Author Archives: cookingwithcandi

This Plum Torte was amazing. Light and delicious. I used larger plums so used less plums. Highly recommend making 2 and freezing for Thanksgiving.

cookingwithcandi's avatarCooking with Candi

photoDSCN4225DSCN4214DSCN4216My friend Ellen sent me this recipe in the spring of last year and I couldn’t find these plums anywhere. She re-sent it to me and I think it’s a most perfect dessert, and I was thinking it would be so perfect for Jewish Holidays but the plums will no longer be available soon.  You can make two and freeze one or freeze both of them for the holidays.  Ellen is an awesome cook so I totally trust her on this.  So here you go. It’s best made with the small italian plums that are out end of August and early September and you know how much I love using seasonal fruits and veggies. Thanks Ellen.

These plums can be called Italian Prunes as well, and try and use them because they are beyond delish!

Perfect for freezing.

Ingredients:

1 cup sugar

1/2 cup sweet butter softened (room temp. or I soften for…

View original post 166 more words

Reblogging the original noodle pudding with apricot nectar. One of the best noodle puddings ever.

cookingwithcandi's avatarCooking with Candi

I’ve tried so many noodle puddings, but keep coming back to the same old , same old. they’ve been passed down in so many different incarnations. i don’t even know what the original one is anymore. this is my most favorite. also a perfect break fast food. can and should be made ahead of time, they hold together better.  we used to add apricot jam, but it really was overkill. we omitted it, and it is perfect just the way it is. thanks to karyn r. for this noodle pudding and for being such a great cooking buddy for as far back as i can remember.

1 lb. noodles ( i use extra wide egg noodles, you’ll need a bag and 1/4 app. just eyeball it)

1 cup sugar

6 eggs ( I use extra large and at room temp. just make sure they are not right out of fridge) they work much better when…

View original post 201 more words

Julie’s Honey Cake with Whiskey – Holiday Recipe

DSCN4319Firstly, thanks so much Julie for taking the time out of your busy baking to send me these wonderful recipes and allowing me to post them on my site. Julie bakes and sells her products in the Aspen area and will ship anywhere, the name of her company is Aspen Jewels Bakery.  Julie also said to inform all of us who live at high altitude that this is strictly a “sea level” cake, if cooked at high altitude it will sink and will be raw inside. This is unfortunate, but there are lots of other cakes to bake.  High Altitude baking is treacherous. You will need a tube pan for this cake.

Ingredients:

3 1/2 cups flour

1 teaspoon baking soda

1/2 teaspoon salt

1 1/2 Tablespoon cinnamon

1/2 teaspoon nutmeg

1/2 teaspoon ginger

3 eggs ( room temp)

1 cup vegetable oil or canola oil which Julie recommends

1 cup sugar

1/2 cup brown sugar

1 Tablespoon Whiskey

1 cup Honey

1 1/2 cups coffee (just leave it in a cup from the morning coffee)

1/4 cup orange juice from a fresh orange ( you will need the zest anyway)

1 Tablespoon orange zest

1 cup chopped pecans

Directions:

Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Spray a tube pan with flour spray. Beat honey, sugars, eggs and oil. Add zest. Mix all dry ingredients in a bowl and set aside. Add coffee and juice alternating with dry ingredients. Fold in nuts. Bake for 70 – 90 minutes until tester comes out clean. Let cool for 30 minutes before removing from pan. Let cool completely.

Sprinkle with powdered sugar before serving.

Or you can make a chocolate glaze to put on top . Once the cake cools down.

Chocolate Glaze:

this is perfect to drizzle over cakes of any kind, it is my recipe for chocolate glaze. You may have to play with the consistency. Add the powdered sugar slowly till you achieve the texture you want. You can always add a little more warm water to thin it out.

3 Tablespoons Cocoa Powder

2 Tablespoons melted butter

1 cup powdered sugar ( confectioners)

3 Tbsp. warm water (could use milk but not necessary)

1/2 tsp. vanilla

Melt butter, add all ingredients , ( go slowly with sugar), Stir until well mixed and smooth. You may need to play around with icing to get the consistency you want. Drizzle on cooled down cake.

Plum Torte

photoDSCN4225 DSCN4214 DSCN4216My friend Ellen sent me this recipe in the spring of last year and I couldn’t find these plums anywhere. She re-sent it to me and I think it’s a most perfect dessert, and I was thinking it would be so perfect for Jewish Holidays but the plums will no longer be available soon.  You can make two and freeze one or freeze both of them for the holidays.  Ellen is an awesome cook so I totally trust her on this.  So here you go. It’s best made with the small italian plums that are out end of August and early September and you know how much I love using seasonal fruits and veggies. Thanks Ellen.

These plums can be called Italian Prunes as well, and try and use them because they are beyond delish!

Perfect for freezing.

Ingredients:

1 cup sugar

1/2 cup sweet butter softened (room temp. or I soften for a few seconds in microwave , but don’t melt)

1 cup flour, sifted

1 tsp. baking powder

pinch salt

2 eggs ( always bake with room temp. eggs unless otherwise stated)

12  pitted purple italian plums, halved*  ( often called Italian Prunes) If you can’t find the Italian Prune type you can use regular plums, but try and make this now while they are in the store and freeze this.

lemon juice and sugar for topping

Directions:

cream sugar and butter, add flour , baking powder, salt and eggs, beat well. Cut a round piece of parchment paper and line a 9 inch springform pan. Spoon the batter into pan ( it will be thick so you’ll need to spread it a bit). Place plum halves skin side up. Sprinkle plums lightly with lemon juice and then sprinkle sugar all over. Bake at 350 degrees for 1 hour. Cool, invert and gently peel off paper then invert again – plum side up.

This is a keeper.

Roasted Potatoes with Mustard and Onions

I saw this on the Barefoot Contessa TV show and thought this would be so tasty. It was! I made it with chicken and steak, but honestly this would be great alongside any dish. Very easy and pretty perfect. This was how I prepared it. It served 6 very well, and it could probably serve 8 – 10 as a side dish. A perfect dish for Thanksgiving or Christmas or any dinner party.

Ingredients:

2 – 2 1/2 lbs. Yukon gold potatoes

2 medium size yellow onions

3 tablespoons olive oil

2 tablespoons whole-grain mustard

Kosher Salt – about 2 teaspoons

Freshly Ground Black Pepper – a few good grinds of the pepper mill

Directions:

Preheat the oven to 400 degrees.

Cut the potatoes in quarters, and then I cut them again, I found they crisped up better smaller.  Place on a very large sheet pan, do not crowd. I actually used two baking sheets for this amount of potatoes.  Remove the ends of the onions, peel them, and cut them in half, slice them crosswise in app. 1/4 ” slices to make half rounds. Toss the onions and potatoes on the sheet pan. ( I also sprayed pans generously with Pam cooking spray)

In a separate bowl, with a wire whisk mix the mustard and the olive oil, and pour over potatoes. With clean hands I mixed up everything on sheet pan, then sprinkled 2 teaspoons kosher salt, and freshly ground black pepper on the potatoes and mixed again.  I baked for about an hour at 400, or until the potatoes were lightly browned on the outside and tender on the inside. I prefer a little crispy, do them however you like. I tossed a few times with a metal spatula during cooking process.

Taste for salt, and you can always add more salt at the end. 

Potato – Zucchini Latkes for Chanukah

It’s almost Chanukah if you can believe it!  These tasty little pancakes are perfect for the holiday and really any day.   Most perfect of all is that you can cook them, freeze them and have them for whenever you want. They make a great appetizer or side dish. My experience with latkes is that they never really taste as good as when you first fry them, but that’s such an impossible task with people waiting to eat and having fifty million other things to do. Latkes are the ultimate comfort food. This is just a little twist on the traditional potato latke .  Usually about 2 – 2 1/2 inches in diameter is the right size, but it’s up to you. Not sure where this recipe hails from. The original from my Grandmother, but the zucchini was added later. My grandmother didn’t own a food processor and it’s a game changer, just makes it so much simpler to do.  I loved my Grandmother’s latkes and not quite sure what she did to make them so delicious but I try my best.

Happy Chanukah!

If you’re not into the zucchini thing just add 2 more potatoes and omit the zucchini.

Delicious served with applesauce , that’s how we do it here.

Ingredients:

6 russet potatoes, peeled and quartered (for food processor)

2 zucchini, cut into large chunks (for food processor)

1 spanish onion, peeled, and cut into quarters (for food processor)

4 eggs, beaten

1 – 2 teaspoons kosher salt ( more to taste) tasting is key here , potatoes can be very bland

1/2 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper

2/3 cup matzoh meal or bread crumbs ( if you’re making for Passover it’s perfect with matzoh meal)

Vegetable oil for frying

*applesauce for dipping ( optional) this is what we use

* sour cream ( optional) if you like

Directions:

Using the grater blade for the food processor, grate the onions, potatoes, and zucchini. A little trick to these latkes is to drain out as much of the liquid as possible, so I literally squeeze out every drop of liquid with my hands. I let each vegetable sit in a colander to drain as I grate the next one.

In a separate bowl, beat together the eggs, salt and pepper. Add it to the potato mixture and combine well. Next, add the matzoh meal or bread crumbs.  Taste for salt (start with 1 teaspoon and add more if needed, this is very important for flavor.

Heat oil in a large, heavy skillet or cast iron skillet, over a high flame. You want the oil very hot. I test the oil with a drop of water–when it sizzles, it is ready to fry. I put about 2 inches of oil in the pan, you may need to add more as you start frying. Form pancakes about 2 inches in diameter, place (very) carefully into the oil, and when the edges start to crisp up, turn them over and continue cooking until golden. If you like them flat and crispier, then flatten them out with a spatula while cooking and start with a little less.

*I like the oil to be clean as I fry a lot, so if it starts to run down I usually pour it out, wipe pan with paper towel and add fresh new oil. This is only in the event the oil starts to get very dark from the potatoes. It may not be necessary but sometimes it is. They will just fry up better.

Let the pancakes cool off, and serve plain or with sour cream or applesauce on the side. If you are freezing them, let cool completely first, then I usually use a Hefty Ziploc freezer bag. Mark them with the date, and take them out the night before you need them. They should stay for at least a month in freezer, and probably longer.

*to re-heat I like to use the oven at 350 degrees on a cookie sheet for about 15 mins. depending on how thick they are. Spray the cookie sheet with Pam Spray and you may want to flip them over 1/2 way through. Make sure they are heated throughout. Serve with some of that homemade applesauce on my blog. Enjoy!

Happy New Year Brisket re-blog

Happy New Year Brisket – excellent recipe for delicious brisket.

A Noodle Pudding from Julie – Apricot Apple Noodle Kugel

DSCN4319Firstly I want to say thank you to Julie for your support and your wonderful recipes , it’s so great to be able to share new and different recipes especially for the same old same old. This one sounds amazing, and I am excited to try it. According to Julie it’s been published in several papers in Detroit. So we have a noodle pudding from Michigan. Thanks Julie. I am going to be making this one this year.

Ingredients:

1 lb . medium egg noodles

1 cups butter, melted

1 1/2 cup sgar

1 1/2 pints sour cream

1 teaspoon vanilla

5 eggs, beaten

1 1lb. crushed pineapple, drained

1 lb. dried apricots, chopped

1 lb. dried apples, chopped

3/4 cup applesauce

brown sugar and cinnamon * for the top of the pudding ( about 1/2 cup brown sugar and 1 tablespoon cinnamon) just enough to sprinkle over the entire top of casserole. You will have to eyeball this.

Directions:

Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Cook noodles in boiling water for 5 minutes and drain.   Pour melted butter over noodles. Combine sugar, sour cream, vanilla, eggs, pineapple, applesauce and apricots. Combine fruit mixture with noodles.

Line a 9 x 13 or larger pan with cooking spray and place dried apples in the bottom of the pan. Pour noodle mixture into the pan and sprinkle with brown sugar and cinnamon. ( you may not need 1/2 cup of brown sugar, just sprinkle entire top )

Bake for 45 minutes or until set and serve immediately. Cut while warm, this freezes beautifully. Julie suggests cutting it before freezing.

Rosh Hashana Menu

My menu could change at any moment, but I will give you a listing of recipes that I posted last year and a few new ones. I will write the titles of the recipes and all you have to do is put that into the search box on my blog or Holiday Recipes should work.  I am going to post a few new recipes , and I will reblog some of the old ones as well. In the event that you’re planning your menu and starting to shop for the holiday, here is a list of some oldies but goodies that may work out well for you. Remember to look for the new recipes as well, I will be posting them throughout this week.  If you haven’t done so, please subscribe so you get my emails as I post them. ( It’s free and fun)

Happy New Year Brisket, Chicken Marbella, Applesauce and Raisin Cake, Don’t let the Apples go Bad Cake, Mushroom Barley, Grandma Millie’s Cauliflower, Another Noodle Pudding from Marcy ( Parve), Noodle Pudding with Apricot Nectar, Homemade Chicken soup with Not-so-homemade Matzo Balls, Happy New Year Brisket and Happy New Year Chicken.

*if you type in Holiday/ Holiday Recipes you should also be able to find the recipes . Most are categorized, in fact almost all of them are.

My Farewell to Nora Ephron: her Tzimmes

Nora Ephron was a wonderful writer and filmmaker. When she died,  her recipes were passed around  at her memorial service. This one was printed in the NY Times and I held on to it so I would be able to pay some small homage to her. Since Rosh Hashanah is almost here, I thought it appropriate to post this recipe, which is a traditional Jewish dish of stewed fruits and vegetables. The funny part about this recipe is that, in it, Nora states that it is “delicious with a pork roast”. You have to laugh at her delicious sense of humor. I will miss her work and so this is my homage to her–the woman and the artist. I will think of her with fondness when I prepare this dish.

Ingredients:

5 carrots cut in various shapes

3 peeled yams cut into pieces

2 cups butternut squash cut up

1 cup dried apricots

1 cup pitted prunes

1/4 cup raisins

2 cups beef stock

3 tbsp. butter or margarine

1/3 cup brown or white sugar or marmalade

1 tbsp. cornstarch

Directions:

In a small pot bring the beef stock to a boil with the butter.

Add the carrots and boil for about 5 minutes till tender but not overcooked. Remove with a slotted spoon to a bowl. Add 3 peeled yams, and boil for about 5 – 7 minutes till tender but not overcooked. Remove to bowl with carrots. Add butternut squash and boil until tender but not overcooked. Remove to bowl. Add a cup of dried apricots and cook 5 minutes, remove, and then do the same with the prunes. Add some raisins for a minute or two. Then boil down the broth that’s left, adding about 1/3 cup sugar, white or brown; or if you prefer 1/3 cup marmalade. When mixture is reduced by about half, remove about 1/2 cup to a measuring cup. Whisk 1 tbsp. cornstarch into it, then add broth to the pot, and whisk until thickened. Put all the vegetables and fruit into a large, pretty casserole dish, and pour the broth over it. Before serving, reheat at 400 degrees for about 15 minutes.

* I printed this directly off of her recipe from the NY Times