Mon. Jan 19th, 2026

BakerAunt

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Viewing 15 posts - 5,896 through 5,910 (of 8,290 total)
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  • in reply to: Request for Cole Slaw Recipe #17393
    BakerAunt
    Participant

      Thank you, Italian Cook. There is, alas, no Miracle Whip in the house, only low-fat Kraft mayonnaise. I wonder what that chemical reaction was. (Is there a quiz question here?) If Miracle Whip is essential, the slaw would need to wait until we do another grocery run to the town north of us. I'd also need to use low-fat. (I never use nonfat--that stuff is yucky.)

      That makes sense that the cole slaw would need to sit for a day. I find the same is true of my potato salad.

      • This reply was modified 6 years, 5 months ago by BakerAunt.
      in reply to: Daily Quiz for August 6, 2019 #17390
      BakerAunt
      Participant

        I missed it, but I learned something new. 🙂

        in reply to: The 2019 Gardens #17384
        BakerAunt
        Participant

          We have finished (and frozen some) of our bean crop. Our snow peas have finished up as well.

          So far, I've gotten two tomatoes off the "Carbon" tomato plant. One was past its useful life; these tomatoes tend to have a dusky red he and dark green around the top when ripe, and so we missed seeing it was ripe. The other I used in a salad, and it is delicious. There are plenty of green tomatoes yet on the plant, as well as on the ones that my husband started from seed. I suspect that there will be a mad tomato rush at some point.

          Some kind of caterpillar has been chomping my husband's broccoli plants, which have not developed any flowers. With the construction, the grass around the fenced garden perimeter is rather long. Next year we will try a "clear" zone around the perimeter. For now, my husband is executing any caterpillars he finds.

          There are four peppers on my bell pepper plant. We are waiting for them to turn red, as we do not care for green ones. The plant has some flowers, so there may be more.

          My husband never got to the woods to pick black raspberries, due to the construction, so we only ended up with a few from there. I was only able to make 3 1/2 cups black raspberry jam. However, 90& of the berries came from our front terrace. When my stepdaughter was here, she went out to the woods with my husband and tasted some of the last of the black raspberries and loved them, so I included the 1/2 cup jar with the birthday present we sent.

          I'd hoped for lots of blackberries, since I always seed them; thus, I need lots in order to make straight blackberry jam. My husband's woods used to have some nice ones, but the trees have now come up and shaded them out. I've been picking what we have on the front terrace. I expect those to finish up this week. If I don't have quite enough, I'll sneak in some blueberries to make up the shortage.

          Some of our wild blueberries on the terrace produced a bit of fruit, but my husband is saving those for seed. Our two commercial plants are young, and so had very little fruit--and one has been crowded by the construction scaffolding. I expect that they will do better next year.

          My husband is going to try one more small bean crop. While it seems strange to think of a freeze when we are sweltering in August, the reality is that it could happen by the time they are producing, so he will put them toward the center where he can cover them if necessary.

          in reply to: What are you cooking the week of August 4, 2019? #17383
          BakerAunt
          Participant

            On Monday night, I made a stir-fry using the remaining turkey breast. We actually look forward to meat leftovers that can be turned into stir-fry. For vegetables, I used green onion (from farmers market), red bell pepper, carrots, celery, broccoli, snow peas (the last from our garden), the turkey, a bit of the drippings from when the turkey breast was roasted, and soba noodles. There is enough that we can have leftovers tomorrow.

            in reply to: Romertopf Bread Bowl #17382
            BakerAunt
            Participant

              I'm beginning to think he breads work better with a cover. I searched the KAF website, but did not find any recipes, probably because they only sold it for a short period. I do have a binder with recipes that I cut out of KAF catalogues over the years, so I may browse it and see what I can find. I think that I would need to do some steam to compensate for there being no lid.

              in reply to: Request for Cole Slaw Recipe #17380
              BakerAunt
              Participant

                Mike--I found a vinegar one in the Frugal Gourmet Whole Family Cookbook. However, my husband and I think of cole slaw as using mayonnaise. (BTW, Jeff Smith hates mayonnaise based cole slaw, it turns out, and thus there are no recipes for it in his cookbooks!) I'd be interested in seeing your mother's recipe.

                Chocomouse--ah, I suspected that your cole slaw might not be written down. The ingredients you list, however, strike me as what I am seeking.

                in reply to: Daily Quiz for August 5, 2019 #17367
                BakerAunt
                Participant

                  I narrowed it to two choices, then picked the wrong one. It's good information to have.

                  With some cheeses, you are more likely to eat more at one time than others. Parmesan, for example, has a lot of salt, but most of us do not chomp off a bite of Parmesan but grate a bit over food.

                  in reply to: What are you cooking the week of August 4, 2019? #17362
                  BakerAunt
                  Participant

                    We have been eating leftover turkey breast the last few days, and re-running cooking fresh green beans in the microwave, and having an ear each of sweet corn. My husband thinks that we have now eaten all the beans from this crop.

                    • This reply was modified 6 years, 5 months ago by BakerAunt.
                    in reply to: What are you baking the week of July 28, 2019? #17353
                    BakerAunt
                    Participant

                      I didn't get as much rise out of this bread as I recall in the past. Possibly it was my alteration, but I also noticed less of a rise with the Grape Nuts Bread I baked two weeks ago. I'm wondering if I need to lower the oven rack, which seems to be above the middle, when I bake bread. I don't seem to be getting that final oven spring. The loaves seem the same size when they come out as when they went in, but I don't think that I've let them rise too long.

                      The bread tastes good. The crumb is good, but it is not as light as in the past.

                      • This reply was modified 6 years, 5 months ago by BakerAunt.
                      in reply to: Daily Quiz for August 4, 2019 #17352
                      BakerAunt
                      Participant

                        Darn! Missed it.

                        in reply to: What are you baking the week of July 28, 2019? #17350
                        BakerAunt
                        Participant

                          This Saturday evening, I'm baking Bernard Clayton's Dark Grains Bread, from his New Complete Book of Breads, a recipe that I've been tweaking but have not baked since last September. I read over my notes and made a couple more changes. I'll add a note tomorrow, after we slice into a loaf for lunch, about taste and texture--and also about whether I'm ready to post my revision of the recipe.

                          in reply to: Freezing Green Beans #17347
                          BakerAunt
                          Participant

                            Today I froze three small packets (189g each) of cut green beans. That's the amount that I estimate the two of us would eat with a meal. I blanched each group in boiling water for 3 minutes, then put into ice water for three minutes. I put them in a salad spinner to dry, then wrapped them in a dish towel. There was still moisture. I spread each third on its own quarter-sheet pan lined with parchment and put the pans into the freezer for an hour. I don't know that the parchment was necessary, but I had visions of their sticking to the pans. After an hour, I put each third into a pint Ziploc freezer bag, squeezed out as much air as possible, then put them in the freezer.

                            When we get around to cooking them, probably in the fall, I'll add another post about how they turn out.

                            Thanks to all who contributed their suggestions and ideas. It's wonderful to have a community to whom I can turn with cooking and baking and preserving issues. You are the best!

                            in reply to: Daily Quiz for August 3, 2019 #17343
                            BakerAunt
                            Participant

                              I got it. Years of listening to Garrison Keillor meant I would not miss it.

                              in reply to: What are you cooking the week of July 28, 2019? #17336
                              BakerAunt
                              Participant

                                Dinner tonight was sliced turkey breast, microwaved green beans from our garden, and sweet corn (the season is here!).

                                in reply to: What are you baking the week of July 28, 2019? #17335
                                BakerAunt
                                Participant

                                  I baked my Lower Saturated Fat, Whole Wheat, Sourdough Cheese Crackers on Friday morning, from the dough I mixed up last week. The extra flax meal doesn’t appear to have affected texture or taste.

                                Viewing 15 posts - 5,896 through 5,910 (of 8,290 total)