Author Archives: cookingwithcandi

A little twist on plain Cranberry Sauce

cookingwithcandioct17 181More October 073It occured to me that sometimes I add this to my Cranberry Sauce, so I wanted to give you all this option.  First Prepare the Cranberry Sauce as I specified in previous recipe. Leave in the pot, then follow this recipe.

Ingredients:

1 Granny Smith apple, peeled, cored, and chopped

Grated Zest and Juice of 1 lemon

Grated Zest and Juice of 1 orange

3/4 cup raisins

3/4 cup chopped walnuts or pecans

Directions:

Cook the cranberries then add the apples, zests and juices and cook for another 15 minutes. Remove from the heat and add the raisins and nuts. Let it cool, and serve chilled.

Karyn’s Cranberry Crisp- Thanksgiving

Fully Cooked Cranberry Crisp

This recipe has been around pretty much my whole married life. If there is a turkey on the table, there is cranberry crisp next to it.  It originated from my friend Karyn, and we even make it for Passover with matzoh farfel.  It’s so sweet and delicious that it could really be a dessert. We love it with our meal; love the sweet and savory thing. You can’t eat too much of it, it is so rich. It is also very dangerous to have in the fridge the next day, so try to give it to everyone who wants to take home leftovers. This tastes good either hot out of the oven or at room temperature. Some people may even want to make it as dessert and serve with vanilla ice cream, but the Kolens don’t. We always serve it as a side dish, but it is awesome however you serve it. Thanks again, Karyn.

Ingredients:

*you def want to double this recipe

4 medium apples ( I use all different kinds)

1 can (1 lb.) whole cranberry sauce

1 tsp. cinnamon

1 cup uncooked quick rolled oats

1/2 cup flour

1 cup dark brown sugar, firmly packed

1/2 cup unsalted butter

Directions:

Preheat oven to 350 degrees and spray 9×13 baking dish with Pam.

Peel apples, slice them, then arrange in baking dish. Sprinkle with cinnamon. Spoon cranberry sauce over the apples.

Separately, stir rolled oats, flour, and brown sugar together. Cut in butter until it’s mixed in and crumbly. Sprinkle this over cranberry layer. Bake at 350 degrees until apples are cooked and top is lightly browned. The entire mixture will be bubbling and your house will smell divine. You will bake about 40 minutes to an hour. You can make ahead of time, and then on the day you need it, just heat it up until it bubbles. I usually make this a few days ahead, because it’s that much less that I’ll have to do the day of. You can freeze this also, so make it way ahead and freeze it. If you freeze it, take it out a day before you need it, and then heat it up the day of.

*just a little hint, if you are having trouble cutting in the butter, melt it first . This is a good hint . Then use your clean hands to squish it together. It is easier to work with this way. If you did it the other way , it’s OK, it will all come out the same,  just easier to melt first, sorry I didn’t suggest that from the get go.  Karyn pointed this out to me on Thanksgiving!

Enjoy!

Fresh Cranberry Sauce

I always have a fresh cranberry sauce on my Thanksgiving table, and I buy extra bags of fresh cranberries and throw them in the freezer so I can make it whenever I want to. It’s tart and sweet at the same time, and why would you buy the canned stuff when you can do this so quickly and easily. It’s delicious with all poultry. Buy a few bags of fresh cranberries, they are all over the place now. If you have the room throw a few bags in the freezer.

Ingredients:

12 ounce bag of fresh cranberries

1 cup water

1 cup sugar

Directions:

Bring 1 cup water and 1 cup sugar to a boil, dump in whole bag of cranberries (12 oz) bring to a boil, then lower heat and simmer for 10 minutes. I let it sit a little off the heat and then refrigerate, this is so easy. Keeps for a pretty long while in fridge, and can def be made way ahead of the big day. For Thanksgiving I use 2 bags because it is my second Cranberry Dish.  Since it’s really just a relish 2 bags is enough. Just double . Depending on how many people you’re having, for just the 2 of us I make cranberry sauce using one bag and keep excess in fridge , it keeps for a while.  Happy Thanksgiving!

*as it’s just a relish 1 bag would probably serve 6-8  and 2 bags would probably serve 10-12

Two Cranberries for Thanksgiving

I will be posting 2 recipes today that will both be on my Thanksgiving Table. Beautiful fresh cranberries cooked the good old fashioned way, they are tart and sweet and once you’ve had them fresh it’s rather difficult to go back to the can. It’s so easy to do , and can be made ahead. Then there is the mother of all
Cranberry dishes, Karyn’s Cranberry Crisp. Since I started making this one (circa 1970’s) it has never not made an appearance on our table. Recipe comes from Karyn yet once again, and how lucky am I because she will be sharing our Thanksgiving and bringing it with her! Make these cranberries part of your tradition, and please let me know what’s going on your table. Happy Thanksgiving.

Pumpkin Walnut Bread (no butter)

I just love pumpkin and I can’t stop posting about it. Pumpkin Season is here.  I love baking this bread because the smell in the house is beyond. I usually serve pumpkin bread and a banana bread in my bread basket on Thanksgiving. It’s hard to believe that there is no butter in this moist, delicious bread. I make both of these way ahead of time, because they freeze so well. You can even double the recipe if you have two loaf pans, and eat one now and tuck one away for another day like Thanksgiving. It’s a nice thing to bring to someone’s house as a gift as well if you’re so inspired. Also, this bread is loaded with spices, speaking of Spices and Penzey’s Spice Market (see post.)  This recipe will make one perfect loaf.

*this bread freezes beautifully for up to 8 weeks. Double wrap it in plastic and put in a resealable plastic freezer bag, and put the date on it. Defrost, still wrapped in the plastic to avoid condensation on the bread, at least 2 hours before serving. I take out of freezer the night before I’ll be using it.

Ingredients:

2 cups all-purpose flour (I sift)

3/4 teaspoon baking soda

1/2 teaspoon ground cinnamon

1/4 teaspoon allspice

1/4 teaspoon ground cloves

1/4 teaspoon ground ginger

1/4 teaspoon salt

2 large eggs, room temperature

1/3 cup water

1 1/2 cups sugar

1 cup canned pumpkin (not pumpkin pie filling)

1/2 cup canola oil

1 teaspoon pure vanilla extract

1 cup chopped walnuts (obviously this is optional)

You will need a 9 x 5 inch loaf pan, parchment paper, large bowl, medium bowl, whisk, silicone or rubber spatula.

Directions:

Preheat the oven to 350 degrees and position oven rack in the center of oven.

Lightly coat the loaf pan with melted butter and dust with flour, or spray with Pam. I line my loaf with a piece of parchment paper that extends one inch beyond the edge of the pan (this makes it easy to life the bread out. It is optional , just make sure you grease pan in one way or another first. If you’re not comfortable working with parchment paper, skip it. I like it but it can be tricky in a loaf pan. Just grease well, or give it a good spray.)

In a large bowl, sift the flour. Then, whisk together the flour, baking soda, cinnamon, allspice, cloves, ginger, and salt until thoroughly blended. In a medium bowl, whisk together the eggs and the water. Add the sugar and blend well. Add the pumpkin puree, vegetable oil, and vanilla extract and blend well. Add the pumpkin moisture to the dry ingredients and whisk until well blended and smooth. Add the walnuts and stir until they are well distributed. Use a spatula to scrape the batter into the prepared loaf pan.

Bake for 55 – 65 minutes, until the bread is firm to the touch and a toothpick or cake tester comes out clean from the center of loaf.  I let it cool for about 10 minutes, then I turn it out onto a rack to cool completely. I don’t freeze it until it is completely cool.

Thanksgiving Corn Bread Pudding

My friend Audrey gave this to me many years ago, and it has become a staple on our thanksgiving table ever since. It just wouldn’t be Thanksgiving without it. It is a favorite in the Kolen household. Can be doubled easily.

Ingredients:

1/2 cup butter (unsalted) 1 stick

8 oz. sour cream (lite ok but not fat-free)

8 oz.  can sweet corn (drained)

8 oz. can creamed corn

8 oz. pkg. corn muffin mix

2 eggs, lightly beaten

Directions:

Preheat oven to 350 degrees.

Melt butter, mix in beaten eggs, then add the rest of the ingredients.

Pour into glass baking dish (Pyrex is good and I spray it first.) 9 x 12 works fine, it’s not a very deep pudding.

Bake at 350 degrees for 35 minutes.

What I’m cooking tonite and Happy Daylight Savings (Bye Bye Daylight)

I think Sunday night is the best night to stay in , cook dinner and relax. So I went to make the Bowtie Pasta, mushrooms, sausage, and peas. Couldn’t find Turkey Sausage anywhere, not Whole Foods, not Fairway, and I gave up. I bought ground turkey, which just so you know works perfectly well. I season it up a lot more with salt and pepper, and it’s just fine. Have had this problem before and this is what I did.  I like to eat in and be in control of what is going into our meal. We all eat out so much these days, isn’t it nice to just kick back , cook and eat dinner, and know what it is that is going into your body? I think it is. I’m not saying we should all be cooking every night, but once in a while give it a try. Happy Daylight Savings, this day is so long anyway , there’s plenty of time to cook unless you’re running the NYC Marathon then I’ll give you a pass.

Another Version of Baked Salami

I cannot quite believe the response to my last post on the baked salami, it truly was off the charts! So happy everyone was so into the Old School recipe. It is  made from 100% beef. I have been told that it is 100% kosher by the way so I stand corrected. The first time I posted this I wasn’t clear on that subject but have been told otherwise.

Same thing as the original Baked Salami (this is already doubled for a large one)

Ingredients:

1 cup Apricot Preserves

1/2 cup Honey Mustard

you may want some extra mustard to serve on side! I actually like non- sweet style mustard, more savory for the side, a true deli mustard is the best.

Cook away the same as the first Baked Salami recipe. You might prefer this one. Keep your comments coming and your free subscriptions, I am so happy that I have an audience out there , it’s nice to know that you’re talking to a lot of people!!! Make sure you spray your pan well, because this gets way sticky in the process.

Pumpkin Lentil Soup (can be vegetarian)

It’s Fall and that means it’s time to cook up some heart-warming soups! Pumpkin Lentil Soup is a delicious, hearty soup that you and your family will love.

This recipe has been around my family for a while. A friend gave it to me a while back, and I make it every fall.  Just because it’s fall and it’s pumpkin and this soup can wind up on my Thanksgiving Table if I don’t make my Butternut Squash Soup.   It’s hard to get canned pumpkin any other time of year, so I take advantage of it now and pick up a few extra cans and try to make it throughout the winter. Warm, hearty and pretty healthy. And what’s a little butter between friends? I actually lost this recipe, but luckily my friend Marcy still had it, so thanks Marcy! It’s good to share with friends, and now all my recipes will be posted on my blog so I’ll never have to search far. You can freeze this ahead of time and take it out for Thanksgiving. For the holiday, it’s always between this and Butternut Squash Soup, and I like that they can both be vegetarian.

*this can be doubled but no need to double the butter (just add a little bit more)

Ingredients:

1/2 cup butter (unsalted)

2 large onions (spanish) chopped

1/2 cup lentils (if you can find red lentils, buy them because they look beautiful for Thanksgiving and give the soup a lovely orangey color)

5 cups vegetable or chicken stock

1 1/2 cups canned pumpkin (make sure it’s not pumpkin pie filling)

1/8 teaspoon dried thyme

1/8 teaspoon marjoram

Kosher salt and freshly ground black pepper, to taste

Directions:

Melt butter in large stockpot (Le Creuset). Saute the onions until translucent and golden, then stir in the lentils and the stock. Add pumpkin and herbs and salt and pepper. Bring to a boil and then lower it and let it simmer for about 1 1/2 hours.

I take the immersion blender to it. It becomes rich and creamy. You may prefer it not pureed, it’s up to you. A third option is to not puree it all the way. If you don’t puree, you may need to add more broth. If soup is too thick, use the broth as needed, a little bit at a time, to reach a good consistency.

*soup freezes just fine but you’ll need to add broth/water after you defrost and heat up

Two Soups for Thanksgiving

One of these two soups will be on my Thanksgiving table this year. They are both deserving of a spot, and they are both perfect for the season. Pumpkin Lentil and my Butternut Squash (no cream). Butternut usually wins because it is lighter, and if I serve a salad (which I usually do,) it’s the better choice. The Pumpkin Lentil is delicious and worthwhile though. It’s a tough choice but may the better soup win. I will make my decision after I finalize the rest of my menu. Look for the Pumpkin Lentil Soup Post, which is new. The Butternut Squash is already on the blog under Soups. The Pumpkin Lentil is so inviting–try it this weekend. Stock up on some canned pumpkin so you can make it all through the winter.  You will be able to find both recipes under the Soups category.