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Posts Tagged ‘breakfast’

Jun
27

Breads, The Farmhouse Table

Make Quick Mix! Have an endless array of biscuits, muffins, and pancakes at your fingertips, as fast and easy as with a storebought baking mix (like Bisquick, for example), only better because it’s homemade. You know how I love one recipe that can do a thousand things, like my Hot, Crusty French Bread or Grandmother Bread. Quick Mix is the quick bread solution.

Here’s how!

How to Make Quick Mix:

5 cups all-purpose flour (may subsitute 1-2 cups whole grain flour as part of the mix)
1/4 cup sugar
1/4 cup baking powder
1 1/4 teaspoons cream of tartar
1 teaspoon salt

Combine in a large bowl. (I use a large spoon and a whisk to blend the ingredients well.) I like to make this mix in 5 cup batches because that fits easily into my mixing bowls, but you can double, triple, and so on to make a large quantity at once. Three Quick Mix 5-cup batches will fit into one gallon-size baggie for storage. Use a large scoop to fill the baggie.





Store as you would flour, in an airtight container, on your pantry shelf. If you expect to be storing it for an extended period (months), you may want to put the baggie in the fridge or freezer. Otherwise don’t worry about it.

How to Make Basic Quick Mix Biscuits:

Per 1 cup of Quick Mix used, add-
1/4 cup shortening or butter
1/3 cup milk or buttermilk

Using a pastry cutter, cut in the shortening before adding the milk, until mixture resembles coarse crumbs. (Just as you would when preparing pie crust-using a pastry cutter for biscuits is one of my secrets to perfect biscuits!) Add the milk and knead your biscuit dough. (Another secret to great biscuits-knead the dough lightly, a few times, adding a pinch of flour if needed to keep dough from sticking to your hands.) Roll out on a floured surface and cut into shapes-circles or triangles are my favorites). Bake at 450-degrees for 10-12 minutes. (Makes approximately 6 biscuits per recipe using 1 cup of mix-double, triple, as needed. I usually make at least a double recipe to feed my hungry horde.)

You can use either milk or buttermilk, and either shortening or butter (or even lard, yes, I said LARD, there’s some in my fridge RIGHT NOW and when I’m in an indulgent mood, I use it, it’s good, there’s a reason our grandmas made great biscuits). And that is just the beginning! Oh, the creations you can bake with this one recipe!

Based on the 1-cup mix recipe, bake garlic-cheese biscuits (add 3/4 cup grated cheese of your choice and one pressed garlic clove, or even two, or use a teaspoon of garlic powder).

Garden biscuits (add 3/4 cup finely chopped veggies of your choice).

Herb biscuits (add 1/4 cup fresh herbs or a tablespoon dried herbs).

Hot or mild pepper biscuits (add 3/4 cup chopped jalapenos or other peppers).

Bacon or sausage biscuits (add 3/4 cup cooked, crumbled bacon or sausage-make bacon or sausage cheese biscuits! cut the bacon/sausage to 1/2 cup and add 1/2 cup cheese).

As you use Quick Mix, adjust the quantities of the add-ins to suit yourself. Mix and match any and all of the ideas above and come up with new ones! The world is your biscuit! You can do anything with these biscuits, including add three tablespoons of sugar and 3/4 cup fruit or berries to make sweet biscuits.

Have a picky eater in the family? Make your Quick Mix in 1-cup batches and make biscuits to suit everyone. Or awe and amaze company with several different types of biscuits. They’ll wonder, “How can she make so many different kinds of biscuits? Did she slave all day?” They don’t have to know you have Quick Mix!

Could one biscuit mix possibly do more? Yes, yes, it can!

How to make Basic Quick Mix Muffins:

Per 1 cup of Quick Mix used, add-
3 tablespoons sugar
1 egg
1/3 cup milk
2 tablespoons oil

Add sugar, egg, milk, and oil all at once. Stir just till moistened (batter should be lumpy). Fill muffin cups 2/3 full. Bake at 400-degrees approximately 15 minutes. Makes 8-10 muffins.

But wait, there’s more!

Per 1-cup batch, add 3/4 cup blueberries or other berries of your choice for berry muffins. (Fold gently into mixed batter just before filling muffin cups.)

Add 1/2 cup mashed banana and 1/4 cup chopped nuts for banana-nut muffins.

Add 1/4 cup pureed pumpkin, 1/2 teaspoon ground cinnamon, 1/2 teaspoon ground nutmeg, and 1/4 cup chopped nuts for spicy pumpkin muffins.

Use only 3/4 cup mix and add 1/4 cup oatmeal for oatmeal muffins.

For cheese and sausage or bacon muffins, leave out the 3 tablespoons sugar and add 1/2 cup shredded cheese and 1/2 crumbled sausage or bacon.

Again, the varieties are endless, limited only by your imagination and your tastebuds. Get creative!

And there is still more!

How to make Basic Quick Mix Pancakes:

Per 1 cup of Quick Mix used, add-
2 tablespoons sugar
1 egg
3/4 to 1 cup milk
2 tablespoons oil

Add sugar, egg, milk (adjust to make a good pouring batter), and oil. Stir just till moistened. Pour batter onto hot, lightly greased skillet or griddle, turning to cook second side after first side bubbles on the surface. The 1-cup recipe makes approximately 6 pancakes.

Add fruit, berries, nuts, cinnamon and nutmeg, and anything else you like for variations!

Is this fun or what? Man, I love food…..


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Posted by Suzanne McMinn @ 5:05 am | Permalink  
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Apr
16

Breads, The Farmhouse Table




Have breakfast with Grandmother Bread! My classic Egg Grandwich-toasted, buttered Grandmother Bread, fried egg, and your favorite cheese (with or without peppered bacon, sliced ham, or a big sausage patty)-is the most requested breakfast on the farm, but if you’re in the mood for something wildly decadent…..





We can do that, too! It all starts with great, big, wonderful slices of Grandmother Bread.





Get the mother of all bread recipes here. If you’ve never made homemade bread before, learn how to bake bread, and be sure to read the family history behind Grandmother Bread. I grew up with Grandmother Bread and have been making it since I was a little girl. With Grandmother Bread at your fingertips, you can do flips, cartwheels, and leap tall buildings. Okay, that’s not true, but you can make some really rockin’ breakfasts!

Like…. Stuffed French Toast! Thick slices of Grandmother Bread stuffed with cream cheese, soaked in sweet, milky eggs, fried to golden perfection and smothered in whipped cream, strawberries, and syrup. Ahhh…..

How to make Stuffed French Toast:

thick-sliced Grandmother Bread
6 ounces softened cream cheese (plain or strawberry-flavored)
butter
5 eggs
2/3 cup milk
1/4 flour
1/2 cup sugar
1/2 teaspoon vanilla
1 teaspoon cinnamon
powdered sugar
whipped cream
sliced strawberries
maple syrup





Using thick slices of Grandmother Bread, cut a pocket into the top of each slice. With a butter knife, stuff each pocket with cream cheese.

Stack up your stuffed slices.





Does that look good already or what?

Whisk eggs, milk, flour, sugar, vanilla, and cinnamon in a medium-sized bowl. Soak slices one at a time, on each side, in the egg/milk mixture, then fry lightly on each side in hot butter. I like to dash some extra cinnamon-sugar on top while it’s cooking. Transfer to a plate.





Top with powdered sugar, whipped cream, and sliced strawberries then load on the maple syrup! This recipe makes enough for approximiately six slices.

This bite’s for you!





Then try Cheesy Poached Eggs! Not your ordinary poached eggs-these eggs are poached in a cheesy-milk mixture and put to bed on a toasted slice of Grandmother Bread.





How to make Cheesy Poached Eggs:

toasted, sliced Grandmother Bread
2 tablespoons butter
4 eggs
1 cup shredded Cheddar or Swiss
6 ounces cream cheese
1 cup milk


Toast bread slices. Melt butter in a large saucepan over medium heat. Add cheeses and milk. Stir till melted. Crack eggs one at a time in a small cup then pour into the cheese/milk mixture in the pan. Cook, covered, three to five minutes depending on how you like your eggs. Using a spoon, lift each poached egg from the pan and place on top of a toasted slice of Grandmother Bread. Top with more cheese mixture from the pan and sprinkle on coarse ground black pepper and/or chives!


Don’t forget all the other delectable breakfasts you can make with Grandmother Bread! Find out how to make (pictured right) Cinnamon Crispies here! Not to mention Cinnamon-Swirl Bread, Cinnamon Rolls, and Caramel-Pecan Rolls-see the directions in the original Grandmother Bread post!


And one more breakfast treat (pictured below)-the quick standby, Cinnamon Toast! Spread butter on sliced bread, dash on the sugar and cinnamon, and pop it under the broiler for a couple of minutes for the hot, sweet, gooey goodness that is made even better because it’s made with Grandmother Bread.





Do you see now what I go through to bring you this fabulously amateur food photography from my farmhouse kitchen swarming with cats? It’s a challenge, I tell you, a challenge!

So what’s your favorite thing to have for breakfast?

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Posted by Suzanne McMinn @ 5:05 am | Permalink  
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