This is the recipe for the soup Daurie Larimer made at Fabulous Friday!
Cream of Mushroom Soup
Ingredients
1-1/2 ounces dried porcini mushrooms, or other dried mushrooms
7 cups chicken broth, homemade or low-sodium canned
6 tablespoons unsalted butter
5 cloves garlic, minced
10 ounces button mushrooms, chopped
2 leeks (white part only), thinly sliced
2 medium shallots, thinly sliced
7 tablespoons all-purpose flour
3 parsley sprigs
3 sprigs fresh thyme
1 bay leaf
1/2 cup heavy cream
1 teaspoon kosher salt
Freshly ground black pepper
Directions
Place the dried mushrooms in a large bowl. Bring the broth to a boil and pour over the dried mushrooms. Set aside to rehydrate for about 20 minutes.
Using a slotted spoon, remove the mushrooms and reserve the broth. Roughly chop the mushrooms.
Heat the butter in a large pot over medium-high heat. Add the button and rehydrated mushrooms and cook, stirring occasionally, until soft and somewhat dry, about 6 minutes. Add the leek and shallot and cook, covered, stirring occasionally, until translucent, about 4 minutes. Stir in the flour and cook, stirring, for 2 minutes more.
Pour in the reserved mushroom broth, taking care not to add any grit or dirt that may have fallen to the bottom of the boil, and bring to a boil while whisking constantly. Tie the parsley sprigs, fresh thyme, and bay leaf together with a piece of kitchen twine and add to the soup. Lower the heat and simmer for 10 minutes.
Remove from the heat and allow to cool.
Remove and discard the herb bundle. Working in batches, transfer the mixture to a blender and puree until smooth. Using a sieve over a large bowl, strain the mushroom puree. Return the puree to the pot and reheat over medium heat.
Whisk the heavy cream, and salt into the soup and season with pepper to taste. Divide among warm soup bowls and serve immediately.
Family note: our fam loves this to have a bit “richer base” by adding 1 lg can of (your fav brand) Cream of Mush soup to this mix & 1 to 2 C cheese (of your choice--except Mozzarella) . To make into Chicken/rice Cream of M soup: add 1 ½- 2 C cooked /diced Chicken & 1 C cooked wild rice mix (your choice)
Sunday, October 31, 2010
Thursday, October 28, 2010
Organization Talk (from Ashton Thelin)
For those of you who missed Ashton's great talk about organization at our RS activity, here are her notes:
Organization
D&C 88:119
Organize yourselves; prepare every needful thing; and establish a house, even a house of prayer, a house of fasting, a house of faith, a house of learning, a house of glory, a house of order, a house of God
Disclaimer… You must commit to a lifestyle change
One of the best things (and the hardest thing) I can tell you is to change your habits! Once you get organized, just don’t fall back into the pattern of clutter. It builds up and organization becomes too arduous of a task, and then you’re back where you started, and you lose all your motivation to be organized. Just put things away right the first time, and you will save yourself so much stress.
Where to start?
* One of the hardest parts of organizing for some people is just figuring out where and how to start.
* Rule #1… You can’t organize clutter!
* Get rid of all your junk. If something is making your life hectic or chaotic, it is not adding value to your life and it is not worth having. Donate or trash it.
* When having trouble deciding where to start, just go slowly. It doesn’t need to be done all in one day, one week or even one month. Remember; it probably took a long time to become so cluttered, so it will take a while to get organized.
* Start small: one cupboard or closet at a time, and one room at a time!
* Clean and organize from one end of your house to the other.
The Pleasure of Purging
1 month challenge
* Start with 3 baskets. Label one ‘sell’, one ‘give’ and one ‘trash’
* Every day for a month, find at least one thing (or 10 things, depending on how much clutter you have) to put in each basket. If a basket becomes full before the end of the month, take care of it immediately, then start again.
* Your ‘sell’ basket would be large items that you don’t necessarily want to donate or trash (for example a brand new pair of skis that you know you’ll never use). You could sell your items on eBay or Craigslist or at a garage sale. It can also contain items you wish to consign. This is an optional basket, as we might not all have items of this nature.
* The ‘give’ box will have things you want to donate to DI (books that you bought that you don’t care to reread) or things you want to pass down (like kids clothes to your siblings)
* The ‘trash’ box is the hardest, but also the most important. Some stuff just needs to be gotten rid of!
Closets
* When purging your closets, try this trick: place all your hangers facing away from the wall (the “wrong” way). After you wear an item, when you hang it up, place its hanger facing the right way. At the end of 6 months, anything you have not worn can be donated. Chances are, if you don’t wear something at least once
every 6 months, it’s probably just wasting space. (Special occasion clothes- snow suits, tuxedos, etc- are an exception)
* When you buy something new, get rid of something old.
* One of the easiest ways to make your closet look better is to standardize your hangers. Make them all one type and color. Throw away wire dry cleaning hangers and cheap plastic ones from clothing stores. You can even assign a specific color of laundry basket and hangers to each person in the family to help make laundry easier to put away.
* In shared closets, keep separate spaces.
* Organize clothes into ‘like’ groups: tops and bottoms, sleeve/hem lengths, color, etc.
Kids stuff
*
Kids stuff
* Instead of saving every single one of your kids’ art projects, take a digital picture of each, then make a photo book out of them! It makes a great keepsake for the kids, and it’s so much easier than keeping 4,000 paintings. (Photo books are readily available through Costco, Target, Walgreens, etc.)
* Rotate kids’ toys. Take ½ of their toys that they don’t play with every day (not including their favorites) and put them in the garage, out of sight. Every month or so, rotate the toys.
Kitchen
* Pantry: Use the system that grocery stores use: when you buy new items, put them behind similar older items, that way you use the older stuff first.
* Over the door organizers are great for cake/cookie decorating items, spices, and bottles of vinegar/oil/etc.
* Group items into categories with similar items- canned goods, breakfast items, kids’ lunch items, snacks, etc.
* Get rid of all your souvenir dishware. You don’t really want 7 plastic Olive Garden cups, anyway! Get rid of your broken dishes or utensils that are missing parts or pieces. They are not worth holding on to. How many extra tupperware lids do you have?
* No chef needs 25 spatulas or wooden spoons. If you find that your drawers are overflowing with excess kitchen utensils, put everything in a box. Once you use something, put it away in its drawer. At the end of 6 months, everything left in the box can be donated.
* When you get home from the store, immediately wash and prepare your food. Separate big bags of snacks into baggies and put them in a basket or box in the pantry to grab on the go.
Bathrooms
* Reserve ‘prime real estate’ (your drawers, under the sink cabinet, and medicine cabinet) for things you use every day. Everything else can go in the closet.
* Medicine: separate into different baskets- first aid, prescription medication, over the counter medicine. KEEP IT ALL IN 1 SPOT
* Makeup: can be stored in makeup bags and brought out every time you need it, or you can store it in flat drawer organizers and stack them. It’s easier to see what you have when things are laid out flat.
Cars
Cars
* Put a bin/basket in your car, and each time you get out of the car, empty out the things that don’t need to be in there. Put it all in the basket to easily be able to take it all inside.
* When you are inside, fill the basket with things that you need to bring to the car (ex: mail, things you need to return, things you need to drop off for your kids, etc.)
* Keep a box or bag in the trunk of your car for your DI donations. If your trunk isn’t big enough, keep it in your garage. When you come across something you need to donate, put it in the box right away- don’t let it just sit around your house.
Craft area/home office/desk/gift wrapping area
* Desk organizers, paper organizers, accordion folders are great for your bills, mail and paperwork
* Wrapping paper can be stored in tall laundry baskets
* Spools of ribbon can be put on dowels
* Gift bags can be stored inside a large gift bag
* Sort supplies into ‘like’ groups and put them in storage boxes or even gift boxes
* Get a detailed calendar and ONE to-do list and use them!! Put birthdays and special occasions on the calendar at the beginning of the year and you’ll always remember when you need to send out a card or gift.
Helpful Hints
* To organize any closet or cupboard, bins/baskets/plastic tubs/boxes/etc are all GREAT organization tools! You can use things you may already have (shoeboxes or Tupperware) or buy new stuff- it doesn’t matter. Just get a variety of sizes for each space and start sorting.
* Drawer organizers are great- you can even stack them and use them on shelves
* Unless you are between homes, it is a waste to have a storage unit! (140x12x6= $10,080)
* Keep all important information in one place. Use a document on the computer or a 3 ring binder to keep all the information you regularly use and need in one place. (emergency info, insurance info, finances, gift ideas, a master birthday/special occasion list, etc)
* Keep all important documents together in an accordion folder- each person has their own section- car titles, birth certificates, social security cards, passports, government ID’s, etc.
* Copy every card you have in your wallet, front and back side, and store it safely in your house. Then if you lose your wallet, you will know exactly what was in there!
Wasted Space
* Ceiling of garage- install overhead shelving (available at Home Depot)
* Under beds- flat plastic tubs meant to slide easily under beds.
Cleaning Calendar
ONCE A WEEK CHORES
Monday
* Do laundry, including sheets & bedding
Tuesday
* Sweep/mop all hard flooring surfaces (excluding bathrooms & kitchen) and vacuum all carpeting & rugs
Wednesday
* Clean bathrooms
Thursday
* Wipe down all window sills, stair railings and spot clean walls, empty all trash cans
Friday
* Using a microfiber cloth, duster or dryer sheet (reader tip!) dust all table tops, shelving, bed frames, etc.
Saturday
* Clean Kitchen- a) Sanitize counter tops b) Sweep/mop kitchen floor & shake out and/or vacuum area rugs/mats c) Clean the inside of the microwave d) Wipe down and polish (if you have stainless) appliances e) Toss expired/spoiled refrigerator items f) Clean stove top and range hood
Sunday
* Rest (obviously)
DAILY DUTIES
* make beds
* wipe down kitchen counters
* sweep kitchen floor
ONCE A MONTH CHORES
* Throughout House - Wash windows and glass doors * Dust blinds * Clean and/or replace air filter of heating/cooling unit * Dust light fixtures & wall vents * Wipe down walls & baseboards * remove cushions from sofa and chairs and vacuum crumbs & debris Kitchen – Clean cabinet surfaces * Thoroughly clean interior and top of refrigerator * Clean oven interior or run self-clean cycle if available
ANNUAL/QUARTERLY DUTIES
* Bedrooms – Flip Mattresses according to tag instructions * Rid closets and drawers of items that have been outgrown or not worn in 6 months. Donate.
* Living Room, Hallway, Staircase - Shampoo carpets and rugs * Clean dryer vent * Clean out and re-organize hall closets, kitchen pantry, built-ins, etc
10 ways to make your home life more simple/enjoyable
* Resign from a commitment you’re not passionate about.
* Clean out your purse or wallet. (Do it while you’re waiting at the doctor’s office)
* Design a filing system that you can stick to.
*
* Record your good “bed” ideas and then implement them. (Don’t we all get our best inspirations when we’re trying to fall asleep?)
* Write to a friend on actual paper.
* Set limits on your bad habits, and reward yourself when you stick with them.
* Avoid watching commercials and reading advertisements.
* Rediscover the pleasure of reading purely for enjoyment.
* Plan two weeks of delicious meals ahead of time and skip the nightly grocery run.
* Learn to ask for help.
Weekly Meal Plans
* This plan takes a little bit of preparation, but saves lots of time!
* Find a week’s worth meals your family loves- a main dish and side dishes and even desserts if you usually serve dessert.
* Make a master list of all the ingredients you would need to make each meal for the week
* Keep the shopping list and a copy of each of the recipes together in a folder.
* Do this one week at a time- eventually you will have enough for a month or two.
“30 Meals” Plan
* Step 1: Find 30 meals your family loves. You might already have 30 “standard recipes” or you might need to experiment with all the recipes you’ve ‘been meaning to try’.
* Step 2: Copy the recipes onto individual cards. They can be cute and crafty or just index cards.
* Punch a hole in each of the cards and tie them together
* Make a master list of the non-perishable ingredients you need for those recipes, and keep your pantry stocked. At the beginning of the week, choose your meals for the week, buy the fresh ingredients you’ll need, and then you’ll be ready to go.
* No more wondering “what on earth am I going to make for dinner tonight?”
Great resources
* OrganizedLiving.com
* The Container Store
* Bed, Bath and Beyond
* Even Target!
Organization
D&C 88:119
Organize yourselves; prepare every needful thing; and establish a house, even a house of prayer, a house of fasting, a house of faith, a house of learning, a house of glory, a house of order, a house of God
Disclaimer… You must commit to a lifestyle change
One of the best things (and the hardest thing) I can tell you is to change your habits! Once you get organized, just don’t fall back into the pattern of clutter. It builds up and organization becomes too arduous of a task, and then you’re back where you started, and you lose all your motivation to be organized. Just put things away right the first time, and you will save yourself so much stress.
Where to start?
* One of the hardest parts of organizing for some people is just figuring out where and how to start.
* Rule #1… You can’t organize clutter!
* Get rid of all your junk. If something is making your life hectic or chaotic, it is not adding value to your life and it is not worth having. Donate or trash it.
* When having trouble deciding where to start, just go slowly. It doesn’t need to be done all in one day, one week or even one month. Remember; it probably took a long time to become so cluttered, so it will take a while to get organized.
* Start small: one cupboard or closet at a time, and one room at a time!
* Clean and organize from one end of your house to the other.
The Pleasure of Purging
1 month challenge
* Start with 3 baskets. Label one ‘sell’, one ‘give’ and one ‘trash’
* Every day for a month, find at least one thing (or 10 things, depending on how much clutter you have) to put in each basket. If a basket becomes full before the end of the month, take care of it immediately, then start again.
* Your ‘sell’ basket would be large items that you don’t necessarily want to donate or trash (for example a brand new pair of skis that you know you’ll never use). You could sell your items on eBay or Craigslist or at a garage sale. It can also contain items you wish to consign. This is an optional basket, as we might not all have items of this nature.
* The ‘give’ box will have things you want to donate to DI (books that you bought that you don’t care to reread) or things you want to pass down (like kids clothes to your siblings)
* The ‘trash’ box is the hardest, but also the most important. Some stuff just needs to be gotten rid of!
Closets
* When purging your closets, try this trick: place all your hangers facing away from the wall (the “wrong” way). After you wear an item, when you hang it up, place its hanger facing the right way. At the end of 6 months, anything you have not worn can be donated. Chances are, if you don’t wear something at least once
every 6 months, it’s probably just wasting space. (Special occasion clothes- snow suits, tuxedos, etc- are an exception)
* When you buy something new, get rid of something old.
* One of the easiest ways to make your closet look better is to standardize your hangers. Make them all one type and color. Throw away wire dry cleaning hangers and cheap plastic ones from clothing stores. You can even assign a specific color of laundry basket and hangers to each person in the family to help make laundry easier to put away.
* In shared closets, keep separate spaces.
* Organize clothes into ‘like’ groups: tops and bottoms, sleeve/hem lengths, color, etc.
Kids stuff
*
Kids stuff
* Instead of saving every single one of your kids’ art projects, take a digital picture of each, then make a photo book out of them! It makes a great keepsake for the kids, and it’s so much easier than keeping 4,000 paintings. (Photo books are readily available through Costco, Target, Walgreens, etc.)
* Rotate kids’ toys. Take ½ of their toys that they don’t play with every day (not including their favorites) and put them in the garage, out of sight. Every month or so, rotate the toys.
Kitchen
* Pantry: Use the system that grocery stores use: when you buy new items, put them behind similar older items, that way you use the older stuff first.
* Over the door organizers are great for cake/cookie decorating items, spices, and bottles of vinegar/oil/etc.
* Group items into categories with similar items- canned goods, breakfast items, kids’ lunch items, snacks, etc.
* Get rid of all your souvenir dishware. You don’t really want 7 plastic Olive Garden cups, anyway! Get rid of your broken dishes or utensils that are missing parts or pieces. They are not worth holding on to. How many extra tupperware lids do you have?
* No chef needs 25 spatulas or wooden spoons. If you find that your drawers are overflowing with excess kitchen utensils, put everything in a box. Once you use something, put it away in its drawer. At the end of 6 months, everything left in the box can be donated.
* When you get home from the store, immediately wash and prepare your food. Separate big bags of snacks into baggies and put them in a basket or box in the pantry to grab on the go.
Bathrooms
* Reserve ‘prime real estate’ (your drawers, under the sink cabinet, and medicine cabinet) for things you use every day. Everything else can go in the closet.
* Medicine: separate into different baskets- first aid, prescription medication, over the counter medicine. KEEP IT ALL IN 1 SPOT
* Makeup: can be stored in makeup bags and brought out every time you need it, or you can store it in flat drawer organizers and stack them. It’s easier to see what you have when things are laid out flat.
Cars
Cars
* Put a bin/basket in your car, and each time you get out of the car, empty out the things that don’t need to be in there. Put it all in the basket to easily be able to take it all inside.
* When you are inside, fill the basket with things that you need to bring to the car (ex: mail, things you need to return, things you need to drop off for your kids, etc.)
* Keep a box or bag in the trunk of your car for your DI donations. If your trunk isn’t big enough, keep it in your garage. When you come across something you need to donate, put it in the box right away- don’t let it just sit around your house.
Craft area/home office/desk/gift wrapping area
* Desk organizers, paper organizers, accordion folders are great for your bills, mail and paperwork
* Wrapping paper can be stored in tall laundry baskets
* Spools of ribbon can be put on dowels
* Gift bags can be stored inside a large gift bag
* Sort supplies into ‘like’ groups and put them in storage boxes or even gift boxes
* Get a detailed calendar and ONE to-do list and use them!! Put birthdays and special occasions on the calendar at the beginning of the year and you’ll always remember when you need to send out a card or gift.
Helpful Hints
* To organize any closet or cupboard, bins/baskets/plastic tubs/boxes/etc are all GREAT organization tools! You can use things you may already have (shoeboxes or Tupperware) or buy new stuff- it doesn’t matter. Just get a variety of sizes for each space and start sorting.
* Drawer organizers are great- you can even stack them and use them on shelves
* Unless you are between homes, it is a waste to have a storage unit! (140x12x6= $10,080)
* Keep all important information in one place. Use a document on the computer or a 3 ring binder to keep all the information you regularly use and need in one place. (emergency info, insurance info, finances, gift ideas, a master birthday/special occasion list, etc)
* Keep all important documents together in an accordion folder- each person has their own section- car titles, birth certificates, social security cards, passports, government ID’s, etc.
* Copy every card you have in your wallet, front and back side, and store it safely in your house. Then if you lose your wallet, you will know exactly what was in there!
Wasted Space
* Ceiling of garage- install overhead shelving (available at Home Depot)
* Under beds- flat plastic tubs meant to slide easily under beds.
Cleaning Calendar
ONCE A WEEK CHORES
Monday
* Do laundry, including sheets & bedding
Tuesday
* Sweep/mop all hard flooring surfaces (excluding bathrooms & kitchen) and vacuum all carpeting & rugs
Wednesday
* Clean bathrooms
Thursday
* Wipe down all window sills, stair railings and spot clean walls, empty all trash cans
Friday
* Using a microfiber cloth, duster or dryer sheet (reader tip!) dust all table tops, shelving, bed frames, etc.
Saturday
* Clean Kitchen- a) Sanitize counter tops b) Sweep/mop kitchen floor & shake out and/or vacuum area rugs/mats c) Clean the inside of the microwave d) Wipe down and polish (if you have stainless) appliances e) Toss expired/spoiled refrigerator items f) Clean stove top and range hood
Sunday
* Rest (obviously)
DAILY DUTIES
* make beds
* wipe down kitchen counters
* sweep kitchen floor
ONCE A MONTH CHORES
* Throughout House - Wash windows and glass doors * Dust blinds * Clean and/or replace air filter of heating/cooling unit * Dust light fixtures & wall vents * Wipe down walls & baseboards * remove cushions from sofa and chairs and vacuum crumbs & debris Kitchen – Clean cabinet surfaces * Thoroughly clean interior and top of refrigerator * Clean oven interior or run self-clean cycle if available
ANNUAL/QUARTERLY DUTIES
* Bedrooms – Flip Mattresses according to tag instructions * Rid closets and drawers of items that have been outgrown or not worn in 6 months. Donate.
* Living Room, Hallway, Staircase - Shampoo carpets and rugs * Clean dryer vent * Clean out and re-organize hall closets, kitchen pantry, built-ins, etc
10 ways to make your home life more simple/enjoyable
* Resign from a commitment you’re not passionate about.
* Clean out your purse or wallet. (Do it while you’re waiting at the doctor’s office)
* Design a filing system that you can stick to.
*
* Record your good “bed” ideas and then implement them. (Don’t we all get our best inspirations when we’re trying to fall asleep?)
* Write to a friend on actual paper.
* Set limits on your bad habits, and reward yourself when you stick with them.
* Avoid watching commercials and reading advertisements.
* Rediscover the pleasure of reading purely for enjoyment.
* Plan two weeks of delicious meals ahead of time and skip the nightly grocery run.
* Learn to ask for help.
Weekly Meal Plans
* This plan takes a little bit of preparation, but saves lots of time!
* Find a week’s worth meals your family loves- a main dish and side dishes and even desserts if you usually serve dessert.
* Make a master list of all the ingredients you would need to make each meal for the week
* Keep the shopping list and a copy of each of the recipes together in a folder.
* Do this one week at a time- eventually you will have enough for a month or two.
“30 Meals” Plan
* Step 1: Find 30 meals your family loves. You might already have 30 “standard recipes” or you might need to experiment with all the recipes you’ve ‘been meaning to try’.
* Step 2: Copy the recipes onto individual cards. They can be cute and crafty or just index cards.
* Punch a hole in each of the cards and tie them together
* Make a master list of the non-perishable ingredients you need for those recipes, and keep your pantry stocked. At the beginning of the week, choose your meals for the week, buy the fresh ingredients you’ll need, and then you’ll be ready to go.
* No more wondering “what on earth am I going to make for dinner tonight?”
Great resources
* OrganizedLiving.com
* The Container Store
* Bed, Bath and Beyond
* Even Target!
Tuesday, October 26, 2010
Primary Program Treat (from Rebecca Davis)
Primary Treat (Travel Snack Mix) from Gina Calderwood/Rebecca Davis
10 cups popcorn
5 cups bugles
5 cups Fritos
8 cups Crispix
1 cup mixed nuts
1 cups pretzels
1 pound M&M's
Carmel Mixture:
2 1/4 C brown sugar
2/3 C corn syrup
1 tsp. salt
1 tsp. baking soda
Place the first 6 ingredients (popcorn thru pretzels) in large oven roaster.
Gently mix. Combine carmel mixture ingredients except the baking soda in a
heavy saucepan and bring to a slow boil. Cook for 5 minutes, stirring
occasionally. Remove from heat and stir in soda. Pour over dry mixture and
mix until well coated. Bake in a 200 degree oven for 2 hour, stirring every
15 min. Pour mixture out onto 2 jellyroll pans lined with waxed paper or
parchment paper. Sprinkle mix with M&M's. Let cool. Store in an airtight
container. Enjoy~.
10 cups popcorn
5 cups bugles
5 cups Fritos
8 cups Crispix
1 cup mixed nuts
1 cups pretzels
1 pound M&M's
Carmel Mixture:
2 1/4 C brown sugar
2/3 C corn syrup
1 tsp. salt
1 tsp. baking soda
Place the first 6 ingredients (popcorn thru pretzels) in large oven roaster.
Gently mix. Combine carmel mixture ingredients except the baking soda in a
heavy saucepan and bring to a slow boil. Cook for 5 minutes, stirring
occasionally. Remove from heat and stir in soda. Pour over dry mixture and
mix until well coated. Bake in a 200 degree oven for 2 hour, stirring every
15 min. Pour mixture out onto 2 jellyroll pans lined with waxed paper or
parchment paper. Sprinkle mix with M&M's. Let cool. Store in an airtight
container. Enjoy~.
Sunday, October 24, 2010
Recipes from Fabulous Friday Part 2
My Favorite Bread Recipe (Holly Beth Smiley, adapted from Kathy Summers)
Mix:
4 ½ cups warm water
1 ½ T. brown sugar
4 ½ T. yeast (I use SAF Instant; others may take longer to rise)
When the yeast is “foamy” stir in:
1 cup honey
1 cup light olive oil
1 ½ T. salt
3 1/3 cups raw oats (This is optional. I always add it for moistness and flavor, but—strangely—all quantities remain the same if you leave this out.)
Knead in the flour:
12 cups freshly ground white wheat flour
(If you don’t have white wheat, you can use 10 cups of hard red wheat flour with two cups of bread flour. Or you can use 13 cups of bread flour for truly marvelous white bread.)
Knead ten minutes to develop the gluten. The dough should be elastic, but it is a soft and somewhat sticky dough. Grease five bread pans with PAM spray (or cookie sheets for rolls or long, skinny loaves). Shape the loaves (or rolls) with a little flour and place in pans. Let rise until almost doubled in size—about 20-40 minutes. Bake at 350 degrees for about 24 minutes for wheat loaves, 27 minutes for white loaves, 11-14 minutes for small rolls, etc. Cook whole wheat bread until just before it looks done; cook white bread a couple of minutes beyond looking done. Cool on racks and store in bread bags. Freeze what you won’t use within 24 hours.
Basic Yogurt (Holly Beth Smiley, adapted from Harold McGee)
Heat milk (I use whole milk because I enjoy the mild flavor) to 180 degrees F. over medium heat.
Let milk cool to 120 degrees F.
Dilute yogurt starter with warm milk. Use two tablespoons of yogurt for each quart of milk (1/2 cup yogurt for a gallon of milk).
Stir yogurt thoroughly into milk and ladle into pint or quart jars (always use glass). Cover with lids and bands and place in a cool oven with the light bulb on for 4-7 hours. Do not disturb during this incubation! When yogurt is set to your satisfaction (less time will be runnier and milder, longer will be thicker and tangier), move to the refrigerator to chill. Don’t forget to save the last of your yogurt to make your next batch.
Notes:
Yogurt keeps well for two weeks or more in the fridge. The lactic acid prevents the growth of other bacteria, but you do need to watch out for mold. The cleaner your jars and materials are, the longer your yogurt will remain fresh.
Lactic acid bacteria are a group of microbes that convert sugars into lactic acid, which suppresses the growth of their competitors. The lactic acid also causes the fat and proteins in milk to cluster into a solid network, with the milk’s water trapped inside. The protein-fat network is fragile—it’s holding 25 times its weight in liquid—so the watery whey gradually leaks from it. That is why whey pools up in the yogurt container after you scoop the first spoonful, and why manufacturers add stabilizers. Your yogurt has no additives, but if you don’t stir or shake it and spoon it out gently, it will hold its shape nicely. Just pour out the whey on top of the yogurt before serving.
Many types of reduced-fat milks replace fat with milk solids, including lactose. The yogurt bacteria will convert this extra milk sugar into more lactic acid, producing a harsher and bitter-tasting yogurt. If you learn how to make yummy low-fat yogurt, please let me know...
If you want to make thick Greek-style yogurt, spoon it into a fine mesh strainer lined with cheesecloth or dishcloth, and let the whey and its lactic acid drain into a bowl for several hours.
If somebody eats your last serving of yogurt (which has happened several times at my house) or you go on vacation and come back to moldy yogurt, you can always get some from me or use a package of Yoplait. The stabilizers and sweeteners will be diluted out in your final product.
This yogurt is delicious with fresh fruit (especially berries or nectarines) and nuts (especially toasted pecans), with a drizzle of honey, with muesli or granola, or in smoothies. I also use it in baking (pancakes and waffles), making fruit dip, vegetable dip, or diluting whipping cream for desserts. I love to substitute it for some or all of the sour cream--and especially mayonnaise (which I dislike)--in recipes. Try it in tuna salad or chicken salad, or to make frozen yogurt or experiment with Middle Eastern or Indian recipes. My kids enjoy it plain in their lunches (with an ice pack). Try to fold it—rather than stir or whip it—so that it will not become too runny.
Plain yogurt has been a kitchen staple in many parts of the world for over 5,400 years. I love seeing the miracle of fermentation in my own kitchen and producing mild, healthy yogurt for just six cents per half-cup serving. Enjoy!
Mix:
4 ½ cups warm water
1 ½ T. brown sugar
4 ½ T. yeast (I use SAF Instant; others may take longer to rise)
When the yeast is “foamy” stir in:
1 cup honey
1 cup light olive oil
1 ½ T. salt
3 1/3 cups raw oats (This is optional. I always add it for moistness and flavor, but—strangely—all quantities remain the same if you leave this out.)
Knead in the flour:
12 cups freshly ground white wheat flour
(If you don’t have white wheat, you can use 10 cups of hard red wheat flour with two cups of bread flour. Or you can use 13 cups of bread flour for truly marvelous white bread.)
Knead ten minutes to develop the gluten. The dough should be elastic, but it is a soft and somewhat sticky dough. Grease five bread pans with PAM spray (or cookie sheets for rolls or long, skinny loaves). Shape the loaves (or rolls) with a little flour and place in pans. Let rise until almost doubled in size—about 20-40 minutes. Bake at 350 degrees for about 24 minutes for wheat loaves, 27 minutes for white loaves, 11-14 minutes for small rolls, etc. Cook whole wheat bread until just before it looks done; cook white bread a couple of minutes beyond looking done. Cool on racks and store in bread bags. Freeze what you won’t use within 24 hours.
Basic Yogurt (Holly Beth Smiley, adapted from Harold McGee)
Heat milk (I use whole milk because I enjoy the mild flavor) to 180 degrees F. over medium heat.
Let milk cool to 120 degrees F.
Dilute yogurt starter with warm milk. Use two tablespoons of yogurt for each quart of milk (1/2 cup yogurt for a gallon of milk).
Stir yogurt thoroughly into milk and ladle into pint or quart jars (always use glass). Cover with lids and bands and place in a cool oven with the light bulb on for 4-7 hours. Do not disturb during this incubation! When yogurt is set to your satisfaction (less time will be runnier and milder, longer will be thicker and tangier), move to the refrigerator to chill. Don’t forget to save the last of your yogurt to make your next batch.
Notes:
Yogurt keeps well for two weeks or more in the fridge. The lactic acid prevents the growth of other bacteria, but you do need to watch out for mold. The cleaner your jars and materials are, the longer your yogurt will remain fresh.
Lactic acid bacteria are a group of microbes that convert sugars into lactic acid, which suppresses the growth of their competitors. The lactic acid also causes the fat and proteins in milk to cluster into a solid network, with the milk’s water trapped inside. The protein-fat network is fragile—it’s holding 25 times its weight in liquid—so the watery whey gradually leaks from it. That is why whey pools up in the yogurt container after you scoop the first spoonful, and why manufacturers add stabilizers. Your yogurt has no additives, but if you don’t stir or shake it and spoon it out gently, it will hold its shape nicely. Just pour out the whey on top of the yogurt before serving.
Many types of reduced-fat milks replace fat with milk solids, including lactose. The yogurt bacteria will convert this extra milk sugar into more lactic acid, producing a harsher and bitter-tasting yogurt. If you learn how to make yummy low-fat yogurt, please let me know...
If you want to make thick Greek-style yogurt, spoon it into a fine mesh strainer lined with cheesecloth or dishcloth, and let the whey and its lactic acid drain into a bowl for several hours.
If somebody eats your last serving of yogurt (which has happened several times at my house) or you go on vacation and come back to moldy yogurt, you can always get some from me or use a package of Yoplait. The stabilizers and sweeteners will be diluted out in your final product.
This yogurt is delicious with fresh fruit (especially berries or nectarines) and nuts (especially toasted pecans), with a drizzle of honey, with muesli or granola, or in smoothies. I also use it in baking (pancakes and waffles), making fruit dip, vegetable dip, or diluting whipping cream for desserts. I love to substitute it for some or all of the sour cream--and especially mayonnaise (which I dislike)--in recipes. Try it in tuna salad or chicken salad, or to make frozen yogurt or experiment with Middle Eastern or Indian recipes. My kids enjoy it plain in their lunches (with an ice pack). Try to fold it—rather than stir or whip it—so that it will not become too runny.
Plain yogurt has been a kitchen staple in many parts of the world for over 5,400 years. I love seeing the miracle of fermentation in my own kitchen and producing mild, healthy yogurt for just six cents per half-cup serving. Enjoy!
Book Group Schedules (from Ellen Dorrough)
Hi Gals,
Well Friday was very fun and I am very excited for this year's line-up. Drumroll Please...
Falconridge LPPS
2010-2011 Schedule
Date Book Author Host
Oct 20th Anahitas Woven Riddle Meghan Nuttal Sayres Alyssa Eucker
Nov 17th The Color of Water James McBride Emily Schild @ Kay Bleak's house
Dec 15th Movie/Book - The Scarlet Pimpermel Baroness Orczy Daurie Larimer
Jan 19th The Book Thief Markus Zusak Janea Nuff
Feb 16th The Thirteenth Tale Diane Setterfield Ellen Dorrough
Mar 16th The Lemon Tree Sandy Tolan Daurie Larimer
Apr 20th My Name is Mary Sutter Robin Oliveira Kay Bleak
May 18th Glass Castle Jeannette Walls Kristy Welsh
Jun 15th Angle of Repose Wallace Stegner TBD
A few things to note:
• I am making a exectutive decision and based on some really great feedback I am naming our group the Falconridge Literary and Pumpkin Pie Society. The name can be vetoed at any time! : )
• We are meeting at 7:30 pm on the third Wed of every month. Dates are listed above.
• We will have the meeting at the Host's house (unless otherwise specified).
• Everyone is welcome.
• December is a Movie month. We will watch the Scarlet Pimpernel, feel free to read the book in advance but most of the evening will be focused on watching the adaptation.
• I will send out a reminder a couple times during the month to remind people. Please send me an email if you would like to be on the distribution list.
• For Your reference, I have also attached the Beechtree reading list below. You will see that all but one book is different (The Book Thief was very popular). There is a lot of great variety in books to read and both clubs are open to participation. Enjoy!
Beechtree
Oct Mockingjay Suzanne Collins
Nov Lemon Tart: A Culinary Mystery Josi Kilpack
Dec The Book Thief Marcus Zusak
Jan Poetry Exchange
Feb My Name is Asher Lev Chaim Potok
Mar The Warrior Heir Cinda Williams Chima
Apr No Graves Yet Anne Perry
May The Count of Monte Cristo Alexandre Dumas
Jun The Winter Dance Gary Paulsen
Let me know if you have any questions! I look forward to a fun year of reading, talking, and of course eating! : )
Ellen
Well Friday was very fun and I am very excited for this year's line-up. Drumroll Please...
Falconridge LPPS
2010-2011 Schedule
Date Book Author Host
Oct 20th Anahitas Woven Riddle Meghan Nuttal Sayres Alyssa Eucker
Nov 17th The Color of Water James McBride Emily Schild @ Kay Bleak's house
Dec 15th Movie/Book - The Scarlet Pimpermel Baroness Orczy Daurie Larimer
Jan 19th The Book Thief Markus Zusak Janea Nuff
Feb 16th The Thirteenth Tale Diane Setterfield Ellen Dorrough
Mar 16th The Lemon Tree Sandy Tolan Daurie Larimer
Apr 20th My Name is Mary Sutter Robin Oliveira Kay Bleak
May 18th Glass Castle Jeannette Walls Kristy Welsh
Jun 15th Angle of Repose Wallace Stegner TBD
A few things to note:
• I am making a exectutive decision and based on some really great feedback I am naming our group the Falconridge Literary and Pumpkin Pie Society. The name can be vetoed at any time! : )
• We are meeting at 7:30 pm on the third Wed of every month. Dates are listed above.
• We will have the meeting at the Host's house (unless otherwise specified).
• Everyone is welcome.
• December is a Movie month. We will watch the Scarlet Pimpernel, feel free to read the book in advance but most of the evening will be focused on watching the adaptation.
• I will send out a reminder a couple times during the month to remind people. Please send me an email if you would like to be on the distribution list.
• For Your reference, I have also attached the Beechtree reading list below. You will see that all but one book is different (The Book Thief was very popular). There is a lot of great variety in books to read and both clubs are open to participation. Enjoy!
Beechtree
Oct Mockingjay Suzanne Collins
Nov Lemon Tart: A Culinary Mystery Josi Kilpack
Dec The Book Thief Marcus Zusak
Jan Poetry Exchange
Feb My Name is Asher Lev Chaim Potok
Mar The Warrior Heir Cinda Williams Chima
Apr No Graves Yet Anne Perry
May The Count of Monte Cristo Alexandre Dumas
Jun The Winter Dance Gary Paulsen
Let me know if you have any questions! I look forward to a fun year of reading, talking, and of course eating! : )
Ellen
Recipes from Fabulous Friday Part 1 (from Rebecca Davis)
Chocolate-Almond Popcorn (from Amber Connell)
(From www.marthastewart.com)
Makes about 30 cups
25 cups popped popcorn (from about 1 cup kernels)
3 cups unsalted whole skin-on almonds, toasted (about 1 pound)
1 cup sugar
1 cup light corn syrup
8 tablespoons (1 stick) unsalted butter
1/4 cup unsweetened cocoa powder
2 teaspoons coarse salt
Preheat oven to 200 degrees. Put popcorn in a large bowl. Add the nuts; set
aside. Put sugar, corn syrup, butter, cocoa, and salt in a medium saucepan.
Cook over medium heat, stirring, until mixture comes to a gentle simmer,
about 5 minutes.
Pour sugar mixture over popcorn and nuts; toss to coat. Transfer to rimmed
baking sheets; bake, stirring every 20 minutes, until almost dry, about 1
hour. Let cool on sheets on wire racks.
BUTTERNUT SQUASH SOUP
Kent Anderson, chef at Chef's Table Restaurant, Provo, Utah
3 T Vegetable Oil
2 T Vegetable Oil
2 Medium onions, small dice
3 medium-sized Butternut Squash, cut in half and seeded
3 C. Chicken Stock
1.5 C Heavy Whipping Cream
1 T Salt
1 T Pepper
2 T nutmeg
2 T fresh ground mace
Heat oven to 350 degrees. Lightly oil butternut squash with 2 T. oil and
place on baking sheet.
Roast the squash uncovered until tender, approximately 30 minutes. Remove
from heat and allow to cool slightly. Using a spoon, remove the flesh from
the squash and set aside in utility bowl.
Heat oil in a large soup pot
Add onions and cook over moderately low heat until completely translucent
Add cooked squash to onions
Add chicken Stock
Bring to a simmer and allow to cook for 15 minutes to allow for interchange
of flavors.
Add whipping cream and blend to desired consistency in a blender. The
smoother the better!
Adjust seasoning with salt and pepper, nutmeg and mace.
BRATTEN'S CLAM CHOWDER
2 Cans (6 1/2 oz.) minced clams
1/2 C. chopped onions
1 C. chopped celery
2 C. diced, peeled potatoes
3/4 C. butter
3/4 C. flour
1 quart Half and Half
1 1/2 tsp. sugar
1/2 tsp. salt
dash of pepper
Drain liquid from clams and pour over vegetables in a saucepan. Add enough
water to barely cover and simmer over medium heat until potatoes are tender
(approximately 20 minutes). Meanwhile, melt butter and add flour. Cook 2
minutes. Add half and half using whisk. Cook as a white sauce until thick
and smooth. Use a wire whisk to stir. Add unstrained veggies and clams
until heated through. Season and serve.
CINNAMON POPCORN
8 qts. air popped corn
1 cup butter
½ cup light corn syrup
1 10 oz. package of redhots
Combine butter, corn syrup and candies. Bring to a boil over medium heat.
Boil for 2 minutes, stirring constantly. Pour over popcorn and mix evenly.
Put in a flat pan and bake at 250 for 30 minutes, stirring halfway through.
Pour out and cool on waxed paper. (Makes 2 pans)
Chocolate Covered Popcorn from Ashley Thelin
(salty sweet and we can't get enough!)
2 Bags microwave popcorn
1 cup M&M's
¾ cup Peanuts (optional)
1 ½ cups stick pretzels
1 cup mini marshmallows
1 bag white chocolate chips
Milk or dark chocolate to drizzle
(Can use chocolate specifically made to melt
like a dipping chocolate rather than normal
Chocolate chips and it will set up faster. Regular
chocolate chips taste just as good but longer
to harden)
Pop popcorn and remove unpopped kernels. Put popcorn, M&M's, peanuts,
pretzels and marshmallows in a BIG bowl (or split in two bowls.) Melt white
chocolate chips on half power in microwave, stirring every 30 seconds or so.
Pour over popcorn mixture and mix until evenly coated (using hands may work
well). Spread on two cookie sheets. Melt dipping chocolate (I use one
whole bag of regular chocolate chips) and drizzle all over popcorn. Let
sit until chocolate sets. May place in the fridge to speed it up.
(From www.marthastewart.com)
Makes about 30 cups
25 cups popped popcorn (from about 1 cup kernels)
3 cups unsalted whole skin-on almonds, toasted (about 1 pound)
1 cup sugar
1 cup light corn syrup
8 tablespoons (1 stick) unsalted butter
1/4 cup unsweetened cocoa powder
2 teaspoons coarse salt
Preheat oven to 200 degrees. Put popcorn in a large bowl. Add the nuts; set
aside. Put sugar, corn syrup, butter, cocoa, and salt in a medium saucepan.
Cook over medium heat, stirring, until mixture comes to a gentle simmer,
about 5 minutes.
Pour sugar mixture over popcorn and nuts; toss to coat. Transfer to rimmed
baking sheets; bake, stirring every 20 minutes, until almost dry, about 1
hour. Let cool on sheets on wire racks.
BUTTERNUT SQUASH SOUP
Kent Anderson, chef at Chef's Table Restaurant, Provo, Utah
3 T Vegetable Oil
2 T Vegetable Oil
2 Medium onions, small dice
3 medium-sized Butternut Squash, cut in half and seeded
3 C. Chicken Stock
1.5 C Heavy Whipping Cream
1 T Salt
1 T Pepper
2 T nutmeg
2 T fresh ground mace
Heat oven to 350 degrees. Lightly oil butternut squash with 2 T. oil and
place on baking sheet.
Roast the squash uncovered until tender, approximately 30 minutes. Remove
from heat and allow to cool slightly. Using a spoon, remove the flesh from
the squash and set aside in utility bowl.
Heat oil in a large soup pot
Add onions and cook over moderately low heat until completely translucent
Add cooked squash to onions
Add chicken Stock
Bring to a simmer and allow to cook for 15 minutes to allow for interchange
of flavors.
Add whipping cream and blend to desired consistency in a blender. The
smoother the better!
Adjust seasoning with salt and pepper, nutmeg and mace.
BRATTEN'S CLAM CHOWDER
2 Cans (6 1/2 oz.) minced clams
1/2 C. chopped onions
1 C. chopped celery
2 C. diced, peeled potatoes
3/4 C. butter
3/4 C. flour
1 quart Half and Half
1 1/2 tsp. sugar
1/2 tsp. salt
dash of pepper
Drain liquid from clams and pour over vegetables in a saucepan. Add enough
water to barely cover and simmer over medium heat until potatoes are tender
(approximately 20 minutes). Meanwhile, melt butter and add flour. Cook 2
minutes. Add half and half using whisk. Cook as a white sauce until thick
and smooth. Use a wire whisk to stir. Add unstrained veggies and clams
until heated through. Season and serve.
CINNAMON POPCORN
8 qts. air popped corn
1 cup butter
½ cup light corn syrup
1 10 oz. package of redhots
Combine butter, corn syrup and candies. Bring to a boil over medium heat.
Boil for 2 minutes, stirring constantly. Pour over popcorn and mix evenly.
Put in a flat pan and bake at 250 for 30 minutes, stirring halfway through.
Pour out and cool on waxed paper. (Makes 2 pans)
Chocolate Covered Popcorn from Ashley Thelin
(salty sweet and we can't get enough!)
2 Bags microwave popcorn
1 cup M&M's
¾ cup Peanuts (optional)
1 ½ cups stick pretzels
1 cup mini marshmallows
1 bag white chocolate chips
Milk or dark chocolate to drizzle
(Can use chocolate specifically made to melt
like a dipping chocolate rather than normal
Chocolate chips and it will set up faster. Regular
chocolate chips taste just as good but longer
to harden)
Pop popcorn and remove unpopped kernels. Put popcorn, M&M's, peanuts,
pretzels and marshmallows in a BIG bowl (or split in two bowls.) Melt white
chocolate chips on half power in microwave, stirring every 30 seconds or so.
Pour over popcorn mixture and mix until evenly coated (using hands may work
well). Spread on two cookie sheets. Melt dipping chocolate (I use one
whole bag of regular chocolate chips) and drizzle all over popcorn. Let
sit until chocolate sets. May place in the fridge to speed it up.
Saturday, October 16, 2010
Fabulous Friday class schedule
Greetings Sisters-
We're just a week a way from our Fabulous Friday fall event. We look forward to seeing you on Friday October 22nd at 6pm for an evening full of craft projects and informational classes. In an effort to help you prepare and arrange your evening, we would like to provide you with the schedule of classes. The evening will go as follows:
6pm- Welcome and start of all craft projects and dinner
6:15pm- "Knitting" with Karen Monson
6:45pm- "Organization" with Ashton Thelin
7:15pm- "Hair Cutting" with Shannon Neal
7:45pm- "Fun with Grandma" with Claudia Leppert
8:15pm- "Bread & Yogurt Making" with Holly Smiley
8:45pm- "Blogs/Facebook" with Cristy Welsh
9:30pm- Wrap Up and Closing Prayer
As a reminder, the crafts will be taking place throughout the evening and can be at your leisure between classes or instead of classes.
If you have any questions, please contact Rachael McCauley- mccauleyrach@gmail.com or Bethany Sebra- bethanysebra@gmail.com.
We look forward to seeing you!
Relief Society Activities Committee
We're just a week a way from our Fabulous Friday fall event. We look forward to seeing you on Friday October 22nd at 6pm for an evening full of craft projects and informational classes. In an effort to help you prepare and arrange your evening, we would like to provide you with the schedule of classes. The evening will go as follows:
6pm- Welcome and start of all craft projects and dinner
6:15pm- "Knitting" with Karen Monson
6:45pm- "Organization" with Ashton Thelin
7:15pm- "Hair Cutting" with Shannon Neal
7:45pm- "Fun with Grandma" with Claudia Leppert
8:15pm- "Bread & Yogurt Making" with Holly Smiley
8:45pm- "Blogs/Facebook" with Cristy Welsh
9:30pm- Wrap Up and Closing Prayer
As a reminder, the crafts will be taking place throughout the evening and can be at your leisure between classes or instead of classes.
If you have any questions, please contact Rachael McCauley- mccauleyrach@gmail.com or Bethany Sebra- bethanysebra@gmail.com.
We look forward to seeing you!
Relief Society Activities Committee
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