Monday, March 28, 2022

Cool As A Cucumber

Open Face Cucumber Sandwiches

I thought I was the only one. The only one who had never made these. When Joanne asked me to make open face cucumber sandwiches for a funeral reception, I told her I would be happy to...if she would tell me how. I had never made any. Or even eaten any. What!?! She was astounded that I had never had a cucumber sandwich. She told me what she mixed together, but like many excellent cooks, she didn't have any measurements to share.

I googled and found as many variations as there are cucumber sandwich makers. But it did give me a starting place. Of course, I called had to call Joanne back and ask what kind of bread she used. I was pretty sure it wasn't the pumpernickel that many recipes called for. She told me to buy the cheapest white bread I saw at the store. The bread is just a base—this sandwich is all about the good stuff on top.

So I bought a gosh awful amount of cream cheese and loads of fresh dill, too many cucumbers and four loaves of bread and then did what Joanne told me to do in the beginning—mix the spread until it tasted right. I did start with one of the google recipes that used 8-oz cream cheese and 1/3 cup of mayonnaise. (I had mixed 3 blocks of cream cheese and 1 cup mayo.) Too much mayo for me. So I added another block of cream cheese to my big bowl. That changed the proportion to 1/4 cup mayo per block of cream cheese. Much better. Daddy-O tasted it after I finished and said a little more garlic would help. In went another pinch. I thought it needed a little more dill and chives. Just a little. And then I stopped. 

I had not planned on posting this recipe because I figured everyone else had been making them for years. (How had I missed these?) But so many people helping in the kitchen that day said, "You are going to post this recipe, aren't you?" "Please put this recipe on your blog." And several asked the same questions I had asked. "What kind of bread did you use?" "How much cream cheese do I need for one loaf of bread?" "Can you make these ahead?"


I'm writing down how I made these for all of us who need guidance. Tweak away.

OPEN FACED CUCUMBER SANDWICHES

1 large loaf sliced white sandwich bread

8-oz block cream cheese, softened

1/4 cup mayonnaise

2 teaspoons chopped fresh dill

1 teaspoon chopped fresh chives

Pinch of garlic powder

Pinch of salt

1 long English cucumber (also called seedless—these are usually shrink wrapped in plastic)

With a hand mixer, thoroughly blend cream cheese and mayo. Stir in herbs and seasonings. Taste and adjust the herbs and garlic to suit you. This can be done the day before.

Slice the cucumber very thin. (I used a mandolin...very carefully!) Spread the slices on paper towels and let the towels absorb excess moisture while you cut the bread.

With a 2-inch cookie or biscuit cutter, cut circles (2 per slice) from the bread. Spread each round with the cream cheese mixture. Top each round with a cucumber slice. Garnish with a sprig of dill.  

Yield: about 40 rounds


Helpful hints:

*Reminder:  3 teaspoons = 1 tablespoon. So basically you use one tablespoon of fresh herbs per 8-oz cream cheese. You might rather use all dill. And maybe add a little grated onion.

*Yes, you do need to taste and adjust after mixing. I added a little more dill and chives and another pinch of garlic powder to my giant bowl of cream cheese mix.

*One flat plastic pack of fresh dill from the produce section is enough to mix in and to garnish with. I bought too much.

*The plastic top from a can of Bakers Joy or PAM is about the right size and can be used as a cutter if you don't have a 2-inch one.

*I picked out the largest cucumbers so that the slices were about the same size as the bread rounds.

*The skin on these cucumbers is very thin so peeling isn't necessary. If you used other cucumbers with waxed skin, you might want to peel them.

*This could also be made on round water crackers. We did that with the leftover cream cheese spread. Delicious.

*Store these appetizers covered in the refrigerator until serving time.

*Two 8-oz blocks of cream cheese mixed should be enough spread for 3 loaves of bread, maybe 4. We used rounds from 4 loaves. I mixed one block per loaf and have lots of spread left over. Which we have enjoyed snacking on.

*Save the crusts left from cutting and let them dry out. Whirl them in a food processor to make bread crumbs for later.

*I bought home 4 little rounds that were left when it was all over. We ate them the next night and they were still pretty good. I wouldn't make them too far ahead, but they hold up better than I thought.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

This funeral service for a dear friend was truly a celebration of a long life well-lived. So many friends came to honor his memory. The church was full. After the service, the church hall was crowded with people coming together to remember this fine man. 

Here in the South we tend to show our love for the family with food, whether it is delivered to the house or served at church. So on a Saturday afternoon we kept the food trays filled as we listened to shared stories and laughter. We saw lots of hugs and smiles mingled with tears. And I thought how good it is to be in a community that knows how to care for each other. 










Friday, March 18, 2022

Finally...A New Recipe

Italian Turkey & Veggie Skillet 

When your body starts craving vegetables, it probably means you should have upped your veg intake a couple of weeks ago. We usually eat a lot of vegetables here but lately things have gone a little sideways. Life happens.  

And there were vegetables in the fridge left over from Little Sister's pasta salad making last weekend that needed to be used pronto. I still had a half a large zucchini, half a large yellow squash and some diced onion, washed and bagged.

Mommy and J-Daddy did most of the cooking last weekend and they left me a package of ground turkey that didn't get used. I found one can of fire-roasted tomatoes in my pantry...pretty sure I bought that can by accident. My normal diced tomatoes are plain or seasoned with garlic/basil/oregano. I needed a quick trip to the grocery store this morning and picked up a box of baby spinach to finish the recipe.

When this recipe popped up on my Instagram feed a couple of days ago,  there was no question about making it. It basically used up everything here that I needed to cook before it wound up in the trash. Fresh things don't last forever. This was one of those recipes that you know won't be bad, but the big surprise was that it went far beyond "not bad" category  to the "really, really good" category. 


This is how I made it. So easy. So quick. So delicious. 

ITALIAN  TURKEY ANDJ VEGGIE SKILLET

1 medium zucchini (I used 1/2 of a large one)
1 medium yellow squash (again, I had 1/2 a large one)
1-lb. ground turkey (we like dark ground turkey)
1/2 onion, diced
2 tablespoons olive oil
2 teaspoons minced jarred garlic (or 4 cloves fresh, minced)
3/4 teaspoon garlic powder
3/4 teaspoon dried oregano
3/4 teaspoon paprika
1/2 teaspoon salt
freshly ground black pepper, to taste
14.5-oz can fire roasted diced tomatoes, with juice
3 cups fresh baby spinach

Quarter the zucchini and squash lengthwise and cut into thick slices. Heat 1 tablespoon oil in skillet over med-high heat. Once hot, add the squashes and let cook on one side for 2-3 minutes without stirring, until it browns. Flip it over and cook the other side for 1-2 minutes. Remove from pan and set aside.

Reduce heat to medium and add turkey, onion and minced garlic to skillet. Cook, breaking it up, until turkey shows no pink. Drain off any liquid. 

Sprinkle with dry spices and stir to coat. Add the can of tomatoes (not drained) and bring to simmer. Stir in the zucchini, squash and fresh spinach. Cook until spinach wilts, about 3-5 minutes.

You can served this over rice, pasta, spaghetti squash or do what we did and serve it up in a bowl and top it with a little parmesan. I am so happy that we have enough left for another meal.


If you are on Instagram, you can find the original recipe from @easyfamilyrecipes. Her measurements are a little different than mine because she used more turkey. Around here ground turkey is sold in 1-pound packages, so I adjusted my seasonings accordingly. I think I have bookmarked about half of her recipes there. They are quick, easy and family friendly. When I dug a little deeper I found her blog with the original recipe, plus some awesome tips.

  • Yes. I did drain off the liquid from the turkey after browning. Sometimes I don't but this recipe needed that. 
  • Yes. I think the fire roasted tomatoes made a (good) difference in the flavors, although you could certainly use another kind.
  • No. I didn't measure 3/4 teaspoon precisely. Just don't fill up the 1 teaspoon measure all the way.
  • Yes. We will make this again for sure!






Monday, March 14, 2022

Kids In The Kitchen


Kids with sharp knives??? 
This might bring terror to their moms.
But with instruction and supervision they can be good to go.
Little Sister is 11 and is plenty old enough to use one.
Rest easy...I was supervising the entire time.


Everyone needs good knife skills unless they plan to eat out forever. 
 Little Sister and I worked on slicing and chopping techniques over the weekend.
Our favorite pasta salad was a great place to start.
With so many vegetables to slice and dice, she got plenty of practice.


Then it was quick and simple to stir the vegetables, pasta and dressing together.


Cooking is also a good way to teach about caring.
To teach about being helpful. About being a kind, thoughtful human.
Taking food to someone is one of our favorite ways to say "I care."


Over the weekend my kitchen was also a science lab.


Little Sister is studying plant and animal cells.


And these cakes that she baked by herself represent the cells.


And all the candy and frosting made up the call components.


When the "cells" were done, she labeled all the parts
–nucleus, ribosome, mitochondria, etc.—
and made a video presentation for her class about the project.


Baby Girl had her turn in the kitchen, too, and baked banana muffins. Sadly there are no photos because I was her baking coach. She did all the measuring and even used a hand mixer all by herself and filled the muffin tin. She is still small enough that she has to stand on a stool to cook. When the muffins were done, they were packed and delivered, too. 

You've probably seen these recipes here before. They are both tried and true. But I'm sharing them again. Who knows when your house will be the one full of grandchildren who want to cook? 


GARDEN PASTA SALAD

1 (16-oz) box of pasta -- rotini, bowtie, or penne 
5 cups of chopped fresh vegetables*
fresh parsley, chopped (optional)
1 (15-oz) bottle Italian salad dressing (my fav is the Wishbone brand)

Cook the pasta according to package directions. Rinse under cold water. Drain well. Put pasta and vegetables and parsley into a large bowl. Add salad dressing and Salad Supreme Seasoning. Toss gently until mixed well. Cover. Refrigerate for at least 4 hours, or until ready to serve. I like to make it a day ahead.

*We used carrot, red pepper, yellow pepper, corn, broccoli, red onion, celery, zucchini, yellow squash, cucumber and cherry tomatoes. It doesn't take much of each veggie. 

This recipe fills a 5-quart plastic container.




BANANA MUFFS

2 cups Bisquick baking mix
1/4 cup sugar
2 tablespoons butter, softened
1 egg
1 cup mashed very ripe bananas (2 to 3 medium)

Preheat oven to 400ยบ.
Combine baking mix, sugar, butter and egg. Beat vigorously for 30 seconds. Fold in bananas.
Evenly divide between 12 greased (or line with cupcake papers) muffin cups. Bake 15-18 minutes. until lightly browned.
While warm, you can drizzle with Thin Icing and sprinkle with chopped nuts, if desired. (The girls like them better without the nuts.)

Thin Icing: Blend 1 cup confectioners sugar and 2 tablespoons water until smooth.

Sometimes I make 36 mini muffins instead. Bake those for 12-15 minutes. 




Wednesday, March 2, 2022

Marinated Turkey Tenderloins

Marinated Turkey Tenderloin


I hate to say it, but my kitchen has been ignored for quite some time now. What a crazy couple of months we've had. Not bad crazy, but not-my-normal-schedule crazy. Last night I figured I had better cook something for Daddy-O before he trades me in for a new model. I had been gone for a good part of the day so I made one of the easiest meals I know how to cook. 

This turkey tenderloin is such a quick main dish. And to my total surprise, when I looked for the recipe here on the blog...it wasn't here. I've been making this for years. I think maybe the recipe was on a package of turkey tenderloins ages ago. 

Before I get to the recipe, let me share a couple of photos from our weekend. We drove back to visit the youngest grandchildren and to let Daddy-O meet his first grandson. 


They had several good man to man conversations.


And we were well entertained by his big sister. Her hospitality skills are strong.


So before I climb back in my car this morning to head back there (these early days require a little more help) let me get this recipe safely posted on the blog. I know some of you use the recipe index here as much as I do. For me it's like an online version of the old plastic recipe box I used for years. But this one I can reference when I'm  standing in the grocery store!

MARINATED TURKEY TENDERLOINS

1 pkg (about 1 lb) fresh turkey breast tenderloin

marinade:
1/4 cup olive oil or vegetable oil
1 lemon, sliced (seeds removed)
1 teaspoon dried oregano
1/4 teaspoon garlic powder

Put oil and herbs into a heavy zip top plastic bag and mix. Add the turkey tenderloins and lemon slices. (I make sure there are lemon slices on both sides of the turkey.) Seal bag and turn to coat the tenderloins. Refrigerate 2 hours or up to 24 hours.

Place turkey on a broiler pan. Move oven rack to top of turkey is 5 inches from heat. Broil small tenderloins (4 per 1-lb pkg) about 10 minutes, turning once. Broil large tenderloins (2 per 1-lb pkg) about 20 minutes, turn once or until juices are clear.  

Serves 2-4


Last night Daddy-O cooked these on the grill for the first time. No messy broiler pan to clean up! They were delicious. But every other time I've made this, I've used the broiler. So it works either way.







 

Wednesday, February 16, 2022

Meet The New Little Man

Baby brother modeling the cap and blanket I knitted for him.


I'm back home but my brain is too tired 
to actually write something that makes sense. 
(How do young moms do it?)
So I'll share a very few photos from the past four weeks.


Instead of taking any knitting with me 
as I usually do when I'm away for a while, 
I packed yarn and a hook instead and started a blanket. 
And I had lots of help from Little Lady.


Little Lady was always ready to help.
She knows when a paci is needed 
and she knows how to poke it in his mouth.


This new baby brother has been thoroughly studied and adored 
and has survived being loved on hard.


We are thrilled to welcome a boy into our gaggle of grandchildren. 








Monday, January 24, 2022

Welcome Baby Boy!


 Taking a break while I’m on a true “grandmother gig.”  Little Lady has a baby brother. After four granddaughters we have a grandson! I’ll be back here in a few weeks. 





Saturday, January 15, 2022

Making Up For Lost Time

Farm fun.

We've had extra family in residence since a few days before Christmas. What a glorious time we've had! After so many months of not seeing grandchildren (because of Covid) and more months of only seeing them at a distance (because of Covid) we actually have been in the same house together for weeks. Making up for lost time. 

We have tried to cram in all activities and projects and activities we haven't been able to do in a long time. We sang Christmas carols around the campfire on Christmas Eve, complete with 3-part harmony. It's nice to be in a family of musicians. We celebrated Christmas and birthdays. We've read so many bedtime stories. The girls put on plays and puppet shows. They've had family hikes to the river.

Enchiladas Con Carne from The Defined Dish.

Mommy and J-Daddy have done most of the cooking the entire time, so we have feasted. (I pulled out the bigger jeans this morning.) I should have made photos of the wonderful meals to share with you. But I focused on making memories instead of photos. (Hint: Many of their recipes. including this one, come from The Defined Dish cookbook.) 

Racing down the hay bales.

The not-so-little-anymore girls had great fun playing on the hay bales in the pasture behind the house. Climbing up, running across the tops, jumping from bale to bale. The best kind of farm fun. They also helped Daddy-O feed the cows which includes tractor driving.

Notice the baby blanket cape?
I crocheted it for her mom.

Those same girls have baked. Little Sister made applesauce muffins last week. And this week Baby Girl baked blueberry muffins all by herself. Except for putting them in and out of the hot oven. She did the measuring and mixing. Grandmothers will let little people do more things than the mamas do. So what if part of the ingredients land on the floor? 


They have both worked on yarny things. Little Sister knows how to knit, but I've been surprised that Baby Girl is the one who seems to love needlework best. (And you know that may totally flip next week and Big Sister will be the yarn lover.) She's a whiz with a knitting spool. I got a knitted bracelet for Christmas. And about two weeks ago, I taught her to crochet. Yes. She's left handed. She was quick to learn. At age 7, she bounces between projects and activities, but she would come back to this again and again.

I had so much fun showing her how to get started that I thought maybe I should try a crochet project again. It has been decades since I crocheted anything. Back in the day, I crocheted afghans for everyone. That was before I knew much about knitting. And definitely before I though about keeping a record of all the ones I made. Photographing every thing we did was not a thing. But there were many many afghans. 

Baby afghan I made for Mommy 40 years ago.

I have never known much about crocheting. Just enough to made a ripple afghan, also known as a chevron blanket. which was popular in the 1970s. (You can find a more formal pattern with tutorial for a blanket similar to mine at this website. Look at her gorgeous colors.)  I made striped ones in college colors. I made ones in gradient stripes. I made them in smaller sizes in variegated baby colors. Some were made of beautiful wool yarn. But many were made of the lowly workhorse yarn Red Heart. It's all acrylic. And it lasts forever. I still have one wool afghan here...the first one I ever made. And I've mended holes in it so many times. But these acrylic ones? They look almost new.

Little Lady taking a pretend nap this morning.

Little Lady loves to snuggle up under this old ripple afghan I made for her mommy over 20 years ago. It's been tossed in the washer and dryer over and over. I imagine this afghan will be around long after I'm gone. We have a few baby afghans that were made for Mommy by neighbors who were contemporaries of my mother-in-law who would be almost 120 if she were still alive. Those old blankets are still beautiful and still in use.

Lots and lots of new yarn.

So with all of these memories and thoughts of crochet floating through my head this week, I ordered a boat load of Red Heart yarn to make another afghan. Baby Girl looked at all the yarn and declared, "It will take you YEARS to make a blanket." She might be right. But that's okay. 

Ripple Afghan made for Jessica about 20 years ago.

Here is the pattern that I've used over and over. I still have the sheet of notebook paper where I wrote down the directions so very long ago. It's not the best written one, but I managed with it for years. Because I didn't know the directions could have been better. 

RIPPLE AFGHAN

Hook: size H

Yarn: 12 skeins Red Heart (12 x 260 yds)


Still working from this pattern, written on a sheet of notebook paper over 40 years ago:


Chain 225 sts. Turn.  Skip 2 ch st.  *Sc in next 6 ch st, always working in the back of each stitch .  Make 3 sc in next ch st.  Sc in next 6 chain st. Skip 2 ch st.*  Repeat for length of chain.  Chain 1 at end of row. Turn. Skip 2 ch st. Repeat pattern for remaining rows.  



This is how the side edge looks if you use my very old pattern.
It's not a straight edge.




And guess what? There is a major winter storm predicted to move in tonight! So these folks are staying a little longer. The fun continues.