Tuesday, December 23, 2014

Yams a la Lucy / a la Karen

350 degrees F
3 cups yams/sweet potato
1/2 cup butter
1 tsp Vanilla
1/2 C. sugar
2 Beaten eggs
1/4 C. Milk

Make mashed potatoes (microwave not optimum) mix all above ingredients and put in med. size baking dish.

Topping:
1/3 C. Butter
1 C. brown sugar
1/2 C. flour
1 C. chopped pecans (almonds ok)


Spread over mashed mix and bake for 350 degrees for 25-30 mins.

My sister Karen makes this fabulous sweet potato dish - it's SO YUMMY, even for someone who doesn't like yams!!

Saturday, October 25, 2014

Homemade Deoderant

 Pic from the original link I found on Pinterest
For original recipe* link I found on Pinterest, click on this pic from their site
I'm huge on prevention, and I've heard rumors about aluminum in deodorant, and the health problems being linked to it...so when I saw this recipe I decided to give it a try. I have been using this for several months now and I totally love it!

5-6 Tbsp coconut oil, in liquid form (warmed to below 76 degrees)
1/4 cup baking soda
1/4 cup cornstarch or arrowroot powder
Optional - a few drops of essential oil of choice for scent (I have a rose oil...ahh!)

Mix together the dry ingredients, then stir in coconut oil until well blended, and kind of like a pomade. Store at room temperature in a lidded container.


When coconut oil warms below 76 degrees it becomes a liquid so in the summertime this deodorant will be a liquid so then I just dip my fingers into it and apply; but when it's cold, it's solid and I use a spoon to scrape some out. With my fingers I rub it into my arm pits where it melts on contact, then I rub the rest into my hands like a lotion. I have NEVER known it to stain anything!

*My original source made reference to another "original." I combined them both.

Sunday, September 21, 2014

Homemade Magic Shell

Got this recipe off of Pinterest from 52 Kitchen Adventures

7 oz chocolate chips
2 T coconut oil

Heat in microwave for 30 seconds at a time until fully melted.

This recipe really works, and has none of the other ingredients we want to avoid.  You can even make it dairy free if you use dairy free chocolate chips.

I found another recipe online that recommends 1 C chocolate chips to 1 T coconut oil.

What we do most frequently with this is make our EASY ice cream cakes. How? Take ice cream out of it's carton or container, put it on a serving tray. Drizzle magic shell all over and especially down the edges and sides. Sprinkle cake sprinkles or other decorations for added color. Freeze. If you want to have birthday candles on it, put them on the "ice cream cake" BEFORE adding the magic shell. YUM!!

Hot Fudge Sauce

(From DeLonne Hucks?)

1/2 C light corn syrup
1 C chocolate chips

Microwave one minute at a time, stir until chocolate is melted. Mix in 1/4 C cream/milk, 2 tsp vanilla and 1 T butter.

Grandma Howlett's Crazy Cake

2 C sugar
2 eggs
1/4 scant C cocoa
3/4-1 C shortening
1/2 tsp salt
1 tsp baking powder
1 3/4 C cake flour
1/2 tsp soda
1/2 C hot water
1/2 C milk

Place all ingredients in a bowl Beat 3 minutes. Bake 25 minutes in 350 degree oven.

We lived next door to my grandma, Ada Smith Howlett, my last two years of high school. I remember my Mom making this recipe: She'd mix the dry ingredients, then make indentations for the wet ingredients, then stir them all together. Simple, but mmm!

Chicken Chili with Hominy

Good thing I printed this recipe out long ago, because now I cannot even find it online! What happened to "massrecipes.com"? But since it is one of our favorite soups, I have to document it here!

1 T canola oil
1 lb boneless, skinless chicken thighs
1 medium onion, diced
2 garlic cloves, minced
1 medium poblano chile, diced (I've used 1 can green chilies)
29 oz canned chicken broth
30 oz canned white navy beans, drained and rinsed
15 oz canned hominy, drained
Salt and ground pepper to taste
Fresh cilantro for garnish (optional)
Hot sauce (like Tapatio) for serving (optional)
Sour cream for topping (optional)

In a large, 5 qt pot, warm oil over medium-high heat. Brown chicken until golden, 3-4 minutes per side. Transfer to a plate; set aside.

Reduce heat to medium. Add onion, garlic, and chilis; cook, stirring often, until onion softens, 3-4 minutes.

Cut browned chicken into 1/2 inch strips. Add chicken, broth, and beans to pot; bring to a boil. Reduce heat to an active simmer, and cook until chicken is very tender and chili has thickened, 25-30 minutes.

Reserve 1/2 C hominy to use as garnish (optional); stir remaining hominy into chili. Season with salt and pepper. Ladle into bowl; garnish each serving with reserved hominy, sour cream, and cilantro, and drizzle with hot sauce as desired.

Per serving: 399 calories: 9.8 grams fat; 34.7 grams protein; 41.4 grams carbohydrates; 9.7 grams fiber

My Favorite Minestrone


Image from this website

1 lb sausage, browned and drained
1 quart water
1 can consomme
3-5 large carrots, cut large
3 stalks celery, cut large
1/2 tsp basil leaf
1 tsp oregano
1 1/2 quarts tomatoes
3 onions, cut large
1 T parsley
1 can tomato sauce
1 clove garlic, minced

Simmer the above 8-10 hours (in slow cooker). Add 1 can cut green beans and 1 can red kidney beans. Simmer 1 hour. Add 1 cup macaroni, cook until macaroni is done, about 10 minutes. Sugar and salt to taste. Sprinkle individual bowls with Parmesan cheese.

This is a very forgiving recipe. You can mix up the ingredients. I personally like to use acini do pepe for the pasta so that we don't get big bites of pasta. I like to add 2-3 C sliced cabbage at the end with the pasta. You can even make it up in less than an hour if that's the time you have, but the longer the ingredients simmer together, the better they'll taste! The consomme is delicious, but you can switch that out with beef broth if that's all you have. A perfect fall recipe. YUM!

Marvelous Minestrone

From Brenda Stott, one of our former neighbors

2 C onion, finely chopped
1 clove garlic, minced
3 C cabbage, finely shredded
2 C carrots, finely diced
1 C green beans, cut
2 potatoes, cubed
2 C zucchini, chopped
4 oz can sliced mushrooms
2 C stewed tomatoes
3 T parsley
1 T basil
1/2 tsp rosemary
2 C tomato juice
4 C beef broth
1 C kidney beans, cooked
3/4 C macaroni
1/3 C raw barley

Saute onions until clear. Combine garlic, cabbage, carrots, green beans, potatoes, zucchini, mushrooms, and tomatoes in a large pot. Add onion. Cook 10 minutes. Add parsley, basil, rosemary, tomato juice and beef broth. Cook 10 minutes. Puree 1/2 cup kidney beans in blender. Add to soup. Add remaining whole kidney beans. Boil. reduce heat. Simmer 25 minutes. Add macaroni and barley, cook for 15 minutes.

Thursday, July 24, 2014

Lime Sherbet


Refreshing Lime Sherbet Recipe
I found a wonderful recipe on Pinterest for Refreshing Lime Sherbet, and per usual for me, I adjusted it for myself and my family and for our ice cream maker, and here is the result.

4-6 tsp lime zest*
1 1/2 C sugar
5-6 C milk
1 C fresh lime juice (prob 8 limes)
1/8+ t salt

Mix the ingredients together in a bowl until well blended, then pour into the ice cream freezer container. (Mine is bigger than the 4 quart maker for the original recipe, but I'm not sure how big, maybe 8. This recipe did not fill it to the "Fill" line.) Freeze to manufacturer's directions. Mmmm!

Notes - The original recipe called for added water, but I just used the whole milk I had on hand, instead of half and half. It works - it tastes great!

Make it dairy free by using almond or soy milk.

*The zest is just the outside green part of the rind, not including the white pith underneath, so as to avoid getting the bitter part of the lime. (In the case of a lemon, the yellow.)

Find the original recipe by clicking on here or on the picture.

Wednesday, July 23, 2014

Sour Milk Pancakes


Mmmm... Sour Milk. 1 t baking soda
2 cups sour milk
2 eggs, beaten
11/2 T sugar
pinch of salt
2 cups sifted flour (I like whole wheat)
1 T melted butter
1 t baking powder

Dissolve soda in buttermilk.  Stir in eggs.  Add sugar and salt.  Beat in flour a little at a time.  Add butter and baking powder. Fry individual pancakes and serve hot.

When looking for recipes to use some sour milk, I found this recipe on Pinterest.  "Retro recipes" are some of my favorites because they usually tend to be basic and delicious, and I did NOT want to lose this one. I also changed it very slightly, so what you see here is how I fix it. (Main difference - it called for buttermilk, but I wanted to use sour milk. It totally works!)

Link to original recipe here.

Monday, June 23, 2014

Deep-Dish Pizza

(From my Betty Crocker Cookbook, 1983 edition, but I've modified it slightly, of course, knowing me...)

1 lb hamburger (sometimes I'll add a little sausage or bacon for flavor)
Pizza Dough (see recipe here)
1 can (16 oz) whole tomatoes (or used diced) drained (I never drain it)
1 Tbsp instant minced onion
1 tsp dried oregano leaves
1 tsp salt
1/4 tsp pepper
1/8 tsp garlic powder (or crushed garlic clove)
1 small green pepper
1 can (4 oz) mushroom stems and pieces, drained
1 C shredded mozzarella cheese (about 4 oz) (I usually also add a little shredded cheddar cheese for color & flavor)

Cook and stir hamburger until light brown; drain. Prepare Pizza Dough. Mix tomatoes, onion, oregano, salt, the pepper and garlic powder; break up tomatoes with fork.

Press dough evenly on bottom and halfway up sides of greased oblong baking dish, 13x9x2 inhes. Sprinkle hamburger over dough. Spoon sauce over hamburger; top with green pepper, mushrooms and cheese. Cook in 425 degree oven until cheese is light brown, 20-25 minutes. 8 servings.

Thursday, May 15, 2014

My class notes: Grains & Sourdough Bread

I went to a set of classes at the home of a friend of a friend, and learned exactly what I've been needing to learn for a while. This time the bread is turning out FABULOUS, my kids LOVE it, and are anxious for me to make more when we get low!!!

Grains Class, Amy Loveless, Saratogajacks.com

The book Amy referred to - "The Art of Baking with Natural Yeast, by Caleb Warnick & Melissa Richardson - I have a copy already, and have used, but not successfully, so I was grateful to have this in person training from someone who has used it with success, and to receive an actively growing live start to get started with.

In 1984 instant yeast came on the market, with lots of dire consequences.

The long yeast process was necessary, because it takes time to break the grains down properly. Grains are like legumes - you'd never try to have dry legumes ready to eat in 15 minutes!

Kamuth wheat is 5% gluten, vs 80% of others

Since then there has been a huge rise in auto-immune diseases, such as yeast infections, fatigue syndromes, autism (recently linked to leaky gut), etc., etc., etc.

5 Steps for Healing your Gut (I can't figure out for sure which steps were 3 or 4)
1. Go off the garbage you've been eating, like the rapid yeast breads, etc.
2. Replace with healthy foods for 2 whole weeks
Bone broth -- extremely healthy
Yogurt or kefir, raw cultured
Fermented vegetables
Coconut products
5. Plug the leaks - Colostrom from Dr. Anthony Klein Smith, chewable colostrom (bovine)

Natural sour dough breaks down the starches/carbs, and fills with enzymes instead! (Her diabetic husband would eat a regular roll and go up 220, eating the sourdough roll he'd go up 5!)

Self grinding flours are best - purchased ground flours are made in plants where machines divide up the ingredients, and put in other things, instead of grinding it complete.
(Recommends Silver Nugget hand crank, from ID, since the competition stole their design, altered one shape and had it made in China.)

Tools for Sourdough bread making
Big metal bowl from IKEA ($9.99)
Danish dough whisk from Amazon ($9.99)

Recipe
Note - IMPORTANT - for every cup of water you add one tsp salt.

4 C water
about 1 C start
(feed this mix with a handful of flour)
4 tsp salt
5 big scoops (about 1 1/2 C each) flour*

Optional ingredients
2 eggs (makes it fluffier)
2 tbsp coconut oil
seeds
1/2 C honey
pepper (counterbalance the sweet with not sweet)
2 tbsp ginger powder (old fashioned dough enhancer)
other flavorings as desired

(She didn't measure anything accurately,  it's not an exact science for her.)

*Flour questions - the sourdough method breaks down the wheat such that the gluten is negligible, so any flours, even the altered ones will work.

Leave in bowl, but place a clean garbage bag around it, and set it aside for at least 8 hours. Then you punch it down and separate it into loaves as desired, and let rise for at least 2 more hours. Bake in 350 degree oven until bread reaches 190 degrees internally, (about 30-40 mins). For a harder crust, put 2 inches of water in a pyrex dish on bottom oven shelf, 15 minutes before putting the bread in, at 400 degrees. Bake bread with the water for 15 minutes, then remove the water and turn down the oven to 350 degrees and finish cooking.

Feed your yeast/start with 1 C flour and 1 C water (not hot). Stir. It should be thick enough for a spoon to stand up, then it will last one week in the fridge. Remember yeasts are territorial, so do NOT put two yeasts next to each other, or store modern breads near your yeast starter! It could ruin them.

Sprouting Grains Class, Instructor Kimberly Shock (EXTREME athlete, vegan for many years, she uses sprouted grains for her nutritious diet.) I have her phone number if you have questions.

When sprouted, grains are GLUTEN FREE, as the sprouting process turns them into a vegetable.

In a quart jar, place 1/2 C of grains. Soak grains for at least 24 hours (different than other instructions you'll read). 

Rinse, rinse and rinse to get rid of the folic acid - you will do this twice a day. Do this between 3-7 days depending on what you are growing and how much you want it sprouted. (If you're going to the bathroom too often, maybe you grew it too long.)

Dehydrate sprouted grains on the lowest setting, sufficiently dried, they have long shelf (10 years), and can be used like normal grains, ground, etc.

You can sprout everything, (but if you sprout kidney beans they are poisonous until cooked.)

Sprouted grains are 1/2 the carbs of non-sprouted.

No dehydrator - you can dehydrate on cookie sheets outside, just protect from birds & other critters & weather...
OR use immediately as moist sprouts: Blend together 2 C sprouted wheat to 1 C water, use as a base for your recipes. (As I'm looking in the book Natural Yeast book, I notice that you usually use a little sprouted grain, and mix it with unsprouted ground grains.)

Wheat grass - 7 days to grow. "One ounce juice is better iron builder than a blood transfusion." 1 lb wheat grass has equivalent nutritional to 23 lb homegrown garden vegetables.

Sprouting provides 900-2000% nutritional improvement over non-sprouted grains. Sprouting makes it a vegetable. (Even dehydrated.)

Sprouted Almond Milk recipe
1 C almonds - soak for 24 hours
Drain, rinse 4-5 times until water runs clear
In blender, combine almonds and 4 C cold water (for cold milk)
1-2 T sweetener (optional)
Blend 3 minutes, and drain through cheese cloth, or similar to remove solid particles.

Sunday, February 9, 2014

Cold Buster Tea

(From a fellow teacher, Tamara Hill, at the school where I work. We'll be trying this next time we need it; I've long known the health benefits of each of these components. Thankfully we've been very healthy this winter.)

I start with a base of chamomile tea (probably any herbal is fine, but this is a mild tasting one).  I make the tea with two tea bags in about 8-10 ounces of water. 

Then I add cinnamon and stir it in, this is a KEY INGREDIENT.  I read an article about cinnamon working as a natural nasal decongestant and antibiotic.  It clears up the drainage.  Add as much as you can handle--I usually do 3/4 TBS up to 1 TBS.  This is not for the faint-hearted, because the cinnamon makes it quite strong.  But better than suffering with a cold.
Next, add honey.  A good amount of honey.  I don't always measure, but I did once and put in about 1/4 cup, you could do a little less though, as that seemed a bit much, but close.  Honey is another key as I know there is something to the idea about being harvested by bees, coming from the flowers, it all helps.
Last, stir in lemon juice.  Again a good amount 1/4-1/3 cup is about what it ends up being. 
Drink this at the first signs of the cold to catch it early and continue twice a day, morning and evening.  I noticed on Sunday that I was sneezing and starting to blow my nose too much, so I made this at about 5:00 Sunday evening.  Within 15 minutes the runny nose had stopped.  I slept all night without blowing my nose, and have continued twice a day since.  I can feel I still have the cold, but my symptoms have been VERY light.  I have zero congestion, though I can feel it has tried to move into my lungs, there is really not much to move down into the lungs to block them up.  Seriously, the best thing I have found for a cold.  I hate cold medicine and hardly ever take it if I can and this totally makes it so I don't need it.  I have had one cold that was a real whopper that I didn't clear up with this, but I'd say 3 out of 4 colds I can kick with the tea.

Thursday, February 6, 2014

Serbian Quiche

(This was served at our 2014 Stake Women’s Conference. It's quickly becoming one of our family favorites!)   

6 eggs, beaten
1 cup milk
1 lb. small curd cottage cheese
1 cup Bisquick
1 lb. cheese, grated
1 cube butter, melted
1 cup chopped ham (optional)

Mix all together. Bake in 9x13 pan at 350° for approx.45 minutes or until golden brown. Test for doneness. This is a very versatile dish.You can change the cheese, add bacon bits or sausage, leave the meat out, add different herbs, the combinations are endless.

Monday, January 27, 2014

Grandma Howlett's Playdough

Here's a recipe my mom has used for years for the kids. The alum - used in pickling - is a natural preservative, so this playdough lasts MUCH longer than most. We have made it LOTS of times, including for school projects. The kids love it!

Mix together:
3 C flour
1/2 C salt
1 Tbsp alum

Mix together then combine with dry ingredients:
1 3/4 C boiling water
3 Tbsp cooking oil
Food coloring (20 plus drops)

Knead together like you would bread dough until all ingredients are well blended. Store in a sealed container or resealable bag in the refrigerator for up to six months.

Tuesday, January 14, 2014

Laura's Pumpkin Bread

From one of my library volunteers - Laura Hartline - for Christmas 2013; this bread was so good, so moist, that I had to have the recipe. Here's what she sent me:

1 cup pumpkin
1 1/2 cups sugar
2 eggs
1/2 cup oil
1/4 cup water
1 2/3 cups flour
1 tsp baking soda
3/4 tsp salt
1/4 tsp baking powder
1/2 tsp cloves
1/2 tsp cinnamon 

Combine first 5 ingredients.  Mix well, add dry ingredients.   Grease loaf pan.  Bake for 50-60 min at 350.  This makes one large loaf.  

I use a large can of pumpkin and triple the batch to get 5 medium loaves.