Browsing articles tagged with " recipes"
Apr 28, 2013
carolott

Blueberry Cream Cheese Tart

If you like cheesecake with fruit, this is an easy and quick dessert to make — and best with local, fresh fruit.  I don’t recommend using frozen fruit for this.  Feel free to use whatever fruit you have handy — all berries work well, as do fresh summer peaches.

You’ll need a nine-inch metal tart pan with a removable bottom.  If you don’t have one, you can find inexpensive ones at Target or a restaurant supply store.

Crust Ingredients:

  • 1-1/4 cups all-purpose flour
  • 1/3 cup sugar
  • 1 stick very cold butter, cut into small cubes.
Filling Ingredients:
  • 1 package (8 ounces) cream cheese (do not use lowfat or fat free)
  • 1/4 cup sugar
  • 1 tsp. vanilla
  • 1 to 2 cups fresh blueberries (or sliced fruit of your choice), rinsed and drained, stray stems removed.

Method:

  • In the food processor, mix flour, butter, and sugar until mixture resembles cornmeal — dough should come together when pinched between the fingers.
  • Dump the contents of the food processor into the tart shell, and with floured hands (or the bottom of a floured measuring cup) press the dough firmly into the bottom and sides of the pan.
  • Preheat oven to 350 degrees F
  • Place tart shell into the freezer and let it firm up — this takes about 15 minutes or so.
  • Once the shell has firmed, place it into the oven, middle rack, and bake until it’s just starting to turn a slight golden color.  Do not let it brown!  Approximately 20-30 minutes, depending on your oven.
  • While the tart shell is cooling (it needs to be completely cool before adding the filling) — mix the filling ingredients, minus the fruit, until completely combined.
  • After the shell is completely cool, add cream cheese filling, top with a layer of fruit, pressing slightly on the fruit so it sticks to the filling.
  • Refrigerate until firm — approximately 45 minutes to an hour.
  • Remove ring from tart pan before slicing — serves 8 to 10, use a sharp knife.

If you don’t eat grains and would still like to make this dessert, you can!  Make the filling and spoon the cream cheese mixture into ramekins, top with fruit, and refrigerate until firm.

Jul 15, 2012
carolott

Pickles, Schmickles

Apparently the idea of making homemade pickles appeals to a lot of folks, so here’s the recipe I used to make these:

Pickles!

Ingredients:

  • cucumbers
  • red onion
  • garlic cloves
  • sea salt
  • dill (fresh or dried)
  • mustard seeds (or a little grainy mustard if you don’t have seeds)
  • cracked peppercorns
  • water
  • white vinegar

Directions:

I used 1 regular sized cucumber and two small picking cucumbers. You can use whatever size you have on hand. Quantities of water/vinegar, and spices will depend on how many cucumbers you have, and how sour you want them to be. The brine should cover the cucumbers completely, so plan accordingly.

Slice cucumbers into rounds — the thinner you slice them, the quicker they’ll absorb the brine. I find that 1/8 to 1/4 inch slices works the best. Any thinner and they’ll turn to mush. Slice red onion about the same thickness. Place all of the slices into a glass bowl or a heat-safe plastic bowl — DO NOT use a metal bowl.

Put water and vinegar in a saucepan (I used 1/2 water, 1/2 vinegar), with salt, mustard seeds, pepper, and garlic cloves. Bring to a rolling boil.

Taste the brine and adjust seasoning if needed.

Pour boiling brine over cucumbers and sliced onion, add dill. You can use dried dill if you don’t have fresh.

Leave on the counter until cool, cover with plastic wrap and leave in the fridge. These get better over time, but as soon as they’re cool, you can start eating them.  They don’t keep forever, but they’ll definitely keep for a few weeks.

Note:

If you prefer bread and butter pickles to salty garlic dills, use less salt and add some sugar to the salt/vinegar/water boil.

Feb 11, 2012
carolott

Rinktum Your Tiddy!

You might know about, or even share, my obsession with old cookbooks.  I’ve been collecting them for years — and I probably have culled my collection down to…50 or so.  I read them like other people read novels.  Reading old cookbooks gives you a sense as to what the world was like during the time the book was written — was the economy good?  Was the country at war?  Were people health-obsessed?

Not only are old cookbooks a window into the past, they’re a great way to find old classic recipes you never see anymore, or recipes that are more giggle-worthy than actually edible.  (Peanut loaf?  Umm…I’ll pass, thanks.)  Enter “Rinktum Tiddy”.  I found this recipe in the Good Housekeeping Book of Menus, Recipes and Household Discoveries, published in 1926.

  • 1 pint canned tomatoes
  • 1 tsp salt
  • 1 tsp sugar
  • 1/8 tsp pepper
  • dash cayenne pepper
  • 1 T chopped onion
  • 1/2 lb. cheese
  • 1 tsp butter
  • 1 egg
  • buttered toast or crackers

Heat the tomatoes and add all the seasonings.  When hot, melt in the cheese, adding it gradually while stirring constantly.  When smooth, add the butter and the egg beaten, stirring all the while.  Serve on slices of hot buttered toast or hot crackers.