Monday

Marshmallows

Fun to make for home or gifts and delicious in hot cocoa.

Ingredients:
1/4c powdered sugar
1/4c corn starch
vegetable oil (for pan)
2 - 1/4oz envelopes of gelatin
1.5c granulated sugar
2/3c light corn syrup

Sift together powdered sugar and corn starch and set aside.
Brush the bottom of an 8x8 inch pan with vegetable oil and then cut a piece of parchment, approximately 8x12 to cover the bottom and 2 sides with overhang. Place in pan and brush the parchment with oil too.
Dust the bottom of the pan with about half your sifted sugar/corn starch and set aside.

Fill stand mixing bowl with 1/2 cup cool water and sprinkle with gelatin.
Meanwhile, in a medium pot with a candy thermometer attached, combine granulated sugar, corn syrup and 1/2c water and bring to a boil over high heat.
Reduce heat to medium and cook until you reach soft ball stage at 240*. Remove from heat.

Turn on stand mixer and beat gelatin on low for about 30 seconds. Then slowly pour in sugar syrup down the side of the bowl with mixer running. After everything is poured in, increase mixer speed gradually (I found I needed 1-2 min at at least two higher speeds to get to the highest speed without splashing everywhere).
Beat on high until doubled in volume and thick and ribbony - about 12-15 minutes.
If adding extract, do so in the last 30 seconds or so. I used scant 1tsp peppermint extract.

Pour batter into prepared pan. Use wet fingers to smooth out surface and sprinkle remaining powdered sugar/corn starch over the top. Let rest, uncovered in a cool and dry place, for 4 hours or overnight.

Invert marshmallow to a cutting board. Use a pastry brush to brush off powdered sugar mix and reserve on cutting board for dipping the newly cut edges in, as well as dusting the knife before and between cuts.

Variations:
For coffee marshmallows, dissolve 6 Tbs instant espresso in 1c boiling water. Set aside to cool to room temp and then substitute where water is called for.

For chocolate marshmallows, mix 6 Tbs cocoa and 3 Tbs hot water until a smooth paste is formed. Add to gelatin mixture before adding syrup. Also add 1/4c cocoa powder to sifter when doing powdered sugar and corn starch.


From Country Living magazine

Spinach and Gruyere Breakfast Strata

This Cook's Illustrated recipe was our Christmas morning breakfast and looked lovely in my 8x8 Spode Christmas baker. Also you prep ahead and bake off the morning of, which I like.

Ingredients:
8-10 slices French or Italian break (1/2 inch thick) - I used a day old baguette
5 Tbs unsalted butter, softened
4 medium shallots, minced (~1/2c)
1 - 10oz package of frozen chopped spinach, thawed and squeezed dry
salt and pepper
1/2c Sauvignon Blanc
6oz Gruyere cheese, grated (~1.5c)
6 large eggs
1.75c half and half

Cut and dry bread either in an oven at 225* for 40min (flipping once halfway through) or leave out overnight. When cooled butter slices on one side with 2 Tbs butter and set aside.

Heat 2 Tbs butter in medium nonstick skillet over medium heat. Saute shallots until translucent, about 3min; add spinach and salt and pepper to taste and cook, stirring occasionally, until spinach and shallots are combined ~2min. Transfer to medium bowl and set aside.

Add wine to now empty skillet, increase heat to medium-high and simmer until reduced to 1/4cup, 2-3 min; set aside.

Butter 8x8 inch baking pan with remaining 1Tbs butter and arrange half the buttered bread slices, buttered side up, in a single layer in dish.
Sprinkle half of spinach mixture then 1/2c of grated cheese.
Use remaining bread to make next layer
Sprinkle with remaining spinach/shallot mix and another 1/2c of cheese.

Whisk eggs until combined, whisk in wine reduction, half and half, 1tsp salt and pepper to taste. Pour egg mixture over bread layers; cover surface flush with plastic wrap and weight down.
Refrigerate at least 1 hr or overnight.

Remove dish from fridge and let stand at room temp 20 min. Preheat oven to 325* with rack in the middle position.

Uncover strata and sprinkle with remaining cheese. Bake until both edges and center are uffed and edges have pulled away slightly from the sides of the dish, 50-55 minutes. Cool on wire rack 5 minutes before serving.


from Cooks Illustrated

Sunday

Slow Cooker Pork Ragu

This is a double recipe so there will be some to freeze for another dinner.

Ingredients
2 large carrots
2 medium onions
4 cloves garlic, chopped
4 Tbs tomato paste
2 tsp dried thyme
2 tsp dried oregano
2 - 14.5oz cans diced tomatoes
2.5-3 lbs pork shoulder, trimmed and cut in half (at least)
Fettuccini and parmesean for serving

Combine carrot, onion, garlic, tomato paste, herbs, 1.5tsp salt and 1/2 tsp pepper in slow cooker. Add tomatoes and their juices; add pork and turn to coat.

Cook on high for 5-6hrs or low for 7-8hrs, until pork is very tender. Pull pork from sauce and place on cutting board. Shred with 2 forks, discarding any fatty bits. Serve with fresh fettuccini and ample parmesean.

From Real Simple, Jan2013

Saturday

English Toffee

After some searching, this is the toffee recipe I landed on for the holidays. It takes some patience and lots of stirring, but the results are delicious!

Ingredients:
1lb granulated sugar
1lb butter, unsalted
3oz water
1tsp salt
1tsp vanilla extract
1lb chopped almonds
1.5lbs bulk dark chocolate, not chips

Combine sugar, butter, water and salt in a heavy saucepan. Over medium high heat, stirring constantly, bring to a boil. Using a candy thermometer, keep stirring constantly until temperature reaches 298 degrees. When it reaches temperature, take off heat, add vanilla and stir well to combine. Then immediately pour out on a silpat. Using an offset spatula, quickly spread to desired thickness. You can either leave as one big sheet or score break lines in the toffee as it begins to cool. To score, oil a chefs knife with canola or safflower oil and repeatedly mark lines in toffee as it cools. Edges will cool first, so be strategic.

When cool, wipe excess butter off the toffee with a paper towel. If you scored the toffee, break it up for dipping. If you left it as a sheet, you'll coat it entirely with chocolate, then break into shards.

To temper chocolate (the easy way), chop chocolate finely and put in a microwave safe mixing bowl. Reserve a good sized chunk of chocolate for the last step. Microwave in 15-20 sec bursts, stirring for 15-20 sec after each time. When the chocolate has only a few small lumps after a microwave burst, add the reserved chunk and stir for a minute or more. All the small lumps should melt and the chocolate should thicken. Your larger chunk will not, it's there to add the right crystals and cool your chocolate. Now your chocolate is tempered.

Either dip the individual pieces and lay on parchment or pour chocolate on the sheet of toffee and spread with an offset spatula. Sprinkle with chopped almonds and allow to cool completely. Reserve any leftover chocolate by pouring onto parchment to cook and then wrap in plastic.