Monday, December 29, 2014

In Giardino

It has been a very nice holiday.  We had our annual open house on Christmas Eve.  The theme this year was Pancakes and Pajamas.  So we had all breakfast foods and most of us wore pajamas to the party.  We always have a big crowd for our house and things get tight, but people do not seem to mind.  We had 3 kinds of quiche, 2 kinds of french toast casserole, corned beef hash, potatoes and onions, bagels with lox and the fixins, polenta with mushrooms and spinach, and a sweet potato and apple kugel - a recipe I found on pinterest.

 Christmas day is usually quiet.  We wake when we want, have leftovers for breakfast and open our presents, just the two of us.  My hubby made for me 5 beautiful bird houses for the garden.  One has a peekaboo back, so we can hang it in front of a window and peek in.  The others are a blue jay house, a cardinal house, and the largest is a screech owl house.  We will hang that one on our chimney, away from the others.

Here are two of the houses, ready for new tenants.  The garden is resting for the season.  I really miss those home grown tomatoes!
 Of course, the holidays are all about embarrassing the children.  So, here is our Genny, mortified that mommy insisted on this torture.

I also received a very large cast iron skillet for a present, so I will be seasoning that soon so it will be ready for use.  We are going to be grilling some ducks on New Year's Eve and I might use the skillet as the drip pan.  All of that duck fat should season it nicely.

Until next time,
Ciao!
Birdie in Cucina

Thursday, December 4, 2014

Holidays in Cucina

It is that time of year when we bake, bake, bake!  I have to get my gifts that need mailing ready to go and I need some cushioning for the contents.  The gifts are culinary in nature this year, so I thought that some caramel corn would be a perfect addition.


My sister and I discovered this recipe one year when we had a lot of leftover popcorn from stringing for the tree.

Oven Caramel Corn

Preheat oven to 200 degrees

12 cups of freshly popped pop corn, divided between two ungreased baking dishes
1 cup brown sugar
1 stick, or 1/2 cup butter
1/4 cup lite corn syrup
1/2 teaspoon salt
1/2 teaspoon baking soda

Heat brown sugar, butter, corn syrup and salt in a saucepan, stirring occasionally, until bubbly around the edges.  Continue cooking 5 minutes more, stirring constantly.  Remove from heat.  Stir in baking soda until caramel is foamy.  Pour on the popcorn and stir to coat.  Bake 1 hour, stirring well every 15 minutes.

Now it looks like the caramel might not cover enough at first, but trust me, it gets around after all of that stirring.  This stuff is highly addictive!

I am bagging this up in celophane bags for transporting and freshness.


Until next time!
Birdie in Cucina


Wednesday, December 3, 2014

Fall turns to Winter

It has been a pretty uneventful month or so.  I have to say that we are generally pretty boring people.  My husband works from home and I am a homemaker, so we spend the day together, sort of anyway.  It is nice because we can eat lunch together and spend time with our dogs without them being alone for long stretches of time.

We have had a a beautiful fall season and winter seems to have come early this year.  We had our first snow storm of the year on the day before Thanksgiving.  We got less than they said we would, but it still made it difficult for travelers.  Thank goodness the roads were clear on the holiday and our family could still join us for our feast.

I took over Thanksgiving dinner a couple of years ago when my mother in-law decided she didn't want to do it anymore.  I certainly didn't mind.  The only challenge is fitting enough people around my table in my incredibly small dining room.

This year I decided that I would make as many of the dishes as friendly to my restrictive diet as I possibly could.  Preparations began a good month ahead of time with me looking through my favorite cook books, magazines, and websites for the recipes.  From there I made my grocery list and shopped on the Monday before Thanksgiving.

I could only find frozen turkey which I was very concerned about getting thawed before I wanted to cook.  Okay, there was one fresh turkey that was so big it would not fit into my oven and would take a new mortgage to purchase.  Early on Wednesday, I took out my turkey and prepared it for the brine.  I ALWAYS brine my turkey and I highly recommend it.  I learned this trick from Cooks Illustrated.  Into my biggest stock pot went about 2-3 cups of salt, the turkey and water enough to cover the turkey.  It sat in the brine, in the refrigerator, until I was ready to cook it at 6 am on Thanksgiving.  I aimed to get the turkey done early so it had plenty of time to rest and retain all of the juices.  I did not have to add any liquid to the turkey pan, as it produced quite a bit on its own.  I lay the turkey on a bed of carrots, celery and onion and placed a sage butter under the skin of the breast to keep things moist.  I did not baste so the skin could get nice and crispy.

This also opened up the oven for the side dishes.  First up was corn pudding since it has to cook for an hour.  I found this recipe this year and it sounded much more interesting than my traditional one.  The texture of the frozen corn and the flavor of the onion made such a big difference. 

Next was the Bourbon Sweet Potato Puree with Pecans. The bourbon adds rich flavor that is not too sweet and the nuts add texture.

I also roasted some mushrooms with salt and pepper and made polenta to go with them.  this was a nontraditional dish that my husband didn't think would go over with his parents, but they loved it.

Stuffing was a challenge to figure out how to do gluten free.  Last year I made a stuffing with gluten free bread and frankly, it was terrible.  But I ran across a recipe for Wild Rice Stuffing.  That would provide the necessary traditional  flavors and be acceptable.  You basically make your favorite wild rice blend, I used chicken stock for the liquid.  While that is cooking up you saute onions, celery, mushrooms, sage and other traditional stuffing seasonings in some butter.  when the rice is finished, add the onion mixture.  throw that in a casserole with a little more chicken stock and back for about 20 minutes.

Instead of the gooey green bean casserole, I made steamed green beans with some sauteed shallots and lemon zest.  Add the green beans to the saute pan to marry the flavors.  With all of the rish dishes, I wanted the beans to have a fresher cleaner taste.

We also had a nice green salad, some corn muffins with blueberries (a tradition in my husband's family), and then dessert!

I made a pumpkin pie with  a buttery pie crust recipe.  I substituted King Arthur Gluten Free Flour for the flour in the recipe.  The filling is from my very worn copy of Good Housekeeping Illustrated Cookbook.  I substituted coconut milk for the evaporated milk.

All in all, I would say that Thanksgiving this year was a success.  Of course I made turkey stock from the carcass and it is now waiting to be soup.  Leftovers have been a joy to eat and have gone pretty fast.

Now the planning for this year's Christmas Eve open house begins!  It is going to be very different as we are having a pancake and pajama theme this year.  All breakfast foods!  Still in the planning stages, but I think it will be fun and different.