Showing posts with label apple. Show all posts
Showing posts with label apple. Show all posts

Butternut Squash Soup with Cider Cream and Pumpernickel Croutons

 From the very first time I tried this recipe from my friend Heather, I was in love.  I loved the autumn inspired flavors with the squash and the apple and I loved the extra crunch and bite that the pumpernickel croutons added.   Too bad a couple of my kids aren't such big fans of it, because I like it enough that I keep making it anyway.  I highly recommend finding the pre-cut butternut squash (pictured below), because peeling and cutting a whole squash was a pain in the patootie!  

 I also recommend pureeing only part of the soup and mashing the rest with a potato masher.  I really liked the extra texture it gave having it only partially pureed.  STAY TUNED later this week for a great recipe using the leftovers of this soup as a pasta sauce.  Double yum! 
Click here for printable recipe.

The ingredients:

BUTTERNUT SQUASH SOUP:
5 Tbs. butter
2-1/2 lbs. butternut squash, peeled, seeded, cut into 1/2-inch pieces
2 cups chopped leeks (white and pale green parts only)
1/2 cup sliced carrots
1/2 cup sliced celery
2 small Granny Smith apples, peeled, cored, and chopped
1-1/2 tsp. dried thyme
1/2 tsp. dried sage
5 cups chicken broth
1 cup apple cider
1/2 cup whipping cream
chopped fresh chives

CIDER CREAM:
1/2 cup apple cider
2/3 cup sour cream

PUMPERNICKEL CROUTONS WITH MAPLE AND CHIVE:
1 pkg. (16-oz) pumpernickel bread, cut into 1-inch cubes
1-1/2 Tbs. olive oil
2 Tbs. maple syrup
1 tsp. salt
1/2 tsp. ground black pepper
3 Tbs. chives

FOR BUTTERNUT SQUASH SOUP:  Melt butter in heavy, large saucepan over medium-high heat.  Add squash, leeks, carrot, and celery; saute until slightly softened, about 15 minutes.

  Mix in chopped apples, thyme, and sage.  Add broth and 1 cup cider and bring to boil.

Reduce heat to medium-low.  Cover and simmer until apples are tender, stirring occasionally, about 30 minutes.


Cool slightly.  Working in batches, puree soup in blender.  

(NOTE:  I pureed 2/3 of the soup and mashed the remaining 1/3 with the potato masher.  It gave the soup a little more texture.) 

Return soup to pan. 

Bring soup to simmer.  Mix in whipping cream.  Ladle soup into bowls.

Drizzle with cider cream. 
Top with chives and pumpernickel croutons. 

Makes 6 servings.  Enjoy!

FOR CIDER CREAM:  In a small, heavy saucepan, boil 1/2 cup cider until reduced to 1/4 cup, about 5 minutes.
Cool.  Place sour cream in small bowl.  Whisk in reduced cider. 
Cover and refrigerate until ready for use. 


FOR PUMPERNICKEL CROUTONS:  Preheat oven to 375°.  Preheat baking sheets in oven.  Toss bread in large bowl with olive oil, maple syrup, salt, and pepper.  Spread croutons in a single layer on baking sheet.  Sprinkle with chives.

Stir croutons lightly once every 2 minutes or so, until croutons are crispy on the outside, but still slightly chewy on the inside; about 5-8 minutes.  Enjoy!

Sour Cream Apple Bars

For any of you who have been following along on my cooking adventures for long know that I'm usually a nut when it comes to taking pictures.  I usually take pictures of the ingredients and most of the steps along the way.  That's why I'm in such shock right now.  I've made these delicious sour cream apple bars, from Homebased Mom, no fewer than 6 times in the last 6 weeks and I only have a few shots of the finished product.  No ingredient shots.  No shots along the way.  I guess I was just so distracted by how good they were, that I couldn't seem to remember to grab my camera.  So, hopefully this one picture and the sheer number of times I've made these will convince you to try out this easy and delicious autumn apple treat.

Click here for printable recipe.  


Crust:
1 cup butter, softened
1 cup brown sugar
2 cups quick cooking oats (I used regular oats)

1 cup all-purpose flour
1 cup chopped pecans
1 tsp. baking soda
1 tsp. ground cinnamon
1/4 tsp. allspice

Filling:

1 cup sour cream
3/4 cup sugar
2 Tbs. all-purpose flour
1 egg
2 tart medium apples, peeled and shredded (I used Granny Smith)

Directions: 
Preheat oven to 350 degrees. 
FOR CRUST:
  In a large bowl, combine softened butter with brown sugar and beat until creamy.  Add oats, flour, pecans, baking soda, cinnamon, and allspice and beat until well mixed.
Press 2/3 of crust mixture onto bottom of ungreased 9x13-inch baking dish.  Bake for 8-10 minutes or until light golden brown. 

FOR FILLING:
  Combine all the filling ingredients and mix well.  Gently pour the filling over the hot, partially baked crust.  Crumble the remaining crust mixture over the top of the filling and press down lightly.  Bake for an additional 25-30 minutes or until top is golden brown and the center is set.  Allow to cool in the refrigerator before cutting into bars.  Store in the refrigerator.  Enjoy!

Menu Plan 4/12-4/18


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MENU FOR 4/12-4/18
 Don't mind the messed up title on the McKlinky.  I pressed enter a little too soon.  :)
 
Monday--Easiest Chicken Enchiladas Ever
Dessert:   Snickerdoodles


Tuesday--Pasta Tomato-Basil  Dish (new)
Wednesday--

Dinner:  Hearty Taco Casserole


Chipotle Sweet Potatoes (new)

Thursday--Philly Cheesesteak Sandwiches  (triple batch for son's teenage friends coming for dinner)  :)
Friday--eat out
Saturday--Breakfast:  Lemon Ricotta Pancakes
  
Dinner:  Thai Chicken Peanut Noodles

Sunday--Breakfast: Apple Fritters



Check out Organizing Junkie for lots more yummy menu ideas!

Apple Nut Coffee Cake

This week at I ♥ Faces is dessert week, which was easy for me, since I do these kinds of tutorials all the time here on the Recipe Shoebox.    This moist crumbed coffee cake was a show-stopper with its fancy presentation and out-of-this-world taste.   Served up with some fresh fruit, you will have a dessert or brunch no one will soon forget!  Be sure to go check out  I ♥ Faces  for lots more dessert tutorials and photos!


Click here for printable recipe.

The ingredients:


CAKE:
1 cup butter, softened
1-1/2 cups sugar
1 container (16-oz.) sour cream (2 cups)
2 tsp. vanilla extract
large eggs
1 Tbs. baking powder
2 tsp. baking soda
2-1/2 cups flour (I used white whole wheat flour)
4-5 medium apples (Gala, Granny Smith, or Golden Delicious)

STREUSEL:
1 cup walnuts or pecans, chopped
1/4 cup brown sugar
1 tsp. ground cinnamon
2/3 cup flour 
4 Tbs. butter


DIRECTIONS:  Prepare streusel topping by combining in a medium size bowl the chopped walnuts or pecans, brown sugar, cinnamon, 2/3 cup flour, and 4 tablespoons butter until mixture forms large pieces.  Next peel, core, halve, and thinly slice apples, then toss apples with 2 tablespoons white sugar.  Preheat oven to 350 degrees.  Grease 14x10-inch roasting pan.  

In a large bowl, with mixer at medium speed, beat 1 cup butter with 1-1/2 cups sugar until light and fluffy.  Add sour cream, baking powder, baking soda, vanilla, eggs, and  2-1/2 cups flour.  Beat mixture at low speed until blended, occasionally scraping bowl.  Increase speed to medium; beat 1 minute.  Spread batter in pan to corners.  Arrange apple slices on top to edge of pan (it took me 4-1/2 apples to cover).    


Crumble streusel topping over apple layer.  

Bake 45-50 minutes, until cake pulls away from sides of pan.  Cool in pan on wire rack 10 minutes.  Serve warm or cool.  


Serves 12.   Enjoy! 

One Year Blogoversary/ 200 Posts / Giveaway/ Apple Pie Recipe and Tutorial!

**NOTE:  This contest is now closed**

I was surprised when I came to write my "Blogoversary" post tonight to discover that not only is it the birthday of my blog today, but it's also my 200th post. Wow! How is that for serendipity?


I started this blog exactly one year ago today in hopes that it would become a way for my sisters, my mom, and I to share and organize our favorite recipes. It got off to a slow start with mostly me posting all my old stand-by recipes while my audience consisted of mainly of people related to me. Since then it has become a hobby I love and a motivation for me to keep trying new recipes. Me and my family have really benefited with the discovery of new favorite recipes and many new friends in the process. Thank you to all of you for your support!

Over the development of this blog, I have often felt badly that I posted all my old favorites first thing when not many people were looking at the blog and now most people are finding my new recipe experiments and not so much my tried and true favorites! In honor of my blogoversary and 200th post I am reposting one of my very favorite recipes--my famous apple pie recipe. Of course I'm not really famous outside my circle of friends for it, but I have won bake-offs with it and been promised a place in heaven by my bishop after he tasted it, if that tells you anything.

Perfectly flaky crust and tender, flavor filled apple pie...if only reaching eternal salvation were this easy. :)
Read to the end for my special 200th post/blogoversary giveaway!!!!
Just a quick note: While my pies have gotten prettier with time, I still have a lot to learn in the artistic department. The recipe makes an out-of-this-world perfectly flaky crust and a mouth watering, flavor filled, tender apple pie filling. The beauty part takes practice and more of an artistic eye than I have.
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Click here for printable recipe
Pie Crust--this crust was a Maryland State Fair winner from 1979 (obviously not my entry since I was in first grade that year). After experimenting with a million different ones over the years, this is by far my favorite (and everyone else's too)!
The ingredients:
1 cup Crisco (I like butter flavored Crisco)
2 ½ cups flour
1 tsp salt
1 egg + enough ice water to make ½ cup liquid
Directions:
Cut shortening into flour and salt until mostly the size of peas (DO NOT OVERWORK THE DOUGH! Big clumps are not only okay, but desirable. You do not want to dough to start sticking together at all).
For the egg/water mixture I put an egg in a half cup measuring cup and add ice water to the top.
Make a slight well in the flour/salt/shortening mixture, add the egg/ice water mixture and stir with fork until just barely clinging together. Knead with hands for 15-20 seconds just bringing in some of the loose crumbs. (Only do this until the dough is just holding together, you do not want want to overwork the dough). I think the crust handles best when used right away, but you could cover and refrigerate the dough at this point. Yields two to three 9” crusts. (I always get two, but my friend Karen always gets three. I guess it depends on how thickly you roll out the dough.)

Divide the dough into two equal sections. Then on a generously floured pie mat (mine's from Pampered Chef, although if you look at the link they're even cooler now than the one I have. I love that you can just pop it straight in the dishwasher to get it clean.) or a piece of wax paper. Use your hands to pat the dough down until relatively flat. You'll want to flip it over a few times in the process of flattening, reflouring the surface slightly each time.

Don't be scared to flour the surface VERY generously.

Making sure you start with both sides of the dough and the mat well floured, use the rolling pin to form the crust into a somewhat circular shape. Make sure that you rotate the whole mat a few times while rolling out the dough to ensure that the thickness is even throughout. (Do NOT be alarmed about streaks of shortening you see in the process of rolling out. This is normal and desirable. A pie class I went to said that those streaks are what make it flaky.)
(Never mind the skiwampus shape of this one, I pulled the edges of the V on the right together to repair it. Even after years and years of making pie crusts---crusts still rip, stick, or end up slightly off shaped occasionally. Practice makes it easier to prevent and to fix.)

After rolling it out to your desired thickness, carefully brush off excess flour and lift the entire mat into a centered position over your pie pan and release gently into the pan.


Be careful when removing the pie mat/wax paper, so that you can try to minimize any rips or sticky spots in the crust. (Making a mess is inevitable during this process, so don't stress!)Don't flute or trim edges yet, unless you are making a single crust pie. You want to leave it all hanging out until you add the filling and top crust (I forgot to take pictures of doing the bottom crust, but needless to say it's all the same, other than there isn't anything in the pan yet.)

Whew! The hardest part is done! Now it's onto the filling part...

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No Fail Apple Pie--seriously this is SO easy!
1 ½ cups sugar, divided
¼ cup flour
1 ½ tsp. cinnamon
salt
½ tsp. nutmeg
½ tsp. ginger
6-7 large Granny Smith apples, peeled and chopped (no substitutions--you want tart, firm apples and Granny Smith are the best) **SEE NOTE BELOW ABOUT CHOPPING.
1 Tbs. butter
Start with the pie crust rolled out into a 9” pie pan. Combine ½ cup sugar, ¼ cup flour, and a pinch of salt in a small bowl and sprinkle over the uncooked bottom crust (this step seems weird to a lot of people, but I promise it turns out fine. I forgot to take a picture, but basically you'll just pour the flour, sugar, and salt mixture into the empty pie crust and stir it lightly with your fingers to evenly distribute it).
**If you don't have an apple/peeler/corer yet like this one from Pampered Chef, I highly recommend purchasing one. Not only will your kids love the thin spiral slices it makes, but it makes the apples evenly sliced in your pie. I get comments all the time on how uniform the apples are and how that makes each one perfectly cooked. If you don't have one, then just try to chop them as evenly as possible. **
Then fill crust with half of the apples. Sprinkle on another ½ cup sugar, then add the rest of the apples so they mound an inch and half or so over the edge.
Combine the remaining sugar (½ cup), pinch of salt, cinnamon, nutmeg, and ginger in small bowl. Pour evenly over the top of the apples. Cut butter up into small clumps and place evenly over the top of the apples and spices.
Roll out top crust and place over pie (using crust directions from above). Brush extra flour away lightly and cut an inch from the edge, pinch top and bottom layers together, then tuck and form as desired,(I use the extra dough to cut out seasonal shapes with cookie cutters to adorn the crust).

Brush lightly with milk.
Sprinkle evenly with approximately 1 tablespoon of granulated sugar.
Make sure to poke a few holes in the top to allow steam to escape. These can be artistically place to enhance the beauty of the pie.

Bake at 425° for 10 minutes, then reduce heat to 375° and bake for an additional 45 minutes. Watch the pie carefully the last 20 minutes or so, being ready to place some foil over edges or top if they are browning too quickly. The filling will bubble out slightly when the pie is done...be patient!

It's best if you let it cool completely, then reheat before serving. Serve warm with cool whip or vanilla ice cream. Good luck and feel free to email me with any specific questions.

Enjoy!

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Whew! You made it through my novel---Now for the giveaway!

One winner will get to choose one of the following pie making implements from the Pampered Chef:

PRIZE #1:
Apple/Peeler/Corer--peels, cores, and slices your apples into kid appealing, perfectly even, spiral slices. My kids have actually taken over peeling and chopping the apples, because they think it's so fun to do. And even if you don't have any little helpers in your house, you will find that this will save you oodles and oodles of time in preparing the apples for apple pie.
PRIZE #2:
Pastry Mat: This nifty little silicone mat is SO nice for rolling out dough of any kind. We use ours (which is an older version of the same thing) for pie crust, sugar cookies, bread dough, and biscuits. I love that it's flexible, no slip, will roll right around my rolling pin for storage, AND will pop right into the dishwasher for cleaning. With all the measurements right on there, you'll never have to estimate size again. Ours is several years old, very well used, and still looks brand new. You will love this!



PRIZE #3:
Deep Dish Stoneware Pie Plate: I ♥ Pampered Chef stoneware!!! This is the best material for baked goods bar none. I went to a pie making class with a professional chef and she said ceramic stoneware is far and above the best material, metal next (even disposable pans), and the worst is glass because it'll make your baked goods soggy. I've given away most of my glass pie pans now. I have lots of other stoneware pans as well, which I love, but this pie plate is one of my favorites. I use it for my pies (of course), but I also love it for when I just have a few items that still need to be baked (the last few cookies of a batch or something) and I don't want put the whole big pan in the oven.


Now all you need to do is leave me a comment telling me which one you want and for extra entries:

~ Subscribe to my blog or follow me via Google Friends Connect (on the right) and leave me a separate comment. Current subscribers/followers can add an extra entry, too.

~Blog about it or email friends. Anything to share this contest. :) Leave me another separate comment telling me how you shared it.

~That would be up to THREE separate entries per person, just make sure you leave the separate comments.

This contest will end on Friday, October 23 at 11:00 pm EST. Open to residents of US and Canada only. Winner will be announced in a blogpost next Saturday 10/24. Good luck!

**NOTE:  This contest is now closed!**

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