annie blog

March 19, 2011
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This Salad Dressing

This Salad Dressing

is a total blast from the past. It is also wonderful on a spinach salad with some hard boiled egg and bacon and some water chestnuts or maybe the spinach with some fruit and toasted nuts.

You have the ingredients in your house to make it, I bet. My only suggestion is to halve the recipe because it makes a lot.

Tangy Salad Dressing

Combine in blender:
1/3 cup ketchup
1/2 cup sugar
2 T. Worchestershire sauce
1/2 cup vinegar (I use red wine vinegar)
1 small diced onion
1 cup oil

Blend until smooth. Keeps awhile in the fridge.

Happy Saturday, y’all!

March 18, 2011
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3 Comments

Beef Stew, Yummy!

Beef Stew, Yummy!

Okay, I know that the weather during which we particularly appreciate dishes like stew is rapidly leaving us…and good riddance, I say. But, yesterday I made a wonderful beef stew for the first time and I really have to recommend it to you.

You can find the recipe and lots of other tasty, easy recipes here on the Three Many Cooks website. Now, the stew itself is great, but Pam also gives a quick cook method, here, that reduces the time in the oven to one and a half hours. If you’re like me, that’s just enough time to roast some potatoes, clean up the kitchen, set the table and do a few loads of laundry — in other words, your dinner is done before you know it. What a lovely dinner it is, too.

All I know is that I, Annie, a take-it-or-leave-it-when-it-comes-to-meat omnivore, was feeling pretty territorial about the leftovers today.

Enough said.

Happy Friday, y’all!!

March 18, 2011
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3 Comments

Beef Stew, Yummy!

Beef Stew, Yummy!

Okay, I know that the weather during which we particularly appreciate dishes like stew is rapidly leaving us…and good riddance, I say. But, yesterday I made a wonderful beef stew for the first time and I really have to recommend it to you.

You can find the recipe and lots of other tasty, easy recipes here on the Three Many Cooks website. Now, the stew itself is great, but Pam also gives a quick cook method, here, that reduces the time in the oven to one and a half hours. If you’re like me, that’s just enough time to roast some potatoes, clean up the kitchen, set the table and do a few loads of laundry — in other words, your dinner is done before you know it. What a lovely dinner it is, too.

All I know is that I, Annie, a take-it-or-leave-it-when-it-comes-to-meat omnivore, was feeling pretty territorial about the leftovers today.

Enough said.

Happy Friday, y’all!!

March 18, 2011
by
3 Comments

Beef Stew, Yummy!

Beef Stew, Yummy!

Okay, I know that the weather during which we particularly appreciate dishes like stew is rapidly leaving us…and good riddance, I say. But, yesterday I made a wonderful beef stew for the first time and I really have to recommend it to you.

You can find the recipe and lots of other tasty, easy recipes here on the Three Many Cooks website. Now, the stew itself is great, but Pam also gives a quick cook method, here, that reduces the time in the oven to one and a half hours. If you’re like me, that’s just enough time to roast some potatoes, clean up the kitchen, set the table and do a few loads of laundry — in other words, your dinner is done before you know it. What a lovely dinner it is, too.

All I know is that I, Annie, a take-it-or-leave-it-when-it-comes-to-meat omnivore, was feeling pretty territorial about the leftovers today.

Enough said.

Happy Friday, y’all!!

March 17, 2011
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1 Comment

The Best Cupcakes Ever?

The Best Cupcakes Ever?

I made some cupcakes today. I took some to the secretaries at J’s school, just because they’re so sweet to him, and I also took some to a friend. Later in the afternoon, I got an email from that friend saying that it was the best cupcake she’d ever had.

High praise, indeed, though this recipe might just warrant it.

These are good cupcakes. To like them you must adore: chocolate, whiskey, Irish coffee, creamy filling, and a really moist coffee-chocolate cake. That covers 95% of the population, I’d bet.

Irish Coffee Cupcakes

Makes 12 standard cupcakes.

Preheat oven to 350. Line a standard cupcake pan with paper cupcake liners.

Ingredients

Cake:
1 1/4 cup all purpose flour
1 t. baking powder
1/4 t. baking soda
1/4 t. salt
1 cup strong brewed coffee
6 T. cocoa
1 1/4 cups brown sugar, packed
1 stick butter, room temperature
2 t. vanilla extract
2 large eggs, room temperature

Filling:
4 oz. cream cheese, room temperature
4 T. butter, room temperature
6 T. powdered sugar
1 T. + 1 t. Irish coffee liquor

Glaze:
2/3 cup chocolate chips
1/4 cup heavy cream
2 t. agave nectar or white corn syrup
2T. Irish whiskey

Instructions:

Sift the cocoa into a small bowl.

In a 2 cup measuring cup, microwave the coffee until it is just about to boil. Take it out of the microwave and pour it into a large bowl. Gradually whisk in the sifted cocoa, until smooth. Add the butter and whisk until butter is combined with the cocoa and coffee. Add the sugar and whisk again until combined. Cool until tepid. While it is cooling, sift the flour, baking powder, baking soda, and salt into the same bowl that you used for the sifted cocoa. After the chocolate/coffee mixture has cooled, add the eggs and the vanilla. Whisk until combined. Add the flour mixture and whisk only until just combined. Do not overmix. Pour into the cupcake liners and bake 20-22 minutes until just set in the middle. Watch them like a hawk at the end of baking time. Pulling them out at the right time ensures a moist cake.

Cool completely.

To make filling:
Beat the cream cheese and butter with a paddle attachment in a mixer or use a food processor. Add the sugar. When it is combined, add the Irish coffee liquor.

To make glaze:
Put both the chocolate chips and heavy cream into a microwave safe bowl. Microwave the mixture at half power for one minute intervals, stirring in between each minute. When the mixture is smooth, add the corn syrup or agave nectar. Stir in the whiskey.

To assemble:
Using a sharp, short knife, cut 2-inch cones out of the top of each cupcake. Remove the cones from the cupcakes and trim off the point of each cone to make each cone into a disk roughly 1/3 inch thick. Place some of the filling in each cupcake. Top the filling with the corresponding disk of cake. Dip the top of each cupcake in the glaze. Make sure to twist your wrist as you remove each cupcake from the glaze. That will give it a great little swirl on top.

These are so yummy, y’all. I know that it looks like too much work, but they are really easy to put together. Also, the filling can be made and refrigerated for up to 2 days ahead and the cupcakes can also be baked hours ahead. The glaze is easy and makes each cupcake look gorgeous.

(Recipe from David Lebovitz’s Ready for Dessert. The method is mine.)

One more thing, save for the whiskey, these cupcakes are Aldivore.

The luck o’ the Irish to ya!

March 17, 2011
by
1 Comment

The Best Cupcakes Ever?

The Best Cupcakes Ever?

I made some cupcakes today. I took some to the secretaries at J’s school, just because they’re so sweet to him, and I also took some to a friend. Later in the afternoon, I got an email from that friend saying that it was the best cupcake she’d ever had.

High praise, indeed, though this recipe might just warrant it.

These are good cupcakes. To like them you must adore: chocolate, whiskey, Irish coffee, creamy filling, and a really moist coffee-chocolate cake. That covers 95% of the population, I’d bet.

Irish Coffee Cupcakes

Makes 12 standard cupcakes.

Preheat oven to 350. Line a standard cupcake pan with paper cupcake liners.

Ingredients

Cake:
1 1/4 cup all purpose flour
1 t. baking powder
1/4 t. baking soda
1/4 t. salt
1 cup strong brewed coffee
6 T. cocoa
1 1/4 cups brown sugar, packed
1 stick butter, room temperature
2 t. vanilla extract
2 large eggs, room temperature

Filling:
4 oz. cream cheese, room temperature
4 T. butter, room temperature
6 T. powdered sugar
1 T. + 1 t. Irish coffee liquor

Glaze:
2/3 cup chocolate chips
1/4 cup heavy cream
2 t. agave nectar or white corn syrup
2T. Irish whiskey

Instructions:

Sift the cocoa into a small bowl.

In a 2 cup measuring cup, microwave the coffee until it is just about to boil. Take it out of the microwave and pour it into a large bowl. Gradually whisk in the sifted cocoa, until smooth. Add the butter and whisk until butter is combined with the cocoa and coffee. Add the sugar and whisk again until combined. Cool until tepid. While it is cooling, sift the flour, baking powder, baking soda, and salt into the same bowl that you used for the sifted cocoa. After the chocolate/coffee mixture has cooled, add the eggs and the vanilla. Whisk until combined. Add the flour mixture and whisk only until just combined. Do not overmix. Pour into the cupcake liners and bake 20-22 minutes until just set in the middle. Watch them like a hawk at the end of baking time. Pulling them out at the right time ensures a moist cake.

Cool completely.

To make filling:
Beat the cream cheese and butter with a paddle attachment in a mixer or use a food processor. Add the sugar. When it is combined, add the Irish coffee liquor.

To make glaze:
Put both the chocolate chips and heavy cream into a microwave safe bowl. Microwave the mixture at half power for one minute intervals, stirring in between each minute. When the mixture is smooth, add the corn syrup or agave nectar. Stir in the whiskey.

To assemble:
Using a sharp, short knife, cut 2-inch cones out of the top of each cupcake. Remove the cones from the cupcakes and trim off the point of each cone to make each cone into a disk roughly 1/3 inch thick. Place some of the filling in each cupcake. Top the filling with the corresponding disk of cake. Dip the top of each cupcake in the glaze. Make sure to twist your wrist as you remove each cupcake from the glaze. That will give it a great little swirl on top.

These are so yummy, y’all. I know that it looks like too much work, but they are really easy to put together. Also, the filling can be made and refrigerated for up to 2 days ahead and the cupcakes can also be baked hours ahead. The glaze is easy and makes each cupcake look gorgeous.

(Recipe from David Lebovitz’s Ready for Dessert. The method is mine.)

One more thing, save for the whiskey, these cupcakes are Aldivore.

The luck o’ the Irish to ya!

March 17, 2011
by annie
1 Comment

The Best Cupcakes Ever?

The Best Cupcakes Ever?

I made some cupcakes today. I took some to the secretaries at J’s school, just because they’re so sweet to him, and I also took some to a friend. Later in the afternoon, I got an email from that friend saying that it was the best cupcake she’d ever had.

High praise, indeed, though this recipe might just warrant it.

These are good cupcakes. To like them you must adore: chocolate, whiskey, Irish coffee, creamy filling, and a really moist coffee-chocolate cake. That covers 95% of the population, I’d bet.

Irish Coffee Cupcakes

Makes 12 standard cupcakes.

Preheat oven to 350. Line a standard cupcake pan with paper cupcake liners.

Ingredients

Cake:
1 1/4 cup all purpose flour
1 t. baking powder
1/4 t. baking soda
1/4 t. salt
1 cup strong brewed coffee
6 T. cocoa
1 1/4 cups brown sugar, packed
1 stick butter, room temperature
2 t. vanilla extract
2 large eggs, room temperature

Filling:
4 oz. cream cheese, room temperature
4 T. butter, room temperature
6 T. powdered sugar
1 T. + 1 t. Irish coffee liquor

Glaze:
2/3 cup chocolate chips
1/4 cup heavy cream
2 t. agave nectar or white corn syrup
2T. Irish whiskey

Instructions:

Sift the cocoa into a small bowl.

In a 2 cup measuring cup, microwave the coffee until it is just about to boil. Take it out of the microwave and pour it into a large bowl. Gradually whisk in the sifted cocoa, until smooth. Add the butter and whisk until butter is combined with the cocoa and coffee. Add the sugar and whisk again until combined. Cool until tepid. While it is cooling, sift the flour, baking powder, baking soda, and salt into the same bowl that you used for the sifted cocoa. After the chocolate/coffee mixture has cooled, add the eggs and the vanilla. Whisk until combined. Add the flour mixture and whisk only until just combined. Do not overmix. Pour into the cupcake liners and bake 20-22 minutes until just set in the middle. Watch them like a hawk at the end of baking time. Pulling them out at the right time ensures a moist cake.

Cool completely.

To make filling:
Beat the cream cheese and butter with a paddle attachment in a mixer or use a food processor. Add the sugar. When it is combined, add the Irish coffee liquor.

To make glaze:
Put both the chocolate chips and heavy cream into a microwave safe bowl. Microwave the mixture at half power for one minute intervals, stirring in between each minute. When the mixture is smooth, add the corn syrup or agave nectar. Stir in the whiskey.

To assemble:
Using a sharp, short knife, cut 2-inch cones out of the top of each cupcake. Remove the cones from the cupcakes and trim off the point of each cone to make each cone into a disk roughly 1/3 inch thick. Place some of the filling in each cupcake. Top the filling with the corresponding disk of cake. Dip the top of each cupcake in the glaze. Make sure to twist your wrist as you remove each cupcake from the glaze. That will give it a great little swirl on top.

These are so yummy, y’all. I know that it looks like too much work, but they are really easy to put together. Also, the filling can be made and refrigerated for up to 2 days ahead and the cupcakes can also be baked hours ahead. The glaze is easy and makes each cupcake look gorgeous.

(Recipe from David Lebovitz’s Ready for Dessert. The method is mine.)

One more thing, save for the whiskey, these cupcakes are Aldivore.

The luck o’ the Irish to ya!

March 16, 2011
by
0 comments

A Curious Buster

A Curious Buster

This youngest son of mine is funny. For instance, he always has a plan when he gets home from school. There is always something to make, a book to write, a contraption to engineer. Homework to do? Well, only if pressure is supplied. Why reluctant on the homework? He’s too busy doing other stuff.

Youngest children are so often affected by what the older siblings are into at the time. Since he has a very, vewwy intewesting older brother, J, he gets to be exposed to different things than I think a typically developing 14 year old would show him. For instance, right now, older brother, J, is enamored with the old “Rudolph” movie. You know, the one that used to come on TV every year. So, he watches it on YouTube now and E frequently watches, too.

E watches.

E thinks.

E then comes out with statements like this:

E: I think that it’s so weird that Santa named one of his reindeer, Vomit.
Me: What? No, I don’t think one is named Vomit.
E: Yes!! It’s the one after Cupid.
Me: Uhhhh.

Jon joins the conversation then (playing along): Oh, yeah, buddy, I’d forgotten all about the one named Vomit. Wonder how he got that name?

E: Probably ate too much junk.

Jon: You’re right. I bet that’s it.

E then returns to the kitchen and announces that he wants to listen to the Rolling Stones’ Street Fighting Man and asks me to put it on.

Buster likes his rock and roll.

What a good idea. Let’s all have a listen.

I hope that y’all had a good Wednesday!

March 16, 2011
by
0 comments

A Curious Buster

A Curious Buster

This youngest son of mine is funny. For instance, he always has a plan when he gets home from school. There is always something to make, a book to write, a contraption to engineer. Homework to do? Well, only if pressure is supplied. Why reluctant on the homework? He’s too busy doing other stuff.

Youngest children are so often affected by what the older siblings are into at the time. Since he has a very, vewwy intewesting older brother, J, he gets to be exposed to different things than I think a typically developing 14 year old would show him. For instance, right now, older brother, J, is enamored with the old “Rudolph” movie. You know, the one that used to come on TV every year. So, he watches it on YouTube now and E frequently watches, too.

E watches.

E thinks.

E then comes out with statements like this:

E: I think that it’s so weird that Santa named one of his reindeer, Vomit.
Me: What? No, I don’t think one is named Vomit.
E: Yes!! It’s the one after Cupid.
Me: Uhhhh.

Jon joins the conversation then (playing along): Oh, yeah, buddy, I’d forgotten all about the one named Vomit. Wonder how he got that name?

E: Probably ate too much junk.

Jon: You’re right. I bet that’s it.

E then returns to the kitchen and announces that he wants to listen to the Rolling Stones’ Street Fighting Man and asks me to put it on.

Buster likes his rock and roll.

What a good idea. Let’s all have a listen.

I hope that y’all had a good Wednesday!

March 16, 2011
by
0 comments

A Curious Buster

A Curious Buster

This youngest son of mine is funny. For instance, he always has a plan when he gets home from school. There is always something to make, a book to write, a contraption to engineer. Homework to do? Well, only if pressure is supplied. Why reluctant on the homework? He’s too busy doing other stuff.

Youngest children are so often affected by what the older siblings are into at the time. Since he has a very, vewwy intewesting older brother, J, he gets to be exposed to different things than I think a typically developing 14 year old would show him. For instance, right now, older brother, J, is enamored with the old “Rudolph” movie. You know, the one that used to come on TV every year. So, he watches it on YouTube now and E frequently watches, too.

E watches.

E thinks.

E then comes out with statements like this:

E: I think that it’s so weird that Santa named one of his reindeer, Vomit.
Me: What? No, I don’t think one is named Vomit.
E: Yes!! It’s the one after Cupid.
Me: Uhhhh.

Jon joins the conversation then (playing along): Oh, yeah, buddy, I’d forgotten all about the one named Vomit. Wonder how he got that name?

E: Probably ate too much junk.

Jon: You’re right. I bet that’s it.

E then returns to the kitchen and announces that he wants to listen to the Rolling Stones’ Street Fighting Man and asks me to put it on.

Buster likes his rock and roll.

What a good idea. Let’s all have a listen.

I hope that y’all had a good Wednesday!