October 20– Erin of Prudence Pennywise selected Sweet Potato Biscuits, page 26. Head on over to her place to check out the recipe. I will be back to baking after the cross country move. See you in November.
Artichoke, Feta Cheese and Garlic Puffs – Martha’s Monday Munchies

Here ya go, artichoke, feta cheese and garlic puffs! I’ve been on a puff pastry kick lately and decided to experiment a bit. These turned out delectable and they were super easy!
Just thaw puff pastry and cut into small squares. Mix a jar of artichoke hearts, a package of feta cheese, a heaping spoon of minced garlic, a little Parmesan cheese, and some fresh ground pepper – lightly mix. Spoon a small amount of mixture onto one corner of the pastry, fold over to form triangle, seal edges and bake at 350 for 20 minutes – YUMMY!
Originally posted at Menagerie
Bat’s Breath Cake aka Oreo Cookie Cake
BAT’S BREATH CAKE
1 cup white sugar
1/2 cup butter
2 JUMBO eggs
1 1/2 teaspoons vanilla extract
1/2 teaspoon maple extract
1 1/2 cups all-purpose flour
1 3/4 teaspoons baking powder
6 crushed OREO cookies
1/2 cup whole milk
- Preheat oven to 350 degrees.
- Grease and flour a 9×9 inch BUNDT pan.
- In a medium bowl, cream the butter.
- Add sugar and cream again.
- Add the eggs, one at a time, beating until well blended.
- Add in the vanilla and maple extracts.
- Sift together the flour and baking powder.
- Add to the creamed mixture and mix well.
- Blend in the milk until batter is smooth.
- Pour into the prepared pan.
- Bake for 30 to 40 minutes.
- Cake is done when it springs back to the touch.
DARK OF NIGHT FROSTING
8 tablespoons butter, melted
3 cups powdered sugar
2/3 cup Hershey’s cocoa
1/3 cup milk
♥
Cararmel Popcorn, Carrot Cheese Balls
4 tablespoons butter, plus more for baking sheet
10 cups plain unsalted popped popcorn
1 cup cashews or peanuts, coarsely chopped (optional)
1/2 cup packed light-brown sugar
1/4 teaspoon Coarse Salt
- Preheat oven to 300 degrees.
- Butter a large baking sheet.
- Place popcorn in a large bowl.
- Add cashes to bowl and toss to combine. Set aside.
- In a small saucepan, bring butter, sugar, 1/4 teaspoon salt, and 2 tablespoons water to a boil, stirring constantly.
- Working VERY quickly, drizzle popcorn with sugar syrup, and toss.
- Spread popcorn evenly on prepared baking sheet.
- Bake, tossing occasionally, until golden and shiny, about 40 minutes.
- Transfer hot popcorn to a parchment-paper-lined baking sheet; let cool.
- Store in airtight container up to 1 week.
CARROT CHEESE BALLS
8 ounces cream cheese, softened
4 ounces yellow cheddar cheese, finely grated (2 cups loosely packed)
1 cup finely grated carrots
- In a medium bowl combine cream cheese, cheddar cheese, and carrot.
- With moistened hands, gently form about 24 balls.
- Serve or refrigerate, covered with plastic wrap, up to 2 days.
Chocolate Chip Cookies: What Did You Bake Today?
- Cream the butter and sugars.
- Add the eggs and vanilla.
- Combine the dry ingredients and add.
- Stir in the chocolate chips. Bake 350 degrees for 10 minutes.
- Makes about 4 dozen.
We Interrupt this regularly scheduled meme…

Just a quick reminder that the Halloween Party at OuR KrAzY KiTcHeN begins this Sunday.
Sunday, October 18th ~ Saturday, October 31st, 2009
RSVP via MR. LINKY
- Do you have a special popcorn ball recipe?
- What is your favorite fall recipe?
- Do you have a favorite apple recipe?
- Do you have special way to carve pumpkins?
- How about a party punch that’s perfect for Halloween?
- What is your idea of a best costume?
We’ll post Mr. Linky on October 18th and leave him in place through Halloween. Write your post piece and come link it up. We’ll all have some time to blog hop and see each other and try recipes.
Next we would like to announce the upcoming Thanksgiving and Christmas parties.

WHEN: Sunday, November 15th ~ Saturday, November, 28th, 2009
WHERE: OuR KrAzY kItChEn
RSVP: MR. LINKY
- Do you have a special pumpkin pie recipe recipe?
- What is your favorite side dish recipe?
- Do you have a favorite apple recipe?
- Do you have special way to carve a turkey?
- How about a party punch that’s perfect for the Thanksgiving crowd?
- What is your idea of a best decorating idea?

WHEN: Sunday, December 17th ~ SUNday, December 27th, 2009
WHERE: OuR KrAzY kItChEn
RSVP: MR. LINKY
- Do you have a special Christmas Cookie recipe?
- What is your favorite holiday recipe?
- Do you have a favorite fudge recipe?
- Do you have special way to decorate the tree?
- How about a party punch that’s perfect for a holiday party?
- What is your idea of the perfect family holiday?
We are looking for guest hosts!
- You can post on any food genre or topic.
- You can guest for a week or a month, we’re pretty flexible.
- Perhaps you have a wonderful tutorial for a favorite recipe that you already posted. No problem, re-posts are great when formatted well.
- Guest hosts will need to post a new entry advertising their guest posts to oUr KrAzY kItChEn on their own home blog.
- A Mr. Linky will be added so our regular readers can play along with you.
Kitchen & Cooking Tips
- Using buttermilk as a meat marinade is an effective tenderizer. It also converts the proteins into B vitamins which helps the liver burn up to 38% more stored fat as energy.
- Adding sour cream to chili will curb the “hotness” of the fiery effect.
- Adding 1 teaspoon of cornstarch to each 1/4 cup of sour cream acts as a binder and prevents the sour cream from curdling in the heat of the chili.
- 2 parts instant coffee to 1 part water makes an effective paste for scratching nicks on dark furniture.
- Bake winter tomatoes for 30 minutes at 350 degrees to achieve that summer flavor. As the tomatoes cook, the sugars caramelize, giving them a sweeter and juicier flavor. Let them cool and then chop and toss with salads, salsas or fruits.
- For fluffier pancakes, separate the eggs and whip the whites into soft peaks before folding them into the remaining ingredients.
- Run your knife through a stick of butter before slicing marshmallows for that yam casserole. You won’t end up with a sticky residue on your knife.
- Applying a teaspoon of butter to your cat’s paws will help prevent hairballs.
- Adding a bit of butter to a watermark on your wood table before you go to bed will help replace the lost moisture from the wood. Just wipe away any residue the next morning.
- Rubbing butter on the edge of your snow shovel will help the snow slide right off as you toss it aside.
- Rubbing a bit of butter around dusty candles will make them look fresh again.
- Butter applied to the cut edges of blocks of cheese will prevent molding.
- Anchovies make a great seasoning for sauces, just a bit salty and spicy all at once. Remember to remove them before serving or mince them so fine that no one notices but you! Also remember a little goes a long way.
It’s finally here…
I recently ran this post over at The Motivation Station. It shows where I’ve been lately more than anything!
Day 6 (we did Friday and Saturday for 3 successive weekends) of the rummage sale was successful, though I feared it might not be when the snow began to fall. Fortunately, it did not stick and while the temperature stayed a bone chilling 25 with wind chill factor, the sun did eventually shine.
Tips for a successful rummage sale:
- When choosing an items for your sale, you have 3 decisions to make: 1) am I still sentimentally attached to this? 2) Is this really junk and should just be tossed or will someone else find value in it? 3) Would I be willing to move it cross country? If you’re answer was YES to any of these questions, then it’s not rummage sale material.
- Have plenty to rummage through. If you don’t, invite your neighbors to join in. Truly the more the merrier and the more hands to help with the work. If people don’t see a large selection, many will walk away before they even walk in.
- SIGNS – maybe the most important factor. Make sure people know where to find you easily. Use clear, LARGE lettering and colorful poster board. List the important items that may interest people most. Adding a stuffed animal of some kind might help too. We began our sale during the local Harvest Festival so we added a colorful scarecrow from the local dollar store to the signs.
- When having a multiple weekend event, it’s important to “ADD” to your signs. Things like “added items”, “last day”, “50 % off today only”, etc… and make sure to keep the dates straight. When I did this, I used different color fluorescents to emphasize the differences.
- Run a simple newspaper ad. I also took the signs down between weekends and then put them up fresh just before the next weekend.
- Place fliers on local bulletin boards.
- Many local radio stations will run a talk time where they’ll advertise your sale for free in smaller towns.
- Wide aisles so they can see everything and not trip over each other.
- Say hello with your customers and have a chat. Engaging them in conversation might shed insight into what they are really looking for. I sold items that weren’t even out for sale that way. Things I just hadn’t gotten around to pricing and putting out.
- Organize your items into like groups or ‘departments’.
- If you’re selling linens, clothes, quilts etc… launder them and clearly mark them to size and they are more likely to sell.
- Price items right. If you’re still so sentimentally attached that you’re asking more than someone else is willing to pay then you’re item will not sell. In my case with moving across country, it became a battle of sentimentality versus practicality. Most of what I had to sort through had become remotely sentimental by association. For example, when my father passed away and we closed down his house and antiques & collectibles business most of it went into storage for me to sort through later as I was currently working full time and going to school full time too. Just a few short months later was the Northridge earthquake. While I lost most of my personal belongings in it, the things I could save were packed up and added to storage for later while we re-built the house. A few short years later mom decided to move out of state and and many more things were added to that pile to sort through later. A couple years later hubby’s unit was deployed and things became even more hectic so the sorting was put off. After his deployment and an unsuccessful foot surgery he was forced to retire from his civilian job and we bought this investment house turned nightmare. We moved it all cross country with us. We are finally dealing with all that remote sentimentality after 16 years. Trust me, it would have been sooooooooooo much easier to deal with years ago and actually saved money and time and emotions to have already dealt with it.
Apple crumble pie and apple cake recipes – Save Room for Dessert
Most of the participating recipes in last week’s Save Room for Dessert were apple desserts. Did you notice Liz‘ Apple Crumble Pie? Her post detailed the misadventures of two young love birds baking in the kitchen, and of course the delicious recipe.
I’d like to remind you about the Halloween Party right here at Our Krazy Kitchen starting October 18th.
There’s also the 2nd annual Need to Knead Bread Roundup starting November 1st. at my own blog, Joy of Desserts, and also at Tamy’s blog, 3 Sides of Crazy. Just click for all the details. You are all invited! Tell your friends, too, because the more the merrier.
Crunchy Squid’s Head for Cultural Connection
Allspice Crumb Muffins ~ Tuesdays with Dorie
October 13– Kayte of Grandma’s Kitchen Table chose Allspice Crumb Muffins, pages 16-17. Head on over to her place to check out the recipe. I will be back to baking after the cross country move. See you in November.
Pesto Spirals – Martha’s Monday Munchies
These are so simple, can’t even call this a recipe! Just unroll a can of Pillsbury Recipe Creations dough (or you can use crescent rolls), spread with pesto, roll up, slice and bake at 350 until golden brown. These are really good served with tomato sauce for dipping. Optional – top with mozzarella the last couple minutes until bubbly.
Originally posted at Menagerie

























