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Kransekake

Kransekake

Ingredients

  • 500 g almonds can also use 250 g roasted, dried almonds and 250 g unroasted almonds
  • 500 g powdered sugar
  • 2 dl egg white needs approx. 6 medium-sized eggs

Instructions

Grind the Almonds

  1. Grind the almonds. If the almonds are to coarsely ground it can be difficult to make the dough sticky.

Prepare the Dough

  1. Put ground almonds, powdered sugar and some (not all) of the egg whites in a large mixing bowl and mix well. Add additional egg whites until you get the consistency you are looking for.

Prepare the Kransekake Tins

  1. Melt butter and brush the molds well. Put some flour in a wide tray or bowl and dip the whole forms in the flour. Shake off any loose flour. Make sure the entire inside of the mold is covered in butter and flour.

Roll out the Dough

  1. Roll out the dough by hand to thumb sized rolls. Put the rolls into the tins and press end joints together so that the rings are whole. Start with the smallest ring and work your way up in size.

Baking

  1. Bake the rings in the middle of the oven for approx. 15 minutes at 180 degrees.
  2. Cool the rings quickly, preferably in front of an open window. Remove the rings by gently tapping on the countertop or tilt them out with a knife. It’s easier to remove them when they are slightly warm.

Storage

  1. Kransekake can be stored in a box with a tight lid. A few of days before the cake is to be served put a couple of pieces of soft bread into the box to make it chewy. Make sure that the bread do not touch the cake itself.

Pain Rustiqe (Rustic Bread)

Pain Rustique

Yield: 2-3 loaves

Timings

Mix poolish the evening before baking the bread. Poolish mixed at 23:00 will be ready around 13:00 – 15:00 the next day with bread being ready to be put in the oven around 19:00. It takes about 4 hours to mix and rise the final dough.

Poolish – 14-16 hours

Final Dough – apx 4 hours in total

  •   Autolyze – 30 minutes
  •   Mixing – 6 minutes
  •   First Rise – 90 minutes
  •   Second Rise – 45 minutes

Yeast

  • 1 gram instant yeast  = 3 grams fresh

Poolish

  • 390g Bread Flour
  • 390g Water
  • .4g Instant Active Yeast (1.2g Fresh Yeast)

Ideal fermentation temperature for the polish is 24C.

Combine and mix all ingredients and ferment for 14-16 hours.

Autolyse

  • 148g Water
  • 780.4g Poolish (all of the polish from the first step)
  • 390g Bread Flour
  • 1.5g Diastatic Malt Powder

Pour the water around the edge of the polish to help it release. Add the water and poolish to the mixing bowl. Add flour and malt. Do not add any salt or yeast. Mix until thoroughly until it comes together but it is OK if the dough is shaggy.

Cover to prevent a skin from forming and autolyze for 20-30 minutes

Mixing

  • 2g Instant Active Yeast (6 g Fresh Yeast)
  • 14g Salt

After the autolyze add the yeast and salt and mix on slow speed for 3 minutes. Increase the speed to medium and mix for 3 minutes. Stop occasionally to scrape the dough off the hook.

When complete the dough will be smooth and slightly tacky and will pull back when tugged.

First Rise

Place dough in a covered container and let it rise for 90 minutes. Fold the dough every 30 minutes for a total of 2 folds. Just fold the dough once or twice, no more. If the dough is rising slowly give it another 30 minutes and an additional fold.

Second Rise

Turn the dough onto a lightly floured surface and divide in 2-3 pieces. Put the pieces in a shallow bowl lined with baking paper so that it can maintain it’s shape as it rises. No rolling or shaping is needed. Proof for apx 45 minutes.

Scoring and Baking

Preheat oven to 230C / 450F.

Score top of dough down the length of the loaf. Slide dough onto baking sheet or into a cast iron pot and cover (pre-heat in oven with lid off). Bake for apx 40 minutes.

Kansas City Baked Beans

KC Baked Beans

Use your choice of baked beans. I use the Bush's with Onions.

Also, use your favorite BBQ sauce, I use Stubbs original or spicy BBQ sauce .

For the BBQ trimmings, you can use any leftover pork or beef (I always keep some back from a smoke and freeze in a zip lock snack bag).

You can also substitute 2 TBS of bacon drippings in place of the 3 strips of bacon. I often skip this if I have the BBQ trimmings or if I am just lazy.

It's also very good skipping trimmings and bacon and reducing sugar by 1/2.

Ingredients

  • 28 Ounce Can Baked beans
  • 3/4 cup BBQ Sauce
  • 1/2 cup Brown sugar dark
  • 1 medium Tart apple chopped, peeled
  • 2 tbsp Raisins golden
  • 1 cup Onion Chopped
  • 3 Slices Bacon chopped
  • 4 Ounces  BBQ trimmings
  • 1 teaspoon Sesame oil

Instructions

  1. Dice the apples, raisins and onion into sizes the same as the beans.
  2. Mix all ingredients together and cook for 1 hour at 350F

  3. I cook these in the pit for about 3 hours at 225F

Boiled Peanuts Master Recipe

Boiled Peanuts

This is the first recipe that isn’t a recipe but rather some guidelines that dependably delivers boiled peanuts. That said, you can skip all of the below, throw some raw peanuts in a pot, cover with salt water and start boiling until they are done to your liking. Add spices as you want when you want….

Basic Rules

  1. Use “Raw” peanuts in the shell.
  2. Soak in saltwater.
  3. Spice
  4. Boil until the desired consistency is reached.
  5. Spice
  6. Soak the boiled peanuts until the desired flavor inside the shell is reached.
  7. Drain and Freeze
  8. Serve hot boiled peanuts by reheating the frozen peanuts in water with red pepper flakes and spice mix.

So let’s unpack this with more details.

Raw Peanuts – Raw peanuts refer to unroasted/uncooked nuts. At times, they also include to mean Green Peanuts, though rare. In most cases, Raw peanuts available are air dried/dehydrated to bring down their moisture content in order to make them less perishable thereby longer storage. In the UK they are often referred to as Monkey Nuts. The peanuts you select have the biggest impact on the boiling time and flavor of the peanuts. Old peanuts, like beans, take forever.

Saltwater – Shoot for 35g/l saltwater. Basically, the same ratio as ocean water. Makes it easy to remember. Measure the water being added to the Peanuts so you know how much salt to add. If adding a spice mix with salt, such as a Zatarains Crab Boil mix, to your water back off some of the pure salt to account for the additional salt in the spice mix.

Spice – Adding spices is the real challenge. Some benefit from being added pre-boil, some towards the end of the boil and others during the soak. I have no scientific knowledge why, but my feeling is that some spices don’t really retain their flavor during the long boiling process. Better to add after the fact. To be honest I think that the majority of the flavor is added during the reheat process when you add the final spices before serving. That said, adding a baseline of spices prior to boiling does add depth to the boiled peanuts. My preference is a couple of “capfuls” of the Zatarains Liquid Boil. Once the peanuts are boiled to your liking, add any spice you like along with Crushed Red Pepper Flakes. Cajun, Creole, Old Bay or your own special mix. Use fresh heads of garlic, onion and your favorite fresh pepper. Jalapeno, serrano, or habanero. Peel garlic but leave whole cloves. Cut onion into thick slices, and halve peppers I halve. Add into the pot 20-30 minutes before the peanuts are done to get them ready for the final soak.  

Soak – Fill a large pot a little more than half full with the raw peanuts. Cover the peanuts by several inches of water, be careful though as they will float at this point. If needed put a plate or smaller pot lid on the raw peanuts to keep them submerged. Bring to a boil and then add the salt / spices. Mix and then take off the boil. This allows the salt and spices to dissolve into the water and gets a head start on the soak. Cover the pot and soak at least overnight. After several hours you will notice that the water level reduces as the peanuts soak in the water. Add water as need to keep them covered. At some point the peanuts will submerge and you can remove the plate/lid holding down the peanuts. A big reason to soak is to really cut down on the cooking time and that saves energy and money.

Boil – Bring pot back up to a low boil/ fast simmer. Boil for anywhere from 2-3 hours to 24 hours. It all depends on the peanut. New peanuts go faster, older peanuts take forever. Keep watch on the water level and keep adding water throughout the boil.

Add more spices – once the peanuts are boiled to your taste add additional seasonings. Red paper flakes, spice mixes etc. Whatever floats your boat.

Soak – Take the peanuts off the boil and allow to soak for a couple of hours on low heat (140F+) in the oven or pressure cooker if it has a “hold” function. I find that the second soak with the newly added spices enhances the flavor. When your happy with the flavor, bring back to a boil one last time for a few minutes and then cool.

Freeze – Drain the cooked peanuts and freeze in ziplock bags. Can last a very long time.

Reheat and Serve – Put desired amount of peanuts in small pot and boil in liquid similar to what it was soaked in. It doesn’t have to be exact but add some red pepper flakes and preferred spice mix. Bring to boil. Serve hot.

Instant Pot Boiled Peanuts

I like to use the instant pot. It’s faster, easier and makes great boiled peanuts. The keep warm / hold feature is perfect for the soaks.

Ingredients

Raw Peanuts to fill half the pot.

Water to cover – measure the volume

35g/l water to salt ratio

2 cap fulls of Zatarains Liquid Crab Boil

2 tablespoon red pepper flakes

¼ Cup Cajun or Creole seasoning

Instructions

Place peanuts in the Instant Pot.

Add water, salt and Liquid Crab Boil. Peanuts must be covered.

Place a plate or pot lid on top of the peanuts to help weight them down.

Place lid on Instant Pot, check to see that the valve is in “sealing” position.

Set to “Pressure Cook” for 5 minutes and let it do a natural pressure release for 30 minutes.

Let the peanuts soak on “Keep Warm”. Check occasionally the water level and top up as needed. Remove the plate/lid once the peanuts stay submerged.

Set to “Pressure Cook” for 60 minutes and let it do a natural pressure release. Check for Doneness. Cook longer if needed.

Add red pepper flakes and Seasoning and let soak on Keep Warm until ready to serve or drain and freeze.

Faster Way to go about it….

Add all ingredients, pressure cook for 60-75 minutes test for doneness. Start Eating. Almost as good as the longer recipe and gets it done faster but the peanuts may be somewhat dry….

Gløgg

Ingredients
1 bottle red wine (robust red blends tend to work best)
1/4 cup sugar or to taste depending on wine
2 tablespoons orange zest (orange peel)
1 tablespoon cardamom pods crushed (could be less if they are fresh)
2 tablespoons ginger – optional (fresh root, cut in a few pieces)
1 stick cinnamon
8 cloves

1 1/2 cup of vodka – less vodka for less flame
Raisins

Almonds (blanched and chopped) for serving

1) Soak raisins in vodka for as long as possible.
2) Combine the wine, sugar, orange peel, cardamom pods, slices of ginger root, cinnamon stick, and cloves into a 2 to 3-quart pot. Heat to 175 F (77 C) and let simmer for 2 minutes.
3) Remove from heat and let stand for at least 1 hour. Low heat – long time, better Gløgg! You can place in barely warm oven if needed.
4) Taste to ensure spices are infused into the wine and right amount of sweetness reached.
5) Strain out spices.
6) Gently reheat to 175 F (77 C).
7) Add vodka and raisin mixture right before serving.
8) Immediately cover and prepare to serve.
9) Light lighter, remove cover and light evaporating alcohol.
10) Serve with raisons and almonds.

Classic Sage and Sausage Stuffing – Thanksgiving Favorites

Classic Sage and Sausage Stuffing (or Dressing)

https://www.seriouseats.com/recipes/2010/11/classic-sage-and-sausage-stuffing-or-dressing-recipe.html 

RH Changes – sometimes I haven’t actually toasted or dried out the bread prior to mixing….

Ingredients

  • 2 1/2 pounds about 2 loaves high quality sandwich bread or soft Italian or French bread, cut into 3/4-inch dice, about 5 quarts
  • 8 tablespoons 1 stick butter
  • 1 1/2 lbs sage sausage removed from casing
  • 1 large onion finely chopped (about 2 cups)
  • 4 large stalks celery finely chopped (about 2 cups)
  • 2 cloves garlic minced or grated on microplane
  • 1/4 cup minced fresh sage leaves or 2 teaspoons dried sage leaves
  • 32 ounces 4 cups low-sodium chicken or turkey broth, preferably homemade
  • 3 whole eggs
  • 1/4 cup minced parsley leaves
  • Kosher salt and freshly ground black pepper

Instructions

  1. Adjust oven racks to lower middle and upper middle position. Preheat oven to 275°F. Spread bread evenly over two rimmed baking sheets. Stagger trays on oven racks and bake until completely dried, about 50 minutes total, rotating trays and stirring bread cubes several times during baking. Remove from oven and allow to cool. Increase oven heat to 350°F
  2. In large Dutch oven, melt butter over medium high heat until foaming subsides (don't allow butter to brown), about 2 minutes. Add sausage and mash with stiff whisk or potato masher to break up into fine pieces (largest pieces should be no greater than 1/4-inch). Cook, stirring frequently until only a few bits of pink remain, about 8 minutes. Add onions, celery, garlic, and sage and cook, stirring frequently, until vegetables are softened, about 10 minutes. Remove from heat and add half of chicken stock.
  3. Whisk remaining chicken stock, eggs, and 3 tablespoons parsley in medium bowl until homogeneous. Stirring constantly with wooden spoon, slowly pour egg mixture into sausage mixture. Add bread cubes and fold gently until evenly mixed.
  4. To cook remaining stuffing, transfer to buttered 9 by 13 rectangular baking dish (or 10 by 14 oval dish), cover tightly with aluminum foil, and bake until instant read thermometer reads 150°F when inserted into center of dish, about 45 minutes. Remove foil and continue baking until golden brown and crisp on top, about 10 minutes longer. Remove from oven, let cool for 5 minutes, sprinkle with remaining parsley and serve.

Sweet Potato Casserole – Thanksgiving Favorites

Sweet potato casserole with pecan crumble

https://www.saveur.com/sweet-potato-casserole-with-pecan-crumble-recipe 

This sweet potato casserole is an especially festive, over-the-top take on the Thanksgiving classic, topped with a crisp pecan crumble and dotted with marshmallows. This recipe first appeared in our November 2011 issue along with Lesley Porcelli's story How Sweet It Is. 

RH Changes – forget the pecan crumble, top with marshmallows or better yet nothing on the top…

Ingredients

For the Filling

  • 3 lb. sweet potatoes
  • 1/3 cup packed dark brown sugar
  • 6 tbsp. unsalted butter melted
  • 1/4 cup heavy cream
  • 1 tsp. vanilla extract
  • 1 tsp. ground cinnamon
  • 1/2 tsp freshly grated nutmeg
  • 1/2 tsp kosher salt
  • 2 eggs lightly beaten
  • Freshly ground black pepper to taste
  • 1 inch 1" piece ginger, finely grated

For the Crumble Topping

  • 1/2 cup flour
  • 1/2 cup rolled oats
  • 1/2 cup packed dark brown sugar
  • 1/4 cup finely chopped pecans
  • 1/2 tsp kosher salt
  • 5 tbsp. unsalted butter cubed and chilled
  • 1/4 cup cup mini marshmallows

Instructions

  1. Heat oven to 425°. Place sweet potatoes on a parchment paper-lined baking sheet and bake until soft, about 1 1⁄2 hours; let cool for 30 minutes, and then remove skins. Pass potatoes through a food mill into a large bowl; stir in sugar, butter, cream, vanilla, cinnamon, nutmeg, salt, eggs, ginger, and pepper. Pour mixture into a 1 1⁄2-qt. baking dish and smooth top; set aside.
  2. Reduce oven temperature to 350°. Stir together flour, oats, sugar, pecans, and salt in a bowl; add butter and, using your fingers, rub butter into flour mixture until large crumbles form. Mound crumble mixture over filling, dot with marshmallows, and bake until filling is hot and crumble and marshmallows are browned, about 30 minutes. Let cool for 15 minutes before serving.

Corn and Okra Pudding – Thanksgiving Favorites

Corn and Okra Pudding

Adapted from "The Lee Bros. Southern Cookbook" by Matt Lee and Ted Lee (W.W. Norton & Co., 2006) https://rosemaryandthegoat.com/2012/01/16/corn-and-okra-pudding/ 

RH Changes – swap out the okra for red bell peppers or extra corn or mixture of the two…

Ingredients

  • 2 1/2 tablespoons unsalted butter
  • 3/4 pound fresh okra sliced into 1/2-inch-thick rounds (about 2 cups) (can swap out with bell pepper and corn…)
  • 1 1/2 cups half-and-half or cream
  • 1 teaspoon kosher salt
  • 1 teaspoon granulated sugar
  • 2 large eggs
  • 1 1/2 cups fresh corn kernels about 4 ears or frozen corn

Instructions

  1. Preheat the oven to 350 degrees. Grease a 1-quart baking dish with 1/2 tablespoon butter.

  2. Scatter okra in a single layer in a dry 12-inch skillet or large sauté pan. Cook over medium-high heat, moving the pieces around the pan frequently, until okra begins to brown around the edges, about 8 minutes. Remove from heat.
  3. Cut the remaining 2 tablespoons butter into pieces. In a small saucepan, heat butter, half-and-half, salt and sugar over medium heat until butter melts and half-and-half begins to simmer.
  4. In a large bowl, beat eggs with a whisk until they are lemon-yellow. Pour hot half-and-half mixture slowly into eggs in a thin stream, whisking constantly to prevent curdling.
  5. Spoon okra and corn evenly into the baking dish; pour milk-and-egg mixture over vegetables. Bake for 40 minutes or until a toothpick inserted in the center comes out clean.
  6. Cut the pudding into 6 equal servings with a spatula; serve immediately.

Spinach Gratin – Thanksgiving Favorites

Spinach Gratin

RH Changes - mixed in 1/2 cup Gruyere & 1/2 Parmesan to the mix, and sprinkled 1/2 cup Parmesan on the top before baking. Added more Spinach as it seemed to little.

Ingredients

  • 4 tablespoons 1/2 stick unsalted butter
  • 4 cups chopped yellow onions 2 large
  • 1/4 cup flour
  • 1/4 teaspoon grated nutmeg
  • 1 cup heavy cream
  • 2 cups milk
  • 3 pounds apx 1.5kg frozen chopped spinach (5 10 Oz packages)
  • 1 cup freshly grated Parmesan cheese
  • 1 tablespoon kosher salt
  • 1/2 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper
  • 1/2 cup grated Gruyere cheese

Instructions

  1. Preheat the oven to 425 degrees F.
  2. Melt the butter in a heavy-bottomed saute pan over medium heat. Add the onions and saute until translucent, about 15 minutes. Add the flour and nutmeg and cook, stirring, for 2 more minutes. Add the cream and milk and cook until thickened. Squeeze as much liquid as possible from the spinach and add the spinach to the sauce. Add 1/2 cup of the Parmesan cheese and mix well. Season, to taste, with salt and pepper.
  3. Transfer the spinach to a baking dish and sprinkle the remaining 1/2 cup Parmesan and the Gruyere on top. Bake for 20 minutes until hot and bubbly. Serve hot.

Thanksgiving Dinner Recipes

I’ve pulled together several recipes that I’ve make in Banchory and Milltimber over the years. I definitely have not included the grilled  chickens or smoked sausages that we always had in replacement for the several failed Turkey attempts in Lowestoft and first year in Banchory. I’ve included more detailed links where available so you can see the original recipes and have also included in the text I published some of the changes I made – usually due to the inability to get the all the ingredients wherever we were.

The recipes are

Sage & Sausage Stuffing – Serious Eats Recipe
Sweet Potato Casserole – Saveur
Corn and Okra Pussing Recipe – Lee Brothers
Spinach Gratin – Ina Gartin

Some tips and tricks on making the sides

Leave plenty of time to make them. Each recipe goes pretty quick, but doing all four at one time takes considerably longer.

If possible make them a day ahead of time, store in the refrigerator and reheat before eating.

Lots of overlap on the ingredients. Prep all the like ingredients at the same time – all the onions, all the ginger etc.

Don’t be afraid to substitute ingredients. I do it all the time.