Peaches and Cream in Pistachio Phyllo Cups – Summer Bliss on a Plate

September 1, 2011 in Desserts

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I just love peach time of year. My favorite way to eat peaches is to hold a ripe juicy peach over the sink and eat it while it drips from my elbows – not even worrying about wiping the sweet juiciness off my face.

This recipe just might be a contender for my second favorite way: soft creamy peachy middle and crunchy phyllo outside. What could be yummier than that? I can’t think of a single thing.

I am blessed to live in the Rocky Mountains, where peaches are perfection this time of year. Fresh peach pie is one of the best things about summer.

But then I saw this idea in Fine Cooking magazine, and, yes, I still get an actual paper magazine delivered to my home mailbox by an actual mailman. I know. Weird.

These little phyllo cups would be so yummy for so many things – anything that is pie-worthy, for example.

I made my own creamy fluff instead of using ice cream. And I used butter and sugar brushed between the phyllo layers.

CONSIDER YOURSELF WARNED:  this was a huge hit at our house. YOU MAY NEED A 12-STEP DESSERT ADDICTION PROGRAM AFTER EATING THIS DESSERT.

Happy Peach Time, Y’all.

– posted by Donna

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Lemon Pie Parfait Recipe – A Quick and Easy No-Bake Update of Grandma’s Lemon Meringue Pie Recipe

August 8, 2011 in Desserts

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Lemon Pie Parfaits - An Update of Grandma's Lemon Meringue Pie

My grandma’s lemon meringue pie was astonishingly good. It is one of my very favorite food memories. As a small child, I hoped and prayed that my grandma would make it every single time I went to visit.

It was her signature dish, and her secret to the powerful lemony tang was kept under wraps until a few weeks ago, when my mom entrusted me with the secret. Here it is for all our Apron Strings friends: when Grandma made the lemon curd for the pie, she let the lemon rind simmer with the curd in the pan and then discarded it before spooning the curd into the pie shell.

So, with the secret unveiled I was longing for that bright fresh taste. But, OK, it’s confession time: I’m not good at baking pies. Oh sure, I suffer through it during the holidays and make the same pies every year, which are a hit, but mostly because my family loves me and forgives my baking inadequacies.

So, I thought, since the best part of the pie is the lemon curd – why not make that and then serve it in a parfait with crumbled shortbread cookies and whipped cream?! And, I just zested one of the lemons and added the zest to the curd for that same bright, lemony taste.

I am proud to report that my creative avoidance of baking has once again paid off in a big way. These parfaits take minutes to put together, they don’t heat up your house like pie baking does, and they have that same powerful lemon tang that my grandma’s pies had. So, let me recap: Easy, Quick, Flavorful. A culinary trifecta!

The perfect way to end a summer day!

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Grapefruit Gelato in Five Minutes: Your New Favorite Summer Dessert Recipe

July 11, 2011 in Desserts

Easy home made gelato

Say gel-ahhhhh-to

It’s officially the dog days, and you have a summer soiree to attend tomorrow. “What can I bring?” you asked. “Oh, just a little something for dessert,” they replied. But the very thought of baking something in this heat makes you deflate with fatigue. You still want to bring something homecrafted – some kind of ice cream would be great, but you don’t have an ice cream maker. What to do?

You spend a grand total of 5 minutes prepping this mock-gelato, that’s what. And then you’ll make it again and again and again. Really. Because it really is only 4 ingredients,  it really does only take 5 to mix it up, you really don’t need an ice cream maker, and, best of all, it really does work.

I know it may sound a little weird, but trust us. We swear it will surprise you. Something about the way that the acid in the citrus combines with the fat in the cream (and yes, you must use cream; we tried it with half & half and it just didn’t work texture-wise, though the flavor was still a total delight) creates a perfect dense, creamy texture that is so akin to ‘real’ gelato, though the technique is very different.

The original called for lemon, which is equally delicious, but there’s something about the subtle tang of the grapefruit here that Donna and I both were tickled by – so creamy & subtly tangy. It’s also incredibly rich. And it truly is amazing how well the texture comes out without churning! The whole thing is a revelation.

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Red, White and Blueberry Cookie Tarts – An Easy Festive Dessert for Your Patriotic Fourth of July Feast

June 26, 2011 in Desserts, Oh My!

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Blueberry and Strawberry Topped Cookie Tarts

What’s better than cookies or fruit tarts? Cookies that are morphed into fruit tarts.

These pretty little cookie tarts are super easy to make and so festive! Isn’t it nice of Mother Nature to give us Americans strawberries, raspberries and blueberries just in time to create red, white and blue desserts? God Bless Mother Nature as well as America!

I used sugar cookies from a bakery, but if you want to make your own, so much the better. If you’re feeling a little more ambitious, you could make our Five Minute Homemade Puff pastry. No, we are not making this up: it really does take only five minutes of prep time from scratch.

Individual Tart Size Homemade Puff Pastry

The cream cheese frosting recipe (below) I used is my favorite all-time frosting that I have made in 30 years. It is light, fluffy and so flavorful. It really shouldn’t be called “frosting,” it should be called “fluff.” I use almond extract so as not to muddy the color, and almond is a delicious flavor with most any other dessert ingredient. It’s used sparingly here – one of those background flavors that makes you say “Hmmmm  . . . what’s in here???”

Happy Fourth Everyone!

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Foolproof Sorbet and the Amazing Trick That Makes It Work: Our Easy Strawberry Lemon Zest Summer Sorbet Recipe

June 9, 2011 in Desserts

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Strawberry Lemon Zest Sorbet

I have always been afraid of sorbet. Terrified, really.

I thought it was one of those seems easy but is really deceptively hard things to make. Like the Tarte Tatin of the frozen dessert world.

If you add too much sugar, your sorbet will be soupy. If you don’t add enough, it will freeze as hard as a rock. But, the thing is – you won’t know until it’s too late and is already in the freezer trying to freeze. . . . Thus causing you to run screaming from the room, wishing you had chosen to write an edgy political blog instead of a food blog. . . . but I digress . . . .

Dara at Cookin’ Canuck, a  fabulous food blogger I follow, recently did a sorbet that looked so delicious, I summoned my courage to attempt my own sorbet. After strolling around the world wide web,  I came across a kitchen trick/geeky science experiment to make a foolproof sorbet.

Zoe at Zoe Bakes, a chef turned food blogger, recently shared this amazing trick for making the perfect sorbet: an egg. Yes, a whole uncooked egg is they key. No, you don’t use it as an ingredient. You use it as a test to arrive at the perfect sugar/fruit juice combo. You put it in your un-frozen sorbet mixture and if it sinks, the sorbet needs more sugar. If it floats, just like the David Letterman WILL IT FLOAT gag, kitchen edition, that means your sorbet has the perfect sugar-to-juice ratio.

The great thing about knowing this trick is that you can make ANY kind of sorbet with this technique. Really, ANY juice can be made into this sorbet now that you know the floating egg trick. Basil-lemon juice sorbet? Sure. Blackberry-rosemary sorbet? No problem. ANY juice will work with this technique, so go ahead – live it up! Try your own flavor combos!

So, you just keep adding simple syrup to your juice until the egg finally floats! I love kitchen magic tricks!

Here’s how it looks when your sorbet is perfect:

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When your egg floats to the top, your mixture is perfect!

Never fear again – the perfect sorbet is just one floating egg away!

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No-Bake Nutella Chocolate Ice Box Cake Recipe – A Perfect Dessert for Hot Summer Days, Updated from My Childhood

May 26, 2011 in Desserts

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No-Bake Chocolate Nutella Ice Box Cake

My grandma’s ice box cake recipe is one of my favorite food memories.

I have lots of other happy memories of her as well.

My great grandma’s hair was a thing of beauty and amazement to me. When I was lucky enough to sleep over at her house, I just couldn’t wait until nighttime. She would sit at her dressing table surrounded by her pretty perfume bottles and soft horsehair brushes and ivory broaches. It was the 1960′s everywhere but in Alta’s bedroom, where it was still the 1920′s. She would take the combs out of her put-up hair and it would cascade down to her waist, soft, wavy and billowy like I just knew a mermaid’s hair would be.  Sometimes she even let me brush it, the biggest thrill of all. Softer than a dream, and shiny from the rainwater she saved to wash it in.

My Grandma Greenhaw loved us grand kids and we knew it by the way she let us “help” her. We sliced ripe summer tomatoes from the garden and arranged them fan-like on the plates. We peeled cucumbers and squash. And the biggest honor of all was helping with the Ice Box Cake.

It wasn’t a cake, really. It was graham crackers with whipped cream – layers and layers and layers until we ran out of crackers. Then, we stuck it in the Ice Box for what seemed like eons, waiting and waiting and waiting impatiently until it was soft and luscious and, well, cake-like. The way it works is that the moisture in the whipped cream softens the graham crackers and turns them into thin cake-like layers. It was a treat fit for a queen and her royal court. We giggled and ate so much our tummys hurt and then she read us stories until she began to nod her head and we all headed off to bed.

I decided to update Alta’s Ice Box Cake, using chocolate graham crackers, something she wouldn’t have dreamed of, and smeared with Nutella, also unknown to Alta, before slathering on the whipped cream. The flavors are richer than Alta’s, but the texture takes me right back to nights on her porch eating Ice Box Cake until we were sick. It’s the perfect “cake” for summertime, because there’s no baking required. No heating up your already steamy kitchen. And My! Oh My! is it luscious.

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Alta Frances Greenhaw - circa 1920 (above) and 1970 (below)

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Blue Ribbon Cheesecake: The Recipe That Started It All. Is Cooking in Our DNA?

May 8, 2011 in Contests and Carnivals and Roundups, Desserts

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Donna's Blue Ribbon Cheesecake - Shared After Our Reunion in 1999

“We wouldn’t be family if we didn’t exchange recipes, would we?”

Rewind to 1998. Just a little over 10 years ago. Not that long, in the grand scheme of things. The idea of even sharing a meal with my biological mother – let alone cooking with her, side by side, exchanging pointers and laughing, casual as can be – was a fantasy pipe dream. It seemed as farfetched as winning the lottery or marrying John Cusack. No sense bemoaning it, that was just the way my life turned out. I had plenty of other things to be thankful for, including a loving adoptive family.

Within a year, everything changed.

Most people my age remember exactly what they were doing on momentus days. July 20, 1969 – Americans first walked on the moon. November 22, 1963 – JFK was shot. Terrorists attack America – September 11, 2001. I am blessed to have another day as if it were yesterday: October 24, 1999, the day that I saw my 27-year-old daughter for the first time in 27 years.

It was, as you might guess, an overwhelming experience. I fell in love with Anne the minute I laid eyes on her at the airport. I was flooded with emotion, and I in turn wanted to flood Anne with love and warmth and acceptance and with me. An unexpected impulse came to me: SHARE RECIPES. And not just any old recipes: The good ones, the Blue-Ribbon Ones, and Yes! the cheesecake recipe.

Sharing my very best food with Anne was a tangible way of welcoming her to my life, to my family. It was a way of making our connection real. Making her a part of us. Nothing but the best was acceptable; hence, the Blue Ribbon Cheesecake recipe was the first to be shared.

I had always been proud of this recipe. It was made in the early 1980′s, when everyone was making the easy no-cook Jello-pudding refrigerator version of cheesecake in a graham cracker crust. I took great pride in making a baked Italian cheesecake taught to me by a fabulous Italian cook and neighbor of mine from Italy. I knew it was good, because I had entered it in the county fair and much to my amazement I won a Blue Ribbon in a competition among dozens of cheesecakes. So I knew it was worthy of sharing with Anne.

In making up for lost time between a birth mom and her daughter, there is no time for mediocre things. Only the ultimate, only the best cheesecake would be good enough for Anne. Good enough for Us. And so The Story of Us began.

– Text in italics by Donna

Within a few months of when we began communicating in earnest, we moved from handwritten letters to long, lingering phone calls to regular emails, getting to know each other little by little, story by story . . . and, eventually, bite by bite. And it was in one of those first emails that our first recipe exchange took place: Donna, writing the opening line of this post, shared the recipe for her cheesecake, which really did win a blue ribbon at a county fair. We connected powerfully, quickly and permanently, partly because of our shared love of cooking.

And now, through the modern miracle of the world wide web, we are privileged to share our journey and this family cheesecake recipe with you.

We’ll tell our stories as we go – not chronologically, for the most part, but over time you’ll get a sense of the whole. One of the things we love about blogging is that it is by its very nature a work in progress. So we”ll share our reunion, and talk about how we started connecting through food together. We’ll also talk about our individual stories, too, our personal histories with food and cooking and all the complexity therein – as well as sharing stuff that’s just plain delicious.

To formally extend our invitation to come along with us on this grand journey, we’re also starting with a giveaway kickoff. You’re gonna want in on this one.

Oh yeah.

Yup. So check it out here!

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No Joke – Strawberry Rhubarb Fool and Mock “Sushi” Sandwich Rolls for April Fool’s Day!

March 30, 2011 in Desserts, Entrees, Oh My!

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An Updated Version of a Classic English Dessert: Strawberry Rhubarb Fool

Food should be fun. And occasionally weird.

April 1 is a good day to try out weird and wacky foods. OK, I admit that the year I did styrofoam covered with frosting presented as a cake was a little much. And nobody really appreciated the ice cream cones I served up with a scoop of mashed potatoes instead. I was greeted with stunned silence and not chuckles. Why did my family not appreciate the hilarity of that?

So, this year I’m going for funny AND yummy. First, how about a good old fashioned “fool” dessert?

My great grandmother used “fool” as one of her go-to easy desserts. “Fruit Foole” is a 500-plus year old English recipe using crushed fruit and whipped cream. My grandmother was a true Lady in every sense of the word. She was of English heritage, so this classic English dessert was her in a dessert dish! All it is is whipped cream (I added a little Greek yogurt, too, to make the whipped cream more substantial), swirled with a fruit mixture.

I was trying to recreate my grandma’s rhubarb flavor. So, I bought a pint of strawberries and some rhubarb jam, which surprisingly I did find at the grocery store. I whirled them together in a food processor. This technique effortlessly recreates that slow-simmered fruit flavor! Superb! Then, I just swirled the fruit mixture into the cream mixture. How easy is that? And, OK, I can’t resist this pun: even a FOOL can make this dessert!

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And how about “sushi” sandwich rolls?

I bought some really unhealthy white soft bread and use that as the “rice” for the sushi rolls. The un-healthier the bread, the better for this recipe (extra white and extra fluffy – Think Wonder Bread).  Next, spread the bread slices with purchased garden veggie cream cheese and put matchstick veggies in the center. Then, roll up and slice into 2 inch pieces, and present – on a sushi plate of course!

There are some really foolish April Fool’s food ideas out there in the blogosphere. I like this compost cake found at the Family Fun site. Check out these dinner entrees presented like cupcakes by Cupcakes take the Cake. How about a meatloaf “frosted” with mashed potatoes to look like a cake at The Kitchn.

Whatever you do this Friday, I say GO FOR IT. How many other days each year do you get permission to act like a fool? – even in the kitchen!

– posted by Donna

Check out the First Place Winner of a “Tortilla Art” Contest: Donna’s Tortilla Snowflakes!

March 9, 2011 in Contests and Carnivals and Roundups, Desserts

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Snowflakes are a part of my life this time of year. And I have fond memories of making paper snowflakes as a kid in school in southern Arizona. That was before I even knew what snowflakes were. No longer innocent on this subject, I am sorry to say, now that I live in the peaks of the Rocky Mountains.

One of the fun things I have done with my kids when they were little was to make snowflakes out of tortillas. Then, all you do is toast them until they are solid, brush them with melted chocolate and then sprinkle generously with powdered sugar for a fun (and messy) treat/work of art.

When the makers of those fabulous uncooked tortillas, Tortillaland, announced they were having a “tortilla art” contest, I knew I had to submit these.

I am thrilled to announce that my art/snack I made with my kids won first place in Tortilla Land’s contest!

Yipppppeeeeeeeee!

All you do is fold up a tortilla into six parts or eight parts, just like you would if you were making a round paper snowflake. Then, you cut little squares, triangles and circles around the folds to make a snowflake. Then, unfold and toast your snowflake in a large skillet over medium low heat – turning frequently until fully crisp and toasty.

Next, brush on some melted chocolate OR some heated Nutella (my preference) with a pastry brush. While the chocolate is still warm, sprinkle on some powdered sugar and – Voila! – edible art to impress your friends and neighbors!

The above photo is our submission for the contest sponsored by Tortilla Land “The Art of the Fresh Tortilla”.

– posted by Donna

Are You Ready for a New Chocolate Addiction? Chocolate Toffee with a Surprise Secret Ingredient: Saltines!

February 12, 2011 in Desserts, Oh My!

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Praline Chocolate Saltines Toffee

I love making home made Valentine treats – it’s one food tradition I follow religiously every February. But, sugar cookies are just so boring. And chocolate candies are, well, just ho-hum. I wanted something easy. Something decadent. Something different. Something salty and sweet and chocolate-y all in one bite. And definitely something unique for all my sweeties. You know, along the lines of chocolate dipped potato chips. Only not those. Also boring.

Then I remembered a sweet decadent treat that was popular in the early 1990′s.

It was made with matzoh crackers, with an ooey-gooey topping.  It was the kind of treat that surprises you from the very first bite. Salty. Sweet Rich. Homey. I decided to try it with saltines and it turned out even more delicious than my memory of the matzoh-based version.

Oh. My. Gosh. This is a magical substance!

The hot brown sugar and butter mixture seeps down into the saltines and transforms them into an other-worldly delicious substance.

My family members made that speechless “This is Heaven” groaning sound when eating these recently  – and couldn’t stop. The whole batch – all 48 squares – were inhaled in just a few minutes.

THIS IS THE EASIEST, NO-FAIL TOFFEE RECIPE YOU WILL EVER MAKE!

This treat takes 20 minutes from start to finish and only has 6 ingredients. Super easy, but the kind of recipe that will make your friends and loved ones think you’ve been slaving for hours.

You MUST try this version out and see if you agree with me that these are an “Oh-My-Goodness What IS in this stuff?” Treat!

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Easy Chocolate Toffee Recipe - Ready for Shipping

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