
1/3 cup butter
2 1/2 tsp. Salt
2/3 cup milk or half and half6-7 cups flour
1 egg
In the large bowl of an electric mixer, combine yeast and water. Let stand 5 minutes. Add sugar, shortening, salt, dry milk, 2 cups flour and egg. Beat together until very smooth. Add 2 more cups flour, one at a time, and beat until smooth. Add about one more cup flour, 1/2 cup at a time until well mixed. Turn dough onto a lightly floured board and knead until it is smooth and satiny or utilize your stand mixer to do the work for you. Return dough to an oiled bowl and cover to let rise until about triple in size.
Turn out dough onto a floured board and let the dough rest for 10 minutes so it will be easier to manage if you roll it. Separate dough into three portions and follow orange roll directions above or roll out each portion into a circle and cut into 8 pie-shaped pieces (or 12 pieces if you want smaller rolls). Roll up crescent-style and place on baking sheet Bake at 350 degrees for 12 minutes. Makes 2-3 dozen rolls.
Total Cost $3.52 (.09 each) Not too bad for 36 Rolls!
Butter $1.21
Sugar $.29
Powdered Sugar $.26
2 Oranges $.95
Milk $.14
Flour $.48
Egg $.19
Friday, October 1, 2010
The Elmo Cake . . . Fat, Furry, and Skewered
Well, despite my best intentions, I really didn't have enough time to bake anything fantastic or unique this past week. (Appalling, I know.) But, I just couldn't end the week without sharing at least something with you. As you may already know, I'm a part-time student in a baking and pastry arts program. I'm about halfway through the program and, overall, I must say that I love it. I keep learning such interesting new stuff.
This semester, I have two classes. One is called Pastry I, the first serious pastry related course, and the other is an intermediate cake decorating class called, appropriately enough, Theme Cakes. So far, our work in the latter has focused on cakes for kids, particularly those requiring 3-D "sculpture" of one kind or another.
This past week's cake creation featured a chubby, furry, wide-eyed Elmo. That's Elmo of Sesame Street fame, in case there's any confusion. Yes, as you can plainly see he's looking quite plump, perched comfortably atop a very tall 2-layer cake, iced in soft buttercream. My husband, at first glimpse from the back of the cake, thought for a moment that Elmo was some sort of hefty bear. Couldn't blame him. That little dude's sporting more fur than Big Foot. Though you might not want to eat him, you could safely do so without coming to any significant harm. Except maybe a belly ache.
He's not exactly what I'd call a marvel of engineering but, for a novice like me, this fact is reassuring from the cake construction standpoint. His torso and head are indeed made of cake, while his arms were shaped out of homemade Rice Krispie treats. His legs are made from marshmallows trimmed this way and that. His eyes, nose, and mouth are fondant. The gift boxes on the cake are made from Rice Krispie treats too, covered in fondant, while the letters and numbers on the side are also fondant.
This is the first cake I've ever worked on that required a long skewer be twisted into it, all the way down into the base (which--in case you're actually interested in this kind of stuff--consists of a royal-icing covered 1" styrofoam disk that was glued atop four layers of corrugated cardboard that were taped together). The skewer, in fact, impales Elmo right through the top of his melon and holds him securely in place. Doing this was kind of nerve-wracking but my teacher, bless her heart, was guiding me every inch of the way: "Turn the skewer slowly like a screw while you push it down. You have to screw it in."
Uh huh. I skewered Elmo.
Oh, and before I forget, this post was brought to you by the letters C-A-K-E.
(If you'd like to comment on this post, or to read existing comments, please click on the purple COMMENTS below!)
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