Tuesday, May 22, 2012

Enchilada Casserole: Unintentional Faux Pas Ends in Serendipitous Entrée



If you’re like me, and I suppose like most people who like to cook, new cookbooks “call” you.  I’m always looking for that next great recipe.  A new cookbook always holds so much promise.  However, with the accessibility of the Internet, I have to admit that I’ve cut back on cookbook purchases.  With a click of my mouse, I can instantly have thirty recipe options for whatever dish I have in mind.  I’ve also downloaded the AllRecipes.com app on my iPhone.  Now all I have to do is input the ingredients I have on hand and multiple recipes are suggested.

So, I was pleasantly surprised when I learned that UpperProvidence Elementary School was compiling their own cookbook, entitled, “Planting the Seeds for Success.”  I was even more excited when school’s principal, Dr. Missie Patschke contacted me and told me a copy was waiting for me at the school.  TADITK blog followers will remember the post about the staff pie contest that Steve Bonetz and I judged last November.  In addition to great recipes from staff members and UPES classes, all of the recipes for the pies in the contest can be found in the cookbook.  If you’d like your own UPES cookbook, they are $10.  Call the school office at 610-705-6150, and tell them the Dad in the Kitchen sent you!

During my tenure in Spring-Ford, I had the opportunity to work with many of the staff members who submitted favorite recipes.  As I perused the pages of the cookbook, it was interesting to connect each recipe with the person who submitted it.  One recipe from school psychologist, Dr. Reesa Wurtz provides options.  Isn’t that what any good psychologist should do?  The recipes from Mark Matthews read as long narratives; pretty much that same way Mark conducts IEP meetings.  The recipes from Jean Lare are short and to the point, just the way Jean operates; naturally, because she’s doing twelve things at the same time.

Jean Lare is one of my favorite people.  She is the person that every principal daydreams about.  I’m not talking about having Jean on the teaching staff, although that would definitely be a plus.  I’m talking about having Jean as a parent in your school…which I am fortunate to say I did.  Jean is the most positive, most hard-working, supportive, and understanding parent with whom I’ve ever worked as a principal.  She is a possibility thinker and simply put, she makes things happen.  Often, Jean has a cadre of like-minded, supportive parents surrounding her, all pitching in to get the job done.

Under Jean’s leadership, the little summer enrichment program called “Cool School” that I started at Royersford Elementary School fourteen years ago, grew from just over 100 students to more than 600 children participating in scores of fun summer classes.  (Registration for Cool School 2012 is open now, and Early Bird pricing is available until June 3.  Click here to register!)

The following recipe from the UPES cookbook is a Lare family favorite.  It comes from the days when Jean’s family lived in Texas.  For many years, the Rotelle canned tomatoes called for in the recipe would be loaded into suitcases and “exported” to Pennsylvania by any visiting family member.  Fortunately, you can get them in our area now, and Wegman’s carries them.

I do have to confess that I messed up Jean’s original recipe.  I was supposed to keep the browned ground beef and onions, and the combined Cream of Chicken soup and Rotelle tomatoes separate.  Instead, not following directions, (the result of breaking the first kitchen commandment of not reading the whole recipe before lifting a spoon), I mixed all four ingredients together.  Jean had informed me that the recipe was “not pretty, but very good.”  I was afraid that now I had ruined the “very good” part.  Such was not the case.  The resulting casserole was fantastic, and Jean said, “Yours is even prettier than mine!”  Wow!  So, it’s just like two recipes in one.  You have choices.  Could have come from a psychologist.

ENCHILADA CASSEROLE
(click on any image to enlarge it)



Will it all fit?
Ingredients:
2 packages of Corn Tortillas (approx. 12-16)
1 or 2 15 oz. cans Chili or Kidney Beans, drained
1½ lbs. Velveeta Cheese (I used shredded Mexican mix)
2 cans Rotelle Tomatoes
2 cans Cream of Chicken condensed soup
2 lbs. ground beef
1 medium onion, chopped
2 Tablespoons Chili Powder
Cayenne Pepper
Garlic Powder

Directions:
Brown the ground beef and sauté the onion together.  I also added a small can of mild green chilies to Jean's recipe.  Set aside.  (You can see I didn’t get very far until I messed up!)  

Combine the Cream of Chicken soup and the Rotelle tomatoes, (undrained), and heat on medium heat.  Set aside.  Here's what it looks like when all four ingredients are combined.

Line a large, deep (at least 2”) lasagna or baking dish with half of the corn tortillas.  (I used non-stick cooking spray on the dish before lining with the tortillas.)  The tortillas will overlap.

Put the meat and onion mixture on top of the tortillas.  (If you decide to combine all four of the ingredients, (as I did), put about half of the mixture on the tortillas at this point.)  

Sprinkle with approximately ½ teaspoon garlic powder and about ¼ teaspoon of cayenne pepper.  (You may want to add more to suit your own taste.  Keep in mind that the Rotelle tomatoes pack a little “heat” as do the chili beans.)  Next, sprinkle the 2 Tablespoons of chili powder on top, less if it’s spicy.

Add the beans (drained) as a layer.  Jean recommends chili beans, as they have added spices.  I used two cans, and it wasn’t too many.  Sprinkle the top of the beans with more garlic powder and cayenne pepper.  

Lay the Velveeta cheese, or sprinkle the shredded cheese evenly over the entire top.

Lay the other half of the corn tortillas over the cheese layer, 

and pour the soup and tomato mixture, (or the other half of the combined mixture) over the top.

For my “version,” I used 1 lb. of the shredded cheese in the casserole and then sprinkled the other half pound on top when there was only about ten minutes baking time left.

The casserole should be baked at 375° for 45 minutes, covered with foil.  If adding cheese during the last 10 minutes, remove the foil and leave it off as the cheese melts.

This dish will serve better if you can allow it to sit for approximately 15 minutes.  It also keeps well, and leftovers microwave well.

Enjoy!

Saturday, May 12, 2012

Happy Mother's Day with a Chocolate Peanut Butter Banana Smoothie!



In case I forgot to mention it in previous posts, I actually do have the best mother in the world.  Despite the fact that she and my father used Dr. Spock’s Baby and Child Care book, (Remember the controversy over that one?), my childhood was thankfully “normal.”  In many ways, my mother was ahead of the curve with the ways in which she stimulated our little developing brains.  We probably watched too much TV, but then again, how much television could you watch with only three channels: 3, 6 & 10?  When channel 12 went on the air, it was like we hit the lottery.

Mom took care of the “book learning” department, and encouraged us to read, write, and be creative.  She certainly set the example, always writing, serving as a correspondent for The Pottstown Mercury for more than thirty years.  She was always reading a book.  Unfortunately, her ability in the area of music, (she was an accompanist at Parker Ford Church for almost sixty years), did not rub off on us.  Dad was into a myriad of other interests, including sports, hunting & fishing, and things like woodworking, ham radio, and photography (he had his own darkroom).  They complemented each other perfectly.  I’m not sure how many people can say they never heard their parents argue, but I’m one of them.  (My own kids can’t make that claim.)

Mom is the oldest of four sisters whose parents died in their forties.  My mother was just out of high school.  The youngest, Frankie, was in eighth grade.  My mother became the breadwinner for the sisters and they had a chaperone of sorts move in with them.  Needless to say, the Kugler sisters are very close.  My mother has been a consistent diary writer and I’ve read some accounts about my dad coming on the scene, initially helping with mowing the grass and fixing things for the sisters.  I like knowing that about my dad.

In recent years, Mom has experienced some TIA’s, or “mini-strokes” as they are called.  Fortunately, it has only affected her short-term memory, and Mom can function almost normally otherwise.  She just can’t remember what we just talked about, or what she came to the kitchen for, or where she put her glasses.  (Sounds like most of us, doesn’t it?)  When the questions she asks are repeated, I try to answer them like they’re being asked for the very first time.  I do admit that I sometimes change the answers just to entertain myself.

“What are you doing now that you’re retired?”

“Well, I thought I’d do things that I’ve never done before.”

“That’s nice.”

“Like robbing a bank.”

“Well, I can’t support that!”

She has never lost her sense of humor.  She also always has a crossword puzzle close by, and after reading the front page headlines and the obituaries, completing the crossword puzzle (in pen!) is next on her agenda.

Thanks for everything, Mom!  You really are the best!

In honor of my mother, I’m naming this smoothie recipe for her.  It’s the "Kugler Special."

“Kugler Special” Smoothie
(Chocolate Peanut Butter Banana)


Ingredients:
1 cup milk
4 Tablespoons hot cocoa mix
2 Tablespoons creamy peanut butter
1 medium banana
¾ cup vanilla ice cream

Directions:
Blend the mixture each time you add an ingredient.  This cannot be beat!  Well, it can be blended…but not beat!  This smoothie is not for the faint of heart.  Check out the calorie count:

1 cup milk - 122 calories
4 Tablespoons hot cocoa mix - 140 calories
2 Tablespoons creamy peanut butter - 190 calories
1 medium banana - 200 calories
¾ cup vanilla ice cream - 210 calories
TOTAL - 862 calories

Oh, what the heck.  It's Mother's Day!  Take your time drinking it, as it will want to slide down quickly.  Savor the taste!

Happy Mother’s Day!  Enjoy!


Friday, May 4, 2012

Peach Crumble



I know.  It’s not peach season, but for whatever reason, I had a hankering for peach cobbler or crisp this week.  It probably had something to do with my visit to Royersford Elementary’s Career Day last week.  As a cooking blogger (my "career"), I decided to have the students create fruit smoothie recipes.  I packed up a produce section's worth of assorted fruit.  One of the ingredients I selected was frozen peaches.  Not only did the picture on the package look inviting, but that peach taste whetted my appetite for more.

Fresh peaches were not an option at this time of year, so I bought several jars of canned peaches.  At that point, I didn’t even have a recipe, but knew what I wanted.  I toyed with the idea of using my new cast iron Dutch oven to make peach cobbler.  I decided that the gratification with that route would be too delayed, what with making a fire and using the coals to bake it.  (A Dutch oven recipe is in the future, so stay tuned.)

A search online revealed a variety of cobbler and crisp recipes.  Cobbler is traditionally made with a wetter, biscuit-type dough baked on top of the peaches, as in this previous post:  Peach Cobbler.  Crisp is made with crumbs baked on top.  Then I started to find peach crumble recipes.  So what’s a crumble?

According to the O Chef website (“Answers to life’s vexing cooking questions”), a crumble is “a British dessert in which raw fruit is topped with a crumbly pastry mixture and baked.”  There is an indication that crumbles are like crisps, but not as rich.  That may be so, but this crumble recipe calls for an entire stick of butter.  Feel free to cut that back to 6 Tablespoons.

The recipe also calls for a one-eighth teaspoon of ground cloves.  If you don’t like cloves, leave it out.  Naturally, peach crumble is going to be better served warm with a generous scoop of vanilla ice cream on top.

PEACH CRUMBLE
(click on any image to enlarge)


Ingredients:
1 can/jar of canned peaches (approx. 24.5 oz.), drained
1 teaspoon lemon juice

For the topping:
½ cup flour
½ cup rolled oats
½ cup brown sugar
¼ teaspoon ground nutmeg
¼ teaspoon salt
½ teaspoon ground cinnamon
1/8 teaspoon ground cloves
½ cup (1 stick) butter

Directions:
Drain peaches and placed in the bottom of an 8”x8” or equivalent greased baking pan/dish.  Sprinkle lemon juice over peaches.

Mix dry ingredients together.  

Using a pastry blender, blend in the cold butter until mixture is uniformly crumby.  If you don’t have a pastry blender, just use a fork. 

Evenly sprinkle the crumb mixture over the top of the peaches.  Some crumble recipes stipulate patting the mixture down on top of the peaches.  I chose not to, and it was fine.  Bake at 350° for 45 minutes.

Don’t try to serve like a piece of cake.  Allow the peaches to jumble together with the crumble.  It is so good!

Enjoy!

Friday, April 27, 2012

A Smoo-o-o-o-th Return to Royersford Elementary


Group One  (*Photo credits, see below)
Click on any image to enlarge it
What I had previously suspected was confirmed today.  What I most miss about being an elementary principal is the kids.  Not only that, but everyone should have a place where they're treated like a rock star.

Today was Career Day for the third and fourth graders at the borough school where I was principal for twenty-five years before retiring in 2010.  Guidance counselor, Ginny Prevost, has organized an annual Career Day for about ten years at the school.  Community members, including many moms and dads, come into the classrooms to share information about their occupations.  It’s a great chance to widen the horizons of the boys and girls, many of whom up until this point have limited their future aspirations to being a fireman or a professional athlete.

Cassandra was was first chef-assistant
I was invited back not as a retired principal, or even as a pastor, but as a cooking blogger, which by the way, has yet to provide me with any financial gain.  However, if the ideal job is one you would do for free, then blogging about cooking is for me.  My dad was a baker, so the cooking part is understandable.  Many people do not know that my mother, Gladys was a correspondent for The Pottstown Mercury for more than thirty years.  That would account for the journalistic side of food blogging.

"The moment of truth"
I shared my year-long experience of starting a cooking blog with the children, projecting my blog onto a screen in the classroom and introducing them to some of the statistics that are provided to assist you with tailoring your blog to your audience.  I also told them about related blog experiences such as learning about food photography and taking the food safety certification course, (the certificate for which arrived in the mail on the day I returned home from Career Day!)

Look at that smile as the honey goes in!
After my spiel about blogging, the real fun began.  I referred to a blog post from last summer entitled, "Refreshing Summer Beverages,” and announced that we would be making smoothies.  Not just any smoothies, mind you.  The children in each group would be inventing the recipes that I would include in this post.  (The excitement and enthusiasm in the room was palpable!)

Group Two - More happy "customers"

Madison was chef-for-a-day #2
I selected a helper from each group, outfitted them with the proper “chef gear,” and put them to work.  There was only one momentary lag when one third grader told me she wasn’t allowed to use a knife.  My host, fourth grade teacher Mrs. Laura Clark fortunately had a plastic one in her pocketbook!  (What ever happened to zero tolerance?)




After reviewing the ingredients that I had on hand, each group selected a fresh fruit item, a frozen fruit, and a liquid.  After initial blending with some ice cubes, the moment of truth came:  The Taste Test.  Was it sweet enough?

Chef Marissa's group (#3) added Cool Whip to their ingredients





To no surprise, each groups “chef-for-a-day” indicated that more sweetness was needed, (as any self-respecting elementary student would), and honey or agave was added.  Everyone then got to share in tasting their group’s creation.  Passing out a recipe sheet and business cards with the There’s a Dad in the Kitchen web address on them, rounded out the presentation.  All that in a half hour.  Yes!  Nailed it…and not once, but three times.  I still had it!

A little extra "help" in the form of some agave syrup
It was so good to be “back in the saddle” where I spent a total of thirty-five years teaching and “principaling.”  Some people asked me if it “felt weird.”  My response?  It was just like riding a bike.  In fact, it would have felt weird not to have returned.

Group Three
Here are the three on-the-spot-invented recipes by the students of Royersford Elementary School.  Basic smoothie directions follow all three ingredient lists.  All ingredients are estimated.  (It’s pretty hard to wreck a smoothie!)  Try them, you’ll like them…and experiment with your own!


RES CAREER DAY SMOOTHIE RECIPES


Group One – “Kiwi Strawberry-Banana Smoothie”
Ingredients:
½ banana, sliced
1 kiwi, peeled and sliced
3-5 strawberries, cored and halved
¾ cup of milk
1½ cups ice cubes (approx.)
2-3 Tablespoons honey

Group Two – “Cranberry Fruit Shake”
Ingredients:
½ banana
½ cup red raspberries
1 cup cranberry juice
1 cup Cool Whip®
2 Tablespoons agave (sweetener)
1½ cups ice cubes (approx.)
¼ cup cold water

Group Three – “Very Berry Smoothie”
Ingredients:
3-4 strawberries, cored and halved
½ cup frozen blueberries
½ cup frozen red raspberries
¾ - 1 cup orange juice
1 cup Cool Whip®
2 Tablespoons agave (sweetener)
1-2 cups ice cubes


Basic Smoothie directions:

  1. Add the liquid you’re using to the blender first
  2. Add the fresh and frozen fruit and blend
  3. Add any Cool Whip®, yogurt, or ice cream and the ice cubes, blending until the ice cubes are “pulverized”
  4. If mixture is too thick (to even blend fully), add some more liquid or water.  You may have to turn off the blender, stir with a spatula, and blend some more.

Enjoy!

*All photos taken by Mrs. Laura Clark and Mrs. Dina Preston, fourth grade teachers at Royersford Elementary School

Sunday, April 22, 2012

Plain & Simple Beef Stew




“It’s time to go down into the cave house and get some potatoes, carrots and other root vegetables and make a beef stew.”

That’s a statement that you don’t hear too often today.  Not many root cellars survive today and most people have no idea what one is.  A large root cellar was a part of the Latshaw Farm on Wall Street in Spring City.  Aunt Sara and Uncle Russell always referred to it as the “cave house.”  In their backyard was a mound of earth with two terracotta pipes protruding from the top.  If you shouted down those pipes you could make all kinds of echo-ey ghoulish sounds.  It was great fun to take an unsuspecting cousin and have them listen for the “monster” at one pipe while you provided the sound effects at the other.

The cave house was accessed through an adjacent shed.  Behind a wooden door was a full flight of stairs taking you down into the earth.  A single clear incandescent light bulb illuminated the storage room at the bottom of the steps.  It was a tubular dome-shaped room with a concrete floor and plastered walls and ceiling.  The walls were lined with wooden benches upon which were peach baskets of potatoes, apples, turnips as well as any other fall-harvested vegetables that kept well in the constant 54° temperature.  It was a great place to explore on a hot summer afternoon.

Beef was one of Aunt Sara’s favorite foods.  Family dinners she hosted almost always included beef as the main course.  Each year, she would have a steer butchered and the labeled packages wrapped in white butcher paper would be stacked in her chest freezer.  The beef she served was always tender, moist, and flavorful.

This version of beef stew is a compilation of a number of recipes I’ve used over the years, and is probably one of the simplest to prepare.  It’s not a dish that you can have on the table in 20 minutes.  While the actual prep and hands-on cooking time takes less than 20 minutes, allowing beef stew to simmer for a couple of hours will make all the difference.

BEEF STEW
(click on any image to enlarge it)

Ingredients:
1½ - 2 lbs. stew beef
1-2 Tablespoons cooking oil (olive, grape seed, or canola)
2 medium onions, chopped
1/3 cup all-purpose flour
½ teaspoon Kosher salt (add more, to taste)
¼ teaspoon ground black pepper (add more, to taste)
1 teaspoon dried basil
½ teaspoon dried rosemary leaves
3 bay leaves
2 Tablespoons dried parsley flakes
5 fresh plum tomatoes, peeled, de-seeded, & chopped, or 2 cans diced tomatoes
5 large carrots, peeled, cut in 1” to 1½” pieces
6 medium potatoes, peeled, cut into 1½” to 2” pieces
2 cans sliced mushrooms
3 cans beef broth (approx. 46 oz.)

Directions:
Begin to brown the beef cubes in the oil over medium heat.

Chop the onions and add to the beef, along with the salt and pepper.

When the onions begin to soften and the beef has mostly browned, add the flour and incorporate it until it is moistened and fairly smooth.  Most of it will stick to the beef cubes.

Add the beef broth and diced tomatoes and bring up to a simmer, (just below a boil).  Allowing the stew to simmer for two hours will allow the flavors to blend and will tenderize the meat.

Prepare the potatoes and carrots by peeling and cutting them into larger, stew-size chunks.  Add them to the stew when ready, along with the remaining ingredients.  Stir occasionally, and as the liquid evaporates, add water to maintain the original level.  Keep the pot covered will slow evaporation.

Crusty bread with butter is a great complement to a one-pot meal like beef stew.  I’d be interested to hear about your favorite beef stew recipes.  Send them to me at drwillauer@gmail.com.

Enjoy!

Tuesday, April 17, 2012

I'm Certified! Taking the ServSafe Food Safety Course



I said, “I’m certified,” not, “I’m certifiable!”

You’d think that educators would love learning; that they would anticipate and just quiver all over for any chance to get into a classroom and learn.  Such is not the case.  Trust me.  I know from experience that educators make some of the most challenging students on the face of the planet.  Most would rather teach than be taught.

And yet…continuing education is required of all who work in education, (as it should be).  Everyone from superintendents to classroom assistants are responsible for keeping “up” with the latest trends, techniques, and methods.  It’s just that we make horrible students.  As a whole, we’re critical, and we get easily bored.  We’re also absolutely atrocious at following directions.  Sad, but true.

After I earned my Masters degree from West Chester University, I decided to take some time off.  It was short-lived.  For most teachers there are only two ways to earn more money.  One is to gain experience.  The longer you’ve been teaching the higher step you reach on the salary scale.  The other way is to increase your level of education.  After earning a Masters degree, you can continue to advance up to and including 30 additional post-graduate credits.  As I was helping to support a young family, it was back to the classroom for me, (in addition to holding down summer jobs during the years I was in the classroom).

After earning thirty additional credits, I decided to take a break.  It was short-lived.  Many colleagues were encouraging me to become a principal; not something I had any desire to do.  Idealistic as it may sound, I really had to convince myself that I would make more of a positive impact on kids as an administrator than I would if I stayed in the classroom.

It was back to the classroom for me at the University of Pennsylvania to earn my principal’s certification.

One day, shortly after starting as principal at Royersford Elementary, I was receiving an annual performance review from Dr. Edwin Coyle, then superintendent at Spring-Ford.  “I’d like you to go back for your doctorate,” he told me.

“Why should I do that?” I asked.

“In case you ever have the opportunity for a central office position,” was his reasoning.

“Don’t take this personally, Dr. Coyle,” I said, without totally thinking about what I was saying, “but I don’t want to be like you.”

He took it well.  What I meant was that I knew that I was exactly where I was supposed to be.  “Progressing” beyond being a principal was not in my plans, and being assigned to the central office certainly wasn’t in my blood.  I would have “died” without daily contact with students, and for twenty-five years proudly served as principal of Royersford Elementary School.  Even though I retired only two years ago, it seems like a lifetime since I “administered.,” but it was my current interests and endeavors that recently took me back to the classroom.

As I write blog posts, I certainly don’t want to mislead or misinform, and now that I’m cooking more frequently for groups at Parker Ford Church, I want to make certain that food safety is a top priority.

Credit:  ServSafe Essentials, National

Restaurant Association © 2008, 2010
There’s no recipe this week, but I would like to tell you about the food safety course that I completed.  It’s called the ServSafe Food Safety Manager’s Certification course and it’s offered at community colleges in the area.  It’s also offered by Paster Training, Inc. which is located in Gilbertsville, Pennsylvania.  I registered online and a book for the course was shipped directly to me within two days.  Food safety certification requires sixteen hours of training.  The first eight result from completion of the course manual.  The second eight hours accrue as a result of a day-long classroom experience.  The day in the training course culminates in taking a 90 question multiple choice examination.  75% is the minimum required to earn certification, although someone at the church told me that he didn’t want anyone cooking for him who only earned a 75%!  I earned a 97% missing items under the Foods and the Facilities categories.  The remaining eight question categories were all 100%’s.

I have to tell you that if you’re squeamish, don’t take the course.  The section on food borne pathogens is disconcerting and sobering.  Everyone in the course had second thoughts about where they ate lunch during the class’s midday break.

I do want to pass several areas of importance onto you.  First, get a kitchen thermometer.  They are inexpensive and very necessary if you want the food you prepare to be as safe as possible.  The first use of a thermometer is to determine doneness when cooking meat.  It helps to avoid over-cooking.  More importantly, use the thermometer to keep food safe.  There is a minimum temperature which should be reached when cooking meats.  (See chart at end of post.)  When serving or holding food, cold items should be kept at 41°F or colder.  Hot food should be kept at 135°F or hotter.  If you have to serve food without accommodations to chill cold items or heat hot food choices, you can safely allow cold food to sit for four hours, or six hours for hot food.  Before reaching those time constraints, either reheat (or re-chill) the food or throw it out.  Reheating something?  Heat it to 165°.  In an upcoming post, I’ll tell you about the importance of proper chilling of food after cooking/serving when you’re getting ready to store it.

Credit:  ServSafe Essentials, National Restaurant
Association, © 2008, 2010 
Another emphasis of the course was the importance of hand washing.  Doing so prevents cross-contamination, (raw meat to ready-to-eat food, for example), and also prevents the spread of germs and illness.  It is important to use hot water with soap and scrub your hands for a minimum of 15-20 seconds, drying them with a single-use paper towel.  Get a load of this:  We learned that anti-bacterial washes aren’t that much more effective than good old hand washing.  Most say they kill 99.9% of germs, but there are so many billions of germs that the .1% is still pretty formidable.  (.1% of one billion is a million, for Pete’s sake!)  And with that happy thought, I’ll leave you.  I’ll have a (safe) recipe for you next week!

Enjoy!



Click to enlarge:
Click to enlarge.  Credit:  ServSafe Essentials, National Restaurant Association,  © 2008, 2010

Wednesday, April 4, 2012

Mom's Peanut Butter Easter Eggs



We could count on the homemade peanut butter Easter eggs every year.  Just like clockwork, a one-pound white cardboard box of melt-in-your-mouth goodness appeared for each member of the family.  Everyone got their own, with their name written in the upper right-hand corner.  My mother-in-law, Rosemary Lebegern, made sure that everyone was treated equally, and may God save your soul if you “borrowed” any from someone else’s box.

For the first time since “Mom” passed away in 2007, I got her recipe out and read it.  Not only did she provide the recipe for peanut butter eggs, but also butter cream and peanut butter “krackle” eggs, made with Rice Krispies. 

On the back of the card are directions for making the chocolate coating.  Rosemary indicated that she bought the necessary chocolate wafers at Edwards Freeman Nut Company in Conshohocken, indicating that the chocolate was already tempered and that adding paraffin was also not needed.  In typical “Mom” fashion, she added a note, “Ask them if you have any questions.  They will tell you.”

Edwards-Freeman Nut Company
Edwards Freeman Nut Company is worth the drive.  A visit is like going back in time.  Located at 441 East Hector Street in Conshohocken, Pennsylvania, the store’s interior is lined with shelves with cubbies that are filled with every type of candy you can imagine.  

A fraction of what you'll find.
The candy you’ll find ranges from old-fashioned favorites right up through the most recent candy fads.  They even have candy-coated insects!  

Candy-coated insects!
The Easter candy was out in full force and I had no trouble finding family favorites as well as some new items to try.  Mercken’s Chocolate Wafers, for melting and dipping the peanut butter eggs, were featured prominently, and I bought 3 lbs.  Until all was said and done, I spent more than $80.  I even bought some bottles of hot sauce.  (As your kids get older, what goes into their Easter baskets gets revised.)

I was glad that I didn’t have to add wax to the chocolate to make the coating.  Something just seems wrong about that.  When I was recently in another store, I overheard two women talking about adding paraffin to chocolate.  I’m guessing it has something to do with making the chocolate less likely to melt in your hands.  The one woman’s son saw the wax going in and he hasn’t eaten a peanut butter egg since.  (If only that would work in my house!)

MOM’S PEANUT BUTTER EASTER EGGS

Ingredients:
1 cup butter (2 sticks)
1¼ cups peanut butter
1 lb. confectioner’s sugar

For chocolate:
1 lb. tempered chocolate wafers (I used Mercken’s)

Directions:
Heat the butter in a saucepan over medium low heat until melted.  Add in the peanut butter.  Make certain that you measure the peanut butter by volume.  It is often sold by weight.  Stir until smooth, then remove from heat.  At this point, I found it helpful to transfer the mixture to a large bowl, but if your saucepan is large enough you can add the sugar without using a bowl.

Add the sugar about one-fourth at a time and incorporate it completely.  Use a wooden spoon at first.  As the mixture cools, you can knead it with your hands.  Cool the mixture for at least one hour in the refrigerator.

To melt the chocolate wafers, place them in a microwaveable glass bowl and heat on high power for one minute.  Stir.  Heat for an additional minute.  If all of the wafers are not fully melted, continue microwaving 20 seconds at a time.

Begin to form “eggs” from the peanut butter mixture.  The size and shape is your choice.  My mother-in-law’s eggs were always uniform in size and shape.  I started with smaller, rounder shapes and they morphed into flattened peanut butter balls.  A little experimenting is probably in order.  Try to form the eggs quickly so that the heat from your hands doesn’t soften the “eggs” too much.  If the eggs are too soft they will change shape.  You also want the surface to be a smooth as possible.

Rather than dip the peanut butter eggs directly into the melted chocolate, coat your fork with chocolate, then place an “egg” on the fork.  Use a spoon to ladle the chocolate over the egg until covered.  Gently tap the fork on the edge of the bowl.  This will speed the dripping of the chocolate and evenly distribute the chocolate coating.


Not exactly "pretty," (I'm learning), but really good!
Scrape the bottom of the fork on the edge of the bowl and gingerly transfer the coated egg to a tray lined with waxed paper.  The weight of the egg and the “lubrication” from the chocolate should allow the egg to gracefully slide onto the waxed paper.  This takes a little practice and no small amount of finessing.

Candy makers use a special two-tined fork that has wire-like tines.  Another trick is to use a plastic fork with the middle tines removed.  (I didn’t figure this out until after my first batch.)

Allow chocolate to harden and store in covered containers in a cool place.  Finished peanut butter eggs can be refrigerated or frozen, and they keep well.  But if your house is like mine…not for long!

Enjoy, and have a blessed Easter.  He is risen!