Thursday, January 2, 2014

Hot Chocolate with Whipped Cream

I love whipped cream.

Back at Thanksgiving, I bought some heavy whipping cream, intending to make whipped cream to go with my pumpkin pie - but since someone else brought a can of whipped cream, it never got used.

It's just been sitting in my fridge, calling to me.

Yesterday, I finally gave in - and about time too!  Technically (according to the date on the package) the whipping cream expired last week... but it smelled fine to me, so into the mixer it went!  5 minutes and a little sugar later, and ta-DA!  Finger-licking delicious.

Unfortunately, (or fortunately?) all I had to eat it with were my fingers.  So I made microwave "real" hot chocolate for all of us, so we had somewhere to put our whipped cream :)  Mmm, mmm!



Whipped Cream
  • roughly 1 cup of heavy cream
  • roughly 1/4 cup of sugar (i used raw) *i mistakenly wrote 3/4 cup in the original post
  • 1/2 tsp vanilla (i didn't measure)

Hot Chocolate
  • handful of chocolate chips (i literally put my hand in the bag, grabbed at the chocolate chips, and put that many in a mug)
  • tiny bit of butter - less than a "pat"
  • 8 to 12 oz of milk, depending on the strength you like and the size of your mug

Instructions
  1. Pour cream into bowl of mixer, the colder the better.  Whip for 3-5 minutes, slowly increasing to the max intensity. When it starts to puff up and form "soft peaks", add sugar and vanilla, continuing to whip to combine.  Be careful not to over whip, or you'll make butter!
  2. Meanwhile, put chocolate chips and butter into a mug, microwave 30 seconds.  Stir, microwave another 30 seconds.  Add a tiny bit of milk, stir, and microwave another 30 seconds.  Stir - if not yet melting and mixing, microwave for 30 seconds more.  If still not mixing or you're getting a weird tootsie-rollish thing, add more butter - the fat will help the chocolate mix with the water in the milk.  When combined well, go ahead and add the rest of the milk, stirring while adding.  Microwave for another 60 seconds or until hot chocolate is the temperature you like. 
  3. Add whipped cream and drink up!
I'm not really sure how much whipped cream this made, since I ate so much of it off the spoon.  I'd guess probably 2.5 to 3 cups?  We consumed it all on 4 hot chocolates with AMPLE whipped cream.  (No, the baby didn't get one - I had 2!)


Monday, November 18, 2013

A week of small firsts

I made two new (and SUPER easy!) things to taste this week. 
  1. Kale Salad (I hear so much about this lately!)
  2. Cranberry Sauce (It's almost Thanksgiving!)

I love cranberry sauce in a can (it's pretty much cranberry-juice jello), but I don't have many fond memories of real cranberry sauce.  And the few times I've tried to use Kale haven't exactly been successful either... but for some reason I put both of these things in my grocery basket this week.  A little bit of internet research later, and voila - 2 unbelievably easy creations that taste great!

Cranberry Orange Sauce
This sauce came out sweet and tangy, with a strong orange flavor.

Ingredients:
  • Pint of fresh cranberries
  • cup or 2 of orange juice
  • cup or so of water

Rinse cranberries, and check for stems.  Place cranberries in a saucepan, and add enough orange juice to cover the berries.  Cover, and bring to a boil, then reduce to a simmer.  The cranberries will start "popping", and turn into a mushy fruit.  Continue cooking, adding water to get the consistency to your liking.  Stir occasionally, to avoid burning bottom.  Mash with a potato masher or puree with a blender or immersion blender, and voila!   I served as a sauce for turkey meatballs and mashed turnips, and then mixed into the baby's yogurt at breakfast - it was a hit both ways.  This could definitely work as a dessert component... maybe over ice cream or some apple pie... Mmm... pie...

PS- I tried eating a raw cranberry for fun - they taste exactly like great cranberry juice, with the texture of an apple.  Really strange, and sooooo sour!


Kale & Chicken Pasta Salad
You can play with the ratios of the ingredients, these are just suggestions

Ingredients:
  • Bunch of Kale, rinsed and torn into smallish pieces - kale is very difficult to measure... I'd wager I used about 10 big leaves of curly kale - filled half of a large mixing bowl while still fluffed up.
  • Zest and juice of 1/2 a lemon
  • Ample Extra Virgin Olive Oil
  • 1/2 Tsp salt
  • Roughly chopped chicken - I used about 2 cups of leftover chicken breast
  • cooked pasta - I used a bag and a half of gluten free shells (I was trying to feed a crowd)
  • diced granny smith apple
  • Carrots or Celery - I parboiled some carrots so the baby could eat the salad too
  • 1/2 to 1 cup of mayonaise
  • Salt and Pepper
  • (grapes would have been good to add - but I didn't have any)
Clean the kale, and place in giant mixing bowl with the salt, lemon, zest, and some olive oil.  Use your hands to "massage" the kale, working the salt, lemon and oil into the leaves. I did this for probably about 60 seconds, until the kale was slightly relaxed and shiny green (and then I let it sit while I finished preparing the other ingredients).  Mix in all of the remaining ingredients, add more oil, salt & pepper to taste, and eat! You're done!

Thursday, November 14, 2013

Baby Sandwiches... Bocaditos?


I give my 1 year old sandwiches. 

Am I a bad mom?

It's not that I'm lazy... it's just that she want's whatever we're having, and she wants to be the boss of her own food.  We were at the point where she wouldn't eat her own food, but then 30 minutes later she'd be standing on her tippy toes, eating my ham and cheese sandwich right out of my hand!


Enter the mini sandwich.
I slice a piece of bread in half the hard way - making 2 really thin slices. Then I cut it into a few smaller pieces.  So far she's had peanut butter and jelly and turkey and cheese.  Peanut butter and jelly sticks together, but also sticks all over her... whereas turkey and cheese is an open invitation to play with her food, she dismantles it and eats the pieces she wants, then throws the rest on the floor or tries to feed it to us!  Today we added in thinly sliced cucumbers and tomatoes, just to add to the variety of food thrown on the floor.

The hardest part about the whole thing... is not eating her mini sandwich myself.  Those little bite size pieces are so tempting!

Tuesday, October 8, 2013

Fall Tomatoes

I didn't plant any tomatoes this year, since the past few years I've tried but had little success.  Amazingly, I had two volunteer tomato plants come up in random parts of my garden, and they made more tomatoes than any of my past attempts!  The tomatoes took their time to ripen, and are now finally ready to eat... now that it's October.

So now that I have a bunch of tomatoes, I tried making gazpacho!  I've had a craving for it lately, and the store bought stuff just doesn't do it for me.  So here's the (delicious) version I made up last night :)

Liz's Awesome Gazpacho
  • 1 English cucumber
  • 1/2 yellow pepper
  • 1/4 onion
  • 4 or 5 medium tomatoes
  • 1 medium clove garlic
  • Juice of 1 lime
  • ~1/4 cup parsley
  • ~2 cups mint leaves
  • ~ 1/4 cup olive oil
  • Salt & pepper
  • 1 cup of warm (softened) cooked white rice

Roughly chop everything and add to a food processor or blender.  I used a giant food processor, you could work in batches in a smaller blender or food processor and combine pured veggies in a big mixing bowl.  Add salt and pepper to taste, I probably used around 1 tsp of salt, but if you want flavor with less salt I bet you could substitute some lime zest.

Serve cold, and enjoy!

Thursday, June 6, 2013

I cooked something that wasn't chicken!!

Woohoo!  I cooked something that wasn't chicken, score!

As I've mentioned before, I have a myriad of food rules at the moment, no gluten for myself, and no milk, eggs, peanuts or soy for the baby (via breastmilk).  I added goat milk into my diet a few weeks ago (apparently it's usually cow's milk that causes trouble), and so far so good.  And SO GOOD!!  It's amazing what you can find in a grocery store these days!  So far, I have found:

  • Goat milk
  • Goat milk yogurt
  • Goat milk drinkable yogurt (milk/yogurt hybrid)
  • Goat cheese (normal)
  • Goat milk cheddar
  • Goat milk brie
  • Goat milk hard cheese
  • Goat milk feta
  • Goat milk BUTTER!!!
After months of no dairy, these finds have opened up a whole new world!!  Obviously some of these taste more like substitutions than the real thing (for example, goat milk cheddar doesn't really taste like cheddar), but some of them are DELICIOUS!!  For example, one of the yogurts I tried this past week was one of the best yogurts I've ever had, ever.  It was only flavored with honey, and it was light and creamy and delightful!

Another interesting find that I'm very happy with is goat milk butter.  It's expensive, and it doesn't quite taste like butter, but so far it's been great for cooking dinner!  I've used it to cook a few different  things, and it lends a buttery flavor I've been missing for so long, while at the same time infusing the meal with a slight goat cheesy flavor.  So in other words, if it's a meal that would taste good with goat cheese added, you get a two-for-one!  Here are two easy meals I threw together earlier this week -  I realize they're both seafood - but butter and cheese go well with these mild fish/shellfish!  And they were both delicious!

Liz's Scampi-ish Shrimp with Goat butter
Ingredients
  • Goat butter (1 or 2 tbsp)
  • White Wine (1/2 cup?)
  • Juice of 1/2 lemon
  • Zest of 1 lemon
  • Fresh Parsley, chopped (1 tbsp?)
  • Fresh Dill, chopped (1/2 tbsp?)
  • 1 carrot, shredded or grated
  • 1 medium zuchinni, shredded or grated
  • garlic, minced, 1 or 2 tbsp (i used 4 smallish cloves)
  • Shrimp - I used about 1/2 pound (of frozen pre-cleaned split shell, I removed shells)
  • Olive oil
  • Salt and Pepper
  • Rice or pasta (optional)
Instructions
  1. Mince/grate/chop/shell your goods, and open your wine.
  2. Add butter and garlic to large pan over medium heat, and have a swig of wine.
  3. When garlic is fragrant, add carrots and cook over medium/low heat until carrots begin to soften.
  4. Add wine if things seem dry. 
  5. Add zuchinni, shrimp, and remainder of wine.
  6. When shrimp are beginning to turn pink, add parsley, dill, lemon juice, and zest, and a turn or two of olive oil, stirring well to combine.
  7. When shrimp are curled, pink, and opaque, season with salt an pepper to taste, and serve.
We ate this over white rice, and it was delicious.  However, the shredded vegetables are somewhat noodle-like, and it would be ok without any rice or pasta for anyone eating low-carb. There weren't many leftovers, but the small amount remaining was delicious the next day too!


Here's an even easier recipe, that highlights more of the goat butter flavor:

Liz's Baked Cod with Goat Butter
Ingredients
  • Juice of one lemon
  • 2 tbsp goat butter
  • 3/4 lbs of fresh cod 
  • fresh herbs (optional) such as parsley and dill
  • salt and pepper
Instructions
  1. Melt the butter, and combine with the lemon juice.
  2. Place the cod filet(s) in a glass baking dish, and pour half of the butter/lemon mixture over the fish.  Flip the fish over, and pour the remaining butter/lemon over the fish.
  3. Bake at 350 for 30-45 minutes, depending on the thickness of the fish.  Fish is done when it comes apart easily with a fork, and is opaque.  Garnish with chopped fresh herbs, and serve.  We had this with sauteed asparagus and beet greens, over white rice.

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