Saturday, December 21, 2013

Red Velvet Cinnamon Rolls with a Twist

photo from Festival of Breads
More Red Velvet! It is a favorite flavor this season. But this recipe could come with the riddle - Guess the mystery ingredient. It is a surprise at first, but actually beets were used many years ago to give Red Velvet recipes their characteristic color instead of food coloring. I like it that the beets give the recipe a uniqueness. The recipe is simple to make and seems pretty foolproof. My next baking experiment is to substitute pumpkin for the beets and cinnamon chips for the chocolate chips.
This was also a finalist in the National Festival of Breads last summer. Marilyn Blankschien, from Wisconsin, developed the recipe. She notes that freshly cooked beets will give a brighter color (allow 45-60 minutes to cook). I thought the canned beets worked well (and easy) and the dough seemed almost like Play-Doh! (For more bread recipes go to: americasbreadbasket.com or kansaswheat.com)

Red Velvet Cinnamon Rolls with a Twist


Prep Time: 3 hours, 45 minutes
Bake Time: 12 minutes
Yield: Makes 16 rolls

Ingredients

DOUGH (Made in 1 to 1 ½-pound capacity bread machine)
½ cup puréed beets (canned or cooked fresh)
½ cup water (80° - 85°F)
1 tablespoon butter, softened
1 large egg
¾ teaspoon salt
1 cup King Arthur White Whole Wheat Flour
1 ¾ cups King Arthur Unbleached All-Purpose Flour
2 tablespoons unsweetened baking cocoa
3 tablespoons granulated sugar
1 (1/4 ounce) package Fleischmann’s® Active Dry Yeast 
FILLING
1 tablespoon butter, softened
3 tablespoons granulated sugar
1 ½ teaspoons ground cinnamon
1/3 cup milk chocolate or semisweet chocolate chips

ICING
2 ounces cream cheese, softened
2 tablespoons butter, softened
1 cup sifted confectioners’ sugar
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
2- 3 teaspoons low-fat milk
¼ cup chopped, toasted pecans
Instructions
1. Thoroughly drain beets in a colander; puree in food processor.

2. Have all ingredients at room temperature (77° to 85°F). Place dough ingredients in bread machine pan in the order suggested by manufacturer. Set bread machine for DOUGH cycle. After 5 minutes, check dough consistency. Dough should form a soft ball around paddle. If necessary, add a teaspoon of flour or water to the dough until the right consistency is reached.

3. When dough cycle is complete, place dough on lightly floured work surface and roll into a 10 x 16-inch rectangle. Brush dough with 1 tablespoon butter, keeping ½-inch away from 16-inch sides.

4. Combine sugar and cinnamon; sprinkle lengthwise over half of dough. Sprinkle and press chocolate chips over sugar-cinnamon mixture. Fold other half of dough over filling, forming a 5 x 16-inch rectangle. Press together and seal 16-inch edge.
5. Cut dough into sixteen 1 x 5-inch strips. Twist each strip and form into a coil, pinching end underneath roll to seal. Place 2 inches apart on parchment-lined baking sheets. Cover; let rise until almost double, about 45 to 55 minutes.

6. Bake in preheated 375°F oven 10 to 12 minutes. Remove rolls to rack.

7. In a medium bowl, stir together all icing ingredients except nuts, beating in enough milk to make drizzling consistency. Stir until smooth and well blended. Drizzle icing on cooled rolls; sprinkle on nuts. 

Nutrition Information

One roll provides approximately 207 calories; 4 g protein; 32 g carbohydrates; 2 g dietary fiber; 7 g fat (3 g saturated); 26 mg cholesterol; 19 mcg folate; 1 mg iron and 133 mg sodium.
Doesn't it look like PlayDoh?

folded, sliced & twisted

Ready to rise

Baked & Delicious!

Tuesday, December 17, 2013

Red Velvet Revisited



Its always fun to try new recipes, but sometimes there are those you want to repeat for a special occasion. Last winter I made the Red Velvet Poke Cake for a couple of occasions and blogged about it in the January 5 (2013) post.
When it was my turn to help with refreshments for a local women’s club this holiday season, I thought this was the perfect dessert. We used crushed holiday Oreos on top to add to the festive look.  Holiday table décor, mini-jars of red and green M&M for favors, Candy Cane Hersey mint candies, coffee and hot tea were just the right fare to follow a beautiful program given by the local music club.
Here’s the recipe again…

Red Velvet Poke Cake
Ingredients:
1 box Red Velvet cake mix
ingredients needed to make cake (eggs, oil & water)
2 (3.4 oz) boxes instant Cheesecake-flavored pudding
4 cups milk
1 (8 oz) tub frozen whipped topping, thawed
10 Oreo cookies, crushed

Directions:
Prepare cake mix according to package directions for a 9x13 cake. When the cake comes out of the oven, allow it to cool for just a couple of minutes. Then, with a wooden spoon handle, a spatula handle, or some other similarly-sized object, begin poking holes in the warm cake.  (You want big holes for the pudding to ooze into, poke down to the bottom of the cake).
In a medium bowl, whisk together pudding mix with 4 cups of milk. Whisk until all the lumps are gone.
Pour pudding over cake, taking care to pour it into the holes as much as possible. Spread it all out and using the back of the spoon, gently push pudding down into the holes.
Put the cake into the refrigerator to set and cool (at least 2 hours). When the cake is completely cooled, spread on whipped topping. Spread it evenly over the pudding layer.
Just before serving top with crushed Oreos. Be sure to keep the cake (if there are leftovers) in the refrigerator.




Monday, December 16, 2013

Walnut Streusel Coffee Cake

Tis the season of baking
And cakes we are making,
To many a meeting I go,
No time to lay low.

This does seem to be the time of the year when it is Bake and Take to many events. And a special time for extra treats at home (we'll resolve to lose those extra calories in January!)
This bundt coffee cake is a tasty end for a warm meal and a few days later is just as moist and tasty with a zap in the microwave.

Ingredients: (Streusel)
1 cup chopped walnuts
1/2 cup packed brown sugar
2 tablespoons butter, melted
1/2 teaspoon ground cinnamon
Coffee Cake ingredients:
4 eggs, separated
1 cup butter, softened
1 3/4 cups sugar
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
3 cups unbleached all-purpose flour
2 teaspoons baking powder
1/2 teaspoon baking soda
1/4 teaspoon salt
1 cup (8 oz) sour cream
2 teaspoons confectioners' sugar
Directions:
1.In a small bowl, mix streusel ingredients: walnuts, brown sugar, butter and cinnamon.
2. Place egg whites in a large bowl; let stand at room temperature 30 minutes. Preheat over to 350 degrees. Grease and flour a 10-inch fluted tube pan. (for easier removal of cakes, use solid shortening to grease fluted tube pans.
3. In a large bowl, cream butter and sugar until light and fluffy. Gradually add egg yolks. Beat in vanilla. In another bowl, whisk flour, baking powder, baking soda and salt; add to creamed mixture alternately with sour cream, beating well after each addition.
4. With clean beaters, beat egg whites on medium speed until stiff peaks form. Fold into batter.
Pour half of the batter into prepared pan; sprinkle with walnut mixture. Pour in remaining batter.
5. Bake 45 - 55 minutes or until a toothpick inserted in center comes out clean. Cool 10 minutes before removing from pan to a wire rack to cool completely. Dust with confectioners' sugar
Yield: 12 servings

Sunday, December 8, 2013

Cowboy Chili

You know you live on a ranch when the activity for the day after Thanksgiving is not Black Friday Sales, but working calves because the 'kids' are home. That was our plan and daughter and her husband were the crew. Since I got to stay in where it was warm and clean, my activity was lunch. The cool day called for a special chili. This recipe is from my friend Sharolyn, she calls it "Wendy's Chili", we called it Cowboy Chili, in reference to the day's activities.


Recipe for “Wendy’s Chili”


2 lbs. lean ground beef (browned and rinsed)
1 – 14 oz. can kidney beans (drained and rinsed)
1 – 14 oz. can pinto beans (drained and rinsed)
1 – can Ranch style beans
1 – 10 oz. can Rotel
1 – 14 oz. can stewed tomatoes
4 – 8 oz. cans tomato sauce
1 – onion, chopped
1 – bell/sweet pepper, chopped
Garlic to taste
1 package chili seasoning
Optional:  1 Tablespoon brown sugar 
 (I omitted the kidney beans, didn't have those in the pantry, and used 1 -15 oz. can of tomato sauce with 1 -12 oz. can of tomato juice instead of the 4 - 8 oz cans of tomato sauce)
Saute onion and pepper, add garlic; combine remaining ingredients and simmer or place in crockpot.  (Cook on low for 4-6 hours)

Tuesday, December 3, 2013

Rich Italian Bread

More from the National Festival of Breads contest of last summer (blog of June 24, 2013 ). This is one I've been wanting to try and waiting for an Italian menu to go with it. Our after-Thanksgiving Saturday dinner was the time. With lasagna, tossed salad and green beans, this bread was just right.
Jane Hinrichsen, from Minnesota, was the contestant who submitted this recipe which was a finalist. She developed it when she was a Family and Consumer Sciences teacher and her class was preparing a meal for the football team.
Photo from the National Festival of Breads website

Rich Italian Bread
Prep Time: 1 hour
Bake Time: 50 minutes
Yield: Makes 2 large loaves, 24 slices each
Ingredients
6-6 ½ cups King Arthur Bread Flour, divided 

1 package Fleischmann’s® Rapid Rise™ Yeast 

2 ¼ cups low-fat milk 

2 tablespoons granulated sugar 

3 tablespoons olive oil 

2 teaspoons salt 

2 teaspoons dried Italian seasoning 

2 teaspoons garlic powder 

½ cup finely chopped onion 

¾ cup shredded Parmesan cheese 

25 pepperoni slices (1.5 ounces), finely chopped (turkey or original) 

1 (14.5-ounce) can diced tomatoes with basil, garlic and oregano, (no salt added), drain well 

1 (2.25-ounce) can sliced black olives, drain well 

1 tablespoon cornmeal, divided 
Instructions
1. In large mixer bowl, using paddle attachment, combine 2½ cups flour and yeast. 


2. In microwaveable bowl, heat milk, sugar, oil, salt, Italian seasoning and garlic powder until very warm (120° to 130°F). Add to flour mixture. Beat 2 minutes at medium speed, scraping bowl occasionally. Add onion, Parmesan cheese, pepperoni and 1½ cups flour; stir in well-drained tomatoes and olives. Gradually add enough of the remaining 2½ cups flour to make a soft dough. (If tomatoes are not drained well, the dough will be very sticky and extra flour may be needed.) 


3. Knead with dough hook 10 minutes. Cover bowl; let rest 10 minutes. Sprinkle two 16 x 14-inch baking sheets with cornmeal. On work surface, divide dough into two equal pieces. Shape into two round loaves and place on baking sheets. Cover loaves with plastic wrap that has been lightly coated with nonstick cooking spray. Let rise in warm, draft-free place until double in size, about 45 minutes. Using a fine, sharp serrated knife or baker’s slashing tool, make slashes about 1/8-inch deep, slashing the top in quarters. 


4. Bake in preheated 350°F oven 45 to 50 minutes or until golden brown and its internal temperature registers 204°F on an instant-read thermometer. 

Note: Dough may be used for pizza crust, sandwich buns, rolls or soup bowls.
Nutrition Information
One slice provides approximately 133 calories; 8 g protein; 16 g carbohydrates; 1 g dietary fiber; 4 g fat (1 g saturated); 21 mg cholesterol; 39 mcg folate; 1 mg iron and 435 mg sodium.


I kneaded the dough by hand as I have better luck getting a manageable dough with that method. It is a very moist dough, even after draining and pressing the liquid from the tomatoes. I made the dough into rolls (25-30, it is a big recipe), and baked about 30 minutes. After baking the product is very soft, we actually liked the rolls better after they were frozen and reheated in the oven with the baking lasagna, they became a bit more crispy. 



Monday, November 25, 2013

Start the Party - Appetizers

There was quite an array of things to see and taste

And the table decorations were great
Recently I had the opportunity to go over to a county I'd worked in as Extension educator, and present a program for an annual event that I helped start many years ago. It was fun to revisit one of the favorite parts of my career. The event was Holiday Happenings, a get-you-ready-for-the-season series of demonstrations, presentations and ideas. I remember doing past programs of wreaths, gingerbread, salads, children's toys and many more topics complete with showing how to decorate, serve and gift the various themes.

My 'return engagement' talk was about family food traditions and I shared some food history and trivia and had a good time visiting with the women. But, as much fun as I had doing this, it was even more fun to watch the other part of the program! Lori, who teaches middle school FCS and is a special events chef in a historical town a few counties away, showed some of the appetizers she makes for the season. She also shared some tips for setting up the buffet table. Like placing foods at different heights by using cake stands, stacked plates and bowls, wrapped boxes, baskets and other decor. She recommended having the drink station separate from the food table to get people to mingle and move. Use everyday items in different ways - canning jars, horn of plenty baskets, flower pots and such. And of course, she stressed food safety - keep hot food hot and cold food cold with the help of iced bowls, warming trays, and other appliances. Of of the best tips was to label the food! She even suggested that besides the name of the food/recipe that the cook's name could be included at a shared buffet to make it easier to trace the recipe for sharing. It would also be helpful to those with food allergies to know what type of food was being offered.

I came home with lots of ideas to try for future gatherings. Here are two that will be taken to our family's Thanksgiving dinner.

Wonton Wrapper Appetizers
1 (16-oz) pkg wonton wrappers (could use egg roll wrappers)
1 lb. sausage, cooked
1 cup shredded Monterey Jack cheese
1 cup shredded cheddar cheese
1 cup Ranch salad dressing
    Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Spray a min-muffin pan with cooking spray. Inset wonton wrappers into the muffin pan and press to sides to form small cups. Bake 5 minutes in the preheated oven. Allow the baked wrappers to cool. Remove from the pan. In a medium mixing bowl, mix the sausage, cheeses and dressing. Fill the cups with the mixture. Bake 10-15 minutes, until the mixture is bubbly and slightly brown. Watch closely so the wrappers do not burn.

Chocolate Peanut Butter Tartlets
1 sheet Puff Pastry, thawed
6 tbsp peanut butter
4 oz bar sweet baking chocolate pieces (or  chocolate baking melts - I'm going to try milk chocolate chips)
2/3 cup miniature marshmallows
    Heat oven to 400 degrees. Unfold the pastry sheet on a lightly floured surface. Roll into an 18x9-inch rectangle. Cut into 24 squares. Press the pastry squares into mini muffin pans. Spoon 1/2 teaspoon peanut butter into each tartlet shell. Top each with 1 semi-sweet chocolate baking melt and 2 mini marshmallows. Bake at 400 degrees for approximately 7-8 minutes or until the pastries are golden brown. Let the pastries cool in the pan on a wire rack for 10 minutes.
   For a larger version (the original recipe before Lori tweaked it) cut puff pastry into 18 squares. After pressing into regular muffin pan cups, add 1 teaspoon peanut butter, 1 square chocolate and 3 mini marshmallows. Bake for 10 minutes.

Here are some other appetizers Lori showed. More to come in future blogs!



Cheese ball shaped as an igloo.
Penguins made from black olives, cream cheese and carrots.

Mini sugar cookies on tiered plate, puff carmel corn in large bowl.
Chocolate chip cheese ball frosted with cream cheese and
 'wrapped' with ribbon of fruit rollups to look like a package.

Unusual serving containers and presentations made it all look festive! 


Sunday, November 17, 2013

A Good Day for Cats, but not Frogs!

Go Cats! Beat the Horned Frogs!
This was an exciting weekend in Manhattan as our K-State Wildcats played the TCU Horned Frogs (yes, really!). After a tight game, the Cats won 33-31. A big part of the fun was tailgating with friends before the game with a frog inspired menu.
My contribution was Frog Cupcakes (thank you, Pinterest).

Frog Cupcakes
These froggies are ready to go to the game.

Ingredients:
1 (18.25 oz) package white/yellow cake mix
1 (16 oz) can prepared vanilla frosting
6 drops green food coloring, or as needed
1/4 cup green decorator sugar
12 large marshmallows
48 semisweet chocolate chips (or decorator gel)
decorator gel for face features
cupcakes, baked and cooling

eyes, ready to put on frogs

Directions:
1. Bake cupcakes according to directions on package. All to completely cool.
2. Mix frosting with green food coloring. If you like, you can reserve some frosting to mix with red to make mouths and tongues. Sprinkle some green sugar over tops of frosted cupcakes.
3. Cut marshmallows in half to make 2 circles. Dip each half in water then green sugar to make eyelids. With a little white icing attach chocolate chip for center of eye. Place eyes on cupcakes.
4. Add face features with red tinted frosting or decorator gel.
My tips: I made the eyes the evening before so they had a chance to dry before attaching them to the frosted cupcakes. Cut the marshmallows with kitchen scissors dipped in water. I used black decorator gel to add the black center of the eye instead of a chocolate chip. Also, I added a couple of tablespoons of meringue powder to the can of frosting to make it a little firmer when set. And, I used dark green decorator gel to draw the mouth.

The cupcakes went well with the menu which included grilled frog legs (for real) and Frog's Eye Salad (Acini de Pepe pasta and fruit salad - see a similar recipe in my blog of July 17, 2011).
The meal deal

Thursday, November 7, 2013

Church Chicken

Because "Church Chicken" sounds better than "Funeral Chicken". But that may be the new informal name for this recipe. We've often joked about the favorite hash brown potato casserole recipe we call "Funeral Potatoes" (Aug. 13, 2011 blog "Collecting Cookbooks" - UMW Party Potatoes), it was even served at the musical "Church Basement Ladies" dinner theater. But some recipes are comforting, tasty, and easy to prepare for a crowd or extended family attending a funeral.
So when our UMW was asked to serve a dinner for the family after a funeral service at our church this week, this recipe - officially called "Glorious Chicken", from a Garden City community cookbook was suggested by the UMW president. And it did turn out to be a favorite, I'll even make it at home - just won't tell the family its "Funeral Chicken"!


Glorious Chicken



4 – 6 chicken breasts, cooked and diced
1 can (10 oz) cream of chicken soup
1 can (10 oz) cream of celery soup
1 carton (8 oz) sour cream
1 small onion, chopped
1 pkg (8 oz) chicken & herb dressing mix
½ cup margarine
1 ½ cups chicken broth

Place chicken in bottom of greased 13x9x2-inch baking pan. Mix soups, sour cream and onion; pour over chicken. Sprinkle stuffing mix over soup mixture. Combine margarine and broth in a small saucepan and heat until margarine melts; pour over stuffing. Bake at 350 degrees for 40 minutes
Makes 8 (or more) servings. 

Here are the four basic steps of the recipe (from the top): 1 - chicken on bottom of pan; 2 - soups+sour cream+onion over chicken; 3 - stuffing mix on top; 4 - broth+margarine added to top.