Summer Slush Recipe

By Mary at 7:40 am on May 23, 2008 | 10 Comments

Want an icy treat to keep handy in your freezer for family and unexpected guests? I’ve got the perfect recipe for you! Go to Weekend Kindness and read about my “Slush Shop”…

And I apologize for not getting much blogging done here lately. In between finishing up the school year, nieces’ graduations, traveling to nephew’s wedding, painting my house, helping dh build a chicken house, and keeping up with all my CHICKEN CHORES (good grief the little ladies are a full-time job!)…well, and all the time I’m spending working out (I’ve lost 15 lbs!!)…

More than blogging, I miss reading your blogs! Hope and pray  everyone is having a wonderful May!

Filed under: Cooking and Food, Life and Weekend Kindness10 Comments »

FAQs and Recipe Additions for Amish Friendship Bread

By Mary at 5:30 am on April 12, 2008 | 33 Comments

No one has time to browse the 273 comments at my original Amish Friendship Bread post to find answers to their questions, so in an effort to put all my Amish Friendship info into one place, I spent some time yesterday copying and pasting all the best of it into this post. Read on for tantalizingly great recipe additions and helpful feedback, all from the best AFB bakers out there: my readers!

First, answers to the most commonly asked questions. Yes, you can most certainly…

  • use non-fat milk or powdered milk
  • substitute applesauce for the oil
  • use 2 or 3 eggs per batch, your bread will turn out fine, just a different consistency
  • use one large box of pudding OR two small boxes or no pudding at all, it doesn’t matter
  • use fast-rising yeast–it will not affect the outcome
  • use self-rising flour–it will not affect your outcome
  • freeze your starter for up to a year (just note which day you were on when you left off, and pick it up at that same point once thawed)
  • thaw frozen starter at room temp for three hours before carrying on with recipe
  • skip a day of squishing with no problems
  • forget to add ingredients or bake EXACTLY on schedule, a day or two off won’t hurt this recipe
  • bake it in a 9×13″ pan for 35 minutes
  • bake it in a Bundt pan, not sure for this one on baking times so just watch it and use the toothpick test
  • bake it as muffins
  • bake ALL your starter by simply dividing it equally between 4 bowls then add your ingredients. Each bowl should make 1-2 loaves. Give away the baked bread and good-bye starter!

Reader’s favorite recipe additions/combos:

  • White chocolate sugar-free pudding (two small pkgs) with half a bag of white chocolate chips and a cup of dried cranberries
  • Sugar-free cheesecake pudding and butterscotch chips
  • Lemon pudding with poppyseeds, substituting lemon flavoring for vanilla (minus cinnamon-sugar topping)
  • Banana pudding, mashed banana and nuts
  • 2 cups fresh cranberries, 1 cup chopped apples, and 1 cup chopped walnuts (2 loaves worth)
  • Chocolate pudding and 1/2 cup chocolate chips
  • Butterscotch pudding and 1/2 cup butterscotch chips
  • Pistachio with walnut (turns out a lovely green color!)
  • Pistachio with Marachino cherries
  • Cheesecake pudding with cranberry and walnut
  • Dried apricots, cherry craisins, and chopped almonds
  • Grated carrots, sunflower seeds, and additional spices
  • Lemon pudding with either raspberries or white chocolate chips (Lemon w/choc. chips tastes like Vanilla Wafers)
  • Blueberries with Cheesecake pudding
  • Pumpkin-spice–half a cup pumpkin puree, pumpkin pie spice, 1/4-1/2 cup grated carrots or raisins
  • Savory Amish Friendship Bread - Omit cinnamon and sugar, add about 1 cup cheddar cheese and 3/4 pkg pepperoni, 1/2 flour and 1/2 cornmeal. 1 cup fresh corn. Serve with tomato sauce.
  • Make one with half the sugar and add lots of savory herbs, some ground beef and a taco seasoning mix instead of pudding. Great with spaghetti sauce.

Regular or Belgian Waffle recipe (from Erika)

  • 2 cups Starter
  • about 1 cup flour
  • 1/4 cup oil
  • 2 eggs
  • 2 tbsp. sugar (or less if you prefer less sweet)
  • 1 tsp. salt
  • 1 tsp. baking soda

Combine starter with enough flour for your preferred consistency. Add oil, eggs. sugar, salt and baking soda to the starter. Mix thoroughly with wooden or plastic spoon. Let the mixture rest for a little bit, maybe 10 minutes. Cook in your waffle iron. Serve with Syrup. Makes six fluffy Belgian waffles.

Website with recipes for cookies, biscuits, pancakes etc, all using Amish Friendship Bread starter

Mary’s original Amish Friendship Bread starter recipe (with all 273 comments)

Mary’s Easier Amish Friendship Bread recipe

Doesn’t it just make you want to get in on the fun? I’m on Day 6, and have BIG plans for my baking day! Please share your tips/recipe faves in comments!

Filed under: Cooking and Food33 Comments »

Make Ahead Breakfast Parfaits

By Mary at 3:04 pm on February 11, 2008 | 7 Comments

I made these Saturday night for a quick, stick-to-your ribs Sunday breakfast…both must haves for Sunday mornings at our house!

They remind me of the fruit and yogurt parfaits available at McDonald’s…which we’ve often recreated here at home! This recipe came out of the November 2007 issue of Parents magazine, it promises plenty of protein, calcium and fiber. My kids weren’t as fond of the couscous addition as I was, but as long as they had a bit of yogurt on each bite, they were fine with it.

Sunrise Parfaits

  • 1 cup fat-free milk
  • Pinch of salt
  • 1/2 cup dry whole-wheat couscous
  • 1 pkg (12 oz) frozen mixed berries
  • 2 containers (6 oz) vanilla yogurt
  • 1/2 cup low-fat granola

1. In a small saucepan, bring milk and salt just to boiling. Stir in couscous. Remove from heat and let stand, covered, for 5 minutes.

2. Divide couscous among six 8-oz plastic cups (or to-go containers with lids). Top each with frozen berries and yogurt. Cover and chill overnight. Top with granola before serving. Makes 6 servings.

Nutrition per serving: 199 cal; 8 g protein; 2 g fat; 4o g carb; 167 mg calcium; 5 g fiber.

Filed under: Cooking and Food7 Comments »

Homemade Chicken and Noodles

By Mary at 4:50 pm on January 29, 2008 | 5 Comments

Chicken Noodle SoupThere’s nothing like Chicken and Noodle soup to comfort away winter’s ailments! This recipe is extremely comforting, and delicious! My sister-in-law, a great cook, fixed this for us over New Year’s. I memorized her chicken recipe and made it for us within the same week! The homemade noodle recipe comes from my tattered Better Homes and Garden’s “New Cook Book”. It’s far from new, but ’tis the name anyhow.

Homemade Chicken and Noodles

  • 1 whole chicken, cut in pieces
  • 1-2 cans chicken broth (recipe calls for 1, I use 2)
  • 1 can cream of celery soup
  • homemade noodles

Cook chicken pieces and broth in slow cooker/crockpot for five hours on high, or till meat falls off bones. Save broth, transfer broth only to soup kettle. Add homemade egg noodles to boiling broth, turn down heat and cook noodles (about ten-fifteen minutes). Meanwhile, remove chicken meat from bones, discard fat, skin and bones. Shred chicken into pieces with fingers–should crumble apart. When noodles are done cooking, add chicken and one can cream of celery soup. If you prefer to thicken the soup, sprinkle a little flour across top and blend it in.

~ Note ~

Please, if you want this recipe to be the very best, use the whole chicken (cut up), or at least chicken pieces on the bone. Substituting boneless skinless chicken breasts just doesn’t produce the same tenderness and flavor. Don’t forget about the low-fat cream soup substitute recipe I shared yesterday, it’s a good one for this recipe, and if you do use it, just dice your celery and add it to the broth in the slow cooker at the beginning of the five hours, it will be nice and tender and a part of your broth without having to add it to the cream soup mix.

Also, my mom sent over five peanut butter jars of frozen homemade chicken broth, complete with bits of onion and celery…so I substituted two of those for the cans of chicken broth. Can you say brilliant? (Thanks, Mom!) Anytime you make a turkey or chicken, save the bones/carcass, etc and cover them with water–add minced garlic, diced onions and celery and simmer for a couple of hours. You’ll have a healthy broth to keep in your freezer for sick days…or whatever.

Okay, on to the best part, the homemade noodles.

Homemade Noodles

I make mine with half whole wheat flour (home ground), we love them. If you prefer sticking with white flour, that works great too. This batch will be the equivalent to an eight ounce package of store-bought, depending on how thin you roll it out. I use my mom’s pasta machine, which makes a hard job amazingly easy. I’ve rolled it out by hand also, it’s quite the workout, but they turn out just as delicious. The main thing with rolling them out by hand, is to get them thin enough.

  • 2 1/3 cups all-purpose flour or whole wheat flour, or a mix of the two
  • 1/2 tsp salt
  • 2 beaten eggs
  • 1/3 cup water
  • 1 tsp cooking oil or olive oil

In a large mixing bowl, stir together 2 cups of the flour and the salt. (At this point, if you want to add herbs to the dry mixture, such as 1 tsp dried crushed basil, marjoram, or sage, go ahead. I don’t usually do this) Make a well in the center of the mixture. In a bowl combine eggs, water, and oil. Add to flour mixture; mix well.

Sprinkle kneading surface with the remaining flour (or use your dough hook in mixer). Turn dough out onto floured surface. Knead till dough is smooth and elastic (8-10 minutes total). Cover and let rest for 10 minutes.

Divide dough into fourths. On a lightly floured surface, roll each fourth into a 12×12 inch square (about 1/16 inch thick). Let stand 20 minutes. Cut as desired. Roll dough up into a long cylinder, and slice noodles about 1/4 inches wide, unroll.

Or, if using pasta machine, pass dough through machine according to manufacturer’s instructions till 1/16 inch thick. Cut as desired.

Cook pasta, allowing a few more minutes for dried or frozen pasta. Makes 1 pound fresh pasta.

~Note~ I made mine earlier in the day and just let the noodles dry on my counters and cooling racks. I didn’t end up using all of the noodles for our family meal, so I stored the remainder (dry noodles) in airtight Zip lock in the refrigerator. For freezing, my cookbook says to dry the pasta for at least an hour, seal it in a freezer bag or freezer container and freeze for up to 8 months. (This is making me want to mega-cook a whole bunch of pasta, anyone else?)

Now, of course, you could just buy those yummy frozen egg noodles at the grocery store and save yourself this delightful from-scratch experience, but even those don’t compare. If you can, borrow a pasta machine from someone and show your children how to make noodles. Mine had a blast. Of course, 7 year old was sick on the couch, which was why I was making chicken and noodles in the first place…but my 10 and 3 year olds said it was way more fun than play-dough!

Alas, my 7 yo passed on eating anything with us that night. When she finally regained a semblance of an appetite the next evening, guess what she wanted to eat? Romaine lettuce and banana bread. So we made sure she had some of both! Her loss, because that soup was incredible!

Filed under: Cooking and Food and Mega Cooking5 Comments »

Low-fat Cream Soup Substitute

By Mary at 1:26 pm on January 28, 2008 | 10 Comments

Yet another great use for nonfat dry milk. I don’t know where I’d be without my huge box. I never use “real” milk for recipes, only for drinking and cereal. With a gallon of milk costing over $3, this saves us a bundle of money. And it couldn’t be easier to substitute. I don’t even whisk the dry milk into the water beforehand, I just add it to the dry ingredients (unless otherwise specified in the recipe) and remember to add the coinciding amount of water later. Check your box for mixing instructions, but the two kinds I’ve gotten both have the ratio of 1/3 cup dry milk to 1 cup water. Easy to remember.

Okay, I got this cream soup recipe from my friend Jana, back when we were both active on the Proverbs 31 Ministry loops. Long time ago. This is a great “mix” to keep on hand, another money-saver. I’ve been grateful for it many times.

Low-fat Cream Soup Substitute

  • 2 cups nonfat dry milk
  • 3/4 cup cornstarch
  • 1/4 cup instant chicken bouillon granules
  • 2 TB dried onion flakes
  • 1 tsp dried basil
  • 1 tsp dried thyme
  • 1/2 tsp pepper

Combine all ingredients, mix well and store in airtight container. To use, mix 1/3 cup dry mixture with 1 1/4 cups cold water in saucepan. Cook and stir over medium heat until thickened. *Add any ingredients desired (ie: mushrooms, celery) Add to casseroles, etc, as you would cream soup. This makes enough for SEVERAL recipes.

*If you do want to add mushrooms or celery (for cream of mushroom or cream of celery soups) saute them first in a small amount of butter.

I’m sharing this recipe because my very next post is a to-die-for homemade chicken and noodles recipe, and having this cream soup recipe on hand would be a very good thing!

Filed under: Cooking and Food10 Comments »

Poppy Seed Bread

By Mary at 2:45 pm on January 18, 2008 | 30 Comments

I’ve been getting requests about this recipe, and since I had it all typed out to email around I decided to post it here at the blog as well…it’s our family’s absolute favorite sweet bread, yes even more than Amish Friendship Bread…mostly due to the fabulous glaze…

Poppy Seed Bread

  • 3 cups flour
  • 2 1/4 cups granulated sugar
  • 3 eggs
  • 1 1/2 cups oil
  • 1 1/2 cups milk
  • 1 1/2 tsp. salt
  • 1 1/2 tsp. baking powder
  • 1 1/2 tsp. each of: vanilla, imitation butter flavoring, pure almond extract/flavoring
  • 2 TB poppy seeds

Mix all ingredients, beat 2 minutes with mixer. Grease and flour 2 large baking pans. Bake at 350*F for 1 hour.

Remove from oven and glaze with the following ingredients, be sure to mix them together before brushing them atop your bread:

  • 3/4 cup granulated sugar
  • 1/4 cup orange juice
  • 1/2 tsp. each of vanilla, imitation butter flavoring, pure almond extract/flavoring

Let set until glaze is absorbed, about 5 minutes, then take out of pans.

These make great gifts at Christmas! I recommend making this recipe into 6 mini-loaves, rather than two large loaves. That way, the glaze goes further with each bite! Plus, if you do mini-loaves, you can put them in a package with an assortment. For instance, Strawberry bread or Pumpkin bread or Amish Friendship Bread…but the Poppy Seed bread is by far the biggest hit and my most often requested recipe.

Filed under: Cooking and Food30 Comments »

Gluten-Free Flour Mix

By Mary at 2:40 pm on January 10, 2008 | 15 Comments

Nowadays, it seems we all know someone with Celiac or Sprue Disease, aka, gluten allergies. My husband is in line for it, genetically. His mother has it, so that ups his chances by ten percent, from what I gather.

Recently I came across a recipe for an interchangeable flour mix for people who can’t tolerate gluten. Here it is for you to use or pass along…

Best Flour Mix (from the Gluten-Free Gourmet Cooks Fast and Healthy by Bette Hagman)

  • 2 parts white rice flour
  • 2/3 part potato starch flour
  • 1/3 part tapioca flour

Make a large batch of this flour mixture to keep in a canister for ready use when flour is needed in a recipe. In a pinch, quinoa flour works well on its own. Try white or brown rice flours, garbanzo flour, and may others if you want to experiment and see what works best for you.

How many of you know someone with this allergy?

Filed under: Cooking and Food and Health15 Comments »

New Year’s Eve: Beef Enchiladas and Movie Recommendations

By Mary at 4:42 pm on December 30, 2007 | 26 Comments

Not sure if it was my Texas upbringing that grew me into a Mexican food lover, but this enchilada recipe definitely sprouted from my Austin roots. Every New Year’s Eve our church would have a potluck and pray in the New Year together…and every year we all looked forward to Hugh’s Enchiladas…I’ve still never tasted better, and am so glad he shared the recipe with the church family…

It’s one of those recipes that is just as easy to double (or triple for large groups), it freezes well, and I just finished stashing two 9×13″ panfuls in my refrigerator for tomorrow night! Y’all be sure to try it sometime!

Hugh’s New Year’s Eve Enchiladas

Meat filling:

  • 1 lb ground chuck
  • 1 tsp cumin, ground
  • 2 clove garlic, minced
  • 1 tsp salt, if desired
  • pepper to taste
  • 1 small onion, chopped
  • 1 small tomato, chopped fine
  • 2 TB water (to keep meat moist)
  • 10 oz grated cheddar cheese

Put the meat, garlic and onion in a skillet with no oil. Cook over high heat till meat loses color…do not brown…Turn heat to low, drain grease. Add remaining seasonings, and tomato and 2 TB water. Cook covered, over very low heat 20 minutes. Be sure meat stays moist. Add more water if needed.

Sauce:

  • 4 TB flour
  • 1/4 cup cooking oil
  • 2 TB chili powder
  • 2 tsp cumin
  • 1 tsp salt
  • 2 cloves garlic, minced
  • 2 1/4 cups hot water plus one 8 oz can of tomato sauce

Place the flour in a cake pan and brown in a 350*F oven, shaking occasionally, till golden brown.

In large pan, put oil, flour, chili powder, cumin, garlic and salt. Blend well.

On low heat gradually add water and tomato sauce. Stir constantly so it won’t lump. If lumps appear, remove from heat and stir until lumps are gone. Keep stirring. Simmer about an hour.

In a skillet in a tiny amount of oil, heat, one at a time, 10 flour tortillas. Turn and remove and keep warm in a pan. (I skip the “keep warm in a pan” part and work quickly, throwing one tortilla in the pan to heat as I take another and add filling ingredients, roll and place in baking dish)

In each tortilla put: 2 TB meat filling mixture and 2 TB cheese (or just enough to cover the meat, no need to be precise!). Roll and put in baking dish, seam side down. Pour any leftover meat mixture on top along with sauce. Top with more cheese.

Bake at 350*F for 15-20 minutes. Done when sauce starts bubbling all around. Be sure they don’t dry out as they bake. (Generally, if all the tortillas are covered in sauce prior to baking, they don’t dry out.)

Besides enchiladas, we’re sure to have a slew of snack foods handy for the evening’s duration…stuff like puppy chow, poppyseed bread, chips-veggies-dips, jerky etc…

Movie Recommendations

We always spend NYE at my b&sil’s house playing games and watching movies. This year I have three top-notch family movies to recommend…

  1. Facing the Giants~This tops the list!  What I took away from this movie is that when our hurts and hardships overwhelm us, if we open our hearts to God, He is free to work amazingly in our lives and in the lives of those around us. We laughed and cried and LOVED this movie–all of us, even 3 year old! It’s been out a long time, and after asking around, we discovered that none of dh’s extended family had even heard of the movie! So don’t be shy about recommending it to people, or loaning out your copy. It’s hugely inspiring!
  2. Amazing Grace~The true story of “anti-slavery pioneer” Wilber Wilberforce, the man who took on slavery in England’s House of Commons more than a hundred years before we Americans abolished it on our soil. He was inspired by his contemporary, John Newton (writer of Amazing Grace)…this is a must-see movie, but we chose to watch it without our children, as some of the slavery parts are a bit hard to take. (FYI, we are way more careful than most parents–and I think my 10 yo could have handled it all right, but definitely not my tender-hearted 7 yo)
  3. The Christmas Card~I recently watched this Hallmark movie with one of my sisters, and promptly fell in love with the captivating cast, the storyline–and the military theme left me patriotically inspired from beginning to end. A great movie, despite all the kissing! My favorite Hallmark movie ever! (Don’t let the “kissing” comment automatically rate this as a chick flick, I think even my dh might like this one!)
  4. The ‘07 Cutting Horse Futurity~my dh stopped by as I was writing this and suggested I add it to the “must-see” family-approved list…I’m telling you, if we had cable and the RFD channel, he’d never leave the house! His dad taped this event for him this year and sent it over…we have definitely NOT been TV or movie free this past week!

What NYE traditions do you embrace? Got any movies to recommend? Don’t forget, wherever you are, to pray the New Year in, something we all should do as we reflect on the blessings of the past year, and open our hearts to God’s will for us in 2008.

HAPPY NEW YEAR!!!!!!!!!

Filed under: Cooking and Food and Family Ties26 Comments »

Potato Cheese Soup

By Mary at 2:09 pm on December 27, 2007 | 4 Comments

Well, really, its earned a new name at our house: Snowstorm Soup! For the story and the recipe, follow this link over to Writer…Interrupted and my post today!

I’d love to hear what your favorite soups are!

Filed under: Cooking and Food4 Comments »

Homemade Buttermilk and Sour Cream

By Mary at 5:44 am on December 13, 2007 | 6 Comments

Gleaned these two great tips from Laine at Laine’s Letters in her recipe box section:

“Buttermilk and sour cream are expensive, but oh, so easy to make.

Buttermilk: I take 1/4 cup of buttermilk aOld Mason Jarsnd add four cups of milk to a mason jar.

Cover and shake a little, then put on the counter.

In about 24 hours, I have buttermilk. I just have to remember to save a little buttermilk from each batch for the next batch.

Sour cream:
Same as above recipe, only you use heavy cream in place of the milk.”

Wonderful to know, right? By the way, I’ve subscribed to Laine’s Letters for years now. She is a dear woman, soKittens in Paradise encouraging to stay at home moms and homemakers everywhere. It would be worth your time to follow the link and check out a few of her letters!

Filed under: Cooking and Food6 Comments »
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