Monday, November 21, 2011
Cheesy Potatoes
CHEESY POTATOES
Ingredients
2 lbs. hash browns, thaw slightly
2 c. shredded sharp Cheddar cheese
1 pt. (12 oz.) sour cream
1 can cream of chicken soup
1 onion, minced
1 teaspoon salt
½ c. melted butter
Crushed corn flakes
Method
Mix all ingredients, except butter. Put into buttered casserole. Let stand a few minutes before
baking. Sprinkle crushed corn flakes on top. Pour over 1/2 cup melted butter. Bake 1 hour at
350 degrees.
Note: Can prepare ahead and refrigerate, but put corn flakes on at last minute.
File this under: Comfort Foods, holiday meals, side dishes, Thanksgiving
Taylor's Traditional Cranberry Sauce
File this under: holiday meals, salads, Thanksgiving, Traditional
Friday, November 27, 2009
Turkey Carcass Soup
One of our favorite Thanksgiving traditions is to make Turkey Carcass Soup the day after the Big Feast. First of all, I just love the name. It sounds so...barbaric and medieval. Secondly, it's absolutely delicious and feels very resourceful to use all of the turkey this way. I discovered this recipe years ago in Jane Brody's Good Food Cookbook, one of my all-time favorite cookbooks.******......******:::******......******::: ******......******
Add a loaf of homemade bread, and you've got yourself an amazing meal.
Turkey Carcass Soup
Ingredients:
- Stock:
- Turkey carcass, broken into pieces
- Any defatted pan juices or leftover gravy
- 12 cups of water, or enough to cover the carcass completely
- 2 medium onions, coarsely chopped
- 2 ribs of celery with leaves, coarsely chopped
- ½ cup diced carrots
- ½ cup diced well-washed leek (optional)
- 3 cloves garlic, minced
- 1 teaspoon salt, if desired
- Bouquet garni, made by tying in cheesecloth:
- 6 sprigs fresh parsley (or 2 tsp. dried parsley flakes)
- ½ teaspoon dried thyme leaves
- 1 bay leaf
- Soup:
- ½ onion, finely copped
- 2 - 3 cloves minced garlic
- 1 tablespoon olive oil
- 1 cup diced carrots
- ½ cup diced celery
- 1 ½ tablespoons flour
- 6 - 7 cups turkey stock
- 1 teaspoon dried marjoram
- Salt and freshly ground pepper to taste
- ⅓ cup raw barley or rice
- 1 cup diced turkey meat
- Hot pepper sauce, to taste (optional)
- 2 tablespoons chopped parsley or chives
For the stock, combine all the ingredients in a large stock pot, bring the stock to a boil and simmer it, partially covered for 2 to 3 hours. (It tastes better the longer it simmers, but be careful not to cook away the liquid.)
Strain the stock; cool, then skim off the fat.
Remove all of the meat from the bones and refrigerate for adding to the soup later. Discard other vegetables, bones, turkey skin, etc. Makes 10 - 12 cups.
To make the soup, in a large stockpot saute the onion and garlic in oil until soft. Add the carrots and celery and mushrooms and cook the vegetables for an additional 5 minutes. Stir occasionally.
Add the flour and stir for one minute.
Add the stock, marjoram, salt and pepper, and barley or rice. Bring the soup to a boil, reduce heat, partially cover the pot, and simmer the soup for about 1 hour. Add the turkey meat and hot pepper sauce. Adjust seasonings, and heat the soup to boiling. Sprinkle the soup with parsley just before serving.
File this under: holiday meals, lunch, Soups, using leftovers
Wednesday, April 9, 2008
Grandma Jane's Special Potato Salad
Grandma Jane had a way with food. Everything she made was delicious--perfectly seasoned, just the right balance of everything, and always plenty for everyone. Her potato salad, for example, was a special treat. There are some things in life that you just *know,* and getting potato salad when you went to Grandma Jane's was one of them. My main goal when visiting her was to wake before everyone else in the house so that I could devour my special breakfast. Potato salad.
I've had this recipe for years. Grandma wrote it out especially for her daughter-in-law and me. Yet no matter how many times I make it, I just can't get it to taste like Grandma's. Still, it's a big hit in our house and everywhere else we take it.
I've altered the recipe a bit to use yukon gold and red potatoes, which just need to be scrubbed but not peeled. Be careful not to overcook the potatoes!
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Potato Salad Special
Cube about four cups of Yukon Gold and red potatoes, and place them in a pot, covering with just enough cold water to cover them. Add a tablespoon of salt.
Place two eggs, whole, in the pot, too, to boil while the potatoes cook.
Bring the water to a slow boil and cook until you can *just* put a fork in them. You don't want them to fall apart, but you don't want them to be too firm. This usually takes about ten minutes from the time the water starts to boil.
While potatoes are cooking, get a large bowl and mix together:
1 1/2 cups REAL mayonnaise, either homemade or Hellman's
1 cup chopped red onion
1 cup finely diced celery
1 tablespoon prepared yellow mustard
1 tablespoon sugar
1/2 teaspoon paprika
1/2 teaspoon pepper
1 small sweet pickle, diced
salt to taste
When potatoes are done cooking, drain them. Remove the eggs and place them in a bowl of cold water to cool. Cool potatoes, gently turning them occasionally to keep them from further cooking in the bowl.
When eggs are cooled, peel them and chop them very fine. Add this to the mayonnaise mixture.
When potatoes are cool, add them to the mayonnaise mixture, stirring well, but being careful not to mash the potatoes. Sprinkle top with chopped parsley.
If it seems too dry, add more mayonnaise.
Chill all of this, preferably overnight, as the flavor is better the next day!
File this under: holiday meals, mayonaisse, onions, potatoes, salads, special occasions
Sunday, April 6, 2008
Hungarian Pork Roast and Caraway Sauerkraut
For our New Year's Even houseconcert, I wanted to try something different, something other than my standard Lentil Soup fare. And since I'm a very big fan of pork roast, sauerkraut and mashed potatoes, I went searching for a recipe that would make my mouth water. This recipe was surely it, and ended up being a very big hit with the houseconcert guests. The comments were made mostly in regard to the thickened sauerkraut and the onion gravy. Cook the pork sl-o-o-o-o-w-ly for maximum tenderness and flavor!
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Hungarian Pork Roast with Onion Gravy and Caraway Sauerkraut
1 large pork roast (6-7 pounds)
7 large onions, peeled and chopped
2 tablespoons sugar to caramelize the onions
salt and pepper
Seer all sides of the roast in a hot roasting pan over high heat. Do not add any fat.
Put all the chopped onions and 2 tablespoons sugar into a roasting pan (I use my electric roaster when doubling this for a great big batch) and cover.
Cook at 325 degrees for about 1 1/2 to 2 hours.
Check periodically to turn it over and push the onions around. The onions should caramelize, or take on a rich, brown color.
When roast is finished cooking, remove it from the roasting pan.
Mix 2 tablespoons of flour into 2 cups of water.
Stir the water/flour mixture into the onions, scraping the sides of the pan to get all of the onions/juices into the gravy. Season with salt and pepper.
Caraway Sauerkraut
2 pounds of Sauerkraut, preferably the bagged kind, rinsed and drained
1 cup of water
1 tablespoon of caraway seeds
1 tablespoon of sugar
2 tablespoons of lard or butter, partially melted
2 tablespoons of flour
Put the sauerkraut in a pot. Add the caraway seeds, sugar and water.
Slowly cook until the kraut is soft, about a 1/2 hour.
In a small bowl, mix the lard or butter and the flour. Stir into the kraut. Stir until thickened.
Simmer for five minutes.
Serve this with mashed potatoes (be sure to make your mashed potatoes with plenty of butter, cream cheese, heavy cream and salt/pepper).
Original recipe found at June Meyer's Authentic Hungarian Recipes. It's packed with fabulous foods! This particular dish includes a recipe for Farina dumplings which I have not yet tried, but look fabulous and can be frozen for use in other recipes. Her recipe for mashed potatoes looks great, with the addition of egg and sour cream.
File this under: Dinners, ethnic meals, holiday meals, meat dishes, special occasions
Tuesday, November 20, 2007
Taylor's Traditional Cranberry Sauce
We found this recipe in a book called Thanksgiving Fun: Great Things to Make and Do by Ronne Randall and Annabel Spenceley. Daughter Taylor has been making it for years, now, and has improved it with the addition of crushed pineapple and a pinch of cinnamon. The best part is watching all of the children gather around the pot to see the cranberries pop. Serve it with generous dollops of homemade whipped cream.
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Taylor's Traditional Cranberry Sauce
2 cups fresh cranberries (can be frozen)
1/4 cup orange juice
1/4 cup water
1 cup sugar
1 can crushed pineapple, drained well
a pinch of cinnamon
Heat everything except the pineapple in a saucepan over medium heat, stirring gently, for about 7-10 minutes. Pretty soon, the cranberries will start popping open! That's the fun part! When they've all popped, add the pineapple. Cool, refrigerate, and serve with whipped cream.
File this under: holiday meals, salads, Sauces, special occasions
Tuesday, April 10, 2007
Easter Dinner
No recipes to post today. Just a photo of our Easter dinner--English roast with red onions and baby carrots, mashed Yukon Gold potatoes and steamed asparagus with lemon butter. Delicious!
I hope your Easter was a very blessed one!
File this under: food photos, holiday meals
