Sunday, December 7, 2008

Christmas GNO

Lora showed us how to make these very cute Christmas cards. We used her stamps and enjoyed picking from the many little Christmas options the perfect stamp for each present. The cards turned out great!
For little Christmas gifts we made these "to do list" magnet cards. Everyone's ended up so different and fun. We all enjoyed sitting and talking all night as we worked on these projects and enjoyed all the yummy food that people brought. It definately felt like the holidays sitting with a group of friends and forgetting all our worries.




Katie's Ham and Potato Soup


Emily's Asian Salad

Oriental Chicken salad
1 head of cabbage and 1 head of lettuce or 1/2 and 1/2 shred
1 box sesame seeds
1 pkg slivered almonds
2 pkg top ramen soup-chicken or sesame
8 green onions-sliced
3 chicken breasts-cooked and diced

Amanda's Rolls

Grandma Ellis Rolls
Let 1 cup milk warm to room temperature
Add:
1 Tbsp Yeast (1 envelope)
1/4 cup Vegetable Oil
1 egg
2 Tbsp Sugar
1 tsp salt
Mix together and then add flour little by little until your mixer doesn't want to mix it any more. (You should add around 3 cups depending on how dry your flour is)
Knead until do in not totally sticky anymore (my grandma says that this is about 100 good "kneads")
Let dough raise to double size.Roll dough out about 3/8 inch thick. Use cookie cutters to cut into circles. Place rolls on cookie sheet w/ greased syran wrap on top (to keep them moist)Let them raise to double size.
Bake at 350 degrees about 10 minutes.
You can put the scraps of dough in a bowl and save for another day or roll them out again for more rolls).

Raenie's Chocolate Cake with Raspberry Sauce

Bake your favorite chocolate cake. I just used a milk chocolate cake mix. Frost it with chocolate frosting. Again, I went the easy way and used store bought chocolate frosting. Cut the cake. Place each serving on a dessert plate and drizzle raspberry sauce over the top...be generous.

Raspberry Sauce
1/3 cup water
3 tbl sugar
2 tbl flour
1 package frozen raspberries, thawed and drained
Mix all into saucepan. Cook on med. heat, stir continuously until thick and boils. Boil and stir 1 minute. Remove from heat. Strain sauce through sieve.

Thursday, December 4, 2008

Whole Wheat Bread (Lora)

2 cups warm water
1 Tablespoon yeast
¼ cup sugar
¼ cup canola oil + extra for kneading and rising
1 ½ teaspoon salt
1-2 eggs
7 cups flour, about 4 cups whole wheat and 3 cups bread flour

(Makes about 3 loaves of bread)

Combine water, yeast, sugar and whisk. Add the oil and eggs and whisk thoroughly. Add the wheat flour in 1-cup portions, whisking/stirring to ensure all the flour is well combined with the wet ingredients before adding the next portion. Add the bread flour and salt, whisk. Continue adding flour until it is too difficult to combine with a whisk.

Turn dough onto a floured surface and gently knead until dough comes together, adding more flour each time the dough gets sticky to handle. After the dough is well combined, switch to oil on the counter-top and continue kneading, about 10 minutes.

Oil the mixing bowl up the sides then work the dough into a tight ball and place back in the bowl. Rub the top of the dough with a little oil, cover the bowl with a damp towel and place in a warm dark place to rise, about one hour, till doubled in size.

Punch down the dough and form into loaves or rolls, etc, and let rise another hour.

For Loaves: Bake 350, for 30 minutes until brown and it sounds hollow

For Rolls: Bake 375 for about 20 minutes

For Scones: heat oil to 350 and fry on both sides.


Tips:
If you think you’re working in too much flour but the dough still needs to be kneaded, don’t flour your counter tops – just pour a little oil on the counter and continue kneading.
Bake your bread so that the top of it is in the middle of the oven
Add the whole wheat flour before the white flour, since whole wheat absorbs more water.
For rolls, add a little extra yeast to give them extra fluffiness.
Do not add salt until after all the wet ingredients and ½ of the flour are thoroughly combined. Salt kills yeast and the other ingredients provide a buffer.
You can make the bread without eggs, but it will go stale faster. Eggs, powdered milk and lemon juice are all dough conditioners and allow the baked bread to stay fresh and soft longer. For this recipe, you could add 1 Tablespoon lemon juice and/or ¼ cup powdered milk.
If you grind your own wheat, do it just before adding to the dough. The warmth from grinding helps the dough rise.