Category Archives: Bread

Blueberry Amish Friendship Bread

amishbreadslice

Have you heard of this bread before? It’s like a baked goods chain letter. When a starter is given to you, you’re given a baggie of creamy liquid with directions on what to do for the next 10 days. It comes off as a bit bossy, I know. All of a sudden, you have a yeasty little pet on your hands that smells a bit like an old beer bottle. To be honest, I tried getting out of this baking obligation. We were on our way out of town and it seemed like the worst time to acquire something that needed care. When it was apparent that my excuses were not working, I accepted my fate and took the baggie with a smile. My new friend did not require much care, though and sat happily on a table that weekend. Instead of baking with it, though, I gave this first starter away and told my victim that if she needed someone to take a starter off of her hands, I would take one.  This is where the friendship part of the name comes in. After 10 days you bake 2 loaves of bread and give away 4 new starters, continuing the string of excuses from one friend to another.

A few days after I gave away my starter, it was back in my hands to do with what I’d like. Part of the Amish friendship bread guilt-trip is that you always tell the friend that they can just throw it away if they don’t want to make it. I could see myself throwing it in the trash and feeling guilty every time I passed the garbage. Thinking of my little pet bubbling away among discarded coffee grounds while I neglected it. Nope, couldn’t do it. However, out of rebellion I decided to test how flexible the recipe is. No, I wouldn’t intentionally throw it away, but if it got ruined while I played around, well, it seemed more palatable. The directions say to “get creative” by adding nuts or dried fruit. People have tried omitting an egg, decreasing the sugar, adding applesauce and the bread was still good. Those tidbits were scribbled in the margin of my directions.

It was my turn at this recipe and I had lots of ideas. First, I knew I wouldn’t have much time to make it on a Monday night, so guess what? I made it a day early. Scandalous! Then I took a look at the ingredients and first thing was first, I was in no way going to add jello vanilla instant pudding to the bread. I highly doubt the first maker of this Amish yeast bread had that ingredient to work with. Maybe I’m wrong, but it did not seem right to me. I halved the sugar, cut back on the oil, used half white and half whole wheat flour, increased the vanilla extract and added 2 cups of fresh blueberries. You know what happened to my yeasty friend? It became a delicious, nutty and moist bread. I was glad I decreased the sugar because with the addition of fresh blueberries it was in my sweetness comfort zone. I sent a loaf to work with Marc and he said there was 1 slice left when he grabbed his lunch from the refrigerator. I think it was a hit. I hope so, anyway, because tomorrow he’s bringing little starter friends.

amishbreadabove

Amish Friendship Bread

makes 2 loaves

Starter recipe

Starter Instructions

  • do not refrigerate your starter
  • the yeast will create air in the bag, let it out periodically

Day 1 – do nothing

Day 2, 3, 4, 5 – mash the bag

Day 6 – add to the bag 1 C. flour, 1 C. milk, 1 C. sugar, mash the bag

Day 7, 8, 9 – mash the bag

Day 10 – Pour the entire contents of the bag into a non-metal bowl. Add 1 1/2 C. sugar, 1 1/2 C. flour and 1 1/2 C. milk and whisk. Measure out 4 starters of 1 C. each and put into 4 gallon-size baggies. Keep one for yourself and give the remaining 3 to friends with these directions. If you keep one starter, you can bake this bread every 10 days. If you do not pass the starter on the first day, make sure to indicate which day of the process the starter is on.

Baking Instructions

Preheat oven to 325 degrees.

To the remaining batter in the bowl, add (these are the ingredients I used):

3 eggs

3/4 C. oil

1 C. white flour

1 C. whole wheat flour

1/2 C. skim milk

1/2 C. sugar

1 t. vanilla

2 t. cinnamon

1 1/2 t. baking powder

1/2 t. baking soda

1/2 t. salt

2 C. fresh blueberries

1. Grease 2 loaf pans and pour half of batter into each loaf pan. Bake about 1 hour.

2. Cool until bread loosens from sides of the pan and remove. Cool completely and dig in.

Easy Boule

bakedboule

Holy deliciousness. A few month ago I added the book, Artisan Bread in Five Minutes a Day to my Amazon order, ya know, because I needed to reach the free shipping level. I learned so much from my first read through and was excited at the prospect of  fresh bread whenever I wanted it. They recommend using a pizza stone and pizza peel, both of which I do not own, so I put the book on the shelf. Out of sight, out of mind, you know how it goes. Then, a few weeks ago, I was hanging around Honey and Jam (love that blog) and noticed that she baked her bread in her cast iron skillet in the oven. Why didn’t I think of that?? Almost simultaneously the Artisan Bread in Five website posted that instead of using the pizza peel you could put your loaf on a sheet of parchment and remove the parchment 10 minutes before baking is finished to brown the bottom crust. Suddenly, I was out of excuses for not making this bread. Don’t make the same mistake, this bread is soooo good. A beautiful crunchy crust surrounds a spongy and flavorful interior. It reminds me of bread that we used to get at an Italian deli when I was a kid. While we were eating the first loaf, Marc kept looking at me with disbelief. He loved it and couldn’t belief how impressive the results were with very little effort.

cutboule2

You can find the recipe on Hannah’s wonderful blog or purchase the book. The only special purchase I made for this bread was a dough-rising bucket because with the master recipe you make enough dough for several loaves. I purchased mine from King Arthur Flour and used my husband’s drill to make a small hole in the top of the lid. Your rising bucket needs a place for air to escape and you can choose to keep the lid slightly ajar or drill a small hole in the top of the lid.

doughbucket

Some tips I found helpful:

*You bake this bread in 1 lb. loaves. It is helpful to have a scale to know you’re at about 1 lb.

*If you do not have a pizza stone or pizza peel, simply put your cast iron skillet in the oven and preheat it as you would the pizza stone according to the directions. Put your dough ball on a small piece of parchment to rest and when it’s time to bake, transfer the parchment with dough to the skillet.

*Drill a small hole in the top of your dough-rising bucket and then you can snap the lid shut when storing it in the refrigerator.

*Don’t be afraid to let this sucker get nice and brown on the outside. The dough is intentionally a bit wetter than normal bread dough and can stand the prolonged baking without getting dry in the middle. For me this takes about 30-35 minutes.

*There is no proofing and no kneading with this bread. Do you honestly need another reason to try this bread?

*Do not, I repeat, do not buy this book and put it on your bookshelf. Give it a shot and be amazed. I can’t wait to take a loaf home to my parents and knock their socks off.

Christmas Stollen

Yeasted Stollen with Powd SugarMy Oma used to bring Stollen, a German Christmas bread, for Christmas every year. It was lovingly packaged in wax paper and again in aluminum foil. As kids, the glistening sugar crust was the best part. My Mom has insisted since my Oma’s passing that the last year she made it was the best, but sadly my Oma did not have a recipe box and I was never able to see her exact recipe. A week ago I went on an extensive search for Stollen recipes and there are tons of recipes out there, but I was looking for the rum/almond type since it was most like my Oma’s. There are many spiced recipes, usually with cardamom that sound delicious, like this one recommended by The Honey Eater that I will definitely be making another time. I combined a few elements from different recipes to come up with the yeast Stollen I made and then I also adapted a quick Stollen recipe from King Arthur Flour that uses baking powder to help it rise a bit and has the unique addition of ricotta cheese. I thought these two recipes had similar fruits and flavoring like I was looking for, but I was interested in the different approaches to the recipes.

My Stollen Tips

  • Soaking the dried fruit in dark rum is a good idea. It plumps the fruit and adds great flavor.
  • After the Stollen has baked, brushing it with melted butter and sprinkling with powdered sugar seals in the flavor and makes the crust extra tasty. I think repeating this process and creating two layers is a good idea, too.
  • Use your favorite dried fruits. Traditionally, you’d see citron and candied cherries in Stollen, but I prefer to use raisins, currants, apricots and cherries.
  • Toast the slivered almonds, always!
  • I used the Buttery Sweet Dough Flavor because I happen to be placing an order at King Arthur Flour and saw it was recommended for their Stollen recipe. It is not heavy or artificial tasting, it just adds a nice hint of sweetness.

Sweet Dough Flavor

Yeasted Stollen

Makes 2 loaves, adapted from several sources.

1/2 C. raisins

1/2 C. dried currants

1/2 C. dried apricots

1/2 C. dried cherries

1/3 C. dark rum

4 1/2 C. all-purpose flour, plus additional as needed

2 (1/4 oz.) pkg. active dry yeast or 2 scant T.

1/3 C. sugar

1 1/2 t. salt

1/2 C. milk

1/2 C. water

4 T. butter, cut up

1 t. grated lemon rind

2 eggs

1 t. almond extract

1/2 C. slivered blanched almonds, toasted and cooled

4 T. melted butter

powdered sugar

1 1/2 t. buttery sweet dough flavor (from King Arthur Flour, optional but good)

1. Combine raisins, currants, apricots, cherries and rum in a bowl and let stand at least 1 hour or overnight.

2. Stir together 2 C. of the flour, yeast, sugar and salt in large bowl. Heat milk, water, butter and lemon rind in a small saucepan over low heat until warm (115-120 degrees, optimal temp. for the yeast). Add to flour mixture along with eggs and almond extract (and buttery sweet dough flavor if using). Beat at low speed of electric mixture until flour is moistened. Beat at medium speed until well combined.

Warmed Milk Mixture Yeast Stollen in Mixer

3. Stir 1/3 C. flour into fruit mixture. Stir fruit mixture, almonds and enough remaining flour into batter to make the dough moderately stiff. I ended up adding about 1 C. more flour, but start adding in 1/4 C. increments until you get the desired texture.

4. Turn dough onto lightly floured surface and knead until smooth and elastic, about 5 to 8 minutes. Shape into a ball and place in a greased bowl, turning to grease top. Cover and let rise in a warm place until doubled in bulk, about 1 hour.

5. Punch dough down, cover and let rest 10 minutes. Turn onto lightly floured surface and divide in half. Pat or roll each half into an 8×14 inch oval. Fold dough in half lengthwise, bringing upper half not quite to the edge of the lower half and press firmly along edge to secure. Place loaves on lightly greased rimmed baking sheet (I used my silpat, but you could also use parchment). Cover and let rise in a warm place until doubled in bulk, about 30 minutes. Preheat oven to 350 degrees F.

Yeast Stollen Ball Yeasted Stollen on Pan

6. Uncover. Bake in preheated 350 degree oven until loaves are golden and sound hollow when lightly tapped, 25 to 30 minutes. Transfer to wire racks and brush with melted butter and sprinkle with powdered sugar. When the loaves have cooled, brush with another coat of melted butter and sprinkle with powdered sugar again.

Bite of Yeasted Stollen Slice of Yeasted Stollen

Easiest Stollen

Makes 2 loaves. Slightly adapted from King Arthur Flour

2 1/4 C. all-purpose flour

1/2 C. granulated sugar

1 1/2 t. baking powder

1/2 t. salt

1/2 C. unsalted cold butter, cut into small chunks

1 15 oz. container ricotta cheese

1 large egg

1 t. vanilla extract

1 1/2 t. buttery sweet dough flavor, optional but good

1 t. lemon zest

1/2 C. raisins

1/2 C. dried currants

1/4 C. dried cherries

1/3 C. dark rum

1/2 C. slivered almonds, toasted and cooled

6 T. butter, melted

3/4 C. confectioners’ sugar

1. Soak dried fruit in dark rum at least 1 hour or overnight.

2. Preheat oven to 325 degrees F. Lightly grease a baking sheet or line with parchment or a silpat. Whisk together the flour, sugar, baking powder and salt in a mixing bowl.

3. Cut the cold butter chunks into the flour mixture with a pastry cutter or two forks. In a separate bowl, mix together the cheese, egg, vanilla, lemon zest and buttery sweet dough flavor. Toss the fruit and almonds into the flour mixture until evenly distributed. Then combine the wet and dry ingredients, mixing until most of the four is moistened.

Cutting Butter Ricotta Mixture

4. Turn the sticky dough out onto a lightly floured work surface and knead a few times until it holds together. I ended up adding quite a few sprinkles of flour to make it come together. Divide dough in half. Roll each piece of dough into a 8×7 inch oval about 1/2 inch thick.

Quick Dough Ball Quick Dough in Shape

5. Fold each piece of dough roughly in half, leaving the edge of the top half about 1/2 inch short of the edge of the bottom half. Fold lengthwise. Use the edge of your hand to press the dough to seal the edge. This is the traditional Stollen shape. Place the shaped Stollen on prepared baking sheet.

6. Bake the Stollen until they are very light browned around the edges, about 30-40 minutes. A cake tester inserted into the middle should come out clean. Transfer to a wire rack and brush with 2 to 3 T. melted butter and sprinkle heavily with confectioners’ sugar.

7. Allow the Stollen to cool and brush with remaining melted butter and sprinkle generously with sugar again. Wrap in plastic until ready to serve. Plastic-wrapped Stollen will keep well for 2 weeks or so at room temperature.

Bite of Quick Stollen Slice of Quick Stollen

Tasting Day 1

Yeast Stollen

Marc and I both thought this lacked a bit of flavor. It has a nice spongy texture because of the yeast, though. It is important that it has a nice butter and sugar crust to enhance the sweetness of the fruit.

Easy Stollen

SO tasty! It came out quite flat due to the lack of yeast, but it is moist and flavorful. I think the addition of ricotta adds a hint of tangy creaminess. It reminded me a little of a tender and moist breakfast muffin.

Tasting Day 2

Yeast Stollen

Much improved! I tried a slice this morning to see if it had changed at all and I was not missing flavor this morning. The flavor plus the yeasty texture made this very, very good.

Easy Stollen

Consistently flavorful and tasty. I think the texture of the yeast Stollen plus the improved flavor beat out the easy Stollen this morning, but it is still very yummy and a wonderful alternative.

Both recipes are great and I recommend them both. In the case of the yeast Stollen, I believe that recipe will improve with age since it is a more traditional recipe and I’m sure it was meant to be enjoyed for weeks. If you’re looking for a less traditional recipe with great Stollen flavor, try the easy Stollen recipe. Thank you for taking the Stollen journey with me! Have a great holiday with lots of family, friends and fantastic food!

What My Basil Did This Summer

Pesto

Many thanks to Pink Stripes and The Honey Eater for helping a girl out. They answered my plea for basil recipes. The basil plant might as well have been a money tree because I figure if I had to buy that much basil it would be a fortune indeed. Wendy’s idea for basil ice cream was an inspirational one, but I sadly had to use my slowly wilting basil before I read her great suggestion. Next time for sure. The Honey Eater shared her authentic pesto recipe and a link to Gourmet’s recipe. I ended up taking a bit from that recipe and also grabbing a couple of details from David Lebovitz’s pesto recipe. The results were amazing.

Here’s what became of my basil in another desperate attempt to deny summer is over. I love you, fall, you just need to go ahead and wait your turn.

The OK Recipes

Creamy Basil Dressing

Creamy Basil Dressing

Recipe from Gourmet

All of the ingredients made this sound like a dressing we would really love, but it just wasn’t for us. The shaved Parmesan made it more interesting, but I felt something was missing. Have I mentioned that I recently fell in love with the wedge salad? I know the lettuce has no nutritional value, but I love how on a weeknight I can peel off the outer layers, wash it, quarter it and have salad for that night and two salads for lunch the next day. It’s especially great with bleu cheese dressing, recipe coming soon!

Basil Corn Bread

Basil Cornbread

Recipe from epicurious

This cornbread smells amazing while it is baking in the oven. It was creamy with a true corn flavor, but this recipe made me realize that I’m old fashioned when it comes to my cornbread. I like it crispy on the outside, corny and sadly, without basil. This makes a ton of cornbread, so if this recipe interests you, it’s great for a crowd.

Oh My Gosh, Make This Now Recipes

Pesto Linguine

Pesto

Adapted from Gourmet and David Lebovitz

Makes about 1 1/2 C.

3 large garlic cloves

2 oz. Parmigiano-Reggiano, coarsely grated (2/3 C.)

4 C. loosely packed fresh basil leaves

1/2 C. pine nuts (some recipes say to toast, I did not and it was still great)

3/4 t. coarse salt

1/2 t. fresh ground black pepper

2/3 C. extra-virgin olive oil (I used Colavita)

1. With processor running, drop in garlic and finely chop.

2. Stop motor and add nuts, cheese, salt, pepper and basil, then process until finely chopped.

3. With motor running, add oil in a stream until incorporated.

Tips: Will keep in fridge for 1 week. Make sure to press plastic wrap against pesto so darkening of pesto does not occur. You can also freeze pesto in an ice cube tray or in muffin tin portions. Simply pour pesto into preferred tray, freeze for a few hours and put perfect portions into a plastic bag or container.

Pesto Linguine

Whipped up with hints from David Lebovitz

4 servings

1/2-3/4 C. pesto

1 lb. linguine (or your favorite pasta)

kosher salt, for pasta water

3 T. unsalted butter

1. Make above recipe for pesto.

2. Cook linguine in salted water until al dente. Drain pasta.

3. Add 3 T. unsalted butter and pesto to hot pasta. Mix until pesto is fully incorporated into the pasta. Serve immediately.

Basil Cucumber Martini

Cucumber Basil Cocktail

Recipe from Food & Wine

This drink is divine! It is so refreshing and delicious. There is a bit of warmth from the ginger and paired with basil, cucumber and Bombay Saphire gin, wow. We had this martini at one of our favorite restaurants and I jumped for joy when I found this recipe online. If you’re trying to cling to summer like me, this is the perfect way to pretend it’s still June.

Grilled Pita Three Ways

Vegetable Kebab PitaRecently, my buddy Steve Raichlin was grilling up some great stuff on PBS. When he started grilling these cheese and vegetable skewers and nestled the toppings in a homemade pita, that’s when I really took notice. He made Indian Vegetable Cheese Kebabs using paneer cheese. I had never heard of paneer cheese before, but Steve described it as an Indian cheese that doesn’t melt as fast as other cheese varieties. It’s very similar to queso blanco, but  does not have salt added. It sounded like just about the tastiest way to make grilled cheese I’d ever heard of.

I made a trip to the grocery store and saw a tasty hunk of queso blanco and realized it was my lucky day. I did not go on an extensive search for paneer, because I had the queso blanco in hand, but I’d like to try it sometime. Steve’s recipe has an Indian inspired marinade with tumeric, cilantro and ginger, but since I wasn’t necessarily in the mood for that type of flavor, I stuck to a simple butter and garlic marinade and sprinkled the kebabs with sesame seeds. Steve did not demonstrate the making of the pita on his show, but said he had a simple recipe posted on the website for it. It did end up being pretty easy. The folding technique described to create the pita sounds more complicated than it is, so do not be frightened like I was. The dough holds up very well to the hot grill, but you have to watch them like a hawk because they are done in a minute. The recipe yielded enough dough for me to make 6 small pitas for our Vegetable Cheese Kebabs on Saturday, 2 grilled pizzas on Sunday and 5 more small pitas for Pita Burgers on Tuesday. I’ll share my three days of pita recipes.

Cheese Kebabs

Vegetable Cheese Kebabs

Adapted from Steve Raichlin, Serves 2

2 poblano chilies or bell peppers

2-3 red ripe tomatoes

1 large vidalia onion

1 lb. queso blanco (paneer or mozzarella will also work)

For basting mixture:

8 T. (1 stick) unslated butter

2 cloves minced garlic

1/2-1 t. red pepper flakes (depending on how spicy you like things)

kosher salt to taste

sesame seeds for sprinkling over basted kebabs

lemon wedges for serving

*If using a charcoal grill, get coals ready at this point. Create a 2-zone fire. Brush and oil the grill grates.

1. Cut the pepper into 2 inch square pieces, discarding the core and seeds.  Cut each tomato into 4 wedges and cut the seeds and pulp out of each wedge (save for stock or other use).  The remaining pieces of tomato should be about 1/4 inch thick.  You can cut the tomatoes in half again, but I liked the larger pieces.  Cut the onion in half widthwise and cut each half into quarters.  Cut the cheese into 2 inch squares.

2. To assemble the kebabs, carefully skewer a piece of pepper, tomato, onion and then cheese. Repeat until all ingredients are used up.

3. Make the basting mixture. Melt butter in small saucepan. After butter is melted add garlic and red pepper flakes and heat until fragrant, but not brown. Remove from heat and add salt to taste.

4. Brush kebabs on all sides with basting mixture. Sprinkle on all sides with sesame seeds. Place the kebabs on the hot side and grill until nicely brown, a minute or two per side, turning as the cheese starts to melt and continue basting with butter mixture.

5. Serve at once with lemon wedges for squeezing and freshly grilled pita.

Pita Dough Grilled Pita

Lachcha Paratha (Indian Puff Pastry)

Slightly adapted from Steve Raichlin, Makes 12-14 small pitas (or 11 small pitas and 2 pizzas!)

I did not use any butter with this recipe. I think I will try it next time, but if you want to cut some of the calories, it is delicious without the butter.

1 envelope active dry yeast

3 T. sugar

1 1/2 C. warm water (not too hot or you’ll kill the yeast)

4 1/2-5 C. AP flour, plus additional for dusting and rolling

2 t. salt

2 T. plain yogurt

1 T. vegetable oil, plus more for bowl

4 T. melted unsalted butter for brushing the bread (I skipped this step, but I’m sure it is yummy)

1. Combine yeast, sugar and 1/4 C. water in a small bowl and let stand until foamy, 5 to 10 minutes.

2. Place 4 1/2 C. flour and salt in a mixer with a dough hook (you can also use a food processor or mix by hand with a wooden spoon). With the mixer running, add the yeast mixture, yogurt and oil. Slowly add 1/2-1 C. of warm water until the dough starts to come together and sticks to the sides. You’re looking for a dough that is soft, but not too sticky. Add additional flour if necessary (mine came together after adding about 1/2 C. water to the dry ingredients and I did not have to add more flour). Knead the dough until smooth and elastic, 5-8 minutes by mixer, 2-3 minutes by processor, or 8 minutes by hand.

3. Place the dough in a lightly oiled bowl, turning to coat dough with oil. Cover with a kitchen towel and put in a warm, draft-free spot until  doubled in size, 1 1/2-2 hours.

4. Prepare a lightly floured rimmed baking sheet. Punch down the dough and then grab 2 inch pieces. Roll the dough between your palms into smooth balls. If you are making the whole batch, you will have 12-14 balls. Transfer to a floured baking sheet. If you are not using all of the dough, wrap the remaining dough in plastic and place in the refrigerator. Cover the dough balls with a clean and slightly dampened kitchen towel. Let rise again until puffy, about 30 minutes.

5. Set your grill up for direct grilling with a medium-high heat.

6. Using a rolling pin, roll the dough balls into 6 inch flat disks on a lightly floured surface. Here is where you can use a pastry brush to remove excess flour and brush with melted butter or oil. Starting at the end closest to you, fold accordion style (like you were making a paper fan, back and forth) with each pleat measuring about 1 inch. This will give you a long flat rectangle of dough. Now, starting at the end of the dough, roll the rectangle into a roll (from the top it will look spiraled, like a sticky bun). Finally, using your rolling pin, roll out the dough into another flat disk about 6 inches across. Lightly brush with butter or oil, if desired. Continue rolling and folding breads until done. (I put each disk back onto the floured cookie sheet from earlier and brought the sheet out to the grill).

7. Brush and oil grill grate. Arrange the bread, butter or oil side down on the grate. Only do a few at a time so you don’t crowd the grate. Quickly brush with more butter or oil if desired and check the progress on the other side. It burns very quickly, so check often. Turn when you have light brown grill marks and the top is bubbly. Grill the other side until lightly brown. You can, again, lightly brush with butter as the hot bread comes off the grill. Continue cooking in batches until all of the bread is cooked.

Variation: Naan

You can also use the same dough to make traditional naan. Make recipe though step 5 and instead of rolling and pleating the dough, roll out into 6 inch disks, gently slap dough from one hand to the other to stretch into an elongated 7 to 8 inch oblong disk with a narrow end like a teardrop. Lightly brush both sides with butter or oil and grill as a minute or so per side. Brush with more butter or oil when it comes off the grill and serve immediately.

Grilled Pita Pizza

Pita Pizza

my recipe www.dulanotes.com, Serves 2-3

Since I used the above dough for 3 recipes, I used a third of it for the Vegetable Cheese Kebabs and put the rest of the dough in the refrigerator. When I was ready to make the pizzas, I used a bit more than half to create 2 personal-sized pizzas. I put the dough in a bowl and covered with a kitchen towel in a warm place for about 1 1/2 hours until it was room temperature.

Roughly 1/3 of pita recipe above, brought up to room temperature

3/4 C. tomato sauce

1 C. mozzarella cheese

4 oz. bleu cheese

1 large tomato

3/4 C. mild yellow pepper rings

12 slices pepperoni

1. Create a two zone fire with oiled grates or use your gas grill. Get your toppings ready so that they are close to room temperature when the pizza is ready to cook. This will help the toppings to cook more quickly since the dough cannot be on the grill long.

2. Punch down the room temperature dough and kneed into a smooth ball. Split ball in half with a bench scraper. Using a rolling pin, roll the dough into a round personal sized pizza with a uniform thickness. Brush both sides with olive oil and transfer to a lightly floured rimmed baking sheet.

3. Grill first side of pizza until lightly brown. Watch closely so it does not burn. After one side is done, transfer the dough cooked side up to the rimmed baking sheet. Top the grilled side of the pizza with sauce and desired toppings. Put back on baking sheet.

4. Carefully put the pizza back on the grill (on the cool side), with the uncooked dough facing down and put the lid down for a minute and keep checking the bottom of the pizza while waiting for the cheese to melt and toppings to cook. Remove when bottom of crust is golden brown.

5. Cut into wedges and serve.

Grilled Pita Burger

Pita Burgers

my recipe www.dulanotes.com, Serves 2-3

Roughly 1/3 of pita recipe above, brought up to room temperature

1 lb. 80% ground beef or bison or turkey

1 t. garlic salt

1 t. onion powder

1/2 t. freshly ground black pepper

pinch of kosher salt

Fresh toppings of your choice: tomato, lettuce, onion, cheese, etc.

1. Get your grill ready with oiled grates.

2. Follow steps 4-7 from the pita recipe above.

3. Combine the ground beef with the seasonings just until combined. Do not overwork the meat or you’ll have tough burgers. Using a flat hand, create a line down the middle of the ball of meat and separate into 2 even halves. Divide the two halves in half so that you have four mounds of meat, each roughly 1/4 lb. Create four patties from the mounds.

4. Depending on the type of meat you use and how hot your grill is, cook for about 4 minutes per side or done to your taste. Top with cheese just before ready to take off, if desired.  Transfer burger to a plate and tent with foil while you cook your pita.

5. Bring your floured rimmed baking sheet with disks of pita to the grill. Cook for about 1 minute per side, checking often so that they do not burn.

6. Put a burger on each pita and top with desired toppings.

Recreating Oma’s Plum Jam

finished-jam

My Oma (German for Grandmother for those that may not know) was a wonderful lady. She emigrated to New York in 1953 when my mom was very young and the details of her life fascinate me. Oma didn’t speak much about her personal life because it was typical for a German woman of her generation to keep that part of her life very private. However, she was always happy and very  generous with hugs, kisses and tasty food. She passed away when I was a sophomore in High School and I still miss her terribly. My mom always says that I remind her of my Oma and I think I learned from her a passion for cooking good food and the joy of entertaining.

My Opa passed away before I was born and my Oma lived as a widow from 1977-1994. By the time I was in elementary school, my Oma was living in a white 2-story home in Waterloo, Ontario and we visited her every summer. While we were in town, she would invite her Candian friends (all of German descent) over and have a big dinner party. My brother and I helped gather fresh herbs from her garden and helped bring in the cloth tablecloths drying on the line in the backyard in preparation for the dinner party. She made amazing roasts, potato salad and delicious desserts. She adorned her table with beautiful tablecloths and her best China. Since we were kids and couldn’t understand a lick of German anyway, we ate our food upstairs and watched Canadian television (usually the highly inappropriate for kids our age, “Kids in the Hall”) while the adults dined in the large finished basement.

One of my most memorable food memories from my Oma is the breakfast she made for us. Every morning she would walk (she never had a driver’s license) to the corner store and get a fresh loaf of crusty bread. This corner store also had an amazing selection of penny and nickel candy, score! She would serve the bread with softened sweet cream butter and her plum jam. The jam was a rich dark purple and was the tastiest stuff on earth. My Oma never used recipes, so unfortunately I do not have her original recipe. When a few weeks ago I saw a recipe for homemade plum jam on Holly’s blog, I was excited with the possibility of recreating my Oma’s plum jam. I was downright giddy when I picked up 2 lbs. of ripe red plums and teetering between bliss and insanity as the chopped plums cooked into a thick and delicious jam. Oh boy is this stuff good. It is the perfect mix of sweet and tart. I will be trying the next batch with prune plums because I think that is the variety she used, but the red plums were very, very good.

diced-plums jam-cooking

Easy Plum Jam

From Holly of Phe/MOM/enon

2 lbs. firm ripe plums (red, black or prune) halved and pitted

1/2 C. sugar

1/2 C. water

1 (3 inch) cinnamon stick or 1/2 t. ground cinnamon

Coarsely chop plums and stir together with sugar, water and cinnamon in a 2-quart heavy saucepan. Simmer, uncovered, stirring occasionally (more often toward the end of cooking to prevent sticking), until thick and reduced to about 2 1/2 cups, 45 minutes to 1 hour.

Discard cinnamon stick and cool preserves. Transfer to an airtight container** and chill, covered. Preserves keep, chilled, 1 month. You can also follow through with the complete canning process.

**I used Ball pint-sized jars and it filled 1 and 1/4 jars, but they worked perfectly. Before adding the plums to the pot, I filled it with water, brought the water to a boil and sterilized the jars and lids in the water for 15 minutes. Transfer to a towel to dry, then discard the water and proceed with the plum jam ingredients.

jam-on-bread

THEN, I went on Twitter to thank Holly for sharing this lovely recipe and she proceeds to tell me that she has a Jam Crumb Cake recipe that I just had to try. Of course, I agreed that I HAD to try it and made the cake that weekend. Sure enough, amazing. The fresh jam peaks through the soft cake and the crumb topping adds the perfect amount of sweetness without being too sweet.

Plum Jam Crumb Cake

Brown Sugar Plum Crumb Cake

From Holly of Phe/MOM/enon

Makes 1 – 9″ cake, 6 jumbo muffins or mini loaves (I made a 9″ round cake)

For cake:

1 C. all-purpose flour

1/4 C. granulated sugar

1/4 C. packed brown sugar

1 3/4 t. baking powder

1/4 t. salt

3/4 stick unsalted butter, melted

1/2 C. milk

1 large egg

1 t. pure vanilla or almond extract

1/2 C. homemade plum jam

For crumb topping:

3/4 stick unsalted butter, melted

1/4 C. granulated sugar

1/4 C. packed brown sugar

3/4 t. cinnamon

1/8 t. salt

1 C. plus 2 T. all-purpose flour

Make cake:

Preheat oven to 400 degrees F with rack in the middle. Generously butter a 9 inch cake pan,  muffin cups or mini loaf muffin cups.

Whisk together flour, sugar, baking powder and salt.

Whisk together butter, milk, vanilla and egg in a large bowl, then whisk in flour mixture until just combined. Pour batter into cake pan. Dollop jam all over surface, then swirl into batter with a spoon.

Make crumb topping: Whisk together flour, butter, sugars, cinnamon, and salt until smooth. Stir in flour, then blend with your fingertips until incorporated. Sprinkle crumbs in large clumps over top of the cake.

Bake cake until a toothpick inserted into the center comes out clean and sides begin to pull away from pan, about 25 minutes. Cool in pan on a rack 5 minutes.

And because I can’t keep well enough alone, I decided to try out a recipe from America’s Test Kitchen for the Best Drop Biscuits with visions of this beautiful jam glistening on a warm biscuit, mmmm. The biscuits were tasty, but I unfortunately messed up the recipe. I halved the ingredients appropriately to make half a batch, but forgot to cut the butter quantity in half, oops! They were buttery and still delicious, but it probably affected the overall shape. In the end, it reminded me of a buttery jam thumbprint cookie.

jam-on-biscuit

Best Drop Biscuits

From America’s Test Kitchen

Makes 12 biscuits

2 C. (10 oz.) unbleached all-purpose four

2 t. baking powder

1/2 t. baking soda

1 t. sugar

3/4 t. salt

1 C. cold buttermilk

8 T. butter, melted and cooled slightly (about 5 minutes) plus 2 T. butter for brushing the tops of the biscuits

1. Adjust oven rack to middle position and heat oven to 475 degrees F. Whisk flour, baking powder, baking soda, sugar and salt in a large bowl. Combine buttermilk and 8 T. melted butter in a medium bowl, stirring until butter forms small clumps.

2. Add buttermilk mixture to dry ingredients and stir with rubber spatula until just incorporated and batter pulls away from sides of the bowl. Using greased 1/4 C. dry measure, scoop level amount of batter and drop onto parchment-lined rimmed baking sheet (biscuits should measure about 2 1/4  inches in diameter and 1 1/4 inches high). Repeat with remaining batter, spacing about 1 1/2 inches apart. Bake until tops are golden brown and crisp, 12-14 minutes.

3. Brush biscuit tops with remaining 2 T. melted butter. Transfer to wire rack and cool 5 minutes before serving.

Whew! Long post, but it had to be shared. For those of you that don’t have the time to read my ramblings, here’s the synopsis…

Grandmas/Omas=GREAT!

Plum Jam, Plum Jam Cake and Drop Biscuits=Oh so good! Go make now.

Holly of Phe/MOM/enon=A wonderful and sweet person. I think you should be Twitter friends with her and visit her Blog often.

Homemade Calzones

calzone1

Recently I have been on a “all new recipes, all the time” kick and my appetite for new recipes has been insatiable. Despite this, I really wanted to make this great calzone recipe, again and today was the day. Marc was impressed the first time I made this and for me, it’s a perfect Saturday lunch recipe. I start the dough in the morning, run a few errands and then the dough is ready for filling by lunch time. Easy homemade goodness? Now that’s how you start a day.

calzone6 Dough after rising

I came across this recipe on one of my favorite food blogs, BakingandBooks, and Ari has really inspired me to try making yeasted creations. When I first saw her tasty looking recipes, I thought I’d be skipping anything with yeast because who makes their own bread these days? Well, Ari does and she’s a busy lady, so I thought if she can do it, I can do it! This recipe is a great one to start with if you’re dipping your toe into the yeasty waters. Don’t be scared, you can do it, too ! I hope to soon try some of her other bread recipes and I particularly have my eye on Sugared Monkey Bread and Yeasted Chocolate Chip Pumpkin Bread. Mmmm…must try soon. Thanks, Ari, for the great recipes and the courage to try yeast.

Filling the calzone Calzones ready for the oven

P.S. Ari’s recipe includes a Three Cheese Broccoli filling that I haven’t tried, yet, but it looks great. She also has an instructional video for making the calzones which was very helpful. I filled my calzones with pizza sauce, mozerella, banana peppers and sliced garlic stuffed olives. A tasty combo.