De Ma Cuisine

Legacy Archive

Wednesday

11

April 2012

1

COMMENTS

Rachel’s Borscht – Episode 18

Written by , Posted in A Cooking Show with Rachel O, Abundant Harvest Organics, Legacy, Soups, This Week's Feast, Thoughts, Vegetables, Vegetarian

I missed Oma this past weekend especially. She used to make a traditional Easter bread called Paska. I thought of her as I made it. Since I’m missing her, since I have some beets to use, and since the weather is cool right now, I’m making Borscht for this week’s episode of A Cooking Show with Rachel O. Oma made the best Borscht. Mine is not as good. I’m not sure I could ever make anything as good as she did. Not being self-deprecating, she was just a great cook.

Borscht traditionally has things like cabbage, beets, beef, dill, and potatoes. This version has more veggies (why not?!) and no meat or dill (I didn’t have any). From this week’s Abundant Harvest Organics box, there are: parsnips, carrots, beets, cabbage, spring onions, fresh garlic, tomatoes, and a daikon radish (from an older box: potatoes). Like I said, not traditional, but still so good! Top it with a dollop of yogurt or sour cream, and serve it with some good bread, and there’s dinner. Perfect for a chilly spring night.

I also made my own vegetable stock for the soup. My friend, Elizabeth, asked if I would show how to make some of these things I often have on hand (like stocks). So in this episode, I’ll not only show you how to make Borscht, but also Vegetable Stock.

I hope you enjoy it as much as we always do. And, make lots, it’s even better the next day!!!

Happy Eating!

Rachel’s Borscht – Episode 18

Prep Time: 20 minutes

Cook Time: 2 hours

Total Time: 2 hours, 20 minutes

Yield: 6-8

Rachel’s Borscht – Episode 18

Ingredients

  • 2 carrots, quartered and chopped
  • 2 parsnips, quartered and chopped
  • 1 daikon radish, quartered and chopped
  • 4 large or 6 small potatoes, chopped
  • 7 beets, peeled and chopped
  • 1 tomato, chopped
  • 1 spring onion, chopped
  • 1 fresh garlic, chopped
  • 1 small cabbage, shredded
  • 8-11 C veggie stock (or 6 C stock, 3-5 C water)
  • 2 T olive oil
  • 1 t salt
  • pepper
  • 1 T balsamic vinegar
  • 1/4 C white vinegar
  • 1 T honey
  • 1 T fresh lemon juice
  • yogurt, for topping

Instructions

  1. Heat soup pot. Add oil. Add garlic, onion, and tomato. Smash tomatoes with potato masher. Cook a few minutes. Add all remaining veggies, except cabbage. Add salt, pepper, and white vinegar. Cook over medium heat, stirring occasionally, about 15 minutes, or until veggies are getting tender.
  2. Add honey, balsamic vinegar, and 8 C stock. Bring to a boil, reduce to a simmer, and cook 2-4 hours. Add 2-3 C more stock after an hour or two of cooking.
  3. (Add 2-3 C water, if needed, bring to a boil.) Add cabbage. Cook 30 minutes more.
  4. Add 1 T lemon juice.
  5. Serve topped with a dolup of yogurt.

Notes

The white vinegar is supposed to set the color of the beets, so they don’t bleed as much. It didn’t work in mine. 🙂 Borscht normally has beef and beef stock. I didn’t have any today, so I made a vegetarian version. It also normally has dill. I didn’t have any of that either. Borscht is always better the second day. I don’t know why. It just is.

http://www.de-ma-cuisine.com/rachels-borscht-ep-18/

This episode was sponsored by Abundant Harvest OrganicsBari Olive Oil Company, and Molly Jenson.

Friday

30

March 2012

0

COMMENTS

Oberg Blackberry Jam

Written by , Posted in Canning, Condiments, Fruit, Legacy

Oberg Blackberry Jam
Recipe Type: Jam
Author: Terry Oberg
Ingredients
  • 8 cups frozen berries (you want about 5 cups of crushed berries)
  • 7 cups of sugar
  • 1 box fruit pectin
Instructions
  1. Rinse the berries and measure out about 8 cups for frozen, since you want about 5 cups of crushed berries. Fresh berries can be crushed and measured that way.
  2. Measure out 7 cups of sugar into a separate container but do not pour it into fruit yet.
  3. Use a potato masher to crush the berries in a 6 or 8 quart pot. Stir in one box of fruit pectin. (I tried liquid pectin below, since the store was out of dry since it’s not really canning season, and I didn’t like it as well, plus it changes this recipe.)
  4. Bring the fruit and pectin mixture to a full rolling boil (a boil that can’t be stopped by stirring) on high heat, stirring constantly. Stir in the sugar fairly quickly, and return the mixture to a full rolling boil and then boil for exactly 1 minute, still stirring constantly.
  5. Remove from heat and then we pour the berry mix into some sort of pitcher to fill the jars since that’s easier than ladling the fruit into jars as most directions say. Just be very careful as you pour the big pot of boiling berry mix into the pitcher, because if it spills it can be really dangerous.
  6. Fill the clean jars within 1/4 inch of the top, and making sure the rim is clean, put on a lid and ring. The lids have been in a small saucepan of boiling water, and can be drained but we usually keep them in the hot water until we place them on the jar. They always seal that way.
  7. Let the jars cool, and check to make sure they have all cooled by pressing on the lid. Make sure they don’t pop. If some haven’t, just refrigerate them and use them first. Try to let the jars sit for a few hours until they’re cool, and then store them in a cool, dry place.
Notes

We usually use frozen berries since those are what we have left over from our Farmer’s Markets. Fresh berries will work the same.
I have cut the above sugar recipe to 5 cups, so there is more fruit than sugar, and it usually sets fine. We have had some batches not gel too well, but that can be used for pancake syrup.
We usually get about 4-5 pints out of this recipe. The box says 9 cups.

Friday

16

March 2012

1

COMMENTS

Oma’s Moon Cookies, by Jill

Written by , Posted in Baking, Cookies, Dessert, Guest Posts, Legacy, Thoughts

I’m blessed to have two brothers. But, until I got a sister-in-law last year, I had zero sisters. However, my cousin, Jill and I are as close as sisters. She’s one of my best friends. She lives in Colorado with her family, so we make up for the distance with visits, Skype chats, phone calls, emails, and texts. She and I were devastated at the loss of our Oma a couple of months ago. We both inherited a love for cooking from her. Jill, however, must have inherited the baking side of it much more than I. She’s a great baker. I asked if she would share Oma’s recipe for Moon Cookies.

Here’s Jill.

I know what you are thinking, it’s why are these called moon cookies yet they are shaped like stars?  Well honestly it is just because I don’t have a moon shaped cookie cutter.  Every time I make these cookies I am already far too deep in the process to stop, go to the store and get the proper shape, and every year I seem to forget that I don’t have a moon shape so I choose the next best celestial object, a star.  But Oma, whose recipe this is, always made them in moon shapes, hence the name.  Everyone in the Pries family knows what a moon cookie is.

This recipe is special for many reasons, most importantly because it was Oma’s.  And everything from Oma is special.  Secondly, they are insanely delicious.  One of the ways Oma loved her family was through food. She always had lovely treats and amazing meals waiting for us whenever we would visit.  Some of my fondest childhood memories take place in her kitchen, whether it was baking Zwieback and honey cookies, or sitting under the kitchen table first thing in the morning to warm up by the vent, or having Opa help me crush my crunchy buns into my bowl of “Opa” soup.  Of all the many traditions Oma passed down, a love of the kitchen was definitely one of them.  She was always eager to teach us and to pass down these special family recipes.  She had a servant’s heart and loved her family so much through everything she did.  I can only hope that I can make my family feel as loved and as precious as she made us feel.  Oma – I love you and I will keep trying to learn to crochet dish clothes, even though they always end up looking like cat toys!!

And now a special word of caution…..do not eat these cookies while wearing black.  The evidence will be all over you. And that is especially bad if you happened to indulge yourself when you really shouldn’t have or were flat out told not to, like a certain three year old boy who disappeared behind the sofa for a few minutes and then reappeared with lovely white fluff all down his front.

Oma’s Moon Cookies, by Jill

Oma’s Moon Cookies, by Jill

Ingredients

  • 2 Cups flour
  • 1/2 lb unsalted butter
  • 1/2 cup white sugar
  • 1 1/2 cups ground hazelnuts
  • Icing sugar, about 3 cups

Instructions

  1. Mix together flour, butter and sugar. Add the nuts (use your food processor to grind the nuts if you had to buy whole ones). Mix well. Refrigerate for about 3 hours. Roll out the dough about 1/4 " thick (thicker is better because they can be quite fragile).
  2. Bake at 350 for 8 minutes or until golden.
  3. After the cookies bake you can cool them until warm, them give them a bath in the icing sugar. Not just a light dusting. Carefully place the cookie in the bowl of sugar and gently pack it on so there is a nice coating. Store between layers of wax paper in the freezer.
http://www.de-ma-cuisine.com/omas-moon-cookies-by-jill/

Monday

6

February 2012

1

COMMENTS

A Legacy – Oma’s Lemon Buns

Written by , Posted in Baking, Dessert, Legacy

Family is so important. Something I’m realizing more as I get older. I have wonderful friends, many of whom are like family (especially since we live so far away from any relative), but they could never replace our parents, siblings, cousins, aunts, uncles, nieces, nephews, and memories of our grandparents.

Some of my fondest memories have to do with food and family. I’ve been blessed with a family that loves to eat well. From my Oma on my Dad’s side, to my Mom, there was no shortage of good cooking growing up. I didn’t really discover my passion for food until I got married and had someone to cook for. But now that I’ve discovered it, I cherish it, and use it as a way to connect to my family. I’ve learned how to make my Oma’s Zwieback in person, talked with Mom on the phone while trying to make her Cinnamon Buns, and have taken photos of the process as I’ve made Oma’s Paska, so I could show her, and have her tell me what I did wrong (and she amazed me – she told me, from a photograph, that the dough was too sticky). I love that cooking connects me to my family.

This heritage, this legacy is so precious to me. So I want to begin to share some of those recipes on here in my new Legacy Recipes section.

This first one is Oma’s Lemon Buns. Oma was an exceptional cook. I can’t tell you if she was a better baker or a better cook. She was simply wonderful at both. I don’t remember a visit where there weren’t at least cookies and Zwieback (and by cookies, I mean at least 5 different kinds), and maybe even Lemon Buns. Oma said that when she turned 90 last October, she would be done baking. That didn’t happen. At the family gatherings before and after her funeral two weeks ago, there were Lemon Buns, cookies, Platz, Fleisch Perishky… her baking outlived her. I think the Lemon Buns were my favorite dessert (other than the Paska, which we only ate at Easter). So I’ll share that recipe with you today. It’s in Oma’s handwriting, but I’ll also type it out, so you can print it if you’d like. If you have any questions, I can’t help you, I’ve never made them. But I intend to, soon. 🙂

 

Oma's Lemon Buns

Ingredients

  • 1 C milk
  • 1 C sugar
  • 1/2 t salt
  • 3/4 C butter or shortening
  • 3 eggs
  • 2 pkg yeast
  • zest from 1 lemon
  • juice from 1 lemon
  • 9-10 C flour
  • 1 C warm water
  • 1 t sugar
  • Filling: 2 pkg lemon pie filling.

Instructions

  1. Cook 2 pkg lemon pie filling. Let cool.
  2. Dissolve 1 t sugar and yeast in warm water. Let stand 10 min.
  3. Cream together butter, sugar, eggs and salt, add lemon peel, juice and the yeast mixture, then alternate the flour with the milk.
  4. Knead to a soft smooth dough. Let rise in a warm place until double in bulk.
  5. Roll out fairly thin, cut into 2 1/2"x4" pieces. Cut a 1" slit, 1 " from each end. Put a tsp lemon filling in the center and pull on end through the slit off the other end. Spread the dough to each side and pinch together. Let the buns rise for about an hour.
  6. Brush with milk beaten egg. Bake for 15-20 minutes at 325F. Put the icing on before you serve.
http://www.de-ma-cuisine.com/a-legacy/

Friday

16

December 2011

0

COMMENTS

Aunt Sue’s Chocolate Fudge Sauce

Written by , Posted in Condiments, Dessert, Legacy

Aunt Sue’s Chocolate Fudge Sauce
Recipe Type: Sauce, Dessert
Author: Aunt Susan Pries
Prep time: 5 mins
Cook time: 20 mins
Total time: 25 mins
This is a recipe you will be reaching for your spatula to scrape every last sticky gooey bit from the jar – or someone else in your family will if they are so lucky!!
Ingredients
  • 1 cup butter
  • 1/2 cup cocoa powder
  • 3 cups sugar
  • 1 can evaporated milk
  • 1 teaspoon vanilla
Instructions
  1. Combine butter, cocoa, sugar, evaporated milk in a sauce pan, over medium heat. Stir often. Bring to a boil and boil stirring constantly for 7 minutes. Put your timer on.
  2. Remove from heat. This next step if VERY IMPORTANT you may think you can omit but it truly will change the sauce. Pour the hot sauce into a blender (remove middle plug, cover with a towel and hold down your lid) and blend for 2 to 4 minutes.
  3. I pour it in a 1 quart canning jar and store it in the fridge.
  4. Enjoy!