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Butter Beans & Cabbage for New Year's
Butter beans on New Year’s
Day! Everybody has their own traditions
for food on New Year’s! My husband
always wanted great northern beans and cooked cabbage. Beans keep us healthy during the next year. Cabbage keeps us financially sound! I have never liked great northern beans. I
think that I had to eat them too often as a kid! So, butter beans were on my menu this
year.
I’ll share my method for
cooking butter beans, but the cabbage is what came from my freezer. I want to make sure you know how simple it is
to freeze cabbage and grab a bag of it to cook.
Why would we freeze cabbage when it lasts two months in the refrigerator
crisper? Because you end up with two big
heads of cabbage accidentally!
Crock Pot Butter Beans
Use a ham hock or a left-over
ham bone to flavor the beans. Put 1
pound of dried butter beans in the crock pot.
Add the ham bone and a sweet onion cut into chunks. Add at least 6 cups of water to the pot. If that doesn’t cover the beans with about an
inch of water over the top, add more water.
Add about a teaspoon of black pepper and a half teaspoon of salt. The ham will have plenty of salt in it, so
there is no need to over salt. Add ½ a
teaspoon of celery seed.
Cook on high for 2
hours. Turn down to low and cook another
2 – 3 hours, until the beans are tender.
There is no need to soak the beans overnight. The crock pot does all that magic.
Sautéed Cabbage
I’m not sure I have a
recipe for sautéing cabbage! Melt 2 Tablespoons
of butter with 1 Tablespoon of lemon infused olive oil in a heavy skillet. Add 3 cups of chopped cabbage and sauté until
the cabbage is crisp tender. In the last
minute of cooking, turn the heat to high so you get a nice crunchy
caramelization on some of the cabbage.
How to Freeze Cabbage
This is pretty easy! Slice the cabbage into thick shreds, and portion
it in zipper freezer bags. Freeze it
until you are ready to use it. Cook the
cabbage from the frozen state. There is no need to thaw it. Do not, however, drop the frozen cabbage
into hot oil or butter. Make sure
your skillet is warm but not sizzling.
Mahi Mahi with Creamed Zoodles and Shrimp
I’m writing my first post of 2025 on a very cold day
in the middle of a snow and ice storm. Roads and businesses are closed. Power lines are down and much of Southern
Illinois is without electricity. This is
a perfect day to get started on my foodie project for the new year. I’ll be posting about all the ways I am using
the produce I froze in the summer and fall last year. I deliberately filled my freezer so I
wouldn’t have to do much grocery shopping during the winter, but more
importantly, so I could have the same delicious vegetables and fruits off-season
that I enjoy in-season!
I care about the nutritional value in fruits and
vegetables. Many studies show that there
is very little loss of nutrients in frozen fruits and vegetables. In fact, it
is possible that frozen vegetables contain a higher level of nutrients than those
found in fresh vegetables purchased at the supermarket. It is all about the fact that fruits and
vegetables are often picked before they reach peak ripeness, so they can ripen
as they are being transported to supermarkets.
My pantry is also full of lots of canned fruits and vegetables, and
until I became an empty nester, I practiced canning and preserving just like my
mother and grandmother had!
My blog posts for the upcoming months are going to include lots of the foods that I have frozen with wintertime in mind!
I almost always prepare a menu including fish for Christmas Eve. This is a simple way to prepare Mahi Mahi.
Mahi Mahi with Creamed Zoodles and Shrimp
Thaw the fish and pat it dry with a paper towel. Brush it with avocado oil and season it with
lemon pepper and parsley. Drizzle a
little avocado oil in a sheet pan and air fry the fish for about 12 minutes at
350 degrees. No need to turn it over. The
size and thickness of the fish will determine the time needed.
My zoodles came right out of the freezer. Dip them in cold water and they immediately
thaw. Press all the water out of the
squash and let them continue to drain on a paper towel.
In a skillet, melt 2 Tablespoons of butter and sauté
peeled deveined shrimp. I cook for one
person, but you can plan on using 6 large shrimp per person. Make the cream sauce by making a slurry of 1
cup of half and half with 1 Tablespoon of cornstarch. Before adding the slurry to the skillet,
sprinkle ¼ cup of grated dry parmesan cheese to the skillet and stir it
around. Gently pour in the half and half
and bring the skillet to a simmer. While simmering, add the zoodles. The shrimp and the zoodles will release some
water into the sauce. If it isn’t as
thick as you’d like, simply make a little more slurry of cornstarch and half
and half and add small portions to the skillet until it reaches desired
consistency.
This recipe for one serving can be adjusted for more
servings. It is very simple and
delicious.
How to Freeze Zoodles?
This is such an easy process! Make your zoodles. Do not wash them. Just drop them in a freezer container and
freeze them. I froze mine in 2 cup
containers. They will retain their
flavor and will retain most of their texture.
Zucchini is a vegetable that is known for absorbing the flavor of
whatever you add to it!
Salmon & Corn Chowder
Salmon & Corn Chowder
Roast Salmon with Cranberry Apple Glaze
I'm posting some perfect meals to help celebrate the holidays. We don't have to wait until Christmas Eve to put something beautiful on the dinner table. When my daughter was young, we celebrated an element of Christmas every Friday night in December! I created a theme, and we learned new things ... and enjoyed a special meal. You don't have to have kids in the household to celebrate through the whole winter! Continue to use your skills and talents to celebrate! Enjoy your passions.
Roast Salmon with Cranberry Apple Glaze
A Perfect Holiday Meal
A plank of salmon makes a beautiful special meal presentation, and most supermarkets carry the frozen variety. They are so easy to prepare. You can grill them, broil them, bake them or steam them. This half salmon was roasted in the oven. You can thaw the fish in the fridge overnight or simply float the packaged fish in cold water for a couple hours. Don’t remove the fish from the package because you don’t want it to absorb water.
Depending on how you prefer your salmon, the timing
changes. A one-pound slab takes about
twenty minutes at 375 degrees to be done.
Some folks like their salmon rare. I don’t! I place my fish … skin side down, sprinkle
with a little salt and pepper and for this recipe, I add a sprinkle of red
pepper flakes.
At the halfway point in cooking, I add the cran-apple glaze to the top of the fish. Here’s the recipe for the glaze. It is also easy to make.
Cranberry Apple Glaze
1 peeled and
chopped red or yellow delicious apple
1 cup of fresh
cranberries
1 tiny candy apple
onion, chopped
1 stalk of tender
celery
¼ cup white sugar
¼ cup of raspberry
infused vinegar or apple cider vinegar
½ cup of water
Simmer the ingredients until the sauce thickens. Serve it warm with the roasted salmon. If you have any left, refrigerate it and use
it later to top cream cheese or brie for an appetizer with crackers.
I completed this meal with roasted vegetables and shrimp, sauteed in butter.
Heritage Soups
January was my month for experimenting with some of my soup recipes. I’ve been working to decrease the amount of soup that I make at a time because I am an empty nester who isn’t crazy about leftovers. I’ve also been trying to identify the probable origins of some of my recipes that have come through the family. My recipes are mine. While they started with someone else, I have adjusted them over the years and made them more original to my family’s tastes.
I’m a food historian by hobby. I’ve spent years researching the foodways of
many cultures. As I detailed in my
introduction to my 2024 food project “Timelines”, I’m focusing on recipes and
techniques that come to me through the Appalachians.
We’ll begin my 2024 journey by talking about
soup. From the time that cave dwellers
who had just discovered fire cooked broth in an animal hide bag by dropping
stones heated in the fire into the broth … to this time of the instant pot …
soup has been a part of every food culture.
Soup certainly evolved as cooking vessels improved, but it has also
evolved as agriculture has progressed.
Early soups may have only held broth and natural herbs for flavor. Today, I couldn’t begin to make a list of the
things available to me to create delicious soups. Just think of the packaged flavorings, noodles
and pastas, fresh, dried and frozen vegetables, dried herbs and so much more.
The Bible speaks of soup, called pottage. The recipe books written in medieval times
listed soops. The first cookbook printed in America in 1742 included
recipes for soup. By the mid-1800s,
scores of soup recipes were included in cookbooks, even though many of them
were copied from one book to another.
As I studied the history of soups and the agriculture
in my ancestral homes of Scotland, Ireland and Germany … I found many
similarities. All three food cultures
started with broth, then came bread dunkers.
This is likely where the word ‘sop’ comes from! You’ll find creamy potato soups and mixed
vegetable soups in the earliest of recipes.
My favorite similarity is kale. In 1984, I owned a restaurant, and we bought
cases of kale to use to line the salad bar.
Today, 40 years later I buy kale to eat on a regular basis. I add it to soup, just like my ancestors did. History tells us that when they only had
broth, they often added kale to the soup pot to add nutrients, texture and to
make it more filling.
Winter squash makes a wonderful creamy soup. We learned as children that the Native
Americans who greeted our colonial settlers taught them how to grow squash,
beans and corn. I suppose they taught
them how to cook them, too. I’ve always
thought that our colonists should have known how to prepare those foods because
they weren’t just grown in America!
Squash dates to the first century in the historic Mesopotamia
region. It was carried all over the
world by explorers.
Here are a few of my small batch soups. I’ve used some shortcuts and I encourage you to do the same. Use my recipes but make them your own. Switch ingredients and experiment with flavors. Approach your cooking not as a science, but as an artform. Create a masterpiece!
Winter Vegetable Soup
Soup preparation depends upon the seasonal produce available. In the depth of cold weather, we are blessed with winter root vegetables. I can buy them at the indoor farmers market, and at my house, turnips top the list. Root vegetables are shelf stable. Store them in a cool, dry place.
This recipe makes about 8 cups of soup. It is good served with warm bread and butter.
Cream of Broccoli and Potato Soup
The ingredients in this soup can be adjusted, but
you’ll need 4 cups of vegetables in total.
I like more potatoes than broccoli, but this recipe calls for equal
parts! I cream the soup with Half and
Half, but whole milk, cream or evaporated milk can certainly be used.
Add 1 to 2 cups of Half and Half and let the soup continue to simmer. The starch from the potatoes should thicken the soup, but if it isn’t thick enough, add instant potato flakes a
Tablespoon at a time until you get the consistency you like.
Acorn Squash and Tomato Soup
I have winter squash sitting on the counter most of
the winter. I use them in lots of ways,
but I first made a version of this soup years ago when I hosted an autumn
luncheon for my girlfriends. Tt was warm
enough to have the event on the back deck.
That time I made all the ingredients from scratch. Now I use a short cut.
There are lots of ways to prepare winter squash. I prefer acorn for this recipe, but it is
equally good using a butternut. The
fastest way to prepare the squash is to simply poke a few holes through the
skin and microwave it. Cook time depends
upon the size of the squash, but ten minutes usually works. Cut the squash in half and let it cool. Remove the seeds and any stringy membrane. Scoop out the flesh and mash it to use in the
soup.
The shortcut for this soup is to simply begin with a
can of Campbells Tomato Bisque. Prepare
it per the instructions on the can. Add
the mashed squash and ½ teaspoon of black pepper and a teaspoon of onion
powder. Stir in a handful of chopped kale and bring to a simmer. Add 1 cup of
Half and Half.
Leek and Potato Soup
Tomato Soup Cake
I recently shared a picture of my Tomato Soup Spice Cake on Facebook and some of my followers asked for the recipe, so I’m happy to post it here.
First, here’s a little history of this delicious cake. Campbells canned their first tomato soup in 1897. It cost 10 cents a can. In 1922, it cost 8 cents and in 1944, it cost 9 cents a can. The recipe for this cake first appeared on the label of the soup can. It was printed in an undated cookbook, thought to have been published in the 1920s. We can assume Campbells developed the recipe in an effort to sell more soup! What does the can of soup do for a cake? It makes it moist and a little denser than the recipe would be without it. It also adds a flavorful tang that we can’t really detect as tomato. However, unlike apple sauce, it does not replace eggs in the recipe.
The first recipe calls for butter and sugar, both of which were rationed during wartime, so I am a little bit confused by the cake’s popularity during WWII. Shortening was also rationed during this time, but the cake’s popularity continued to rise through the decades. Finally, in the 1950s with the advent of cake mixes, Campbells published a recipe adding a can of tomato soup to a spice cake mix.
I found my recipe in my Mother-in-law’s recipe box. Most of her written recipes were actually her mother’s, so I’m dating my version to the 1930s. It is delicious, versatile and gets better day by day as you store it! My recipe was baked in bread loaf pans and dusted with powdered sugar. Today’s versions, which are all over the internet, suggest cream cheese frosting or buttercream frosting.
Tomato Soup Spice Cake
Combine the butter, sugar and eggs and whip until fluffy. Combine all the dry ingredients (including the spices) and beat it into the butter mixture a portion at a time. This will be thick. Add the can of soup and use the water to clean out the can. Pour the water into the batter. Mix until the batter is creamy. Gently fold in the raisins and nuts. Any nuts will work, and I added dried cherries to my recipe this time. Dates and dried cranberries would be wonderful, too.
This recipe fills a bund pan, but you can bake it in a 13x9 inch pan, or two round layer cake pans. Bake it at 350 degrees for 25 minutes.
Let the cake cool 15 minutes, before turning it out of the bundt pan. There are lots of ways to top this cake. I like it with no topping other than a little whipped cream. Add a drizzle of caramel sauce and it is even better.
Chicken and Dumplings
I don’t make chicken and dumplings very often. My husband loved them, but he’s gone. My daughter and her husband aren’t crazy
about them, and my granddaughter just decided she might like them again just a
few months ago. I say might like them
‘again’ because she ate so many one time when she was little that she got a
stomachache! Was that more information
than you wanted?
This past week, I was suddenly craving chicken and
dumplings, so I bought a whole chicken and planned my dumpling making day! For me, the broth and the boiled chicken are
as important as the dumpling flavor. I
have to figure out a way to use all that chicken, and I love keeping a couple
cups of the broth to start a pot of soup later on. It is so good.
To make a good stock for dumplings, plan on gently
boiling your chicken for 15 minutes for every pound of chicken. Make sure you wash the chicken inside and
out. If you are lucky enough to get
giblets with your whole chicken, wash those in cold water. You certainly want to add them to the stock pot. Add enough cold water to the stock pot to
cover the chicken. Add an onion cut in
quarters, 2 carrots cut in chunks and 2 stalks of celery cut in chunks. Add 1 teaspoon of salt and another teaspoon
of ground black pepper. A clove of
garlic and a bay leaf will add incredible flavor. When I have fresh sage, I add a stem of the
leaves. My chicken simmered for 3 hours
then I removed all the meat and bones from the stock and set it aside to
cool. I removed 3 cups of the stock
from the pot … 2 cups to freeze for later and 1 cup to cool for the dumpling
dough. I added a pinch of saffron to the
stock and brought it back to a simmer while I prepared the dumpling dough. After the chicken cools enough to handle,
remove the meat from the bones.
To make the dumplings …
Gently beat together 2 cups of all-purpose flour, 1
egg and 1 cup of warm chicken stock. Don't add boiling hot stock to this
because it will scramble your egg. Let the stock cool a bit before you
add it.
On a floured board, gently knead in a
little extra flour until you can handle the dough. It will be warm and pliable.
Carefully roll the dough to a thickness of about ¼ inch and cut into 2 inch
squares.
I actually use a clean flour sack dish towel to roll
my dumplings on! You can take it outside and shake out the flour when you
are done and throw it in the washing machine.
Drop the dumplings into the simmering broth, cover and
cook for 10 minutes. Add the chicken meat back in after the dumplings are
done.
I don’t add all the chicken back to the pot because
one person can’t eat all that! I freeze
it for use in chicken sandwich salad and a couple casseroles. If you are cooking for a crowd, you might
want to double the dumpling recipe and add back all the meat.
Enjoy!
Roasted Grapes on Brie Cheese
Grapes on Brie Cheese
I recently saw a recipe online for a topping for baked brie
cheese and decided to make my own version.
This is such an easy process. It takes just a few minutes once you’ve roasted the grapes.
Place a cup of whole seedless grapes on a roasting pan. Drizzle them with a little bit of olive oil
and a dash of salt. Roast on 400 degrees
for 15 minutes. Set the grapes aside.
Place a round of brie cheese in an oven proof dish. Score the top of it. Add the roasted grapes to the top. Sprinkle on a few dried cherries and pecan
halves. Drizzle balsamic glaze over the topping. Put in the oven at 350 degrees for 20 minutes,
or in the microwave for 5 minutes. The
topping should be sizzling, and the cheese should be gooey!
Serve with crackers, pita bread or apple slices.
Bologna Salad - Delicious!
When Joe and I were first married, I delighted in fixing his
favorite meals. I’d mention things that
I knew how to cook, and he’d say “Yes, make that” so I would. He
and I both had grown up with mothers and grandmothers who were good
cooks … and frugal cooks. He used to
talk about having to take bologna sandwiches every day for his school
lunch. I walked two blocks home for
lunch, so we didn’t have that in common, but we did have bologna in common. We also had bologna salad in common. The first time I made it, he was
thrilled. The second time I made it, he
pulled a prank on his least favorite aunt.
His Aunt Billie and her husband came to visit on a
Sunday. They just dropped by to see
where we lived. In reality, they were
hoping for a free lunch. Billie was an
arrogant woman, and she didn’t hesitate to let her presumed superiority be
known. She went all through the house,
even opened the bedroom closet, and Joe was not happy. Realizing they weren’t going to leave until
we fed them, he suggested that I make them a sandwich for lunch. I was happy to plate bologna salad sandwiches
with chips and a dill pickle spear for each of them. Billie proclaimed that her sandwich was the
best ham salad she had ever had. Joe
smiled ear to ear as he told her, “That’s because it’s bologna salad.”
Growing up, my mother had certain menu items that she
repeated every week. During high school
football season, Friday nights included supper of hamburgers, chips and
soda. That was a treat because of the
soda and chips, but I’m not sure it was the best meal for my football playing
brothers.
Lunch meat sandwiches weren’t on the menu much because Daddy
wanted cooked food. However, in the heat
of the summer months especially when Mother was in the midst of canning,
bologna salad was a favorite Saturday lunch menu item. Think of those primary color Pyrex mixing
bowls. The biggest yellow one was filled
with potato salad. The green one was
filled with bologna salad for sandwiches.
The red one was filled with creamy slaw and the blue one remained empty
to hold any leftovers! In those days, we
didn’t have food processors, so we chopped everything for the bologna salad with an old fashioned food
grinder. At our house, the only place we
could fasten the grinder was on a basement step! Our kitchen counters and kitchen table did
not have an edge where it would work. It
was a project!
Mother came from a big German family, and I suspect her
recipe for bologna salad came from one of her many relatives. Wurst Salat is identified as a recipe that
came to America with German immigrants.
Families in many regions, heavily populated with families of German
descent, enjoy it still today. It is
kind of like potato salad in that every family has its own recipe! The variations are many.
Bologna originated in Italy, specifically in its namesake city, Bologna. We know it as Mortadella. It is made from beef and pork and is studded with little chunks of fat. Italian immigrants brought it to America, shared it with German sausage makers and bologna was Americanized to be what we love today. In Germany, Wurst Salat is made differently in regions. It is typically julienned. Strips of Swiss cheese, pickles, onion and sometimes pimento are added. Dressings range from a vinegar and oil base to a mayonnaise base. A quick internet search will lead you to recipes and pictures. It is served as a salad with rustic bread, boiled eggs and radishes.
We see this style of salad in German communities in the
United States. We find it made with
German bologna which has a nice garlic flavor
Amish and Mennonite communities favor Lebanese bologna, which originated
in Lebanon County, Pennsylvania. This
beef bologna is heavily flavored with spices like black pepper, white pepper, mace
and nutmeg. It is smoked and I think it
is more like a summer sausage than typical bologna.
I’m happy to share my recipe for bologna salad today. We love it on soft white bread and on crackers. My husband could eat a whole sleeve of saltines with bologna salad. I enjoy it for breakfast/brunch on white toast. Find your favorite way to eat it and adjust the recipe to your own tastes. Enjoy!
Use a food processor to prepare these ingredients. Begin by chopping the onion and celery into chunks. Add the bologna and the egg. Continue chopping until it reaches the consistency you desire. Complete the mixing in a bowl. Add the relish, juice, mayonnaise, mustard, salt, pepper and a sprinkling of celery seed. You should adjust the liquid ingredients if the salad is too dry. You can certainly eat this immediately. It is better if you refrigerate it for a couple hours. This will last in the fridge for three days but doesn’t hold up well in the freezer. I have, however, made sandwiches on white bread and frozen them. They are great to take in a packed lunch. Just remove from the freezer in the morning and by lunchtime, they are ready to eat. If the mayonnaise liquifies because of the freezing, I don’t notice it.