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Archive for the ‘Entertaining at Home’ Category

bread- rolls baked and buttered in pan

On rare and random occasions, I’ll make a batch of home-made bread or dinner rolls.

They are soooo good right out of the oven, hot and yeasty with butter melting into every crevice.

This recipe is one my mom taught me when I was young and she learned it from her mom.

It isn’t hard to make, just takes a little time while you are waiting impatiently for the bread to rise so you can bake these babies and enjoy all that fresh bread goodness.

Ingredients

Ingredients

Mix milk, shortening, sugar and salt in a saucepan. Stir over medium heat until milk is scalded (180 F).

Mix milk, shortening, sugar and salt in a saucepan. Stir over medium heat until milk is scalded (180 F).

 

Pour warm milk into a large bowl to cool.

Pour warm milk into a large bowl to cool.

While milk is cooling, add yeast to 1/4 cup lukewarm water, stir until yeast is dissolved then leave it alone to do its thing for a few minutes while the milk cools.

While milk is cooling, add yeast to 1/4 cup lukewarm water, stir until yeast is dissolved then leave it alone to do its thing for a few minutes while the milk cools.

Stir yeast into milk mixture when the milk is about the temp of a baby's bottle.

Stir yeast into milk mixture when the milk is about the temp of a baby’s bottle.

Stir in flour.

Stir in flour.

Knead dough, form into a ball, cover and let rise for an hour.

Knead dough, form into a ball, cover and let rise for an hour.

 

Dough should now be doubled in size. Punch down dough and knead again.

Dough should now be doubled in size. Punch down dough and knead again.

Pinch off a piece of dough, about the size of a golf ball, roll into a ball and place in a greased baking pan. Uniformity is NOT my middle name, so mine are all uniquely sized. Continue with this process until you've filled the pan with rolls, leaving space between each one. Cover and place a warm spot to rise for another hour.

Pinch off a piece of dough, about the size of a golf ball, roll into a ball and place in a greased baking pan. Uniformity is NOT my middle name, so mine are all uniquely sized. Continue with this process until you’ve filled the pan with rolls, leaving space between each one. Cover and place a warm spot to rise for another hour.

Your pan of rolls will go from this...

Your pan of rolls will go from this…

to this. Bake in 375 preheated oven until tops are golden brown.

to this. Bake in 375 preheated oven until tops are golden brown.

Slather the tops with butter and refrain from gobbling up a few while it oozes into every little corner and crevice.

Slather the tops with butter and refrain from gobbling up a few while it oozes into every little corner and crevice.

Cut one open, add butter and take a bite of yeasty bliss!

Cut one open, add butter and take a bite of yeasty bliss!

Home-made Dinner Rolls (or Bread)

2 cups milk

4 tbsp. shortening

1 tbsp. sugar

pinch of salt

1/4 cup lukewarm water

1 pkg. yeast

4 + cups of flour

Combine milk, shortening, sugar and salt in a heavy saucepan over medium heat. Stir constantly until shortening is melted then continue to stir  until milk scalds. Keep a close eye on it because you don’t want the milk to scorch in the pan.

(Note: Scalded milk is milk that has been heated to 180 °F. At this temperature, bacteria are killed, enzymes in the milk are destroyed and many of the proteins are rendered inactive. The bacteria have to be killed off because any “wild yeasts” in the milk can alter the texture and flavor or the bread.)

Once the milk mixture is heated up to temp, pour it into a large bowl to cool.

Pour the lukewarm water into a small cup or bowl. Gently stir in the yeast and let set for a few minutes, working its magic. I love that smell. It takes me back to childhood days when my mom made some yeasty treat on a weekly basis.

Test your milk mixture with the tip of your finger. You want it to be cool, but not cold when you stir in the yeast. Think the temperature of a baby’s bottle for a good point of reference. Stir the yeast into the milk until it is well blended.

Start stirring in the flour, a cup at a time. You might end up using closer to five or six cups by the time it’s all said and done, but four is a good starting point.

Work the flour into the milk mixture. When it gets hard to stir, you can get your hands in there and start kneading the dough. If you’ve had a stressful day, this is a great way to work out some aggression. Punch the dough down with your fist, flip it around and keep going. It’s also a great work-out for those arm muscles! See, you are burning calories, destressing and making something delicious all at the same time. Talk about multi-tasking!

If the dough is  really sticky, continue adding flour, about a half cup at a time until you can work it without it globbing up all over your fingers.

Keep kneading until the bread has an elastic feel to it (meaning you can feel it pop and give as you knead).

Grease the sides of your bowl with a little butter, placing your nice ball of dough in the center of the bowl. Cover with a tea towel and set someplace warm to rise. My favorite place is right in front of our fireplace. It’s warm, but not hot, and creates a perfect environment for the bread to rise.

Force yourself to leave the bread alone for an hour. By that time, it should have doubled in size.

Although this seems like cruel and unusual punishment, you are going to punch down the dough and knead it again. Just a couple minutes worth of kneading is fine.

At this point you can do any number of things with the dough – shape it into a loaf in a bread pan, form it into bread sticks or dinner-rolls, make fancy little shapes with it.

I generally make dinner rolls because I can freeze what we don’t eat for another day.

To make the dinner rolls, pinch off a piece of dough about the size of a golf ball. Roll it around and drop it into a greased baking pan. Leave a little space between each roll because they will expand. In a 9 x 13 pan, I probably end up with about 24 rolls.

Once you have the rolls all shaped, cover the pan with the tea towel and return to that warm spot for another hour.

Preheat the oven to 375 degrees. When the rolls have doubled in size, pop them in the oven and bake for about 12-15 minutes, until tops are golden brown.

Remove from the oven and immediately slather the tops with butter, while trying not to drool at the wonderful yeasty smell that is filling your home and making your mouth water.

Serve with butter, jam, honey or use to soak up the juice from a hearty bowl of stew.

You won’t be able to eat just one!

She Who Loves Home-made Bread

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scratch-and-sniff

The other day I received a catalog in the mail.

Nothing unusual about that. Just ask Captain Cavedweller. He could tell you how I clog up the mail box with my junk mail taking up room for his important stuff like Cabela’s sales flyers and hunting magazines.

Anyhoo, I was flipping through the catalog and came across a page with a dotted circle next to the words Rub & Smell. So I did. That turned out to be a very good decision. The catalog is full of beautiful candles and you could get an idea of the fragrance simply by browsing through their lovely, glossy, scented pages.

As I rubbed and smelled my way through the catalog, it reminded me of my grade schools days when the teachers would put Scratch ‘N Sniff stickers on our work if we did a good job. There were the ever popular lemon stickers.

scratchandsniff

I also remember these. The grape one was good and the popcorn one was okay but I always thought the other two smelled weird.

Despite the smells, they were really fun to get on your homework.

Evidently, in the grown up world, though, we’ve evolved from scratching and sniffing to rubbing and smelling. I guess that does sound a little more dignified.

Regardless of what you call it, it’s still pretty fun!

She Who Had Way to Much Fun Rubbing and Smelling Her Catalog

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asnowmensnowshoehiking

If you are totally into the whole snow/winter/freezing thing, here are a few ideas for some winter themed parties. Enjoy!

* Snowman Party – The fun can snowball in a hurry with a creative theme. Use a simple menu like Snowman’s Soup (Potato Soup), Snowman Rolls (shape biscuits or rolls into a snowman shape). Cut your favorite white cheese with a small snowman cookie cutter, and place on top of  nice green salad for Snowman  Salad. Finish the meal with a snowman shaped dessert, easily made by stacking varying sizes of cupcakes, covering in white frosting and finishing with coconut or by dipping Nutter Butter Cookies in melted white chocolate and adding a face and a hat with frosting. Use snowman decorations left over from the holidays to highlight the theme. You can even make an easy centerpiece out of white styrofoam balls (available at craft stores) placed in a pretty glass bowl.

* Snowflake Party – Get the kids in on the decorating for this party. Have them cut as many snowflake as they can and hang them all around your serving and gathering area. Chiffon, organza or even tulle can be a great and affordable way to carry out the theme, especially when you combine white and icy blue. Layer white lights under the chiffon for a warm glow. For this party you could make snowflake soup (tomato soup with a sour cream snowflake floating in each bowl – fill a sandwich bag, clip a corner and pipe it on!) and snowflake sandwiches (grilled cheese sandwiches made by alternating a dark bread like rye with a lighter bread like sourdough or white. Cut out snowflakes from each then put the cut out of one bread into the cut out area of the other.)  Serve Candy Cane punch (1 liter cranberry or strawberry juice, 2 liters of lemon-lime soda, 2 quarts peppermint ice cream. Just before serving, put chilled  juice in punch bowl, scoop in ice cream, top with chilled soda. Garnish the bowl with mini candy canes) with snowflake sugar cookies for dessert.

* Skating or sledding party – use mufflers and mittens for your decorations. Use mitten shaped invitations to spread the word. Serve hot cider and hot chocolate (if you are serving hot chocolate make sure you have fun add ins read like marshmallows, crushed peppermint, mini chocolate chips and long peppermint sticks to stir with), snack mixes, and something simple like  mac and cheese with warm bread and salad. Make ice skate brownies for dessert. Cut a small skate shape our of cardboard for a template then cut out brownies, flipping the template over for half so the skates or heading different directions. Frost with white icing, make laces from red icing and the skate heel from a touch of chocolate frosting. Add a mini candy cane on the bottom for the skate blade.

* Winter Animals  – this theme works well and is most fun for younger children. Using the theme of animals that make you think of winter, it can be a really fun meal for little ones. Penguins can be made from hand-boiled eggs with olive heads and arms (use a whole black olive for the head and the tip of a mini carrot for his beak. Cut an olive into quarters lengthwise for arms and use tips of mini carrots for the feet. Toothpicks will anchor on the head and limbs. Be sure someone removes the toothpicks for younger ones before eating!). How about polar bear sandwiches? Just cut bread slices in the shape of a polar bear. You could do peanut butter, grilled cheese, meat, whatever you want. Serve milk as “artic punch” and have popcorn balls for reindeer cookies for dessert.

* Escape to Paradise – for the adults who are tired of gray skies and freezing temperatures, tell everyone to come dressed in their tropical best. Turn up the heater, play the luau music and put out a feast featuring “warm, sunny” foods and drinks like tropical fruit salad, pulled pork sandwiches, chicken and veggie skewers, crab pasta salad, orange-avocado salad atop mixed greens and tropical sunrise drinks (orange juice and ice with a dash of pomegranate juice). Make sure everyone has a lei to wear. A parting gift to each guest could be a votive that smells “tropical” like pineapple or coconut, as a a fun reminder of the evening. Tie it in a circle of tulle with a bright ribbon and it makes a lovely little gift!

She Who is Ready for Spring

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present_gift_298895

Somewhere between the last of the holiday goodies being eaten and the mania of the Super Bowl taking over your house, the winter blahs are likely to set in.

Keep them at bay with a fun get together with friends.

Plan a Re-Gift Party and sit back for an hour or two of laughs, smiles and fun.

The idea for the party is pretty simple: have everyone bring a wrapped gift of something they received for Christmas they really didn’t want. Put the packages in a pile then draw numbers to see who gets to select the first gift, second and so forth. Each participating in the exchange can either take a wrapped gift or steal one that has already been opened.

It’s a fun way to liven up a winter afternoon or evening without cutting into your budget. If everyone brings a potluck dish, you’re investment in the party is minimal, but the rewards in seeing friends all laughing together is priceless!

She Who Needs to Plan a Party

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