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Showing posts with label pumpkin. Show all posts
Showing posts with label pumpkin. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 28, 2018

Mini Pumpkin Tartlets-- Happy Fall, Y'All!

Hello, everybody!  I have a tasty recipe for Fall. I'm a fool for Fall. You know those people who love pumpkin spice everything? Yes? That's me. 
Sometimes I get out the spices and take a whiff of nutmeg or allspice just so I can pretend that cold weather is on the way! Not that I love cold weather, but it's just the season...

Crisp leaves. Frost in the morning. Dark clouds on the horizon. 

Fall is so.... dramatic. 
My writerly heart feels an affinity for the season that's not all sunshine and clear blue sky. 

The spices of fall. Nutmeg, ginger, cinnamon, and cloves. (In this house, we call them "too much cloves" because I can't ever get the measurement right. There's none at all, and then way too much. We just accept that cloves will be "too much" in every dish.)
But before I begin, I have to say this little doggy makes me laugh. He rolls himself up in his favorite blankie when his person leaves him at home. Goodness gracious. Some people have emotional support animals. Our animal has an emotional support person. 
So! Let us begin. Two cups of crushed Nilla wafers, plus 1/4 tsp cinnamon and a dash of "too much cloves".
 Add a few TBS of melted butter and press into a pan.
 Oops, missed a picture but take a can of pure pumpkin puree and add 1/2 tsp cinnamon, 1/8 tsp cloves, 1/8 tsp nutmeg, and a dash of ginger. Mix well, then add four large eggs to it will bake together. Most recipes have condensed milk, but I have a child who is lactose intolerant so we skip that part. It gives the pie a less custardy feel, which I like, too.
 Bake at 350F for 30 minutes or until done. I let the crusts brown too much but there you go. It's Friday and the 80th birthday of the publication of The Hobbit so we were watching the movie. I remember my dad reading me the series when I was younger than my youngest child, and now I've read the series to them. Bless you, J.R.R. Tolkien, and thank you for the gift of your stories!
 A latte with a dash of bittersweet chocolate is the perfect pairing...
 Happy Fall, everybody!!


 Leaving you with this fun picture I took of a sunflower in my kitchen. (See how the screen made little tiny squares on the leaves?) I hope you find something with pumpkin spice to enjoy, and a few cheerful flowers to brighten your day!


Tuesday, November 27, 2018

Garden Produce - Love is Fruit Always in Season

Hello, everybody! The Fresh Pioneer has returned with some sad news. It's the end of summer, have you noticed??

But rather than mope, I thought I'd post a retrospective as a bloggy sort of Psalm 148. (It's okay if you don't have it memorized, you can read it here... and then come back!).  Psalm 148
I want to go for one last glorious run through my backyard.

Fresh raspberries. Heaven on earth.
 Squash and zucchini from my friend Barb's garden.
 
Piles of cukes from my stepmother's garden. We ate so many cucumbers, I'm surprised we're not green.
 
Blueberries from Lampson Blueberries, just twenty minutes from our house, up in the hills. We picked over 150 lbs and they didn't even make it to October. Let's see: 8 people, 3 months, that's approximately 6 pounds of blueberries a month per person in our house. Not very much! Next year, we'll pick more. I say that every year.

Pears from my dad's pear tree. (Like my kettle? Very Pioneer-y.)

Peaches from one of our two peach trees. There were so many that I had to figure out how to freeze them. Ruthy's peach pie is my next project!

Our seedless grapes have finally rebounded from the drought of 2001. Had a wonderful crop this year and about 50 lbs went to a woman who made them into raisins. She bakes panattone for Christmas and ships it all over the US.

Pounds and pounds of perfect plums from my dad's orchard. The tree was so overloaded it was breaking its own branches. We must have picked a hundred pounds. My neighbors started pulling their curtains when they saw us coming with our bags of free plums. You can only eat so many...

Oops, how did this sneak in here?? We're supposed to be praising God's bountiful goodness. But I suppose zucchini bread with walnuts and chocolate chips is worthy of a little praise. :)

We also had bags and bags of our neighbors' goodies because we live in the sort of place that if you're growing it, you better share. It's just good manners. So we've had sweet corn and heirloom tomatoes and apricots, too.

I'm continually in awe of the massive blessings that God showers on us, for no good reason.

He's just that way. And this was a little 'taste' of the way He blesses us out here in ORYGUN.

 (And that pic was taken by Jeff Horner who works at our little hometown paper, the Walla Walla Union Bulletin. The guy is brilliant. Who knows why he lives way out here in podunk east, but we're sure glad he does.)

But as winter closes in, I'll try to remember what Mother Teresa said. "Love is a fruit in season at all times, and within reach of every hand."

When the memories of fresh raspberries and pears have faded and I'm staring out my kitchen window at the frost on the dead lawn, I'll just reach out and snag a toddler... and give them some loving. (Like this little dude, watching his cookies bake. He stared at them for a long time before they were 'done'.)
Hey, here's a cute one... And he's holding walnuts. Bonus.


Better yet, I'll snag a tweener or two. Hey, she looks hug-able...

This one is scaring me a bit. Too many ninja movies?

Oh, wait. This one really needs a squeeze. Cranky, naked toddler out of the bath stole her apple slices and then sat his naked tushie on her lap. Check out her face. She's thinking how much her life stinks right now. Long-suffering tweeners. Gotta love 'em.
 


So, to ease the transition to Fall, we're going to do what we do best. Make a cake!
Oh wait, I'm not good at cake. But I still like to eat cake, so I'll make one anyway. I've picked up a few tips over here on Yankee Belle Cafe, so let's go try them out.

I saw Hershey's has a chocolate cake recipe that didn't look too hard. And it's rated BEGINNER. I'll take that as a good sign...

  • 2 cups sugar
  • 1-3/4 cupsall-purpose flour
  • 3/4 cupHERSHEY'S Cocoa
  • 1-1/2 teaspoons baking powder
  • 1-1/2 teaspoons baking soda
  • 1 teaspoon salt
  • · 2 eggs
· 1 cup milk · ( we were out but I used condensed, with some water. Am I just like a pioneer woman or what??)
    1/2 cup vegetable oil
   2 teaspoons vanilla extract
   1 cup boiling water

So, I mixed everything together (really, just like that except for the boiling water and the Hershey's powder, those I mixed separately and then added them) and let Edna do her magic. (Check out that gleaming chrome. Go, baby, go!!)

I think it was Mindy who said to dust the inside with cocoa powder instead of flour. MMMMMM.


And then Missy had a great tutorial on when a toothpick comes out clean it means done. Really clean, not sorta clean, with blobs. THEN she said to let it cool completely before trying to pry it out of the pan. (*lightbulb*)


SUCCESS!!!! And now I stuffed foil in there so the aliens wouldn't mess with its chocolate brain.



No, no, no. I have a plan. and it involves real pumpkin stem. So out I go to the porch...
And mix some frosting until it's just the right shade of.... salmon pink. Whatever. Use your imaginations.
At least the green was okay. And now for the decoration... Because you know I live in a zoo.

Uh-huh. Eat your hearts out, ladies. Multi-colored sprinkles dumped on by a 3 year old.
 


And check out that shirt. HE's ready for Fall! Even if I'm not.

Even if I'm dreading the six month trek through socks and shoes and jackets and coats and mittens and runny noses and being trapped in the house all day.

Because it will pass, and we'll have some fun while we wait for spring to come around again.

(My friend Patty Jones' pumpkins, straight from the patch! She sold them on the cheap and donated all proceeds to the Humane Society. She rocks.)
 
 

So, I raise my cake and say a prayer for friends near and far. Because LOVE is a fruit always in season, no matter how long this winter will last.
 

Downeast Maine Pumpkin Bread

Hello, everybody! The Fresh Pioneer is back and it's that time of year when I repost my FAVORITE pumpkin bread recipe ever. So, without further ado, here it is from 2014. I made a batch just this last week and I'm making it again this evening. I love sharing this with neighbors and friends, and it has never failed me!
                                                  
  I'm SO excited it's October! I've got great new projects lined up, the kids are just getting over their first cold of the season (as opposed to starting their first cold of the season) and I LOVE FALL. 
So, here's my go-to "welcome to Fall" recipe, Downeast Maine Pumpkin Bread. (Don't ask me about the Maine part. I think I stopped in there when I was young, but I don't really remember it. So, in my mind, Mainers sit around and eat this all day. Lucky ducks.)
 
 Super bright picture of our garden pumpkins! My husband grew a great batch of calabazas this year. In his mountain town, they're serious about growing enough to last through the cooler months. Great vitamins, easy food source.
 Big pot. (Ha! I see my polka dotted shirt. I love polka dots. They're so playful.)
 Someone just brought me a flower.
 So, boiled for about 30 minutes on high, carefully cut away the pumpkin from the skin. It should be really soft. Pie pumpkins are different that the carving pumpkins. Sweeter, easier to cook. Not as stringy.
 Mr. Ninja takes on the cooked pumpkins. Ten seconds. BAM.
 Mmmmm. The first batch was eaten up right away. Cinnamon, sugar, hot from the pot.
 BUT I wanted to make pumpkin bread, so we repeated steps 1-4... except the eating part. One pumpkin gives about two and a half cups of pumpkin. We usually boil about 3 pumpkins at a time so we have some to eat and some to freeze.
  • 2 cups of pumpkin


So, this is all I have of the process. You'll just have to imagine it. Mix the dry ingredients in a bowl. Mix the eggs, pumpkins, oil, water, and sugar. We also added a cup of walnuts.


Ta-DAH! Of course, this is doubled. Your recipe will either give two small loaves (one to freeze!) or one fat loaf like that above. Now, these are the original, but we also added chocolate chips to a batch. YUM. And then we added a cup of walnuts, a cup of chopped green apples and some golden raisins to another batch and it was like the ultimate Fall bread.
  That's all for now! Have a wonderful weekend!