Pimiento Cheese

This is the second installment of my Southern New Year’s Foods series.  Happy New Year!

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Really, The Evil Genius and I complete each other. While I sit here on the couch with the laptop, contemplating pimiento cheese, he is watching ‘Alien vs. Predator’ and talking about which characters he thinks will be eaten. So see? We’re both thinking about food.

This family marches on its stomach. Long before I met my southern transplant husband, I was learning to cook southern food from my Arkansan grandma. And while I’m certain he didn’t marry me just for  Grandma’s pimiento cheese, collard greens, and cornbread recipes, I’m equally certain that the ability to execute those dishes well contributed to my charms.

Although I wouldn’t swear to it, I do believe that I detected tears of joy in his gorgeous blue eyes when I placed a dish of this pimiento cheese along with a plate of crackers in front of him so many years ago. Just for the record, there’s no shame in a good ole boy weeping over food like Grandma used to make… He may be Evil, but he still loves his Mammy.

Pimiento cheese is a food that is as big a part of the South as the phrase “y’all”.  This flavorful creamy cheese spread is flecked with bits of sharp cheddar and bright roasted red peppers.  It is as at-home on an elegant buffet table as it is on humble celery sticks for an after-school snack.  Thrown together in a flash, pimiento cheese is big on flavor and low on effort.

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Don’t just stop with at the crudites and crackers, though.  Whether you trim the crusts and add watercress for sophisticated tea-time  sandwiches or slap it between two slices of buttery white bread, pimiento cheese makes a delicious and satisfying savoury sandwich filling.  You can’t get much more Southern than a having a pimiento cheese sandwich and a glass of sweet tea for lunch on the front porch. And you just may have the best grilled cheese of your life if you toast two slices of hearty wheat bread filled with pimiento cheese.

A party just isn’t a party without pimiento cheese in some form, and New Year’s Eve is the biggest fete of the year!  So break out a bowl this festive spread and have copies of the recipe handy to pass out, because you will be asked.  It is that good.

Happy New Year Y’all!

For a printer friendly, photo free version of this recipe, click here!

Pimiento Cheese

Ingredients:

  • 1 (3 ounce) package cream cheese, softened to room temperature
  • 16 ounces grated Cheddar cheese (I like to use a blend of extra sharp and sharp cheddar.)
  • 1/2 cup mayonnaise
  • 1/2 of a small onion
  • 2-3 Tablespoons pimientos (or roasted red peppers) smashed with juice from the jar.
  • 1/2 teaspoon each granulated garlic, granulated onion, coarse salt and freshly ground black pepper

Add the cream cheese, mayonnaise, granulated garlic and onion, salt and freshly ground pepper to the work bowl of your food processor that has been fitted with the blade.

Grate the onion into the the food processor on top of the other ingredients.

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Pulse until smooth.

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Scrape down the sides of the bowl and add the shredded cheddar.  Pulse seven or eight short bursts; just until the cheese is mixed into the cream cheese.  Scrape down the bowl again and add the pimientos with their juice.

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Pulse four or five more short bursts; just until the pimientos are chopped to the point where they are blended in, but still in recognizable pieces.

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Use a silicone scraper or spatula to transfer the mixture to a serving dish or storage container.  Cover tightly with plastic wrap and refrigerate for about an hour prior to serving to allow the flavors to meld.

Leftovers can be kept tightly wrapped in the refrigerator for up to a week.

*If you do not have a food processor simply combine all the ingredients in a large bowl and stir vigorously with a sturdy spoon until thoroughly blended.

Now slather this on some celery sticks, pour yourself a tall glass of sweet tea and say y’all a few times.  You might just like it.

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Yuletide Spiced Brandy Liqueur

It’s time to get cozy.

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The air has progressed past crisp to chilly and will soon be downright cold. The leaves have finally given up their tenuous grasp on the trees and -with one final gust of nearly winter wind- fallen to insulate the grass and ground against the coming snow.

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Thanksgiving and the feast have come and gone and we’re still snacking and feeding on the almost-more-anticipated-than-the-meal-itself leftovers.  A warm potato wheat roll dunked in hot turkey gravy is just the thing to bring warmth back to icy fingers after playing outside.

~~  ~~

There’s a bustle and hustle going on almost everywhere.  Crowds have pushed at store doors on ‘Black Friday’ with people rushing to snap up those spectacular deals they were promised.  Malls and stores are teeming with holiday shoppers.

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The deer are treading lightly and making midnight mass crossings on the backroads and highways alike, trying to elude the daylight and its attendant hunters.  My mighty hunter husband spends each morning and evening out in our  back field bundled from nose to toes in fleecy camouflage with his head and chest sporting blaze orange.

~~  ~~

The kids are wired from the excitement of the season; parties, gifts, friends, food.  They’re constantly discussing, formulating, planning, creating, and playing.  Gifts for bosom buddies are made and given with care and anticipation.

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And I am finding the little pockets of quiet.  The hush.  The moment of silence when everything else falls away and I am left alone to admire the hawk circling the silver clouds in the late autumn sky and watch my husband making his way back to our yard and home through the tall dried weedtops.

When the timing is just right -the evening hunting is over, the kids are working on their presents, dinner is bubbling away on the stovetop, the dogs are napping- I throw a log on the fire,  a blanket around my shoulders, and meet The Evil Genius out on the porch with two small glasses of Yultide Spiced Brandy Liqueur.

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This gentle restorative or lightly orange and spice flavored brandy warms you enough to make you feel equal to a return to the rush. Serve this at a gala holiday event, an intimate gathering of friends, or in your own pockets of quiet. Whether basking in the glow of your loved ones or relaxing by the light of the fire in the woodstove, take a little sip. Just one. Then breathe.

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And remember it’s Christmas time.

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Pour this brown elixir into a beautiful bottle and wrap with a ribbon -satin, velvet or raffia- to make a one-of-a-kind culinary gift for the lovers of food and drink in your life.

For a printer-friendly, photo free version of this recipe, click here!

Yuletide Spiced Brandy Liqueur

Adapted from the Christmas Spiced Brandy recipe in “Classic Liqueurs” by Cheryl Long and Heather Kibbey

Ingredients:

  • The zest of half of a tangerine (Only use the colored part of the peel.  Avoid the white pith.)
  • 4 broken cinnamon sticks
  • 2 whole allspice berries
  • 2 whole cloves
  • 2 juniper berries
  • a 2 inch piece of fresh ginger root, grated (or 2 Tablespoons dried ginger pieces)
  • 2 black peppercorns
  • 1 scraping fresh grated nutmeg
  • 2 cups brandy
  • 1/2 cup raw (turbinado or demerara sugar)
  • 1/2 cup water

Add tangerine peel, cinnamon, allspice, cloves, juniper, ginger root, peppercorns, and nutmeg  to a clean and dry quart or half gallon mason jar with a tight fitting lid.

yuletidespicedbrandy1Pour brandy over spices and zest.

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Shake the jar and put in a cool, dark place for fourteen days.  Be sure to shake the jar every other day.

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On the fourteenth day, combine the water and sugar in a saucepan over medium heat.  Stir constantly until sugar is completely dissolved.  Remove from heat and allow to cool, covered, to room temperature.

While syrup cools, arrange a fine mesh sieve (or colander lined with cheesecloth) over a bowl or clean pan.  Shake brandy one more time and then pour through the sieve.   Set the spices aside* or discard them.  Transfer the strained liqueur liquid to a clean jar that you can use to further age and store the liqueur.

*You can discard the spices or you can put them in a small saucepan with water over low heat to make your kitchen smell wonderful.

When the sugar syrup is cooled, pour it into the jar with the liqueur liquid.  Tightly fix on the lid and shake to combine.  Return to the cool, dark storage area for an additional seven days to mellow.  It only improves with age, but it is ready to serve at this point.

Apricots, Almonds and Chocolate: Foodie Gift #23

In rounding up the bits and pieces from all my Christmas Baking (See Foodie Gift #21), I find that I have a couple dozen pretty dried apricots, half a cup of toasted slivered almonds and a half bag of semi-sweet chips. I also have a few minutes, so I’ll do a very quick and easy gift to pass on to a couple friends and family members. These make a really lovely addition to a Christmas cookie platter as well.

 

Chocolate-Dipped Apricots with Almond Clusters

 

8 oz. dried apricots

1/2 c. toasted slivered almonds

6 oz. semi-sweet chocolate chips

1 T. shortening

 

Place the chips and shortening in a glass bowl, and place over a pan of lightly simmering water. Stir and melt the chocolate and shortening together till smooth. Taking one apricot at a time, dip one third into the chocolate and place them on waxed paper to cool and dry. Once the apricots are done, stir the almonds into the remaining chocolate and drop by small clusters onto the waxed paper as well, till they are set.

 

It’s easy to do these with other fruit and nut combinations as well, and it’s a wonderful way to not let anything go to waste.

 

Merry Christmas!  Happy Holidays!

Bacon and Horseradish Dip

From as far back as I can remember, Christmas Eve was all about snacking–we would have a table loaded down with various cold meats and cheeses, special dark and light rye and pumpernickel breads, my mother’s Christmas punch, lots of chips and crackers with accompanying dips and spreads, and of course, platters of cookies. While we had a bit of time when we were all gathered for the evening meal of Christmas Soup, it was the prolonged evening of grazing that we really looked forward to as children. to be honest, as adults as well!

 

One of my favorite dips was one that was bought, already prepared, Heluva Good’s brand of Bacon Horseradish Sour Cream Dip.  I would zero in on where that dip was placed, and once we were given the go ahead, I did my best to ensure a healthy (??) helping made it to my plate. Others could have their fill of onion dip, liptauer cheese, etc.–it was bacon and horseradish for me every time!

 

So imagine my dismay, when shopping for our own quiet Christmas eve meal this year, when I could find no such item in any of the upper MI grocery stores we frequent. I went from store to store, finding plenty of sour cream, and plenty of variations on the French Onion dip theme, but nothing else. To say I was distraught is understatement. However, necessity being the mother of invention, I grabbed the onion dip and decided I would dress it up myself and see if I could come close to my Christmas Eve favorite.

 

Well, needless to say, I have found some good degree of success with this, or would not be sharing it with you now!!  Very fast, super easy, this would make a wonderful addition to your own snacking regimen, or a tremendous gift for a friend who would enjoy this combination of flavors.

 

Easy Bacon Horseradish Dip

 

1 12-oz. container French onion dip

6 oz. thin-sliced bacon, cut in half

3 T. prepared horseradish

 

Cook bacon over very low heat, letting it crisp slowly. Drain the bacon, and while it drains, lightly whisk together the onion dip and horseradish. Once the bacon has drained and cooled a bit, chop into fairly small bits, and give it all a final crumble with your hands, making sure no large bits remain. Gently stir into the dip, pour into an appropriate container, cover and refrigerate. Yes. Good.

Spicy Glazed Nut Mix: Foodie Gift #21

Okay, we’re getting down to the finish line here, and if you are like me, you have found that you have missed a couple of folks you wish to gift, and today is NOT a day you want to spend going shopping. So, you have to take a look at what is left from all the cooking, baking and preparing you’ve done so far and see what is left.

 

This recipe is great for all those leftover nuts that you may have on hand from preparing various cookies and candies, and is very flexible regarding the mix of nuts you can use. AND it’s darn good as well!  I know I found it on the web, but for once I have not remembered to keep the site info, so my apologies for not being able to credit the source. When I find it, I’ll be sure to add it here!

 

Very quick to fix and very tasty, here is the:

 

Spicy Glazed Nut Mix

About 4 cups

 

2 cups mixed nuts (untoasted); any combination of cashews, whole almonds, pecan halves, and hazelnuts1 tablespoon unsalted butter, melted

3 tablespoons dark brown sugar

1/2 teaspoon ground cinnamon

3/4 teaspoon cayenne pepper (optional if you don’t like this kind of spicy)

1 1/2 tablespoons maple syrup

1 1/2 teaspoons coarse or kosher salt (kosher is best, but regular salt will do)

2 cups small pretzel twists (or other pretzel bits, crispy cereal, whatever)

 

 

1. Spread the nuts on a baking sheet and roast in a 350 degree oven for 12 minutes, stirring once for even toasting.

2. In a medium bowl, mix together the melted butter, brown sugar, cinnamon, cayenne, and maple syrup. Add the warm nuts, pretzels, and salt, and stir until the nuts and pretzels are completely coated.

3. Spread the mixture back on the baking sheet and return to the oven for 10 minutes, stirring twice during cooking. Remove from oven and cool completely, separating the nuts and pretzels as they cool.

Once cool this mixture can be stored in an airtight container for up to a week.

Last Minute Quick Breads: Foodie Gifts 18# and #19

They don’t call them quick breads for nothin’!  Here are a couple of recipes I’ve used to great acclaim over the years, and my source for these is my mother–a great baker in her own right.  These two breads in particular have been appreciated as Christmas gifts by my own family, and I just shipped a batch of them out–they are very good travelers, and keep wonderfully moist for a long time. So if you are looking for a couple more quick gifts, these may serve!

 

Dawn’s Applesauce Bread

 

1/2 c. shortening or butter, or half and half of each

1 cup sugar

2 eggs

1 t. vanilla

2 cups flour

1 t. baking powder

1 t. salt

1/2 t. baking soda

1/2 t. cinnamon

1/2 t. nutmeg

1 1/4 c. applesauce

1/2 c. walnuts (optional)

 

Glaze:  1/2 c. confectioner’s sugar mixed with 1 T. apple juice or cider

 

Cream sugar with shortening till light, mix in eggs and vanilla.  Whisk together dry ingredients, and mix half into the creamed mixture till blended; stir in applesauce, then follow with the rest of the dry mixture. Stir until just well blended.  Pour into a 9 x 5 loaf pan, or two 7 inch loaf pans, or four 5 inch loaf pans. Bake at 350 degrees for up to an hour, testing the smaller loaves beginning at 40 minutes.  Cool for 10 minutes, remove from the pans and glaze. Then let cool completely.

 

 

Dawn’s Banana Bread, with Christmas Bread Option

 

1 cup mashed ripe banana

2 eggs

1/2 c. oil

1/3 c. buttermilk or sour milk

1 t. vanilla

1 3/4 c. flour

1 1/2 c. sugar (Yep, 1 1/2 cups!)

1 t. baking soda

1/2 t. salt

1 t. cinnamon (optional)

1/2 t. nutmeg (optional)

Christmas bread additions:  1/2 c. chopped pecans or walnuts, 1/2 c. chocolate chips, 1/2 c. dried fruit (cherries, cranberries, chopped apricots all work well)

 

Mix together banana, eggs, oil, milk and vanilla. Whisk together dry ingredients and combine well with the liquid mixture. Add the Christmas bread additions if desired, and pour into prepared 9 x 5 loaf pan, or two 7 inch pans, or four 5 inch pans. Bake at 350 for up to 1 hour and 15 minutes for the large loaf, and begin checking smaller loaves at 45 minutes, baking until a toothpick is clean of batter when checking for doneness. Cool for 10 minutes and remove from pans, then cool completely. These loaves are best served a day or more after baking.

 

Merry Christmas!

Viennese Rounds: Foodie Christmas Gift #6

The first time I had these cookies was in the home of a friend in a little college town I lived in for several years. Houghton, NY was the town, and Barbara Woolsey was the friend.  We have lost touch with each other since I left Houghton several years ago, but every time I make these cookies I think of her and her lovely family. And I thank her for sharing this recipe!

 

These are simple cookies, but take a little more time than some. Like the cookies mentioned in my last post, these are nut and butter cookies, no eggs involved, but they are sandwich cookies and take a little more time to form and decorate. But they are certainly worth it. The one change I have made is to toast the nuts before grinding them.

 

Viennese Rounds

 

1 cup butter

1 1/2 c. confectioners sugar (divided)

1 1/2 c. flour

1 t. vanilla

1/2 cup ground toasted filberts (hazelnuts)

red food coloring

1 c. red raspberry preserves

 

Cream butter and 1/2 c. sugar until well blended in large bowl; stir in flour, vanilla and nuts. Roll into teaspoon sized balls and place 2 inches apart on creased cookie sheet (or use parchment if you have it). Lightly grease bottom of measuring cup and dip in sugar, pressing each ball to a 1 inch round. Bake in 350 degree oven for 10 minutes or until goldn around the edges. Remove from cookie sheets to wire racks and cool.

 

Beat remaining 1 cup of confectioners sugar with a few drops of water until smooth, tint with a drop of food coloring. Spread half of the cookies with preserves, top with remaining cookies. Decorate tops with pink icing spirals.

 

Again, we hope to have photos of these added soon! And Barb, should you stumble across this site, again accept my many thanks, both for the cookies and the years of friendship!

Homemade Marshmallows: Foodie Christmas Gift #4

Last year I made homemade marshmallows for the first time. For years I felt too intimidated to make the attempt, not sure why, but I’m so glad I finally gave it a whirl. These need to be started at least a day before you need to serve them or package them for gifts, so be sure to give yourself some leeway. The only change I made to the recipe I found was to use confectioners sugar alone for the coating, rather than mixing with cornstarch. I don’t like the feel of the cornstarch, and with corn allergies being an issue for some, I felt it was better without.

 

This recipe is for your basic vanilla flavored marshmallows, but I had success with flavoring in other ways–raspberry flavoring with a touch of red food color, mint flavoring with green, orange flavoring with a touch of yellow and red color together.  I also made a spiced marshmallow, adding some ground cinnamon and ground nutmeg to the marshmallow, and also mixing some of the same spice into the confectioners sugar coating. All turned out wonderfully well.  Hope you enjoy these as much as we have!

 

Homemade Marshmallows

Scroll to the bottom for an easy-print version of this recipe!

.75-oz unflavored gelatin (3 envelopes of Knox gelatin)
1/2 cup cold water
2 cups granulated sugar
2/3 cups light corn syrup
1/4 cup water
1/4 teaspoon salt
1 tablespoon vanilla extract

Confectioners sugar, Cornstarch (optional)

Line 9 x 9-inch pan with plastic wrap and lightly oil it. Set aside.
In the bowl of an electric mixer, sprinkle gelatin over 1/2 cup cold water. Soak for about 10 minutes.
Meanwhile, combine sugar, corn syrup and 1/4 cup water in a small saucepan. Bring the mixture to a rapid boil and boil hard for 1 minute.
Pour the boiling syrup into soaked gelatin and turn on the mixer, using the whisk attachment, to high speed. Add the salt and beat for 12 minutes. After 12 minutes, add in the vanilla extract beat to incorporate.
Scrape marshmallow into the prepared pan and spread evenly (Lightly greasing your hands and the spatula helps a lot here). Take another piece of lightly oiled plastic wrap and press lightly on top of the marshmallow, creating a seal. Let mixture sit for a few hours, or overnight, until cooled and firmly set.
In a shallow dish, combine equal parts cornstarch and confectioners’ sugar. Remove marshmallow from pan and cut into equal pieces with scissors (the best tool for the job) or a chef’s knife. Dredge each piece of marshmallow in confectioners’ sugar mixture.
Store in an airtight container.

 

Here is the link to the original recipe, and it will give you a picture of the finished product as well. (My camera is currently on the blink, sorry!)

Marshmallow Recipe

 

Homemade Marshmallows: Foodie Christmas Gift #4
Author: 
Recipe type: Dessert, Candy
Prep time: 
Cook time: 
Total time: 

Serves: 36
 

Creamy, lofty, light-as-air homemade marshmallows. You’ll never want another one from the store after trying these! And you can customize them to create unique flavors like chocolate, orange, coffee, etc…
Ingredients
  • 75-oz unflavored gelatin (3 envelopes of Knox gelatin)
  • ½ cup cold water
  • 2 cups granulated sugar
  • ⅔ cups light corn syrup
  • ¼ cup water
  • ¼ teaspoon salt
  • 1 tablespoon vanilla extract (or other flavor extract)
  • Confectioners’ sugar

Instructions
  1. Line 9 x 9-inch or 8 x 8-inch pan with plastic wrap and lightly oil it using your fingers or non-stick cooking spray. Set aside.
  2. In the bowl of an electric mixer, sprinkle gelatin over ½ cup cold water. Soak for about 10 minutes.
  3. Meanwhile, combine sugar, corn syrup and ¼ cup water in a small saucepan. Bring the mixture to a rapid boil. As soon as it is boiling, set the timer and allow to boil hard for 1 minute.
  4. Carefully our the boiling syrup into soaked gelatin and turn on the mixer, using the whisk attachment, starting on low and moving up to high speed. Add the salt and beat for between 10 and 12 minutes, or until fluffy and mostly cooled to almost room temperature. After it reaches that stage, add in the extract and beat to incorporate.
  5. Grease your hands and a rubber or silicone scraper with neutral oil and transfer marshmallow into the prepared pan. Use your greased hands to press the marshmallow into the pan evenly. Take another piece of lightly oiled plastic wrap and press lightly on top of the marshmallow, creating a seal. Let mixture sit for a few hours, or overnight, until cooled and firmly set.
  6. Sprinkle a cutting surface very generously with confectioner’s sugar. Remove marshmallow from pan and lay on top of the sugar. Dust the top generously with sugar as well. Use a large, sharp knife to cut into squares. Separate pieces and toss to coat all surfaces with the sugar.
  7. Store in an airtight container.