Tag Archive | "milk"

Chocolate Raspberry Muffins

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Chocolate Raspberry Muffins


If you ever wanted dessert for breakfast, and felt a little guilty popping a single Dove's Promise's Dark Chocolate piece to melt on your tongue with your morning coffee ... then I have wicked solution for you.  A muffin.  Because even though it's chocolate, the fact that it's a muffin still makes it breakfast.  And since the stores are filled with pink hearts, chocolates and forget-me-not's, I thought this treat would make the perfect cupid's arrow  ... either for your Valentine's heart or your own.

I have a full list of ingredients and directions at the end of the post ... but the main stars of this event are ripe red raspberries, dark chocolate chips and pink muffin cups to make them cute and girlie.

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Sift together your flour, sugar, salt and baking powder.  Then sift the cocoa.

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I should have sifted the sugar in with the flour ... but making these snow topped cocoa mountains was more fun.  I like to play with my food.

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Add the brown sugar, then whisk/stir it all together.

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Next start adding your wet ingredients.  Whisk your eggs together in a separate bowl.

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Milk.

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Chocolate chips.

Might I add that I almost had to run out to the store to buy another bag as Jim, the photographer, could not stop eating these.  What makes that even funnier is that he doesn't like sweets!  Liar.  These are bittersweet ... so I give him that credit at least.

My recommendation ... get an extra bag of chocolate and an extra package of raspberries for munching.

Here's a few facts that will take away the guilt ... raspberries are loaded with vitamin C ... chocolate is full of antioxidants and polyphenols ... eggs and milk give you protein and calcium.  Ignore the sugar and flour. They don't exist except to carry this wholesome nutrition into your body.  (wink)

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Mix in the chocolate chips before the raspberries.  They're a little tougher, so you can really mix them in well.

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Raspberries are fragile, so be careful when folding them in.  These were fresh, but I might even recommend freezing them for an hour so that they hold up better to mixing.

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Serve on a platter for breakfast ...

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Or as a single tasty treat with coffee or tea ...

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Chocolate Raspberry Muffins

(recipe modified from Inn at The Park's Chocolate Chip Muffin Recipe Below)

2 Cups all purpose flour
2/3 Cup cocoa
1/3 Cup packed light brown sugar
2 tsp baking powder
1/2 tsp salt
2/3 Cup milk
1/2 Cup melted butter
2 eggs, lightly beaten
1 tsp vanilla
1 package of chocolate chips
1 package of fresh raspberries

1) Preheat oven to 350 and grease muffin pan or line with paper cups.

2) In a large bowl, whisk or sift together flour, cocoa, sugar, baking powder and salt.

3) Beat eggs in a separate bowl, then add all wet ingredients to flour/cocoa mixture.

4) Fold in chocolate chips. Next add the raspberries and spoon batter into muffin cups.

5) Bake for 20 to 25 minutes. Let cool then dust with confectioners sugar and serve.

Chocolate Chip Muffins

from the Inn At The Park Bed & Breakfast, Louisville, Kentucky

2 Cups all purpose flour

1/3 Cup packed light brown sugar

2 tsp baking powder

1/2 tsp salt

2/3 Cup milk

1/2 Cup melted butter

2 eggs, lightly beaten

1 tsp vanilla

1/2 cup chopped walnuts

1 package of chocolate chips

1) Preheat oven to 350 and grease muffin pan or line with paper cups.

2) In a large bowl, whisk or sift together flour, sugar, baking powder and salt.

3) Beat eggs in a separate bowl, then add all wet ingredients until well blended..

4) Fold in chocolate chips. Next add walnuts and spoon batter into muffin cups.

5) Bake for 20 to 25 minutes. Let cool for 5 minutes and serve.

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Heart Shaped Strawberry Stuffed French Toast

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Heart Shaped Strawberry Stuffed French Toast


HeartFrenchToast45French Toast was probably my favorite breakfast growing up and recently I've been receiving lots of different variations of this popular morning food.  Some with different fruits and spices, some stuffed, some layered, the classic single slice and family casserole style.  It made me wonder, why do we call it "French" toast anyway?  I know it's not really French, or is it?

Wikipedia's etymology says the earliest use of the term was in 1660 and was bread fried with wine, orange juice and sugar.  I'll have to give that recipe a try!  After doing a little more digging through Google, I discovered in French it is actually called "pain perdu" which translates into "lost bread."  It was a popular recipe in many countries, not just France, as a way of making stale bread palatable.  The English call it "gyspy bread" and I think I'd like to adopt that term from now on ... sounds like breakfast with an adventurous edge!

While there are many different adaptations, the basics remain the same.  A simple batter of eggs and milk.  And I like to add a dash of vanilla, the way my Mom always made it.

This recipe comes from Diane Kenniston Hill Inn Bed & Breakfast in Maine. She likes to make her French Toast with shell or heart shaped homemade biscuits.  In lieu of biscuits I used some Texas sized bread.

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Here's what you'll need:

The basics ... milk, eggs, bread, butter

Add to that a dash of vanilla, some sugar, walnuts, strawberries, and maple syrup.

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You can do this same recipe with whole slices of bread instead of heart shapes.  Or, if you're like me, next time you walk through the baking section of your store and see all the cookie molds you'll dream of French Toast in the shape of flowers, butterflies, kittens, birds, musical notes and the State of California.  (That last one was random, I know)

If' you're going to make it into a shape, cut your bread first ...

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Then add the milk, eggs, sugar and vanilla to a large bowl and mix well.

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Pour mixed batter into a shallow bowl for dipping.

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Then start layering into a 13x9 inch baking dish.

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Slice your strawberries and layer on top of the bread.  Isn't this starting to look like a lovely Valentine's Day breakfast?

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Next, put a layer of bread on top of the strawberries, sort of like a sandwich.

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I poured the extra batter over top to fully soak them in eggy goodness.

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Sprinkle with walnuts and add a dab of butter to the top of each toast.

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Bake at 325 for about half an hour.

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And you'll have plenty of left over crust to make bread pudding ... or feed the ducks.

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When they're finished, slice around the edge of the hearts with a knife and serve individually with strawberries and maple syrup.

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Doesn't it look like it's sticking it's tongue out?

That is, if French Toast could sass back and actually had a  tongue.

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Mmm.  Delish.

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Heart Shaped Strawberry Stuffed French Toast

Ingredients
12 slices of thick bread
1 cup milk
4 eggs
1 teaspoon vanilla
1 tablespoon sugar
1/2 cup chopped walnuts
1 cup sliced strawberries
pinch of salt
butter
maple syrup

Directions
1) If using cookie cutter to make shapes, prepare and slice bread.
2) In a medium sized mixing bowl, whisk together eggs, milk, vanilla, sugar and salt.  Pour mixture into a shallow bowl for dipping bread.
3) Soak bread in egg mixture and add one layer into greased baking pan.
4) Cover first layer of bread with sliced strawberries.  Next, dip remaining bread in egg batter and add on top of strawberries like  a sandwich.
5) Sprinkle chopped walnuts on each piece and add a slice of butter.
6) Bake at 325 for 30 to 40 minutes.
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Ricotta & Raspberry Stuffed French Toast

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Ricotta & Raspberry Stuffed French Toast


stuffedfrenchtoast5This is the "2nd" course of the all-day-long breakfast we enjoyed recently with Jaden & her family at the Mount Dora Historic Inn.  The main dish was the Italian Strata, but after looking at these photos I'm not sure how I even had the room in my tummy to move on to a 3rd course!  (But I did finish the plate ... every last tasty morsel.  Then I ran 17 miles that evening so I could keep my girlish figure.)

Now, when Chef Jim said he was making "stuffed" French Toast, I imagined two thick slices of some soft bread sandwiched around ricotta and raspberry.  But he goes extreme.

Gigantic.

HUMONGOUS.

COLOSSAL!

One slice of bread ... that is literally ... the size of a whole loaf. Whoa.

And he says he made this bread from scratch too ... but I have to see that live and in person to gather photographic evidence to believe it.  It's just too perfect.  Gives me a baking complex.

My next question to him was, "how in the heck do you get it to cook all the way through?"  To which is reply is, "watch and learn young grasshoppah ..."

Try out his recipe and drool over the photos Jaden took of the whole process.  And yes, it tastes just as good as it looks.

Ricotta and Raspberry Stuffed-French Toast

INGREDIENTS

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Photos by Jaden Hair

2, Loaves Italian Sandwich Bread (not too crusty, more doughy)

Filling
6, Ounces of  Whole Milk—Ricotta Cheese
4, Ounces of Red Raspberry preserves

Cream (French Toast) Mix
8, large eggs
2 to 2 ½ cups of ½ and ½
2, teaspoons vanilla extract

PREPARATION

1) Blend Ricotta and Raspberry preserves in a large bowl

2) Slice loaves on a 2 inch bias (slanted), about 20 degrees or to preference, and

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save end pieces for a Strata—another breakfast fave!

3) Cut a slit length wise across the top of each piece of bread (corner to corner), and place on a cookie sheet covered in tin foil for easy clean up

4) Spoon mixture into bread pockets and set on cookie sheet so opening is facing up—this helps to keep filling from oozing out

5) Make cream mixture by whisking together the eggs, cream, and Vanilla extract—use a large bowl for this

6) Roll each, stuffed piece of bread in the cream mixture until just wet—do not over saturate, then place pieces on a cookie sheet (slit up), and drizzle remaining cream on top

7) Cover with saran wrap and allow to sit overnight—this allows the bread to surrender to the cream.

COOKING PROCESS

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1) The following morning carefully unwrap your uncooked French toast and roll the tops in the remaining cream to wet—set aside

2) Preheat for 10 minutes an electric griddle (275 degrees) —very important to use an electric griddle—they cost about $30.00 and they are fantastic for Pancakes, French toast, Blintzes, etc.

3) Preheat your oven to 400 degrees

4) After the griddle is preheated, coat with cooking spray

5) Brown French toast (about 3 minutes for the first side and 4 minutes for the second side—check by tilting the French toast with spatula every minute or two to ensure they do not burn

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6) Place on a (Baker’s Secret) cookie sheet covered with tinfoil and bake in oven (400 degrees) for 5 to 6 minutes per side.  These double-layered cookie sheets (Baker’s Secret)—are readily available at your local grocer—prevent the bottom of your toast from burning

7) Powder sugar on each plate and then on French Toast

8) For presentation, you can slice extra strawberries on either side of plate; personally though, I like to plate the French Toast with bacon or kielbasa (Mmm…

healthy).

9) Serve with your   favorite syrup and butter

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Note: As this dish is finishedin the oven at 400 degrees for about 10 to 12 minutes, the outer surfaces of the French toast should be pastry-like (crispy, not burned) to the touch.  If not, than it should be baked a bit longer.  If you do not have a double-layered cookie sheet, use two cookie sheets (nested—one on top of the other), this is not the best method; however, it will help.

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Italian Breakfast Strata

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Italian Breakfast Strata


ItalianStrata9We recently had my friend Jaden and her family up visiting our home town of Mount Dora for some holiday fun.  A little holiday shopping, a little man-made snow sledding in the park ... a lot of good food!

Ordinarily I'd happily invite friends over to stay at our home, but we've got a little 1920's  two bedroom cottage.  Hardly big enough for two families ... although, I could pitch a tent in the basement and we could make it fun like a good old fashioned grade school sleep over.  Hmm ... naaaah.

Instead, our friends Jim & Ana at the Mount Dora Historic Inn graciously hosted them at their Conch House Cottages so they could have their own home away from home.  It's literally just a few steps away from our front door.  The only condition ... we all had to do breakfast together.  Wonder what happens when you get a group of people together in the morning that love food?

Breakfast lasts aaaaall daaaaaaay!

That's my kind of morning.

We had much to celebrate after she and her son, Nathan, and I survived crossing 4 lanes of traffic led by a kamikaze pedicab driver across NYC's 5th Ave.  You can see some Flip cam action of that ride here ...

Notice that we're laughing hysterically.  Lesson learned, when in the face of death ... smile.

The photos in this post are from SteamyKitchen's talented eye and quick triggered shutter finger.  One cup of strong coffee and she's whippin around the kitchen with her 5 lb lens totally workin the food.

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In the recipe below, I kept Chef Jim's instructions just as he gave them to me.  For one, I didn't remake this one in my kitchen yet, so I have no comments other than Mmm and Yum.  But you'll notice a few of his notes will make you scratch your head and say, "really?"  Yeah, he's a joker.  He had me once asking our local grocery manager what the difference was between "hens" eggs and "chicken" eggs.  There is none.  Ha ha.

First ... a little food porn ... some drooling ... and then ... the recipe .

I have no words.  No commentary.   Just pure silence awe.

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Okay.  One small teeny little comment.  Notice the purple mug in the right hand corner.  Yeah, the one that is the size of a coffee pot.  Jim said his doctor told him he could only drink one cup of coffee ... so he just upgraded his mug.  For all the coffee lovers out there ... that's not lying, right?  It is one cup of coffee, it's just 20 ounces.  LOL!

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And one final note ... this was our 3rd course that day.  Good thing I started running as a hobby!

Enjoy!

Italian Breakfast Strata

from the Mount Dora Historic Inn

Ingredients

Egg mixtureItalianStrata6
12, large eggs
1, tsp dry mustard
4, dashes of your favorite hot sauce
Black pepper to your liking
8, ounce sour cream
½ cup whole Milk
4 oz hand-grated Cheddar
4 oz hand-grated Muenster

Ingredients for Layers
Day old Italian sandwich bread—hand-pulled into ½ inch pieces—about a 1 ½
¼ each green, red and yellow peppers—cored and diced
¼ medium onion—peeled and diced
½ lb of boiled ham—hand-pulled into small pieces
4 oz hand-grated Cheddar
4 oz hand-grated Muenster

Method for Eggs

Whip together eggs, sour cream, and milk—then add spices and blend well—electric blender works best—set aside

Architecture of the layers

1) Grease well a standard pie-dish
2) Layer enough day old bread to cover the bottom of the dish
3) Sautee your onions and peppers in little olive oil—cool—then evenly layer over the bread
4) Then spread ham over the veggies and, finally, spread both cheese over the top
5) Pour ½ of the egg mixture over the layers and let sit for 5 minutes—this allows the bread some time to soak up the egg mixture
6) Add the rest of mixture reserving 1/3 inch of space from the top of the pie dish
7) Place in pre-heated oven ... Then pour remaining mixture just to the top-edge of the pie dish—this prevents spilling of egg mixture—on your floor, in the oven and on your shoes.
8) Bake for 60 to 65 minutes at 350 degrees or check with an instant read thermometer to 180 degrees internal temperature –Allow to temper and set for 6 minutes before slicing.

Note: The Strata will get puffy on the sides first and then the middle will puff during the final minutes of cooking.  If the middle does not puff—it is not done!

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Gingerbread Pancakes

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Gingerbread Pancakes


GingerbreadPancakes30This week my family is coming over for Christmas brunch, and even me ... traveling breakfast girl ... is feeling the self-imposed pressure of making a holiday brunch that is memorable and delicious.

I had a hankerin this week to try out some holiday pancakes, and I have some great pancake recipes from innkeepers, but I really wanted to try a gingerbread pancake.  I've even been on the hunt for a gingerbread man pancake mold ... but I've only found cookie cutters. Thanks to the Google Gods I did find eons of gingerbread pancake recipes.  So many I didn't know which one to try.  Some with raisins, some with currants, some with cocoa.  I just wanted a basic gingerbread pancake, is that too much to ask!

I just eenie-meenie-minnie-mowed and clicked through on one of the first listings that came up.  I found one on CDKitchen.com and gave it a whirl (with a couple of modifications/additions later ... please take note).

Here's what you'll need!  I have the full list of ingredients at the bottom of the post.  I later added an additional cup of flour, teaspoon of ginger and 1/4 cup of sugar.

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Start with adding your dry ingredients to a large mixing bowl.

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Next, add your wet ingredients to another bowl and whisk together.

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During one of my health nut kicks a couple of years ago I had a nasty introduction to molasses.  You see, I thought it was syrup.  I was going to be healthy and low cal by adding that to my pancakes.  And I drenched my sweet little pancakes in the black, rust-flavored tar.  Yeah, yeah, go ahead and laugh.

My boyfriend was a champ.  He didn't complain. Ate them all.  Me ... I made some toast instead.

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Molasses on milk.

My new art project.

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Blend together.  Starting to look like chocolate milk, huh?   Don't drink it though.

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Pour wet batter into your large  dry ingredients bowl with the flour, spices, etc.

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You may have to scrape the bottom of the bowl a bit.  Molasses doesn't play nice with others.

Blend.

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Well bah-humbug.  The batter was runny.  I dipped my finger in and took a taste. This was a no make-up-work-in-my-pajamas day, so I have no photographic evidence of the finger-licking.  But I'll tell you that it tasted like molasses.  Ugh. Now I'm feelin a bit scroogey.

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I followed the recipe EXACTLY!   To a T!    (indecently, where does the phrase "to a T" actually come from?)

Anyway, it was a runny, molasses flavored mess.

So, I added a little more love that it needed.

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An extra cup of flour.  That helped with the consistency.

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Now to put molasses in its place and tweak the flavor.  I added an additional tsp of ginger and a 1/4 cup of sugar.

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Mmm.  That helped a whole lot!  Dipped my finger again and now the flavor is more like a gingerbread cookie.  It's ready to go be made into round cake perfection.

A little butter.

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A little batter.

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A little bubbly.

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Flip.

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Now that's a leave-for-santa worthy pancake.  I could eat it like a cookie.  But instead of eating with my fingers I'll fancy it up with a bit of butter, maple syrup and festive star fruit.  And of course, a fork and knife.  Still in my pajamas though.

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Enjoy!

Gingerbread Pancakes

Ingredients

2 1/3 cup all purpose flour

1 tsp ground cinnamon

1 1/2 tsp ground ginger

1/4 cup sugar

1 tsp baking powder

1/4 tsp baking soda

pinch of salt

1 1/4 cup milk

1/4 cup molasses

1 egg, beaten

3 tbsp vegetable oil

Directions

1) Combine the dry ingredients in a large mixing bowl.  (Flour, spices, sugar, baking soda and powder)

2) In a separate bowl, beat the egg  then add and mix together the milk, molasses and oil.

3) Add wet mixture to dry mixture and blend until combined.  Using a ladle or measuring cup, scoop 1/4 cup of batter onto  a hot greased griddle or skillet. You can use non-stick spray or butter. (I prefer butter for flavor)

4) Turn when bubbles form on the surface and the edges are golden brown.

5) Serve with butter, syrup and festive starfruit.

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Cinnamon Rolls

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Cinnamon Rolls


Cinnamon RollsFlour ... Butter ... Eggs ... Milk ... Sugar ... Oh, how I love thee.  Let me count the ways ...

It never ceases to amaze me how many different things can be baked from just tweaking a combination of the above ingredients.  I'll have to have a marathon-list-making post of all the different creations.

For this morning, I'm going to make a traditional chilly-morning-gooey-cozy-comfort-food favorite ... cinnamon rolls.  I have to confess, I usually make these by popping open a cylinder can with a certain giggly dough boy gracing the label.  The orange icing was my favorite.  Artificial ... yes, I know.  But quick and easy.

This recipe is not a quick one.  But it is easy.  Nothing artificial here.  And they taste soooo much better with the added ingredients of time and love.

There are a lot of different variations of recipes for cinnamon rolls, but this one in particular comes from Anchor Inn on the Lake in Branson.

Here's what you'll need ...

Cinnamon Rolls Ing

The magnificent 5 ... flour, sugar, milk, butter, eggs ... with cinnamon, brown sugar and yeast.  I know, yeast is the only one that doesn't sound yummy.  It makes them big and soft and gooey though.

Add the yeast to a mixing bowl with just a little bit of water, about a 1/2 cup.  As the yeast dissolved into the water, you may need to mix it up just a bit to make sure there are no big clumps of yeast.

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Scald the mild and melt the butter into it.  Do NOT boil.  This is on low to medium heat.

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Break the egg into a separate bowl and beat with a whisk.  Sounds a little like punishment for the egg, doesn't it?

My friend Jim gave me another reason/need to break the egg into a separate dish ... it is so that you don't ruin your whole recipe in case the egg is bad.  Luckily I've never encountered a bad egg.

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Add the eggs to the milk/butter mixture and mix.  Then add the milk/butter/egg mixture to the yeast absorbed in water and mix.  Then add the flour and white sugar to the wet mixture and lightly mix with a spoon, just so that all the flour/sugar is wet.  Cover with a towel and put it in a warm place (I place it on top of my heating oven) to let the dough rise for an hour.

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In the recipe, Dee suggests turning the dough out onto a floured surface and kneading for 5 minutes, THEN setting it aside to rise.  I followed this instruction making my first batch of cinnamon rolls, and the dough never rose.  But I'm pretty sure that had a lot to do with the fact that it was a hot humid sticky sauna outside that day.  Even in my second batch, it did rise, but it didn't double in size.  As much satisfaction as I would have received from punching down the dough, I didn't want to fight mother nature.

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Plop the dough out onto a floured surface.  (I probably have a little too much flour there!) Also flour your hands up pretty good, work into a ball and then roll it into a rectangular shape.

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Spread on melted butter ... about  3/4 of a stick, and sprinkle with brown sugar and cinnamon.

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Roll into a tight roll and pinch the edge together at the end.  Some cinnamon sugar gooeyness might ooze out.  That's okay.

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Then slice into 1 inch think rolls and place onto a greased/floured cookie sheet or baking dish.

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MmCinnamon Rolls

Next batch, I think I'm going to try adding the orange glaze from The Old Hen  Bed & Breakfast.  Then I'll have the full homemade version of my dough boy childhood favorite.

Cinnamon Rolls

Try leaving a batch of these for Santa instead of cookies ... I'm sure he/she will be pleased!

Cinnamon Rolls

from Anchor Inn on the Lake

IngredientsAnchor Inn On The Lake

1/2 Cup Water

1 tbsp Active Dry Yeast

1 Cup Milk

1/2 Cup Butter

1 tsp Salt

1 Egg

4 1/2 Cups Flour

1 Cup Sugar

Filling

1/2 Cup Brown Sugar

1 tbsp Cinnamon

2 tbsp Butter

Directions

Dissolve yeast in 1/2 Cup warm water in a large mixing bowl.

Scald mild and melt butter in it.  Add sugar and salt to milk mixture.  Let cool to 120 degrees and add beaten egg to milk mixture.

Add mild mixture to yeast and mix well, then add flour.  Let dough rise until double.

Punch down dough and roll out into 9x13 rectangle

Spread butter or margarine across rolled out dough

Cover with brown sugar and cinnamon

Roll up dough lengthwise into tight roll.

Slice dough into 1 inch slices

Place slices cut side up on a greased cookie sheet.

Bake at 350 degrees for 20 minutes.

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Cherry Almond Oatmeal Bake

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Cherry Almond Oatmeal Bake


bowl of oatmeal 2Looking for a hot & steamy breakfast? I'm not talking about a romantic breakfast for two ... but instead a bowl of sweetness that fills your belly full and gives you the same comfort of a warm fuzzy blanket on a cold morning.

Perfect for filling up before skiing or any other outdoor fall and winter activities where you have a houseful of cold and hungry folks to feed.

This oatmeal with a twist comes to us via Lois with the Horse & Chase Inn, located in Venice, FL. Normally you wouldn't associate Venice, FL with skiing or winter activities, but the weekend we were there, Florida was experiencing some chilly 36 degree weather and rain. We bundled up, adorned ourselves with rain gear and still went to the beach to hunt for sharks teeth. Venice is known for being the Shark's tooth capital of the world and we were not going to let a little weather spoil our fun. That afternoon, Lois warmed us up with conversation and her southern hospitality and while I didn't get a chance to try her version of the recipe, she gave me all the instructions to make it at home.

I know you might be thinking ...

oatmeal = boring

This one is anything BUT boring.  Lois calls it "Michigan Oatmeal" because of the cherries.  And they definitely are a nice change from the standard raisins and cinnamon that are usually mixed into oatmeal.  They're bigger and slightly tart.

Ingredients

The ingredients are simple and the recipe is quick.  Here's what you'll need ...

2 Cups Old Fashioned Oats
4 Cups Milk (I used Almond Milk)
1/2 Teaspoon Almond Flavoring
1/4 Cup Brown Sugar
1/2 Cup Sliced Almonds
1/2 Cup Dried Cherries
1 Large Apple, Grated

Start by pre-heating your oven to 350 degrees and then wash and grate your apple. You could also substitute the apple with 1 cup of cinnamon apple sauce. However, the grated apple adds a little more texture.

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apple shred

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All the steps following are uber easy. Simply layer all the ingredients in a greased glass casserole dish.

The oatmeal ...

adding oatmeal

The milk ...
(Side note here, I used almond milk because I prefer it to regular milk.

Also, I would stir the almond extract into the milk to provide more even flavoring.)

adding milk

The cherries ...
(The tartness of the cherries really balances out the sweet brown sugar)


adding cherries

The grated apple ...

adding apples

The almonds ...


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The brown sugar ...

(Do I hear the Rolling Stones in the background here?)


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Next, CAREFULLY add the casserole to the oven. It will be a little liquidy until the oatmeal soaks up the milk. Bake at 350 degrees for 45 minutes.

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Let cool for about 10 minutes, scoop and serve!

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If you're like me, you sometimes like to have "breakfast" during other parts of the day other than just the morning. So it's good to note that this Michigan Oatmeal Bake also makes a terrific dessert. We had some left over that I refrigerated and re-heated the next day for an afternoon treat. Since the oatmeal had overnight to soak up all the almond milk, extract and moisture from the cherries, the consistency more of a bread pudding. Delish.

--Rachelle

Cherry Almond Oatmeal Bake

from the Horse & Chaise Inn

Ingredients
2 Cups Old Fashioned Oats
4 Cups Milk (I used Almond Milk)
1/2 Teaspoon Almond Extract
1/4 Cup Brown Sugar
1/2 Cup Sliced Almonds
1/2 Cup Dried Cherries
1 Large Apple, Grated

Directions

1) Start by pre-heating your oven to 350 degrees and then wash and grate your apple. You could also substitute the apple with 1 cup of cinnamon apple sauce. However, the grated apple adds a little more texture.

2) Mix the almond extract with your milk.  Then sprinkle the oatmeal in a greased glass casserole dish and pour the milk on top.  Next, layer the remaining ingredients on top of the oatmeal.

3) Next, CAREFULLY add the casserole to the oven. It will be a little liquidy until the oatmeal soaks up the milk. Bake at 350 degrees for 45 minutes.

4) Let cool for 5 to 10 minutes, scoop and serve!

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Julie’s Croissant Bread Pudding

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Julie’s Croissant Bread Pudding


BreadPudding22We recently enjoyed a whirlwind weekend in San Francisco. It's a lot to see in only four days, but I'm really happy that we squeezed in drive out to Napa Valley where we met with the innkeepers at the Glass Mountain Inn, a gorgeous inn located in St. Helena.  My friend Vanessa and I were talking about what surprised us most about Napa Valley.  And that was ... well ... it was so brown!  It is Fall.  And I guess we both had visions of vineyards like the movie A Walk In The Clouds with rolling green hills full of vines and picturesque as-far-as-the-eye-can-see panoramic mountain vistas.  But we're both optimistic happy girls.  So rather than focusing on the quick feeling of disappointment from an unfulfilled expectation, we focused on the glass being half full ... with wine!  And wine is something that California does really really well.

After driving through the valley, the town of St. Helena was a sweet surprise.  It was green.  The town was reminiscent of a movie set ... only more real and organic.  And the road to Glass Mountain Inn was uphill, winding, and every turn had another view of a sparkly vineyard.  Yay!  And I do mean "sparkly" in the literal sense of the word.  The vines have little metallic tags that I suppose are there to scare away birds.  But I like to think of them as vine bling.  After all, something as magnificent as a pinot noir should come from something that sparkles.

So what's with all this wine talk on a breakfast blog?  I digress.  To find out how the Glass Mountain Inn got it's name and take a look at the Man Cave that gave Brian Pinot envy watch the fun little video we made. (Click here) And for a sample of our our San Francisco weekend  itinerary click here.

Alrighty.  On to the good stuff!  How about a little Grand Marnier with your breakfast?

Ingredients

What I love about this recipe is how easy it is to make ... but it tastes oh-so-good and is easy to fancy schmancy it up.  I've already made it now half a dozen times this month when we had friends or guests over for breakfast (or dessert!)  The ingredients are simple and easy to remember if you're running quickly through the grocery story to pick up a handful of things.   All you need is some croissants, sugar, milk, eggs, Grand Marnier, and berries and powdered sugar for garnish.

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Spray your ramekins with some non-stick spray and tear your croissants into bite sized pieces, filling each ramekin as you go.  Place the ramekins on a cookie sheet or some other edged pan to catch anything that spills.

Next, mix your other ingredients in a large bowl (excluding berries and powdered sugar)

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The Grand Marnier has an interesting effect to the milk.  Start bubbling and making all sorts of fun swirls.  This sparked my curiosity to find out what in the heck was the cause of this little chemistry experiment. I Googled it and found 3 possible answers.

1) "I'd say that when you add the milk-coffee mix to alcohol the concentrated alcohol must be able to denature the milk proteins initially (similar to acid in cheese making but a different mechanism - hydrophobicity), alcohol added to coffee/milk must not ever be concentrated enough to do this." Uh-oh!

2) Then someone said it was "curdling" ... but then wouldn't we have a bunch of cheesey White Russians served in bars?  Baileys and milk don't seem to have the same effect.

3) Then I found this random strange video "milk to alcohol" where someone turned milk into alcohol.  It's really bizarre.  With a train going by several times in the background sound, someone adds sugar, yeast and milk together in a cup and pours it from one cup to another. After awhile it turns orange and then a cat comes up to drink the milk.  WEIRD!

I'm totally off subject now.  Damn internet and it's endless supply of useless trivia.  Back to the recipe ...

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Whisk everything together ...

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And pour on top of croissants.  Soak em good.

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Let them ist for at least 15 minutes so the bread can soak up all the liquidy egg mixture.

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Bake at 400 degrees for 20 to 25 minutes.  Mine took just a tad longer since I put them on a baking stone.  That think absorbs heat like nobody's business.

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After they've cooled for about 5 minutes, take a knife around the edge to loosen them up and then turn over onto a plate.

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Mmm.

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Garnish with raspberries and sprinkle with powdered sugar.  Take a bite.  Pause.  Make Mmm noises.  Enjoy!

Whole recipe from Julie at Glass Mountain Inn is listed below.

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Julie's Croissant Bread Pudding

Glass Mountain Inn

St. Helena, CA

(yields 8 servings)

Ingredients

8 store bought croissants, torn into medium-sized pieces

8 whole large eggs

1 1/2 cups milk

2 Tbsp Grand Marnier liquor

1 Tbsp superfine sugar

Powdered sugar and fresh raspberries, blueberries and/or blackberries for garnish

Directions

1) Preheat oven to 400 degrees.  Generously spray 8 ramekins with vegetable oil.  Add one torn croissant to each ramekin.

2) Whisk eggs, milk, sugar and liquor in a bowl.  Pour egg mixture into each ramekin, making sure there is enough liquid to soak bread.  Let ramekins sit for 15 to 20 minutes to allow bread to soak up egg mixture.  Place ramekins on parchment covered baking sheet, preferably a jelly roll pan with sides to avoid sliding.

3) Place ramekins in preheated 400 degree oven and bake for 20 minutes until golden and puffed.  Using an offset spatula, gently turn out each bread pudding on a serving plate.  Top with powdered sugar and fresh berries.  Chicken-apple sausage or bacon is a perfect accompaniment to this dish.

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Berry French Toast

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Berry French Toast


PennyFarthingA few weeks ago, Brian met a couple in Mount Dora (our hometown) that were taking a vacation from the vacation business.  They are the innkeepers at the Penny Farthing Bed & Breakfast in St. Augustine.  So naturally, when we were driving through St. Augustine last week we had to stop in for a cup of coffee and say hello.

I have to confess ... I was a little confused about who "Penny" was and I kept adding an extra syllable to the end of their name as in "Farthing-ton."  I've since been enlightened.  Take a look here at the video.

Marie (not Penny), gave me a fantastic recipe for a Berry French Toast.  I love breakfast made in a ramekin since you end up with nice little individual servings of goodness ... and ... if you have extra you can just put a lid on it or cover in saran wrap, stick it in the refrigerator and save it for later.

Here's what you'll need!  Simple ingredients ... yum-mee flavor.  I used some fresh raspberries and also some froze mixed berries since berries are not in season at the moment ... I had to elbow a few people at the grocery store to even get my hands on a pint of raspberries!

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I could actually just take the bread, cheese and raspberries and go have a picnic!

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When we visited Paris, everyone had a baguette in hand, under arm, or in a basket.  It was like, if you didn't have one you were missing out!  That memory pops up every time I slice into "French" bread.

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My large cutting board was in the sink, dirty, and my no-slip cutting board was in the dishwasher ... also dirty!  So, I used my simple el cheapo cutting board and placed a dish towel underneath to prevent sliding.  It also came in handy for cleaning up the crumbs afterward!

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You'll need four slices, and you want them to be in small bite sized bits.  The quickest way to do that is to cut it in half ... then flip one side over so you have the crusts facing the same way.  That makes it easier to slice through.

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Also slice up some cream cheese.  Careful ... it's sticky!

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After you have the bread and cheese chopped and ready to go, layer them into the ramekins. Bread first, then berries, then cheese, then more bread.  Cause, ya know, you can never have enough bread!

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Mix together 3/4 cup of milk, 3 tsp of maple syrup and 2 eggs.

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Pour the egg mixture on top of the layered bread, cream cheese and berries.  Cover and let it sit overnight in the refrigerator.

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The next morning, bake at 350 for 25 to 30 minutes.

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I think I followed directions pretty well all except for one ...

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... greasing the ramekins!!!  AAAAAARRRRGGGH!

Since I made a crappy move by forgetting to grease my ramekin, it made me think of a friend of mine's son who had a great phrase for making a turd.  And that was ...

Taaaah Daaaaah!

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Well, it might not look pretty, but it tasted GREAT!

Good thing I had a few more to spare.  We'll just keep them in the bowl, shall we?

A little dash of some berry sauce ...

(I had this sauce on hand. Marie at Penny Farthing has a couple ingredients listed below to make some sauce from scratch)

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... and now we've got some good looking AND great tasting Berry French Toast.

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Here's the whole recipe.  Enjoy!

Berry French Toast

from Penny Farthing Inn

Ingredients

4 slices of French bread cut in 1/2 inch cubes

3/4 cup raspberries or blueberries

2 ounces of cream cheese cut into 1/2 inch cubes

2 eggs

3/4 cup milk

3 tbsp maple syrup

(Sauce)

2 tbsp raspberry preserve

1 cup maple syrup

Directions

(prepare night before)

1) Grease two ramekins and line with half the bread cubes

2) Cover with raspberries or blueberries (or both!), top with cream cheese and cover with remaining bread.

3) Beat together eggs, milk & 3 tablespoons of maple syrup.

4) Pour egg mixture over bread/cream cheese/berry filled ramekings and place in the fridge over night.

5) In the morning, bake at 350 for 25 to 35 minutes.

6) Cut round the edge of the ramekin and turn the French toast over onto a plate.  Cover with sauce and serve!

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Breakfast Classics: The Pancake

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Breakfast Classics: The Pancake


PancakeI have several variations of pancake recipes in my inbox and it occurred to me that I need to add some instructions for making a classic pancake.  No, you don't need to run to your local grocer and buy some shake and pour.  Everything you need is probably already in your cupboard.  Take a look at how easy and simple it is to make a classic pancake.

Grab the following items out of your pantry:  Flour, sugar, salt, baking powder.   Open your refrigerator door and pull out one single egg and your carton of milk.  Get a big mixing bowl out of your cabinet and let's get started.  This will take 5 minutes, tops.

First, pour all your dry ingredients into the bowl.  About 1 1/2 cups of flour, 2 tsp of sugar, a pinch of salt, and 2 tsp of baking powder.

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Then add the wet stuff ... about 1 1/2 cup of milk and an egg.  It makes the pancakes a bit fluffier when you beat the egg with a whisk ... you can do this quickly in a small bowl.

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Mix together and pour onto a heated and greased/pammed/sprayed griddle.  In about 5 minutes, you'll have breakfast.  Got your syrup ready?

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Let the pancakes get a lot of bubbles coming up to the surface and slightly cooked/dry around the edges before flipping.

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And there you go.  Nice fluffy golden brown hot pancakes.  There are many, MANY variations.  I'll always refer back to this basic batter to start.

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Classic Breakfast Pancakes

1 1/2 cups all purpose flour

2 tsp baking powder

2 tsp sugar

1/2 tsp salt

1 egg (beaten)

1 1/2 cup milk

( A note about flour.  you can also nix the baking powder and use self rising flour for fluffier pancakes.)

Directions

1) Mix all the dry ingredients together in a large bowl.  (Flour, baking powder, sugar, salt.)

2) Whisk egg in a small bowl and add to the above flour mixture along with the milk.

3) Stir together until well blended and pour onto a hot greased griddle.

4) Wait until pancakes are bubbling and cooked around the edges and flip.

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