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Wednesday, November 26, 2014

Recipe: Compound Butters

Compound Butters
Circa: 2014

 With Thanksgiving approaching I thought I would share one more recipe with you before Thursday!  I love making compound butters for special dinners or  during the holidays. Not only are they delicious and add so much flavor to a dish but they are very simple to make! Today I am providing you with some of my favorite flavor combinations to share with your friends and family this holiday season.
 
When I became Education Coordinator at the museum one of the first things I learned to do was make homemade butter. During our busy season we can make up to six batches in one day! At the museum we use a wonderful vintage Daisy Churn similar to the one pictured in the ad below. While it still gets the job done after all these years it tends to take a lot of time and elbow grease. It's a wonderful teaching tool for our younger visitors and helps them appreciate how hard people had to work in the past even for simple things, however,  at home I like to take advantage of our modern technology and let my mixer do the hard work!  While you can certainly add any of these flavorful ingredients to pre-made butter, homemade butter is so easy to make and adds a delicious and special touch to your holiday meal.
 
 
How to Make Homemade Butter
 
To make homemade butter all you need is heavy whipping cream and a stand or hand held mixer. You will typically get half as much butter as the amount of cream used.
 
1.  Place the heavy whipping cream in a bowl and begin mixing on a low speed. You can increase to a medium speed as the cream begins to thicken. However, be careful not to increase the speed too soon or you will have cream flying everywhere! (I learned this the hard way)
 
2. The cream will transform into fluffy whipped cream; this is what I consider the half way point. Keep whipping the cream until it breaks down into soft cottage-cheese like curds.
 
3. The butter will then begin to stiffen as the butter fat separate s from the milk, clump together and turn yellow.
 
4. Once the butter separates turn off your mixer and pour off the milk. You can press the butter with a spatula to squeeze out any remaining milk.
 
5. As a bonus you can keep the buttermilk to drink!
 
It is that simple! I often get asked "How do you know when you have butter?" Trust me you will know by the consistency and color of the butter.  At this point in time I return the drained butter to my mixer and begin to add my ingredients. Rather than provide measurements for my butter combinations I have found that it is all about personal taste. For example, I love a lot of fresh basil with my lemon zest, however my husband prefers just a touch. Also if you are making small batches you may need a teaspoon of an ingredient rather than a tablespoon. I suggest adding a little bit at a time until you reach the perfect combination! For my savory butters I also added a touch a kosher salt.
 
I hope that these combinations inspire you to create your own delicious compound butters!
 
Here are my favorite combinations below!
 
 
I love the combination of lemon zest and fresh basil from my garden. They create a delicious and fresh flavor combination that works well on everything from a baguette to a roasted chicken!
 
 
 Roasted Garlic and Rosemary is my husband's favorite! I roast a head of garlic in the oven, extract the garlic and let it cool in a dish before I add it to my butter.
 
 
My favorite way to serve my cinnamon and honey butter is on my husband's homemade cornbread while it is still warm from the oven.  
 
 
Once you have created your compound butters I suggest rolling them in plastic wrap or parchment paper and placing them in the refrigerator to chill for at least 30 minutes to an hour before serving. They make a wonderful addition to any holiday table! 
 
 I hope that you have a very Happy Thanksgiving with your family and friends! Peace and Love always!

Friday, November 21, 2014

Recipe: Grandma's Cornbread

Grandma's Cornbread
Circa 1950's


           Today I am bringing you a recipe that is very near and dear to our hearts and has been passed down on my husband’s side of the family for generations. I always look forward to the fall and winter months and it is without a doubt my favorite time of the year. When the temperatures start dropping and the nights grow longer I turn to my favorite comfort foods for dinner. I am a very lucky girl and was blessed to not only marry a wonderful man, but one that loves to cook! He makes a killer pot roast, delicious stew, amazing chili and the dish that goes with them all…cornbread. It seems like we are making a batch every week when the temperatures start dropping. With Thanksgiving approaching I thought that there wouldn’t be a better time than to share this wonderful recipe!  It is delicious on its own and makes an amazing stuffing for Thanksgiving…at least in our family stuffing has always included good ole’ Texas cornbread.


          This recipe was passed down from Chris’s mom from his wonderful grandmother.  She grew up in Depression-era Oklahoma and it was always on the table at family gatherings.  Chris borrowed his recipe from his Grandma’s, although he does admit that the honey and sugar were later additions because “Grandma would never have made ‘sweet’ cornbread.”  I must confess that I love the sweet additions! Please enjoy this wonderful family heirloom recipe with you own loved ones this Thanksgiving!

Chris's grandmother is located on the 1st row 3rd from right with the doll

     Here is a little food for thought on this traditional southern dish to share with your friends and family this holiday season. Corn was in America long before Columbus sailed the ocean blue and was a staple for many Native Americans. When new settlers arrived in America they had to “make do” with food sources that were available to them and corn happened to be one of the most prominent. While European settlers had traditionally used finely ground wheat for their breads, anything “fine” was in short supply. Therefore they turned to corn or as it was sometimes known, maize.  John F Mariani wrote “Native Americans roasted their corn and ground it into meal to make cakes, bread, and porridges…The new cereal was precious and helped early settlers to survive those first harsh years…Before long uniquely American dishes were being developed,” It would later go on to be called cornbread and become everyday fare. However, many colonists were not thrilled with the wheat substitute, and viewed any form of bread made with corn instead of wheat a sad paste of despair.

          When settlers arrived in Texas in the early 1800’s (including Grandma’s great-great grandparents) corn was one of the first crops they planted and used it to feed their families and their animals. Over the years it has gone by many names including corn pone, johhny cakes, hoe cakes, and spoon bread. Today is no longer considered a sad day when you have fresh and warm cornbread with your meal! Please enjoy!  

Saturday, November 1, 2014

Recipe: Amas Veritas

Amas Veritas
Circa: 2014
 
 
 
       For my final Halloween cocktail recipe I thought I would just do something fun! It's a delicious and refreshing recipe that is perfect for All Hallow's Eve bewitching theme but could go great in spring, as well! Since the Voodoo Queen represented the more mysterious side of witchcraft, this cocktail represents the lighter, romantic and feminine, side found in Practical Magic. One of my favorite scenes in the film is when a young Sally Owens conjures up a  true-love spell known as Amas Veritas to protect her from falling in love. I was so inspired that I wanted to create my own magical cocktail.
 
 
 
         I began by researching herbs and ingredients that would not only be delicious but could bring one luck in love. Luckily, all I had to do was turn to my own garden and neighborhood. I adore rosemary and always have it growing in our garden since it is one one of my favorites and I have plenty on hand.  My next inspiration is from my own neighborhood in the form of locally grown honey. 
 
        Together, rosemary  and honey have traditionally been considered to have magical properties. They are both sacred elements to Aphrodite, the Greek goddess of love and beauty. They symbolize femininity, and an old saying says ,"where rosemary flourishes, the woman rules." Although my husband questions that saying, rosemary is also supposed to only grow in a home garden if a women is present.  And on a more practical level, rosemary's fragrance is said to enhance memory and help retain youth.  Of course, I had to work it into a cocktail.
 
       Honey also has magical qualities of it's own and can be used to sweeten someone's feelings for you. It is believed that if you pour honey into a jar or saucer on top of a piece of paper containing someone's name and then light a candle, that person's relationship with you will grow and possible evolve into love. Honey is also used in spells to bind items together, even friends and couples.
 
 
Due to their magical properties Rosemary and Honey are a perfect combination! While honey will sweeten someone's thoughts of you, rosemary will make you unforgettable. This spellbounding cocktail is designed to do both. It's blend of herbs, sweetness, and citrus make for a delicious and refreshing concoction.
 
     I hope that you had a wonderfully bewitching Halloween this year and remember...

Always,
throw spilled salt over your left shoulder
keep rosemary by your garden gate
plant lavender for luck
and fall in love whenever you can