Cooking & Baking
Related: About this forumGetting ready for the holiday
The big thing is, I'm not religious and I'm specifically not a Christian. I went through all the rituals as a kid, but it just doesn't sing to me. So, Easter and all the other events are fine for others, but not my thing. DH is less of a 'fallen-away' Catholic than a 'leapt-away' Catholic.
However, we both recognize that everything pretty well shuts down for Christian holidays. So I prepare for us to hunker down and stay home, and we might as well have a good meal. This one's close enough to the solstice and general hope of spring.
I've ordered a ham and I'm hoping for the best. This is a double-smoked ham from a good barbecue joint. We've been so disappointed in hams for some time that I've largely given up. The last one, from a supposedly good source, lost a quarter of its weight and sat in easily a cup of water after cooking; the meat was dried out and tasted of nothing but salt. But ham used to be so good that we just can't quite give up hope. This is ham's last chance. Wish me luck.
Standard veg and sides, and I'm still working to get consistently good biscuits. I'm ashamed to buy 'whomp' biscuits, in the tube, but I do sometimes. I'm inventing a dessert - I have leftover filling for a Greek filo pastry called galaktaboureko in the freezer, and some leftover filo. The filling is a kind of custard. I don't have enough for the pastry, but I got some apples and I'm going to make a kind of custard/apple strudel with the filo. Clearing up the freezer and it should be good.
And today I finished a batch of coffee liqueur. Sort of like Kahlua, but a little more chocolate and vanilla. DH likes Black Russians, and I'm not averse to putting a little of it in some hot coffee. I brought a tester up to DH this AM to ask him if it was sweet enough - he drank it and said "Oh, my God, that's good." Here's the recipe.
500ml vodka
500ml dark rum
½ pound whole coffee beans
4oz cocoa nibs (approx.1 c.)
1 vanilla bean, split open
Later:
2 ½ c white sugar
2 c water
Mix everything but the sugar and water in a large sealable jar.
Store in a cool dark place for at least 3 weeks, shaking or stirring frequently at least several times per week.
Strain well. (Fine strainer, possibly with cheesecloth. Or sieve first, followed by fine coffee strainer.) You will have nearly 3 cups of strong, very bitter liquor. The beans are exhausted and should be thrown out.
Melt and brown 1 c sugar in a small pan, stirring constantly till it reaches a rich dark brown, but not yet burned. This is a game of chicken go as far as you dare, but if you burn it, throw it out and start over. Carefully add 1 c water it will spatter. Stir till the sugar and water are dissolved together into syrup. Add the rest of the sugar and the rest of the water; boil for 5 minutes or till completely dissolved. Cool and add to the rest of the ingredients to taste usually all of it. Add more sugar yet, if not sweet enough, but shouldnt be too sweet. Go for bittersweet, evenly balanced.
Bottle. This will make about 1.25 liters.
AllaN01Bear
(23,006 posts)bon apitite . leftovers .!!!!
msongs
(70,137 posts)Kali
(55,713 posts)I'm not tired or anything, am I? Not only do I not know what time or day it is, I don't know what season it is.
Well, the strudels are done, anyway. Note, plural. The whole point of throwing stuff in the freezer if I can't use it right away is that I don't throw away food. However, I can't re-freeze this stuff, so I used it all up.
This is a lot of strudel. Trimmed the ends off to neaten them up, as they weren't filled all the way out (on purpose, so they wouldn't drip all over the baking sheet and oven floor). So that's the cook's treat. And it's good.
SARose
(817 posts)😂
Shhhh dont tell anyone or I might lose my Southern Belle status. The Walmart frozen Great Value Buttermilk biscuits are great. My kids/grandkids think I still make them from scratch. 😉