Showing posts with label recipe. Show all posts
Showing posts with label recipe. Show all posts

Tuesday, December 6, 2011

Butterhorn rolls recipe

My Grandmother, Phebe Cotton, made these for special occasions. The family always looked forward to them. They are rich with butter and are a little bit sweet. They make the best turkey sandwiches the day after Thanksgiving with a little mayo and some cranberry sauce. I started making them when we were first married and now my husband and son think they cannot have a major holiday without them. Frankly, they are kind of a pain to make as they only ever raised quickly for my grandmother in her overheated kitchen.


BUTTERHORNS
Servings: 36
Yield: 3 dozen

 Notes: These may take quite a while to raise since the dough is very rich with butter.  Grandma Cotton kept her kitchen HOT and that helped.  Find a very warm place for them to rise and they'll do much better.

1 cup milk, scalded (bring just to boil in saucepan and remove from heat)
1/2 cup cold butter
3 large eggs, beaten
1/2 cup sugar, plus more for sprinkling
1 teaspoon salt
1 package yeast
4 1/2 cups bread flour, or more or less as needed
1/4 cup butter, at room temperature for forming rolls

1.    Cool scaled milk by adding the butter to it and set aside.  Beat the eggs and add the sugar to the eggs.  Add salt.  Add the yeast to the cooled milk and butter making sure first that the liquid is not too hot or cold for the yeast.  Add yeast mixture to the egg mixture.  Add flour until dough is  firm enough to pull away from the sides of the bowl.

2.    Knead dough and form it into three equal balls and let raise in a greased bowl.  Roll the balls around in the grease so they will separate.

3.    When very light, roll or pat balls into 1/2 inch thick circles.  You should not need to flour the surface as the dough is very buttery and shouldn't stick.  Spead each circle with butter.  Cut each circle into 12 pie shaped wedges (or only 8 for 2 dozen larger butterhorns).  Stretch each wedge out and roll from base to point.  Place on a greased baking sheet with point tucked underneath.  Sprinkle each with sugar if desired.

4.    When light and fluffy, bake at 375 degrees on the top rack of most ovens.

first rising of dough--keep it very warm
dough patted down, spread with butter and cut into wedges to roll up

Wednesday, February 17, 2010

Featured Artist: Nicole of Nicole's Homemade Treats


If you are looking for a great source for edible gifts this is it!

Nicole is a team mate of mine on my Homefront Team on Etsy. She sells amazing edibles she makes in her immaculate, dedicated, licensed kitchen in her basement in Central New York. She ships world wide in carefully packaged boxes, with an ice pack enclosed when necessary, so your items arrive freshly made with the best ingredients and in great condition.


Nicole is a mother of two adorable boys. She's a foodie extraordinaire who loves to cook HUGE meals for lots of people.



Nicole makes awesome sauces.

Nicole runs a full service shop. In addition to her other edibles, you can purchase sampler boxes in various sizes as well as gift certificates. Everything is beautifully packaged.

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Nicole has a great blog. She shares incredible recipes on it all the time. If you are a foodie, you'll absolutely love her blog. My favorite post of hers is the Lemon Cookie recipe. I've made them twice now and they are totally awesome. Below is my photo of how my cookies turned out with her recipe:

my food photos aren't as good as Nicole's, but I think they still look yummy

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Nicole's Etsy Shop (which is called Nikid)
Nicole's Blog
Nicole's Facebook
Nicole's Twitter

Sunday, June 7, 2009

Tacy's Soup

It's good to have a few of those tried and true recipes that can be whipped up for a family meal in no time. This Southwestern style, hearty soup was invented by our friend, Tacy. Everything in it is a pantry staple in our home so I can make it any time. It has a creamy/cheesy tasting base that actually has NO cheese in it (shhhh, don't tell your family--they'll never guess).


2 cans condensed cream of chicken soup
3 cups chicken broth
28 oz can of diced tomatoes
1 onion, chopped
2 tablespoons olive oil
1 pound chicken, cooked and shredded or chunked (canned or leftover works well)
7 oz can chopped green chiles (or two smaller cans)
1/4 teaspoon garlic salt
1/2 teaspoon oregano
1/4 teaspoon ground cumin
chili powder to taste
salt to taste (you won't need any unless you used low sodium products)
black pepper to taste

Saute onion in olive oil. Add condensed soup (do not thin with water), stir. Slowly whisk in chicken broth. Add tomatoes, chicken, green chile and spices. Heat through.


Serves 8. This makes a large pot of soup and is great for leftovers. Serve with tortilla chips for a little crunch.

This is also something that I make when camping as nothing in it needs to be refrigerated if you use canned chicken.