Showing posts with label Good to eat. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Good to eat. Show all posts

06 October 2015

Desserts on a Budget

It isn't something new... really...

Super fun to use my cake pedestal, which I received as a wedding gift many, many moons ago, and which has spent most of those moons in storage because I wasn't gonna take it to Africa!

But, with two in college and six in private school and the cost of living in Quebec, a new-to-us place, the corner cutting learning curve is rather steep.

But, I am able to apply some skills I learned from trying to grocery shop in Niger...

I don't plan menus. I gave up rather early on in my African days... when every Friday afternoon I'd plan out a menu for my Saturday grocery shopping day - only to get to the store and discover that something I needed was no longer available in town. One week, there was no butter. The next week, no powdered milk. Another, no eggs. It's not surprising that supply in a W. African town might be inconsistent, and it did get better over the years that we were there, but by then?

Habits had hardened and weren't so easily broken.

What I'd learned to do was know about how much food it took to feed my gang for a week and to buy enough of whatever was available in town and then develop a menu once I got home with whatever it was I'd found.

That strategy works just as well, here in the developed west - when applied to sales. That means I don't have to clip coupons, scour the sales ads, etc. I go grocery shopping at the store that happens to be convenient, buy what is on sale and then build my menu from what I have in the pantry, fridge and freezer when I get home.

This week - they had huge bags of beets on sale.

Other ingredients - butter, sugar, flour, eggs, cocoa - are all the type of things I almost usually always have on hand.

But, that meant the learning curve for the next few weeks would be how to cook with beets (Not borscht - we've already been there, done that; although Tim and the biggers like it, it isn't a fave with the littlers.). Since I need after school snacks as well as in-school snacks, the first thing I did was google "ways to use beets in desserts." The first entire page of search results all ultimately led back to the very first link listed: 


I must admit, the recipe/title did not interest me, not in the least - hence why I skipped it and kept on reading through the rest of the results.

As I kept coming back to the above page, however, the brilliant pink frosting, however, finally did pique my interest.


So I read on, and decided to give it a try... although I made cupcakes instead of a layered cake. And... I made a few changes... but for the most part, I followed the recipe as written.

Ingredients:
2 beets - roasted and then finely grated
Spray of olive oil

3/4 cup grated beets
3/4 cup of butter
1 cup packed brown sugar
3/4 cup honey
2 large eggs
splash of vanilla
2 cups flour
2/3 cup unsweetened natural cocoa powder
1 teaspoon baking soda
1 teaspoon baking powder
1 "sorta" teaspoon salt
1 1/4 cups milk soured with vinegar

1/4 cup softened butter
1/2 brick softened cream cheese
2 1/2 cups powdered sugar
2 tbsp grated beets mashed with a fork
splash of vanilla
milk as desired

Preheat oven to 400'F.

Wash beets under running water, and trim leaves (although mine were already trimmed). Place beets in foil.  Drizzle with olive oil.  Seal up foil.  Place in the oven and roast until tender when pierced with a fork - which was slightly less than an hour. Allow beets to cool completely (that was when I went to pick the kids up from school).  Peel once cool and grate, finely.

Reduce the oven temp - 350'F.  Place cupcake liners into cupcake pan.

Cream together butter and sugars until fluffy, a few minutes.  Beat in eggs, one at a time. Then beat in beets and vanilla extract until thoroughly combined.

Combine milk and a dash of vinegar to make 1 1/4 cup soured milk. Let sit.

In a medium bowl, whisk together flour, cocoa powder, baking soda, baking powder, and salt.

Add half of the dry ingredients to the butter and egg mixture.  Beating on low speed , slowly add soured milk.  Once just incorporated, add the other half of the dry ingredients. Beat on medium speed until milk and dry ingredients are just incorporated.  

Spoon the thickish batter into prepared muffin pan.  Bake for 18-20 minutes or until done. Cake is done when a skewer inserted in the center comes out clean.  Remove from the oven, remove from muffin pan and allow to cool.

For the frosting, beat cream cheese, butter and powdered sugar together. Add beets, vanilla and milk.

Frost cupcakes.

And, that's all there is to it! The step of roasting the beets does lengthen and complicate the process, but only slightly. And, they do say that beets have antioxidant and anti-inflammatory properties as well as aid in the detoxification of the body. Maybe... maybe not - but at least "beet" might not be a bad word when I tell the kids that they play a prominent part in future recipes.

By the way, I left the brilliantly colored cupcakes prominently displayed as the gang was getting ready for school. The end result was Wrightlings anxious to get home and grab their after school snack! There's even enough left for tomorrow's after school snack as well!

Oh yeah! I can't forget to mention that I think the dad snuck one into his lunch on his way out the door... even though he was allowed to test taste the night before.


This recipe has been officially declared, by each and every Wrightling present,

"A THUMBS UP, DEFINITE REPEAT!!"

(Good thing, since I bought 10 lbs of beets! But I guess I'd also better figure out a few more recipes that use beets!)

21 November 2013

~ chocolate banana pudding ~

~ made like I've never made it before! ~



And a lot better-for-me-chocolate-pudding than I've ever eaten before as well!



  • 2 avocados
  • 4 bananas
  • 6 tbsp cocoa
  • 6 tbsp sugar (or honey) - more or less to taste - depending on the sweetness/ripeness of the bananas
  • 2 tsp vanilla





Puree until smooth. Spoon into serving dishes, Cover and refrigerate until ready to eat.


I've had this idea for awhile - ever since I used avocados instead of butter in mashed potatoes once and they (i.e. Tim and the kids... even though Tim doesn't gets resentful when I use the wrong food and it still tastes right... grin!)  never had a clue.

Something tells me that they'll be pretty clueless about it this time as well... 

I sneaked a taste test into M&M (who is enjoying a quiet afternoon with Dora the Explorer). You should've seen those eyes light up!



Although? By now, for all except our Jon-man, the avocado would be a non-issue.

Give it a try and let me know what you think! 

27 October 2013

31 days... of dinner chez les Wrightlings... Homemade lasagna... noodles and all {day 27}


Several years ago, I tried making homemade lasagna noodles. I think I considered it an epic fail. But it is one of those things that I've had on my list to try again... someday...

Saturday, October 25, 2013 became that some day.

I figured I already had the other stuff frozen as far as relative ease in pulling together the rest of the meal.

I thought my family would be home to eat it with me when I put it on the menu plan.

And on the coldest week of this fall yet, on that Saturday, I knew we weren't planning on traveling - but rather at home, cleaning the house and just hanging out.

And I made lasagna from scratch... noodles and all... although my little smarty-mouth daughter (I'll let you wonder which one) informed me that unless I milled my own flour, I couldn't say it was from scratch.

I wasn't too happy with that comment, oh daughter of mine...

One true comment? 

Rolling out lasagna noodles was more work than I expected. Not difficult, but just required more physical energy/strength than I figured it would. That might have something to do with strep throat... But then again, maybe if we all spent more time doing the work required to prepare our food, we'd find it easier to maintain a healthy weight.

Just wondering?



We actually fit at the table... since the second shift didn't arrive to eat until more 
than an hour later.





Everyone liked the homemade noodles!
I'm pretty sure I'll be doing it again.

It has to get easier with practice.



Yummy oatmeal cake (with the most delightful butterscotch icing that I've decided will be wonderful on doughnuts the next time I make them)!

Uncle Harold, Cousin Mike, Tim and Jonathan joined us and echoed earlier sentiments... even had compliments on the home made Italian dressing...

Sometimes a twist on a good 'ole standard is a pretty good way to go.


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25 October 2013

31 days... of dinner chez les Wrightlings... Toad in the hole and roasted squash ~ seriously! {day 25}


One morning Toad sat in bed.
“I have many things to do,” he said.
“I will write them
all down on a list
so that I can remember them.”
Toad wrote on a piece of paper:
A list of things to do today
Then we wrote:
Wake up
“I have done that,” said Toad,
and he crossed out:
Wake up



I've got a list today, too... even if it isn't written down and

Making Toad in the hole... a traditional British meal... is on it.
Why?

Because not only do my kids love to eat frog legs 
from their favorite Chinese restaurant in Niamey; 
they also
 like love to play with live toads (and frogs)... like seriously...


(Click this link if you'd like to see more pics from many moons ago 
of Wrightlings toad snuggling.)



Their Redcoat Brit friends recently posted on fb about making Toad in the hole.
Had never heard of it, but was intrigued.
I asked... but I also googled and found a recipe.

I figured I had to at least give it a try.
After all, if Gibbo could make it...?

There are no REAL toads in the recipe...
although I had Jonathan, Elsie Mae and Mary Michelle
seriously
worried for several days.

They all liked the dish, just not the butternut squash served on the side.
After all, what's not to like about sausage, Yorkshire pudding and onion gravy?

We also had company for dinner.
Cousin Laura, Aunt Mary, and cousins Olivia and Ada... 
They came by the house, picked up the littles and took them to a local Halloween walk.

You know, one of those things where the kids come home with a lunch bag loaded up with all sorts of sweet and unhealthy things to spoil their dinner and lead to teeth decay?




But my favorite moment came after dinner, while we were sitting around chatting with Cousin Laura.

Anna asked Laura and Tim how they were related.

Laura began explaining that they were cousins - 
Tim's mom was Laura's aunt because Laura's daddy was the little brother of Tim's mom.

Anna kinda had her blank expression... the one that says:
"I understood the words you just said, but I still don't really get it!"

So Laura kept on talking, giving more details - 
she and Tim were born really close to the same time: 
Her mama was just leaving the hospital with her and her twin sister the day Anna's daddy was born. Then there was Cousin Mike, born just a few weeks later. 
Four cousins in about 6 weeks time.
(And it is fun to see them all such good friends as adults, now!)

Then Anna looked back and forth between Tim and Laura several times before wondering aloud,

'"You mean you're actually older than Dad?"

"Yes, by about a week," Laura replied.

"Wow! I thought Daddy was so much older than you. He definitely looks like it!"

I could've fallen off the couch laughing... 
That may have been the first time EVER that Tim has been told he looked like... 

the old one!

And, in case you were wondering?

Toad in the hole was a definite repeat...

"...minus the squash, Mama!" Can you hear Jonathan cry out?


And now, just like waking up and eating breakfast are regulars on the to do lists of both Toad and me...

I think making Toad in the hole will be as well.


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24 October 2013

31 days... of dinner chez les Wrightlings... Cabbage fritters with yogurt dip and a yummy fall fruit salad {day 24}


Chopped cabbage

mixed with eggs, salt, pepper and just enough flour to hold it all together.

Fried until golden,

and set to drain on newspaper then kept warm in the oven = cabbage fritters, or
"beignets de chou."

Olive oil, spices and plain yogurt

all mixed together as a dip or spread for the beignets.

Seriously the easiest AND the best

tasting Fall salad I've ever made or eaten, and...




you have dinner chez les Wrightlings last night, a pretty typical-busy getting ready for AWANA Wednesday night at our house.



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21 October 2013

31 days... of dinner chez les Wrightlings... Butterscotch pumpkin bread with chocolate pumpkin butter {day 21}


Since we're eating leftovers for our main meal the next few days (with kiddos out and about or traveling over the weekend, we have more than usual), I thought I'd let you in on this delightful recipe, which, when paired with the pumpkin butter (nutella-ish... seriously... according to several of the Wrightlings, the ones who "do" pumpkin bread... which is all of them except for one... Any guesses which one?)


Super easy... see?

1 cup vegetable oil
2 2/3 cups granulated sugar
4 large eggs
2 cups roasted pumpkin (freshly roasted was delightful)
2/3 cup water
3 1/3 cups flour
1/2 teaspoon baking powder
2 teaspoons baking soda
1 1/2 teaspoons salt
1 teaspoon nutmeg
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
1 1/2 cups butterscotch chips

Mix dry on one bowl, mix the wet in another. Gently fold flour mix into the wet ingredients. Grease pans and pour into bread pans. Bake at 350 for 60-80 minutes or until done.



I made the chocolate pumpkin butter overnight... starting with this recipe, but I put it in the crock pot and let it cook on low all night long... the yummy smell actually woke me up and so I got up to stir and went ahead and turned it from low to warm only. Then in the morning, I ran it through the blender and it was good to go, spread on our pumpkin bread.


Super moist and sweet pumpkin bread with the light flavor of butterscotch chips, covered with still warm chocolate pumpkin butter (which some of kids mistook for Nutella) and a big cup of hot coffee with creme brulee creamer... 

A perfect start to a Sunday morning!

Tim went hunting again that evening... brought home another squirrel... stay tuned. Maybe we'll have ANOTHER squirrel meal on deck for this week. Jonathan's on his knees by the computer begging, "No, Mama! Please no!" But we've got to give toad in the hole a try first!


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