Oct 042012
 

Baking Basics and Beyond: Learn These Simple Techniques and Bake Like a Pro
by Pat Sinclair

With the demise of home economics in the school system, many adults have no baking experience at all, relying on dreary store-bought baked goods and artificial mixes to satisfy their cravings. Baking Basics and Beyond allows even absolute novices to prepare a wide array of delicious, healthy breads, cakes, cookies, pies, and more. In a warm, reassuring manner, Pat Sinclair leads beginning bakers step-by-step through each recipe, thoroughly explaining each technique and direction.

Still free? Click Here to find out!

Continue reading »

Oct 022012
 


FREE Farmhouse Kitchen Recipes: Cracking Crock-Pot Meals: (Stews, casseroles and other Delicious Slow Cooker Recipes)

FREE Farmhouse Kitchen Recipes: Cracking Crock-Pot Meals: (Stews, casseroles and other Delicious Slow Cooker Recipes)
By F. A. Paris
[Kindle Edition]
Publication Date: September 28, 2012
Length: 73 pages

With Autumn upon us, and Winter creeping up, the weather is perfect for some heart-warming scents that permeate the home while the most sensational meals slow cook all day long. Continue reading »

Sep 262012
 

Fitz-All Set of 2 Replacement Pot Knobs, Wide – Click Here! – I just bought these pot knobs and now I wonder why it took me so long! I melted the handle on my crock pot years ago and it was a pain to grab it in order to lift the lid. I couldn’t find a replacement knob for the Rival Crock pot, so everytime I used my crockpot (maybe once or twice a month), I would take a screwdriver and unscrew the knob on my dutch oven and screw it onto my crock pot. At least I was fortunate to have another knob that fit. Continue reading »

Sep 222012
 

I’ve added a new kitchen gadget to my blog post, “My kitchen gadgets, utensils and bakeware recommendations” at http://susans-musings.com/my-kitchen-gadgets-utensils-and-bakeware-recommendations.

Image of OXO Good Grips Potato Ricer

OXO Good Grips Potato Ricer

I had never even heard of a potato ricer until I saw it on Breaking Bad…lol! Walter’s wife, Skyler, was being complimented on her smooth and creamy mashed potatoes by her sister, Marie. Skyler said she used a potato ricer.

Then, one day I was looking at a recipe for hash browns. One woman said she just shredded the potatoes and then pressed the moisture out with paper towels. Her husband said they were too mushy that way, and that he preferred to use the potato ricer because it squeezed out the excess water. Well, I found the website, and here’s how the conversation went: Continue reading »

Sep 022012
 

Speedy Suppers Cookbook: Simple meals for a family-on-the-go, all in about 30 minutes or less! Gooseberry Patch [Kindle Edition]

Speedy Suppers Cookbook: Simple meals for a family-on-the-go, all in about 30 minutes or less!
By Gooseberry Patch
Kindle Edition
Book Length: 224 pages

Simple meals for busy families! Speedy Suppers cookbook features delicious dishes that are ready in 30 minutes or
less like baked ziti supreme, quick-as-lightning enchiladas and easy, breezy caramel brownies.

From the Author
Enjoy this recipe from Speedy Suppers Cookbook .
Continue reading »

May 132012
 

I’m not a baker. Very rarely do I make a cake from scratch, and I could never make a pie crust. I’m a Duncan Hines or Betty Crocker kind of gal, and I buy my pie crusts from the freezer section of the grocery store. When I bake, I never have the right ingredients on hand. I either use the wrong kind of shortening or margarine instead of butter. I don’t knead enough or I knead too much. I just don’t have the patience to go through all of the steps it takes to make a nice loaf of bread or pie crust.

Today, I was in the mood for my sausage gravy and biscuits. I bought the sausage, but I forgot to get the biscuits. I usually buy Pillsbury Grands refrigerated biscuits.

Now, I could have just made toast but I thought I’d try to make biscuits. Really, it can’t be that difficult. I have flour, and that’s all it really takes to make biscuits, right? Continue reading »

Jan 232012
 

We moved to Tennessee almost two years ago, and I hadn’t made any cookies since I lived in Fort Lauderdale, Florida.

Every time my husband would stop at Food City (once or twice a month) here in Knoxville, he’d buy chocolate chip and M&M cookies from the bakery. I have to admit, they are delicious! But every time, I would say to myself, my cookies are way better!

You see, when I made cookies in Florida, they came out great. Nice and plump, not flat! Granted, some cookies are meant to be flat or thin, but not my Nestle Tollhouse Chocolate Chip Cookies. They came out perfect. Nice and plump, and oh, so delicious!

So, over the Christmas holiday I decided to make chocolate chip and M&M cookies. Using the best tollhouse chocolate chip cookie recipe from Nestles, I made a couple of big batches of cookies, adding M&Ms to half of them. My cookies came out flat! What the heck??? That never happened before. They look and taste okay but they are too thin and will fall apart.
Continue reading »

Nov 222011
 

 

Thanksgiving is going to be very different this year. First of all, there are only the three of us, my husband, Bob, our 17-year old son, Patrick, and me. This will be our first Thanksgiving in Tennessee. We have lived here for almost two years, but last year we spent Thanksgiving with Bob’s dad and sister in Cincinnati. That was the first time we’d seen them in over four years.

Still, I plan on buying a big turkey for just the three of us. I absolutely, positively love leftover turkey sandwiches and all the great turkey dishes I have learned to make over the years, so I like to have extra. Even if I weren’t cooking at home this year, I would have cooked a turkey just for the leftovers. Our extended family are pretty spread out this year, so the three of us, plus Ibis the cat, will be staying home to enjoy our first Thanksgiving in Tennessee.


Continue reading »

Nov 012011
 

Pot Roast with Onion GravyThis chuck roast recipe is by far the best I have ever had. What makes this so easy is that the beginning high temperature sears the meat right in the roasting pan without using the stove top, and the delicious gravy practically makes itself while the meat is roasting.

Originally, I made this pot roast without the vegetables in the pot. I served it with mashed potatoes, green beans and dinner rolls. However, in the photo on the left I added baby carrots and celery to the pot, and served it with boiled potatoes. (See below for an updated version, which includes cooking a frozen chuck roast! (9/28/13)

Ingredients:
3-4 lbs chuck roast
1 tablespoon brown sugar
salt and pepper for rub
1 large onion, peeled, whole or quartered

Gravy:
5 cups water
1/2 cup flour
1 1/2 tsp salt
1/4 tsp black pepper

Directions:
Rub all sides of roast with salt, pepper, and brown sugar.
Place the meat into a roasting pan, uncovered.
Roast at 450 degrees for 15 minutes, turn roast over and roast for another 15 minutes. Remove from pan and put aside.

Chuck RoastThis is my new lasagna pan, and it’s great for pot roast – I love it!

In roasting pan, whisk together 5 cups of water, flour, 1 1/2 tsp salt and 1/4 tsp pepper. Place roast back in roasting pan and pour some of the water mixture on top. Add onion. Reduce the oven temperature to 300 degrees and roast for 3 hours (preferred method), or at 350 degrees for 2 hours, turning roast once at the halfway point of the cooking time. Unless the roast is completely covered with water/gravy, I would suggest covering the pan at this point to avoid the top from drying out.

Chop the onion into the gravy before serving. The kids don’t like onions, so I reserved some of the gravy without them.

Serve with mashed potatoes, biscuits and your choice of vegetable.

This time, I added baby carrots and celery to the roasting pan in the beginning, after browning the roast, and served with mashed potatoes.

Everyone raved about it, but I’d still prefer to cook it without the vegetables. Also, the gravy cooked out more than I would have liked. I placed the roasting pan over two burners and whisked in more water and flour. Keep an eye on the gravy and add more water or beef broth an hour before it’s done if it cooks out too much. You want at least two cups of gravy when finished.

Printable recipe without images:

9/29/13

Have you ever cooked a FROZEN roast?

This was one of those days when I was all prepared to season my chuck roast and sear it in the oven. Except for one thing. It was still FROZEN SOLID!! I was thinking that the roast was sitting in my refrigerator and completely thawed out. I had forgotten that it was only last night when I took it out of the freezer and placed it in the refrigerator. My fridge runs cold, so it would normally take a few days to thaw out a 4-lb. roast. Not only was the roast frozen, but I got a late start. It was almost 2 PM. I still had a good four to five hours before dinner, so I should have enough time (I hope). Unfortunately, there have been times when my roast would seem to cook all day and just never be tender enough. It has taken as much as five hours before. You can’t always be sure with cheaper cuts of meat.

I quickly went to the Internet to see how to cook a frozen chuck roast. To my surprise, I found many responses. The one I chose was where a woman seasoned and placed the roast in a 450 degree oven, which is what I always do at first, anyway. She continued to roast at the high temperature for several hours, but she was cooking a 10-12 lb. shoulder roast, and my chuck roast was just less than 4 lbs.

Since it was frozen, I skipped the rub in the beginning. I put it in the oven at 2:15 Pm. After 15 minutes on each side at 450, I stuck a fork in it and it was completely defrosted! I figured it had only been 45 minutes since I began to prep, so I really hadn’t lost that much time. I removed the browned meat and set it aside. I then added the salt, pepper and brown sugar to both sides.

In the roasting pan, I whisked together the water, flour, 1 1/2 tsp salt and 1/4 tsp pepper. I placed the roast back in the roasting pan and scooped some of the water mixture on top. I then added the onion.

This time, I decided to add baby carrots and celery to the pot. I lowered the oven to 350 and set the timer for 90 minutes. It was now 2:45 PM, so it looked like it would be done in time for dinner (I had figured dinner to be between 6 and 7 at the latest). I will see how far along it is and decide whether to continue at that temp. I just don’t want the roast to dry out. Even though it’s sitting in five cups of water, it will evaporate and I need to keep an eye on it.

4:15 PM. Internal temperature was 150F, but since it’s a chuck roast it still has a ways to go before it’s tender enough. I need to be able to cut it with a fork. The tops of the meat and veggies are singed, so I gave it a good stir, turned the meat, and covered it with foil. Back in the oven for another hour or so.

5:30 PM. Checked pot roast for tenderness. Will wait until 6 PM to start potatoes.

6:00 PM. Peeled and quartered russet potatoes, and boiled in a separate pot for 20 minutes.

6:30 PM. Removed from oven and placed chuck roast on large platter, surrounded with potatoes, carrots, onions and celery. Served with gravy and warm dinner rolls.

Chalk this one up to another wonderful Sunday dinner.

Family Rating: Five Smileys

Bon appétit!


Oct 142011
 

This is one of my family favorites. I usually make them the way my mother did, with Heinz Homestyle Savory Beef gravy. Campbell’s Beef Gravy is good, too, or just use your favorite. These boneless pork loins are so tender you can cut them with a fork. It’s simple and delicious!

 

Bon appétit!

Family Rating: Five Smileys