• About

recipes of things past

recipes of things past

Author Archives: recipesofthingspast

Mom’s brownies

18 Monday Mar 2013

Posted by recipesofthingspast in Uncategorized

≈ 3 Comments

Tags

brownies, easiest brownies ever, Merle Mitchell

My mom was a chocaholic. One of my favorite chocolate desserts are her brownies. She would usually make them with homemade freezer vanilla ice cream. Once the brownies and ice cream were ready, she would call us to eat with the warning that the corners of the brownie pan were hers and none elses. She loved the corner brownies.

If you are still using a box mix to make your brownies, pinch yourself and make these. They are super easy to make. And while they are warm, cut out the corner piece and dish up a scoop of ice cream in my mom’s honor.

Merle Mitchell & Teal Masson

Merle’s Brownies

Ingredients:

– 1 cup butter

– 1/2 cup cocoa

cocoa

– 4 eggs

– 2 cups sugar

– 1 1/2 cups flour

– dash salt

– 1 teaspoon vanilla extract

– 1 cup chocolate morsels

– 1 cup chopped pecans or walnuts

Recipe:

1. Preheat oven to 350 degrees

2. Grease and flour a 9×13 pan

3. Melt butter in sauce pan. Dissolve cocoa in butter and set aside.

cocoa in melted butter

cocoa mixed into butter

4. Beat eggs and sugar together until fluffy.

5. Beat in flour, salt and vanilla.

6. Add cocoa and butter to flour mixture.

7. Add chocolate pieces and nuts.

8. Bake in greased and floured pan for 30-40 minutes Bake 30 minutes for chewy brownies and 40 minutes for cake-like brownies.

Share this:

  • Click to share on X (Opens in new window) X
  • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • Click to share on Pinterest (Opens in new window) Pinterest
Like Loading...

Ladies and their gin

09 Saturday Mar 2013

Posted by recipesofthingspast in Cocktails

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

gin cocktail, greenpoint cooler, heido flato, shana sussman

Normally gin is not my preferred method of preserving my liver. However some great ladies I know may have swayed me to the dark side. So just in time for spring, here are two gin cocktails that are easy to make and even easier to drink.

Shana Sussman’s spin on the Greenport Cooler

Shana Sussman

My friend Shana is a New Mexico transplant from Brooklyn. A friend of hers jokes that her yin and yang is her Ramones old lifestyle versus her new Gram Parsons lifestyle. So to keep her new cowboy boots in check, every now and then she has to pull out a reminder of the East Coast. This drink recipe is her latest yin move to add balance on the Ramones side of life.

Aine: I know you told me where this drink came from but I think we were drinking them at the time, so the memory is gin fuzzy. Please refresh.

Shana:  The drink was named for Greenport, Conneticut which is where the guy created it. (Later changed the name to greenwood cooler – greenwood heights is the name of the Brooklyn neighborhood where the bar is/where I lived.) The bar was called Quarter.

Recipe:

– 4 cucumber slices

-1/4 lemon wedge

-mint

-3 shots fresh grapefruit juice

-2 gin shots

-1 shot simple syrup

Muddle mint, lemon and cucumber. Add Grapefruit juice, gin, simple syrup and crushed ice. Enjoy.

The IN-FLATO

Heidi

I’ll admit that the name of this drink came not from the drink’s inventor, but from imbibers of this amazing cocktail at a holiday party. My friend Heidi Flato is the inventor of the drink, and she is far too classy to give any cocktail of hers such a ridiculous name. She makes the cocktails. We fools think of silly names. It should probably be a house rule that when one makes such classy cocktails, they don’t need a name.

Recipe:

-Gin

-Grapefruit soda such as San Pellegrino (can substitute grapefruit juice and club soda)

-Mint

-Lemon

-Lime

Squeeze half of a lime and half a lemon into a tall glass with ice. Add 1 part gin to 2 parts grapefruit soda or juice. Add fresh mint and a lime wedge. If using grapefruit soda, skip the club soda. Enjoy.

Share this:

  • Click to share on X (Opens in new window) X
  • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • Click to share on Pinterest (Opens in new window) Pinterest
Like Loading...

Grace Miller’s Savoury Cheese Cookies

02 Saturday Feb 2013

Posted by recipesofthingspast in Dessert

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

cheese cookies, Grace Miller, Nichole MIller, savory cheese cookies

This past holiday season my friend Nichole Miller hosted a holiday BAKE-A-RAMA. This recipe is a one of the amazing recipes I acquired.

Nichole Miller

Nichole Miller

As we waited for cookies to bake, we all got to hear about Nichole’s grandmother, Grace. Nichole even produced the following photo of Grace (in shooting mode) which may be one of my favorite photos of any grandmother EVER.

Grace Miller with her son

So I ask the questions, and Nichole tells the stories and you get the most amazing savoury cookie recipe.

Aine: So this photo is of Grace and your Dad? Tell us about Grace.

Nichole: Grace and my grandfather, William Rudolph Miller, were the loves of their lives. After my grandfather passed, Grace never remarried. That is my father, William Rudolph Miller Jr in the photo.

Grace lived in Madison, Wisconsin.  According to a recently obtained and non-confirmed story, somewhere in her family history was one of the first American women to enter China via a circus or performance troup. I need to investigate this more. But yeah just looking at the photo you can tell that Grace was pretty much a badass. I remember her smoking Benson & Hedges cigaretttes and drinking highballs.

Aine: What is the history behind these cookies?

Nichole:   The cookies were part of her annual tradition of baking ridiculous amounts of Christmas cookies, and these cookies were always part of that session. She would bake my sister and myself a tin each. My dad would usually eat one of the tins as he drove them from Madison to Chicago, leaving one tin for us to share. This usually happened before the actual holiday, as we almost always spent Christmas with Grace (my mom’s side being jewish, and all).

Grace's cookiesGrace’s Cheese Cookies

Ingredients:

– 3 sticks margarine

– 3 cups flour

– 1/8 tsp cayenne pepper

– 8 oz sharp cheddar cheese grated

– pecan halves

Directions:

1.  Preheat oven to 400 degrees

2. Soften butter

3. Blend in flour then cayenne pepper and cheddar cheese.

4. Form dough into 1 inch balls and place on parchment lined cookie sheet

5. Press pecan half into each rounded ball

6. Bake for 10-12 minutes

Share this:

  • Click to share on X (Opens in new window) X
  • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • Click to share on Pinterest (Opens in new window) Pinterest
Like Loading...

Dan Hadley schools us in mac n cheese

19 Saturday Jan 2013

Posted by recipesofthingspast in Uncategorized

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

Dan HAdley, grilled mac n cheese, mac n cheese

Let me say that if you think great mac n cheese comes out of a box this is not the blog for you. Now that is out of the way let’s get to business.

Dan Hadley

I thought I knew mac n cheese. I have my own recipe I have used for years and as serious as that recipe is…Dan Hadley’s mac n cheese puts mine to shame. I won’t disclose much about Dan or y’all will be hunting him down to cook for y’all. But every time I have been around him, Dan cooks something amazing.

This year at a New Year’s gathering in Joshua Tree, Dan injured his foot and ankle. Despite that injury and a crazy packed kitchen filled with too many cooks, Dan managed to put this mac n cheese together (I am still not sure how he did it). As he poured in the cream, he laughed and said “oh yeah this is not a low fat option.” But anyone expecting a low fat mac n cheese option needs their head examined. Once assembled, the mac went on the grill. Yes I said grill. When it was ready, people were fighting over it, mumbling with mouths full about how great it was, and begging Dan for the know-how.

What follows is the know-how…of course you feel free to mix it up especially in the add variety of cheese department. And tell Dan thanks, because mac n cheese will never be the same for you. I threw my recipe of 20 years away and replaced it with this. I promise that you will too…

Dan’s Mac n Cheese-a-rama

Crow's take on the Dan mac n cheese

Crow’s take on  Dan’s mac n cheese

Source: BBQ USA by Steven Raichlen (Workman Publishing, 2003)

Method: Direct and inirect

2 cups (about 8 ounces) elbow macaroni

1 teaspoon vegetable oil

2 ears sweet corn, shucked

1 medium red onion, peeled and quartered

4 tablespoons (1/2 stick) unsalted butter, melted, plus 2 tablespoons butter

Freshly ground black pepper

6 to 8 New Mexican green chiles or Anaheim or California peppers, or 2 to 4 poblano peppers

1 yellow bell pepper

1 red bell pepper

2 cloves garlic, minced

1 shallot, minced

3 tablespoons flour

2 cups half-and-half, light cream, or milk

2 tablespoons Dijon mustard

2 cups (about 8 ounces) grated smoked cheese, preferably smoked Cheddar

1/4 to 1/2  cup dried bread crumbs (preferably homemade)

You’ll also need:
A cast iron skillet,  aluminum foil roasting pan or drip pan, or grill-proof baking dish (about 9 by 12  inches), sprayed or brushed with oil; 2 cups wood chips or chunks (optional; preferably hickory or oak); soaked for 1 hour in water to cover, then drained

Bring 8 quarts of lightly salted water to a rapid boil in a large pot over high heat. Add the macaroni and cook until al dente, about 7 to 8 minutes. Drain the macaroni in a large colander, rinse with cold water until cool, and drain again. Toss the macaroni with the oil to prevent sticking.
Set up the grill for direct grilling and preheat to high.

When ready to cook, lightly brush the corn and onion with half of the melted butter and season with salt and pepper. Place the corn and onion on the hot grate and grill until nicely browned, 2 to 3 minutes per side (8 to 12 minutes in all) for the corn, and 3 to 4 minutes per side (9 to 12 minutes in all) for the onion, turning with tongs as needed. Add the chiles and peppers to the hot grate and grill until the skins are charred, 3 to 5 minutes per side (6 to 10 minutes in all) for the New Mexican chiles, or 3 to 5 minutes per side (12 to 20 minutes in all) for the poblano peppers, and 4 to 6 minutes per side (16 to 24 minutes in all) for the bell peppers. Transfer the corn and onion to a cutting board and let cool.

Transfer the grilled chiles and bell peppers to a baking dish and cover with plastic wrap. Let the peppers cool to room temperature, about 20 minutes (the steam trapped by the plastic wrap helps loosen the skin from the peppers). Scrape the skin off the cooled peppers, then core and seed them.

Cut the corn kernels off the cobs using lengthwise strokes of a chef’s knife. Thinly slice the onion quarters crosswise. Cut the chiles and peppers into 1/4-inch dice. The recipe can be prepared to this stage up to 2 days ahead.

Melt the 2 tablespoons butter in a large saucepan over medium heat. Add the garlic and shallot and cook until soft but not brown, 2 to 3 minutes. Stir in the corn kernels and grilled onion, chiles, and bell peppers. Stir in the flour and cook for 1 minute. Stir in the half-and-half and increase the heat to high. Let the mixture boil for 3 minutes, stirring well; it should thicken. Remove the pan from the heat and stir in the mustard and cooked macaroni, followed by the cheese. Season with salt and pepper to taste; the mixture should be highly seasoned. Spoon the macaroni and cheese into the cast iron skillet or oiled aluminum foil pan. Sprinkle the top of the macaroni with the bread crumbs and drizzle the remaining 2 tablespoons melted butter over the bread crumbs. The recipe can be prepared to this stage up to 24 hours ahead.

Set up the grill for indirect grilling and preheat to medium-high. If using a gas grill, place all of the wood chips in the smoker box or in a smoker pouch and run the grill on high until you see smoke, then reduce the heat to medium-high. If using a charcoal grill, preheat it to medium-high, then toss all of the wood chips or chunks, if desired, on the coals.

When ready to cook, place the macaroni and cheese in the center of the hot grate, away from the heat, and cover the grill. Cook the macaroni and cheese until the sauce is bubbly and the top is crusty and brown, 40minutes to 1 hour. Serve at once.

spacer

 

 

Share this:

  • Click to share on X (Opens in new window) X
  • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • Click to share on Pinterest (Opens in new window) Pinterest
Like Loading...

Joan’s Cornbread

12 Wednesday Dec 2012

Posted by recipesofthingspast in Bread

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

Jean's cronbread, Lilian Powell Wilson

skillet cornbread
If it needs explaining, getting someone’s cornbread recipe is a big deal. As simple as it is to make, every cornbread recipe has its own variation. Everyone swears that their mom or grandmother’s cornbread is the best, and everyone has an opinion as to cornbread (sugar or no sugar, cornbread versus corncake, etc). That said, it is a huge honor to get this recipe from my friend Lilly. Lilly and I share similar experiences with cornbread as my grandmother and mother loved to crumble cornbread in a bowl and pour buttermilk over it and eat it with a spoon just like Lilly’s dad!
Lillian Powell Wilson, Lilly to me, and I go back to middle school in Itasca, Texas. There were four of us that were inseparable through middle school and junior high: Lilly, Gloria, Wendy and myself. Whether it was the skating rink in Hillsboro, passing notes in Mr. Edward’s history class, or listening to our favorite bands, we were always together. Now Lilly lives in Germany, and I get to live vicariously through the photos of her traipsing across Europe. So read along, and then get to making her mother’s cornbread.
Lillian
Lillian on her Mom’s cornbread
As promised long ago, my cornbread. This is adapted from my Mom’s recipe as
given over a call from my home in Germany to hers in Texas. I also had to do a bit of internet searching for amounts as she uses pinches and scoops which didn’t translate well to my unpracticed hand.

She has made it forever! I assume her mother taught her. My mom is from Alabama, near Birmingham. Both my parents are from Alabama. They met and married there. Dad worked for Braniff Airlines and was transferred to Chicago and later to Dallas. They fell in love with Texas, and got several family members to move there as well (almost all of my Mom’s family). But of all my siblings (two sisters and a brother) I’m the only Texan (born there!). Hehe I love to tease them with that.

I’m glad to share it. It’s one of the few things I can make now that I consider “mine.” My pancakes are pretty good too. I didn’t start cooking until we moved to Germany. Brian (Lilly’s husband) did the cooking before.

I love this cornbread with hot and spicy chili. My dad used to crumble up a slice into his buttermilk and eat it with a spoon.

I use a bit more corn meal than most because this is cornbread not corncake! Also, an iron skillet really is a must.

Joan’s (Mom) Cornbread
Serves about 6
Ingredients:
–  1 1/4 cups corn meal
–  3/4 cup flour (all-purpose)
–  1/4 cup sugar
–  4 tsp salt
–  2 eggs
–  1 cup milk
–  6 Tbsp butter (melted or very soft)
–  1 Tbsp vegetable oil
Directions:
1.  Preheat oven to 400F/200C
2.  Add oil to skillet then place in heating oven.
3.  Soften or melt butter.
4.  Combine 1st five ingredients (dry items) in large bowl.
5.  Mix eggs, milk, and softened/melted butter in another bowl.
6.  Combine dry & wet ingredients, stirring gently. Do not over mix. Set aside.
7.  Remove hot, oiled pan from oven. Sprinkle approximately one Tablespoon dry cornmeal (or Polenta if you have it YUMMY) over the bottom of pan. This should fry slightly in the oil. Now poor in batter & place in oven on middle to lower rack for 20-25 minutes.
The cornbread should be golden brown and have pulled slightly away from the pan edges when done.

Share this:

  • Click to share on X (Opens in new window) X
  • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • Click to share on Pinterest (Opens in new window) Pinterest
Like Loading...

Kaiserschmarrn…a Bavarian pancake

08 Saturday Dec 2012

Posted by recipesofthingspast in Dessert

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

Bavarian pancake, Daniel Spann, Roswitha's pancake

RoswithaLast month, my friend Daniel Spann decided to do the ultimate American road trip. He and his girlfriend, Roswitha, flew from their home in Germany to America. They bought a car in San Francisco and started driving. His intention was to show Roswitha an “American experience” as she had never been to the States. Everything was going great until their car broke down in Gallup, New Mexico on the Friday before a holiday weekend.

Roswitha with her American bike helmet

Roswitha with her American bike helmet

Once rescued from Gallup, their misadventure turned out to be a great culinary adventure at my house. Roswitha is an amazing cook, and she graciously shared recipes with me as well as cooking some traditional Bavarian dishes. What follows is the recipe for the first dish she showed me: Kaiserschmarrn, a traditional Bavarian pancake dish that can be eaten as a dessert or a meal. She cooked. Daniel translated. I took photos and notes. Then we ate until we could eat no more.

Aine: Where does the name of this dish come from and what does it mean?

Roswitha & Daniel:  Kaiser is the word for the emperor. Schmarrn is a word that means a mess or sometimes it can be a swear word. But in this case it’s like a pile of mess or a mash-up.  There are lots of stories about how this dish got its name but here is the one I know. The Emperor woke up at night and was hungry, but because it was the middle of the night there were no servants. So he went to the kitchen to make up some food. Because he was the Emperor, he had no idea how to cook so he tried to make this dish. It was huge mess but it was good so basically it’s called the “Emperor’s mess” or Kaiserschmarrn.

Aine: How would you explain this dish?

Roswitha & Daniel: The dish is like a pancake, but after it cooks you cut it into lots of pieces. The best time to eat it is when it is hot. You put the pieces on a plate and sprinkle powdered sugar over it. We eat it with applesauce but you can eat it with any fruit. Sometimes people put raisins in it.

Aine:  How did you learn how to cook this and when do you make it at home?

Roswitha:  I was raised in Bavaria. When I was young we went to live with my grandparents, my father’s parents. I had a hard childhood. I never felt as if I belonged. My grandmother would make this. As I grew up doing most of the work and cooking on the farm, I learned how to make it.

With my son, I wanted his childhood to be different from mine and happy. So I make this dish quite often for him and his friends. They love it and eat it as soon as it is ready and off the stove hot. It is really filling and so easy to make. I make my own applesauce so I serve Kaiserschmarrn with that applesauce.

Roswitha’s Kaiserschmarrn

Ingredients:

– 2 cups milk

– 4 eggs

– pinch salt

– 1 to 1 1/2 cups flour

– pat of butter for skillet

Directions:

1. Mix the first 4 ingredients together. Start with one cup flour. Add more if needed until you have a thick pancake like batter.

Roswitha

Thick batter

2. Heat skillet on medium. Add pat of butter.

3. Once butter is melted add scoop of batter to skillet. Let one side cook and then flip just as you would with a pancake.

Batter in hot skillet

4. Once done, move cooked pancake to plate and cut into many strips.

Pancake done-ready to be cut into pieces

cut into pieces

5. Sprinkle with powder sugar and add applesauce on the side to dip pancake strips in.

spinkled with sugar and applesauce

6. Cook remaining batter. Serve hot.

Share this:

  • Click to share on X (Opens in new window) X
  • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • Click to share on Pinterest (Opens in new window) Pinterest
Like Loading...

Bacon Sugar Cookies…yes I said BACON

01 Saturday Dec 2012

Posted by recipesofthingspast in Dessert

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

Bacon sugar cookies, Sara Defusco

For those of us who are BACON OBSESSED, this recipe is a dream come true: Sweet and savory in a cookie. You can thank my friend Sara DeFusco for inventing this. She’s a fellow bacon-a-holic but neither of us are in denial about our addiction.

Sara is the wife of my friend Boston Chris. Ironically, I met Chris in Portland, and he now lives in the South so at some point we have to drop the Boston from his name. Anyway, when Sara was first introduced to our group of friends, we liked her instantly when she got Chris out on the dance floor. None of us had ever seen him dance. We knew she was “the” girl for him from the minute the music started.

Sara & Chris DeFusco

So what follows is Sara answering my questions and then she spills the BACON SUGAR COOKIE recipe she created.

Aine: First how did you learn to cook?
Sara: I ain’t gonna lie. My mom was not the best cook. She made a great roast chicken and a helluva beef stew, but we Irish are not known for our cuisine.

I pretty much taught myself, by reading, watching and talking with others. Remember, Julia Child said “if you can read, you can cook.” So I did.

Aine: So how did you get into baking?

Sara: I never had an interest in baking until an internet search served up many sweets recipes featuring bacon.   Last Christmas, I made chocolate chip cookies for all the neighbors, and they all seemed to like them.   I’ve also used sweets as a substitute for smoking.   I became quite fond of the sea salt/ chocolate bars that are so popular right now.  I even went so far as to pay EIGHT DOLLARS for a chocolate bar with bacon in it, at Whole Foods.  It was not as great as you’d think.

Thus, I decided I could make a sweet salty treat, on my own, at home, cheaply.

Aine: Did you just start with this recipe or how did your “process” work?

Sara:I tried a brownie recipe I found online.  Disaster. The recipe had me putting  whole raw bacon in between layers of brownie mix, like a lasagna.  Needless to say, the bacon was not crispy, and the whole thing just fell apart.

Next, I put some pre-cooked bacon bits on top of brownies, when they were mostly done baking, but the bacon kinda fell off as you tried to eat the brownie.

So following the philosophy of “keep it simple, stupid” , I realized–sugar cookies were the way to go.  Simple sweetness to complement the salty bacon.  Got a package of dry Betty Crocker sugar cookie mix (even though it was Thanksgiving time and I was almost tempted by gingerbread…), fried up some bacon till crispy, chopped it up, and stirred it into the batter as if they were chocolate chips.

The finishing touch is lightly salting the cookie balls with table salt before they go in the oven.  just to kick it up a notch.

Eat ’em, and holler AMEN!

Bacon Sugar Cookies

Ingredients:

– 1 pkg Betty Crocker sugar cookie mix (or if you have your own recipe use that)

sugar cookie mix

– 6-8 slices of bacon, cooked and broken into small chips

– salt

Directions:

1. Mix up the cookie dough according to package directions

2. Throw in the crispy bacon bits

Bacon mixed into dough

3. Roll dough into balls

4. Lightly salt the balls of cookie dough

5. Cook at 375 degrees for 7-9 minutes.

Bacon Sugar Cookies

Share this:

  • Click to share on X (Opens in new window) X
  • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • Click to share on Pinterest (Opens in new window) Pinterest
Like Loading...

My mom’s pecan tassies

27 Tuesday Nov 2012

Posted by recipesofthingspast in Dessert

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Merle Mitchell, mini pecan pies, pecan tassies

First, I have to declare that I am a pecan pie snob. For a pecan pie to be truly great, in my opinion, it has to have the perfect ratio of crust, filing and pecans. If the pie is crust heavy, the sweetness of the filling gets lost. If the filling is too thick and gelatinous well…the pie is just a hot mess.

This critiquing reminds me of a variation of one of my favorite sayings: “those who can’t do, critique.” I can’t make a perfect pecan pie which is why this recipe is the answer to the pecan pie dilemma. Mini pecan pies (or pecan tassies as my mom called them) make it impossible to get the ratio wrong.

I have no idea where this recipe came from. The recipe card in my mom’s recipe box carries no clue. All I can tell you is that as long as I remember, these pecan tassies were a holiday and party staple in our house. My mom took them everywhere. Every holiday party. Every family gathering. Family reunions. Work potlucks. And no one could eat just one. I can even see the container she carried them in…a huge 70s yellow Tupperware plastic bowl with a white lid.

My mom loved to buy pecans around Corsicana, Texas. As kids we hated shelling pecans, but we knew the reward was these pies. The week before Thanksgiving or Christmas, mom would double this recipe (the recipe makes 4 dozen), and she would churn out 8 dozen pecan tassies. We were forbidden from even sneaking one. She would tell us “if y’all eat them all, you will be shelling more pecans.” The threat alone kept us from even trying to sneak one. When we would show up with her and her tassies, people would say to us “you are so lucky to have a mom who makes these. Y’all must eat them all the time.” My brother, sister and I would just nod our heads and look at each other, full well knowing we had better hit the dessert table before anyone else did if we wanted to eat our own mother’s dessert.

So here’s the recipe. They are super easy to make. The perfect pecan to filling to crust ratio is down to a science. But make sure you sneak one or two for yourself as soon as they cool…otherwise they will be gone before you know it.

Merle Mitchell’s Pecan Tassies

For the crust:

– 1 cup butter, softened

– 1 (8 oz) package cream cheese, softened

– 2 1/2 cups flour

Prepare the crust:

1. Beat 1 cup butter with 1 package cream cheese with mixer until creamy

2. Slowly add flour to butter mixture. Beat at slow speed until forms a dough.

3. Shape mixture into 48 balls. Place balls on a cookie sheet and refrigerate for one hour.

For the filling:

– 1 1/2 cups firmly packed brown sugar

– 1 1/2 cups chopped pecans

– 2 eggs

– 2 tablespoons butter, melted

– 2 tsp vanilla extract

– pinch salt

Prepare the filling:

1. Whisk together all the filling ingredients.

Prepare the tassies:

1. Grease muffin tins with vegetable shortening.

2. Place 1 dough ball into each muffin cup. Use fingers to shape dough into a shell. The crust shell will only go about half-way up the muffin tin cup.

3. Spoon approx 1 rounded tsp of filling into each crust shell.

4. Bake at 350 degrees for 20 min.

5. Let cool about 10 min and remove.

Share this:

  • Click to share on X (Opens in new window) X
  • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • Click to share on Pinterest (Opens in new window) Pinterest
Like Loading...

NO DRUMMER JOKES…or you won’t get this recipe

13 Saturday Oct 2012

Posted by recipesofthingspast in Main Dish

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

Gene Trautmann, Get well soup

This is the photo that made me politely ask for this recipe:

Labelled the ‘Get Well Soup’, it was given to me by a drummer. Now if anyone knows what is needed to get through exhausting tours, horrible road food, feeling under the weather, lead singer egos and all those awful drummer jokes it is a drummer. This drummer is Gene Trautmann. Gene has drummed for bands such as Queens of the Stone Age, Eagles of Death Metal, and the Miracle Workers. Gene can be found these days in the band Star and Dagger which is composed of Sean Yseult (White Zombie), vocalist Von Hesseling, guitarist Donna She Wolf (Cycle Sluts From Hell), and guitarist (Dave Catching (Eagles Of Death Metal) . Gene appears as the preacher in the following new video:

I met Gene through mutual friends, and at this point should tell some rock moment story. But I won’t. Instead, when I think Gene Trautmann I think hiking book. The first full year I lived in Portland, Gene and our mutual friend came through on tour with Mark Lanegan. It was this dreary December, and it happened to be my birthday. I was a bit homesick wondering what I was doing in the land of endless mist and mold. The two of them took me out to eat, and they had gone to Powell’s bookstore and bought me this amazing book of hikes around Portland. For 7 years, every friend and visitor I had in Portland went on a hike from those pages. The pages bore evidence of  comments on each hike, water stains from being dropped into glacial runoff, wild berry smudges and campfire ashes. One page was even marked with one word: BEAR!!!! If a book can make one appreciate the place where they live, that hiking book was my Northwest Tourism Bureau.

But enough about books and hiking. Let’s talk soup. I have made this soup now twice since getting the recipe and I can attest to it kicking my allergies to the curb.

GENE TRAUTMANN’S GET WELL SOUP

Gene on his soup: I created this recipe as a “Shotgun” approach to getting my flu under control. Some of the ingredients are known to be healers and others are just for flavor. Some might argue that I’m using too many ingredients and flavor is too complex to be good, but I think that getting well is more the key here. My mom used to use the leftover (if there ever is any) and freeze it into ice cubes and use for flavoring sauces and stuff. You can store the cubes in a plastic bag in the freezer.

 RECIPE:

All ingredients should be fresh and organic when possible. Especially the chicken

Ingredients:smile
– 1 Very Large Pot with Lid Pref. Stainless or Ceramic.
– 1 Whole Chicken or Chicken Thighs and Breasts Pack (Whole is best to have giblets for broth flavor)
– 1 Head Parsley
– 1/2 Bunch Cilantro
– 4 Sprigs Fresh Thyme
– 4 Sprigs Fresh Basil
– 2 Bay Leaves
– 4 Large Sprigs Fresh Rosemary
– 1 Peeled Head of Ginger, Sliced lengthwise


– 2 Heads Fresh Garlic, Peeled & Halved
– 2 Sprigs of Lemon Grass (Optional/Asian Markets Carry this)
– 1 Lemon, Juiced & 1 in reserve
– 1 White or Yellow Onion, Peeled & Diced
– 1 Red Onion Peeled and Quartered
– 4 Spring Onions or Bunch of Chives Chopped


– 4 Carrots Chopped


– 2 Celery Stems & Heads Chopped


– 1/2 Tsp Cayenne Pepper
– Lots of Fresh Cracked Black Pepper
– Other seasonings in the cupboard you might have that sound good
– 1 qt. Organic Chicken Broth ( yes this is cheating)


– Olive Oil

Directions:
1. Chop and Prep all Veggies and have on hand to put into the pot. Always start with the Biggest Longest cooking ones and work your way down.
2. Add some Olive Oil to the pot and put on Med. heat.
3. Open up the chicken and pull out the giblets
4. Cut down the chicken into quarters
5. Brown the chicken on all sides to render some fat
6. Reserve Chicken for later.
7. Brown the Giblets and reserve.
8. If Necessary add a little more oil.
9. Add veggies 1 kind at a time, starting with Carrots, Celery, Garlic, Onions, Green Onions etc. Add dry spices.
10. Don’t add the fresh herbs yet.
11. Once the veggies have sautéed and onions are translucent, turn up the heat to high and add giblets and chicken.
12. Now top up the pot with chicken broth and water, leaving room for the boiling action and herbs and lemon.
13. Once Soup Boils, bring down to a slow simmer.
14. Taste and adjust salt & spices.
15. After the soup has simmered for 1 Hr. you can:


a) Remove chicken pieces and pull off the meat, toss the bones and return meat to the broth
b) Add Lemon
c) Add Fresh Herbs
d) Serve


e) If you have the luxury of it, don’t even eat the soup for a day.

Refrigerate and serve tomorrow. It’s twice as delicious!
When re-heating put only what you’ll use in a separate container to heat. This saves time and prevents returning a hot pot to the fridge.

Share this:

  • Click to share on X (Opens in new window) X
  • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • Click to share on Pinterest (Opens in new window) Pinterest
Like Loading...

Where I really want to work

29 Saturday Sep 2012

Posted by recipesofthingspast in Appetizers

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

black bean dip, boudin dip, Cheryl Huff, Gayle Riley

I love my job but if I could have any job at a place where I could just show up and eat what my co-workers made to snack on…well it might be CHRISTUS Jasper Memorial Hospital in Jasper, Texas.

My aunt Gayle Riley works there, and she forwards me the most amazing recipes from her co-workers. She also tells me how amazing the food is which leaves me hungry reading a recipe and wondering how I can break away to the store for the ingredients. All I can say is if you ever have the misfortune to end up as a patient there, I suggest you forgo the hospital food and find a way to sneak in the employee break room. THAT IS WHERE THE GREAT FOOD IS FOUND.

So I am going to share two dip recipes from them. The first is Boudin Dip and it is courtesy of Cheryl Huff. I don’t know Cheryl but after trying this recipe I want her to be my new best friend. The second recipe of my Aunt’s Black Bean Dip. My aunt tells me my cousin Stephany will fight anyone for it, so I’ll just give y’all the recipe and save everyone a black eye. Thanks to the ladies of Christus Jasper Memorial Hospital. Keep those recipes coming. Now to just figure out how to get a fake employee name tag for myself…

Cheryl Huff’s Boudin Dip

 Step 1:

3 large links of Zummo’s regular boudin crumbled

1 package of green onions chopped

Morton Sea Salt/Roasted Garlic seasoning in grinder – Wal-Mart sells this.

Sauté in pan with a little olive oil to keep from sticking.  While sautéing add ground spice. (I just grind covering over the top of the boudin.)

Step 2:

In a microwaveable container add:

1 large container of Velveeta Cheese (I have used the 2% and it is good but the real thing is better…)

1 large block of cream cheese (same thing, the real thing is better)

2 cans of Mushroom soup. (The Campbell’s 98% fat-free is actually better cuz it is creamier)

1 can of Rotel tomatoes.

3 Tablespoons of Paul Prudhomme’s salt free Magic Seasoning   This is the secret to the flavor. You will be disappointed if you don’t use this seasoning! It is the blue one and sold separately.

Microwave all the ingredients on high until melted, stirring occasionally and using a whisk at the end for smoothness. This takes about 10 minutes depending on your microwave.

Step 3:

Blend sautéed boudin mixture into the micro waved mixture.

Step 4:

*New variation that I just started to do and makes it creamier:  This is the last step! I now add chicken broth to the mixture. Use as much or as little as you like for personal preference. I used ¾ of a can of Swanson Chicken Broth. It seems every time you make this the thickness varies a bit. Don’t be afraid of the Chicken Broth. I think the next time I may put the whole can in.  I have tried milk before to achieve the consistency I wanted, but the broth really improved the end result in taste and creaminess.

Gayle Riley’s Black Bean Dip

– 2 8 oz pkgs cream cheese softened

– 3/4 cup fat-free mayonnaise

– 3 tbsp southwestern seasoning mix

– 2 green onions with tops thinly sliced and diced

– 1 diced red bell pepper

– 1 can pitted ripe olives, drained and chopped

– 3/4 cup salsa

– 1 clove garlic, pressed

– 1 15 oz can black beans, drained and rinsed

– 1 8.75 oz can whole kernel corn, drained

1.  For dip, combine cream cheese, mayonnaise and seasoning mix in small bowl.  Whisk until smooth.

 2. Set 1 cup of cream cheese mixture aside. Spread remaining cream cheese mixture over bottom and halfway up sides of tortilla bowl or serving bowl.

3. Slice green onions. Set aside 2 tablespoons for garnish. Dice bell pepper & chop olives.

4.  In bowl, combine green onions, bell pepper, olives, salsa, garlic, black beans and corn; mix well. Spoon half of the salsa mixture over cream cheese layer.

5. Spread half of the reserved cream cheese mixture over salsa layer.

6.  Top with remaining salsa mixture.

7. spread remaining cream cheese mixture on top. Sprinkle with
reserved green onions.

8. Serve with tortilla chips.

Share this:

  • Click to share on X (Opens in new window) X
  • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • Click to share on Pinterest (Opens in new window) Pinterest
Like Loading...
← Older posts
Newer posts →

Enter your email address to follow this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

People, Recipes, Stories

Archives

Top Rated

Create a free website or blog at WordPress.com.

Privacy & Cookies: This site uses cookies. By continuing to use this website, you agree to their use.
To find out more, including how to control cookies, see here: Cookie Policy
  • Subscribe Subscribed
    • recipes of things past
    • Join 44 other subscribers
    • Already have a WordPress.com account? Log in now.
    • recipes of things past
    • Subscribe Subscribed
    • Sign up
    • Log in
    • Report this content
    • View site in Reader
    • Manage subscriptions
    • Collapse this bar
 

Loading Comments...
 

    %d