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Home Cooks Guide

A professional chef's guide to the home kitchen

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Truffle Carbonara Recipe – The Ultimate Indulgence!

September 5, 2021

The most decadent version of carbonara.

This carbonara is decadent, rich, and earthy with dry-cured bacon, parmesan, leeks, and a generous amount of shaved black truffle.

If you’ve been reading this blog, you know that most of my recipes are easy and accessible for the home cook. This recipe is easy, but I do recognize that truffles are not the most accessible ingredient. That being said, I’ve been stuck inside with my family on this Labor Day Weekend because of hazardous wildfire smoke, I randomly came into a windfall of truffles courtesy of Staci, aka The Truffle Huntress, from Tesoro Mio Truffle Ranch, and this is my escapism. So indulge me in this completely impractical, decadent version of carbonara.

If this recipe looks fun but you don’t have access to a fresh truffle, feel free just to use it for inspiration and play around with adding other fancy (or not so fancy) mushrooms (porcini, oyster, beech, chestnut, portabella, etc) when you sauté the leeks and garlic. You could also try using truffle salt or truffle oil. Just be aware that a lot of truffle oils are made from synthetic “truffle flavor”.

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Truffle Carbonara

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  • Author: Kara Taylor- Home Cooks Guide
  • Prep Time: 5
  • Cook Time: 15
  • Total Time: 20 minutes
  • Yield: 2–4 servings 1x
  • Category: Pasta
  • Method: Stove top
  • Cuisine: Italian
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Description

A decadent carbonara with black truffle, leeks, dry-cured bacon, and parmesan.


Ingredients

Scale

1/2 lb pasta

1/2 cup pasta water (set aside after cooking pasta)

1 cup chopped leeks

1/2 cup chopped dry-cured bacon (or store bought)

3 egg yolks

1/2 cup grated parmesan

3 garlic cloves

1 T thyme

shaved fresh truffle

salt and pepper to taste


Instructions

Bring a pot of salted water to a boil and add the pasta.  Cook according to the package directions.  Measure out the pasta water for the sauce and set aside before draining the pasta.

Meanwhile over medium heat, sauté the bacon until crispy.  If the bacon is on the leaner side, you may need to add 1 Tablespoon oil to the pan.  Use a slotted spoon to transfer the bacon to a paper towel.  Leave the bacon fat in the pan.

In a small bowl, combine the egg yolks and the grated parmesan and stir well.

Sauté the leeks and garlic with the fresh thyme leaves over medium heat until tender and transparent.  About 5 minutes. Add a splash of the pasta water. NOTE: Pasta water should be hot but not boiling at this point.

Remove from the heat, then gradually add the egg mixture while stirring constantly.  Then stir in the rest of the pasta water and continue stirring until the sauce is smooth.  Add the cooked noodles (noodles should still be hot too) and combine well with the sauce.  Season with salt and pepper.

Shave truffles onto the pasta and stir, reserving a couple of shavings for garnishing the plate.

Serve and add the reserved truffle shavings on top.

Enjoy!!

 


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Filed Under: Entertaining, Pasta, Uncategorized Tagged With: mushroom, parmesan, pasta, truffle

How To Make Sausage

August 15, 2021

Big batch of Andouille at The Farm Table

In 2010, when I was 25, I began a little company called Smokey Ridge Charcuterie. I made hand-crafted fresh and cooked sausages, pates, bacon, duck confit, and other specialty charcuterie products. It started with an apple sausage recipe that I launched out of a little farmstand in an area of Northern California called Apple Hill. After the farmstand closed for the season that first year, I expanded the sausage varieties and products that we offered and began selling them at regional farmer’s markets. We gained quite a following and launched a club where several hundred loyal customers could give us their credit card numbers to make 6 packages per year filled with whatever types of sausages and charcuterie I felt like making at the time. This arrangement was a chef’s dream. For 10 years I made sausage by hand for club members, customers, and restaurant goers. Between 2010 and 2020, I hand twisted over 100,000 lbs and sold around $1 million of sausage, and I have developed several dozen tried-and-true sausage recipes. My secret to the best sausages is simple: high-quality meat, well-trimmed of any undesirable bits, fresh ground spices, fresh herbs, and 7 grams of salt per pound (unless it’s a chicken sausage).

In 2020, the restaurant closed, a casualty of the Covid Pandemic. And like millions of chefs and restaurant workers everywhere, I took this as a cue to exit an industry that I’ve had a love-hate relationship with since I was a kid working my first job. Long story short, I have a bunch of amazing beloved recipes and years of know-how that are no longer being used commercially and I want to share them with the world, starting here with this in-depth guide to sausage making – my way.

I’ll go into detail about these steps below but here’s a cheat sheet for quick reference.

EQUIPMENT

Before I get into the steps of sausage making, I want to spend a second on equipment. Sausage making is fairly intensive when it comes to equipment. If you are planning to make a small 2 lb batch of bulk sausage – go ahead- buy already ground meat or use the grinder attachment and mix with your stand mixer. If you plan on making batches of sausage bigger than 5 lbs, you really should invest in some equipment. These are my recommendations for economical home-grade equipment suitable for 10 lb batches (all my recipes are 10 lb batches):

Cimeter

A cimeter is a long curved knife that is really handy for breaking down cuts of meat. Something about the curve of the blade lets you easily separate whole muscles without cutting through them. I recommend a 10-12 inch cimeter for breaking down pork butts. A Victorinox is a decent economical choice.

Grinder

I recommend a stand-alone grinder, not an attachment to your stand mixer. I have this one from butcherpacker.com. It costs $160, has 3 grinder plates, and can grind 10-20 lbs of meat fairly quickly without overheating. It came with attachments for stuffing sausage which you could definitely try out to start. I prefer a separate sausage stuffer but if you only make sausage a couple of times per year, this one machine would probably suffice for grinding and stuffing. It also grinds breadcrumbs, tomatoes, etc.

Mixer

I recommend a hand crank mixer like this one with a 20lb capacity for $180 from homedepot.com. You may be tempted to use your household stand mixer but I would strongly advise against it. A stand mixer can only handle about 2 lbs of sausage at a time and is prone to overheating. If you are making a 10 lb batch that would be about 25 minutes of hard work for your mixer and you’ll risk blowing out the motor.

Stuffer

If you plan to make sausage regularly, I highly recommend a vertical sausage stuffer with a 5-15 lbs capacity like this one. There are several brands to choose from and several capacities. I used to use Cabela’s in a 20 lb capacity when I was just getting started, before switching to a hydraulic sausage stuffer that could stuff hundreds of pounds in a day. The smaller the capacity the more you’ll have to refill it, this can be a pain if you are doing really large batches. These stuffers have gears that help press the meat through the canister and out the sausage tube at the bottom. Look for one with all stainless steel parts.

Whatever you do, do not get the old-fashion cast iron manual stuffers. These are really hard to use, especially with drier sausage types.

Other things you’ll need:

  • Sheet pans to contain the links when twisting.
  • Mixing bowls- for dry spices, for fresh ingredients, for liquids, and for meat.
  • Casings
  • Sausage poker (can use a needle)
  • Lots of fridge/freezer space to store ingredients and to cool equipment parts.
  • Lots of clean, sanitized counter space.

HOW TO MAKE SAUSAGE

1) Select the Meat

The general rule of thumb is to aim for 25-30% fat in your sausage meat mixture. You can make leaner sausage and you can make fattier sausage, but 30% fat is the standard. Fat is essential in achieving the bind (more on that later) and pork fat is the best. Pork butt (which is actually shoulder, don’t know why they call it butt) with a 1/2 -1 inch fat cap is perfect for sausage all by itself. Or you can mix lean and fatty cuts like pork loin with pork belly. You can mix different types of meat too, for instance, venison with pork belly or pork back fat.

It’s possible to make all-beef, all lamb and all venison sausages, but in my experience, it is difficult to get the perfect texture without using pork fat. Pork fat is softer and makes for a better bind and better final texture. It is also more cost-effective. Unless you are avoiding pork for religious purposes, I highly recommend using pork belly, pork back fat, or plain old pork butt as the main source of fat for your sausage.

If you want to make leaner sausages without sacrificing the bind and texture, you can make the standard 30% mix and then use a substantial amount of diced or course ground lean as an internal “garnish” folded in.

For poultry sausages, use boneless skinless chicken thighs with some fat left on them, duck breast with fatty skin on or a mixture of fatty duck or goose with leaner poultry like turkey, and chicken breast (as in my Turducken Sausage – recipe will be posted soon). Poultry fat is less saturated than pork fat and tends to liquefy and separate from the meat when cooked. To improve the texture I add dry-milk powder to all my poultry sausages at a rate of 1-3 grams per pound.

Can You Use Frozen Meat?

Yes! Ideally, you would only be using the highest quality fresh meat for sausage making and charcuterie. However, if you are using your own harvested meat trim or buying specialty meat products like duck breast, chances are you will be using frozen pieces. I have made tons of sausage using frozen meat products with great success. If you are making raw cured sausages like saucisson sec or salami, you should only use pork that has been commercially frozen to kill trichinosis.

The important thing is to make sure the meat has only been frozen one time, is well-sealed, and was frozen at a low temperature. Properly frozen meat is frozen at temperatures of -10 F or lower. Commercially frozen meat from the grocery store or a food service vendor is frozen at these low temperatures. A high-quality, high-efficiency, newer chest freezer will freeze and hold food around -10 F, provided you are not overloading it with room temperature foods to freeze all at one time (in which case it will slowly pass through the 32F- -10F and freeze with large ice crystals, damaging the cell structure of the meat). Jamming 10 lbs of venison into the small freezer section of your kitchen fridge will not freeze at these low temperatures and is not recommended. Snow-like ice crystals and pooled icy liquid indicate freezing and thawing and refreezing and is no bueno. Also bad news is white freezer-burned pieces of meat. Small amounts can be cut off, but if a large portion of the meat surface is freezer burned it will taste oxidized and cardboard-like.

2) Trim the Meat

Thoroughly trimming the meat is, in my opinion, imperative to a high-quality sausage. I think most people believe that sausage is where all the undesirable scrap pieces can go. I know for a fact that many butchers take this position. I do not. In my process, meat trimming takes up about 30% of the entire sausage-making time in the kitchen, followed by about 15% mixing and grinding and 55% filling and twisting casings.

Meat should be trimmed of glands. These are located in the shoulders and legs in triangular pieces of fat between muscles. In the legs, it is just below the bottom round. In the shoulder, the gland is located between the coppa (aka cottage roll) and the rest of the shoulder flap. If you are buying pork shoulder or Boston butt in the grocery store, chances are it has already been trimmed of glands. However, if you are buying cases of primal or subprimal cuts of meat from a food service vendor or are butchering your own animals, you will need to do this yourself.

Meat should also be trimmed of bone fragments, thick tendons, connective tissue, and excessively bloody veins and arteries. Run your hands over the cut of meat to feel for small bone fragments that were left behind during butchering and remove these if present. If using boneless shoulder cuts or boneless legs, sometimes there will be a small piece of bone left where the shoulder blade or hip was removed. For chicken thighs, feel around the perimeter of each thigh to remove small pieces of chicken bone. Chicken thighs are the most tedious piece of meat to debone and the main reason why I made only a little bit of chicken sausage despite it being constantly in high demand.

Thick tendons should be removed. You can get away with being a little lax on this if you are making a finely ground sausage, after all, unlike glands, there is nothing inherently gross about tendons (aka collagen). However, if you are making a course ground sausage or medium ground sausage, the tendons will result in unpleasant crunchy bits that make the eater wonder “what is this?”. Which is never good thing to wonder when you’re eating sausage.

3) Scale the Recipe

All my recipes are from my commercial recipes that were developed for 100 batches. My “Master Recipes” have been scaled back to 10 lbs of meat, primarily, because this is an easy number to scale. In my opinion, if you are making links, any lesser amount would not justify the set-up, clean-up, and effort. Furthermore, 1 standard hog casing uses roughly 10 lbs of sausage mix. However, if you are making bulk sausage, a two-pound batch is totally acceptable in which case, simply multiply all ingredients by 0.2. Or use my pre-scaled “Small Batch” Recipes which are scaled and adapted for 2 lbs and include volume measurements (instead of weights only). The Small Batch recipes are less precise and I do not recommend scaling these to larger amounts. Use the Master Recipes if you want to scale it up.

Unless you are buying meat already ground, expect to scale the recipe as the amount of meat you end up with after trimming is almost guaranteed to be off by 10-20 %. If you end up with 8.5 lbs of meat after trimming, simply multiply all ingredients in the recipe by 0.85. If you end up with 12 lbs of meat, multiply all ingredients by 1.2. When scaling a recipe, do the math all at once and write it out. That way you don’t run the risk of scaling all ingredients except one, because it just slipped your mind. I can’t tell you how many times I’ve seen this happen in the kitchen.

Master Recipes

  • Bratwurst
  • Apple Breakfast Sausage
  • Andouille
  • Duck Apricot Bourbon Sausage
  • Mild Italian Sausage
  • Maple and Sage Breakfast Sausage

Small Batch Recipes

4) Prep your Spice and Liquid Mixes

When making sausage, you will end up with 1)a bin of meat, 2) a container with dry spices, 3) a container of fresh ingredients like garlic and fresh herbs, 4) a container of liquid and 5) a container of casings soaking in water (if using). These components can be prepped ahead of time and stored in the refrigerator.

The dry spice component will include salt, sugar (sometimes), and dry spices. Whenever possible spices should be fresh ground. Buy spices in whole seed and grind them at home for the best-tasting sausage. It really makes a huge difference. Even better, toast them first in a dry pan. Bulk spices can be bought for cheap at sfherb.com, and other online retailers or bulk foods store. Once the dry spices are all measured out, you can go ahead and combine with the trimmed meat bin. It saves space in the fridge and lets the flavors soak in.

Keep the fresh ingredients separate from the dry spices until ready to grind. Otherwise, the salt will pull liquid out of these ingredients and wilt the fresh herbs and make the mixture wet. These are things like garlic cloves, fresh onions, and fresh green herbs. If you are grinding with a medium or fine die you can leave the garlic cloves whole and other vegetables coarsely chopped. However, if you grinding through the large die, you will want to mince everything beforehand.

Combine the liquids in a separate container.

If you are planning to make links with natural casings, soak the casings with water in a separate container.

5) Grind

It is very important that the meat stays cool during grinding and mixing. Cool all removable parts of the grinder in the refrigerator for at least 30 minutes prior to grinding. If you are making sausage in a powerful commercial grinder this is less of an issue because you are doing such a large amount of meat and the meat moves through it so quickly it just doesn’t have a chance to warm up. However, if you are making sausage at home, some grinders are painfully slow. Motors get overworked and hot and this can become a major issue for your sausage making.

Most grinders come with a fine, medium, and course die. It is really a personal preference which die you use though some sausages are traditionally done with one or the other. The medium die is good for most varieties of sausage including bulk breakfast, bulk Italian, and bratwursts. Course die is good for the sausages that you see with the big chunks of pork belly/fat studded throughout like Andouille. Course die is also good for grinding meat to be used as an internal garnish folded into a finer mix. The fine die is for smoother types of sausage, like bockwurst or hot links.

NOTE: You can buy ground pork or other ground meat if you want to take a shortcut. If you do this, I recommend getting it from a butcher shop and specifying the cuts and fat ratio that you want.

6) Mix

Mixing is the step that transforms your meat mixture from a ground hamburger-like texture to a juicy sausage by creating the “primary bind”. This is a bind between meat protein, fat, and salt. This is the most important and most fraught part of sausage making. This is where things can get really f’d up. The good news, it’s hard to over mix and easy to err on the side of caution.

Return all your meat to the fridge or freezer to get it nice and cold. It could even have some slightly crunchy frozen bits on the top. This is especially important if it took a long time to get through the grinding process.

Place your seasoned meat and fresh ingredients (if the recipe calls for any) in the mixer, turn the mixer on, and mix for 1 minute. Slowly add the very cold liquid and mix for another 4 minutes. The meat mixture should look tacky and sticky. This indicates the bind has formed. Keep mixing until this happens.

You can mix by hand if you don’t want to invest in a mixer. Make sure your meat is very cold as your hands will warm it up. This works for quantities of 5 lbs. or less. For large batches, this becomes a real workout and the coldness of the meat on your hands will test your toughness.

If you undermix the sausage or if the meat gets warm during this process, you will ruin the texture of the finished product. I’ve done it before with a 100 lb batch and it’s a really sad thing when it happens. You cannot really overmix sausage (unless it mixes for so long that it gets warm), but you can under mix it!

Now You Have Bulk Sausage

At this point, you have bulk sausage. Think Sausage patties, spaghetti sauce, stuffed mushrooms or peppers, scrambled eggs, and soup. Bulk sausage is a versatile ingredient to have on hand in a variety of flavors. There is nothing wrong with stopping here. Simply bag up your sausage in user-friendly quantities and freeze until ready to use. Alternatively, you can fill and twist links.

7) Twist the Links

To make sausage links you will need 1) your casings 2) your sausage stuffer, sanitized and set up with the nozzle that fits your casings and 3) lots of completely cleared and cleaned counter space and couple of sheet pans or 2 inch hotel pans. Links can be ordered off of butcher-packer.com or sausagemaker.com as can all of your equipment.

Types of Casings

  • Natural Casings: These are the only kind of casing that I use. I like the tradition behind them…. and I like the pop. Natural casings are made of intestine, bung or stomach. They come either packed in salt or in brine. If packed in salt, they need to be soaked in water for a minimum of 30 minutes though more time is better up to 12 hours. Change the water out a couple of times. If packed in brine, rinse the casings before use. Either way, you will want the casings stored in fresh water while you are making sausage so they don’t dry out and become fragile. If using another kind, simply follow the directions for that specific kind of casing.
  • Collagen: Comes in either Fresh Collagen for fresh sausages or Smoked Collagen for smoked sausages. The fresh collagen is more fragile and doesn’t hold up to smokehouse hanging so if you use these make sure to purchase the right ones for the type of sausage you are planning to make.
  • Fibrous: These casings are most often used for Summer Sausage, Salami and Mortadella types. They are not edible. You will remove them prior to eating the sausage. Fibrous casings are very tough and durable. You can fill them to capacity without them breaking and will end up with a sausage product of uniform diameter.
  • Alginate (vegan): As the name implies, these casings are made from algae. They are vegan friendly. Which begs the question, Why? As it happens, I just learned about alginate casings when I was cooking up a package of store bought brats that were encased with an unrecognized gelatinous thing. It’s unusual that I encounter something in the sausage sphere that is entirely new to me so I was intrigued. However, the gelatinous alginate casings had no pop, which is in my opinion, the best part of a brat.

2) Fill the sausage stuffer with the sausage meat mixture.

3) Place the casing on the nozzle so that about 4 inches overhang Begin slowly pressing the sausage meat out of the stuffer. Once the sausage reaches the end of the nozzle and begins to fill the casing, pause, tie a knot in the casing, then continue pressing until the casing is completely and evenly filled or the sausage stuffer is empty.

4) Now it’s time to twist the sausages. Start with the knotted end. The other end should have no knot in it yet. Using your thumb and index finger on each hand, squeeze the casing at the length of one sausage. Twist it. Now, skip the length of one sausage and pinch off the 3rd sausage. Twist it in the same direction as the first. Continue twisting every other sausage in the same direction. When you get to the last sausage in the link, tie a knot.

It will take a while to get a feel for this. If you fill the casing too tight it will pop when you twist. The slower you press, the tighter the fill will be. If you fill it too loose, it will require a lot of twists before it is tight and will end up much shorter. Gauging how fast you should press and how long your sausages should be based on how tightly your casing is filled to achieve uniformed sausage lengths is an art that comes with lots of practice.

If the casing pops while twisting, just pull out the meat from that one popped sausage and continue twisting. The meat can be added to the sausage stuffer for the next casing or set aside for bulk sausage. You’ll trim out the empty casing segments later.

5) Pop the air bubbles. You can buy sausage pokers at butcher-packer.com or sausagemaker.com or you can use a needle. Just prick each sausage all over quickly. Go all the way through. Don’t be timid about this, you won’t hurt them. Some air bubbles you cannot see.

6) Hang the sausage in the fridge or your freezer. This tightens and dries the casings. If you don’t have space to hang the sausage, you can lay them out flat over a rack on a sheet pan. If you are vacuum sealing your sausages, freezing them beforehand keeps the meat from being pulled out of the casing during the vacuum sealing process. You can also poach or smoke sausages before packaging them and freezing them.

8) Package or Cook Your Sausage

To store sausages – pack them tightly into a quart size freezer ziplock bag and squeeze as much air out as possible. Then freeze until ready to use. Alternatively you can vacuum seal or wrap with plastic wrap and butcher paper.

Fresh uncooked sausage is good for 3-5 days in the refrigerator. Poached or smoked sausages are good for up to 7 days in the fridge, or 4 weeks if vacuum sealed.

For tips and tricks for cooking sausages, check out this post. How To Cook Sausage Links Perfectly

Filed Under: How to, Uncategorized Tagged With: beef, chicken, duck, lamb, Sausage

The best way to use Garlic Scapes…Pickle Them!

July 21, 2021

Spring-Early Summer at the Missoula Farmer’s Market

Years ago, when I started pickling garlic scapes at the restaurant, scapes were virtually unheard of. Today they are commonplace at Farmer’s Markets and CSA’s during the spring and early summer. Which is good news for shoppers because they are versatile and delicious.

Garlic Scapes are the flower blossom and stem of hard-neck garlic. Soft-neck garlic does not produce edible scapes. If you grow garlic and would like to have this lovely springtime produce as well, you will need to make sure you are growing hard-neck garlic.

Garlic scapes can be sauteed, steamed, blanched, made into pesto or vinaigrette, chopped up in soup, minced like chives as a garnish, used in place of regular garlic (it is much milder), and pickled (my favorite). The entire thing is edible, however, depending on what stage they were in when picked they can be a bit tough and stringy. I usually trim the very tip of the flower blossom which dries out quickly, and then I either cook these by blanching for 5-10 minutes and then sauteeing, or I pickle them. I love the sweet mild garlic flavor, the beautiful curly shape, and the light and dark green color variation of garlic scapes. They jazz up any dish.

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Pickled Garlic Scapes

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  • Author: Kara Taylor- Home Cooks Guide
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Description

Pickled garlic scapes are beautiful and delicious.  Perfect for eating out of the jar, garnishing a bloody Mary, or serving as an accouterment to a meat and cheese platter.


Ingredients

Scale

4 lbs garlic scapes

8 cups white vinegar

8 cups water

4 Tablespoons Salt

4 Tablespoons Sugar

Per Quart Jar (4 Jars in total)

1 1/2 teaspoons dill seed

1 1/2 teaspoons whole mustard seed

1 teaspoon black peppercorns

2 whole bay leaves

1 dried hot chili (optional, more if you like it spicy)

1/4 garlic scape minced

sprigs of fresh dill or tarragon (optional)


Instructions

Fill a water bath with water and the quart jars and bring to a boil.

Meanwhile, in a smaller sauce pan, add water and the jar lids and bring to boil.

Combine the water, vinegar, sugar, and salt in a pot (5 quarts or larger) and bring to a boil.

Clear off and clean your work surface.  Round up a town for the counter, jar tongs, the magnet lid lifter (if using), a clean tea towel, and a wide mouth funnel and ladle or a pitcher for pouring the vinegar into the jars.

Trim the ends of the garlic scapes if they look dry.  Thinly slice one garlic scape and divide it into 4 equal portions, one for each jar.

Once the vinegar mixture and the jars have come up to a boil, reduce the heat on both to low.  

Using the jar tongs, remove one jar from the canner and carefully pour out the water.  Place it on the towel on the counter.  Add the chopped garlic scape, mustard seed, dill seed, fresh herbs, bay leaves, and dried chili.  Pack the jar with scapes (about 1 lb per jar). 

Using the wide mouth funnel or the pitcher, pour the vinegar mixture into the jar leaving 1/2 inch headspace.  Insert a butter knife all down the side of the jar and pull the handle of it towards the center to remove air bubbles.  Repeat this a couple of times.  If the liquid level dropped add a little more.

Dip a corner of the clean tea towel into the boiling canner and then wipe the rim of the jar.  Using the lid magnet, remove a lid from the boiling water and place it on top of the jar.  Put on the ring and tighten until just barely finger tight (when it just barely meets resistance, see note).

Prepared Jars of Pickled Garlic Scapes ready for the canner.

Set the prepared jar aside and repeat with the rest of the jars.  Once all the jars have been prepared, place them in the water bath canner.  They should be covered with at least 1/2 inch of water.  Add more water if needed.  Turn the heat back up to high and bring it back to a boil.  Once it has reached a boil, process for 25 minutes (at sea level, adjust for elevation).  See canning altitude chart.

Carefully remove the jars from the canner and place on a towel on the counter.  Do not touch the jars until fully sealed and cooled.


Notes

NOTE: Air needs to be able to leave the jar as it is heated in the canner.  This is how the vacuum is created.  If the lid is too tight the air cannot leave and the jar may crack in the canner.  Tighten the ring just until you feel the start of some resistance, the minimal amount needed to keep the lid in place.

NOTE: If you have never canned before I highly recommend this tutorial.  Water bath canning is simple to do but there are some important food safety issues you should be aware of.  Most importantly – you can only water bath can products that have a PH of 4.6 or lower.

Did you make this recipe?

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Filed Under: Appetizer, Condiments, Accoutrements, Pickled Things, Gluten Free, Pantry and Prep Staples, Uncategorized Tagged With: Dairy Free, DIY Canning, garlic scapes, Home Canning, Pickles, Platters

Simple and “Healthy” Blue Cheese Vinaigrette

July 15, 2021

The links in these recipes are for products that I use and recommend.  

Ah, blue cheese. A broad category of cheese that ranges from buttery and spreadable to crumbly and dry, approachable to assertive, grassy, earthy, and funky, to spicy or sweet. Blue cheese is perfect for showcasing on a cheese platter. Some varieties are fit for dessert with a drizzle of balsamic reduction or honey and candied nuts. Blue cheese complements fruit, especially pears, figs, and cherries. It also complements beef, which is pretty much the opposite of fruit. For an ingredient so versatile it’s somewhat of a shame that only one dressing comes to your mind when you think of blue cheese dressing – that gloppy, creamy, tangy mixture found right next to the bottles of Ranch at the grocery store.

Don’t get me wrong, I love that gloppy, creamy, tangy blue cheese dressing. And there’s something noble about a dressing that takes a somewhat risky ingredient, a cheese that attracts the most adventurous and “sophisticated” eaters when purchased on its own at a cheese counter, and makes it accessible to every dude in a Sports Bar noshing on crispy chicken wings and celery sticks. But in this salad dressing landscape dominated by one version of blue cheese dressing, there are possibilities for this amazing ingredient that have been forgotten.

This Blue Cheese Vinaigrette is one of those possibilities. Blue cheese salad dressing has been unjustly given its reputation as the “most unhealthy” dressing. It doesn’t have to be this way. This blue cheese vinaigrette is light and dainty. If you are one of the millions of people eating salad for health reasons, this healthy blue cheese salad dressing won’t completely counteract all of your sacrifices and hard work. Years ago, while working at a French Restaurant in Missoula, I made and served a similar dressing with a salad of mixed greens, avocado, pear, and candied walnuts. It was lovely.

The Best Blue Cheeses for Dressing

Some blue cheeses are soft and spreadable and some crumble well. For this recipe, I recommend a blue cheese that crumbles well. In the restaurant kitchen, I have used Roquefort and Point Reyes Blue for this dressing. Both of those varieties will add a little creaminess to the dressing while still holding some shape to the crumbles. I recommend these blue cheeses for this dressing:

  • Stilton
  • Danish Blue
  • Forme D’Ambert
  • Roquefort
  • Point Reyes Blue
  • Maytag
  • Gorgonzola / Gorgonzola Piccante
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Blue Cheese Vinaigrette

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  • Author: Kara Taylor- Home Cooks Guide
  • Prep Time: 10 minutes
  • Total Time: 10 minutes
  • Yield: 2 1/2 cups 1x
  • Category: Condiment
  • Method: mix
  • Cuisine: french
  • Diet: Gluten Free
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Ingredients

Scale

1/4 medium onion, minced/chopped

1/2 garlic clove, spicy green sprout removed from middle

1 cup white wine vinegar

3/4 cup canola oil

1 1/2 – 2 cups crumbled blue cheese

1 teaspoon sugar

1/2 teaspoon salt

1/2 teaspoon smoked paprika (or plain paprika)

1/4 teaspoon dried thyme

1/4 teaspoon dried marjoram (or sub oregano)

1/4 teaspoon fresh ground pepper


Instructions

In a blender, combine all ingredients except the oil and blue cheese.  Blend until very smooth.

Turn blender to medium-low speed.  Very slowly add the oil in a slow steady stream until fully incorporated.

Add the blue cheese crumbles and pulse a couple of times until the blue cheese bits are the size of peas or smaller.  The dressing will get slightly creamy as some of the blue cheese is dissolved into the vinaigrette.

Transfer to a container with a tight-fitting lid and store in the fridge until ready to use.  The dressing will keep for weeks refrigerated.


Equipment

Image of | Vitamix Explorian Blender, Professional-Grade |

| Vitamix Explorian Blender, Professional-Grade |

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Nutrition

  • Serving Size: 1 Tablespoon

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Filed Under: Condiments, Accoutrements, Pickled Things, Gluten Free, Pantry and Prep Staples, Sides and Salads, Uncategorized Tagged With: salad dressing, white wine vinegar

S’more Pancake Mix Recipe | Just Add Water

July 6, 2021

The links in these recipes are for products that I use and recommend.  

This Just-Add-Water Mix is perfect for busy mornings and back country breakfasts.

This Just-Add-Water S’more Pancake and Waffle Mix is perfect for busy back-to-school mornings and backcountry breakfasts. Toasted marshmallows on top transforms this quick and easy breakfast into an extra special morning treat.

I’ve been playing around with Just-Add-Water Mixes lately. Partly because I have big ambitions for camping trips this summer and am always on the look out for the perfect back country meals that are 1) easy, 2) shelf stable and 3) require very little dishes and clean-up. Partly because I need a morning meal for my 7 year old that I can make with one hand, while holding the baby on my hip with the other, in less than 10 minutes start to finish. Or better yet, a morning meal that my 7 year old can whip up on her own!! Partly because breakfast is and has always been my least favorite meal to cook and I require super easy options in the morning for my own sanity. Before kids, this was the meal that I would outsource to restaurants. Now I look for make-ahead breakfast options because there is no worse way to start the day than with a sink full of dirty dishes!

These S’more Pancakes are made from a graham cracker batter and studded with marshmallow and chocolate chips. If you want to keep it simple, a generous spread of salted butter is all that these pancakes or waffles require. However, if you want to take this breakfast to the next level, try out these fun toppings:

S’more Pancake Toppings:

  • Graham Cracker Crumbs
  • Toasted Marshmallow (campfire, stove top or torch)
  • Brown Butter
  • Caramel Sauce / Sweetened Condenced Milk
  • Whipped Cream
  • Nutella

How to Make Fluffy Pancakes

For fluffy thick pancakes, make a thick batter. Preheat your griddle and then immediately reduce the heat to medium-low once you add the batter to it. Thick fluffy pancakes take a while to cook, about 4-5 minutes per side. This recipe calls for 1 cup dry mix to 3/4 cups water. This will make fluffy pancakes. You may be tempted to stretch the mix by adding more water to it, and this is fine, but you will get less fluffy pancakes that cook quicker.

For waffles, make a thinner mix of 1 cup mix to 1 cup water.

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S’more Pancake Mix Recipe | Just Add Water

5 Stars 4 Stars 3 Stars 2 Stars 1 Star No reviews
  • Author: Kara Taylor- Home Cooks Guide
  • Prep Time: 10 minutes
  • Cook Time: 10 minutes
  • Total Time: 20 minutes
  • Yield: 10–12 servings 1x
  • Category: Breakfast
  • Method: Mixing
  • Cuisine: American
  • Diet: Vegetarian
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Description

A simple and delicious Just-Add-Water Pancake and Waffle Mix for busy mornings.


Ingredients

Scale

3 cups flour

1 cup Graham Cracker Meal *

1 cup Dry Milk Powder

2 Tablespoons Bob’s Red Mill Egg Replacer

2 Tablespoons Baking Powder

1 cup Mini Dark Chocolate Chips

1 cup Mini Marshmallows, chopped


Instructions

A day or two before making this mix, open your bag of marshmallows and leave them out to dry.  This will make it easier to chop them into small pieces.

Make the graham cracker meal by grinding the graham crackers with a mortar and pestle or in a food processor.  You could also put the graham crackers in a bag with the air removed and roll a rolling pin over them.

In a large mixing bowl, add all ingredients and stir well.  Transfer the mix to a bag or an 8 cup mason jar and store at room temperature until ready to use.

To Prepare the Pancakes:

Preheat your griddle, or pan.

For each cup of dry Pancake & Waffle Mix, add 3/4 cup of water and mix well. 

Butter (or spray with oil) your griddle.  Ladle out the batter.  Reduce the heat to medium and cook until golden brown on one side and bubbles are visible on the top.  Flip and cook until the other side is golden brown.

Top with your favorite toppings and serve.

For Waffles:

Preheat your waffle iron

Use a 1:1 mix:water ratio

Spray waffle iron with oil and cook to desired brownness 

Top with your favorite toppings.


Notes

1 cup of dry-mix makes about 3 medium-sized pancakes.  

For 4 people use 3 cups of dry mix and approximately 2 1/4 cups water.

For 2 people use 1 1/2 cups dry mix and approximately 1 cup plus a couple of tablespoons water.

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Filed Under: Breakfast, Budget Bites (under $2), Camping Recipes, Entertaining, Kid Friendly, Pantry and Prep Staples, Sweets, Uncategorized Tagged With: just add water, make ahead

QUICK TIP | How to keep fish from sticking to the pan

June 19, 2021

Nothing, I repeat, nothing is more frustrating than preparing a beautiful meal and then having the main attraction stick to the pan and ruin your presentation. Whether you are cooking for yourself, cooking for friends and family, or cooking “on the line”, this is one of those soul-sucking kitchen moments that we have all gone through. Fortunately, I have a really simple “secret” solution that can be used when all else fails.

When writing any posts, I generally poke around on the web a little bit to see what else is out there. If a topic is well covered by other food blogs, I usually will choose to focus on a topic where I could offer something new to the conversation out there. There are a lot of tips out there on how to keep fish from sticking to the pan, however, I was surprised to find that my super simple technique was not among them. This technique works great for fish fillets, as well as chicken, pork, and steak.

How to Keep Fish (or Steak, Pork Chops, or Chicken) From Sticking to the Pan

First things first, these steps below are all good practices and are the tips that everyone else on the blogosphere recommends for preventing fish or meat from sticking to the pan.

  1. Pat the fish fillet with a paper towel until well dried and season it with salt and whatever else you would like. Or better yet, leave it uncovered in the fridge for a day or so to dry the surface.
  2. Preheat a dry pan. I recommend stainless steel or ceramic non-toxic non-stick. Cast iron is great if it’s your designated fish pan (flavors can permeate) AND it is well seasoned. Teflon non-stick really are not meant to be heated while dry (plus, I hate how the coating flakes into food with wear and tear). Why preheat while dry? This keeps the oil from smoking and burning and creating off-flavors.
  3. Add 1-2 Tablespoons oil. I prefer oil with a high smoke point like canola.
  4. Gently add the fillet of fish and immediately give the pan a little shake when you put it in. If it sticks, don’t worry. NOTE: if the fish doesn’t sizzle when it hits the pan, the pan and oil are not hot enough. Test a corner before gently sliding the fillet in.
  5. At this point, you can turn the heat down to medium or medium-low to reduce the splattering of oil and slow the cooking down for more even cooking and a better sear.
  6. After at least 3-5 minutes or when the fillet is visibly cooked halfway through, using a fish spatula or thin metal spatula (this is key here), flip the fish over and repeat on the other side. If it sticks, give it 30 seconds and try again “it will release by itself when it’s ready.”

Indeed, these are all good practices for achieving the perfect sear. However, every chef knows that sometimes your fillet will still stick. It just will. And sometimes, the amount of time it takes for the fish to “release by itself when it’s ready” is longer than you want to cook it for. For example, sea scallops cooked medium. If cooked for 3-5 minutes on each side, the amount of time for the sear to be fully formed and release on its own, the scallop would be well done. If the fish (or steak, chicken, or pork) sticks after doing all of the steps above, or if your window for “perfect doneness” is about to pass you by, here is my no-fail secret tip to unsticking the fillet from the pan…

  • Remove the pan from the burner and let it sit for 1-3 minutes. Physically remove it, don’t just turn the heat off. The fish fillet will release from the pan when the pan cools and the skin and the sear will still be crispy (as long as you don’t forget about it for 10-15 minutes). The release will happen faster if you put the pan directly on a stainless steel or granite counter than if you put it on a drying rack or hot pad because the heat (or in this case, the reduction of heat) will be more quickly transferred. Factor this “quick release” carry-over cooking into your timing if you are trying to achieve a specific level of doneness other than well done.

When trying to sear a fillet of fish or other protein, it does takes time to achieve a good crust and a natural release from the pan. This lends itself to thicker cuts of meat and will be difficult to achieve with anything thinner than 1 inch (unless you want it cooked well-done).

OTHER TIPS FOR PAN FRYING FISH

  • If the fillet is long and thin or you are pan-frying whole small bone-in fish, press down on it with a spatular when you first put it in the pan and when you flip it. This will help it stay flat, and stay in contact with the oil for a good crust or sear.
  • If you are cooking small or thin pieces of fish, seafood, or other meat, dusting them with flour helps prevent sticking by forming a layer between the protein and the pan.
  • For small pieces of fish, seafood, or meat that you want to be cooked to below well-done (say medium or rare), make sure the pan is super hot.

Let me know in the comment section how this tip works for you and if you have any questions on how best to cook specific items, I am happy to share my suggestions there as well.

Filed Under: How to, Meat, Tips and Tricks, Uncategorized Tagged With: chicken, fish, pan fry, pork chop

Special Sauce! Cajun Remoulade Recipe

June 14, 2021

A simple summer salad of shrimp and cajun remoulade.

This Cajun Remoulade is one of those sauces that always found a way onto my menus at the restaurant, no matter what season. It’s the “special sauce” on my version of the Cajun Muffaletta sandwich, the perfect accompaniment to salmon cakes, and the secret ingredient in Cajun Shrimp Endive Spoons – a popular passed appetizer for wedding receptions. At home, I’ve served this sauce alongside fried catfish, boiled shrimp, and tossed it with cooked chicken for a quick chicken salad with a kick. If you like spicy, you’ll find a ton of uses for this sauce. And if you don’t like spicy – simply cut out the hot sauce, and you’ll still find a ton of uses for this sauce!!

Remou-what?

A Remoulade (re-MOO-lad) is essentially a cold mayo/aioli-based sauce with the addition of minced ingredients stirred in. Common ingredients that are often added to a remoulade are minced onion, pickles, pickled peppers, bell peppers, capers, olives, garlic, celery, horseradish, fresh herbs, and spices. A Tartar Sauce is a remoulade.

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Cajun Remoulade Sauce Recipe

5 Stars 4 Stars 3 Stars 2 Stars 1 Star No reviews
  • Author: Kara Taylor- Home Cooks Guide
  • Prep Time: 10 minutes
  • Total Time: 10 minutes
  • Yield: 2 cups 1x
  • Category: Sauce
  • Method: Stir
  • Cuisine: Cajun
  • Diet: Gluten Free
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Description

This versatile cold sauce with a kick compliments cold cuts, fried foods, seafood, and chicken.  As is, this recipe packs a punch, but you can dial down the heat by reducing the hot sauce and cajun spice.


Ingredients

Scale

1 1/2 cups mayonnaise

1 1/2 Tablespoons Dijon Mustard

1 1/2 Tablespoons Ketchup

1 1/2 Tablespoons Parsley, minced

2 1/4 Teaspoons Hot Sauce (like Tabasco or Crystal)

2 1/4 Teaspoons Lemon Juice

1 1/2 Garlic Cloves, minced

1/4 cup Shallot or Onion, minced

1 Celery Stalk, minced

1 Tablespoons Capers, minced

3/4 teaspoon Cajun Spice

1 teaspoon Paprika

Pinch of Ground Black Pepper

Salt to taste


Instructions

Mix all ingredients together.

Store refrigerated for up to 2 weeks.


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Filed Under: Condiments, Accoutrements, Pickled Things, Dairy Free, Entertaining, Gluten Free, Pantry and Prep Staples, Uncategorized Tagged With: aioli, Dairy Free, Fried Fish, mayo sauce, mayonnaise, sandwich sauce, vegetarian

Fancy Oven Rice Pilaf Recipe | For Catering and Entertaining

June 9, 2021

The links in these recipes are for products that I use and recommend.  

An easy-to-customize side dish for any occassion.

This toasty delicious baked rice side dish is versatile, economical, and easily adapted to accommodate allergens, dietary preferences, and regional cuisines.  The optional addition of carrot, dried fruit, nuts, different spices, and fresh chopped herbs make this dish visually appealing, fragrant, and fully customizable to any party menu.

This dish is especially handy for catering and dinner parties because it can be prepped up in the morning and stored at room temperature (instead of trying to cram it into an already packed fridge). An hour before the meal, simply mix the broth with the rice mixture in the hotel pan, cover it with foil, and pop it in a preheated oven. There’s no need to heat the broth first (unless you are trying to expedite the cooking time). This dish is pretty forgiving and stands up well to sitting in a chafing dish. Unlike other types of rice dishes, rice pilaf isn’t prone to mushiness or stickiness.

Try These Variations

Gluten Free – Sub out orzo/Israeli Cous Cous for rice

Dairy-Free – Use duck fat, olive oil or vegetable oil instead of butter

Vegetarian – Use veggie stock

Middle Eastern – Dried Fruit, pine nuts or almonds, caramelized onion, za’atar spice blend

Greek – Garlic, lemon zest, black pepper, rich chicken stock, fresh dill and parsely at the end.

French – garlic, black olives, herbs d’provence spice blend

Indian – Onion, carrots, peas and curry powder

Chicken and Rice Comfort Food – Onions, Carrots, Celery, Rich Chicken Broth, Butter or Duck Fat, Parsley/Sage/Thyme and Chicken Thighs nestled on top.

Catering Large Parties or Cooking at Home

This recipe makes one 2″ 1/2 hotel pan (at home that’s equivalent to a 4-quart casserole pan or brazier) and serves about 15 people.  Use the “Scale 2x” option to scale for a full-size hotel pan that serves approximately 30 people (or 8 quarts).

This recipe calls for baking the pilaf at 400 F for 1 hour (that’s on convection). This assumes the broth is mixed with the rice mixture while cold or at room temperature and the pilaf is cooked in a mid-grade home oven. If you are using a high-powered commercial oven – expect this dish to cook 15 minutes faster or reduce the heat to 375 F. You can cut the cooking time by about half by bringing the broth to a boil first.

The basic version of this recipe costs around 60 cents per serving (California Retail Prices 2021)! For professional caterers with access to wholesale pricing through their vendors and for Home Cooks living in less expensive states, you can expect the cost per serving to be even less!!

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Fancy Oven Pilaf | Catering Recipe

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  • Author: Kara Taylor- Home Cooks Guide
  • Prep Time: 20 minutes
  • Cook Time: 50-60
  • Total Time: 0 hours
  • Yield: 15 servings 1x
  • Category: Side
  • Method: Baking
  • Cuisine: World
  • Diet: Vegetarian
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Description

This toasty fragrant rice dish is the perfect party side dish and is easily adaptable for dairy-free, gluten-free, and vegan preferences.


Ingredients

Scale

2–4 Tablespoons Oil or Butter

2 1/2 cups Long grain rice (Basmati)

1 1/2 cups Orzo or Israeli Cous Cous or vermicelli*

1/2 cup Quinoa (red or black adds visual appeal) **

1 cup diced onion or shallot

1–2 Tablespoons minced garlic

salt to taste  

7 1/2 Flavorful, well-seasoned broth (chicken, veg or other)***

1–2 Cups Garnishes – dried fruit, pine nuts, walnuts, shaved almonds and/or diced carrot. (Optional)

Herbs and spices (Optional)

Chopped Fresh Herbs to sprinkle after cooking (Optional)


Instructions

  1. In a saute pan with oil or butter, toast the Orzo, Israeli Cous Cous or Vermicelli until golden brown all over.  Transfer the pasta to the hotel pan or oven-proof dish.
  2. Add a little more oil and saute the onion and garlic.  Add the rice and cook for another 3-5 minutes, stirring occasionally, or until well coated in oil with some grains of rice toasted.  Transfer this batch to the hotel pan. 
  3. Add any optional spices, herbs, vegetable ingredients, or dried fruit to the hotel pan.
  4. At this point you can either 1) cover the hotel pan with a layer of parchment and tin foil for transport and place the broth in a separate container. Or 2) Add the cold/room temp broth, cover the hotel pan with parchment and foil and bake at 400 F for 50 minutes.  Carefully lift a corner of the foil for a peak.  Watch out for the steam.  If it’s still pretty wet, cook for another 10 minutes. 
  5. Remove from the oven and keep covered for 5-10 minutes.  Fluff the rice up with a spatula or serving spoon.  Taste and season with salt and pepper if needed and sprinkle generously with fresh herbs. 
  6. Serve.

Notes

* To Make Gluten-Free – replace the orzo or Israeli Cous Cous with rice

** If you don’t have quinoa, you can replace this with rice.

*** The broth makes this dish.  I recommend good quality home-made broth that is heavily seasoned.

NOTE: If scaling this recipe up for a large party with multiple full-size hotel pans (say for 100 people) –  follow steps 1-2 but dump all the rice, quinoa, toasted orzo/couscous, and sauteed onion and garlic into a large mixing bowl.  Then transfer 10 cups of this mixture to each full-size hotel pan.

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Filed Under: Budget Bites (under $2), Busy Weeknight, Dairy Free, Entertaining, Kid Friendly, Sides and Salads, Uncategorized Tagged With: catering recipe, dinner party, Middle Eastern, orzo, vegan, vegetarian

Citrus Buttermilk Panna Cotta Is The Perfect Summer Dessert

May 15, 2021

The links in these recipes are for products that I use and recommend.  

Buttermilk Panna Cotta with fresh seasonal fruit, an easy no-bake summer dessert.

Panna Cotta is an easy, custard-like, no-bake, no-fuss dessert. Served with fresh seasonal fruit, it is perfect for summer. In Italian, Panna Cotta means “Cooked Cream”. Unlike other “cooked creams” such as creme brulee, flan, and pastry cream, Panna Cotta is thickened with gelatin instead of eggs and/or starches. The result is a delicate silky texture and a mild flavor that can be adapted for any occasion and requires only about 10 minutes of active prep (plus some passive time as it sets in the refrigerator). A basic Panna Cotta is made with less than 5 ingredients, and is gluten-free and egg-free for those with allergies.

The recipe below uses grapefruit zest, buttermilk, and cream. You can use any creamy base. Coconut cream Panna Cotta with lime zest served with fresh mango. Almond Milk Panna Cotta with Rose Blossoms. Milk and Honey Panna Cotta with Fresh Figs and Pistachio. Just some ideas. The possibilities are endless. Here’s the master ratio to use if you want to branch out and experiment:

Panna Cotta Master Ratio (1 cup yield)

1 cup creamy liquid

1/2 teaspoon powder gelatin dissolved in 1 Tablespoon Water

2 – 3 Tablespoons sugar

Using Gelatin

Powdered unflavored gelatin is one of those ingredients that most home cooks don’t have on hand. Here’s a pro tip for you. Go get some (unless you are a strict vegetarian, in which case, this post probably isn’t for you). It has so many uses in the kitchen not to mention the many health benefits of incorporating gelatin into your diet.

I add gelatin to hot savory liquids and broth to create instant Cheater Bone Broths. A little gelatin adds viscosity to pan sauces. It stabilizes whipped cream and meringues. I mix gelatin in with my coffee grounds when I brew coffee for an extra silky brew that is packed with collagen. You can make healthy fruit juice gummies and fruit juice jello, a fun kitchen project for kids. And you can turn creamy substances into Panna Cotta, a silky semi-solid custard that melts in your mouth.

For the most part, using gelatin is a no-fuss kitchen technique. However, there are a couple of things to keep in mind when making desserts (or savory aspics) that you want to hold a gel when chilled or at room temperature.

  • Bloom the gelatin by dissolving it in some water for 5-10 minutes prior to using it.
  • Don’t boil the gelatin.
  • If you want to reduce the sugar in a recipe you may need to increase the gelatin amount slightly as there will be more “available water” for the gelatin to bond with. You can always try the recipe as is and if it doesn’t gel, bloom a little more gelatin, rewarm the mixture and add the bloomed gelatin to it, then chill it all again.
  • Be aware that some alcohols, acidic ingredients, and fruit enzymes can mess with the gelatin’s ability to hold a gel. If you are troubleshooting or want to get creative and know what you can and can’t do, this is a great in-depth article about using gelatin in desserts from Serious Eats. 6 Unexpected Factors That Can Ruin Your Gelatin Desserts.
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Citrus Buttermilk Panna Cotta Recipe

5 Stars 4 Stars 3 Stars 2 Stars 1 Star No reviews
  • Author: Kara Taylor- Home Cooks Guide
  • Cook Time: 10 minutes
  • Total Time: 10 min + 3 hrs to set
  • Yield: 4–6 servings 1x
  • Category: Dessert
  • Method: Stove top
  • Cuisine: Italian
  • Diet: Gluten Free
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Description

This Panna Cotta is light and delicate and perfectly complements fresh seasonal fruit.  I use grapefruit zest in this recipe.  You could also use orange, lemon or lime zest or a combination of citrus.


Ingredients

Scale

1 3/4 cup heavy cream

1 1/4 cup buttermilk

1 teaspoon vanilla

zest of one grapefruit (or lemon, lime or orange)

1/2 cup sugar

1 1/2 teaspoons unflavored gelatin

3 Tablespoons water


Instructions

Bloom the gelatin in the water and set aside.

Bring the cream, sugar, vanilla, and zest to a low simmer. 

Remove from the heat. Add the bloomed gelatin and gently stir until dissolved (about 30 seconds to 1 minute). 

Slowly add the buttermilk while gently stirring.

Pour into your molds (see note below).

Transfer to the refrigerator to chill for 3 or more hours.  If you plan on chilling overnight or longer, gently press plastic wrap onto the surface of the panna cotta to prevent a film from forming.


Notes

This recipe batch makes 1 (8 inch pie pan size)- 6 (4 oz ramekins) molded Panna Cottas.

If you plan on serving this inverted onto a plate (as pictured in this post), lightly oil your molds so it doesn’t stick.  You may need to invert the mold over the plate and just wait a minute for it to slowly drop out.  Don’t rush or force it.

Did you make this recipe?

Tag @homecooksguide on Instagram and hashtag it #homecooksguide

Filed Under: Entertaining, Gluten Free, Kid Friendly, Sweets, Uncategorized Tagged With: citrus, Gluten Free, Grapefruit, Healthy, Labor Day

Just-Add-Water Cornmeal Pancake Mix. Perfect for Camping and Cooking with Kids!

May 12, 2021

The links in these recipes are for products that I use and recommend.  

Just-add-water Cornmeal Pancake Mix makes for an easy backcountry breakfast.

Cornmeal pancakes (aka Johnny Cakes) are a fun take on the regular run-of-the-mill pancakes and waffles. We eat a lot of pancakes and waffles at my house. I like to change it up. I developed this easy prep-ahead pancake mix for camping, busy weekday mornings, and for kids cooking in the kitchen. My 7-year-old can now whip these up for herself! Without needing me to get all the ingredients from the high shelves, and then leaving my kitchen a mess at the start of the day😩. This dry mix comes together in just a couple of minutes. When ready to cook up a batch of delicious cornmeal pancakes, simply add water at a ratio of 4 mix: 3 water plus or minus a little bit to your liking. I like cornmeal pancakes with brown butter, honey, and fresh fruit. That’s my favorite sweet combo for breakfast. I also like these savory, with green chilis and cheese for a midday snack or dinner side, or with a poached egg and hot sauce on top for breakfast.

There’s a couple of ingredients you may not have in your kitchen but are worth picking up. Dry Milk Powder is available in the baking section at the grocery store. It is worth having on hand. I use it in Sourdough bread sometimes. It is great for baking cakes and cupcakes. Use 1/4 cup dry milk powder and 1 cup of water for each cup of milk called for in a recipe. I also use Dry Milk in coffee or tea when I’m camping or backpacking. It’s used in my Backcountry Oatmeal Recipe. And if I’m desperate at home for some milk and haven’t had time to run to the store, I’ll mix up some milk from dry milk for the kid’s cereal (though my oldest is getting harder to trick this way). Bob’s Red Mill Egg Replacer is a non-egg-based powder that helps with thickening and richness and contains a little bit of baking soda for additional leavening power. If you want to make this recipe without purchasing this product, you could substitute a mixture of cornstarch and baking soda. I would do 3 T cornstarch and 1 T baking soda for an 8 cup batch. If you have an egg allergy at home, this recipe is egg-free.

VARIATIONS AND SERVING SUGGESTIONS:

IDEAS FOR SWEET PANCAKES OR WAFFLES

Stir into the mix: banana, mashed cooked pumpkin, apple sauce, cinnamon or pumpkin pie mix, citrus zest, lavender sugar, and/or chopped fresh fruit.

Top With jelly, honey, brown butter, whipped cream, sweetened creme fraiche, fresh fruit or preserved fruit, and/or chopped nuts.

For added richness – substitute water for buttermilk or milk. Add 1 tablespoon vegetable oil or melted butter or coconut oil per cup of dry mix.

Add sourdough starter – 1/2 cup sourdough starter discard for every 1 cup dry mix in addition to the water.

IDEAS FOR SAVORY PANCAKES

Stir into the mix: such as green onion, corn kernels, cooked peppers and onions, bacon or chopped ham, green chilis, and/or cheese.

Top With creme fraiche/ sour cream, butter, red or green enchilada sauce, poached eggs, and/ or hot sauce

For added richness – substitute water for buttermilk or milk. Add 1 tablespoon vegetable oil or melted butter or coconut oil (or bacon or duck fat) per cup of dry mix.

Add sourdough starter – 1/2 cup sourdough starter discard for every 1 cup dry mix in addition to the water.

COOKING TIPS

Once you add the water, let the mixture sit for 5-20 minutes for the cornmeal to soften up a bit. You don’t have to do this, but I like to if I have the time.

Heat the griddle or skillet (or waffle iron) before adding oil or butter. Once the skillet/griddle is hot, reduce the heat to medium.

Add the butter or oil just before adding the batter

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Just-Add-Water Cornmeal Pancake Mix

5 Stars 4 Stars 3 Stars 2 Stars 1 Star 5 from 1 review
  • Author: Kara Taylor- Home Cooks Guide
  • Prep Time: 5
  • Total Time: 5
  • Yield: 8 cups dry mix | 64 pancakes 1x
  • Category: Kitchen Staple
  • Method: mix
  • Cuisine: American
  • Diet: Vegetarian
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Description

This easy make-ahead pancake mix is perfect for camping, cooking with kids,  and busy mornings.  Simply add water, stir and cook!!


Ingredients

Scale

CORNMEAL PANCAKE DRY-MIX

3 cups fine cornmeal

3 cups all-purpose flour

1 1/2 cups dry milk powder

6 T Bob’s Red Mill Egg Replacer (Or 3 T Cornstarch + 1 T Baking Soda)

3/4 teaspoon salt

2 Tablespoons baking powder

6 Tablespoons sugar (optional)


Instructions

In a mixing bowl, combine all ingredients and stir until well combined.  Transfer to a 1/2 gallon jar, a large ziplock, or another container.  Store in a cool dry place for up to 6 months.

To Make the Pancakes

For 8 medium-sized (4-5 inch diameter) pancakes, mix 1 cup of dry mix with approximately 3/4 cups of water.  Whisk until there are no clumps.  Let this mixture sit for 5-20 minutes (if you have the time, not required).  You may want to add a little more water or dry mix to achieve your preferred consistency.

Preheat your griddle or skillet.  Once hot, add your butter or oil and pour in the batter. Reduce the heat to medium/low. When bubbles start to appear on the surface, flip the pancakes over and continue cooking a couple of minutes.


Notes

NOTE: I do not add sugar to my dry mix.  I think pancakes are sweet enough when smothered in honey, or maple syrup.  I also like having a versatile mix that can be made into savory things.  That being said, if you like a sweet pancake, I have recommended a sugar amount in the recipe as “optional”.

Did you make this recipe?

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Filed Under: Breakfast, Budget Bites (under $2), Camping Recipes, Kid Friendly, Pantry and Prep Staples, Sweets, Uncategorized Tagged With: camp cooking, camping breakfast, cooking with kids, cornmeal, johnny cakes, just add water, pancakes, prep ahead, shelf stable

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