I pray that if you do not have a relationship with God, you will pray and be saved TODAY! Admit to God that you are a sinner then confess and turn away from your sin. Believe that Jesus is the Son of God and that He died for your sin, taking the punishment for you so you can spend eternity with God. Confess your faith to others that He is your Savior, Lord and Friend. Accept His forgiveness, grace, and mercy, and allow Him to truly be the Lord of your life!

Thursday, May 8, 2014

Ultimate Chocolate Chip Cookies

It was recently brought to my attention that I had not ever posted my most favorite recipe in all the world.

The Ultimate Chocolate Chip Cookie Recipe
(pictures soon to come)
If followed exactly, the baker of this recipe will end up with consistently perfect chocolate cookies every time.  Promise.

This recipe requires a couple of very specific pieces of kitchen equipment to make them perfect: a digital kitchen scale and an upright mixer.  The mixer might be able to be bypassed with a hand mixer (although you may be tired afterward), but the scale is necessary as all of the loose/dry ingredients in this recipe are measured in grams.

2 1/2 sticks real butter
227 g white sugar
284 g light brown sugar
1 1/2 tsp real vanilla
2 eggs
241 g bread flour
241 g cake flour
1 1/2 tsp baking powder
1 1/4 tsp baking soda
1 1/4 tsp kosher salt
1 1/2 bags 60% cocoa or greater chocolate disks (Ghiradeli or Hershey's)

Preheat oven to 350 degrees.  Cream together room temperature butter and sugars for 5 minutes in an upright mixer on high, scraping as needed.  While still on high, add the vanilla and one egg at a time.  Beat on high for another minute.  While mixer is going, weigh flours and add baking soda and powder to the flours, along with the kosher salt and whisk until blended.  Turn mixer to low and slowly add the flours into the mixer until JUST MIXED.  Once flour is added, mix for a minute or LESS.  Remove bowl, add chocolate and stir.  Put in a glass container and cover tightly with a lid or plastic wrap.  Put in the fridge for 48-72 hours.  Remove the dough and allow time at room temperature to soften and make it easier to handle.  Weigh out dough to 50 gram portions and roll into a ball, pushing in any chocolate that sticks out.  This will make for a prettier cookie.  Place dough on parchment paper cut to fit on a metal cookie sheet.  Sprinkle tops of each dough ball with a tiny bit of kosher salt.  Leave plenty of space, they will spread to be about 2 inches in diameter.  Bake for 18 minutes.  Check after 15 minutes.  You want the cookie only slightly browned.  Let sit for 5 minutes on the cookie sheet then gently transfer cookies with a large, very thin spatula to a cooling rack until cooled.

MORE INFORMATION:
You can pre-make dough balls, freeze them in a tightly closed container and bake as many or as few as you need over the course of a few weeks.  Why weigh loose ingredients and not use cups to measure?  Well, cups can be VERY inconsistent each time depending on how packed down the ingredient is.  Therefore, weighing in grams is a more accurate and consistent way to make the same cookie every time.  The kosher salt adds just the tiniest amount of saltiness to bring out the sweet of the cookie and the bitter of the chocolate, YUM!  The mix of flours give the cookie the perfect amount of chewiness and rise.  Using all purpose flour will not yield the same quality of cookie.  If you over mix the flours, your cookie will NOT rise properly.  This is not a recipe for your stoneware baking pans.  Parchment paper on even the cheapest aluminum cookie sheets work best.  Spacing is key so cookies are round, not lop-sided because they ran into each other or the sides of the pan.  Even on my large cookie sheet, I only put about 6 dough balls, on my small pan, only four.  This means more rounds in the oven, but well worth it for pretty, round cookies!

I got this recipe originally when I went on a Paula Deen cruise.  One of her guest chefs was doing a cooking show (well, "cookie" show, as it turned out) and I was chosen from the audience to be the chef's helper.  His name is David Liete.  He spent 6 months of his life researching and perfecting this recipe (must have been a tough job!) to make the ultimate chocolate chip cookie every time.  I have made this recipe hundreds of time in the last few years, when I follow it to a "tee", they turn out perfect and the same every time.  Any changes or short cuts are noticeable in the quality of cookie produced.  Please let me know how yours turn out!! Bon Appetit!!




Friday, May 2, 2014

Cabbage Creole (and a lesson, too)

One weekend, my mom brought over a dish.  It was the most delicious cabbage recipe I had ever tasted.  I am not a fan a cabbage.  Of the healthy-eating foods I will eat, it is very low on the list.  I kind of like the taste, but the smell...oh the smell...when it is cooking is nearly unbearable.  That is...Until I tasted this recipe.  Then I was certain I could endure the smell if this wonderfully simple and delicious flavor was at the finish line.



CABBAGE CREOLE

1 lb. of LEAN ground meat, seasoned, browned and drained (beef, venison, turkey)
(I use Tony's to season meat, but the flavor here is up to you)
1 chopped onion, sauteed
1 chopped green bell pepper, sauteed
1 LARGE head of cabbage, roughly chopped to about 1 inch squares
1 can of Rotel
1 can of Cheddar Cheese soup -OR- 1 8 oz block of Velvetta, cubed

In a large dutch oven, brown meat and drain, set aside.  Saute onion and bell pepper in a little of the meat drippings until just under-done.  Add cabbage and Rotel, cover and cook until just done, stirring occasionally.  Add meat and cheese, stir and let simmer for an hour or two.  Or put a lid on it and put it  in the oven at 250 degrees for the same amount of time.  I prefer the oven method, mainly because all my gas burners are too hot and simmering for too long usually burn on the bottom.









That's it!  A fairly healthy meal of simple deliciousness.  And only one pot and one colondar is dirtied!  It is a meal I can throw together on Sunday morning, and it is ready when church is over.  Speaking of which....

One Sunday morning, Easter Sunday as a matter of fact, I did just that.  Only, I had forgotten to turn the oven on when it was time to leave and put the pot in the oven.  So, in my infinite culinary wisdom (haha), I turned the oven on to 500 degrees to get it heated up more quickly, then I was going to turn the heat down and head out the door.  Only thing is...I forgot to turn the heat down. At first, walking up to the back door, it almost smelled good, then we walked into the kitchen.  OH NO!  It was not good.  Not good at all!!!

As I have mentioned previously, the smell of cooking cabbage usually prevents my preparing it in my house, however, the smell of burned to a crisp cabbage is enough to turn a person off to cabbage-eating for a lifetime!  Now keep in mind...it was in a cast iron dutch oven with the LID ON, and it still burned a layer of solid blackness an inch deep on the top and two inches deep on the bottom.  Only the thinnest layer of color was visible in the middle.  I was tempted to throw out the dutch oven and all, but with some hard work of three days of elbow grease, I am pleased to report I was able to recover the use of my dutch oven once again (I know, you were concerned, haha).

THINKING METAPHORICALLY:
Because I was so busy by the numerous things I was doing to get us out the door on Easter Sunday, I  missed some very important steps in the process of the task that I had been given, to make the Cabbage Creole.  More importantly, I and my family missed out on the blessings of deliciousness in my inattention and lack of focus on the other things.

I do this in my spiritual life at well.  I take my eyes off the important things and put my  attention and focus on other things.  This causes missed blessings.  And may even cause those closest to me to miss out on His blessings in a ripple effect.  It may not be as obvious to me at the time, like the stinch of burning cabbage, in fact we may never know we missed a blessing at all.  However, to teach and discipline us, sometimes God gives us the opportunity to see the missed blessing and we learn just how much He truly desires us to stay close to Him, focused on His ways, not for the what He can do for us, but simply the joy of having Him near.