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Saturday, June 19, 2010

Easy No-Bake Cheesecake with Huckleberries

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I've been away for a few days because we are visiting my wonderful (seriously) in-laws up in the wilds of Northern Idaho.  I do mean Northern too, since we are only about 25 miles from the border of British Columbia.  It is truly beautiful up here and we have had a great trip already.

We have enjoyed spending time together as a family and in doing simple things - being outside, boating on a lake, fishing, riding horses and 4-wheelers, playing on a trampoline and playing with the dogs, listening to the cows, driving on country roads, and visiting local attractions.  We even had a campfire so Aidan could make s'mores and both boys caught their first fish!

Among all these things, we even got rained out a couple of days and used the time to enjoy a movies and games as well as some delicious recipes.  I'll be sharing a crock-pot lasagna recipe in the near future, but I wanted to tell you about this truly delicious and simple dessert in time for any last minute Father's Day ideas.

My mother-in-law got this recipe from another family member for a no-bake Cherry Cheesecake, and since my husband is such a fiend for huckleberries, and his Mom always makes sure to have some on hand, we decided to top the cheesecake with a warm concoction of huckleberries instead. 

The pie itself is light and fluffy and would be wonderful with most any topping your little heart - or that of any Dad in your life - desires.  Happy Father's Day!  

Easy No-Bake Cheesecake with Huckleberries

For the crust:
1 1/2 cups graham cracker crumbs
6 tablespoons butter, melted
1 tablespoon sugar

Mix together and press into a 9-inch pie pan, in the bottom and up the sides.  Set aside and make filling.

For the pie filling:
1 8-oz package of cream cheese, softened
1/2 cup sugar
2 cups cold whipped cream or Cool Whip

Beat all three ingredients together well, until light and fluffy.  Place in prepared pie crust.  Chill at least 1 hour. Serve with cooled huckleberry topping (below).

For the topping:
3 cups huckleberries, frozen or thawed
1/3 cup cornstarch
1/4 cup fresh lemon juice
1/2 cup sugar

Stir together well in a saucepan over medium heat.  Bring to a simmer and allow to thicken.  Once thickened, place in a heatproof bowl and allow to cool.  Serve over cream cheese pie.

Tuesday, June 8, 2010

TWD: Tender Shortcakes with Strawberries

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You may have noticed a new link on the sidebar over there for my new blog. I've been somewhat cryptic lately, and though I'd like to say it was because I had something wonderful and exciting to share with you - perhaps that was foodie related. While, what I have to share over on my new blog, Sweet & Simple, is wonderful and often exciting to me, it is basically my new Mom blog. I haven't always shared as much about our personal happenings here, because, to be honest, what is happening here is often too personal and somewhat complicated. I have felt strangely a little silent about news of our newest arrival, Kayla. I haven't really known how to share what was happening, and until now, I haven't been ready. Kayla is beautiful, wonderful, and complicated. We were surprised to find out that she has Down Syndrome. It changes nothing as far as how we feel about her - she is ours and we adore her. That said, Sweet & Simple is my place to share our journey in an honest, sometimes painful, but hopefully now coming from a good place - instead of the sometimes hurtful place that it can feel like. I hope that by sharing our journey more personally it can reach out and help educate others and really help anyone who is going through something difficult to know that it is okay to feel whatever you need to to work through the tough times and be grateful for the journey. I hope you'll join me on that journey, but I know that isn't what this food blog is about - which is why we have our own special, sweet and simple place to share those stories - and so that PheMOMenon can stay what it is - my happy place to share my passion for food, baking, and cooking. I'm sure I'll still occasionally share some stories here too, but I need PheMOM to stay that happy place for me. So, there you go, the big announcement finally - not what anyone was expecting, I'm sure, but very important to us. Thanks so much for coming here. Now that I've basically come clean about my bit of silence here and acknowledged the 'elephant in the room', I can get back to normal here. That is a very good thing, especially since I have about 30 posts to tell you about and I can't wait!

Tuesdays with Dorie this week was hosted by Cathy at Tortefeasor who chose the Tender Shortcakes. There were many choices of berries to fill these lovely little biscuit-like cakes with, but I guess I'm a purist because all I wanted was strawberries - sweet, red, ripe strawberries and whipped cream.

I'm so glad that I went with that because these cakes were heavenly. Honestly, I'm not usually a bit fan of shortcakes because it most often means some kind of sponge cake that is often just not very good. These sweet biscuits were easy to make and wonderfully tender, sweet and delicious all on their own.

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I didn't have anywhere to deliver a full batch of these and decided to just make a half batch for this first time (much to my regret) and ended up just eating the others plain over the next couple of days. They didn't even need anything with them and were just totally edible all on their own.

The only thing I changed about the recipe, wasn't really a change to the recipe at all - just a little addition - I went ahead and brushed a little extra heavy cream on the outside on the biscuits before baking to help them get all golden and lovely - and as you can see, it worked.

For more tender shortcakes, make sure to check out the other TWD bakers.

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Sunday, June 6, 2010

Homemade Almond Granola Recipe

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I have now been making this granola, in one slight variation or another, for about a year now. Every time I make it, I have a few friends and family members that I check in with because I know they are going to want some. In fact, I almost always have to make two or three batches at once to go around - and then it goes fast.

I hadn't ever made homemade granola, but when the idea got lodged in my head, I couldn't let it go. I've never been a big fan of granolas because premade versions almost always had some kind of dried fruit in it or another - and I really just don't like dried fruit. I've tried. It's just not my thing. That's why homemade is so much better for me. I decide what goes in... and especially what doesn't. So, when I make this, I make what I like to refer to as a 'nekkid' version using my general formula.

So, I'll give you my formula to play with - then I'll include my most usual version below.

The Formula:

3 cups old fashioned rolled oats - preferably thick cut
1 cup raw nuts, your choice of any mixture
1/2 cup shredded or flake coconut
3 tablespoons extra addition - such as untoasted wheat germ, high fiber cereal or flax seed or a combination
1/4 teaspoon salt
8 tablespoons sweetener - one or a combination - such as light brown sugar and honey
3 to 4 tablespoons vegetable oil
1 teaspoon ground cinnamon (and/or other spices)
1 teaspoon pure vanilla or almond extract

Other Mix-Ins for after the baking:

chocolate chips, raisins, other dried fruits, etc.

Homemade Almond Granola

Stir together in a large bowl:

3 cups thick-cut old fashioned rolled oats
1/2 cup raw almonds, chopped
1/2 cup raw pecans, chopped
1/2 cup shredded coconut
1/4 teaspoon salt
2 tablespoons packed light brown sugar
2 tablespoons untoasted wheat germ
1 tablespoon high fiber cereal

Combine in a small microwavable bowl, heat gently and pour over dry ingredients in large bowl and stir well:

6 tablespoons honey
3 tablespoons vegetable oil
1 teaspoon cinnamon
1 teaspoon pure vanilla extract

Heat oven to 300 degrees F. Spray a large baking sheet with nonstick spray, coating it well. Spread granola mixture in a layer over the entire sheet. Bake in the oven 15 minutes, then stir with a spatula. Bake 15 to 20 minutes more until light golden. Remove from the oven and allow to cool. Stir a few times while cooling to break up the pieces - if you want it chunkier, don't stir it too much while cooling. Store in an airtight container. Makes about 5 cups.

Tip: If you double the recipe, still only bake this size recipe per baking sheet and one at a time. It is a bit time consuming, but the mixed granola can sit in the bowl while waiting to bake the next pan. If you decide to bake it all at once, you will end up having to split the granola onto as many pans as the amount of batches you make, then stir more, rotate pans and it will still take a good 15 to 20 minutes longer. In other words, it's simpler to just set the timer and bake one at a time. If you put more than one pan in, because of the different levels of the racks in the oven, you run the risk of burning the granola.

Cookbook Spotlight Roundup & Interview with Deborah Madison

Remember this Huckleberry Cream Tart I made from Deborah Madison's Seasonal Fruit Desserts book? I just wanted to let you know that the round-up of all the fabulous creations the other participants in the latest Cookbook Spotlight over at A Blithe Palate is posted.


So, don't miss out on seeing all those other creations - make sure to check out the round-up! Before you go, Deborah was kind enough to answer some questions for me that I had about her new book. You can read the whole interview below. Deborah is definitely one intelligent and inspiring lady - it makes reading the book and learning from her truly a joy and inspiration.

PheMOM: What inspired you to write a book that focuses so distinctly about fruit desserts?

Deborah: I love desserts, I started out in pastry, and I've always included desserts in my cookbooks so I finally I wanted to focus on desserts, particularly fruit based desserts. To me fruits are like vegetables —both are plant foods and both can be cooked with— or not. But fruit is so compromised by the requirements put on it for travel and storage I'm concerned for its future. Good fruit is pure pleasure and not a lot has to be done with it, but we're losing touch with that as we eat unripe fruit shipped long distances.

I wanted to bring fruit, and the pleasures it offers for the last course of the meal, into focus. I'd love to be able to do for a peach what's been done for a Brandywine tomato.

I also wanted to write a dessert book that wasn't intimidating, that wasn't about difficult techniques but was more about cooking, and of course, fruit lends itself perfectly to that.

PheMOM: If you had to sum up exactly what you hoped people would learn from this book, what would it be?

Deborah: I would hope that they discover some new approaches to fruit desserts and, of course, enjoy their tastes and the fact that they are so straightforward to make.

I would want them to discover that fruit desserts are gorgeous and satisfying, and that our farmers markets produce other foods that enhance fruit as well, such as cheeses and nuts, jams and syrups, even grains.

But I would also hope that readers would start to think about how the future of fruit rests in part on our willingness to search out good fruit that's most likely going to have been grown close to where you live because the old, wonderful varieties just don't travel. Picked green, they have no flavor; picked ripe, they bruise. You have to be where the fruit is, so look around, try things you haven't tried before, ask questions, and don't feel you have to have strawberries year around. Wait for the rosy little ones that might not be huge but whose flavor will knock you off your feet!

PheMOM: I won't ask you to narrow it down to one recipe in the book, but if you could only eat one fruit from each season for the rest of your life, what fruits would they be and why?

Deborah: Thank you for not asking me to narrow it down to one recipe - impossible, to be sure! This is about fruit and its season and so that would be very hard.

Spring: There isn't a lot to choose from, actually—it's the leanest season because we're tired of dried fruits, apples and pears but we're months away from soft fruits.

I'd say Pixie tangerines because the Pixies are so sweet and juicy and they're one of the last citrus to come into season. Their juice also makes a very good pudding, one of my winter-spring standbys, which is in the book. I'd also choose rhubarb because it's the first fresh spring fruit (vegetable, actually) and it is very lovely seasoned with the juice of the Pixies and other citrus, including grapefruit.

Summer: Artic Rose Nectarines. Actually, any white nectarine or peach is pretty much perfumed and divine and you just slice them and eat them. A truly ripe melon.

Fall: Quince, because I absolutely adore their aromatic quality and their color once cooked, and Concord grapes because they're a "family food" for me and I love to make a Concord grape pie.

Winter: All dried fruits, especially prunes and Medjool dates, because they are luscious and soft and endlessly versatile. I would make mixed fruit compotes with the mixed fruits, a Not so Sticky Pudding, with the dates when I wanted a really rich over-the-top dessert. But more often, I'd make a platter of dates with a tangy goat cheese from the farmers market and some wonderful nut, like Shagbark hickory nuts from a Wisconsin farmers market, maybe a piece of dark chocolate. I do this all winter long, actually, varying the components as citrus move through their season. It's a dessert that you can put together at the last minute and need never be the same twice.

PheMOM: How did you learn so much about all the fruits to share all that amazing and useful information in the book?

Deborah: I visited with lots of farmers and fruit growers. I shopped in farmers markets and orchards all over the country and asked questions. And I read books on botany and fruit.

PheMOM: With such an already amazing array of cookbooks under your belt, what direction do you see yourself heading in if you decide to write another one?

Deborah: I don't think it would be a cookbook per se. I'm not sure I can, or should, write more recipes at this point, but there are other areas I'm interested in exploring around food that have more to do with farming, farmers, and plant life itself. I've a few ideas but they're in their infant stage right now —a little too tender to go out in the world. In the meantime, I'm going to plant a few apricot trees, though, because that's a fruit I adore and it will grow where I live, even if the crop often freezes. When it doesn't, it's heaven!

Tuesday, June 1, 2010

TWD: White Chocolate Brownies with Raspberry Coulis

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I am a project collector. I take on too many things at once and should really learn to not spread myself so thin. I know all this, and yet, I don't seem to be able to stop myself. Why?

I guess to a certain extent, I thrive on the energy of accomplishing the things I set out to do. Unfortunately, the flip side of that is being a perfectionist who is forced to underperform and let slide too many things each day because, although I said a while back I was trying to find a way to fit more hours into the day, it just isn't happening. So, until I learn how to stop spreading my time out so thinly, I'll just keep trying to juggle the best I can. I hope you'll continue to bear with me as I have some important things I need to tell you all about but just can't seem to find the right time or the right way to say it. It will be soon though, because the lack of communication on my part is driving me nuts. My most sincere thanks to you for still coming here and visiting, even though I've been strangely out of touch lately. I promise to shed some light on that all soon and am sure you'll all understand. UPDATE: Please visit my new blog Sweet and Simple and read the start of my explanation about what is happening in our life. I am finally no longer going to be strangely silent. Love you guys!

Speaking of things that were spread thin recently (like that ridiculous segway?) what about the meringue on this week's White Chocolate Brownies for Tuesdays with Dorie? I know several people mentioned they had decided their brownies were going nekkid, but I chose to just stick to the recipe and see what they turned out like. I've never made any type of brownie that had white chocolate, ground almonds, fresh raspberries and then meringue spread on top of the unbaked batter - very unique, and therefore, I wanted to see what they were meant to be like.

The White Chocolate Brownies were chosen by Marthe of Culinary Delights, but I have to give a little shout-out to Ms. Clara who has been waiting **oh so patiently** for someone to finally choose this recipe :) Actually, I was really excited too and we really enjoyed them.

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I made the full batch to take to a family BBQ where they were pretty much devoured. I was concerned when making the recipe due to the fact that so many people were having trouble getting them to bake all the way through. I think I ended up baking mine for a good 10 minutes extra and the middle portions were still quite gooey. I'm still not sure what that was all about or how to fix it, but I've decided that next time (like our host, Marthe) I will probably do cupcake sized portions and not have to worry so much about the gooey-ness.

I think I would also like to try a version with ground hazelnuts instead of the almonds, but the almond meal was really wonderful in it. I went ahead and made the raspberry coulis like Dorie suggests for serving on the side, but frankly, they didn't really need it. Overall, it was very different and fun to make, they were delicious and I'll definitely make them again some time.

Be sure to check out the Tuesdays with Dorie blogroll to see how the others fared this week!

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