Monday, December 26, 2011

How to Make Quick and Easy Bar Cookies & Desserts

!±8± How to Make Quick and Easy Bar Cookies & Desserts

When you are in a hurry but still want a homemade cookie or dessert, try these delicious recipes. The Chocolate Scotcheroos are very quick and easy since they do not require baking. The crispy rice cereal crust coated with a delicious chocolate-butterscotch mixture is always a hit! The Raspberry Surprise Bars are also very easy as they use purchased slice and bake cookies as their crust. The recipe calls for using butterscotch cookies but chocolate or sugar would work as well.

CHOCOLATE SCOTCHEROOS

1 cup sugar
1 cup white corn syrup
1 pkg (12-oz) chocolate chips
1 pkg (12-oz) butterscotch chips
1 cup creamy peanut butter
6 cups crispy rice cereal

In a 3-quart saucepan, combine the sugar and corn syrup. Cook the mixture over a medium heat, stirring frequently, until the mixture begins to boil. Remove the pan from the heat. Stir in the peanut butter until melted, mixing well. Add the crispy rice cereal and stir until well blended. Press the mixture evenly into the prepared pan. In the microwave or on the stove over hot, not boiling, water, melt the chocolate chips with the butterscotch chips. When completely melted and blended, spread the mixture evenly over the cereal mixture. Allow to cool. Cut into squares or rectangle bars.

Note: In extremely hot weather, keep refrigerated.

RASPBERRY SURPRISE BARS

1 pkg Butterscotch Slice and Bake cookies
8-oz cream cheese
2 tbsp milk
1/2 cup raspberry preserves (or other flavor to suit your taste)

Slice cookies and place close together in a 9 X 13-inch cake pan. Bake cookies at temperature instructed on cookies package for 10 to 12 minutes or until golden brown. Meanwhile mix the cream cheese with the milk. As soon as you remove the cookies from the oven, spread the cream cheese mixture over the top of the cookies. Spread the preserves over the cream cheese. Cool before cutting into squares.

Enjoy!


How to Make Quick and Easy Bar Cookies & Desserts

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Tuesday, December 6, 2011

Jazz Up Your Party with a Cajun Tradition

!±8± Jazz Up Your Party with a Cajun Tradition

Entertaining is a great way to spend time with your family and friends, but after a while your staple party ideas may seem to become a bit stale. Coming up with fun themes or ideas can be a bit daunting, but if you check out the traditions of other cultures you may find just what you need to spicy up your next party. If you're looking for a way to jazz up your get-togethers with new ideas and fun themes then consider borrowing a Cajun tradition or two. Louisianans are known for having a good time whether it's at Mardi Gras or just a family gathering.

Forget about that same backyard barbeque that you plan every year and host a crawfish boil instead. A crawfish boil is a great laid back event that guests of all ages can enjoy, and you can host one even if live crawfish are unheard of in your area because many Louisiana companies can ship them to you as long as they are in season (January through June). In addition to the crawfish, you can also serve corn on the cob, whole red potatoes, and onions just add them in the same boiling pot. Have plenty of cold beer and soft drinks available and your guests will definitely have a memorable time.

Rather than serving yet another oven roasted turkey to your dinner guests, treat them to a delicious stuffed turducken. A turducken is a Cajun poultry phenomenon that consists of a semi-boneless turkey that is stuffed with a boneless duck that is stuffed with a boneless chicken. Additionally each bird is stuffed with some sort of seasoned dressing as well. Since turduckens can be baked in the oven or cooked on a grill or smoker they work great as a main course for sit down dinners as well as outdoor parties.

You can even use thin slices to make delicious finger sandwiches that your guests are sure to love. Simply use the turducken slices in place of roast beef, ham or turkey. Just be sure to use a sausage stuffed variety because those with cornbread or rice dressings tend to fall apart when sliced and which could result in sandwiches that are quite messy.

If a turducken is too much for your guests to handle try deep frying a turkey instead. A Cajun fried turkey has a crispy skin and tender juicy inside that will definitely please a hungry crowd. A fried turkey is not battered as fried chicken is, but is merely seasoned well with a dry rub or injected with a marinade and fried in hot oil. Most Louisianans prefer peanut oil because it adds an extra layer of flavor but, you can use any oil with a high smoking point. Since this cooking process requires 2 gallons of hot oil (it should be heated to about 350 degrees) you should only attempt to prepare this tasty bird outdoors; however, whether you serve it indoors or outdoors depends solely on the style of your party.

For an idea that will get your party guests involved in the meal preparation take a cue from a Cajun Mardi Gras tradition. On Mardi Gras day, townspeople travel from home to home requesting various ingredients that are needed to prepare a communal meal, which is usually a gumbo. You can recreate this tradition anytime of the year by asking each guest to bring an ingredient for the gumbo. Gumbo is a dish that is best suited for cooler weather, but during warmer months you can request that guests contribute ingredients needed for a jambalaya.

These Cajun inspired ideas provide great entertaining options that can be used throughout the year to jazz up any party or dinner. Whether you're hosting a backyard party or Thanksgiving dinner give it a Cajun twist and your guests are sure to have a great time that they won't soon forget.


Jazz Up Your Party with a Cajun Tradition

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Saturday, December 3, 2011

All Kinds of "Kitchen Hints" From Those Who Have Been There!

!±8± All Kinds of "Kitchen Hints" From Those Who Have Been There!

Age has a way of letting you collect many wonderful hints to use at any given moment. These hints can be applied to a variety of different areas of our lives. I am looking forward to collecting many more of these hints as I go from mid to late middle age (autumn season of my life) to being among the older and aged (winter season of my life).

I would like to start sharing some of these helpful hints with all of the younger ages (spring and summer seasons). Sharing with people, which do NOT already think that they know-it-all could prove very beneficial to these youngsters.

Some of the hints were handed down by word of mouth, some I found in cookbooks and magazines and in more recent years, on the computer and through e-mails. These hints are for the KITCHEN. There will be hints for cooking, hints for cleaning up, hints to not have to clean up, dessert hints, fruit hints, and annoying fruit fly hints.

For dry fluffy rice, every time, make sure and put a slice of dry bread on top of the cooked rice and cover.

To keep muffins from burning around the edges, fill one of the middle sections (cups) with water instead of batter.

When boiling potatoes, put a little butter in the water to keep it from boiling over.

To keep a double pie from running over, stick two or three pieces of macaroni in the center of the top crust. The juice bubbles up through these macaroni.

Before melting chocolate, run the inside of the pan it is to be melted in, with butter. The chocolate will not stick to the pan.

To warm up cold biscuits, muffins, or rolls, dampen a paper towel and wrap the biscuits, muffins, or rolls. Then, place the wrapped bread either on a tin into a warm oven for a few minutes, or on a microwavable plate and into the microwave for a few seconds.

When cream will not whip, add the white of an egg. Let the cream and egg thoroughly chill and then it try again.

To keep warming milk (from cows, soy, rice, etc) form scorching so quickly, rinse the pan with water, before heating the milk in a saucepan.

Sprinkle a little flour in the pan before frying eggs. This will prevent the eggs from popping.

To get Brazil nuts to come out whole, freeze them for a couple of hours before cracking them.

For crispy pie crust made with pure vegetable shortening, substitute one or two Tablespoons of apple cider vinegar for = the water. Doing this will moisten the dough mix.

To eliminate the mess with ground cranberries, wash, sort, drain well and FREEZE them before grinding them.

Rubbing salt into your wet fingertips will remove the odor of onions. After rinsing off the salt, repeat if necessary.

Peel a banana from the bottom and you will not have to pick the little "stringy things" off of it.

Pull your bananas apart when you get home from the store. If you leave them connected at the stem, they ripen faster.

Store your opened chunks of cheese in aluminum foil. It will stay fresh much longer and not mold. (I personally am NOT into aluminum foil-look up "dangers in aluminum").

Peppers with three bumps on the bottom are sweeter and better for eating. Peppers with four bumps on the bottom are firmer and better for cooking.

Add a teaspoon of water when frying ground beef. It will help pull the grease away from the meat while cooking.

To make really rich scrambled eggs or omelets, add in a couple of spoonfuls of sour cream, cream cheese, or heavy cream and then beat them.

For a cool brownie treat, make brownies as directed. Then, melt Andes mints in a double broiler and pour it over the warm brownies. Let it all set for a wonderful minty frosting.

Add garlic immediately to a recipe if you want a light taste of garlic. Add garlic at the end of the recipe if you want a stronger taste.

Before you pour a sticky substance into a measuring cup (like peanut butter), fill the cup with hot water. Dump out the hot water, but do NOT dry the measuring cup. Immediately, add your ingredient and watch how easily the peanut butter (or whatever) slides out.

Say goodbye to those pesky fruit flies by taking a small glass, fill it half way with Apple Cider Vinegar and two drops of dish washing liquid; mix well. You will find those flies drawn to the cup and gone forever!

To prevent ice cream cone drips, stuff the bottom of the cone with a miniature marshmallow.

Use a meat baster to "squeeze" your pancake batter onto the hot griddle and you will get perfectly shaped pancakes every time.

To keep potatoes from budding, place an apple in the bag with potatoes.

Prevent eggshells from cracking; add a pinch of salt to the water before hard-boiling.

To easily remove burnt on food from your skillet, simply add a drop or two of dish soap and enough water to cover the bottom of the pan, and bring it to boil on the stove top.

Spray your plastic ware with nonstick cooking pan spray before pouring in tomato-based sauces and there won't be any stains.

If you accidentally over-salt a dish, while it is still cooking, drop in a peeled potato and it will absorb the excess salt for an instant "fix me up".

Place an apple in hardened brown sugar to soften it.

When boiling corn on the cob, add a pinch of sugar to help bring out the corn's natural sweetness.

To determine whether an egg is fresh, immerse it in a pan of cool, salted water. If it sinks, it is fresh, but if it rises to the surface, throw it away.

You can have even more fun in the KITCHEN, now that you have some extra hints to make it all easier! Happy working in the KITCHEN!


All Kinds of "Kitchen Hints" From Those Who Have Been There!

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