Showing posts with label recipe. Show all posts
Showing posts with label recipe. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 17, 2012

Mom's Homemade Ice-Cream

Growing up with a father who was a dairy farmer, I drank whole raw milk.

Yes, that means (gasp!) unpasteurized. 
That also means that it was as un-skim as you could get it.



It was normal to get the Tupperware gallon jug from the refrigerator and have to shake it before pouring because all the thick rich cream had risen to the top. Now really, that makes no sense. The thick heavy cream rising to the top?? Leo, my ruggedly handsome dairy farmer, informs me that the water content in the milk is heavier than the cream and therefore the cream is lighter. But has more fat. A lot more fat.   Hmmm, interesting. Anyhow, to get back to shaking the jug...Even now, buying milk from the store, I shake the jug to mix it before pouring, and I don't have to. Old habits and all that.

My sisters and I didn't always leave the cream in the jug with the rest of the milk; sometimes we would let it rise to the top on purpose so that we could skim it off (hence, why skim milk is called skim milk) and save it. Then when we had enough, Mom would mix together a batch of homemade vanilla ice-cream. One of us would stand by the stove stirring the concoction of milk, sugar, flour and salt. You had to stir for forever it seemed, and you couldn't stop because it would burn or all of a sudden be very hot, rise to the top and overflow onto the burner. Not that that ever happened to me of course; I am sure it was always to Kimmy or Roxie.

When the custard was just the right thickness, you would add beaten eggs and vanilla. Then it had to cool.    When it was again just right, the cream was added and the whole batch was put into the ice-cream freezer and the process of freezing would begin. And no, it was not a hand-crank freezer, it was electric. How old do you think I am?

I can still hear the sound of that freezer as it worked, turning the canister filled with yummy (although technically not good-for-you) goodness, in the middle. That whirring, loud motor as it rotated caused the ice and rock-salt mixture to flow around that canister in such a way that, as if by magic, the runny custard turned into ice-cream. And it did really seem like magic. 

When the motor would make a whiny, slow groan like it just couldn't turn any more, you knew it was ready. Mom would quickly unplug it, and then....

...she would take the lid off and pull the dasher out of the middle. This she would always hold over a plate and then one of us girls would take it to Dad. Remember how, when you were a kid,  you would always like to lick the beaters when making cake or cookies? (Okay, I still do that!) This was like that, but it was ice-cream, and it was Dad's job to clean off the dasher. I don't think he minded.

The first scoops of vanilla ice-cream, to me, where always the best. Frozen, but soft and creamy. Really, it was like a Wendy's Frosty. Mom would let everyone have some, but then would put the lid back on and let it ripen while sitting in the salt and ice brine.  Later, when getting a spoonful, the ice-cream was now more frozen, harder. Still delicious.



Vanilla Ice Cream (cooked)
2 3/4 cups sugar                             6 eggs, beaten
6 T. flour                                        4 cups heavy cream (yeah baby)
1/4 tsp. salt                                      4 1/2 tsp. vanilla
5 cups milk, scalded


Scald milk. Combine sugar, flour, and salt. Add 1/2 cup milk to make a smooth paste. Add paste slowly to hot milk, stirring constantly (and I mean constantly!). When custard thickens, add a little to beaten eggs, stirring, to temper the eggs (no, you are not trying to make them angry, you are trying to prevent them from turning into scrambled eggs when you pour them into the custard). Then add egg mixture to the custard, stirring quickly (you almost need two people) and cook 1 min. longer. Remove from heat and put through blender (no one wants lumps in their ice-cream, unless it is cookies or chocolate!). Add vanilla. Cool. Add cream and pour into gallon ice-cream freezer and freeze according to your freezer directions. 

Friday, December 30, 2011

Sleep is Sweet...but so is my cappuccino

I came home from work this morning and just sat in my car. Sometimes I am just so tired and when the sun is shining, making my car warm, I just want to sit there like a cat and soak it in.

And then my family sees me in my car...
                               sleeping....
                               with my mouth open....
                               drooling...
Not glamorous by any stretch of the imagination. At least I wasn't purring.

Our bodies are designed to need rest, but somehow I think that my body should not need as much as everybody else. I would like to think I can survive, even while going 24 hours or more without sleep.

Besides isn't that why coffee was invented?

What do you mean it wasn't?!?!

I can tell I need to sleep. Everything is either ridiculously funny or extremely annoying. I find myself staring at nothing for long periods and can't remember at all what I was thinking about. I am writing this blog and have to keep changing my spelling cause my fingers are either 2 letters ahead or 1 behind.

I found a coffee recipe that sounds heavenly and thought I'd share it with you. Maybe I'll think about making some later when I wake up. Just in time to go back to bed for the night.

Gotta love working night shift!

Enjoy!

Chocolate Cappuccino

    For sweet stirrers, prop in peppermint sticks. This homemade treat is far less expensive than in a coffee shop.
    Total Time: 10 mins
    Servings: Makes 8 servings.
    SEE MORE BETTER HOMES AND GARDENS RECIPES
    Ingredients
    • 1/2 cup  whipping cream
    • 3 tablespoons  powdered sugar
    • 1/2 cup  finely chopped semisweet chocolate or finely chopped milk chocolate
    • 1/2 cup  crushed striped round peppermint candies

      8 cups  hot espresso or very strong coffee  

      Chocolate curls

      Directions

      1
      Beat the whipping cream and powdered sugar with an electric mixer on low speed until soft peaks form; set aside.

      2
      Spoon 1 tablespoon each chopped chocolate and peppermint candies into a coffee cup. Add hot espresso. Top with the whipped cream and chocolate curls. Serve at once. Makes 8 servings.

      Nutrition Facts
      Calories 221, Total Fat 10 g, Saturated Fat 6 g, Cholesterol 27 mg, Sodium 88 mg, Carbohydrate 24 g, Fiber 2 g, Protein 5 g. Daily Values: Vitamin A 11%, Vitamin C 3%, Calcium 20%, Iron 1%.
      Percent Daily Values are based on a 2,000 calorie diet











Tuesday, December 20, 2011

Simple and Sweet

Did you know that Hershey Kisses will get hard and crumbly, instead of soft and melty, when left in the oven for too long? I didn't know before but I do now.

I was making a gift for Ryan's school teacher. It was supposed to be easy and fast. I had made the same thing last year and thought I didn't need to read the recipe.

WRONG!

Something as simple as a few minutes made all the difference between success and failure.

A few minutes a day, spent in prayer and reading my Bible, can make all the difference between success and failure too. When I take the time, even if I don't have a "good" day, I can still have peace.

So, as I play Mannheim Streamroller (A Fresh Aire Christmas), I make another batch of Chocolate Pretzel Rings. And this with a good attitude, even though I just threw away 1 1/2 bags of overcooked Hershey Kisses.





Chocolate Pretzel Rings (Taste of Home Quick Cooking 2010)
50 pretzel rings or mini pretzels ( I like the waffle-shaped ones)
50 Hershey Kisses (can use plain chocolate ones or the striped ones; whatever you like!)
M&M's (I also used the M&M peanut butter ones)

Place pretzels on greased baking sheets; place a kiss in the center of each ring. Bake at 275 for 2-3 minutes or until chocolate is softened. Remove from oven. Place an M&M candy on each, pressing down slightly so chocolate fills the ring. Refridgerate 5-10 min. or until chocolate is firm. Store in airtight container at room temperature.
Yield: about 4 dozen
 Yummy!