Saturday, April 12, 2008

Crab and Dill Puff Appetizers

After making the Bacon and Cheese Puffs last weekend, I decided to try a variation of that recipe. I picked up some crab meat and some fresh dill and whipped these up this afternoon. They were lovely and light, very filling and a great change on the original recipe.

1 package cream cheese, plain, softened
1 cup cooked crab, chopped into bits
1/3 cup grated parmesan cheese
2 tablespoons fresh dill
1 tablespoon milk
2 cans crescent roll dough

Combine cream cheese, parmesan cheese, crab, dill and milk in medium mixing bowl until well combined and spreadable
Separate the dough into triangles
Spread cheese and crab mix over the dough and roll up
Bake on greased cookie sheet 12 to 15 minutes at 375 degrees until pastry is done and golden brown

Tuesday, April 8, 2008

To Do List

In my endless surfing I often come across recipes that I know I have to try. The problem is that I tend to lose track of the links before I get around to making them. This is a mini-list of a few I've come across recently so I can find them again!

Orange Chocolate Tart from The Ulterior Epicure

Monday, April 7, 2008

Slow Cooker Chicken Pot Pie

All moms know any meal you can do in your slow cooker is a good meal.  This recipe takes only minutes to put together but you'd never suspect that from how it tastes. Made with canned soup and frozen vegetables, it could easily be altered to use fresh veg from the farmer's market or garden.

Best served over warm biscuits, either frozen or home-made.

2 cans cream of chicken with herb soup
1 1/2 cups chopped and peeled raw carrot (or baby carrots cut in half)
2 cups red skinned or new potatoes chopped into cubes
1 bag frozen peas
1 medium onion, diced
1 lb boneless chicken breasts or thighs, chopped into 1" chunks
1 cup milk
1 tablespoon fresh rosemary, chopped
1 tablespoon fresh thyme, chopped
salt and pepper


Combine soup, carrots, milk, herbs, potatoes, onion and chicken in your slow cooker
Cook on low for about 7 hours
30 minutes before serving, stir in frozen peas

Serve over warm biscuits

The herbs can be changed a bit to suit, but do go well with this recipe.

If you can't find cream of chicken with herb soup, plain cream of chicken works well too.

Chocolate Chip Shortbread Cookies

One of my mother's favorite treats when I was a child was a good shortbread biscuit or cookie. I've spent years looking for the perfect shortbread cookies and have come up with a few that are now in my standards cookbook. This is one of those. Made with real butter and mini-chocolate chips, this simple, crumbly cookie is more addictive than I ever realized. A hit with the folks in my office as well as my mom, there is never a shortage of folks who will take a batch when I make them.

These keep very well for several days in an airtight container so making a few batches at a time is no problem. 

I make these with an electric mixer and you really need to do it that way. You can mix this by hand but the lack of wet ingredients can make it a bit labor intensive without a mixer. I use my small hand mixer and it works a treat.

1 cup butter, softened
1/2 cup powdered sugar
1/2 cup corn starch
1 mini-chocolate chips (I either use milk chocolate or dark chocolate, both are wonderful)
1 1/2 cup flour

Beat butter and powdered sugar with an electric mixer until light and fluffy
Sift flour and corn starch together and add gradually to butter mixture
Once that is combined, stir mini-chips in by hand

Drop by rounded teaspoonfuls onto lightly greased cookie sheet
Bake 20 minutes at 330 degrees until bottoms are light golden brown
Remove to cook on parchment or waxed paper before putting in an airtight container for storing

Do not over cook these, once the bottoms are golden brown, they are done. The finished cookies will not be much darker than the raw dough when done so it may seem that they need more time. 

Other chips could be used in place of the chocolate, but the mini size works best for this recipe. The normal size chips just seem to be a bit big.

Orange Marmalade Cookies

Anyone that remembers Paddington Bear will also remember that Orange Maramalade was the favorite jam of the bear from Darkest Peru. Since childhood it's always had a special place in my heart too. These delightful, fresh and fluffy cookies are as easy as could be and simply melt in your mouth. Try them once and you'll be hooked.

1/3 cup softened butter
2/3 cup white granulated sugar
1 egg
6 tablespoons orange marmalade (any sort you like)
1 1/2 cups flour
1 1/2 teaspoon baking powder

Cream butter and sugar until light and fluffy
Add egg and orange marmalade, mix until combined (if mix is too stiff, add a bit more marmalade)
Sift together flour and baking powder
Gradually mix into creamed mixture until dry ingredients are completely incorporated

Drop by rounded spoonful onto greased cookie sheet and bake 8 to 10 minutes at 375 degrees until light golden brown

Cool on wire rack before storing in an airtight container

These are wonderful served warm with tea or coffee, but are just as nice once they've cooled. These will keep for a few days in an airtight container but are unlikely to last that long.

Bacon and Cheese Puffs

I browse recipes online from time to time, ok, all the time. Sometimes I'll find a recipe that I know is going to be great before I even try it. This is one of those recipes. While browsing on Tastespotting (a great user-fed web site that allows users to post photos and links to recipes and articles on their blogs or other blogs they've found) I found this recipe that was posted on Just Baking. Originally a Kraft recipe that was posted on the Yahoo food section, this simple appetizer is suprisingly wonderful and super easy. 

While it calls for canned crescent roll dough, other dough could be substituted. Puff pastry might be nice, but I would increase the ratio of filling to dough to keep them from being too dry. This one was a hit with the kids in my house and a new favorite has been found. I've edited this slightly from the original recipe by using green onions instead of regular onions and I made these a bit bigger than they indicated getting a few less out of the recipe, but I like them a bit bigger.

1 package cream cheese, plain, softened
8 slices bacon, cooked and chopped into bits
1/3 cup grated parmesan cheese
1/4 cup chopped green onions
2 tablespoons fresh parsley
1 tablespoon milk
2 cans crescent roll dough

Fry bacon, chop and set aside
Combine cream cheese, parmesan cheese, chopped green onion and parsley, bacon and milk in medium mixing bowl until well combined and spreadable
Separate the dough into four squares, pressing to seal the perfs
Spread cheese and bacon mix over the dough, cut into wedges and roll up
Bake on greased cookie sheet 12 to 15 minutes at 375 degrees until pastry is done and golden brown

We just chopped uneven shapes and rolled them up into little pouches and they turned out great. 

Perfect for a quick lunch, brunch or appetizer, this recipe could be easily changed to included virtually any filling in a hurry.

- Sorry there's no picture yet, next time I make these I'll add one. They were snapped up too fast for me to get a good shot of them.

The Lazy Baker - Lava Cakes


Some days, some very long and stressful days, the chocolate craving takes over. Those are usually the days when I'm just too tired or lazy to bake something from scratch. One box you'll usually find in our cupboards is a boxed cake mix for Lava Cakes. These warm little cakes with molten chocolate in the middle are so easy and quick and perfect on their own, with a bit of powdered sugar on top or if I'm a bit more motivated a strawberry or raspberry sauce poured over the top.  There is nothing like cutting into one and seeing the warm chocolate inside start to seep out.

Some boxed lava cake mixes contain a separate packet of sauce you pour into the batter just before baking, but the Dr. Oetker brand is just one package of powdered mix, one egg and a bit of hot water, all combined and poured into the furnished small baking tins. What could be better - a one bowl mix, throw-away baking tins and a desert that takes less than 30 minutes from start to finish!

These are also nice with a bit of warm custard on top or any other sauce you can think of that goes well with chocolate.

Tuesday, April 1, 2008

A girl can dream...

I have wanted a KitchenAid stand mixer since all my friends growing up wanted the new Barbie doll and I thought I needed one for my Easy-Bake oven. I look longingly at them online, drool over them in stores and fold down the pages in catalogs where the glorious things appear. All the fabulous colors, the different finishes and styles, it is almost more than I can stand.

Some how, some way, I will get my mixer. A lemonade stand may be in my future. My husband just laughs, but that lemonade stand may be in his future too!