2007-08-26

Double chocolate chip cookies

original recipe by BS via JdG

chocolate_chip_ww_cookies
(photo shows Variation Two)

Preheat oven to 350-375 F

Mixture 1: (use a large mixing bowl)

Ingredients:
  • 1 cup butter
  • 1 cup brown sugar
  • 0.5 cup white sugar
  • 1 egg
  • 1 tsp vanilla extract
  • beat the butter and add the brown sugar gradually to make a mixture
  • incorporate the white sugar
  • add 1 egg and mix into the batter
  • add the vanilla

Mixture 2: (use a medium sized mixing bowl)

Ingredients:
  • 2 cups flower (all purpose or cake and pastry)
  • 1 tsp baking soda (optional)
  • add the baking soda to the flour and mix
Mixture 1 and 2:

Ingredients:
  • 1.5 cups chocolate chips (for variety add 0.75 cups white chocolate and 0.75 dark chocolate chips)
  • add mixture 2 to mixture 1, gradually incorporating the flour to make the batter
  • incorporate the chocolate chips

  • line baking sheets with waxed paper
  • make little balls with the dough and press to flatten a bit on the sheet
  • bake until golden -- won't take long in a hot oven (10 min) -- try not to overcook
  • makes 4 dozen medium sized cookies

Variation One:

  • substitute 13 tablespoons of canola oil for one cup of butter
  • substitute 1 cup of white sugar for 1 cup brown and 0.5 cup white sugar
  • substitute 2 egg whites for 1 egg
  • substitute whole wheat flour for white flour

Variation Two (half-recipe of Variation One):

  • 7 tbsp canola oil
  • 0.5 cup white sugar
  • 1 egg white
  • 0.5 tsp vanilla extract
  • 1 cup whole wheat flour
  • 0.5 tsp baking soda
  • 0.5 - 0.75 cups of chocolate chips
  • makes about 40 small sized cookies

2007-08-21

Almond cookies

This recipe is based on one that originally appeared in the Globe and Mail on Saturday February 5, 2005 by Lucy Waverman "The Home Chef."

almond_cookies



Ingredients:

  • 3/4 cup unsalted butter
  • 1 cup granulated sugar
  • 1 large egg
  • 2 teaspoons almond extract
  • 2 cups all-purpose flour (sifted or pre-sifted)
  • 1/2 cup finely ground toasted almonds
  • 1/2 teaspon salt
  • slivered almonds (one per cookie -- see notes about quantity, below*)

for glaze:

  • 1 egg yolk
  • 1 tablespoon water
Instructions:

  • Preheat oven to 350 F
  • In a large blow, cream together butter, sugar, egg and almond extract
  • In a separate bowl, combine the flour, ground almonds and salt. Stir into the creamed mixture
  • *to make 30 - 36 cookies (original recipe): Shape dough into 1 1/2 inch balls and place 2 inches apart on an ungreased cookie sheet
  • *to make 90-100 cookies (what I do): Shape dough into 3/4 inch balls and place 1.5 inches apart on an ungreased cookie sheet
  • place a slivered almond into the centre of each cookie
  • beat together the egg yolk and water in a small bowl to make glaze
  • brush the glaze on the cookies
  • bake for 12-15 minutes or until golden brown and crisp
  • cool on a rack

Notes to self:

  • the total recipe uses almost all of a 100 g package of slivered, blanched almonds
  • the glaze often drips down the side of the cookie -- next time try glazing the cookies on a wire rack before moving them onto the cookie sheet
  • also try reducing the heat to 325 F and cooking longer (bottoms tend to scortch -- not sure if it's from the glaze dripping over or the heat is too hot
  • alternately, could try using a silpat sheet or putting one cooking sheet on top of another

2007-05-14

Finger Jell-o

Guaranteed to be a delight with the pre-school set! (Results are similar in consistancy to gummy bears, but cool to the mouth -- a perfect warm weather treat!)

Ingredients:
  • one envelope of Knox gelatine (15 mL)
  • 50 mL room-temperature water
  • 200 mL boiling water
  • one package of Jell-o (85 g)
  • one small casserole-type dish

Instructions:

  • pour gelatin pouch over 50mL of room-temperature water (not in hot water or the gelatin clumps)
  • add 50 mL of boiling water and stir constantly until gelatin is completely dissovled (about 1-2 minutes)
  • add remainder of boiling water (about 150 mL)
  • add package of Jell-o powder
  • mix until Jell-o dissolved
  • pour into small casserole-type dish such that the liquid is at least 2 cm in depth
  • put in refrigerator to set (about 1-2 hours)
  • cut into cubes or strips and eat with fingers!

2007-04-29

Hard boiled eggs

from ParentHacks commenter Phil

Put the eggs into the cold water (just enough to cover the eggs) and cover tightly. Put the pot on the stove on high. When the water comes to a rolling boil then turn off the stove but leave the pot on the hot burner with the lid on and leave it for five minutes. The eggs will come out perfect.



I'd been doing it something similar but leaving for 10. I'll have to try reducing the time by a few minutes and see if it makes a difference.

2007-01-31

Tip: Roasting poultry

I read this in the Toronto Star on Saturday January 27, 2007

When roasting a turkey, chicken or capon, rest the bird on a couple of large pieces of celery, two carrots and two cooking onions.

When the bird is done, it lifts out easily and the gravy is delicious. You can also add the celery if you make soup.

2007-01-27

Beef stew

found in the comments here:
https://www2.blogger.com/comment.g?blogID=11982554&postID=2121106556739239456
by KLee

A good crockpot recipe -- I take a package, usually about a pound or so of stew beef and put it in the bottom of my crockpot. Then, I empty an envelope of "beef stew" seasoning over the top, put in about a cup and a half of water and a bag of frozen crinkle cut carrots, and slap that baby on. When I return from work, I can either dump in two cans of sliced or diced potatoes, or if I have the time, peel and dice potatoes myself. If the mix is too thin for my taste, I add an envelope of brown gravy, and it's good to go. Cook on high for five hours, or on low for eight or more, depending on how dense you want it to be. I usually serve over rice.

2007-01-12

Nancy's Best Ever Meat Loaf

Found in the comments section of this post (by Nancy)
http://www.quietfish.com/notebook/?p=341

Best Ever MeatLoaf

2 eggs
2/3 cup milk
3 slices bread
1 onion chopped
1/2 cup shredded carrot
1 cup shredded cheddar
2 tsp salt
1/4 tsp pepper
1 1/2 pounds ground beef
1/4 cup ketchup
1/4 cup brown sugar (I use a little less)
1 tbsp mustard

Beat eggs in a large bowl -- Add milk, salt, pepper and bread, beat until bread disintigrates. Add onion, carrot, cheese and beef. Mix well and pack into 9×5 loaf pan. Combing, ketchup, brown sugar and mustard and spread over top. Bake at 350 for 1 hour, let stand 10 minutes and serve. (I bake a little longer.)

2007-01-09

English muffin pizzas

adapted from:
http://homeparents.about.com/od/snacks/r/pizza5.htm and
http://pediatrics.about.com/od/recipes/r/eng_muf_pizza.htm


INGREDIENTS:
  • Whole wheat muffins
  • Pizza sauce (or homemade tomato sauce or fresh tomato slices) (2 TBSP per muffin half)
  • Mozzarella cheese (grated)(about 1/3 cup per muffin half)
  • Pepperoni (optional)
  • Mushrooms (optional)
  • Other pizza toppings (green olives, pineapple, ham cubes, hamburger, onions, green peppers)

PREPARATION:
  1. Preheat oven to 350 degrees F.
  2. Put presliced English muffins face up on a cookie sheet.
  3. Spoon some pizza sauce on each half of the muffins.
  4. Top with pepperoni, mushrooms etc and then the cheese.
  5. Bake for about 5-10 minutes or until the cheese melts and bubbles slightly.

2007-01-07

A delicious secret truth

A wonderful story about memories of making fudge. Printed in the Globe and Mail.


A delicious secret truth
A cherished family recipe lost and found. At the age of 12, fudge had taught me the virtue of patience.
by PETER DESBARATS

I was still in grade school when I made chocolate fudge for the first time. It was my initial experience of the magic of cooking -- the transformation of such everyday ingredients as milk, sugar and butter into something entirely different and wonderful. I loved the process. I loved the result. Everyone in the family loved what became known, particularly at Christmas-time, as Peter's Chocolate Fudge. I continued to make fudge throughout high school. I became expert in detecting that critical moment in fudge-making called the soft-ball stage. One Christmas season I must have been the only student in Montreal's Loyola High School, or perhaps in Canada, to include a candy thermometer in his Christmas list (and to receive one).
By then my limited repertoire in the kitchen included spicy spaghetti sauce, much to the horror of my Scottish-Canadian mother who practically fainted at the mere mention of garlic. Later, as a young adult aware of belonging to the first generation of Canadian males who cooked with flair and pride, I continued to expand my repertoire. The pages of cookbooks that my wife Hazel and I have collected over the years are filled with scribbled comments noting the dates and outcomes when recipes were first tried by either one of us. But somewhere along the line, the original chocolate fudge recipe disappeared. Gone forever, I reluctantly assumed.

Until last December when I received an e-mail from my cousin Mary in Lachine, Que. Mary is the one who always keeps me up-to-date on the latest jokes and funny videos circulating on the Internet. Her mischievous sense of humour hasn't changed much since my high school days when I baby-sat her and her younger sister Jill. This time, Mary informed me that, while sorting through some old memorabilia, she had discovered a tattered sheet of paper entitled Peter's Chocolate Fudge. Was it possible, she inquired, that this was the fabled long-lost recipe?

"That's it all right!" I immediately e-mailed in return. "Like coming across the Dead Sea scrolls, only more delicious. Let me know how it turns out."

I had recognized it at once. There was the half-a-cup of corn syrup added to the three cups of white sugar -- sweetness on sweetness. There was the cup of Carnation evaporated milk for richness. There were the three squares of unsweetened chocolate for pure, undiluted ambrosia. And there was the admonition to cook all these over a low heat until the mixture reached the critical soft-ball stage, the elusive moment that had evaded Mary on her first try. She e-mailed the bad news to me:

"I'm glad it's the right recipe but my efforts bombed. Kathy (a neighbour who owns a candy thermometer) didn't come home so I winged it with the testing in cold water. I was sure it was ready for the butter, etc., and the beating since I could actually form . . . well, a soft ball. But it isn't cooked enough, I can tell. It runs, if slowly, when I tip the pan in the fridge. Oh woe! I beat it furiously 'til my arm fell off well over 10 minutes later. I even went outside to help the cooling along as I was beating, so I don't know what's wrong. I'm wondering now if I can re-cook it. Well, maybe I'll try tomorrow. Nothing much left to lose."

I urged her to do this but warned her against re-cooking. I advised her to start over again and this time to stir the mixture slowly. This was the first secret of success that I had discovered. At the age of 12, fudge had taught me the virtue of patience. I counselled Mary against putting it in the fridge to set. As soon as it was taken from the stove, that was the time to add the four tablespoons of butter to make it glossy, the one teaspoon of vanilla for depth of flavour and the cup of walnut pieces which were the only optional ingredient but which I always added for that delicious subtle crunch in the depths of the velvety fudge. And then you had to beat the slowly cooling mixture until it was thick but not too thick. That's usually about the time when your arm says enough. On Christmas Eve last year, Mary's triumphant cry rang out across the Internet : "Hallelujah! A successful batch! . . . tho' I may have to have surgery on my arm for the beating it's taken in getting it right. Ouch! Well, it was worth it. That's a very good recipe, Peter! Thanks for all the tips and encouragement."

So thanks to my cousin Mary, Peter's Chocolate Fudge lives again but of course the recipe will have to remain a family secret. What's that you just said? You mean that I've already . . . Oops!

Peter Desbarats is a London, Ont. author, journalist, playwright and academic.