Eating Well between the years... Quick, Easy and Leftover Recipes ... Countdown till 2008

Last post 12-25-2007 8:28 PM by Running_Diva44. 170 replies.
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  • 12-19-2007 7:18 PM In reply to

    Re: Eating Well between the years... Quick, Easy and Leftover Recipes ... Countdown till 2008

    Hi Jet, I love this story and read it every year.  I do find another new bit of wisdom in it each time I read it.

     

    One of my favorite seasonal movies is the very old version of A Christmas Carol with Reginald Owen from 1939. I also love to watch Scrooge with Albert Finney, 1970. My DD played little Fan in grade school in the stage play. She only had a couple lines but of course we thought she was the best thing in the play. Wink

     

    Kids sure do keep you busy when they are in school and the older they get the more involved the are in extracuricular activities. I sure was glad when DD could drive herself to these things but it was also scary. Just a matter of trade offs, eh? You never get a lot of sleep no matter what.

  • 12-19-2007 7:47 PM In reply to

    Re: Eating Well between the years... Quick, Easy and Leftover Recipes ... Countdown till 2008

    Kast, my mom made those Potato Patties too. It was a meal in itself. We always had some homemade Applesauce to it. I still can say Yumm, Yumm.

  • 12-19-2007 7:52 PM In reply to

    Re: Eating Well between the years... Quick, Easy and Leftover Recipes ... Countdown till 2008

    Ok, I have to figure the bb out again, but have no time right now. Having my ladies for Domino coming,

    Bis spaeter

    Erna

  • 12-19-2007 8:27 PM In reply to

    Re: Eating Well between the years... Quick, Easy and Leftover Recipes ... Countdown till 2008

    I LOVE A Christmas Carol - I own several versions of this wonderful classic.  It seems like each version has some part that I like best.

    I even love the Muppets Christmas Carol and I do not even like muppets as a rule.

  • 12-19-2007 11:40 PM In reply to

    Re: Eating Well between the years... Quick, Easy and Leftover Recipes ... Countdown till 2008

    Nice to meet you Picasso. If you can admit that you like watching the Muppets version of A Christmas Carol I can admit that I even watch Scrooged from 1988 with Bill Murray and Karen Allen. Murray plays the meanest Scrooge ever, suggesting they staple antlers to a little mouse that's in one of his TV specials. OMG.

     

    Speaking of A Christmas Carol, anyone know from experience what twelth-cakes are?

     

    "It was his own room. There was no doubt about that. But it had undergone a surprising transformation. The walls and ceiling were so hung with living green, that it looked a perfect grove; from every part of which, bright gleaming berries glistened. The crisp leaves of holly, mistletoe, and ivy reflected back the light, as if so many little mirrors had been scattered there; and such a mighty blaze went roaring up the chimney, as that dull petrification of a hearth had never known in Scrooge's time, or Marley's, or for many and many a winter season gone. Heaped up on the floor, to form a kind of throne, were turkeys, geese, game, poultry, brawn, great joints of meat, sucking-pigs, long wreaths of sausages, mince-pies, plum-puddings, barrels of oysters, red-hot chestnuts, cherry-cheeked apples, juicy oranges, luscious pears, immense twelfth-cakes, and seething bowls of punch, that made the chamber dim with their delicious steam'.

  • 12-19-2007 11:50 PM In reply to

    Re: Eating Well between the years... Quick, Easy and Leftover Recipes ... Countdown till 2008

    Just had to check on the word brawn. Knew it had to be meat. The kind that grosses you out or the kind l like and just wish I could get some good homemade stuff at Christmas time.

     

    BRAWN

    Head cheese, also called souse and brawn, is a jellied loaf or sausage. Originally it was made entirely from the meaty parts of the head of a pig or calf, but now can include edible parts of the feet, tongue, and heart. The head is cleaned and simmered until the meat falls from the bones, and the liquid is a concentrated gelatinous broth. Strained, the meat is removed from the head, chopped, seasoned and returned to the broth and the whole placed in a mold and chilled until set, so it can be sliced.

  • 12-19-2007 11:53 PM In reply to

    Re: Eating Well between the years... Quick, Easy and Leftover Recipes ... Countdown till 2008

    Picasso, you are the greatest ! Last night I thought about it and I will try it out. Thanks a million. Renate
  • 12-20-2007 12:05 AM In reply to

    Re: Eating Well between the years... Quick, Easy and Leftover Recipes ... Countdown till 2008

    Brandied fruit cake cookies

    3/4 cup chopped candied cherries (I use red & green)
    1/2 cup chopped candied pineapple (I use kitchen shears)
    1/4 cup brandy
    1 1/2 cups flour
    1/2 teaspoon baking powder
    1/4 teaspoon baking soda
    1/2 cup butter (room temp softened)
    2/3 cup sugar
    1/2 teaspoon vanilla
    1 egg
    1/2 cup small curd cottage cheese
    1/4-1/2 cup candied fruit, quartered (Garnish for tops of cookies)


    1. In small bowl, combine the 3/4 Celsius cherries, pineapple and brandy.
    2. Cover and chill overnight.
    3. In a small bowl, combine flour, baking powder and baking soda, set aside.
    4. For batter, in a large bowl, beat butter, sugar and vanilla until fluffy.
    5. Add egg and cottage cheese and beat until combined, beat in flour mixture.
    6. Cover and chill overnight.
    7. Stir brandied fruits mixture into batter.
    8. Drop by tablespoons onto ungreased baking sheet lined with parchment paper.
    9. Add additional cherries to garnish tops of cookies.
    10. Bake 375 degrees for 9 to 11 minutes or until bottoms are light brown.
    11. Cool completely on racks.
    12. May be frozen.
  • 12-20-2007 12:10 AM In reply to

    Re: Eating Well between the years... Quick, Easy and Leftover Recipes ... Countdown till 2008

    Subject: Spicy Chicken Soup With Vegetables
    Posted by: salsarose Replies: 0 Posted on: 3/12/2007 9:17:38 AM
    #T805397
    Spicy Chicken Soup With Vegetables


    INGREDIENTS:
    1 pound boneless chicken breasts or tenders, cut into 1-inch cubes
    2 small potatoes, cubed
    1 small carrot, diced
    1 1/2 cups frozen corn kernels
    1/2 cup chopped onion
    1/2 cup chopped celery
    2 tablespoons Dijon mustard
    1/4 tsp ground black pepper
    dash cayenne or hot pepper sauce
    1/8 tsp garlic powder
    2 1/2 cups vegetable juice (V-8 Brand)
    1 1/2 cups chicken broth
    salt to taste
    PREPARATION:
    Combine chicken, vegetables, mustard, black and cayenne pepper, and garlic powder in slow cooker; pour vegetable juice and chicken broth over all. Cover and cook on low for 7 to 9 hours. Taste and add salt, if needed.
    Serves 4 to 6.

     

  • 12-20-2007 12:11 AM In reply to

    Re: Eating Well between the years... Quick, Easy and Leftover Recipes ... Countdown till 2008

    hi everybody

    thanks for the recipe texas  - this is a good idea to use up the cauliflower in a complete different way.

    Speaking of the christmas carol - i love it too and we have several versions  - i think i have seen every kind of movie even the bill murry one - which i enjoy -lol - but my very favorit is a audiobook version my son got when he was maybe 4 years old - the voice of this reader is amazing -i hear it every year.

    I will have to renovate DS room again - his desk collaped - my father admit when he put together the desk he had forgotten to double check the screws - oh well it did its job for some time but now it is ruined. I will go to IKEA on friday and he will also get a new wardrobe as his is a bit to childish now -lol.

    erna i hope you had fun with your domino ladies!!

    renate i sure hope your DH gets much better soon i now you want to go as soon as possible. i had no idea you have that many bosnians in st. louis - we had so many different former yugoslavians from all parts in germany - durin the kosovo war - many went back home  - still we have quite a few here...

    berny how is it going for you - out northern star? hope your butter tarts turned out nice...

    i am constantly nibbeling on ernas ulmer brot it is great - it actually cause a bit of a fight at the meeting my mom went to as a few ladies discussed the ulmer brot everybody had a different reciope but they all agreed ernas was great -lol

    ok got to hit the shower and off to work.

    twinkle

  • 12-20-2007 12:13 AM In reply to

    Re: Eating Well between the years... Quick, Easy and Leftover Recipes ... Countdown till 2008

    Geeked  Picasso,it worked,how great. I have Firefox,but I never use it.i have to get used to it.Renate

    now I also have The B I and U you talked about underneath the message. 

  • 12-20-2007 2:16 AM In reply to

    Re: Eating Well between the years... Quick, Easy and Leftover Recipes ... Countdown till 2008

    melanie i have just been on ebay  germany as i was looking for something and i have seen a bavarian cookbook in english - i thought you might be interested...

    My eyes were about to pop out about the amount of cookbooks and handwritten recipes and such on ebay USA - very tempting -lol

    renate i am so happy it is working for you!!

    twinkle

  • 12-20-2007 7:22 AM In reply to

    Re: Eating Well between the years... Quick, Easy and Leftover Recipes ... Countdown till 2008

    The Story of the
    Christmas Cake

    The Christmas Cake as we know it today comes from two customs which became one around 1870 in Victorian England. Originally there was a porridge, the origins of which go back to the beginnings of Christianity. Then there was a fine cake made with the finest milled wheatflour, this was baked only in the Great Houses, as not many people had ovens back in the 14th century.

    PLUM PORRIDGE
    Originally people used to eat a sort of porridge on Christmas Eve. It was a dish to line the stomach after a day's fasting, which people used to observe for Christmas Eve, or the 'Vigil' as it was called long ago. Gradually, they began to put spices, dried fruits, honey etc in the porridge to make it a special dish for Christmas. Much later it was turned into a pudding, because it got to be so stiff with all the fruits and things, that they would tie it in a cloth, and dunk it into a large cauldron of boiling water and boil it for many hours. This turned into Christmas Pudding.

    PLUMCAKE
    Later, around the 16th century, it became popular to add butter, replace the oatmeal with wheatflour, add eggs to hold it together better. This became boiled plumcake. So boiled plum pudding and boiled fruitcake existed side by side depending on which ingredients the housewife used.

    Only big houseS had proper ovens to bake in. In the castles and fine homes, people would make a special cake for Easter, which was a rich fruitcake recipe with a topping of what we now call marzipan or almond paste. A similar cake was baked for the Christmas festivities, but whereas the Easter one was a plain cake with almonds, the Christmas one had dried fruits in season and spices. These represented the exotic spices of the East, and the gifts of the Wise Men . Such things were first brought to Europe and Britain particularly, by the Crusaders coming back from the wars in the Holy Land in the 12th century.

    TWELFTH NIGHT CAKE
    But it was not a Christmas cake, but a Twelfth Night Cake. Twelfth night is on the 5th January, and has been for centuries the traditional last day of the Christmas season.. It was a time for having a great feast, and the cake was an essential part of the festivities. This was slightly different in different countries, and also at different social levels.

    In the GREAT HOUSES Into the cake was baked a dried Bean and a Pea. one in one half and the other in the other half. The cake was decorated with sugar, like our icing, but not so dense, and ornamentation. As the visitors arrived, they were given a piece of the cake, ladies from the left, gentlemen from the right side. Whoever got the bean became King of the Revels for the night, and eveyone had to do as he said. The lady was his Queen for the evening.

    In smaller homes, the cake was a simple fruitcake, with a bean in it, which was given to guests during the twelve days of Christmas. Whoever got the bean was supposed to be a kind of guardian angel for that family for the year, so it was an important task, and usually, it was arranged that a senior member of the family would get the bean! This was observed until recently in Poland in fact.

    In Britain the cake was baked as part of the refreshments offered to the priest and his entpourage who would visit on the feast of the Epiphany, January 6th, to bless each house in the parish. this custom died out after the Reformation in the late 16th century.. In Mallorca, the main island of the Spanish Balearics Islands, they have a similar custom which takes place at Easter.

    The festive cake in Britain was revived at the end of the 17th century, and became very much part of the Twelfth night partying again. It is recorded In royal households, that the cakes became extravagantly large, and the guests divided into two side could have a battle with models on the cake! One battle was a sea battle, and there were minature water canon on the cake which really worked!

    TWELFTH NIGHT
    This is the Church festival of Ephiphany. The traditional day when Christians celebrate the arrival of the Magi or Three Kings at Bethlehem. It used to be the time when people exchanged their Christmas gifts. The feast was marked, as were all the old feasts, by some kind of religious observance. A visit to the church, a service or some kind, and then a folk observance which was tightly wrapped up as part of the Church activities. As we have seen, Twelve Day (the day following Twelfth Night) entailed the blessing of the home, and in some countries is still observed. But after the Reformation, these customs of the Church were banned by the Puritans, and fell into disuse. Without its religious overtones, Twelfth Night became a time of mischief and over indulgence. By 1870, Britains Queen Victoria announced that she felt it was inappropriate to hold such an unchristian festival, and Twelfth Night was banned as a feastday.

    THE ARRIVAL OF THE CHRISTMAS CAKE
    The confectioners who made the cakes were left with boxes full of figurines and models for Twelfth Cakes, and also had lost revenue by the banning of the feast. So they began to bake a fruitcake and decorate it with snowy scenes, or even flower gardens and Italian romantic ruins. These they sold not for the 5th January, but for December Christmas parties. And it was thus that we developed the Christmas cake.

    BOILED PLUM CAKE FOR THE COLONIES
    People in Britain began to make the boiled fruitcake to send to their families who had gone to the new world colonies - in Australia, Canada, etc. and to send to those who worked on the missions. The boiled cakes lasted bestter than the baked ones, and in those days of the 19th century, they could take many weeks or months even to cross the world by ship. These cakes were usually sent as part of a Christmas Hamper of food and presents, and this way the tradition of Christmas cake, often eaten with a piece of cheese or apple pie, became known all over the world.

    The Americans in turn were getting cakes sent from all parts of Europe by relatives in the 'Old Country'. Then in the 1890's a German immigrant opened a cake bakery in a small town, and began to bake cakes which the Americans in turn would send to their relatives back in Europe. This cake was based on a traditional Christmas cake, but contained many of the fruits which were grown in the Americas. This cake is now sent out to countries all over the world by the bakery, and is probably the most popular Christmas Cake today!

  • 12-20-2007 9:57 AM In reply to

    Re: Eating Well between the years... Quick, Easy and Leftover Recipes ... Countdown till 2008

    Hello everyone! Thank you Darlene and Melanie for the cards and recipes!

     

    Have a busy day again today.....going to work and then going to my parents for supper and to make candy! :) I made some cookies and candy to send with dh to work tonight. The guys he works with just love chocolate covered pretzels.....they can't figure out how you fix them!!! LOL!!! I showed dh and he couldn't beleve how easy it was! Big Smile

     

    Well I have to get ready.....going to go eat Chinese food today..

    Later Jet

    I think I can, I think I can, I think I can do it!!!! :)
  • 12-20-2007 11:57 AM In reply to

    Re: Eating Well between the years... Quick, Easy and Leftover Recipes ... Countdown till 2008

    hello

    thank you very much for this info picasso - that is very interesting! I had no real idea about the fruit cake traditions!

    my grandma who was born and raise in england has a very nice fruit cake and plum puding recipes she won't share so far - but she sends out one cae to each of her 6 children as part of a christmas gift - this year she send it in a very special tin - just beautiful. here in germany we have our stollen and that is our "fruit cake" - my mom often makes a very light and nice christmas cake with a marzipan and icing topping and she decorates it with marzipan candy - sometimes too pretty to even cut -lol but it gets eaten anyway...

    jet have fun with all those goodies - chinese food is always great. I love sweet and sour dishes the most and fried noodles

    ok see you ladies - back to the kitchen and thinking what i will make for supper -i got to clean out my pantry before i do my christmas shopping.

    twinkle

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