Tag Archives: food

A Christmas Tradition: Nut Roll

Our friend Erin is pretty awesome at cooking and at life. At one point in time, she made hundreds of batches of caramel that made the rounds of our Ravelry group. Seriously, people would hide these caramels from their families, hoarding them carefully to ensure that they would last as long as possible or alternately eat as many as possible in one sitting. So when she said that she’d be willing to do a little food blogging, I jumped at the possibility. I love reading about people’s Holiday traditions, particularly if they involve food! – Lauria

Growing up, my family didn’t have a lot of hard and fast Christmas traditions. I can think of two–both food related. On Christmas Eve, Grandma W. would make this weird apple sauce pudding concoction that she would hide a nut in. Everyone would get a scoop and whoever found the nut would get an extra present. I thought it was foul and would just mush my serving around looking for the nut. On Christmas morning, we had Grandma P.’s nut roll for breakfast. This was the good stuff.

This nut roll, very similar to potica bread, was adapted from my great grandma’s recipe. Grandma had to play around with it a bit, because her mother in law didn’t measure anything. She made it every Christmas, letting my sister and me help when we were around. Grandma gave me the recipe several years ago, and asked that I take over. I happily obliged.

Here is what you will need for the dough:
1 1/2 c milk
1 c sugar
4 1/2 t yeast
1 c melted butter
6-6 1/2c flour
4 eggs beaten
3 t salt

and for the filling:
1 1/2# shelled walnuts
3/4 t cinnamon
1 1/2 c sugar

First, scald the milk by heating it on the stove just enough to form small bubbles around the edges. Pour the scalded milk over sugar in a large bowl (I use the bowl to my stand mixer), stir and let cool to lukewarm.  When the mixture reaches roughly 100 F, stir in the yeast and 3 cups of flour. Mix well, cover and let rise until full of bubbles.

Add the eggs, salt and melted butter, and blend well. Add an additional 3 cups of flour. Beat very well for 10 minutes or with dough hooks of mixer, adding more flour as needed to create a satiny, slightly tacky dough.

Cover, let rise 1.5 hours. At this point, the dough can be refrigerated overnight. Remove the dough from the refrigerator one hour before continuing. If you are making this all in one day, now is a good time to make the filling.
In a food processor fitted with the chopping blade, combine the walnuts, cinnamon and sugar. (I should note that I have decreased the filling amount from the original recipe. That’s all that will fit in my food processor, and my loaves are still bursting with goodness.) Pulse until the walnuts are coarsely chopped.

Divide your dough into four equal parts. Roll dough into a 1/4 inch thick rectangle. This can be done on a lightly floured towel, but I like to use my silicone baking mats. Spread on 1/4 of the filling, leaving a narrow border around the edge.


Roll up like a jelly roll, pinching closed the ends and seam. Transfer to a baking sheet. I don’t think it’s necessary to grease or line the sheets, but again, I use my silicone baking mats.


Repeat with the remaining portions of dough. Cover and let rise 45 minutes. Preheat your oven to 325 F. Brush top with beaten egg and bake for one hour.

Now that I look at it, this recipe could easily be cut in half if you don’t want four loaves of nut roll sitting around. It freezes well, though, and I usually end up doubling the recipe and passing them out to neighbors. Enjoy!

Cozy Holiday At Home

Despite all the cleaning, cooking, baking and prep-work involved with hosting a holiday, there’s nothing quite like having a cozy, quiet Thanksgiving at home.

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I finished up the napkins and moved on to a table runner from a canvas dropcloth I got at Lowe”s and some leaf stamps.

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I was rather pleased with the result!

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Five pies were made in advance. Two pumpkin, one pumpkin cream, one vegan pumpkin (okay I cheated there and only had to heat that one up from frozen), and an apple pie.

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I made a GIANT batch of Susan’s stuffing – I hadn’t realized how large a regular batch was, so I doubled it.

We’ll be eating stuffing leftovers for the next three years.

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Oona showed off her reading skills to Paul’s mom.

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I spent most of the day on my feet in front of the stove – but it was totally worth it.

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Obligatory meal photo – we had brined, roasted turkey (Trader Joe’s – easiest bird I have ever cooked!) with homemade gravy from pan drippings, roasted green beans with red onions, garlic and pancetta, sweet potato casserole with mini marshmallows on top (the kids demanded it), Susan’s stuffing, mashed potatoes (made in the crockpot!!!  BEST thing ever!), homemade rolls, and two kinds of cranberry sauce (bourbon-cranberry and cranberry chutney).

Goodness I think I need to go fix myself a plate of leftovers now.

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Pie, coffee and wine by candlelight.

Today we shall avoid the shopping crowds and enjoy some family time before getting our tree tomorrow and kicking off the Christmas season.

Hope your holiday was as warm and pleasant as ours!


Tagged: food, Seasons

Fresh Cranberries …

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- by Joan -


An Apple A Day …

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- by Joan -


November-ing

As we careen toward Thanksgiving I’ve been trying with all my might to enjoy November and its relative calm.  After the Big Meal it will be all Christmas and crazy, but for now it’s still fall, everything pumpkin is still in vogue for the month.  There are still a few patches of color here and there where the rain and wind have not knocked them off the trees, and it’s still not bitter cold.

Although, truth be told, the weather here has been so bizarre I think I’d take the bitter cold just so I’d know how to cope.  Instead we’ve had a day where it flurried like mad for about an hour followed by temperatures in the 70′s a few days later.  You never know if you’ll need the A/C or the heat on.

It’s the ending of fall, and it’s bittersweet.

We will be having Thanksgiving at home this year with Paul’s family, and I am enjoying getting the house organized and cleaned in readiness for it (hey, cleaning is therapeutic for me!).  In the meantime it’s starting to get hard to concentrate on school when there’s so much to be done and to enjoy, but we’re at least not falling behind.

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Oona’s reading a lot of seasonally appropriate books about Thanksgiving (though the pickings are slim on these – as a historian I don’t like the ones that whitewash the history, even-or maybe especially- for little ones).

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Yesterday my November issue of British Country Living came, and I spent a glorious afternoon with a cup of coffee and some gingerbread cookies from Trader Joe’s, pouring over its pages.

That mug, by the way, is one of my absolute favorites.  It was made by my friend Anna Branner with Susan’s logo on it, and you can find more of Anna’s wonderful wares HERE.

To top off all things Novembery, we’ve been enjoying some homemade Pumpkin-Cinnamon Swirl bread.  It’s wonderful toasted with a bit of butter.  I used the recipe for the Cinnamon Swirl bread (made in the Pullman Loaf pan) from King Arthur Flour, but for the filling I added about a third cup of pumpkin puree and took out 1 egg and the water.  It’s got just a touch of pumpkin-y flavor when it’s done and it smells heavenly while it’s baking!

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Tagged: food, Homeschooling, Seasons

Brunch and Munch In NYC …

Brunch

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Sarabeth’s in Tribeca

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Munch

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Communal Table (Le Pain Quotidien) Bleecker St

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- by Joan -


Did You Know …

If you unfold one of these containers …

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… it turns into a plate !!!  Who knew?  Not me.

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Saw this on the internet and had to try it.. try it for yourself and see.


Good-bye Jack o’ Lantern; Hello Pumpkin!

Glass pumpkins

If you’ve been reading this blog for long you know that I am absolutely coo-coo-crazy for pumpkin. For years I’ve been screaming that pumpkin doesn’t get enough attention but I think that particular tide may have finally turned. I’m seeing pumpkin everything in the shops and on restaurant menus.

Today, we’re celebrating by revisiting some of JMF’s favorite pumpkin posts.

Pumpkin Fondue

As soon as the leaves begin to fall from the trees and the air turns cold and crispy, I crave Pumpkin Fondue. This is a super easy recipe and I’ve never met anyone who didn’t nearly fall over dead when they tasted it.

A few years ago I created what I still consider the ultimate Thanksgiving stuffing, made with– you guessed it!– pumpkin. You can find it here.

Did you know making your own pumpkin puree is really simple? Read all about it in this post. And be sure to read the comments in which Suzy points out that you can replace tomato paste with pumpkin puree in most recipes.

Jeannie’s Bourbon Pumpkin Cheesecake with Bourbon Caramel Sauce is not to be missed!

Jenny’s Apple & Butternut Squash Soup is probably the most popular recipe we’ve ever posted on the blog and, while it calls for butternut squash, I almost always sub in pumpkin instead.

Here are some pumpkin recipes I’m anxious to try but haven’t gotten to yet:

Angry Chicken’s Pumpkin Ginger Waffles

Smitten Kitchen’s Pumpkin Cinnamon Rolls (and all the reason of SK’s pumpkin recipes.)

Fine Cooking’s Brown Butter Pumpkin Cake

King Arthur Flour’s Pumpkin Cake Doughnuts (I bet I could get Amy to make these for me.)

This Pumpkin Spice Coffee Cake is supposed to be healthy-ish, I think.

This vegetarian lasagne recipe calls for pumpkin. Intriguing…

And what could possibly be bad about Pumpkin Risotto?

Do you have a favorite pumpkin recipe that I should be trying? Please post a link!

How To Throw A Party Like A Pro

What happens when two talented cooks/restauranteurs throw a 5th birthday bash for their son?

A fantastic party with amazing food on a beautiful fall Sunday.

My friend Lisa and Will had us (plus many, many, many) other people to celebrate Alston’s big day.  Oona fairly wore herself out playing in the leaves and chasing ducks and dogs and other kids around while Maddie acted as official baby-watcher for darling little Marie.

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Just look at that baby!

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Tree stump chairs by the fire and food.

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Pumpkin cupcakes with cream cheese frosting.  I know, you’re jealous.  Yes, they were every bit as amazing as they sound.

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I mentioned the food, right?  Aside from the fall-themed appetizer spread there was pulled pork and coleslaw.  And it was YUM.

Maddie and Emily and I drank gallons of the hot apple cider (and I may have sampled some of the hard cider as well……)

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The little man of the hour!

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Oysters!

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Will by the fire, which was perfect: not too hot for such a sunny day, but just warm enough for the chill in the air.

Fall parties like this are my favorite kind.  The bugs are mostly gone, the leaves are stunning, the campfire isn’t sweltering, the food is warming.

It’s one of the best ways to turn 5!

 


Tagged: Farm, food, Pets, Seasons

Apple Cider Doughnuts

You all know how much I love King Arthur Flour, right?  They have some of the best recipes on their site, and the best ingredients with which to make them (no I am not getting paid to say that!).

So it’s no surprise that I am on their website frequently.   While browsing last week I came across a recipe for Apple Cider Doughnuts.

Well, of course I had to try them!  And though generally I am a food purist and would prefer my doughnuts as nature intended them – fried – I was willing to try them out baked.  After all, less fat, right?

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These two ingredients are this recipes secret weapons of flavor.  Boiled Cider and applesauce (I used my own, made with the ninety billion pounds of apples we picked).

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The batter worked up very quickly, and gets plopped into the doughnut pan (it was like $10 at Bed Bath & Beyond).

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After baking, I slid them all out of the pan and then they had a bath in cinnamon and sugar.

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The sugar mixture sticks best if they’re put it in directly from the oven.

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I made about 18 doughnuts in all.  Though it was hard to keep an accurate count because they kept getting eaten!

In all, the only real disappointment wasn’t taste – related.  I adore the smell of cider donuts wafting on the breeze at the orchard while they’re being fried.  Sadly, my house did not smell that way while baking these.  But the flavor was right and even though they’re not *quite* as delectable as fried doughnuts, they are a super, serious, amazingly close second.

We’ll be making these again.


Tagged: food, Seasons