Food

A Recipe for Christmas Joy

I love to cook and bake and can and preserve.  I'm always looking for and trying new recipes - aren't you? 

Here's an old favorite of mine that as many times as I've attempted it, even though I'm sometimes a little heavy on some ingredients and sometimes a little short on others, it turns out perfectly every time. I've written it down for you and I do hope you'll try it and report your results back to me!

Christmas Joy

Prep time - minutes 

Serves a multitude

Ingredients:

2 1/4 cups Faith

1 tsp. Promise

1 tsp. Gratitude

1 cup (2 sticks) Belief

3/4 cup Wonder

3/4 cup Awe

1 tsp. Generosity

2 large scoops of Patience

2 cups Laughter 

The light of 1 North Star

Directions:

In a small bowl combine Faith, Promise and Gratitude. Set aside. In a large bowl, whisk together Belief, Wonder, Awe, Generosity & Patience until creamy. Gradually combine mixture of small bowl to large, stirring together evenly for a smooth consistency. Stir in Laughter, and at the last moment add in the light of the North Star.

Recipe will begin to rise immediately and will double in size every day. Begin serving as quickly as possible, multiple servings per day recommended for maximum benefit.  Excellent when accompanied with a slice of Glee and makes an elegant presentation along side a full goblet of Glory.

Keep for yourself and give as gifts to friends, neighbors and strangers.

Enjoy!

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Christmas on the Equator

I happen to know this because a big part of my heart remains in Ghana, where my charity, Point Hope, does good work bringing food, water, education, skills training, and medical resources to the people there. It’s also where I was blessed to meet five of my children.

This Christmas, the children in our Point Hope program would like to share a blessing with you. Below is a recipe for a special Ghanaian Christmas treat:

Bananas Ghana

8 bananas
1/4 cup sugar
1 cup orange juice
3 tablespoons apricot brandy (or use 3 more tablespoons of orange juice)
4 tablespoons shredded coconut and/or groundnuts (peanuts)
4 ounces sour cream, with 1 tablespoon brown sugar

Preheat oven to 350 degrees.
Cut 8 medium bananas lengthwise and then in half.
Combine 1/4 cup of sugar with 1 tsp cinnamon in a shallow bowl. 
Coat banana pieces in cinnamon sugar. 
Place coated pieces cut side down in a 9 inch ovenproof dish. 
Mix orange juice and brandy together and pour over the bananas.
Bake 20 minutes, periodically basting the bananas with the juice.
Remove bananas from oven and sprinkle 4 tbsp coconut and/or peanuts on top.
Dish up and SERVE PIPING HOT!
Optional: Blend together 4 oz. sour cream and 1 tbsp brown sugar (sweetened sour cream), serve as garnish on side.

We wish you all a Merry Christmas, or as it would be said in just a few of the 100 languages spoken in Ghana: “Afehya Pa” (Akan); “Brunya Name” (Ewe); “Burinya Tami” (Siwu, the language spoken by not more than 100,000 people, including Point Hope Ghana’s National Director, Chris Amuzu-Addo).

May your Christmas be filled with deep thankfulness for each blessing you have! To learn how about how you can help build a village and a forever family home for these children, please visit PointHope.org.

Chocolate Eggnog Pie | Listener Favorite!

Several years ago a listener named Helen submitted a Chocolate Eggnog Pie recipe that became VERY popular. I shared the recipe on air one night during the holiday season and ever since then, I get requests for it year after year... 

So before I’m bombarded again THIS year, here it is!

Helen’s Chocolate Eggnog Pie

Ingredients:

CRUST:

  • 1 1/4 cups graham cracker crumbs

  • 1/4 cup sugar

  • 1/4 cup margarine or butter, melted

FILLING:

  • 2 cups eggnog

  • 6 oz (1 cup) chocolate chips

  • 1 tbsp unflavored gelatin

  • 1/4 cup milk

  • 1 cup heavy cream, whipped

Instructions:

  1. Combine crust ingredients. Press over bottom and upsides of an 8" cake pan; set aside.

  2. Bring eggnog almost to simmering over low heat, stirring constantly.

  3. Add chocolate chips; stir until melted.

  4. Soften gelatin in milk; stir into eggnog mixture until thoroughly dissolved. Cool.

  5. Fold in whipped cream when mixture begins to thicken.

  6. Pour over graham cracker crust.

  7. Cover and refrigerate until set.

  8. To serve, cut into squares and garnish with additional whipped cream, if desired.

I’ve given this recipe to so many listeners over the years and they all rave about it. It’s one of those tried and true dishes sure to please!

Happy Holiday’s Everyone!




 

You CAN do it!

One of the things I love most about gardening isn’t gardening at all, it’s eating! There’s nothing better than a fresh tomato, sliced cucumber, tender-crisp floret of broccoli…  Well, maybe there is. Maybe a dilly bean with a slice of cheese, pickled beets on a winter salad, applesauce with my pork chop, spaghetti sauce full of herbs and spices… I’m talking about all the types of food I can or preserve in late summer/early fall, that I, friends, and family get to enjoy all year through; far beyond bright summer days and the end of the growing season.

Canning and preserving was a way of life for most of our grandparents, when our country was mostly agrarian, people lived rurally, and you couldn’t run to the grocery to pick up a tomato, just flown in from Chile’, any day of the year.  The tradition continued in my home because my grandparents left a 500 acre farm in Arkansas when many were doing the same in the mid-fifties. They came to the West Coast lured by the lucrative timber business, but couldn’t sever themselves completely from the lifestyle that had supported their families for generations. They always had a big garden and raised livestock. So, this time of year both my grandmothers kitchen and my mothers were a hive of activity “putting up” the various fruits and vegetables grown over the summer.  Kids were put into production chopping, grinding relishes, smashing fruits and hanging corn to dry.  Now that I have realized my life-long dream of a place to farm and my crops are large enough to do more with than have a few great dinners, I’ve been going back to my roots and relearning the skills that were instilled in me all those years ago.  And I’m having a blast doing it! 

I’ve talked about my canning on the air and on social media, and have had many, many requests for more information.  I’m going to tell you just enough to hopefully get you interested in doing more research on your own and trying it for yourselves!

There are two methods of canning; hot water bath and pressure.  The hot water method is used for high-acid food. It’s great for pickles, jellies and jams.  The pressure canning method is used for low-acid foods.  This method brings the temperature of the food up much higher than boiling water can and is necessary to prevent the growth of botulism, which, put bluntly, can kill you.  So can driving a car, going swimming, or crossing a road, which most of us do fairly regularly without panic. Don’t be frightened of home canning, but do be cautious. Get the right equipment and follow directions TO THE LETTER.  Think of it as “looking both ways” before you step into the crosswalk.  If you’re new to canning, start out with pickles and jams please, then once you get the basics down move on to pressure canning for your meats and produce like green beans and corn that are not in pickling brines.

I’d recommend jam for your very first canning experience.  You can buy grapes, berries, or other fruits from farmers markets or produce stands, and it doesn’t take much.  You will need a large pot, small (1 or 1/2 pint) canning jars (often found in your supermarket cooking aisle this time of year) lids, seals, and a box of fruit pectin (SureJell is the brand I often use.)  Buy the pectin first and read the directions, picking up any necessary supplies.  Most recipes call for the fruit, chopped or as the recipe instructs, sugar (lots of sugar!) and pectin.  The fruit mixture is usually cooked with the sugar and pectin and poured into sterilized jars. Sterilized seals and rings are used to close the jar and they are then place into the ‘hot water bath.’  The jars sit in boiling water for a specified amount of time bringing the jam and jar up to the same temperature.  After they are removed, the cooling air in the jar compresses, sealing the contents. Viola! Jam!

Homemade jam is delicious! Just the knowledge that you made it yourself makes it taste ten thousand times better than anything you can pick up in the grocery store!  Forget the toast – you want to eat this on top of ice cream, in milkshakes, a dab on a pork chop or with a sharp cheese – Ummm Ummm good!

So if you’ve ever been curious about canning – get out there and DO IT! Pick up one of the many guides put out by Kerr or Ball (standard canning supply providers) and get to jammin’! Your county extension office is also a good source for information as is your local library or, where else, the internet!

I want to know of your successes – and also if something doesn’t work right.  Many times I’ve made jam or jelly that “doesn’t  set”, but ya know what? It makes excellent syrup for pancakes and waffles!

CAN you do it? Yes, you CAN!!!