Friday, October 3, 2014

Bon Appetite - A Weekend Treat: CRACKER PUDDING


My contemporary novel, KEY TO LOVE, is currently on sale for $0.99 for the entire month of October. In the novel, Lucas Fisher, the main hero, is trying to get custody of his little nephew, Todd Fisher, now orphaned because of his father’s death in a car accident. Todd loves eating animal crackers. This recipe is a great one—but you must use “oyster crackers.”

 
CRACKER PUDDING
 

1 qt. milk
½ cup flour
½ to ¾ cup sugar
½ tsp salt
1 egg
½ cup coconut
1 cup crushed oyster crackers

Let milk come to a boil. Mix flour, sugar, salt
and egg into a batter. Add the batter, coconut
and crackers to the milk and cook until thick.

Friday, September 26, 2014

Bon Appetite - A Weekend Treat: CAJUN SHRIMP

This is a favorite of everyone when we have get-togethers. It gives shrimp an entirely different taste. All you need is the infectious beat of an accordion and fiddle to make it truly Cajun!



         
  









CAJUN SHRIMP

1 Lb. Shelled Deveined Shrimp
2 Tsp. Paprika
1 Tsp. Thyme
1 Tsp. Seafood Seasoning***
½ Tsp. Seasoned Salt
½ Tsp. Red & Black Pepper
¼ Tsp. Nutmeg
¼ Tsp. Garlic Powder
¼ Tsp. Old Bay Seasoning

Combine seasonings.  Heat
3 Tbsp. oil in a large skillet.
Add seasonings and stir about
30 seconds till bubbling.  Add
shrimp and stir till all coated.
Over medium heat, cook 3
minutes covered.  Remove
cover, stir and cook 2 minutes,
stir and cook 1 minute.  Serve
with or without cocktail sauce.

*** Chef Paul Prudhomme’s Seafood Magic is good
 

Friday, September 12, 2014

Bon Appetite - A Weekend Treat: NOBBY APPLE CAKE


Every Friday I'll be sharing a favorite recipe. With autumn sneaking up on us in Central Pennsylvania, I'm featuring an apple treat. This is an old recipe I copied from my mother's handwritten notebook of her most loved recipes.


Nobby Apple Cake                                                           

 6 TBSP butter or margarine 
2 cups sugar
2 eggs
1 tsp cinnamon
½ tsp salt
2 tsp baking soda
2 cups sifted flour
6 cups diced apples
½ cup chopped nuts
2 tsp vanilla

Cream margarine, sugar and eggs;
Sift dry ingredients together and add to creamed mixture
Stir in diced apples, nuts and vanilla
Pour into greased pan.
Bake: 350 degrees for 40-45 minutes

I prefer to lightly ice my cake with just a plain thin layer of vanilla frosting. 
Great with ice cream or whipped cream or plain.

Friday, August 29, 2014

TOMATOES: The Beauties of a Fall Harvest


This is the time of the year when the fall harvest begins. For gardeners, anxious to taste the first tomatoes of the season, this is the time when the fruit swells on the vines and everyone scurries to find ways to store the pretty red or yellow beauties for future use. There are more than 4,000 varieties of tomatoes in our world, ranging from the small, marble-size cherry tomato to the giant Ponderosa that weights more than three pounds.

Tomatoes can be cooked, eaten raw, canned, frozen and used in a variety of sauces. According to the U.S. Department of Agriculture, Americans eat more than 22 pounds of tomatoes every year. More than half this amount is eaten in the form of ketchup and tomato sauce.

Technically, a tomato is a fruit, since it is the ripened ovary of a plant. In 1893, the Supreme Court ruled in the case of “Nix vs. Hedden” that tomatoes were to be considered vegetables.

The word "tomato" comes from the Spanish tomate, and is member of the deadly nightshade family. Tomatoes were not cultivated in North America until the 1700s, and then only in home gardens since many people thought them to be poisonous. By 1782, Thomas Jefferson was raising tomatoes on his plantation. But it took until the 1900s for them to may their way into American cookbooks.

The H. J. Heinz Company, also known as the Heinz Company, and commonly known as Heinz, is a food processing company and is worldwide famous for its "57 Varieties" slogan and its ketchup. Its world headquarters is in Pittsburgh, PA. Henry Heinz picked the number 57 at random because of its sound after he rode an elevated train in New York City and spied an advertisement for a shoe store boasting “21 styles.”

Whether your eating pizza sauce, tomato soup, ketchup on your fries, or a simple BLT (Bacon, Lettuce and Tomato) sandwich, the tomato is now a common ingredient in most people’s diets. Let the fall harvest begin!