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OTHER FALL FRUIT DESSERTS

After last week’s post, with delicious pumpkin recipes and links to lots of yummy pumpkin desserts, pies and more, it’s time to stop and ask: “What if you’re tired of pumpkin, or don’t want a spicy pie after a full meal, or just don’t like pumpkin? Well, there are many other wonderful fruit desserts to choose from because, believe it or not, fall has more fruit crops than spring-apples, grapes, pears, cranberries and, of course, all kinds of nuts.

Below is a recipe sampling for desserts using each of these fruits with links to posts giving information and more recipes attached to each category heading.  I have also referred to three former posts, which deal with the general subject of fall fruit desserts. Their links are:  Dec.12, 2012,   Nov.8, 2013   and Nov. 7, 2019. 

The first recipe here, Pecan Pie is special for me. I love the pie, but only found it in New England and the South, never in the Mid-Atlantic States. If I wanted it, I had to make it and doing so taught me that I, with little experience, could adjust a recipe, altering a dish to taste as I wanted it to. So often the pie I was served had gelatinous center with few nuts. The one I created had a light custard center full of chopped nuts. It gave me the courage to go on and carve my own cooking adventures.

I include the Apple, Raisin, Walnut Pie because it’s a close substitute, taste wise, for the Thanksgiving traditional Mince Pie. I don’t know if mincemeat is even sold anymore. Heavily laden with suet, it was one of the first foods to go when we became health-conscious about diet. I doubt if younger people even know what suet is. Still Mince Pie has a flavor long associated with Thanksgiving, and it’s nice to keep traditions alive, not to mention this pie is delicious-I think better than mince.

In addition, I’m including my pastry recipe. The biggest secret is ICE water, not cold—ICE.  I often substitute ¼ cup wheat pastry flour for the white. It adds taste and crispness to the cooked crust. Finally, when baking pie shells for custard pies, especially if they’re refrigerated, I use an egg, or even a cream or milk wash on the dough before baking. It helps to waterproof t and prevent sogginess.

Above all, as you read this, if you don’t see a recipe you like, do click on the links. There are many more wonderful desserts in the posts. And many options for the coming holidays, not just Thanksgiving.

RECIPES

My Crust Recipe for single crust pie
1 cup flour
1/3 cup shortening- Crisco
3 Tbs. + if needed ICE water
In a deep bowl, cut shortening into flour with 2 knives until pea sized crumbs form. Add the water a Tbs. at a time mixing until dough holds together. Form into a ball cover and chill 30 min. Roll on a floured surface until slightly larger than the pan. Line the pan with the dough, cutting off or tucking excess under and crimping edges. Crust can be frozen, chilled or baked ahead according to pie directions.
NOTE: Tis will do 1 crust plus a lattice top if rolled thin. For 2 crusts increase flour to 1 ½ cups and shortening t0 ½ cup.

My Pecan Pie: Serves 6-8
¼ cup butter
2/3 cup brown sugar
3 eggs well beaten
¾ cup dark corn syrup
1 tsp. vanilla
Dash salt
1 cup pecan halves-divided 1/3 cup reserved
Crust for pie shell
Chop 2/3 cup pecan halves. Cream together the butter, brown sugar and salt, add the syrup, incorporate well, then fold in the eggs and chopped nuts blending evenly. Pour into the pie shell and use the reserved nuts to decorate the top. Bake in a 450 deg. oven 10 min. and reduce heat to 350 deg. for 30-35 min. more until a knife inserted comes out clean. Cool. Pie will puff then fall slightly. Serve on day of baking or store covered overnight.

Apple, Raisin, Walnut Pie: Serves 6-8
1 ½ cups chopped cooking apples
2 cups raisins
3 cups apple cider
1 cup sugar
1 tsp. cinnamon
1 Tbs. lemon juice+ ½ tsp. zest
2Tbs.butter
½ tsp. salt
3 Tbs. cornstarch
½ cup chopped walnuts.
Double crust recipe or buy 15 oz. package of 2 dough rounds
NOTE; I like a thin crust, so this will allow for some extra, especially if making a lattice top. Don’t use over a heaping ½ cup shortening. Store left over dough chilled and use within 10 days, or roll and freeze. Line pie pan.
Dissolve the cornstarch in ¼ cup of the cider; put all the other ingredients except the walnuts in a pot and heat to boiling. Stir in cornstarch mix, and simmer, stirring until thickened. Stir in nuts. Pour into bottom crust. Top with top crust, well vented, or lattice top. Bake at450 deg.for10 min. then at 30-35 min at 350 deg. Cool before slicing.
To prepare in advance; the cooked filling can be kept chilled, in a plastic container for several days and then poured into the shell and topped before baking. The pie pan can be lined and the top crust dough kept chilled in plastic wrap for several days as well.

APPLES:  Nov. 2, 2017,   Sept. 21, 2023

French Apple Pie : Serves 6-8
3-4 lb. cooking apples-peeled, cored in ¼ inch slices
¼ cup melted butter
¼ cup sugar
½ tsp. ground cinnamon
Successively layer the apple slices so they lay flat, in the pie shell; a circular pattern looks best for presentation. Sprinkle each layer with some sugar and cinnamon. When the crust is filled, pour the melted butter over all, and then garn garnish with sugar and cinnamon. Bake in a preheated 450 deg. oven 10 min, then at 350 deg. for 30-40 min. until apples are tender and crust is crisp. Best done serving day, but can be done the day before. Store at room temperature.

Grandmother’s Sour Cream Apple Cake: Serves 12 +
5 cups peeled, cored and sliced tart apples
¼ cup butter
½ cup sour cream
1 cup sugar
1 lemon- zested and juiced
2 Tbs. flour
½ cup chopped almonds + ½ cup toasted, slivered almonds
8 eggs separated
½ tsp. salt
Sugar, cinnamon and dry bread crumbs for garnish
Whipped cream for serving—optional
Cook the apples with the butter in a covered skillet over low heat until soft, stirring occasionally. Add the next 4 ingredients and the egg yolks, lightly beaten, to the pan and cook until thickened. Cool. Whip egg whites with salt until stiff and fold into apple mixture. Spread batter 1 inch thick in a large pan or baking dish and sprinkle top with sugar, cinnamon, bread crumbs and slivered almonds. Bake at 325 deg. for 45 min. or until the cake is firm. Can be served hot, but is best chilled with whipped cream.

CRANBERRIES   Nov. 30, 017

Cranberry Crisp: Serves 6
12 oz. fresh cranberries=2 cups
1/3 cup sugar
½ cup chopped walnuts
1 egg
½ cup of flour
½ cup sugar
3/4 cup butter- melted
Lightly grease a 9 inch pie plate. Fill with berries, top with 1/3 cup sugar and nuts. Beat egg until foamy, beat in butter, flour and remaining sugar until batter is smooth. Pour over berries. Bake in a preheated
325 deg. oven until browned, about 45 min. This is best served warm with ice cream or whipped cream.
NOTE: This can be stored, before baking, the berries in the pie plate, covered, and the batter in a container in the refrigerator for about 3 days. Combine and bake. Probably can also be reheated in the microwave the day after baking.

Cranberry Orange Walnut Ice Cream: Serves 6-Very quick and easy to make.
2 cups cranberries
¾ cup sugar
1 orange –quartered, seeds removed
½ cup chopped, toasted walnuts
1 pint vanilla ice cream- softened
Coarsely chop berries and orange, with rind. Stir in sugar and blend fruit mix, making sure the orange rind is pulverized, add walnuts and stir into softened ice cream. Pour into a mold and freeze until firm. Unmold and serve garnished with cranberries and walnuts. Or spoon ice cream into a freezer container; a couple of hours before serving fill a decorative freezer-proof bowl with individual scoops of ice cream and spoon them into dessert dishes at table
*This ice cream recipe is packed with fruit. I love it this way but some people, especially children, may prefer it if the quantity of vanilla ice cream is doubled in proportion to the fruit. Keeps frozen as long as commercial product.

PEARS:     Nov.16, 017,    Dec. 3, 2020

Pear Kuchen: Serves 8-10
Pastry for a 9”spring form pan or a 1 crust pie-if home-made add 2 Tbs. sugar to the dough See recipe above
1 quart canned pear halves = (2) 16 oz. cans
3 eggs
½ cup sugar
½ cup cream or fruit juice
Line the bottom and sides of a greased spring form pan with the pastry. Drain fruit and arrange cut side down in pan. Beat eggs with sugar and liquid until light and pour over the fruit. Bake at 400 deg. for 10 min. and then at 350 deg. until custard is set about 30 min. Sprinkle with slivered toasted almonds or cool and scatter chopped almond brittle over the top. Serve with whipped cream.

Wine Poached PearsServes 8
8 Bosc pears—peeled but stems left on
2 cups cranberry juice
1 cup lighter red wine such as red zinfandel or Pisano
1cup water
¼ cup sugar
1cinnnamon stick
Put everything but pears in a large pot and heat to dissolve sugar, bring to a simmer and add pears. Cover and continue simmering, turning occasionally until pears are tender 15-20 min. Cool in syrup still turning to keep color even. Can be made a couple of days ahead, but chill fruit separate from syrup to keep color 

even. Gently re-heat syrup and serve around pears.

GRAPES: Oct. 29, 2020

Grape Pie: Serves 8-10-From- https://www.tasteofhome.com/recipes/ruby-grape-pie/
Pastry for a 2 crust pie  See recipe above.
4 cups (2 lbs.) seedless red grapes-halved
2/3 cup sugar
½ tsp. ground cinnamon
3 Tbs. cornstarch
2 Tbs. lemon juice
1 Tbs. lemon zest
2 Tbs. butter
Combine grapes, sugar and cinnamon in a saucepan, toss to coat and marinate 15 min. Add cornstarch, lemon juice and zest, bring to a boil, stir for 2 min. or until thickened. Pour into a pastry lined 9 inch pie plate, dot with butter and cover with top crust. Seal, trim, flute and cut steam holes in top. Bake at 425 deg. for 20 min. then at 350 deg. for 30-35 min. or until golden brown. Cool on a wire rack.

Grapes in Sweet Sour Cream: Serves 4
2 lb. seedless grapes –red makes a better presentation
1 cup sour cream
¼ cup sugar- or to taste
¼ tsp. cinnamon
Remove grapes from stems, wash and dry well. Stir the cream, sugar and cinnamon together and taste to adjust seasonings. Gently stir in the grapes and chill well. Serve in compotes. Can be transported separately and mixed before serving. Cream can be mixed a day or two in advance.

PUMPKINS EVERYWHERE

It’s the height of pumpkin season and since we’re so used to seeing them everywhere, we don’t often stop to appreciate their uniqueness, aside from being the only food item with a spice mix flavoring things from coffee to bread. We think of pumpkin as a symbol of fall, but actually, since it’s sown in spring, it’s the last of the summer fruit harvests. That’s right; horticulturally pumpkin is a fruit, related to berries.

Native to North America, pumpkin has been grown globally for years, but except for sweet custards and purees in the Near East and Asia, it’s generally relegated to animal fodder, especially in Europe. I remember seeing pumpkins scattered around cattle food troughs in Italy. Only in North America is pumpkin considered primarily human food, suitable for many dishes at table; it’s recipes interchangeable with those of winter squash. 

Moreover, pumpkin is the only fruit iconic of not one, but two holidays and aptly so. It puts on a mask as a Jack-O-Lantern for Halloween and it was one of the first foods the Indians introduced to the settlers in Massachusetts. Finally, pumpkin is valued for both its meat and its seeds, which roasted are called Pepitas, favorites in several cuisines, especially those with Iberian roots.

Sadly, though we enjoy pumpkin while it’s in season, about 8 weeks, as is normal for fruit, we forget about it when autumn is over and focus on holiday party foods. Then comes deep winter, when pumpkin and the other hardly squash dishes would be perfect, but we don’t revisit them. Pumpkin custard pie would be a great dessert on a cold winter night, as would the chilled chiffon version on a hot summer one, but they aren’t offered despite pumpkin being available in cans all year.

The recipes below are a sampling of the many in posts on this site. For general recipes on pumpkin, go to Nov.8, 2012,   Oct. 21, 2014  and Oct. 15, 2020. For details of Stew in a Pumpkin, a favorite of mine click on Nov. 11, 2015. To see recipe examples of squash and pumpkin interchanged, go to Oct. 22, 2015. For Squash recipes go to Oct 24, 2019Nov. 4, 2021, and Oct. 22, 2022. Pumpkin desserts are on Nov. 8, 2018,     Nov. 18, 2021  and Nov. 17, 2022. Pumpkin desserts other than pie are on Oct. 6, 2016 and Oct 21, 2019.

RECIPES

Ham, Gouda, Pumpkin Canapes: 4 open sandwiches or 16 canapes

PUMPKIN BUTTER

15 oz. can pumpkin puree

⅓ cup ginger ale

¾ cup sugar

½ teaspoon ground cloves

1 teaspoon cinnamon
½ teaspoon nutmeg
Combine all ingredients in a large saucepan over high heat. Bring to a boil. Reduce heat to low and let simmer for 30 minutes until thickened, stirring very frequently to avoid burning. Let cool completely and refrigerate until ready to use.

PROSCIUTTO TOASTS

4 slices hearty bread

¼ cup pumpkin butter

2 oz. prosciutto

¼ lb. Gouda cheese (smoked or regular) thinly sliced

Fresh thyme-or a sprinkle of dried

Set oven or toaster oven to broil. Top each slice of bread w. 1 tablespoon pumpkin butter. Divide prosciutto over pumpkin butter. Top with cheese slices and thyme. Broil toasts 8-10 minutes until cheese is bubbly and beginning to brown in places. For Canapes cut each bread slice in 4 pieces before toasting. Serve hot.
NOTE: To make ahead, wrap and refrigerate before toasting. Toast to reheat.

Creamy Pumpkin Soup: Serves 6
1 ½ lb. pumpkin cut in chunks without rind
1 lb. white potatoes
1 Tbs. oil
2 Tbs. butter
1 large onion chopped|
2 cups vegetable stock
1 tsp. tarragon
½ tsp. nutmeg
2 cups milk
1-2 tsp. lemon juice
Salt and pepper
Heat the oil and butter and sauté onion until soft; add the pumpkin and potatoes and sweat over low heat, stirring often until tender. Add seasonings and stock, simmer 10 min Cool slightly and puree. Add milk and reheat to serve, but don’t allow to boil. Add lemon juice as a seasoning perk before serving.

Pumpkin Ravioli: Serves 4
1 lb. pumpkin cooked and mashed until smooth
½ tsp. cinnamon
2 Tbs. butter
24 wonton wrappers
Mix pumpkin with the cinnamon. Lay out the wrappers on a flat surface and place 1 tsp. of the squash mix. In the center of each; top with another wrapper and dampen the edges with water and press to seal. Alternately, place ½ tsp. filling in the center and fold the wrapper over to form a triangle.
Bring 4 qts. salted water to a boil and cook the ravioli, a few at a time, until they float. Remove and drain on a plate. Melt the butter, pour over the ravioli and rewarm in a microwave before serving. Garnish with parsley and/or Parmesan.

Spinach Ravioli: Serves 4 This dish is especially good when served combined with the squash ravioli in equal amount. With or without meat the combination makes a full entrée.
(1) 10 oz. package of chopped spinach- thawed and drained
1 cup ricotta or cream cheese
½ tsp. nutmeg
2 Tbs. butter
24 wonton wrappers
Repeat the process as directed above, substituting the spinach, mixed with the cheese and nutmeg for the ingredients in the squash recipe. Serve on the same plate with the squash ravioli using the full 4 Tb. butter as a sauce.

Stew in a Pumpkin: Serves 6
This is a favorite recipe of mine, and one I’ve also featured in a post on reasonably priced dinners. It’s great for a weekend or a dinner party at this season. Can also be made and served individually in small pumpkins.
3 Tbs. butter
2 lbs. beef cubed—well trimmed pork can also be used
3 Tbs. cornstarch
2 large onions diced
3 tomatoes chopped
2 Tbs. butter
¼ tsp. EACH salt and pepper
3 cups beef stock
½ lb. prunes
½ lb. dried apricots
3 sweet potatoes sliced
(2) 10 oz. packages corn –thawed and drained
1 pumpkin, top cut off and reserved, cleaned of pulp and seeds.
Melt 3 Tbs. butter in a Dutch oven. Roll the meat in the cornstarch and brown. Set aside. Melt 2 Tbs. butter in a separate pan and sauté vegetables until tender. Add to meat with juices. Add all remaining ingredients except pumpkin cover and simmer 1 hr. Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Ladle stew into the pumpkin; set in a roasting pan with 1 inch of water, and bake for 1 hr. Carefully transfer pumpkin from the pan to a serving dish and replace its top as a lid for garnish. Serve at once scooping out some of the pumpkin meat as you ladle out the portions.

NOTE: I save clean-up by sautéing the vegetables in the Dutch oven first and then browning the meat. It’s one less pot. Also if you have it on hand, replace one cup of stock with beer. It deepens the flavor.

Pumpkin Crisp: Serves 4 From Homemade Magazine- Can double as turkey dressing
2 lb. pumpkin peeled, seeded and in 1 inch cubes
4 Tbs. butter divided
1 cup chopped onion
2 cups toasted bread cubes- stuffing mix is good
1 tsp. crushed dried rosemary
¼ cup chopped walnuts
Salt and pepper
Simmer the squash in water until tender, about 7 min., drain and toss in a 3 quart casserole dish with 1 Tbs. butter and salt and pepper to taste. Sauté onion in remaining butter until tender, about 5 min. Add bread and rosemary and cook about 2 min. more tossing to coat bread with butter. Stir in walnuts and spoon over squash. Bake in a 400 deg. oven until bread is browned. Toss before serving.

 Hands down the best custard pumpkin pie recipe is on any can of Libby’s pureed pumpkin.

For the traditionalists who simply want to upgrade the standard custard pie, here are some topping ideas:

Nut Topping: Mix 2/3 cup pecans or walnuts+ 2/3 cup brown sugar + 3 Tbs. butter. Sprinkle over pi. Place in a 425 deg. oven until it begins to melt. Spoon over pie.

Eggnog Cream: Reduce 2 cups commercial eggnog over low heat, by half about 20-25min. Chill well and spoon over pie before serving or pass on the side.

Meringue: Beat 2 egg whites until soft peaks form, add 1-2 drops vinegar and continue beating adding ¼ cup sugar gradually until stiff peaks form. Swirl over chilled pie, covering top, but not crust. Place in a 425 deg. oven until peaks turn golden.

Pumpkin Chiffon Pie– This is a great pie for anyone who doesn’t like the more intense flavor of pumpkin custard or to serve in warm weather.
1 baked pie shell- this is especially good with cinnamon and sugar and/or ground nuts added into the dough
1Tbs. gelatin softened in ¼ cup cold water
1 ½ cups cooked pumpkin
½ cup sugar
¾ tsp. salt
1 tsp. Cinnamon
½ tsp. ginger
2 eggs-separated
1 cup milk
¼ cup chopped toasted walnuts, pecans or Brazil nuts for garnish
Beat the egg yolks slightly; combine with the seasonings milk and pumpkin inch and cook over boiling water stirring constantly 5 min. Add the gelatin and stir until dissolved. Chill until slightly thickened. Beat the egg whites to soft peaks then add the sugar, beat to stiff peaks and fold into the pumpkin mixture. Pour into the baked shell, garnish with the nuts and chill until firm. Serve cold.

Pumpkin Tiramisu: Serves 10-12
1 ½ cups whipping cream
¾ cup sugar
8 oz. cream cheese
15oz. can pumpkin
¾ tsp. pumpkin pie spices
3 oz. pkg. ladyfingers halved
¼ cup rum
2 oz. amaretto  cookies -crushed
Beat the first 2 ingredients until stiff, beat in the next 3 until smooth. Line a 9 inch springform pan with half of the halved ladyfingers, squeezed together so no spaces remain. Sprinkle with 2Tbs. rum. Cover the ladyfingers with half the filling and top with the rest of the ladyfingers and 2 Tbs. rum. Spread the rest of the filling on top and Sprinkle with crushed cookies. Chill overnight.

Pepitas: Yields 2 cups- From https://www.rachelcooks.com/pumpkin-seeds-pepitas-eight-ways/

Traditional

2 cups Pepitas
1 tablespoon olive oil
1/2 tsp salt
1/2 to 1 tsp of freshly ground pepper

 Preheat oven to 300°F. Line cookie sheet with foil or parchment paper.  Combine all ingredients and spread in a single layer on prepared sheet pan. Bake for 20 minutes, stirring halfway through. Seeds should be golden and crunchy.

NOTE: This website lists 8 different flavorings such as pumpkin, chili-maple, and ginger-soy.

Pumpkin Pie Spice Mix:
1 cup sugar-preferably bar or super-fine sugar
½ tsp. EACH salt, cinnamon, ginger, nutmeg, allspice
Stir everything together in a glass jar. Screw on the lid and shake well and put in a cool dark place for several days to incorporate the flavors, shaking every day or so to keep them blended. This can be adjusted to suit personal preference.

TRICK OR TREAT UPDATE

There’s a rumor that Trick or Treating is dying out. Not true! Can you believe American children would let a night of free candy go away? No, Trick or Treating is simply evolving to fit the times. The suburbs, particularly the developments, once teeming with kids, were the stronghold of the practice.  Now they are home to singles, childless couples, retirees, and empty nesters who want to stay put. The feeling of a social community is gone and streets which blazed with porch lights on Halloween are dark. Parents feel the need to accompany even older children on their rounds.

Moreover, Trick or Treat hours, 5-8 P.M, are strictly regulated by towns and HOAs, with the first hour, reserved for toddlers only. However, most of their parents work and can’t get home in time. So traditional methods of Trick or Treating no longer work and modifications are needed.

Actually, several options are already available. One is that town and shopping centers feature a Trick or Treat Night on Halloween.   It’s a safe solution. The children are constantly in sight in a brightly lit area and probably end up with more ‘loot’. Another is for the families in a neighborhood to designate one garage where they all bring candy, offer cider, and let the kids mingle for an hour or so. Don’t forget, Halloween is usually on a school night. This isn’t a party but it is a special childhood memory.

A third option gaining popularity is called a Trunk Treating. Here a neighborhood, possibly two, size helps, or a school, church or community organization get together and choose a large open space, preferably an empty parking lot, but a field will do. They alternately drive and back their vehicles in wide circle, leaving lights on, and open trunks, decorated for Halloween, holding candy. It’s very like the garage party, only larger scaled. As with the other two options, it restricts the kids to a well-lit, safe area, while providing enough ‘Treats’ and creating enough of an ‘occasion’ to satisfy them.

These Trick or Treat ‘gatherings’ relieve some of the pressure on choosing a dish for family dinner that night too. It no longer needs to be something stable enough to serve twice, hours apart, the kids early and the parents later. Fast food even becomes an option. Halloween dinner is difficult to plan for families with children who go out because it has specific requirements.

It’s always a challenge to feed excited children. For any success, the food needs to be something they like, appetizingly presented, easily, quickly eaten, preferably by hand—utensils are a red flag saying This takes time!” Therefore it also to be has something which won’t drip, spill or leave greasy fingers. Trust me, a spot on a costume is a disaster to be avoided!

I started out with a casserole, which was a real failure—too dfficult to serve, to eat and to clean up. Then I tried pizza-the kids ate it, but reheated, 4 hours later, it wasn’t the treat we parents needed. I finally settled on soup, which I could keep warm for hours and sandwiches I could assemble as wanted and it worked, even after the kids were grown, because we still gave out candy.

I relied on creamed vegetable soups, well pureed, using the pureed vegetables as the major thickening agent, and a protein filled sandwich. I tried to add some interest to the sandwiches, like the baked apple slices in the ham and cheese below and cut them in pieces the kids could take with them, when the doorbell rang.

RECIPES
SOUPS: These take the place of vegetables in a normal dinner. I prefer to make soups from fresh or frozen produce rather than use canned to avoid the sodium and other preservatives. It’s healthier. Though each can adjust to other ingredients which will make a more sophisticated dish, the recipes are left in basic form because they are intended for childrenOne note-If keeping the soup warm for any length of time, use slim milk, half and half or heavy cream. All other grades curdle when heated. 1 Tbs. of yogurt or sour cream is a nice finishing garnish for most of the recipes. Recipes are for 6 servings unless otherwise noted.

Cream of Cauliflower
1 large onion diced
1 large stalk of celery diced
1 medium head cauliflower chopped or 1 lb. frozen
6 cups chicken stock
1cup half and half
Salt and pepper to taste
Garlic powder, caraway seed or dried dill-Optional
Simmer the vegetables in the stock until tender. Puree to desired texture, return to pot and add cream and seasonings and herbs if using. Can be made ahead and kept chilled for two days after pureeing. Add cream etc.as reheating. Keep warm on low, adding water or milk if and as needed.

Cream of Broccoli
1 lb. broccoli fresh or frozen –stems peeled, chopped
1 large onion-chopped
1 large stalk celery-diced
6 cups chicken stock
1 cup half and half—or optionally almond milk
Salt and pepper to taste
1/3cup+ 1 Tbs. grated Parmesan cheese
Follow directions above for cauliflower soup. Garnish with 1Tbs. grated Parmesan per mug.

Pea Soup with Mint: Serves 2 in bowls.
Following the steps above, I sautéed a medium onion in 1Tbs. canola oil, then added 1lb. of frozen peas, 3 sprigs of fresh mint and 1qt. of chicken broth*. After simmering them for 20 min. they were pureed and, needing no other seasoning, chilled. They were garnished with sour cream and a sprig of fresh mint.
Two variations of this soup would be to add either a package of frozen or ½ lb. fresh asparagus stalks to the peas (saving the tips for garnish) OR omit the mint, and add a box of frozen, chopped spinach and a 1/8th tsp. nutmeg to the peas. Proceed as above and garnish with a swirl of plain yogurt.

Carrot Soup: Serves 2 in bowls.
See directions above-To the sautéed onion, I added 1lb peeled, sliced carrots (not the baby ones) and about 3 cups chicken broth* to cover. After pureeing, I divided it into two bowls and added 1/8th tsp. ground ginger and 1Tbs. frozen orange juice concentrate to one, and 1/8th tsp. coriander and 2tsp. chopped fresh cilantro to the other. They were served chilled and garnished with orange peels on one and a sprig of cilantro on the other.
Two variations of this soup would be to add ½ a peeled, cored apple per serving, before cooking, and substitute cider or apple juice for some of the broth with a pinch of cinnamon for seasoning OR replace the other seasonings with 1/4tsp curry powder.

Lilly’s Cream of Potato (My favorite as a child!)
1 Tbs. butter
1 large onion diced
1 ½ lb. potatoes-peeled and diced
6 cups chicken stock
½ cup half and half
Salt and pepper to taste
1 Tbs. Parsley flakes + more for garnish
Melt butter in a large pot and coat onion, add stock and potatoes. Simmer until potatoes are tender and follow directions above. Serve garnished with parsley.

Corn and Sweet Potato Soup
1 Tbs. oil
1 lb. frozen corn kernels
1 medium-large sweet potato-diced
1 large onion-diced
1 jarred red pepper-optional
7 cups vegetable stock
½ tsp. cumin
salt and pepper to taste
Brown the onion in the oil, add the stock the corn and the potato and simmer for 10min. Use a little of the stock to make a paste of the cumin and add to the pot along with the pepper if using. Simmer for 5min. more. Puree and return to pot, or chill, season as reheating.

Italian Tomato Soup: 2 Servings
(1) 8 oz. can tomato sauce
(1) 8 oz. cup water
1 envelope beef bouillon
1/8 tsp. oil
Garlic powder, pepper, dried oregano and basil to taste
Heat all ingredients at a slow simmer until flavors meld, about 8 min. Serve.

French Lentil Soup
The beauty of lentils is that unlike other legumes they don’t have to be soaked before they’re cooked. 1 lb. bag of green lentils
1 large onion diced
3 Tbs. oil
1 large carrot thinly sliced
3 Tbs. tomato paste
2 bay leaves
½ cup red wine
2 tsp. dried oregano
2 Tbs. red wine vinegar
Water to cover
Salt and pepper
Sauté the onion in the oil until soft; add the carrot, tomato paste, bay leaves, lentils and water to cover. Bring to a boil and simmer, covered 1-1 ½ hr. stirring and adding more water as needed. When the lentils are cooked, add the wine, vinegar and oregano. Cook 5 min., remove bay leaves and blend to a rough puree. Combine with soup in pot, stir and season with salt and pepper, reheat if necessary and serve.

Creamy Pumpkin Soup
1 ½ lb. pumpkin cut in chunks without rind
1 lb. white potatoes
1 Tbs. oil
2 Tbs. butter
1 large onion chopped|
2 cups vegetable stock
1 tsp. tarragon
½ tsp. nutmeg
2 cups milk
1-2 tsp. lemon juice
Salt and pepper
Heat the oil and butter and sauté onion until soft; add the pumpkin and potatoes and sweat over low heat, stirring often until tender. Add seasonings and stock, simmer 10 min Cool slightly and puree. Add milk and reheat to serve, but don’t allow to boil. Add lemon juice as a seasoning perk before serving.

Mushroom and Bread Soup: Serves 8 –From 400 Soups by Anne Sheasby
6 Tbs. butter
2 lb. mushrooms-sliced
2 onions- chopped
3 cups skim milk
8 slices white bread
1 cup heavy cream
¼ cup chopped parsley
Salt and pepper
Sauté vegetables in butter over low heat until soft but not browned. Remove from heat, add milk and bread, cover and soak 15 min. Puree, return to pot, add cream, seasonings and 3Tbs.parsley. Reheat and serve, garnished with parsley.

SANDWICHES: The object here is to create sandwiches that arouse children’s curiosity and stay fresh longer. As stated above, sleeve bread is too absorbent and tends to dry out, especially when toasted. The best alternatives are denser breads like Jewish rye, Focaccia, and pita pockets or rolls which add flavor. It also helps to reduce the amount or replace the condiment spreads. Tasty as they are they do moisten the bread. I’ve found an excellent option is to place thin slices of fruit between layers of filling or use a dryer ingredient like cream cheese or nut butter.
The recipe below is an example of this type of sandwich and it has worked well in lunch boxes and on picnics but it’s only an outline. I’ve included other suggestions, however the combinations you choose are up to you and about pleasing your family’s individual tastes as are the quantities of meats, cheeses etc. in the fillings. Obviously a pre-teen can handle a heftier sandwich than a toddler.

Ham, Cheese and Apple Sandwich: Serves 2
4 slices bread-Jewish rye or pumpernickel suggested, or 2 wheat buns
Deli sliced ham and cheese-choices optional-I like Swiss
Thin coating of mustard on bread-optional
Slice a peeled, cored apple in about 3 slices per quarter. Put in a small bowl with a light sprinkle of sugar and another of cinnamon. Add 1-2 Tbs. water or apple juice and microwave about 1min-1 min.30 sec. Store refrigerated in juice if made ahead. This prevents the apple from browning. Layer ½ apple slices on bread between ham and cheese per sandwich, to keep moisture from ruining bread

Suggestions
1) Sliced chicken or turkey on Jewish rye lightly spread with Dijon or spicy brown mustard
2) Sliced chicken or turkey on a crusty roll or focaccia with slices of melon or grape halves.
3) A salmon filet, chopped or whole, sprinkled with dried dill weed, on a bagel spread with cream cheese and chives or mixed with onion powder, and optionally thin slices of cucumber.
4) Sliced smoked salmon in the above recipe
5) Drained, canned tuna mixed with drained relish, India or pepper etc. on a roll or in a pita pocket
6) Roast or corned beef on a roll or focaccia spread with cream cheese mixed with horseradish
7) Roast beef on Jewish rye topped with drained sliced or stems and pieces of canned mushrooms which have been baked about 10 min. on low heat in a bit of butter and a little soy sauce-and drained.
8) Sliced hard boiled eggs on Jewish rye thinly spread with Dijon or spicy brown mustard.
9) Peanut or another nut butter topped with crumbled cooked bacon on Jewish rye
10) The Elvis-peanut butter and sliced banana great in pita pockets

COOKING TIPS AND KITCHEN SHORTCUTS

Food shopping is an increasingly time consuming chore, especially with the growing trend to make fewer trips and shop for longer periods.   I know my advice to start early stocking up for the holidays adds pressure but it really does bring savings in both time and money. So it’s only fair that I offer some advice on dealing with the extra quantities as well.

The following advice comes from three sources. In 2020, Bon Appetit Magazine interviewed several restaurant chefs on what they had learned when Covid forced them to cook at home. I had to smile because restaurant chefs don’t retail shop, or worry about prices, unless they’re chef-owners, or going over budget, and they have assistants. Usually their advice on domestic cooking sounds like re-inventing the wheel, but these responses were very ‘uncheffy’ and they did have some good points on food storage since they deal in quantities.

The second source is Cook’s Magazine. They concentrate on comparing ingredients and improving technique and can be relied on for sound, down-to-earth cooking information on kitchen utensils as well as using food products.

My third source of advice is the Cooking Club of America Magazine. Their membership of incredible home cooks, monthly share the tips and tricks they have discovered to make food prep easier and more fun. They’re truly ingenious but decidedly for domestic use and would be impractical in a commercial venue.

Bon Appetit follows restaurants, interpreting recipes for home serving. Restaurant chefs buy in bulk their paramount concern in planning ahead is getting food safely stored as soon as possible. Freezing is the fastest way to do this and the best way to preserve freshness. See posts Sept. 13, 2018 and Sept.20.2018..
1) Ground meat needs special attention because it has more surface areas which spoil quicker than a single piece. I advise freezing it in portions which allow for individual servings and/or divided use, about 4 per pound.
a) I freeze meat, especially beef, in individually wrapped balls, which can be baked or broiled as separate entrees, centered on a plate of pasta or thawed in correct amounts for a casserole.
b) Try ground pork, lamb, and sausage as well as beef and poultry, opening a variety of recipe options
c) When buying Valu-Packs, I use 1 lb. to make and bake tiny meatballs. Stored bagged, they can be    added, frozen , to a sauce or microwaved and served as canapes with a dipping sauce
 
2) Freezing produce is covered in the links provided above but I’ll add a trick I devised while living in Italy. Italians are focused on seasonal vegetables but as an American, missed non-seasonal options. The green goods grocer sold tennis-sized balls of trimmed, blanched, drained spinach and kale which I could wrap and freeze. It’s simple to do at home and great way to deal with leafy vegetables on sale or in valu-packs.
a) Potatoes are too watery to freeze well domestically unless mashed but I often opt for the 10
lb. bag. Separate the ones of suitable size for baking. Bake and stuff but hold the second baking. Wrap, freeze and bag them, then simply garnish and bake for a quick, elegant side. Do not microwave-the skins won’t crisp.
b) Eggplant doesn’t freeze domestically. A good rule is if an item isn’t frequently found in the glass freezer cases; don’t try to freeze it at home.
3) Grains freeze well and the chefs advice cooking and bagging extra to have on hand.

4) Fresh Produce in the refrigerator is still subject to the FIFO law-First in=first out but there are exceptions.
a) A head of cabbage will last longer than a bunch of fresh herbs, apples longer than pears. So check often and use good sense.   
b) Get to know the more durable produce. Cabbage for example can do so much more than most people realize, steaks, stir-fries, grilled sides. Fennel is delicious both raw and cooked. 
c) If herbs are wilted, blanch and puree them. Make into a pesto or freeze   in ice trays and bag the                                                                cubes to use as flavorings. 1 cube=2 Tbs. Pears and other fruits can be used in baked goods or                 c             cooked, pureed and frozen as can vegetables. They are good sauce bases and for pesto.

5) The best way to extend the life of fresh vegetables, beans, snow peas, celery stalks and especially those with roots, carrots, radishes, scallions, is to store them immersed in water not in the crisper.
a) Store celery, the outside stalks halved, scallions and herb upright in containers as flowers in a vase, roots left on.

6)  Dated refrigerated products are also subject to FIFO, but that too has changed. Chefs used to be all about pitching anything over date, now they advise caution and testing. The white coating on the Parmesan can be ground in and the cheese frozen. A crust forming on sour cream merits inspection. Perhaps it can be scraped off, the remaining cream repackaged for quick use.
a) The best tools to determine spoilage are your nose, and dipping a finger-tip in for a small taste. If   these tests say O.K.-go with it.
b) Have a few recipes to use ‘iffy’ products handy, rather than letting them expire while you seek ways to use them.

7) Find a multi-purpose sauce to perk up dishes and other sauces which suits your cooking style and tastes. It may be based on tomatoes, peppers, anchovies, there’s even a good, hot eggplant one. Just be sure your family likes it and it can be added to or passed with recipes to give them a bit of ‘newnesss’.

8) Beans are indigenous to every cuisine and always there to provide an economic, flavorful, satisfying meal but, news flash, they should always be cooked in a broth flavored to fit the finished dish.
a) People claim beans take too much time but no longer. Instant Pots and Slow Cookers changed that but the stove top method has changed too.
b) No long soaking required. Rinse the beans and simmer them in the flavored fluid of choice. It will take 2 or more hrs. depending on the type bean. So take that zoom meeting, cook it after dinner or on the weekend. Beans are better the next day.
c) If you want a quicker method, first hard boil the beans in their liquid for 6-10 min., depending on size of bean, turn off heat and allow to sit covered for about 30 min. to expand them. Return to a boil, then simmer for 30-45 min. more-continue with prepping the finished dish.

Cook’s Magazine is focused on techniques, the best utensils and proper and extended uses of ingredients. Its advice is always solid and I’ve incorporated many of its suggestion into not just my recipes but my regular cooking routine. Here are some which will help with holiday prep.
1)  Onions cut lengthwise are milder in taste. For more bite cut them crosswise

2) To give commercial broth the fuller taste and body of homemade, add ¼ tsp. unflavored gelatin to 1 cup broth. I add 1 Tbs. to ½ cup broth, let it soften, then microwave it to dissolve, add it to the quart carton.  It really enriches the taste of gravies, sauces and stocks.

3) When browning ground meat, add ¼ tsp. salt and baking soda and let it sit for 20 min. before cooking. This prevents it from getting thin and watery.

4) Garlic powder tastes like fresh if mixed with an equal amount of water and sautéed in butter before added to mashed potatoes or other dishes.

5) Stop any vinaigrette from separating by adding 1 Tbs. molasses. .Makes a much better presentation.

6) When coating a roast with a rub, sparingly sprinkle with granulated sugar just before roasting. It doesn’t taste, but it melts and holds the rub on as well as browning.

7) To give a two-crust pie a crunchy, sweet crust, brush the top thoroughly with water, then sprinkle 1 Tbs sugar over it before baking.

8) This I haven’t tried but I trust Cook’s advice. For a perfect, 4 lb.medium rare, boneless rib roast, preheat oven to 500 deg. and put meat in for 12 min. Turn the oven OFF and leave it alone for 2 hr. DON’T PEEK. Remove the roast and let it rest for 20 min.  Slice and serve.
a) To economize substitute a Top Sirloin roast for the rib one.

The Cooking Club of America is filled with members who love to cook and are really good at it. They are experts at devising efficient ways to use appliances and finding short cuts to working with food. (posts July 9, 2012,    June 16, 2019) It’s important to know your appliances, utensils, and to take advantage of cooking tips especially how to make objects multi-task.

1) Put the roast on the second to the bottom shelf and a sheet of vegetables on the bottom shelf. It’s a lower temperature for the veggies, but they make it up in time. Put any vegetable side dishes or bake potatoes next to the meat pan.

2) Once an oven or other appliance is ready, don’t turn it off after one task. Bake that cake. Boiling a vegetable? Throw in a couple of eggs for eating during the week. Use the hot burner to sauté another vegetable or toast nuts.

3) To avoid being burned when checking the temperature of the contents of a pot while cooking, put the stem of an instant read thermometer through the openings in a slotted spoon, and lower it until you can get an accurate reading.

4) Use corn holders to secure round objects like tomatoes, onions and lemons, for slicing

5) Chopsticks are handy in the kitchen to remove food from the toaster, to rearrange food on a platter or roasting vegetables and to easily pit cherries, cut a small “X” in the bottom. Remove the stem, insert the narrow end of the chopstick and push the pit out.

6) To quickly chop nuts, put them in a plastic bag and pound then with the bottom of a can.

7) To coarsely chop herbs, place them in a glass and snip with a scissors.
One of my favorite suggestions: If at all possible, grow your own herbs. I grow them in pots and in the fall, I either bring them in (several last well in a heated house and a sunny kitchen) or I lightly chop them and freeze them in ice trays with a bit of oil and water and use as described above. I love having fresh herbs available.

Let’s look at Uses for the Freezer:

1) Ice Cubes can be made from fruit juice, wine, and stock, then used as flavorings when making drinks, sauces and gravies. Meanwhile, store cubes in plastic bags: 1cube = 2Tbs.

2) Fresh Herbs, with a little water added, can be preserved frozen, in ice cube trays, and added to recipes as they cook. Again store cubes in plastic bags.

3) Fresh Ginger Root is easier to work with frozen. Keep it in plastic wrap and simply peel back the “bark” and grate or chop. Stores frozen for months.

4) Open both ends of a can of Tomato Paste, use one end to slide it, in tubular form, unto a piece of plastic wrap and roll it up. Freeze and simply slice off pieces as needed. No mess, no waste.

5) To Freeze Food in zip-lock bags, gently press out the air, and lay the bags flat in a pan or cookie sheet until frozen. They need less storage space and the contents remain intact.

6) Small bags of Fruit or Grapes can be frozen and used in place of ice to chill drinks without watering them down, and consumed with the drinks or as snacks, toppings etc.

7) This newly in and I haven’t tried it yet, but Fresh Tomatoes, after a short time in the freezer, will peel when run under cold water.

8) This I have done. Bamboo Skewers will burn if not soaked in water before using. Soaked and stored in the freezer, they’re always ready to go.

9) Chopsticks and Skewers are really useful!  If you don’t have any, do get some. Chopsticks are free with any order from a Chinese restaurant, and a 12 pack of skewers are @$1.00 in any market. These offer a safe way to remove food from a toaster.

10) To easily pit cherries, cut a small “X” in the bottom. Remove the stem, insert the narrow end of the chopstick and push the pit out.

11) They are excellent for rearranging food on a platter without ruining the effect or in an oven while cooking without getting burned, especially rearranging roasting vegetables.

12) Cooking Spray isn’t just for pans anymore. I always buy Canola oil. It’s tasteless, has a very low fat content and a high smoke point, which makes it a good choice for nearly any cooking task.

a) It alone can prepare most cake pans for baking, eliminating the mess of greasing and flouring. Be advised, however, older pans and cookie sheets may acquire a yellow tint.

b) Sprayed on foil, it can replace parchment paper.

c) If you need to lift foods that tend to stick while cooking, such as cookies or pancakes, spray the spatula first, and they’ll come right up.

d) lightly spray the outsides of sandwiches I’m going to grill or broil. When pressed with the spatula they get an even golden brown and a silky crust.

Now for a list of unrelated, but helpful, kitchen hints. Be sure to read the last, it’s my favorite!

1) To avoid being burned when checking the temperature of the contents of a pot while cooking, put the stem of an instant read thermometer through the openings in a slotted spoon, and lower it until you can get an accurate reading.

2) Use corn holders to secure round objects like tomatoes, onions and lemons, for slicing

3) Stand the grater in a shallow bowl, rather than over a plate, when grating. It keeps the shavings in one place.

4) Likewise, when stripping an ear of corn, stand the cob in the center opening of a tube pan. The kernels fall into the bowl for easy collection.

5) When using a mortar and pestle, add a few drops of oil to the herbs. It keeps them together and won’t affect the recipe.

6) When using a hand mixer, to prevent splattering, cut two holes in a paper plate and, holding it upside down, insert the beaters through the holes before mixing.

7) To make diet vinaigrette dressing creamy, without adding to the calories, blend it on high for a couple of minutes with a cracked ice cube.

8) For easy removal, when making a dish that need to be inverted onto a plate, foil line the pan bottom.

9) For a less messy application of barbeque sauce while grilling put it in a plastic squeeze bottle, squirt it on then spread it over the food with a brush or a long handled sponge.

10) To slightly thicken gravy in an almost finished dish, put the flour or cornstarch in a tea strainer, and stirring constantly, shake it over the pot. This prevents clumping.

11) For smaller jobs, to seal stuffed chicken breasts, or wrap food in bacon for example, buy “T” Pins in the needle section of a crafts store. They’re unbreakable, easier to work with, better looking and reusable, all advantages over wooden toothpicks.

12) Reheat pizza in a non-stick skillet, over medium-low heat for 3-5 mins. The crust crisps and the toppings don’t overcook.

13) To stuff cupcakes, and keep them neat, in lunchboxes say, hollow out the center with an apple corer and fill as desired. This is also a way to “ice’ them without the mess.

14) To emulate the appearance of a fondant icing or a glaze, heat canned icing in the microwave for about 30 sec. until it becomes fluid, then spoon or pour it over the cake. Flavorings can be added at this point as well.

15) Use florists glass corsage tubes to hold flowers, or other objects, to easily and freshly decorate cakes.

16) To neatly fill plastic bags for food storage, hold a clean, label peeled, open ended can, size appropriate, upright in the bag, on a flat surface and use it as a funnel through which to pour the food. I keep a small, a medium and a large can in my equipment closet.

17) Roasting garlic, wrapped in foil, in an oven, takes about an hour and uses electricity. I had a Garlic Roaster, but lost it in my last move, so I’ve improvised- successfully. Get a 3 X 4 inch, unglazed terra cotta flower pot and matching saucer. Plug about ¾ of the pot’s bottom hole. I used cork, but foil would work. Prepare a garlic bulb as usual, by cutting 1/3 off the top, revealing the cloves. Put it on the saucer, spoon over 1 ½ Tbs. oil; cover with the pot and microwave on high 1 to 2 mins. depending on the size of the head and the power of the oven. Remove, cool and squeeze the bulb to force the cloves out into a jar. Add the cooking oil and kept refrigerated. Lasts for several weeks. The garlic can be mashed and used as a spread, or added to other dishes. Roasted garlic is much milder than other forms, lending a more subtle flavoring.

I’ve used these tips so often, most have become automatic for me, but I still keep a list handy, in case I’ve forgotten anything. Hope they’re as much help to you as they have been for me.

START HOLIDAY PREP-BE SAFE NOT SORRY

Thanksgiving used to be different, more in-house, less travel. It was a day to relax before the gates opened to the winter holiday havoc of preparations-shopping, chasing sales on gifts and food. Well the gift sales may continue but Thanksgiving now definitely marks the gates closing on food sales. I learned this the hard way some years ago. 

I set out the Monday after Thanksgiving to buy my cookie ingredients and was shocked by the rise in prices on items I had bought a week or so before, especially dairy products. Additionally, I was surprised by the absence and/or scarcity of other things, add-ins/ons like dried fruits, nuts and decorative sugar, and boxed foods, like cake and quick bread mixes. Even supplies of vegetables and fruits, canned and frozen, were thin, and cranberries non-existent. The store’s answer to my questions was that they had received their supplies in the fall and were not scheduled to restock until January.

The final blow came December 23, when I went to pick up my pre-ordered turkey. The cost was 3 times what I had paid for an identical bird in November, which was under $20.00 as compared to over $50.00. I’ve played by the new rules since and learned that, on the up side, it helps the budget by amortizing the cost of holiday food, on the down side it requires more storage space. I’ve found several dishes can be made ahead and will keep for the holidays, reducing the number of items to store and amortizing prep time. This is a huge stress saver later. 

Although, I have written posts on this subject for a decade, I still get questions about, and encounter people who are shocked by the situation. Below is a list of posts, all linked to their articles, which answer questions and advise about advance holiday food preparation. I make a point of not endorsing expenditure, but advance preparing to host a holiday or occasion will become the norm due to rising food costs, and freezer space will be increasingly imperative. A small one, even rented for an event, will soon justify the expense.

Several of the linked articles listed below explain that early October is the time to start watching for and taking advantage of sales on ingredients you’ll need over the holidays and contain sample schedules. Others offer advice on the types of dishes which can be made ahead and stored, giving proven recipes. Between the two, it’s possible to amortize time and money, and relieve a lot of holiday stress.

As to my certainty that food prices will continue to rise for the foreseeable future, there’s a footnote at the bottom of this post which summarizes the change in control of the U.S. food supply. I’m adding an illustration of our now competing with other nations for our own agricultural products.  The situation developed over 40 years and unfortunately is irreversible as it stands now. 

October 29, 2014-PREPARE AHEAD FOR THE HOLIDAYS
This post recounts the reasons why I became so interested in preparing ahead for the winter holidays. Planning is the important first step, determining the obvious items which can be bought early and stored and even foods which can be made or partially made, weeks in advance. Included are stuffing tips, and recipes for cheese spreads and fruit bread.


October 27, 2016– AMORTIZE HOLIDAYS-SAVE MONEY, TIME,STRESS=PRICELESS
Prepping ahead lessens the financial burden of the holidays by amortizing the food expenses. Time can also be ‘amortized’ by preparing dishes as early as their recipes allow or making and preserving them, mainly by freezing. Nothing is a greater relief during the hectic holidays than realizing something is ready and waiting, without having to gorge a chunk out of your busy schedule to do it, except, perhaps, knowing the cost has been defrayed. This post focuses on the importance of scheduling, both in shopping and cooking, and gives advice on how to plan.

October 5, 2017-SHOP HOLIDAY FOODS NOW

I believe that organized planning and informed shopping are key and a LIST is the most valuable tool to managing any situation involving food preparation.  Since the sales on the items you’ll need for various occasions will be appearing intermittently in the same time period, you need an over view, a master list. However, to avoid confusion the master list should be clear as to separate events. Sound difficult? Not really. To construct a working master list answer four questions, omitting any that don’t apply. Then follow the directions.

October 12, 2017-PREPARE HOLIDAY FOODS AHEAD

Advance preparation is straightforward but has 4 simple rules discussed in this post. It’s also highly rewarding but completely individual depending on each cook’s abilities, schedule and storage space.  The best way to illustrate the overall process is to share my Holiday Timeline to give a general idea and allow you to adapt it to your situation. I can tell you, I now wonder how I coped with the holidays before  I had this

October 19, 2017-RECIPES TO MAKE AHEAD
The next step is to look at what type of recipes lend themselves to this treatment and if they need be altered to do so. I discuss freezing methods and recommend several of my previous posts which give detailed directions on freezing different types of foods. I also include tips on how to extend the life of refrigerated dishes and include 9 recipes for dishes I always have made in advance.

October 4, 2018- AMORTIZE THE HOLIDAYS –SAVE TIME, MONEY, STRESS
Revisiting how taking advantage of the pre-Thanksgiving sales prices saves money and relieves stress with the knowledge that when it’s time to tackle a kitchen project, everything needed is at hand. Above all, it lessens the financial burden of the holidays by amortizing the food expenses. Time can also be ‘amortized’ by preparing dishes as early as their recipes allow or making and preserving them, mainly by freezing. It’s a relief during the holidays to know something is ready and waiting, with the cost defrayed

October 11, 2018– SCHEDULE FOR MAKING HOLIDAY FOOD AHEAD

Preparing food ahead for events is less stressful than cramming it into a busy day. This doesn’t actually save time it amortizes it. A dish takes a given amount of time to prepare no matter when it’s done but spending it during a free period is far less stressful than squeezing it into a busy one. Here is a schedule for the weeks prior to the winter holidays, illustrating which types of dishes can be prepared and when.

October 18, 2018- HOLIDAY RECIPES TO MAKE AHEAD
Once convinced of the convenience of having dishes prepared in advance, the next step is to look at what type of recipes lend themselves to this treatment and if they need be altered to do so. Here are 9time- tested recipes, with links to many more and tips on making, preserving them and others in their categories, plus leftover storage and serving suggestions.

October 3, 2019– PREPARE AHEAD FOR THE HOLIDAYS
Merchants always prepare months ahead for holidays, and what we don’t realize is the food industry has begun to do the same. Prices on holiday supplies, especially baking supplies and canned goods are featured at lower prices October through Thanksgiving. In December, though often showcased, items reflect regular prices. One theory is that the tactic masks a general price hike in January. In any case, NOW is the time to shop for items in these categories….. 

October 17, 2019- PREPARING HOLIDAY DISHES AHEAD
If food shopping in advance for the holidays, it’s logical to discuss dishes able to be prepped in advance too. Of course the ones with more perishable ingredients go first, but how well they store and retain their freshness matters too. I’ve been doing this for years and have worked out a general schedule, printed here, for you to use as a guide.

October 8, 2020–HOME KITCHEN HOLIDAY GIFTING 2020-A NEW LOOK
Every year I write about preparing ahead for the holidays, which includes making gifts. This year DIY gifts will have new meanings. They aren’t just personalized ‘Thank You’s or special ways to wish friends a happy holiday. They carry a deeper message, saying “I made this for you because I want you to know I care for and will miss you. I am truly saddened by this situation, pray next year things will be normal again and we will be together.” It’s the thought and effort that goes into making such gifts which really carries the message. The personal touch conveys more than words and fortunately, several will stand up to shipping, because, if this pandemic continues, it will curtail travel. Here are 10 items worth considering.

* FootnoteThe story is simple. When a very efficient exfoliant was developed during the Vietnam era, its commercial value was apparent but crops had to be created which were impervious. Prior to that time agricultural experimentation in the U.S. had been done in colleges and universities under federal grants, which made any results government property.  However, private labs were allowed to become involved in this project.  With greater funding, and prior knowledge, the company which manufactured the exfoliant, quickly developed a ‘super’ soy bean seed.

Thus, in the early ‘80s history was made when the first U.S. patent for a living organism was issued, not for the seed, but for the process which created it. After that, the process could be freely applied to other plants, corn, wheat etc. Naturally, the holder of the patent controlled the seed and consequently controlled the price of the crop. Please note the greatest price changes in the above accountings.

Now this process, in some form, has been applied to the seeds of most produce plants making them GMOs.  Included is fodder for our livestock which takes the axiom from above one step further. The one who controls the feed crops controls the husbandry industry and, consequently, the prices on meat, poultry and dairy.

If you have any doubts about the global scope of the situation, the next time you’re in a supermarket, take note of the origins, especially of the produce and seafood items, fresh, frozen and canned. You’ll see many products are now farmed internationally according to climate, not limited to their country of origin and transported to markets worldwide. Also note that 99% of packaged items contain soy or corn products, unheard of 50 years ago, when soy was rarely used in the U.S. as other than a cover crop. It helps to explain the complete control international conglomerates have on our food supply and to understand why prices are no longer influenced by the economy of any one country. Unfortunately, the reality is that the situation can‘t, or won’t, be altered for many years, if ever. 

A more recent illustration of this reality is the rise of potato prices. The controlling corporations have opened and are expanding a market for potatoes in developing countries which traditionally relied on grain based bulk foods to feed their people. The higher cost of potatoes is the price we must pay to compete for our own produce and, as stated above, won’t be affected by our economy.

SPOTLIGHTING APPLES

Peak apple season is as much a part of autumn as the falling leaves, but we seem to have become a bit ‘Ho-hum’ about it. Perhaps the varieties of apples now available all year has led us to take them for granted.  Possibly, we’re distracted by the bright pumpkin displays, and the fuss over ‘Pumpkin Seasoning Mix’ (which also works with apples)   Even candy apples, once featured everywhere, have become scarce and applesauce has disappeared from family menus. Sad that a fruit so fabled through history that it was chosen to traditionally top fruit displays, thus giving NYC a favorite nick-name, has become common place.

It’s not to say huge quantities of apples aren’t processed commercially.  The juice, valued for itself, is the main ingredient in blended drinks, canning fruits and other foods, including some meats, making jams, jellies, condiments and lately, pharmaceuticals.  The fruit itself is being overlooked nowadays.

The blame for this can most plausibly be traced to our widening palates and increasing interest in different cuisines, especially Asian ones. Although apples come from Asia and China is still the largest producer, Asians aren’t fond of eating them raw or sweetening them to make dessert-the West’s two major ways of consuming apples. Asians do use them in slaw and stir-fries, as shown by two recipes below.

This brings me to the subject of this post.  Part of apples fade from the spotlight is their consistent availability and reasonable cost, but that is all the more reason to explore their possibilities now, when food prices are up. If a reasonably inexpensive ingredient can make meals special, then let’s find ways to use it. The following recipes consist of quite ordinary ingredients, and require no special cooking skills or effort.  Simply making apples a component lifts them out of the everyday. It gives the dishes an upscale appeal, perfect for company, yet they’re still simple enough for a week night.

For more apple recipes other than desserts, such as Applesauce Bread, Chutney, Cream Cheese Chutney Tree, Apple Chips, Gorgonzola Apple Stuffing for Poultry, Sweet Potato Stuffed Apples, check post of              
Oct 26, 2017.
For more apple dessert recipes, including Easy Apple Strudel, French Apple Pie, Dutch Apple Cake, Grandma’s Sour Cream Apple Cake, Amaretto Soufflé with Apple Pearls, Easy Mulled Cider and my own pie crust go to  Nov. 2, 2017

RECIPES

Apple Compote: Yield 3 cups—A multi-use recipe. It can be served as alone as a fruit course, as an accompaniment to meat or as a dessert with whipped topping or over ice cream. A few tablespoons can be stirred into hot or cold cereal.
6 large cooking apples –Golden (NOT Red) Delicious, Granny Smith, Rome etc.
1 cup water
¼ cup sugar
1 Tbs. lemon juice
¼ cup raisins—optional
¼ tsp. cinnamon—optional
¼ cup chopped toasted walnuts-for optional garnish
Peel, core and dice apples in ½ inch chunks. Bring sugar and water to a boil; add apples, raisins and juice. Cook until fruit is tender but not mushy. Taste if more sugar is needed, add cinnamon if desired. Serve 

warm or chilled, topped with nuts if desired.
Ham, Cheese and Apple Sandwich: Serves 1
4 slices bread-Jewish rye or pumpernickel suggested, or wheat buns
Deli sliced ham and cheese-choices optional
Thin coating of mustard on bread-optional
Slice a peeled, cored apple in about 3 slices per quarter. Put in a small bowl with a light sprinkle of sugar and another of cinnamon. Add 1-2 Tbs. water or apple juice and microwave about 1min-1 min.30 sec. Store refrigerated in juice if made ahead. This prevents the apple from browning. Layer apples on bread between ham and cheese, to keep moisture from ruining bread.

Apple Soup: Serves 6
Recipe I
4 large apples-cored and chopped
1 large red onion- minced
3 Tbs. butter
1 quart chicken stock
¼ tsp. EACH nutmeg, salt, cinnamon
2 cups half-and-half or heavy cream
½ cup toasted chopped walnuts
Sauté onions and apples in butter until tender. Add stock and seasonings and blend. Simmer partially covered 10 min. Off stove, fold in half-and-half or cream. Warm to incorporate. Serve chilled or warm garnished with nuts.
Recipe II— Curried version
Replace nutmeg and cinnamon with 1 ¼ tsp. curry powder, or to taste, and reduce cream to ¾ cup. Garnish with parsley or chopped chives in place of nuts.

Asian Apple Slaw: Serves 4—From https://recipes.timesofindia.com/us/recipes/asian-apple-slaw/rs58869460.cms

2 apples

1 teaspoon fish sauce

salt as required

3 tablespoon rice vinegar

2 jicama

sugar as required

3 tablespoon lime juice

2 bunches scallions

Cut jicamas and apples into thin slices. Chop scallions and mint leaves. Keep them aside in separate bowls. Take a deep bowl and add rice vinegar, lime juice, salt, sugar and fish sauce. Mix well. Add the sliced jicamas, apples, chopped scallions and mix well. Garnish the salad with mint leaves (optional) and serve.

Cabbage and Apple  Bake: Serves 4
1 medium head cabbage-finely shredded
3 Tbs. butter
2 Granny Smith apples-peeled and sliced
½ medium onion- sliced
2 Tbs. caraway seeds
2 tsp. salt
Paprika
Melt the butter in a large skillet and toss in all the ingredients to coat. Cover and cook over low for 1 hour. Serve hot. OR toss ingredients in an oven-proof casserole, cover and bake on low (300 deg.) for about an hour.

Apple Stuffing for Duck or Other Poultry:  Ingredients calculated for a 4-5lb. bird

3-4 or + slices of cinnamon –raisin bread–depending on size of bird
1/3 cup raisins if using plain cinnamon bread
2 large apples -peeled cored and in large dice
1 stalk celery – sliced thin
½ medium onion diced
1 egg
2 tsp. dried sage
Salt to taste
Orange juice sufficient to moisten
Toast the bread and tear in pieces about 1 inch. Mix all the ingredients with enough orange juice to just moisten and stuff bird. Cook according to directions per pound.

Pork Normandy: Serves 4

4 slices of pork loin or boneless loin chops @ ¾ inch thick- well trimmed

4 Tbs. butter

1 large onion sliced

¼ tsp ground cloves

2 large apples cored and quartered lengthwise

½ tsp sugar

1 cup apple juice

1 envelope chicken bouillon granules

1 cup heavy cream OR 1 cup ½ and ½   with 1 ½ tsp cornstarch dissolved in it.

Melt the butter in an oven proof skillet over medium heat and brown the pork well on both sides. While the meat is browning, add the onions to the skillet and cook until softened. Preheat the oven to 350 degrees. * Arrange the onion around the pork, sprinkle with the cloves. Sprinkle one side of the apple slices with the sugar, and arrange them fan-like, sugar side down, on the meat 2 slices per slice or chop. Add the juice and bouillon to the pan, cover and bake 40 min. Remove meat with a spatula, careful not to disturb the fruit, to a plate to keep warm. Return the skillet with the juices to the stove over low heat, add the cream and simmer until thickened. If you want to avoid using heavy cream, substitute milk with cornstarch dissolved in it. Stir until sauce thickens. It may need a few minutes simmering to reduce. Pour over meat and serve at once.

* If not using an oven proof skillet, arrange the meat, onions and apple in a casserole dish. Deglaze the pan with the juice and bouillon and pour over the meat. Cover and bake as directed. Remove the meat to a plate to keep warm, and return the juices to the skillet, over low heat, add the cream and proceed as directed above.

Apple Chicken Stir Fry: Serves 4—From   https://butteroverbae.com/easy-apple-chicken-stir-fry/

Chicken Marinade

2 chicken breast halves cut up in 1 inch cubes 200 gm

2 Tbs Soy Sauce

2 Tbs Worcestershire sauce

1/2 tsp black pepper powder

1 tsp garlic paste

2 Tbs corn flour

Sauce

1/2 tsp salt

2 full Tbs honey or brown sugar

1 cup of apple juice

1 tsp white pepper 

2 tsp black pepper
2 Tbs soy sauce

2 Tbs Worcestershire sauce

2 Tbs hoisin sauce

3 Tbs vinegar
Other

1 medium apple cut up in medium sized cubes

2 medium onions cut in ½ inch squares

2 cloves garlic finely chopped

1/4 cup oil

1 Tbs corn flour

Sesame seeds for garnish

Chopped spring onions for garnish

Marinate chicken cubes in all the spices and sauces, (except for the corn flour). Refrigerate for 30 mins at least. Add corn flour to chicken and coat evenly. Add oil in a frying pan or wok, and stir fry chicken until golden brown. Remove chicken from oil and set aside.
In the same oil, add onions and apples and stir fry at high flame. Allow the onions and apples to caramelize and get a nice brown edge. Remove the onions and apples from the oil and set aside.
In the left over oil, add chopped garlic, and stir fry until they turn golden brown. Add all the ingredients for the sauce in the pan and allow it to simmer for 3 to 4 mins at medium flame Mix corn flour with a little water to form slurry and add it to the simmering sauce. Cook for 1 to 2 mins and dump in all the chicken, onions and apples. Cook for another 2 mins to reheat all the ingredients and get the consistency of sauce you want. Top with sesame seeds and spring onions. Serve immediately with steamed rice or stir fry noodles.

Apple Dumplings: Serves 4
Pastry for a 2 crust pie* or 1 sheet puff pastry-see note below
4 cooking apples- peeled and cored
½ cup sugar + more if needed
4 drops vanilla syrup or ¼ tsp. cinnamon
Separate dough into 4 parts. Roll each to ¼ inch thickness and cut about a 6 inch square in the center. Save extra dough for another use. Trim the bottoms of the apples so they stand upright and place one in the center of each square. Fill the cores with sugar and a drop of vanilla or a pinch of cinnamon. Pull the dough up around the apple, completely covering it, pinching seams together and at the top to close**. Sprinkle tops with remaining sugar and cinnamon. Bake on a sheet at 400 deg. for 40 min. or until crisp. Serve warm or chilled, alone or with whipped cream. *NOTE: Rozanne Gold’s recipe in Recipes 1-2-3 replaces the pie crust with a sheet of puff paste. The cooking time is reduced to 20 min. Otherwise the recipes are the same
** I like to save the stem and stick it into the top, it’s decorative and defines the pastry.

Apple, Raisin, Walnut Pie

1 ½ cups chopped cooking apples
2 cups raisins
3 cups apple cider
1 cup sugar
1 tsp. cinnamon
1 Tbs. lemon juice+ ½ tsp. zest
2Tbs.butter
½ tsp. salt
3 Tbs. cornstarch
½ cup chopped walnuts.
Double crust recipe or buy 15 oz. package of 2 dough rounds*
Roll dough and line pie pan . Dissolve the cornstarch in ¼ cup of the cider; put all the other ingredients except the walnuts in a pot and heat to boiling. Stir in cornstarch mix, and simmer, stirring until thickened. Stir in nuts. Pour into bottom crust. Top with top crust, well vented, or lattice top. Bake at450 deg.for10 min. then at 30-35 min at 350 deg. Cool before slicing.
To prepare in advance; the cooked filling can be kept chilled, in a plastic container for several days and then poured into the shell and topped before baking. The pie pan can be lined and the top crust dough kept chilled in plastic wrap for several days as well

* NOTE; I like a thin crust, so this will allow for some extra, especially if making a lattice top. Don’t use over a heaping ½ cup shortening. Store left over dough chilled and use within 10 days, or roll and freeze.

LATE SUMMER PRODUCE-PRESERVING AND SERVING

Long gone are the days of great-grandma’s major summer project to ‘put up’ enough produce to supply winter meals. With the abundance of supermarkets and the produce items they offer, both preserved and fresh all year, the DIY approach is strictly optional. And that is what gives home preserves appeal.

Being all natural, home preserved items usually taste better than commercial renditions. As gifts, they convey personal regard without intimacy. In an attractive container they become a lasting memento which can cover a multitude of occasions-hostess gifts, thank you, bread-and butter, teachers, clients and more. Above all some items especially nuts are a true economic saving.

In addition to an ample supply of the produce I preserve as gifts, I freeze a few regular items, more for convenience than as special features. Still they too can brighten a winter meal with a glimpse of summer. Zucchini can be sliced and frozen in single portions and always on hand for a quick ratatouille. Other produce, once vital to home canning for the winter pantry, having been replaced by commercial versions, isn’t worth the cost or effort now-peaches, cherries,, beans, pickled cucumbers for example. This is especially true since GMOs have equalized all crops, eliminating the ‘bumper’ ones worth preserving. 

 However, for those who have the time, space and access to quantities of summer produce I give detailed instruction on ways to preserve it, including directions to sun dry tomatoes, in my posts dated  Sept. 15, 2022,   Sept. 13,2018,  Sept.20, 2018 (includes recipes) Sept. 22, 2016, and a special post on zucchini Sept.15, 2016. The items discussed in these posts corn, beans, zucchini, tomatoes and peaches are specifically preserved by freezing or drying. Similar items can be handled in the same way; peas and asparagus are akin to beans; apricots are like peaches. If an item isn’t mentioned, there is probably a reason. Plums, for example, are too watery and fibrous to be preserved by freezing; they must be stewed. Eggplant is impossible to home preserve by any method. Updates are listed below in the section on recipes to showcase preserved produce. For more go to posts for Sept.22,2018,  and Sept. 22.2022 

Great-Grandma wanted Sept. 30, 2022produce in its prime because she intended to serve the fruit for instance peaches, whole or sliced, as a solo dish. My gift recipes work well with the end of season produce, because though not so pretty to serve fresh, it often cooks better, having less water it usually has a more concentrated flavor. This is a distinct advantage in making the recipes I recommend collections of recipes as gifts where other ingredients and flavorings are introduced. Samples of those too, are given below. Full collections of recipes are in posts for Sept.8, 2022Sept 30, 2022

RECIPES
For Preserved Produce: Other recipes in post include Green Beans with Soy Mushrooms, Chow Tao, Corn Salad, Bean Salad with Corn, Peach Syrup-topping, Quick Dessert Cups,
Update: Spinach and kale are easy to freeze. Remove the thick veins stems and veins and blanch the leaves in simmering water 7-10 sec. until slightly wilted. Remove to a sieve and run under cold water to stop the cooking. Spread out on a board and coarsely chop, if desired. Gather leaves into a tennis-sized ball, squeezing as much as possible without bruising the leaves, to remove excess water. Roll in plastic wrap, place in a bag and freeze. Thaw at room temp or in microwave, do not re-boil. Each ball equals about (1) 10 oz. box.
Mediterranean Fish   See. , Aug.31, 2023
Stuffed Fish Rings      See  Sept  7, 2023
Spinach Pie: Serves 4-6
2 balls or 10 oz. boxes frozen chopped spinach
2 eggs
2 envelopes chicken or beef bouillon granules
Pinch nutmeg
Mix thawed, but undrained spinach with egg and bouillon. Place in a lightly greased, flat bottom oven proof or microwave safe casserole. Top with nutmeg.  Cook in oven, along with other items 30 min. at 250 deg. or 20 min. at 350 deg. Alternately cook 90 sec. on high in microwave.  Cut with a spatula and serve in wedges or squares while hot.

Zucchini: Microwaving is my favorite method to cook zucchini for everyday eating.
Easy Side: Serves 2
Slice a zucchini or separate the slices of a frozen one, add a quarter of an onion sliced, a drizzle of oil, pinch of garlic powder, salt, pepper and herb(s) of choice, basil, oregano, rosemary, fennel ,and nuke it for 3-5 min. until crisp tender. Topped with Parmesan, it’s a great vegetable side, but it’s also good on toast as a snack or sandwich. 

Microwave Ratatouille: Serves 2 well
The addition of tomatoes, diced, canned are great, and, optionally, peppers to the above recipe, turns it into an instant ratatouille, which is not only a good side, or sandwich filling but makes excellent bedding for fish.  Simply spread it in the bottom of a dish, place the fish on top and bake or broil until cooked.
This concoction freezes for about a month and can be perked up with the addition of cooked cut green beans, mushrooms or spinach to serve at a later date. Adding rice and sausage, leftover ham or hot dog slices turns it into a quick dinner casserole.

Beans

Ham and Beans au Gratin: Serves 4
1 lb. beans
8 slices Deli ham – custom cut 1/16 to 3/8 of an inch thick
½ cup grated sharp cheese
2 cups milk
4 Tbs. butter
4 Tbs. flour
¼ tsp. garlic powder
Paprika and dried parsley for garnish
1 envelope chicken bouillon granules –optional
Parboil the beans until crisp tender, about 8 min. Shock under cold water and drain well. Divide the beans into 8 piles of about 10 beans each, and wrap each bundle in a slice of ham. Place bundles in a greased dish, seam side down. Make a simple cream sauce by heating the butter in a saucepan until it foams, Add the flour and stir to a smooth paste. Quickly add the milk, return to medium heat and stir constantly until sauce becomes smooth and thick, about 3 min. Add seasonings; pour the sauce over the bean-ham bundles and top with the cheese and garnish. Bake at 350 deg. until bubbly and cheese melts and browns slightly, about 15 min. Serve hot at once. Tip: plate with a spatula, taking care to serve the bundles intact.

Corn

Arugula and Liver Salad with Corn: Serves 4-From French Bistro Cooking by John Varnom
2 Tbs. butter
4½ Tbs. walnut oil
2/3 cup corn
8 chicken livers
1 small head frisee lettuce or green leaf lettuce
1 small head of arugula
4 ½ Tbs. balsamic vinaigrette
Arrange lettuces on the plates. Sauté the livers in the butter and oil, over high heat, for 3 min. per side. Add corn and remove pan from the heat. Place 2 livers on each plate and deglaze the pan with the vinaigrette. Spoon the dressing and corn over the plated livers and serve warm.

Peaches

Peach Salsa; Yield 3 cups
2 cups peaches
½ cup sliced grape tomatoes-or chopped tomato
½ green bell pepper-chopped
1 scallion-thinly sliced-white and green parts only
Generous dash garlic powder
Dash cayenne pepper
1 Tbs. chopped fresh cilantro
1 tsp. lemon juice
Salt and pepper to taste
Mix all the ingredients in a bowl and allow flavors to meld for about 20 min. Store covered and chilled for 2 days. Serve with fish, poultry and rice.

Tomato

Sundried Tomato PateServes 6-8—From Tea Time Journeys by Gail Greco
½ cup oil packed sundried tomatoes-drained, save oil for another use.
8 oz. cream cheese
¼ cup butter
½ cup grated parmesan
¼ cup butter
¼ tsp. EACH dried oregano and basil
½ tsp. rosemary
Blend everything until smooth. Chill at least 6 hrs. before serving.

Produce Gifts: Other recipes post include Peach Brandy, Watermelon Pickle and Fruit Leather
on Nuts: Though nuts are possibly the most popular gift and  this is a good time to buy nuts, both for price and availability, they shouldn’t be prepared more than 3 weeks before gifting. For a list of recipes and detailed instructions on making them go to post for Dec. 2, 2021  Recipes include Salted Nuts, Pesto Nuts, Nuts Glaceed, and candied nuts, plain, coffee and orange

Mint Sauce: Yields about 4 quarts. sauce
4 cups fresh mint –tough  stems removed
Cider vinegar to cover
Sugar or substitute such as Splenda to taste
Simmer the mint and vinegar in a pot until the leaves are cooked, about 8 min. Add sweetener to taste as the mint cooks. Do not over do. This should be sweet-sour when finished. Remove from heat, cool and process or blend until the mint is finely ground. Correct seasoning and pour into clean bottles. Let stand, uncapped until completely cool, cap and store in a dark, dry, cool place. Keeps for two years or more.
Use in salads, on cooked vegetables and to marinate or baste meat.
NOTE: I use sterilized salad dressing bottles—but only glass ones.

Apricot Chutney: Yield 3cups- Adapted from Food.Com*
2 cups apricots-pitted and roughly chopped
1 large red onion-diced
1 cup raisins
2 cups brown sugar
2 cups apple cider vinegar
1 tsp. mustard seeds
1>2 tsp. salt-to taste
½ tsp., curry powder
¼ tsp. turmeric
1 tsp. allspice or cinnamon
1 Tbs. minced Serrano chili-optional
Place all ingredients into a large, heavy bottomed, pot. Stir over medium heat until the sugar dissolves. Bring to a boil then reduce heat to a low simmer. Let it simmer away for about an hour until it’s nice and thick. Keep an eye on the heat and stir often so it doesn’t burn. Fill sterilized canning jars to within 1/2 inch of the top. Screw on sterilized bands and lids securely. Store in a cool, dark place, refrigerate after opening.
*For more apricot recipes go to: Aug.9, 2018

EASY, FAVORITE, FAMILY DINNERS

When I was reviewing recipes for last week’s post, I realized I was rejecting many of my favorite go-tos. Either they required more prep, cook time, clean-up or are more difficult to serve in shifts. Some might spatter during cooking or have a sauce which could drip, necessitating a change of clothes before heading out to that evening meeting.  So they didn’t make the cut for last week, but they’re all simple, straight-forward, delicious, family friendly dinners, perfect for week days or Sunday suppers. Most are fun meals, open to family participation and great to bring everyone together, especially in busy times like early September or the winter holidays. 

You can find more suggestions for this type of recipe by clicking on   Sept.18, 2019,   Sept. 17, 2020,   Sept.16, 2021,    Sept.1, 2022

RECIPES

My Easy Spaghetti: Serves 4
1 ½ lb. ground beef – or sausage or turkey 

(1) 28 oz. can crushed tomatoes

Tbs. oil

2 small carrots, peeled and sliced thin (1/8 to 1/16 inch) or about 8 baby carrots
(1) 1 oz. box raisons

2 tsp. garlic powder – or to taste

2 tsp. dried oregano-or to taste

2 tsp. dried basil-or to taste
Dash crushed red pepper flakes

1 tsp pepper and salt to taste

1 lb. thin spaghetti or angel hair pasta-or other strand pasta of choice

Grated Parmesan

In a deep pot, over medium heat, brown the meat in 1  tsp. of oil, when all pink in gone, add all the other ingredients, but the pasta, Simmer about 40 min. until the sauce reduces a bit and the carrots are very tender. Cook the pasta in a separate pot just to al dente. Drain and put in the pot with the sauce, toss briefly, THEN turn the contents out into a serving bowl. Pass the Parmesan.

NOTE: Spaghetti sauce freezes beautifully, so make ahead or extra if you wish, and freeze it in separate containers of the size your family needs for a meal, or in single servings for quick meals. Reheat in the microwave, even if frozen and add to freshly cooked pasta.

Party Taco Pie: This recipe is for 8 servings, just as it was given to me, as a dish to be served at casual buffets. It can be halved, but it became such a favorite for second helpings and leftovers that I never modified it.
1 lb. ground beef

1 cup chopped onion

1 envelope Taco seasoning mix

Salt and pepper to taste

(1) 4 oz. can green chilies drained

2 cups milk

4 eggs

1 cup self-rising flour—Bisquick or Jiffy

¼ tsp. baking powder

2 tomatoes peeled and sliced

1 cup Sharp cheese shredded 

Sour cream

Chopped lettuce

Chopped onion

Cooking spray

Spray skillet, and sauté beef and onions until brown and soft. Stir in seasonings, and spread on the bottom of a greased 9 inch, deep casserole. Top with chilies. Preheat oven to 400 degrees. Beat together milk and eggs in a bowl. Still beating, add flour and baking powder, and continue until smooth. Pour over contents of the casserole, and bake for 25 min .Spread tomatoes, then cheese over the top, and bake for 8-10 min more, until cheese bubbles. Allow to cool for a few minutes before serving to set. Cut into wedges and top with sour cream, lettuce, and onion.
No other sides are needed.

Classic Fajitas:
2 cooked, boneless, skinless chicken breasts OR 12 oz. beef for stir fry (see chart) cut in 

   2 inch strips     

1 red bell pepper julienne

1 green bell pepper julienne

2 medium onions halved and sliced thin

3 Tbs. cooking oil

1tsp coriander

1tsp cumin

Salt and pepper 

(8) 8” flour tortillas

(1) 8 oz. jar salsa

(1) 8 oz. container guacamole

1 cup sour cream

(1) 8 oz. pkg. “Mexican 4 Cheese Blend” – or shredded “Monterey Jack”              

Heat oil in a large skillet over high heat. Add onions peppers and spices, and chicken if using raw. Cook about 8 min. until the vegetables are crisp tender. If using beef, cook vegetables about 4 min and add beef the last 4 min, so that it browns but stays tender. If using cooked chicken add last 2 min.to heat.

Meanwhile, cover tortillas with a dish towel, place on a plate and warm in the microwave on high at least 1min—test to make sure they’re warmed through.
Place the toppings – salsa, guacamole, sour cream and cheese on the dining table. Add the warm tortillas, and bring the sizzling meat mixture to the table in the skillet—making sure that it’s on a board or trivet—and let everyone dig in.

To eat a fajita—Lay a tortilla flat on your plate, and spoon the meat mixture in a line across the center of the tortilla parallel to you, leaving a 2inch margin on each end. The julienne cuts make this easy. Put on the toppings of your choice—I like them all—and fold those short sides over the filling squaring them off. Then roll the first long side, the one near you, over the filling, then roll the whole thing over on the other side to make a compact  bundle—–and enjoy ! ! !

Tortilla Strata Burger: A healthy, fun burger for the family to share but if serving 4 for dinner, the recipe should be doubled; however, the 1 jar of Salsa will suffice. Remember in choosing it that cooking intensifies peppers’ heat.

8 oz. hamburger

¼ tsp ground cumin

(1) 16 oz. jar garden style salsa – level of spiciness optional – you’ll use a little over half

(6) 6 inch whole wheat tortillas

½ cup sour cream

(1) 15 ½ oz. can black beans rinsed and well drained

(1) 4oz can green chilies

2 Tbs. chopped fresh cilantro

8oz shredded Monterey Jack cheese

Non stick cooking spray

Brown the beef in a skillet coated with non-stick spray, allow to cool, and mix with the cumin. Spread 2 Tbs. of the salsa in the bottom of the casserole. Top with a tortilla then begin the layering with 2 Tbs. of salsa, 1/6th of the sour cream, then 1/6th each of the beans, beef, peppers, cilantro and cheese. Top with a tortilla and repeat the layering again starting with the salsa and ending with the cheese until all the ingredients are used, pressing down gently on each tortilla to keep the stack level. End with a tortilla.** Can be made a day ahead at this point, cover and refrigerate, then allow to warn a bit before baking. Preheat oven to 350 degrees and bake for 15-20 min., until cheese melts and salsa bubbles. Creamy coleslaw from the Deli goes well with this

*This dish is more attractive if it can be seen through a clear container

** This does tend to lean a bit. One way to keep it straight is to put a bamboo skewer down through the center before baking. I make the skewer into a decoration by putting a cherry tomato on it before serving.
Sides aren’t necessary but a salad is welcome

Cheese Fondue: A family recipe of Swiss friends which is truly amazing in how quickly dinner is ready with little fuss. It’s easy, foolproof and tasty. If you have to use a stove, lift the saucepan regularly to prevent clumping and a candle to keep the food warm at table.
2 lbs. grated Swiss cheese – or very thinly sliced and cut in small pieces – rind removed

6 Tbs. flour

1 garlic clove cut in half

4 cups dry white wine

6 Tbs. brandy

Dash salt

Ground nutmeg

Ground black pepper

Toss cheese and flour to coat well. Rub the inside of the pot with the garlic. Over low heat, cook the wine until bubbles rise to the surface. Add the cheese, a few spoonfuls at a time, stirring constantly. Continue stirring until the cheese is melted; the mixture is smooth and begins to bubble. Add the brandy, nutmeg and pepper. Reduce heat until there is just enough to keep the fondue hot, without burning the bottom. It sounds far more difficult than it is, and made at the table, everyone can watch. 

Serve with a variety of dippers – – Pieces of crusty bread,( just be sure the bread has the density to hold up to the sauce, otherwise it will be soggy, or break off and stay on the pot) or cubes of cooked meat –chicken,  ham, cooked hot dogs, or vegetables – cherry tomatoes, broccoli or cauliflower flowerets, baby carrots, pieces of bell pepper, scallions, celery even fruits – or fruits, apple, pear, fresh pineapple or grapes and on and on and on.
Again a salad can be added, but unnecessary if vegetables are included in the dippers.

Monte Cristo Sandwiches: Serves 4
½ lb. cooked ham – sliced

½ lb. cooked White meat turkey – sliced

½ lb. Swiss cheese- sliced

1 loaf (preferably bakery) unsliced whole wheat or 7 grain sandwich bread

Mayonnaise

Dijon or spicy Brown mustard

3 eggs

1 cup – possibly more – milk

4 Tbs. butter – at least

Get the ham, turkey and cheese from the Deli, and request the slices be no less than 1/16 inch thick. Use artisan bread, French or Italian rather than a commercial packaged loaf. They have more flavor and a coarser, more country texture that works well here because it stands up better in the preparation.

Divide the cheese and meats into 4 piles each. Mix the eggs and milk. Cut 8 slices of bread. This is one recipe where I like the bread sliced rather thick at least ½ an inch. Lightly toast the bread and spread one side of 4 slices with mayonnaise, and one side of the other 4 with mustard. Divide the cheese for each sandwich into 3 piles. Put 1/3 on the mustard covered bread slice, top with ham, then 1/3 cheese, then the turkey, then the last 1/3 cheese, and top with the mayonnaise spread bread slice. The reasoning here is that the cheese in melts and holds the sandwich together. Melt 1 Tbs. butter in a skillet, if you have one that holds 2 sandwiches good, melt 2 Tbs. of butter. Dip both sides of a sandwich in the egg mixture and gently fry in the butter, first one side and then the other, until both are brown and crispy, and the cheese has melted. Repeat with the rest of the sandwiches. Serve hot. 

*I like Italian Tomato soup with this. Per servings; mix 8oz canned tomato sauce, 1 tsp olive oil, ½ cup water, ½ envelope. beef bouillon granules, pinches of dried oregano, basil and powdered garlic. Serve very hot in mugs or bowls.

Cranberry-Chicken Salad: Serves 2
1 cup bite size pieces of meat
2 Tbs. craisins
2 Tbs. chopped walnuts
¼ cup crumbled Feta cheese
At least 4 cups of Bibb, Iceberg, Romaine or other salad lettuce in bite sized pieces
½ Tbs. olive oil
@3 Tbs. Raspberry vinaigrette
Toss the greens with the oil, then layer the meat, craisins and nuts over them. Pour the vinaigrette over and top with the cheese. Present layered as made.



Pork Loins with Apricot Glaze:  Serves 4
Shadybrook Farms makes turkey tenderloin that is the same size as this type of pork loin and can substitute.
(2) 1 lb. Pork Tenderloins – Commercially prepared in plastic sleeves*
12 oz. jar apricot preserves
15 oz. can apricots in syrup-drained, contents reserved
Chop fruit, boil syrup to reduce by half and dissolve jam in syrup , add fruit
Remove wrappers from pork and pat dry. Rub each with ½ tsp salt and ½ tsp pepper. Heat grill or broiler. Brush meat with glaze and place on a foil lined pan or on grill and cook 4 inches from heat source 10-15 min for the grill, 15 – 20 min. under the broiler, basting with glaze and turning every few minutes, until internal temperature reaches 150 degrees. Allow to rest, tented under foil 5 min., before carving. Slice meat and serve topped with a drizzle of glaze and be sure to pass any remaining glaze warmed.
NOTE: I  wouldn’t advise attempting to prepare and freeze these lions ahead, but leftovers should freeze well. In fact, I’ve had success freezing rice. So ready serve portions on rice, with glaze, should freeze for short periods- a week or so. Reheat in the Microwave.  

Pork Chops Basil: Serves 4
This is an old family favorite and it also works well for pork loin roasts. It can be refrigerated for three days or even frozen for two weeks, after the baking, so it can be made ahead and quickly ready when wanted. Veal chops, turkey cutlets or boneless, flattened chicken thighs, may be substituted for the pork. Children can prep the meat and get the ingredients ready for use.
(8) ½ inch thick center pork chops well-trimmed of fat
½ cup flour
1 Tbs. garlic powder
2 Tbs. dried basil
½ a small can frozen orange juice concentrate
Water to dilute juice
¼ cup cream sherry
Sprinkle half the garlic powder and half the basil in the bottom of an oven proof dish or pan that will hold the chops closely but not overlapping. Dredge the chops in the flour, by shaking in a plastic bag, one at a time, making sure they’re well coated. Place in pan, and sprinkle the rest of the garlic and basil over them. Cover and seal the pan with foil. Bake, preferably at 250 degrees for 2 hours, but acceptable at 350 degrees for one hour. Remove from oven, turn on broiler, and lift foil. Dilute orange juice with the sherry and just enough water to come almost to the top level of the chops in the pan, and pour over the chops. Broil until chops brown and the sauce thickens. Serve hot.

 Coconut Crusted Tilapia: Serves 4- The coconut is optional Simply eliminate it from the ingredients and Step1.
4 Tilapia filets – about 1lb
1 cup plain Panko
½ cup sweetened coconut flakes – toasted
½ cup + mayonnaise
Lemon pepper
Step I- Preheat oven to 350 deg. Toast coconut on a piece of foil until golden, about 4 mins. watching that edges don’t burn. When cool mix with Panko.
Step 2 – Place fish on a lightly oiled cooking surface, a pan or baking sheet. Completely cover the tops with a thin sheet of mayonnaise, more like a veneer. Dust lightly with lemon pepper.
Step 3 – Sprinkle with Panko-coconut mix, and bake 8 mins. per 1 inch width of filet, until top is golden, fish puffs slightly and edges bubble. Serve at once
Note: I put the breading mix in an empty herb bottle with a shaker top. It’s easy to apply, and any extra can simply be stored in the bottle.

The coconut lasts forever in the freezer, but you can substitute a bit of cumin and coriander, or dill—just remember Tilapia’s flavor is very mild.  Oh, and it only needs a sheer coating of mayo, just enough to make the bread crumbs stick, but it must be mayo, not yogurt or cream cheese. It adds a zing of taste and enough fat to let the fish brown.

Flounder Rolls: Serves 4- Quick cooking, easy to prepare. Can be cooked in shifts.*
I devised this some years ago, for a child who loved spinach but hated fish. Then I was surprised to find out it freezes well using fresh fish, and can be cooked frozen, simply add 6 to 8 min. to the cooking time. Otherwise, just use frozen flounder or tilapia.
4 fish fillets – divided in half lengthwise
(2)10oz boxes of frozen chopped spinach – thawed and drained
2 envelopes chicken or beef bouillon granules
2 eggs
Ground nutmeg
2 tsp. butter
1 lemon quartered
Toothpicks
In a bowl, mix the bouillon packets and the eggs with the spinach, making sure they’re well combined. Divide the mixture into 8 portions, and roll a strip of flounder around each, tail end over the thicker one, leaving enough overlap to secure with a toothpick. Alternately, for larger rolls, divide the spinach into 4 portions and wrap each with 2 pieces of fish over lapping on each side. Press the tops and bottoms to compact the filling.
Preheat oven to 350 degrees, and melt the butter in an ovenproof dish large enough to hold the fish rolls comfortably. Using a spatula, transfer the rolls to the dish, but be sure they are upright and the sides are straight. Sprinkle the tops with nutmeg, and bake about 20-25 min. until fish is very white and opaque, and eggs bubble out of the top making a white foamy sauce. Serve at once with pan juices. Garnish with lemon wedges.
* Can be frozen if using fresh fish, just allow about 5-8 min. of extra cooking time. Otherwise cook within 24 hours of making them, but store well chilled and covered.