French Market Beignet Doughnuts – Real ones this Time



Look Closely…


Photo above…


And Below…





Remember last week


Dave here from MY YEAR ON THE GRILLI was ashamed that I declared… I CAN COOK THAT! But then, who couldn’t???  I actually bragged about opening a tube of dough and whipping cheater Beignets off in a matter of minutes.


I was ashamed, the guilt was over powering and I confessed… Today I want to finish the cycle of penance and give an authentic recipe for those delightful little breakfast snacks.

Fortunately, Mary at DEEP SOUTH DISH, had already provided a recipe for FRENCH MARKET BEIGHET DOUGHNUTS on her site!


Anyone who has ever visited New Orleans has a warm spot in their heart for these beauties.  Been a goal for awhile to learn to make authentic French market (OK, Cafe du monde) style Beignets.  Here’s Mary’s recipe…

French Market Beignet Doughnuts
Posted at http://www.deepsouthdish.com

1 envelope of yeast
1/4 cup of warm water
4 cups of sifted flour
2 tablespoons of shortening
1/3 cup of boiling water
1/4 cup of sugar
1/2 teaspoon of salt
1/2 cup of evaporated milk
1 egg, beaten
Powdered sugar, sifted

Dissolve the yeast in the warm water and set aside. Sift the flour and set aside. Pour the boiling water over the shortening and stir until the shortening is melted.

Preheat deep fryer to 360 degrees. In a large bowl, combine 2 cups of the sifted flour with the sugar and salt, melted shortening, milk, egg, and yeast mixture. Add enough additional flour to form a shaggy dough. Sometimes you will need all of the flour, sometimes you’ll need less – depends on the weather, rain, humidity, etc. in my opinion! Turn out onto a lightly floured surface and roll thin – somewhere between 1/4-inch and 1/8-inch thick. Using a  pizza wheel, cut the dough into 2-inch squares. Drop into hot fryer and brown on one side until golden, flip and brown on the other side. Remove and drain on paper towels, sprinkle with sifted powdered sugar and serve immediately with a cup of café au lait.

Makes between 30 and 40, depending on how thick you roll them.


I did cut the recipe in half, made plenty for the two of us…



And they came out great…



My penance is now complete, I can indeed cook authentic scratch Beignets.

DARING COOKS ~ BRUNSWICK STEW

Wolf of Wolf’s Den chose a popular pan-Southern classic called Brunswick Stew.

According to Wolf, “Brunswick Stew has a long, and oft debated history. Brunswick, Georgia claimed that the first Brunswick Stew was created there in 1898. There is, at the Golden Isles Welcome Center on Interstate 95, a bronzed stew pot with a plaque proclaiming this fact.

However, Brunswick, Virginia claims that the first Brunswick Stew was created there by a camp cook named Jimmy Matthews in 1828, for a hunting expedition led by Dr. Creed Haskings, a member of the Virginia State Legislature for a number of years. He was said to have used squirrel in the original Brunswick Stew created for the group when they returned. The hunters were at first skeptical of the thick, hearty concoction, but upon tasting it, were convinced and asked for more.

Every year, there is an Annual Brunswick Stew Cookoff that pits ‘Stewmasters’ from both Virgina and Georgia against their counterparts, and takes place every October in Georgia.

In the early 20th Cent, the rivalry of the two Brunswicks helped make this dish as popular as it is today, and it quickly became a pan-Southern classic. Some recipe call for the original addition of squirrel, but most allow for chicken, turkey, ham, or pork, even beef on occasion. Rabbit is also used. The vegetables can vary widely from variation to variation, however, the Brunswick Stewmasters recipe says *exactly* what is used in competion stews, and states that “Adding any additional ingredient(s) will disqualify the stew from being an original Brunswick Stew.”

However, most agree that, Brunswick stew is not done properly “until the paddle stands up in the middle.”

The first recipe is more traditional – long and involved, as can be many Southern recipes. The second was the very first Brunswick stew I ever tasted. Both are fairly straight forward and easy, requiring no special equipment, techniques, or super hard to find ingredients.”

Recipe Source(s)- I’ve included two different recipes for this Challenge, out of the hundreds of variations out there. The first is from “The Lee Bros. Southern Cookbook: Stories and Recipes for Southerners and Would-Be Southerners” by Matt Lee and Ted Lee”, and the second from the Callaway, Va Ruritan Club, who hand out cards with their recipe printed on them, every year at the Blue Ridge Folklife Festival, and where I tried my first ever Brunswick Stew.

Blog Checking Lines- The 2010 April Daring Cooks challenge was hosted by Wolf of Wolf’s Den. She chose to challenge Daring Cooks to make Brunswick Stew. Wolf chose recipes for her challenge from The Lee Bros. Southern Cookbook by Matt Lee and Ted Lee, and from the Callaway, Virginia Ruritan Club.

Variations allowed- Recipes may be halved if you choose. You may substitute any vegetables you don’t prefer. You may use fresh, canned or frozen vegetables. My variations are included in the notes. For example- some recipes include okra in their stew, others use creamed corn. You may sub out the rabbit for pork, turkey, beef, or even another game animal if you have it available.

Mandatory- You must use one of the two recipes provided. Now, to not exclude our vegans/vegetarians, if you’d like, use vegetable stock and leave out the meats. It won’t be a ‘true’ Brunswick Stew, but it’ll have the spirit of one.} There’s no gluten anywhere in this that I’m aware of, so we’re good in that regard.

Recipe Two, The Short Way-
Brunswick Stew recipe from the Callaway, Va Ruritan Club, served yearly at the Blue Ridge Folklife Festival in Ferrum, Va.

Serves about 10

2 ½ pounds combination diced stewed chicken, turkey, and ham, with broth – yes, all three meats
3 medium diced potatoes
2 medium ripe crushed tomatoes
2 medium diced onions
3 cups frozen corn
1 ½ cups frozen lima beans I just don’t do lima beans!
4-5 strips crumbled bacon
4 tablespoons of butter
1 Tablespoon sugar
1 Tablespoon Poultry Seasoning
Dash of red pepper
2 diced carrots (optional)
Tomato juice

  • In the largest stockpot you have, which is hopefully larger than the 5 qt ones I have, preferably a 10-12 qt or even a Dutch Oven if you’re lucky enough to have one, fry the bacon over medium-high heat until it just starts to crisp. Transfer to a large bowl, and set aside. Reserve most of the bacon fat in your pan, and with the pan on the burner, add in the chiles. Toast the chiles until they just start to smell good, or make your nose tingle, about a minute tops. Remove to bowl with the bacon.
  • Season liberally both sides of the rabbit and chicken pieces with sea salt and pepper. Place the rabbit pieces in the pot and sear off all sides possible. You just want to brown them, not cook them completely. Remove to bowl with bacon and chiles, add more bacon fat if needed, or olive oil, or other oil of your choice, then add in chicken pieces, again, browning all sides nicely. Remember not to crowd your pieces, especially if you have a narrow bottomed pot. Put the chicken in the bowl with the bacon, chiles and rabbit. Set it aside.
  • Add 2 cups of your chicken broth or stock, if you prefer, to the pan and basically deglaze the4 pan, making sure to get all the goodness cooked onto the bottom. The stock will become a nice rich dark color and start smelling good. Bring it up to a boil and let it boil away until reduced by at least half. Add your remaining stock, the bay leaves, celery, potatoes, chicken, rabbit, bacon, chiles and any liquid that may have gathered at the bottom of the bowl they were resting in. Bring the pot back up to a low boil/high simmer, over medium/high heat. Reduce heat to low and cover, remember to stir every 15 minutes, give or take, to thoroughly meld the flavors. Simmer, on low, for approximately 1 ½ hours. Supposedly, the stock may become a yellow tinge with pieces of chicken or rabbit floating up, the celery will be very limp, as will the chiles. Taste the stock, according to the recipe, it “should taste like the best chicken soup you’ve ever had”.
  • With a pair of tongs, remove the chicken and rabbit pieces to a colander over the bowl you used earlier. Be careful, as by this time, the meats will be very tender and may start falling apart. Remove the bay leaf, celery, chiles, bacon and discard.5 After you’ve allowed the meat to cool enough to handle, carefully remove all the meat from the bones, shredding it as you go. Return the meat to the pot, throwing away the bones. Add in your carrots, and stir gently, allowing it to come back to a slow simmer. Simmer gently, uncovered, for at least 25 minutes, or until the carrots have started to soften.
  • Add in your onion, butter beans, corn and tomatoes. As you add the tomatoes, crush them up, be careful not to pull a me, and squirt juice straight up into the air, requiring cleaning of the entire stove. Simmer for another 30 minutes, stirring every so often until the stew has reduced slightly, and onions, corn and butter beans are tender. Remove from heat and add in vinegar, lemon juice, stir to blend in well. Season to taste with sea salt, pepper, and Tabasco sauce if desired.
  • You can either serve immediately or refrigerate for 24 hours, which makes the flavors meld more and makes the overall stew even better. Serve hot, either on its own, or with a side of corn bread, over steamed white rice, with any braised greens as a side.

Recipe2-In large stock pot or Dutch Oven, mix all ingredients, heat until bubbly and hot. Add salt and pepper to taste. Add tomato juice as desired. Cook until all vegetables are tender. Serve hot.

Optional- Not required for the Challenge-but I always make my own broth!
Sunday Chicken Broth

From “The Lee Bros. Southern Cookbook: Stories and Recipes for Southerners and Would-Be Southerners” by Matt Lee and Ted Lee
Makes about 1 quart (4 cups or 919.68 grams or 32.303 oz)
Estimated Time- 1 ¼ hours

Bones and trimmings, but not giblets, of one 3 ½- 4 ½ lb (1594.32-2049.84 grams or 56-72 oz) chicken, or 12-14 oz / 341.64-398.58 grams / approx. 2 cups chicken bones and trimmings
1 large onion, trimmed, peeled, quartered
6 large stems fresh flat leaf parsley
1 stalk celery, cut into 2” lengths
2 large bay leaves
5 cups / 1149.6 grams / 40.379 oz cold water
1 cup / 229.92 grams / 8.076oz crisp dry white wine
Salt and pepper to taste

Place bones/trimmings in medium stockpot and add onion, parsley, celery and bay leaves. Add wine and water, liquid should cover all ingredients, if not, add more until it does. Bring to vigorous simmer over high heat, then reduce heat and simmer gently for roughly 45 minutes to an hour, skimming any scum or fat that comes to the surface.

Strain broth into bowl through fine mesh strainer. Discard the solids. Measure what you are left with, if not planning to further reduce, then salt and pepper to taste.

Store in tightly sealed container in refrigerator until the remaining fat congeals on the top. Remove the fat, and unless not using within 2 days, keep tightly sealed in the refrigerator. Otherwise, freeze, and it will keep for upwards of a month.

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March Winner – Chocolate Obsession Wednesdays

It is very hard to select a winner of the chocolate of the month from the links we got on Chocolate Obsession Wednesdays.  After much, going back and forth from one fabulous recipe to another, it seemed clear, we have a winner.

And that winner is Easy to be Gluten Free with her mouthwatering Chocolate Mousse Cake.

Please check out her recipe and let her know what you think.

Congratulations.

Flourless Brownies

Flourless Brownies

6 eggs

2 2/3 cups sugar (My husband commented, these were not sweet. He did not know how much sugar was in the brownies but he is right. They were just right, no cloying aftertaste.)

1 1/2 cups potato starch

3/4 cup cocoa

2/3 cup vegetable oil

1 teaspoon vanilla

1 cup walnuts, coarsely chopped

I  spread chocolate chips on top and put the brownies back in the oven for a minute. I then spread the chips over the brownie pudding, not the brownies. Hubby likes them without frosting.

BROWNIES

Preheat oven to 350 degrees Fahrenheit (180 degrees Celsius).

Place the eggs, sugar, potato starch, cocoa, oil and vanilla into a large bowl.

Mix it all together until it is smooth.

Add chopped walnuts.

Line a 9 x 13 inch pan with parchment paper and pour the batter into the pan.

Bake for 30 minutes, or until a cake tester inserted into the brownies’s center comes out mostly clean, and the top is light brown and crispy.

Do not overbake.

When you remove the pan from the oven, allow it to cool completely.

Allow it to set for a few minutes and then slice.

CAPTION CONTEST

What am I thinking? Enter your best caption for a chance to win a delicious prize.
It’s CONTEST TIME. The kind folks over at MarxFoods have invited Joanne from Eats Well with Others to host a contest over at their blog. You should go check out the post with the details. But basically it’s a caption contest, judged by Joanne. The deadline is this coming Monday, 4/19 and the winner will receive an AWESOME prize. So get yourself over there ASAP, write a witty caption to win her heart and go post it!
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TASTE & CREATE ~ No Reason Needed & CHICKEN POT PIE

Taste and Create was started as a food event by Nicole from For the Love of Food. This is the 2nd time I’ve participated in Taste and Create and I don’t plan on stopping soon. I enjoy meeting new bloggers, especially foodies.

The whole purpose of Taste and Create was, and has been, and continues to be to create a community of bloggers who test each others’ recipes and share links. The participants of the event are paired together and try a new recipe from one another’s blog.


My partner this month is Carol from NO REASON NEEDED. I spent yesterday, a rainy Sunday afternoon perusing her recipes and was intrigued by her unusual recipe titles like elephant ear cookies, zippy slow cooker chili, pizza stuffed pretzels and super easy strawberry and lime ice cream when I zeroed in on a comfort favorite of mine chicken pot pie. So that was tonight’s dinner.

When I was a child, Swanson frozen pot pies were a favorite of my mom’s to serve in a pinch. I have to admit that as a child I loved them, but as my taste buds matured I started searching for a replacement recipe, a HOMEMADE replacement recipe.

I love my chicken pot pie recipe, but am always looking for new and better or even just different recipe so thought I’d try hers. On a bonus note that I didn’t at first notice, Carol made this recipe last October 2009 as a part of Taste & Create when she was partnered with Natalie, from What`s for Supper? So LOL I guess we’re doubling trying this recipe.


CHICKEN POT PIE
1 pound skinless, boneless chicken breast halves – cubed

1 cup sliced carrots

1 potato cut into cubes (
as per Natalie’s suggestion)
1 cup frozen green peas
(I used FRESH)
1/2 cup sliced celery 1/3 cup butter
1/3 cup chopped onion

1/3 cup all-purpose flour

1/2 teaspoon salt
(CAROL omitted, but I left it in)
1/4 teaspoon black pepper (Carol omitted, but I used white pepper)
1/4 teaspoon celery seed (Carol used celery salt and I omitted)
1 3/4 cups chicken broth
2/3 cup milk

2 (9 inch) unbaked pie crusts
(I used my own HOMEMADE recipe and only the top crust)

  • Preheat oven to 425 degrees
  • In a saucepan, combine chicken, carrots, peas, and celery. Add water to cover and boil for 15 minutes. Remove from heat, drain and set aside.
  • In the saucepan over medium heat, cook onions in butter until soft and translucent.
  • Stir in flour, salt, pepper, and celery seed.
  • Slowly stir in chicken broth and milk. Simmer over medium-low heat until thick. Remove from heat and set aside.
  • Place the chicken mixture in bottom pie crust.
  • Pour hot liquid mixture over.
  • Cover with top crust, seal edges, and cut away excess dough.
  • Make several small slits in the top to allow steam to escape. (I also like to decorate the tops – have to use those pricey Pampered Chef tools somewhere!)
  • Bake in the preheated oven for 30 to 35 minutes (Carol cooked hers for 50 minutes and I made mine as small individuals so was able to use Natalie’s timeframe), or until pastry is golden brown and filling is bubbly. Cool for 10 minutes before serving.

Carol mentions that Natalie mentioned:

  • brushing the top of the pie with egg to make it golden brown
  • making two pies (allowing you to eat one and freeze one for later) “….I just plop the uncooked pie in the freezer and wrap it well in plastic and tin foil. When I am ready to cook it, I just take it from the freezer to the preheated oven and possibly cook it a little longer than I normally would!”

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Lemon Meringue Pie – Save Room for Dessert!

I’m not afraid to say it:

I’m a total dork for citrus at this time of year. Well, this or any other time, really. But especially now when so many recipes lend themselves to that lovely freshness that citrus offers. It’s like eating sunshine.

Or maybe I’m just reading too much into the situation. I don’t know.

Either way, my husband challenged me to make a lemon meringue pie after he saw me devour a slice at a diner a couple of weeks ago. Never one to back down from a challenge, I squinted my eyes and squared my shoulders and accepted. Even though I’d never dealt with meringue before and was a bit wary of it.

But all worry was for naught!

Start with 2 large lemons, or if they’re small like mine, use 4. Juice the heck out of them.

In a medium saucepan, combine 1 1/4 cups of sugar, 2 tablespoons of flour, 3 tablespoons of cornstarch and a pinch of salt. Add the lemon juice and 1 1/2 cups of water, then on to the heat it goes. This will come to a boil and needs to be stirred frequently.

After you’ve reached a boil, add two tablespoons of butter and melt them into the lemony goodness. Mmm…

While your lemon filling is bubbling away in the hopes of getting nice and thick (which it will!), separate 4 egg yolks and whites into separate bowls. Set the yolks aside, you’ll be using them for meringue in a little while.

Beat the yolks a bit, then pour approximately 1/2 cup of your hot filling into the bowl with the yolks, WHISKING CONTINUOUSLY AND RAPIDLY. Why did I just virtually scream those words at you? Well, because if you let the eggs sit still they will scramble. You want to keep them moving in order that they may mix with the filling and cook without little tough bits of egg getting in the way. Then, pour the egg/filling mixture into the pan on the stove, which you are whisking as you pour. Get the message? Whisk whisk whisk!

Once the filling is nice and thick and yummy looking, set it aside to cool.

Now it’s time for the crust. I used a Pillsbury crust, the kind you just unroll and bake. Ever so much easier and really very good and flaky.

Line your pie plate, flute the edges of the crust, prick all over with a fork and set it in a 450 degree oven for 10 minutes.

In that time, you can work on your meringue.

Remember those 4 egg whites you set aside a little while ago? Beat them with your mixer until they start to get foamy.

Then add 1/2 tsp of cream of tartar, 1/2 tsp of vanilla and 6 tbs of sugar. And whip them all up until stiff peaks form.

Finally time to assemble! Pour your filling into your baked crust and spread the meringue on top of that.

Into a 350 degree oven for 10 minutes, and you get…

THIS!

And after an hour in the fridge you get THIS!

It really is heavenly, and well worth the effort. So give it a try and let me know how it works for you!

Lemon Meringue Pie

Crust
1 Pillsbury crust

Filling
2 large or 4 small lemons, juiced
1 1/4 cup white sugar
2 tbs cornstarch
3 tbs flour
Pinch of salt
1 1/2 cups water
2 tbs butter
4 egg yolks

Combine dry ingredients in medium saucepan, stirring well to incorporate flour and cornstarch. Whisk in lemon juice and water, making sure flour and cornstarch are broken down. Heat to boiling over medium high heat, then add 2 tbs butter and stir until melted.

Whisk egg yolks together in separate bowl, then slowly add 1/2 cup of hot filling to the eggs, all the while whisking to ensure that yolks do not cook. Once eggs and filling are incorporated, add this to the rest of filling in saucepan. Allow to boil until thickened, stirring continuously, then set aside off-heat.

Unroll crust into pie plate. Flute edges and prick crust all over with a fork to prevent swelling and bubbling while baking. Bake crust for 10 minutes in a 350 degree oven. In the meantime prepare meringue.

Meringue
4 egg whites
1/2 tsp cream of tartar
1/2 tsp vanilla extract
6 tbs white sugar

Beat egg whites until they start to foam. Add other ingredients and beat until stiff peaks form.

Fill crust with cooled lemon filling and top with meringue, spreading meringue over filling until it touches the crust all the way around.

Bake pie for 10 minutes in a 350 degree oven. Allow to cool sufficiently once out of oven, then place in fridge for at least an hour for filling to set up.

Enjoy!

Oh, and when you get a chance, hop on over to my blog and drop me a line! There’s lots of food-centric adventures under the Cooking tab, and I’d love to hear from you on anything you see there!

FLUFFY BUTTERMILK PANCAKES

As my good friend Martha over at Menagerie tells me, storm days are perfect “CAVE” days. Days to just snuggle in and do nothing or better yet ONLY what you WANT to do! Today is one of those days as we batten down the hatches for what they tell us will be a “significant late season storm“. The temperature has dropped almost 20 degrees and the wind is blowing almost 60 miles an hour so I decided brunch was in order – a comfort brunch that is. Hot, fluffy buttermilk pancakes! Hubby likes to top them with molasses, but I love my homemade maple syrup.

The key to fluffy pancakes is not to over mix the batter.
Do NOT beat it smooth.
You should have some small lumps.

FLUFFY BUTTERMILK PANCAKES
1 1/2 cups all-purpose flour
2 teaspoons baking powder
1 teaspoon baking soda
1/2 teaspoon salt
3 tablespoons sugar
2 eggs, lightly beaten
1 1/2 cups buttermilk
2 tablespoons unsalted butter, melted

  • Heat griddle to 375 degrees.
  • Sift together flour, baking powder, baking soda, salt, and sugar into a medium bowl.
  • Add eggs, buttermilk, and 4 tablespoons butter; whisk to combine. Batter should have small to medium lumps.
  • Using a 1/2 cup measure, pour pancake batter about 2 inches away from each other.
  • When pancakes have bubbles on top and are slightly dry around edges, about 2 1/2 minutes, flip over.
  • Cook until golden on bottom, about 1 minute.
  • Repeat with remaining batter, keeping finished pancakes warm.
  • Serve with homemade maple syrup.

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STRAWBERRY KIWI HOMEMADE BUTTERMILK SHORTCAKE

This is even better when you take the time to make fresh whipped cream or homemade vanilla ice cream to go with it.

GLAZE
2 baskets fresh strawberries, sliced
2 kiwis, chopped
1 cup pureed strawberries*
1 cup sugar
2 tablespoons KARO light corn syrup
3 tablespoons cornstarch
½ cup water

*I use the less than pretty berries for the puree.

Mix together sugar, corn syrup, cornstarch and water in a 2 quart sauce pan, cover and bring to a slow boil.

When you reach a boil remove the lid. Add the 1 cup pureed strawberries and boil a few minutes more and then chill 10 minutes.

After chilled pour over sliced berries and toss gently.

BUTTERMILK SHORTCAKE
2 cups flour
1½ teaspoons baking powder
½ teaspoon baking soda
dash of salt
4 tablespoons sugar
¼ teaspoon cinnamon
½ cup butter, softened, but not melted
¾ cup buttermilk**

Sift the dry ingredients together. Add the milk and butter and mix well into a soft dough. DO NOT over knead – it will become tough.

Grease an 8 inch pie pan really well. Gently arrange dough into an even mound and pre-cut into your serving portions before baking.

Bake at 400° for 15 to 20 minutes or until toothpick done and golden brown.

Slice each shortcake open, bot with a thin layer of honey, arrange on plate and top with a scoop of strawberry kiwi glaze and vanilla ice cream or whipped cream.

**As a substitute, Buttermilk can be made by adding 2 tablespoons of vinegar to regular milk.

AND MY REVIEW FOR LE CRUSET:

I was recently made aware that there is a wonderful online shopping experience available right from your desk top. Whether you are looking for tv stands, dining room furniture or cookware, they have it all.


Remember all these wish list posts I did about all the wonderful quality kitchen dreams and wishes I have? Well, all the items I’m dreaming about to complete my dream kitchen are available from these sites from CSN stores.

CSN stores sent me this awesome LeCruset Baker to review. I have dreamed of owning one for sooooooo long. I decided in order to review it properly I had to makes lots of great recipes like THE ULTIMATE COMFORT MAC & CHEESE, POT ROAST & ROASTED VEGGIES and RITZY CARROT & BROCCOLI CASSEROLE.


My conclusion: VERY FAVORABLE! Everything cooked up beautifully and the clean up was so easy! This is a beautiful quality piece of cookware. I can’t wait to buy more pieces from CSN stores – their shipping and customer service are well above the norm.

SNUGGLE TIME!

There’s a storm brewing here for tomorrow. I plan on snuggling in and reading!
“A smile is the light in the window of your face
that tells people you’re at home.”

Author unknown…
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