Saturday, March 12, 2011

More cookies...

Ok, so I'll try to stop baking so many cookies.  I've decided I need to look into more savory snacks (suggestions?) or find more time for actually cooking a meal.  But in the mean time, here's a yummy sugar cookie recipe I made about 3 weeks ago and forgot to blog about...

Chewy Sugar Cookies:  (source:  Fine Cooking Magazine, issue 109)
A couple of things.  First, I'm not big into colored sugar, so I didn't use any.  I also chose not to use the almond extract.  Thirdly, I actually have pictures!  yay! 

Friday = Pizza and movie night

For the past month or so, we've had a weekly pizza and movie night.  As my mom jokingly puts it, we "eat the movie and watch the pizza."  Some of my favorite recent movies include "The Bachelor and the Bobbysoxer" and "Mr. Blandings Builds His Dream House," both starring Cary Grant.  I also enjoyed the original version of "The Shaggy Dog" and the classic "Lawrence of Arabia." 

Anyways, we rarely order pizza out, preferring to make it ourselves.  Mom and/or Dad make the crust, I make the pizza sauce, and my sibs help with grating cheese or slicing toppings.  It can be quite a production sometimes!  ;)

For the pizza sauce, one 28-oz. can of diced or crushed tomatoes is more than enough for 2 large pizzas.  Here's how I generally make the sauce:

Heat a pot on medium-high on the stove.  When it's hot, add about 2 tablespoons of olive oil and sautee either 2 cloves of garlic or 1 small, finely chopped shallot.  Then add about 2 teaspoons of basil, oregano, and/or thyme, and one pinch of red pepper flakes.  Add one can of diced/crushed tomatoes and bring to simmer.  Cover partially and cook for about 10 minutes.  Taste and season with salt, pepper, and sugar as needed.  Remove from heat and let cool.  Voila!

Very simple recipe.  I like it because it's fairly quick and there are boundless variations.  Plus, if there's any leftover sauce, we freeze it.  Awesome for those nights we don't feel like making sauce. 

(bad picture, I know, but the lighting was poor and this was best pic of the bunch)

Thursday, March 10, 2011

Molasses Cookies

Back to sweets again.  Oh well...these are too good to not share. 

Anyways, this is part two of Sunday's cooking adventures.  I made a batch of these cookies because there weren't any sweets in the pantry and I had nothing better to do (haha).  This is my aunt's recipe and I've used it many times.

Molasses Cookies:

3/4 cup shortening
1 cup sugar
1/4 cup molasses
1 egg
2 tsp. baking soda
2 cup flour
1/2 tsp. cloves
1/2 tsp. ginger
1 tsp. cinnamon
1/2 tsp. salt

350 degrees for 10 minutes.
*   *   *   *   *

And yes, those are all the instructions.  I usually mix the shortening and sugar together, then add everything else except the flour because the spices will often be unevenly distributed if added them after mixing in the flour.  Then I'll add in the rest of the ingredients; usually the flour is last.  Generally I add heaping teaspoons of the spices. 

I've tried a couple of molasses/spiced cookie recipes, but this one is, by far, the best.  I also like Abigail Johnson Dodge's Ginger Crackles from The Weekend Baker cookbook.  Her recipe is very similar to my aunt's, making roughly x1.5 more cookies, and uses butter in addition to shortening.

Once again, sadly no pictures. 

Monday, March 7, 2011

Dinner

This Sunday I made dinner for the sibs.  A pretty basic menu--roasted chicken, spinach, and rice.  Oh and my famous molasses cookies (recipe to follow). 

For the chicken breasts, I seasoned both sides with salt and pepper and browned them in a cast iron skillet at medium high with a little olive oil for approximately 4 minutes per side.  Then I put the entire skillet in a 350 degree oven for about 40 minutes.  Maybe a little long, yes, but I'm not about to eat undercooked chicken.  I topped it with a simple compound butter composed of butter (real surprise, right?), lemon zest, olive oil, salt, garlic, and rosemary. Voila.  Pretty simple and very flavorful.  I smeared some of the butter on the chicken about 10 minutes before it finished cooking, and then added more right before serving. 

Sunday, March 6, 2011

Cupcakes!

This past Thursday I made cupcakes with my little sister.  It seems I'm on a baking spree, but that's because sadly I don't have as much time to cook full meals.  But that's been remedied this weekend with posts to come. 

I've made several batches of cupcakes (especially last year when I went through a cupcake frenzy), but my favorite remains Abigail Johnson Dodge's Emergency Blender Cupcakes from her cookbook, The Weekend Baker (New York: 2005).  They're quick, easy, and--you guessed it--can be made in the blender. 

The recipe makes about a dozen regular sized cupcakes.  I only made 9, however, because I wanted to experiment with mini cupcakes which I hadn't done yet.  The leftover batter made about 6 of the minis and I found they bake very nicely for 9 minutes at 375 degrees.

I also skipped the chocolate fudgy frosting because my sister insised on traditional "sugary frosting...either pink or blue" and we didn't have any sweetened condensed milk on hand anyway.  So I attempted making butter cream frosting but I apparently looked in all the wrong cookbooks for a basic recipe.  I knew it had butter and confectioner's sugar, and maybe a little milk.  So I went with that and made it up as I went along.  The first problem, though, was I didn't add enough sugar.  Apparently a half stick of butter can hold a LOT of sugar!  Secondly, the frosting was lumpy.  Not cool.  So next time I'll try sifting the sugar.


Saturday, March 5, 2011

World-Famous Roast Chicken

Okay, so maybe it isn't "world famous," but everyone I know loves it. 
Ingredients:
*One 3-4 lbs. whole chicken, rinsed, patted dry and innards removed

*about 1/4 cup of kosher salt and freshly ground black pepper

*about 1/4 cup of olive oil

*chicken broth or water

*a couple tablespoons of butter

What to do: Preheat the oven to 400 degrees.

Put the chicken in a large roasting pan (using a rack is optional; I usually use it though). Brush olive oil all over the outside and inside of the chicken. Then smear the salt and pepper mixture all over. Annnd into the oven for about 1 1/2 to 2 hours (until the juice runs clear)!

About halfway through cooking, watch for chicken bits smoking in the bottom of the pan. Add some water or chicken broth (~1/2 a cup).

During the last 20 minutes of cooking, melt the butter and brush it onto the upper half of the chicken and baste a couple of times. This will give it a yummy, crispy skin.

 
My dad taught me how to roast a chicken all by myself when I was 12, and this recipe hasn't changed much.  I like it because the prep work is fairly quick, and I can just throw it in the oven and forget about it until the last half hour of cooking.  Some variations include stuffing the bird with garlic and fresh herbs.  

Wednesday, March 2, 2011

Everybody loves brownies

This weekend I revisited a favorite recipe of the fam's, a very simple brownie recipe from the 12th ed. of The Fannie Farmer Cookbook (New York: 1979). 

Since the recipe didn't specify, I just used salted butter which didn't affect the end result.  Also, the total baking time ended up about 35 minutes instead of 40.

And unfortunately, I couldn't get a picture of them because they were all gone by the time I could get my hands on my brother's camera!  Oh well...