Thursday, December 23, 2010

poms poms and punch for everyone!

I made pom poms until my fingers bled. I ended up with a festive wreath that looks as though it would be the de facto shag carpet in the Claus Family rumpus room.

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I think it was worth it, yeah? Wreath inspiration found here (one of my faves). Oh! Also this wreath I made in November, inspired by the same post. I also made another one as a gift:

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I'm not shitting you when I tell you that the above wreath was downright EASY to make. I made another one for a Christmas gift. I wouldn't lie about this sort of thing.

THIS PUNCH should come with a warning label.

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It's full blown party time with a decorative ice mold thrown in for good measure. If a frosty punch bowl doesn't say "Good Times", then I don't know what does.

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This concoction is Liquid Christmas Cheer, Loud Mouth Soup in it's finest form. One of our party members fell down the stairs with merriment. I think I pulled a muscle laughing. I won't name names.

THIS CAKE had more rave 5 star reviews than I have ever seen on All Recipes for one single baked good.

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It was worth the hype. Although I did double all the spices as most of the gals suggested. I made this cake last Saturday and wrapped it tightly in Saran wrap, removing it and frosting it last night for our gift grab showdown.

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It was still moist, delicious and flavorful. That recipe is one for the record books. So easy.

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I hope your holiday is filled with lots of merriment (watch those stairs, they can sneak right up on you), excellent food and good company! Have fun, be safe and have a Merry Christmas!

xoxo,
jess

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Wednesday, December 22, 2010

aunt jess' cranberry moonshine

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So a few weeks back I prepared some cranberry liqueur which I mentioned in passing. I also wrote about it here. And now, a few short weeks later, it's done. I have, actually already packaged up and given it as hostess gifts to two of my girlfriends.

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This cranberry liqueur (god I hate that word) is seriously simple to throw together. The whole process took me about 30 minutes. Then it sat and steeped in jars on the floor of my pantry, until it was good and liquored up.

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At that point I took it out and strained it twice (although you will only have to strain yours once if you use a fine mesh strainer the first time) and poured it into some cute salad dressing bottles I found at Homegoods.

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I won't lie, the whole process of making and food processing a simple syrup and then straining and pouring the liqueur is a little sticky, but well worth it. The resulting hooch is sweet and tart and completely amazingly delicious when drizzled into a glass of chilled prosecco.

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To complete this hostess gift, I simply tied a little label on the cranberry liqueur and gifted it with a bottle of bubbles. And then I made my hostesses open it up and pour me one. I have one left, which I will give my cousin, Jenny, who's hosting Christmas Eve.

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This whole project cost me nothing, because I had on hand vodka, lemon zest, OJ and I got the bag of cranberries free. All I needed was a tiny bit of foresight to start the process a few weeks in advance and then had to pickup the bottles ($2.50 each). It's easy, it's cheap, it's cute and the brilliant red color makes it a super festive holiday gift. Trust me, you'll go Lansbury for this Cransberry (serious watch this. So amazing!). Cheers!

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Monday, December 20, 2010

candy girl

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Does anyone else feel like you’re living in a time vacuum where everything is either WORK, TRAFFIC or DRUNK? Right. Welcome to December, it’s like this every year. For some reason my job, which under normal circumstances allows me adequate time to both Take Care of Business and Slack Off is on Take Care of Business Overload and the lack of time to slack off is not cool; especially since I’m behind on a lot of things, this here blog notwithstanding. But anyways, there’s not much we can do now, right? It’s December 20th. TWENTIETH. Which means there really is not much time now. This also means it’s time for me to remind myself to BE REALISTIC about time constraints and above all, not try and be a hero with the DIY and the home cooked blah blah blah. It’s time to get focused, pick up a couple of gift certificates and serve cheese and crackers.

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The blogosphere is filled with psychotically talented people that are apparently, far better at time management than I. They are also adept at baking, have nicer handwriting than the average person and have, apparently, limitless access to mason jars. These are the people whose very existence will inevitably make you feel like you are a little bit less-than if you are unable to spin wool, craft artisan cheeses in your basement, make homemade bread for breakfast on Wednesdays while simultaneously weaning your twins off of breast milk and sewing handmade, yet stylish, ties for your husband. These people may or may not be robots and I’m here to tell you that if you are not one of them, congratulations, you probably have a social life and/or human heart.

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This is not to say that I don’t admire these super high achieving domesto-bots, I do, I really wish I could be more like them. Every December I start out the month with big dreams in my head of making seven different types of gorgeous cookies and homemade biscotti, which I will naturally package with organic parchment paper in vintage antique tins and mail out to my friends far and wide prior to December 15th. And then I realize that you know, my regular life will actually still be in existence during this month as well. The pressures of December, in addition to my normal schedule, means that almost every evening in the second half of the month will be a time for Revelry and Merriment. And just to let you know Revelry and Merriment do not often go hand in hand with productivity. At least not at Chez Dickens. Usually they go hand in hand with pizza and Polar seltzer, but that’s just us.

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With that being said, and given the content of the remainder of this post, I want to assure you that I am not the type of person who makes homemade candy. I’m not even close to good at making cupcakes, let alone candy. Soup or a savory appetizer, that’s a different story; however, this book that I have is completely amazing and makes me feel, at least a little bit, that domestic success is possible without losing your head about it. Her instructions are straight forward and clear, without being overly complicated. I would never, ever, ever have attempted to make candy at my house if it didn’t look so dang easy. Admittedly working in melted chocolate is messy, and you have to stay focused and work quickly for a bit, but seriously, you could do this! And the candy? So good! Now I won’t be signing the lease on a chocolate factory any time soon but I will definitely make these candies again. Honestly, it’s such a simple recipe I can remember it off the top of my head*. You really can’t get much better than that now can you? If I can do it, you can too. So let’s do it together shall we?

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BITES of JOY (alt. name COCONUT ALMOND DELIGHTS-don't want to get sued)

2 egg whites
½ cup sugar
1 tsp. vanilla extract
½ tsp. kosher salt
2 cups sweetened, flaked coconut
Roasted, salted almonds

2 cups chocolate chips

You will also need: a baking sheet for cooking the coconut and almonds on, as well as one or two baking sheets lined with parchment paper for your finished chocolates.

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In the book, she made small candy bars. I wanted smaller portions, so I made little lumps, which I eventually turned into balls (snicker).

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Preheat oven to 350. Combine egg whites with sugar, vanilla and salt. Blend together well with a fork or whisk. Fold in coconut. Lightly oil a baking sheet. Using a teaspoon and your hands mold the coconut into small rounds, about the size of a 2 teaspoons. Press an almond into each round. Bake for about 10-13 minutes. Checking on them after the 10 minute mark. When they start to brown ever so slightly on the edges, take them out. Let cool on the pan for about 5 minutes. At this point in time, I realized mine looked ugly, jagged-edged and difficult to roll in chocolate, so I decided to work them into balls, rounding out the coconut with the almond in the middle. Because coconut has a lot of natural oil, this was easy to do without getting my hands super sticky but make sure your balls have cooled enough to handle without burning your hands. You want them still a little warm, so that they are pliable. I then placed my balls (Hee. How many times can I type that in one post?) on the cooling rack and let them cool completely. When the balls were room temperature, in a microwave safe bowl, nuke your chocolate chips on high for 1 minute, then stir well with a fork to distribute the heat, microwave another minute, stir well, microwave about 30 seconds more and stir well again. The chocolate should be silky and fall from the edges of the fork like a ribbon. Mmmmm, silky chocolate ribbons. Using two forks as your implements drop each ball into the melted chocolate and roll to coat completely, lifting the ball out of the chocolate and placing it on to your waiting parchment paper. Continue with each ball until all are coated in chocolate, stopping to microwave the chocolate for another 30 seconds or so and stir it well if it gets too thick. Let sit at room temperature, cooling and hardening completely for 4 hours.

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They are completely delicious. If I knew making homemade Almond Joys was as easy as microwaving chocolate and being willing to get a little sticky, I would have made them years ago. They are so good I almost wish I could un-learn this, because these strike me as pretty dangerous to have around the house. Fortunately, mine are going to be given as gifts before the week is done.

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*if there are any mistakes, then you know why. The top of my head is not exactly super bright right now.

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And for those of you that are interested in this kind of project. This is the book. It's seriously amazing:

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Friday, December 10, 2010

there will be swear words

Do you enjoy and delight in tales of other people’s failure? Well then, you’ve come to the right place. I’m finally ready to tell you a story about the pie that nearly broke me. But a word of warning, I’m probably going to swear a lot, so if you don’t like that be forewarned. It would be simply impossible and completely dishonest for me to even attempt to relay this tale of failure without a few choice four letter words. I also use Jesus’ name in vain at least once (sorry, Heather). Don’t say I didn’t warn you. It’s just that this story needs to be told exactly as I would say it to your face and in person, well, I swear kind of a lot.

So I became obsessed with the idea of making this pie the first time I saw it. I have no idea why, I’m not even THAT into pie or butterscotch. I think it was the browned butter and bourbon aspect that got me all excited. Plus, I must admit, I’ve gotten a little cocky in the kitchen since the success of my pumpkin whoopie pies. I thought that if I can make a delicate baked good like that, then I can probably do pretty much anything. I was wrong.

I thought Thanksgiving would be the perfect opportunity to knock everyone’s socks off with this decadent homemade masterpiece. I banked on this pie being so life altering that I didn’t even put much thought into my appetizer (which is usually my strong suit). I was totally hosed by the very idea of it. I read the recipe through several times, because it was clear that making the pudding filling would be a matter of precise measurements and quick action, and I knew I needed to be ready.

Tragedy one came with the crust. I misread the stupid recipe and used only butter, no shortening. Seasoned bakers know that this means your crust shrinks up when baked. Kind of a shitty thing to happen when the filling is going to be liquid. Not to mention the fact that well, it looks like crap too. I shook it off and moved on.

Tragedy two came while I was preparing my ingredients. Since I knew once the butter was browned and the sugar melted I would have to start moving fast, I prepped a finely measured out mise en place (thank you Top Chef). About ¾ of the way through my prep I realized that the recipe called for evaporated milk (which I did not have), not sweetened, condensed milk (which I had). As the kids say these days: fuck my life. This was the day before Thanksgiving at 5 p.m., arguably the worst time to be in the car and/or grocery store and I would rather eat glass before I did either. Not to mention the fact that I already had a pie crust par baking in the oven and a countertop covered with already measured ingredients. You should know that right now my cat Bruce is very interested two things: human food and acting like a dick (read: jumping on the counter whenever my back is turned and trying to eat things out of the sink drain- gag-) so I really would not have put it past him to haul his fat ass up there and nosh down on a stick of butter while unsupervised. I sprinted (Sprinted. Seriously- this has pretty much only happened twice in my life and one time it was because the cops showed up at a party) down to the corner store. Dude working there, smelling my tragic desperation, goes: “can I help you find something?” “evaporated milk?!” (surely my corner convenience store would have this random bomb shelter food, right?) “nah, sorry” (he looked truly apologetic) to which I looked up at the sky and said “fuuuuuuck” and then sprinted back out the door and back to my house. When I got home I googled “substitutions for evaporated milk” and found I could use half and half. I French kissed the internet and dashed back to the store and then back home.

When I got back to my house I decided to get a little Zen about the whole process. Slow down, chill out, focus my attention. This called for a cocktail. I took five deep breaths, made an extremely strong Old Fashioned and headed back into the tenth circle of hell: the pudding circle.

very necessary pause:

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feeling slightly hopeful:

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Here, I started to get down to the brass tacks of the recipe. The recipe, which would prove to be a filthy lying pirate hooker of a recipe, told me that it would take 10 minutes to brown my butter. I kept it low, I was vigilant, I was careful. Guess what happened? Burned to shit. Heinous, reeked up my kitchen, ruined a pot (guzzles bourbon, cracks knuckles, shakes it off). Stick No. 2 browned without issue. Then I added the brown sugar and things started looking up, then I added the half and half and started to feel like a successful person again and THEN came the part where I had to temper the cornstarch with a half cup of the liquid, stirring viciously the whole time. THEN came the part where I added that mixture back to the pot on the stove and had to stir the whole time but only for a minute! Because apparently after a minute cornstarch starts to LOSE its thickening ability. Perfect. I might as well be on a game show at this point. THEN I had to temper the four egg yolks and then add that mixture back to the pot. Oh just so you have a slight idea of how many pots and bowls were dirtied in the process, here is a photo of my kitchen. Keep in mind I don’t have a dishwasher, so…yeah.

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At some point I added the bourbon also, both to the pot and more into my mouth. As I’m stirring the mixture I realize that there are some gnarly gelatinous chunks throughout it. Well, isn’t this just ducky my pudding looks like the gelatinous sacs that the Gremlins birthed themselves out of. I got out my immersion blender because my solution to pretty much anything disagreeable in the kitchen is to puree the shit out of it with an immersion blender. THEN, once cool, I had to strain the whole mess through a mesh strainer. My mesh strainer is for cocktails (of course it is) and holds about two ounces of liquid at a time. As you can imagine the straining process was a total blast considering the size of my strainer relative to the size of the Gremlin chunks of sticky pudding. At some point during this process my friend Michelle had called to confirm our plans for that evening. She cheerily asked how the pie was going to which I lamented to her the ridiculousness of the whole process noting without a hint of irony that “this motherfucking thing better taste like Jesus’ tears for the work I’ve done.” I took a taste of my liquid and felt the slightest whiff of hope, it did taste really good. I dumped the strained pudding liquid into the crust, tossed it into the fridge and put the whole mess behind me as I gassed it over to Michelle’s to drink the pain away. At her house I helped her make her side dishes and appetizers and almost felt human again. When I got home hours later I excitedly checked on the pudding, to see if it had, well, pud. The pie was still decidedly liquid. That’s okay! I thought, my head warm with red wine and hope. By tomorrow that pie is going to be perfect and delicious and it’s going to be the best Thanksgiving ever!

In the morning we packed the car up and headed to my aunts’ house. The pudding had still not pud. I was like a psychotically determined person for whom reason did not apply. When Paul gently suggested that I simply just leave the pie behind I kindly told him in my sweetest voice that this goddamn pie was going to goddamn Thanksgiving with us whether it was solidified or not. As you can probably imagine by the time we arrived at our destination at least two tablespoons of the un-pudded pudding had trickled onto the floor of my car. But that’s fiiiine. I’m sure that cooked half and half, butter and bourbon smells SO good in automobile upholstery. I relayed my tale of woe and un-pudded pudding to my mother and aunts who promptly passed me a pumpkin martini and told me to shake it off. My Aunt Sally told me that it would look fine once I garnished it with whipped cream and reminded me “don’t you know that ‘garnish’ is French for fuck up?” I felt better and still held out hope that perhaps the pie, now in the garage freezer, would solidify by the time dessert rolled around.

Several bottles of prosecco hours later, I made up the whipped cream and removed the pie from the freezer. It had some ice crystals in it. I pretended it was solid and soldiered on. Because I am completely delusional and psychotic and, at this point, was fairly drunk, so I was truly unstoppable. I walked over to the dessert buffet; pie in hand, turned my head to the right to say something to my mom and promptly dropped the cursed pie, whipped cream side down, directly onto my sister in law’s cake. My mom howled with laughter. Still, I righted the pie, replaced the whipped cream, smoothed out the whipped cream that had assaulted Renee’s cake and placed the pie confidently on the buffet. It was, without a doubt, the ugliest and worst looking pie in the history of pies. The filling, liquid as it was, did taste good actually. My sister in law was the first besides me to try it “Dang, Jess I just drank some of your pie and it tastes great!” a teeny tiny light bulb sparked to life in my fuzzy drunken head. Drink my pie. That’s it! I decided to take back power from the pie that wouldn’t pud, picked it up, strained the whole thing into the martini shaker with some Baileys and vanilla Stoli, shook it with ice and poured a round of shots for me and my aunts. Suck on that, pie. We are ingesting you whether you are edible or not.

Gorgeous, isn't she?

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Does this looked pudded to you?

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So if you’re still here, congratulations, you probably don’t have ADD, because this is the longest blog post in the history of blog posts. There is a lesson here: if life hands you a shitty pie, drink that bitch. Fin.

PS, I will have a real recipe up ASAP. I just couldn’t resist sharing this tale of failure.

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Friday, December 3, 2010

most delicious tear gas ever

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I’m not even close to ready to describe to you guys the massive failure that was my Thanksgiving Pie. For right now, I will just let you know that my cheeseball was a resounding success (cute, right?)

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...and that I made French Onion Soup and you should too.

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It’s so easy. Not like the pie (cracks knuckles, makes angry fighting face).

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I used Julia’s recipe. Because, I mean, who else? And it was seriously a cinch. The only issue is that you will be peeling, slicing and cooking about 3 pounds of onions. So protect yourself and be prepared. I wore safety goggles, which started out as a joke but clearly became very necessary.

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(don't mind the mega greasy hair and myspace face. I was obviously joking)

Because when Paul came downstairs he started weeping an ugly cry because our whole house was like a World War I trench flooded with tear gas. The cats retreated to the third floor with tissues and gasmasks. We had to open all the doors and turn the fan on high.

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But the good news is once you add the wine and the stock the pungency and eyeball torture tempers down a great deal.

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And the soup. Good Lawd, the soup. It was so delicious. I ate it for lunch that day and several other days this week. I even ate it without the bread and cheese because it was that rich and delicious and good god, I mean, who the heck eats onion soup without the cheese, the whole point of the soup is usually because it’s a good excuse to nosh down on a half lb. of melted cheese, right? Seriously though. That good.

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FRENCH ONION SOUP

2 tablespoons butter
¼ cup olive oil
3 lbs onions, halved and sliced thin
2 cloves garlic, minced very fine
1 teaspoon granulated sugar
2 cups dry white wine (I used Sauvignon Blanc)
6 cups beef stock (I had to round this out with about one quarter chicken stock. It worked fine)
salt and pepper
1 Turkish Bay Leaf (optional)
1 few pink peppercorns (optional)

Toasted slices of French baguette
Olive Oil
Grated gruyere
3 teaspoons grated Parmesan

In a large saucepan over medium heat melt the butter and oil together. Add the onions, garlic, and sugar. Sauté until slightly colored, stirring occasionally (don't stir too much -- you want them to brown) for about 10 minutes. They won’t be completely caramelized, but they will have cooked down a bit.

Add the white wine, raise temperature to medium high, and bring to a boil. Lower temperature back down to medium and cook for 5 minutes. Add the stock, raise temperature to medium high and bring to a simmer. If using, add the peppercorns and bay leaf. Lower temperature to low and simmer uncovered for 90 minutes.

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To serve, ladle the soup in oven proof bowls, float one or two slices of baguette on top and cover with grated Gruyere and a sprinkle of parmesan. Place under the broiler until the cheese is melted and bubbling and browned in some spots. Watch closely, all broilers operate differently and you don’t want to light the bowl on fire. I don’t own any oven proof bowls, so I simply brushed my baguette with olive oil on both sides and toasted each side, then I placed the slightly browned slices on tin foil, topped with Gruyere and parmesan and toasted them to melt the cheese. I then placed them on top of my soup. Delicious. Bon Appétit.

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Two more quick things: I cannot tell you how it pained me to the depths of my very soul to use two whole (drinkable) cups of white wine in this but c’est la vie. It does make the soup totally delicious. Second, this is one of the cheapest things ever to make. A bag of onions and beef stock, pretty much the only thing you need besides the wine (but you probably have a bottle kicking around, right? Or would like an excuse to purchase wine and drink the leftovers on a Saturday afternoon, right? Don't worry this is a judgment free zone, boo).

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This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 Unported License.