Welcome Note

For family members submitting recipes: please double and triple check to make sure you've got all amounts correct and all the necessary ingredients in your recipes. Fill in the label box only with MAJOR ingredients for easier searching (salt and pepper really are not necessary) as well as if the recipe is a main dish, side dish, soup, salad, bread, and/or dessert. Pictures are awesome but not necessary if unavailable.

For random readers from across the world who happen upon this little blog: welcome and we hope you enjoy the recipes from our family's kitchens!

Friday, December 30, 2011

Crazy Cake

This was one of my all-time favorite desserts to make--and eat!--when I was a child. My mom acquired this recipe somewhere and we all loved it! A very moist chocolate cake. Sift together into ungreased 9" x 13" pan: 3 cups flour 2 cups sugar 2 t soda 6 T powdered cocoa 1 t salt Make 3 indentations into mixture. Pour 2 t vanilla into one, 2 T white vinegar into one and 1/2 cup oil into the third. Pour 2 cups cold water over all and stire with a fork. Bake @ 350 degrees for 30 - 40 minutes. Frost with favorite chocolate frosting. Can add chopped walnuts on top.

Oatmeal Chocolate Chippers

Cream: 2 cups butter 1 1/2 cup brown sugar 1 1/2 cup sugar Add: 4 eggs 2 t hot water 2 t vanilla Add: 3 cups flour 2 t salt 2 t soda Add: 4 cup oats 12 ounces chocolate or butterscotch chips Bake at 350 degrees about 8 minutes.

Great Chocolate Chippers

One of our favorite chocolate chip cookie recipes! It's a little fancier than some as it contains coconut. Cream: 1 cup butter 1 cup sugar 1/2 cup brown sugar 2 eggs 2 t vanilla Add: 2 1/3 cup flour 1 t soda 1 t salt 1 cup chopped walnuts 12 oz. chocolate (or butterscotch) chips 1 cup coconut Bake 10 minutes @ 375 degrees.

Pumpkin Bread

This yummy recipe was from our Provo friend and neighbor, Pam Pulley. We traditionally make it in October to celebrate fall. Combine: 2 cup flour 2 baking powder 1/2 t soda 1 t salt 1 t cinnamon 1/2 t nutmeg 1 cup pumpkin 1 cup sugar 1/2 cup evaporated milk 2 eggs 1/4 cup soft margarine 1 cup chopped walnuts 1 cup chocolate chips Pour into greased pans and bake @ 350 degrees for 30 - 40 minutes.

Frozen Fruit

This is fun and refreshing as well as healthy! Can be used as a salad or dessert. We used our home bottled fruit and had this often with Sunday dinner.

Combine:

1 quart pears, drained and chopped
1 quart peaches, drained and chopped
1 can fruit cocktail, drained
1 can pineapple chunks, drained
1 T. lemon juice

Cover and freeze till slushy. Put in individual serving dishes and pour lemon-lime pop over top.

Waldorf Salad

Combine:

apple chunks
celery slices
raisins
Miracle Whip
1/2 t cinammon--optional

Aunt Lil's Layered Salad


From our Provo neighbor and dear friend, Janell Miller. This is also a hit at summer picnics!

Layer in a 9" x 13" pan or large glass salad bowl:

1 head lettuce, torn
1 package frozen peas, slightly thawed
1 onion, sliced and separated into rings
2 ribs chopped celery

Mix and pour over:

1 cup sour cream
2/3 cup sugar

Spread evenly with spatula and then pour over and spread:

1/2 cup mayonaise
3 T red wine vinegar

Top with grated Parmesan cheese.

Cover. Refrigerate 6 - 15 hours before serving.


Indian Summer Salad

Yet another easy, healthy salad!

Combine and chill:

1# grated carrots
1/2 cup crushed pineapple and juice
1/4 cup raisins or Craisins

Spinach Salad

This is a very good but not low-cal salad! Makes enough for a crowd--a large Tupperward bowl works well--and is always a crowd pleaser! To make it a little more elegant, use a glass salad bowl as it is layered. I used to make it for our annual July 4th picnics!

Layer:

1 bunch spinach--washed, dried, torn
1 head lettuce, torn
1 purple onion--sliced and separated
3/4 # sliced mushrooms
1# grated cheese
1# bacon--cooked, drained and crumbled

Dressing:

Blend in blender:

2/3 cup white vinegar
1 cup oil
2/3 cup sugar
1 green onions, chopped in 1" pieces, stems included
1 1/2 t salt
1 t yellow mustard
2 t celery seed

Sunshine Salad

Another easy, healthy salad that the kids can make and enjoy!

Combine:

1# grated carrots
a can drained Mandarin oranges
1 small can pineapple tidbits

Serve chilled.

Easy Fruit Salad

Mix the following with Cool-Whip:

1 -2 large apples, chopped
1 - 2 large oranges, chopped
1/2 - 1 can drained fruit cocktail
1/2 cup grated cheese
1/2 cup chopped walnuts

Hawaiin Fruit

A simple, fresh fruit salad that is good with Asian dishes. Easy for the kids to make! Our kids used to like making this with their meals for their "cook nights."

Combine:

2 cans drained Mandarin oranges and 2 cans drained pineapple tidbits. Top with browned coconut. Serve chilled.

Beefy Chicken Breast

Spread bottom of pan with packaged chipped beef, cut up (a few Budding 3 oz packages). Place raw chicken breasts on top. Pour 1-10 3/4 oz. can of cream of chicken or mushroom soup mixed with 1/2 cup milk and 1/2 c. sour cream. Bake at 350° until done.  OR, can be done in electric frying pan.

These are just easy and tasty.

Impossible Quiche

Makes 1 pie.

This was one of Nathan's favorite meals to make as a kid (other than leftovers and make-your-own) because it is delicious and always turns out!

Place 1 c. cubed ham or bottom of lg. pie pan.

Add 1 c. grated cheese and 1/3 c. green or yellow onions.

Mix: 4 eggs, 1 c. Bisquick, 2 c. milk, 1 t. salt, 1/4 t. pepper.

Pour over ham.  Bake at 400° for 50 minutes.

Sweet Potato Souffle

Cook and skin about 12 cups yams.  Melt 1/4 c. margarine (or butter buds) in 9"x13" cake pan.

Add: yams, 1/2 c. milk, 1/2 c. sugar,  and 2 eggs.

Topping:
1 c. brown sugar
1/2 c. flour
1/2 c. margarine - soft, but not melted
1/2 c. chopped nuts

Bake at 350° for 30 minutes.

This has been a Monson family tradition since we lived in Provo at Thanksgiving and Christmas.

Eryn Michelle's Microwave Peanut Brittle

Blend:

1 c. sugar
1/2 c. light Karo syrup
Dash salt
1 c. raw peanuts

Microwave 7-10 minutes, stirring every couple of minutes until light brown.

Add:
1 T. butter
1 1/2 t. baking soda
1 t. vanilla.

Spoon onto sprayed wax paper - small patties or one large sheet.  Cook, break apart and enjoy!

Wonderful Wild Rice Soup

Cut 4 oz. of bacon into small pieces and cook. (Or you can use a cup of chopped, cooked ham.)

Place in crock pot. 

Add:
2-10 3/4-oz cans condensed cream of potato soup
1 pkg prepared Uncle Ben's instant wild rice
2-2-oz cans non-fat or 2 % evaporated milk
1-2 cups grated mild cheddar cheese

Put on warm all day long and thin with additional regular milk, if desired.  

The original recipe is from Mom (Kathryn)'s co-worker but used a pound of bacon, whipping cream and much more cheese - so this is very tasty but a healthier version that Kathryn adapted.

Navy Bean Soup

Mom has very good memories of this - her mom used to make it and Mom thinks this is pretty darn close.

Boil and simmer ham bone until meat falls off the bone. Discard the bone and cut up the ham.

Add:

1-2 T minced garlic
1 chopped onion
Boil until done. Add 16 oz. canned white beans or soak and cook 1 pound dried beans instead.

(If you want to do this in the crock pot, boil the ham bone, onion and garlic first.)

Whole Wheat Pancakes

The story behind these is that we used to make them on cold winter mornings with freshly ground whole wheat flours. The eggs are optional since at the time they said that eggs were unhealthy! However, they are saying eggs are good for you now.  We no longer have the grinder since it went mildewy in Minnesota.  (Nice, warm, humid Minnesota basement.)

2 cups whole wheat flour
1 T baking powder
1 t baking soda
1/2 t salt
1/4 c. oil (opt)
2 c. milk
2 eggs (opt)

Blend until lumpy. Bake on griddle sprayed with Pam at 350 and serve with honey.

Hummingbird Lady's Bean and Corn Salsa

We had a memorable night feeding hummingbirds at Pastor Corrinne Thul's beautiful home up Logan Canyon near 2nd Dam in 2010. And this was one of the hors d'oeuvres.

Combine:
2-16 oz. cans white beans
2-16 oz. cans black beans
2-16 oz. cans corn
2 cups salsa
2 chopped avocadoes.

Serve with corn chips.

Nancy and Bill's Green Salad

Toss:
Large bowl chopped romaine
1 yellow pepper, diced small
1 orange pepper, diced small
1 peeled cucumber, diced small
3 ribs celery, diced small
8 oz grape tomatoes, halved or quartered
2 grated carrots

With Paul Newman's Balsamic Vinaigrette.

Courtesy of Nancy and Bill Carr at our annual 4th of July picnic.

Suzie's Fruit Salad

Toss equal parts:
Red and green grapes, whole or halved
Chopped apples
Vanilla yoghurt (not necessarily equal parts)..


Quite elegant, actually!

From the kitchen of Suzanne Leale Gray

Kathryn's BBQ Meatballs

We all love 'em....

You can make the meatballs using any recipe or just use frozen pre-made meatballs.

Sauce:
Blend 2 cups ketchup, 1 cup brown sugar, 1/2 t. tobasco sauce, 1/2 t. garlic powder and 1/4 cup chopped onion. 

Put about 3 lbs of frozen meatballs in a single layer on a baking tray (one with edges).  Cover with sauce and cook at 350° for 1 hour.  Yummy if served on brown rice!

Skinny Chili

When first fall weather hits, you've gotta make this!

Brown and drain:
1 pound lean ground beef
8 stalks celery, chopped
2 chopped onions
1 chopped green pepper.

Add to the meat mixture and simmer until hot:
4-16 oz. cans of chili beans (in seasoned sauce)
2-16 oz. cans of plain stewed tomatoes
2-16 oz. cans of mexican seasoned stewed tomatoes

Add additional seasoning if desired (but with mexican tomatoes & seasoned chili beans, it is quite yummy!)

Quick Pumpkin Chocolate Chip Cookies - Terri Viehweg

Terri Viehweg was with Mom in the primary presidency in Hyrum.  This makes about 5-6 dozen cookies.

2 dry spice cake mixes
1 lg can (~29 oz)
12 oz. bag chocolate chips.
Chopped walnuts are optional.

Blend and bake at 350 for about 8-10 minutes per batch.

Sunday, November 27, 2011

Swedish Pancakes


This recipe is special to me for several reasons. First and foremost because I have many fond memories of Dad making this tasty recipe for breakfast! I also connect because I have Swedish blood in me! And since my father served an LDS mission in Sweden, he got to taste how the Swede's make it.

Now that I have made it for my own family, they love this recipe too! Celeste, Samuel, and Ruth all devour the pancakes, made more healthy by the wheat flour my Dad has chosen to use. Most recently, Ruth even ate six pancakes filled with a variety of jam's! Quite a healthy appetite she has for a little girl of two years! I've cooked up Swedish Pancakes at least four times this year, and I keep tweaking the recipe to match that which I remember my father making. With this version of the recipe, I have gotten very close.

When we went to visit my parents last Saturday, Celeste and Samuel excitedly told their Grandpa that Daddy made Swedish pancakes! I spoke to Dad about it, and he said that the choice to use wheat flour was his own. Many of the Swede's cook them with white flour, which allows them to be even thinner... much like crepe's. Of course, many Swede's are only getting started with the jam. They often sprinkle powder sugar on top before rolling them up.

Ingredients:
  - 1 cup wheat flour
  - 2 tsp cinnamon
  - 1/2 tsp salt
  - 1/2 tsp nutmeg
  - 2 eggs (beaten)
  - 1 tsp vanilla
  - /4 cup sugar
  - 1½ cups milk
  - 1/3 cup melted butter

Directions:
  1. Pour wheat flour into a medium mixing bowl. Stir in cinnamon, salt, nutmeg, and sugar.

  2. Beat eggs until lightly mixed. Add vanilla and stir.

  3. Combine egg mixture to flour mixture. Stir until blended.

  4. Add milk and stir until ingredient compounds are sufficiently integrated.

  5. The pancake batter should be runny. Thicker batter creates thick pancakes; you want the pancakes to be fairly thin so that they can be rolled up once the jam is spread. Add additional milk if necessary to reach the desired consistency. You'll have to experiment based on altitude, humidity, and personal preference.

  6. Melt butter in Microwave; add to the pancake batter and mix.

  7. Cook on electric griddle at 275 - 300 degrees. You can also cook them in a frying pan using medium heat over the stove. A grill is preferred for heat consistency.

  8. Using a small measuring cup, pour batter as circles 4" in diameter.

  9. As with most pancakes, flip when the bubbles start to pop.


Serve: Hot! Spread a line of jam or jelly down the middle of the pancake, and roll it up like taco. Then consume! Instead of meat, your taste buds will be greeted with the sweet flavour of your favorite jam or jelly. I have used apricot, peach, strawberry, raspberry, boysenberry and grape. But my favorite has always been apricot!


Notes: This recipe is not a perfect recreation of what my father recited to me over the phone several years ago. The recipe that my Dad gave me called for many approximations, making it a very inexact science. For instance: a dash of salt, a bit of nutmeg and vanilla, and "enough milk to make it runny." ;-) Certainly with such a fantastic and tasty breakfast dish, I wanted to distill measured ingredients that I could consistently make them myself. I have been tweaking the recipe every time, and now the pancakes cook up very close to the way I remember Dad making them.

I've also cut the recipe back... almost in half. Dad's original recipe calls for a full 2 cups of wheat flour! I quickly learned that while it doesn't initially seem like too much, the amount of batter grows dramatically as you add the other ingredients. If you choose to use 2 cups of flour, don't forget to double everything else in the recipe. After adding "enough milk to make the batter runny," you will fill a large mixing bowl! It's fine for a hearty family of two adults and five teenagers, but if you have a smaller family like we do, 50 pancakes is a tad too many! Unless you have a duck pond nearby that you can take the left-overs to feed! :-) So I recommend the measurements that I have used, and then calibrate the recipe to your family's appetite thereafter.

Don't forget to mix in the melted butter at the end. My father adds it to keep the pancakes from sticking in the frying pan. It's not a problem on my stick-free electric grill, but I still use the butter because it adds a touch or richness to the flavour.

Last of all, I have a special request for Dad: Please try my reduced recipe, and comment on how close I am in both flavour and consistency. I'd be very curious to get your feedback since you are, after all, the one who perfected it while we were growing up. Michelle, Nathan, and Thayne: Feel free to critique it also! After all, you each grew up eating it too. :-)

Friday, November 25, 2011

Cranberry Jell-o Salad

I'm trying to mimic Mom's salad, but not sure exactly how she makes it so I improvised a bit.  Let me know if it's close or what changes can be made....

Ingredients:

2-0.3 oz sugar-free raspberry jello packets
1-14 oz. can of whole berry cranberries
3 stalks celery, chopped
1/2 T lemon juice
1-6 oz. can crushed pineapple, undrained
1 medium Granny Smith apple, chopped
1/2 c. chopped walnuts

Directions:

When you chop the apple up, mix in with the lemon juice & pineapple to prevent discoloring.  Follow directions to make the jello - once the powder has dissolved, mix in the apples & pineapple and boil a few more minutes.  Mix in the cold water (from jello package) and remaining ingredients.  Pour all into a bowl and put in refrigerator to set.  Tastes best if done the night before.  Once it's set, stir it up and enjoy!
 

Creamy Corn

One of my friends made this a few years ago and I tried it out yesterday for Thanksgiving meal... Yummy and easy! (But terribly unhealthy, I'm sure..)

Ingredients:

2 cans corn
1 large sweet onion (chopped)
1 T olive oil
4 oz. cream cheese
Red pepper (to taste: I used about 1/2 T)
Seasoning salt (to taste: I used about 2 t)

Directions:

First,   saute the onion in the olive oil - use medium or medium-low heat, so the onion won't brown but become translucent. This might take 10-15 minutes, but is worth it.
Meanwhile, drain the corn and mix with the cream cheese in a medium pot.  When the cream cheese has melted, and the onions are ready, mix in the onions and seasonings.  Enjoy!

Monday, November 21, 2011

Classic American Meat Loaf

This is the basic Meat Loaf--all beef, with a touch of green pepper and onion, topped with strips of bacon--instantly recognizable as the all-American diner/hash house standard! This comes from a book of meat loaf recipe's... without a doubt the most unique wedding gift that Mary and I received ten years ago. According to the author of the book, this recipe was inspired by one diner cook whose secret was to make this meat loaf with "ketchup in and ketchup on" for maximum flavor and moistness. The bacon certainly doesn't hurt either!

Ingredients:
- 3 tablespoons unsalted butter
- 2 cups finely chopped onion
- 1 medium green bell pepper, finely chopped (about 3/4 cup)
- 1 large celery rib, finely chopped
- 1 teaspoon dried thyme, crumbled
- 2 pounds ground beef
- ¼ cup rolled oats
- 2/3 cup ketchup
- 2 eggs, beaten
- 2 teaspons salt
- 1½ teaspoons freshly ground black pepper
- 4 slices of bacon, halved crosswise

Instructions:

1. In a medium skillet, melt the unsalted butter over medium heat.


2. When it foams, add the onion, bell pepper, celery and thyme. Cover and cook, stirring once or twice, for 10 minutes, Remove from the heat and cool to room temperature.


3. Position a rack in the middle of the oven and preheat the oven to 350 degrees. In a large bowl, combine the ground beef, the onion mixture, oats, 1/3 cup of the ketchup, the eggs, salt and pepper; mix thoroughly.


4. Spoon the meat mixture into a large, shallow baking dish and shape into a flat loaf about 2 inches high. Smooth the top with the back of a spoon. Spread the remaining 1/3 cup ketchup over the top of the meatloaf. Arrange the bacon strips, overlapping them slightly, if necessary, on top of the ketchup.


5. Bake the meat loaf for about 1¼ hours, or until an instant-reading thermometer inserted into the center registers 145 degrees. Let the meat loaf rest on a rack for 10 minutes before slicing. Serve hot!

Note: This recipe tastes very similar to the meatloaf that Mom used to make, minus the bacon of course! I loved Mom's recipe, and it was always very good, with the tangy baked-in ketchup on top. Mom also baked it with dill pickle spears from time to time, although pickled meatloaf was not my favorite.

Also, be aware that when I used the pan in the photo at the top of this recipe, it filled to the very brim. As a result, the bacon grease sizzled and boiled over the top, coating the bottom of our oven and leaving it a nasty mess to clean up. :-( Although the smoke from the smoldering bacon grease did give the meatloaf a rather nice hickory-smoked flavour! So make sure to place a cookie sheet BELOW the meatloaf if the ingredients nears the top of the pan! On a serious note, I did have to lower the oven temperature for the last 25 minutes because the bacon grease really would have started a fire. So be careful...

Finally, the recipe makes no indication as to whether the bacon should be cooked first. So I placed the bacon in raw! I used thick cuts of quality maple-flavoured bacon. The generous amounts of bacon juices deeply penetrated the loaf. It sure tasted fantastic! *yummy* But if you want to cut fat calories, I would advise you to cook the bacon slightly and then drain the grease before adding it to the top of the loaf. Doing so will also cut down on how much the bacon spits while the meatloaf cooks.

Sunday, November 20, 2011

Monkey Rolls

This was the name that my kids gave this tasty and easy breakfast treat that Mom would often make for us on cold winter mornings. I thought it was such a cute name that Mary and I now also refer to them as "Monkey Sweet Rolls".

Ingredients:
- 1 large can of refrigerated Biscuits (8 count)
- ¼ cup brown sugar
- 1-2 Tbsp of butter
- ½ cup raisins

Directions:
- Heat over to lowest setting (warm)
- Drop two pads of butter (1-2 tablespoons)in an 8" round cake pan
- Place pan in oven until butter has melted; remove from oven.
- Increase oven temperature to 375 degrees.
- Using an oven mitt (or bare hands for those with thick calluses) tilt pan back and forth to allow butter to coat surface.
- While still hot, sprinkle generous amounts of brown sugar over the bottom of pan.
- Drop raisins evenly across the thin butter/brown sugar base.
- Add the biscuits last, placing them evenly. They should perfectly fill the pan.
- Cook in oven for 15 - 17 minutes, until golden brown.
- Remove from oven and let cool for 3 minutes.
- Grab a large plate, turn the pan over, and give it a good quick shake.
- The sweet rolls will drop to the plate upside-down, with the sweet goodness on top!

NOTE: When Mom makes these, she usually uses 2 tins of the smaller biscuits (10 count) which is perfectly fine, although you will need two pans to cook them all. They are better for smaller mouths, and sweeter too since the raisin/sugar/butter mixture is more concentrated for them.

The amounts I gave are approximations, so feel free to adjust them based on your own personal tastes and cravings! :-)

One last note... if you have young children, let them watch you drop the biscuits onto the plate. It's a magical experience when they get to see what was hiding on the bottom!

Missionary Biscuits and Gravy




Serving Size: 4 adults or 2 hungry Missionaries!

Ingredients:
- ½ cup white unbleached flour
- 3 cups milk
- ½ tube pork sausage (6 oz.)
- 1 or 2 teaspoons salt
- 1 refrigerated tin of biscuits (large or small)

Directions:
- Crumble sausage and heat in frying pan until just browned (don't over-fry it).
- Have biscuits baking in oven as per package instructions.
- In a separate bowl, mix flour and milk together.
- Stir with a whisk until lumps are mostly gone.
- Turn heat to medium (drain grease if desired, or leave it in for extra flavor!).
- Add flour/milk mixture and slowly stir into pan with sausage.
- Stir occasionally until mixture comes to a low boil.
- Mixture will begin to thicken at this point; stir regularly.
- Continue stirring over low heat until gravy reaches desired consistency.
- Remove from heat. Split open biscuits and pour gravy over the top. Enjoy!

NOTE: Because sausage inherently contains lots of salt, you may choose to add none to the gravy; however, I still recommend at least 1 teaspoon for good flavor.

If you have little children, the small prepackaged biscuits work best. But you may need two cans of 'em to fill everyone up. Otherwise, I recommend one can of the large Western Family or Pillsbury home-style or buttermilk biscuits. They taste better, and hold the heat better when serving them.

Of course, you can always make your own biscuits from scratch, if you have more time in the morning than I. ;-)

Friday, November 18, 2011

Ellen's Cake Mix Cookies AND Alison's Homemade Oreo's

Ellen's Cake Mix Cookies: 1 pkg. chocolate cake mix 1/4 c. flour 2 eggs 1/2 c. butter, melted 1 tsp. vanilla 1 pkg. chocolate chips Bake at 350 degrees for 12-14 minutes. Alison's Homemade Oreo's: Prepare cookies per recipe above but omit chocolate chips. In mixer, prepare buttercream frosting: 1 stick butter 1/2 c. shortening 3 c. confectioner's sugar 1-2 tsp. vanilla Spoon into a ziploc bag, snip a tiny bit of a bottom corner, and squeeze onto bottoms of cookies. top with another cookie. Consume quickly before every one else discovers you! Thayne's favorite variation: add a little mint extract and green food coloring to the buttercream frosting to make mint Oreo's.

Ellen's Chinese Chicken Salad

Whisk together dressing:
2/3 c. oil
5 TBSP rice vinegar
3 TBSP white sugar
1 1/2 tsp. kosher salt
3/4 tsp. black pepper

Pour over 1/2 head of chopped cabbage, some diced green onions, 1 cup of frozen peas, and 1/2 package of smashed uncooked Ramen noodles (seasoning package not needed). Chill in fridge until ready to eat. Add in some leftover shreds from a cold Rotisserie chicken to make it a main dish on a sweltering summer's eve.

Thursday, November 17, 2011

Tator Tot Casserole

This is the traditional Tator Tot casserole that I grew up with. Some variations of this recipe calls for odd items, such as green beans. While you are certainly welcome to experiment, this is the way that I have enjoyed it for years!

Serving Size: Large Family

Ingredients:
- 1 lb. Ground Beef
- Garlic Salt
- Dried Onion pieces
- Medium or sharp Cheddar Cheese (grated)
- 2 lbs frozen Tater Tots
- 3 cans Cream of Mushroom Soup

Directions:
- Thaw out the hamburger the night before, or nuke it in the microwave if on a tight schedule
- Brown 1 pound of hamburger (crumbled)
- Spread the hamburger along the bottom of a 9" x 12" pan (large cake pan size).
- Sprinkle (not too much) garlic salt and dried onion on top of the meat.
- Spread layer of grated cheese on top of meat mixture.
- Top with 2 pounds of frozen tater tots and spread cream of mushroom soup evenly across tater tots.
- Sprinkle more grated cheese (to taste) and cover with tin foil (shiny side down).
- Bake for 1 hour at 350 degrees.

Note: If you wish to make this casserole more healthy, use only 2 cans of Cream of Mushroom Soup. The original recipe calls for only 2 cans, but I have found that it leaves it a bit dry. 3 cans is perfect, albeit not as nutritious. ;-)

More!

This is the classic More! recipe I learned from Mom. I hesitated posting it, since Alison just posted Thayne's custom variation on the recipe. However, I had already typed it up from my recipe book, and there are several differences between the two. Furthermore, this recipe offers the specific measurements that I am familiar with.

You can't go wrong with either recipe... this original recipe is tangy, but mild. Whereas Thayne's custom More will certainly have more zest to it! Try both of them, and feel free to experiment with what you like most. It's a very forgiving recipe, and how you cook it is up to you! Either way you look at it, More! is a Monson classic!

Serving Size: Large Family w/ leftovers

Ingredients:
- 1 lb. Ground Beef
- ¼ cup chopped onions (or 2 Tbsp dehydrated)
- ½ cup chopped Green Peppers
- 1 cup chopped Celery
- 2 cups Macaroni Noodles
- 1 can Corn, drained
- 1½ Tbsp. Chili Pepper
- 1 can Tomato Sauce
- 1 can Tomato Soup
- Grated Cheddar or Mozzarella Cheese (to taste)

Directions:
- Brown and crumble the hamburger meat; add onions, green peppers, and celery.
- Cook meat and vegetables on the stove for several minutes; remove from stove and drain.
- Meanwhile, have the macaroni noodles cooking; remove when tender (but firm), and drain.
- Choose either a slow cooker/crock pot, or a deep pot atop the stove.
- Add meat mixture, corn, chili pepper, and cooked macaroni noodles.
- Add salt and pepper to taste; pour in tomato sauce and soup, and stir well.
- Cook over stove, covered, or in slow cooker. You can even Microwave it!
- Cover with grated cheese; cook until heated through.

Note: Because most of the items are cooked separately, the cooking time after combining the ingredients is short.

Wednesday, November 16, 2011

Lanny's Yummy Brown Gravy

I do my recipes in narrative form, so I hope that doesn't bother anyone. But I like making this easy gravy which is very versatile and can be used alone or with rice, potatoes or with other veggies.

Take an onion, a clove of garlic (garlic optional) and if you have sprouted onions they work well with the greens chopped up for this, or add some green onions. You can add some green peppers if you like. Take a frying pan with some olive oil (or I prefer butter) and brown the onions, garlic and green pepper. Then add about a pound of thawed hamburger. The hamburger doesn't have to be thawed, but it's easier that way. (Otherwise, especially if it's lean, it takes some patience heating it, turning it, scraping thawed burger off until it's all browned equally without burning it.)
Then add a can of mushrooms with the water in the can, and a bit more to make about a cup of water. Add a packet of brown gravy mix and stir it over medium or high heat until it becomes thick. Salt and pepper to taste.

I like this over rice or potatoes, but it's good by itself as well. My cat (Wizard) is jealous and trying to help me type so if there are any mistakes, it's HIS fault.

Thayne's Favorite MORE!

After previously screwing this recipe up twice (mainly because I wasn't following Thayne's instructions or a written recipe), I managed to correctly make it last night in honor of Thayne's "birthweek". Third time really is the charm, YAY! So this recipe is according to Thayne's closely followed instructions last night:

Boil one package of macaroni noodles. Meanwhile, next in the cast of characters in another pot are:

1 onion
1 green pepper
4-5 celery stalks

Slice 'em, dice 'em, and saute 'em in a little oil and/or Worcestershire sauce (makes the onion less tortuous for the eyes).

Add in ground beef and brown it. We are always out of tomato sauce, so instead, add in 2 cans tomato soup and 1 can of diced tomatoes (Mexican if you've got 'em). Mix in a can of corn as well. Season with 2 TBSP chili powder (yes, 2 TBSP) and some dashes of cumin, paprika, and garlic powder. Stir in cooked macaroni and top with shredded cheese. This makes a large batch so expect some leftovers if you have a small family.

Alison's Snickerdoodles

This is another top secret family cookie recipe (and thanks to Betty) I shall share. I made these a lot in college for my roommates as well as in hopes of attracting cute boys [snicker snicker]! The cookie trap didn't work as I'd hoped it would, but my mad writing skillz did catch a good one and I ain't letting go of him! 1 c. shortening 1 1/2 c. sugar 2 eggs 2 3/4 c. flour 2 tsp. cream of tartar 1 tsp. baking soda 1/4 tsp. salt 2 TBSP sugar + 2 tsp. cinnamon Preheat oven to 400 degrees. Mix shortening, sugar, and eggs. Blend in flour, cream of tartar, baking soda, and salt. Shape into 1" balls and roll in sugar + cinnamon mixture. Bake for 8-10 minutes.

Soft and Chewy Pumpkin Cookies

1 c. canned pumpkin (one small can contains 2 cups) 1 c. white sugar 1/2 c. vegetable oil 1 egg 2 c. flour 2 tsp. baking powder 2 tsp. cinnamon 1 tsp. nutmeg 1/2 tsp. salt 1 tsp. baking soda mixed with 1 tsp. milk 1 TBSP vanilla 1 c. chocolate chips In one bowl, mix together pumpkin, sugar, vegetable oil, and egg. In another bowl, combine flour, baking powder, cinnamon, nutmeg, salt, baking soda and milk. Add dry ingredients to wet ingredients bowl and mix. Add in vanilla and chocolate chips. Bake at 350 degrees for about 10 minutes. Serve with a glass of milk!

Lanny's Yummy Rice

I use a large flatish broiler pan with the drip tray.

First, chop up an onion and and some garlic and you can either put it in the broiler pan, or brown it in butter first (tastes better this latter way) and mix it with a couple of cups of brown or white rice in the pan itself. If you have the green onions, or if your onions have decided to group and sprouted a little, it adds some color to chop up the sprout part and add that. You can also add thinly sliced carrots if you like. Mix in a large can of cream of chicken soup. Add a small can of mushrooms or several chopped up fresh ones if you prefer. Add a couple of cups of water, salt and pepper to taste. (You can add a packet of instant chicken gravy if you like).

Place a cut-up chicken (or should I say "sliced up" so you don't get a creepy image of a hyperactive chicken spouting one-liners?) on the drip tray, and cover with foil. Bake for about an hour at 350 degrees, but depending on altitude and my poor memory, it could be a little more than that.

Remove the foil and put the chicken on a serving tray. If you're a heathen, you can serve the rice right out of the broiler pan like I prefer to do, or if you're more civilized you can put it in a serving bowl. Either way, you should stir it up to mix any settled ingredients evenly.

Chicken Tortilla Soup

This probably isn't a healthy soup but my excuse is that it will help us with some additional padding in the cold winter season. I even lowered the excessive amount of butter from the original recipe (you're welcome)!

1-2 chicken breasts, cubed and cooked with a dash of chili powder (either microwave or cook in a separate pan)
1 Onion
1 green pepper (optional)
1 pint Half & Half (I hope to experiment with milk someday, I'll let you know how that turns out)
1 c. flour
1/2 c. butter
4 c. chicken broth (bullion granules + water work fine)
1 c. cheese (plus some for garnish)
1 (10 oz.) can diced tomatoes (with or w/out chilis)
1 can corn, drained (or use frozen)
1-2 cans beans of your choice, drained and rinsed (we like black beans and kidney beans)
Taco Seasonings (packet or homemade - chili powder, cumin, paprika, mustard, Mrs. Dash)
Sriracha chili paste (optional, but Thayne loves to add it)

Saute onion and green pepper in butter. Add Half & Half. Slowly add in and WHISK flour. Add chicken broth, cheese, cooked chicken, tomatoes, and seasonings. Rinse beans in a collander and add. Add drained corn. Season with taco seasonings and Sriracha (optional) to make it as hot as you dare.

Serve with tortilla chips, a little more cheese, and a small dollop of sour cream to cool it down.

Alison's Taco Soup

This recipe is an amalgamation of three different taco soup recipes, therefore, I might as well call this one my own (need just a little ego stroking today, thank you very much). It has quickly become one of our favorite and quick soups.

1 onion, diced
1/2 green pepper
ground beef
1 can kidney beans + liquid
1 can corn + 1/2 liquid
1 can (8 oz) tomato sauce
taco seasonings (One of those packets or your own favorite combination. Ours is chili powder, cumin, mustard, paprika, and a little Mrs. Dash (she's like my third grandma).)
tortilla chips
shredded cheese
sour cream

Saute one onion and half a green pepper (optional) in a little Worcestershire sauce. Add ground beef and brown. Add taco seasonings. Add beans, corn, and tomato sauce. Bring to a boil. Simmer until ready to serve. In your own bowl, sprinkle on some shredded cheese, crushed tortilla chips, and a dollop of sour cream.

Tuesday, November 15, 2011

Mary's Crescent Rolls / Sweet Rolls

For all of you who have waited long for this recipe... it is finally here! Mary's famous roll recipe! Actually, it originated from her grandmother, Helen Mitchell, whom passed it down to Mary. Apparently the original recipe came down through the echelons of the Relief Society before that. Now it is preserved in the Monson Family Kitchen blog, and will hopefully be a future part of a Monson family cookbook! This recipe has been a family favorite for decades, baked for many a year by Mary's grandmother, and enjoyed by the Mitchell family since before Mary was born. I was fortunate enough to be introduced to this fantastic recipe during my first Mitchell Thanksgiving Dinner, at Mary's grandmother's house, while I was still dating my sweetheart. Mary picked up the recipe soon thereafter, and she quickly perfected the art of baking these scrumptious rolls! If you haven't been lucky enough to taste them, look no further than this recipe! Crescent rolls don't get any better than these! Yield: 2 dozen Ingredients: - Yeast Start (1 Tbsp yeast, ¼ cup water, a pinch of sugar) - 3/8 cup sugar - 3/8 cup vegetable oil - 1½ tsp. salt - 1 cup hot water - 1 large egg - 4¼ cups unbleached white flour - 1/3 cup powdered milk (optional) Directions: - Prepare yeast start in its own small bowl. (sprinkle pinch of sugar over yeast) - In your main mixing bowl, combine sugar, oil, salt, and hot water. - In a separate bowl, combine flour and powdered milk. - Combine half of the flour mixture into the sugar mixture; mix until blended. - Add egg and yeast start. Mix together. - While mixing, add remaining flour in ½ cup increments. - Let dough rise for 1 hour. Knead dough to work the bubbles out, and divide in half. - Roll each half into a circle. Use a pizza cutter to divide into 12 equal slices. - Roll each slice (gently with fingers) into a crescent shape, starting at fat end. - Place on greased cookie sheet. Let rise 30 minutes more. - Cook for 10 minutes at 375 degrees. Let cool. Note: This is a very versatile recipe, and can also be used to make cinnamon rolls, scones, breadsticks, and delicious pizza dough! Another Note: These rolls stand perfectly well on their own merits. But if you really want a rich experience, try slathering them with butter! Especially while hot!

Dinner in a Pumpkin #2

Scoop guts out of one medium or two small pumpkins. Begin baking them at 350 degrees while preparing the meat and rice on the stovetop to save time as the pumpkins need to bake for at least an hour, depending on size. Begin cooking 3/4 c. rice and water in one saucepan. In another, saute one diced onion. Brown ground beef and drain excess fat. Add: 2 TBSP soy sauce, 2 TBSP brown sugar, and 1 can Cream of Mushroom soup When rice is done, add that as well as 1 can of corn and 1 can of green beans. Remove pumpkin(s) from oven and fill with meat/rice mixture. Continue cooking until pumpkin is soft and easily pierced with a fork (about one hour total cooking time of pumpkin, give or take, depending on size). Serve by scooping out meat and rice mixture and slicing up pumpkin. I like to add a little salt and pepper to my pumpkin slice, and Thayne likes ketchup on his meat and rice. [Picture pending cuz it was cute]

S'Mores

8 c. Golden Grahams
5 c. marshmallows
1 1/2 c. chocolate chips
1/4 c. corn syrup
5 TBSP margarine
1 tsp. vanilla

Microwave marshmallows, chocolate chips, corn syrup, and margarine for 2-3 minutes, stirring every 30 seconds. Pour over golden grahams and stir quickly to coat well. With buttered hands, spread mixture into a 9x13" pan. Cool, cut, and serve.

Better-Than-Anything Cake

I was introduced to this decadent dessert whilst attending Snow College where it had another name but we'll stick with the more conservative one so as to be able to speak around our small children. :)

Prepare one boxed chocolate cake, per back of the box instructions.
Poke holes in cooled cake every 1/2" with the end of a wooden spoon.
Drizzle on 1 (14 oz.) can of sweetened condensed milk. Let sit for a minute so as to soak in. Drizzle on 1 small jar caramel ice cream topping.
Spread on 1 container of defrosted cool whip topping.
Sprinkle on 1 cup toffee bits.
Serve immediately or refrigerate.
Break out 1 Richard Simmon's Sweating to the Oldies the next day.

Thai Peanut Noodles

These noodles are quick and easy to throw together in a pinch and a BIG hit in our house! The recipe comes from the Our Best Bites blog (two awesome Mormon chicks).

Boil 12 oz package linguine noodles. Meanwhile, prepare and whisk sauce ingredients in a small saucepan over medium heat.

Sauce:
1 c. chicken broth (1 tsp. chicken bullion granules + 1 c. water = broth)
6 TBSP creamy peanut butter
1-4 tsp. Sriracha chili paste (a worthy staple in our fridge; WARNING: the more you use, the hotter it gets)
3 TBSP honey
6 TBSP soy sauce
3 TBSP fresh ginger (adjust amount if powdered)
4-6 cloves garlic (use a garlic press or squish and mince with knife)

Drain aldente noodles and add sauce. Mix in some steamed vegetables (we prefer the frozen California medley - broccoli, carrots, and cauliflower). Serve in bowls as there is plenty of sauce. Slurp it up!

Completely optional garnishes include freshly chopped green onions, cilantro, and peanuts with a squeeze of lime.

Monday, November 14, 2011

Alison's Saturday Morning Pancakes

2 1/2 c. flour (more or less)
1/4 c. oil
2 TBSP sugar
1 tsp. salt
5 1/2 tsp. baking powder
2 cups milk (more or less)
2 tsp. vanilla
cinnamon
nutmeg
mashed bananas or blueberries or chocolate chips (optional)

Combine ingredients quickly with a whisk. Heat griddle to about 325 degrees. Bake pancakes until bubbles pop and then flip. Serve with warm syrup and butter, maybe top with fruit, perhaps a side of eggs (scrambled, sunny, you decide).

The Meatballs that Momma Craves

I confess. I could eat this stuff every week if possible! And fruitbat Thayne loves fresh pineapple!

Meatballs (from Pioneer Woman since egg free meatballs used to be a necessity in our house and they've stuck ever since since they're fairly simple to make):

Ground Beef
1 c. milk
1 heaping c. quick oats
salt and pepper and a little Mrs. Dash

Mix well. Scoop with small cookie scoop onto a foil-lined baking sheet. Bake at 375 degrees for at least 30 minutes.

Sauce (slightly different from Kathryn Monson's recipe):
2/3 c. sugar
1/2 c. vinegar
1/2 c. fresh pineapple and any juice
1/4 c. ketchup
1 tsp. soy sauce
1 1/2 tsp. Worcestershire sauce
2 TBSP corn starch
Tabasco or Sriracha (optional or as masochistic as you feel necessary)

Combine and whisk in small saucepan and bring to boil on stovetop. Pour over cooked meatballs. Serve with either cooked brown rice or mashed potatoes.

Oven-Roasted Butternut Squash

This is my favorite way to prepare butternut squash! Cut butternut squash up into 1/2" cubes. Place in bowl and drizzle with 1-2 T. Olive Oil and sprinkle with kosher salt and pepper. Mix well to evenly coat. Spread evenly onto baking sheet and bake at 375 degrees for about 20 minutes (mixing half way through) until easily speared with a fork.

Alison's Honey Mustard Chicken

1/2 c. honey
1/2 c. mustard
1/4 tsp. basil
1/4 tsp. parsley
1/4 tsp. paprika

Mix ingredients and pour over ~4 defrosted chicken breasts in 9x9 pan. Let marinate for 30 minutes or so. Bake at 350 degrees for 30 minutes. Flip and spoon glaze over chicken. Continue baking for 15 minutes more. Extra glaze goes nicely over some Rice-a-roni. Serve with butternut squash or broccoli.

Sweet Potato Oven Fries

Cut sweet potatoes into wedges or 1/4" sticks. Soak in water with 2 tsp. salt for at least 15 minutes (the longer, the crispier they'll be, science and osmosis sort of thing).

Spray foiled baking sheet lightly with some oil. Spread on sweet potatoes and spray with a little oil as well. Sprinkle with a little salt and pepper and/or other seasonings of your choice. (Not too much salt, though.)

Bake at 425 degrees for 30-45 minutes or until crispy on the outside, flipping half way through for even cooking.

Dip in fry sauce (famous pink mixture of mayonnaise, ketchup, and relish from Utah) and eat!

Pseudo Chicken Cordon Bleu Casserole

Pseudo Chicken Cordon Bleu Casserole


2 chicken breasts, microwaved and cubed
Leftover ham, cubed
1 can cream of chicken soup
1/2-3/4 can milk
1 box Stove Top chicken stuffing
Can of corn and/or green beans (or frozen)
Mozzarella cheese, shredded (or cheddar)

Mix all ingredients except cheese in a bowl. Spoon into 13x9 dish. Sprinkle on mozzarella cheese. Bake at 350 degrees for about 20-25 minutes until bubbly and warm. Set the table and proceed to snarf it down!

Alternate rendition: use cubed turkey instead of ham and chicken and use cream of mushroom soup instead of cream of chicken soup.

Alison's Easy Bake Salmon

Easy Bake Salmon (although, I suggest not using an easy bake oven)


2 fillets of Salmon
1/4 cup soy sauce (we get some good stuff at the Korean market and it's worth it, trust me)
1 teaspoon lemon juice
1/2 teaspoon ginger (ground is just fine)
1/4 teaspoon pepper
a clove or two of garlic (minced or sliced thinly)

Mix and marinate the fillets for about 30 minutes to 4 hours, depending on how much time you have. Bake at 325 degrees for about 25 minutes or until nice and flaky. Prepare a side of spinach or other tasty green veggie, a baked potato, and some bread and you just might have a gourmet meal in under an hour to impress your significant other with!

Pioneer Woman's Berry Cobbler

1 stick butter, melted
1-¼ cup sugar
1 cup self-rising flour*
1 cup milk
2 cups fresh or frozen berries of your choice

Mix together 1 cup sugar and flour and whisk in milk. Pour in melted butter and whisk it all well together. Pour the batter into a buttered baking dish. Sprinkle berries over the top of the batter evenly. Sprinkle ¼ cup sugar over the top. Bake at 350 degrees for 1 hour, or until golden and bubbly. Keep a close eye on it as sometimes it only needs 45 minutes. Sprinkle a teaspoon of sugar over the cobbler 10 minutes before it’s done.

Don't forget to serve it warm with a dollop of whipped cream or even ice cream! You will be worshiped forever...or at least until it's gone and it's time to make more!

* To make your own self-rising flour, shift together 6 cups flour, 3 tbsp baking powder, and 1 tbsp salt. Store whatever you don't use in an airtight container.

Quick and Yeast-Free Soft Breadsticks


This recipe comes from an old church cookbook and are yeast free (for those of us too lazy to buy yeast or just sometimes are too afraid of the little buggers and just lie with the first reason). They are lovely alongside a bowl of baked potato soup!

1 - 1/2 cups flour (sometimes more if really gooey and hard to work with)
2 tsp sugar
1 - 1/2 tsp baking powder
1/2 tsp salt
2/3 milk
3 TBSP butter or margarine, melted

Combine flour, sugar, baking powder and salt in a bowl. Add milk slowly and stir to form a soft dough. On a floured surface (a cutting board or counter top) knead the dough gently 3-4 times.

Prepare a 9x13 baking dish by pouring in the 3 TBSP melted butter. Place the dough in the middle of the dish and press it into a rectangle shape (NOT to the edges of the dish, mind you) a little less than 1/2 inch thick or so. Brush some of the excess butter that you'll see on the sides over the top of the dough. Cut into breadsticks however you like with a pizza cutter and sprinkle with cheese such as Parmesan (a little more, more, MORE! You can't go wrong with more cheese).

Bake at 400 degrees for 10-15 minutes or until golden brown (keep an eye on them). These are best served warm on the side of a creamy soup or spaghetti.

Potstickers

Thayne loves potstickers! So I learned how to make them! These take some prep time but are actually quite fun to make and delicious! They go well alongside some stir fry or even as their own main dish with a little rice. This recipe comes from the back of a potsticker wrapper package.

1/4 ground pork (or you can go vegetarian and skip along)
1/2 cup cabbage, finely chopped
1/8 cup green onion, diced
1 TBSP soy sauce
1/2 TBSP dry white wine or vinegar
1/4 tsp kosher salt
1/2 tsp cornstarch
Dash of pepper

Mix the ingredients together in a bowl and place a small spoonful of the mixture in the center of one round potsticker wrap. Moisten the edge of the wrap with water on your fingers (not too much but not too little) to help stick together when you fold it up. Make a few pinches to help it stay together during the cooking process and to make it look fancy so people will be amazed by your cool handiwork.


Heat 2 TBSP oil (or thin layer) in skillet over medium heat. Add potstickers and lightly brown the little sucker's bottoms (slight maniacal laugh, sorry, it's dark and stormy outside today). Pour in 1/4 cup of water (or less, too much and you'll have soggy butts, seriously) and cover the pan tightly with a lid. Turn the heat to low and cook until the water is gone.

Serve while hot on a platter with a small cup of soy sauce and enjoy!

Not Yo Mama's Enchilada's


Then again, they might be yo mama's enchilada's. (If so, she totally rocks and we should be friends!) I just thought that sort of title sounds cool too, hehe! Make them mild, medium, spicy, green or red. Whatever floats your boat, tops your ice cream, bakes your burrito. Eh, you get the point. You can also use ground beef, chicken, or (my fav) leftover steak.

1 cup +/- cooked rice
1 can refried beans
1 to 2 cups cooked meat of your choice, cubed or shredded
1 to 2 cups cheese (there is no such thing as too much of a good thing...sometimes)
2 small cans (or one big can) Enchilada sauce (Old El-Paso is a really good brand)
Package of soft tortilla shells


Prepare a 13x9 casserole dish with some pan (from experience, don't miss this step). Stir together rice, one small can (or half of big can) of sauce, one cup of cheese, and meat in a metal bowl (from experience again, trust me when I suggest a metal bowl for this because red enchilada sauce stains plastic bowls, #@$#%!). Smear a tortilla shell with one or two spoonfuls of beans. Top with two spoonfuls of meat mixture. Like this, m'dearie:


Roll up and place in dish. Repeat as many times as necessary until meat mixture is used up. Smother with rest of enchilada sauce and cheese. Bake at 350 degrees for 30 minutes or until hot and bubbly. Ring the dinner bell to signal to the troops that dinner is on. Top with sour cream, lettuce, tomato, salsa, jalapenos, etc.

Saturday, October 8, 2011

Eryn's Crockpot Chicken Soup

This is nothing fancy, but turned out pretty good!

Ingredients:
8 cups chicken broth (I just used 8 cups of water and some bouillon cubes)
2 cups diced celery
1 medium onion
2 cups diced carrots
1-2 lbs chicken, diced (can throw it in raw or throw it in a pan for a couple minutes with the onion to seal in juices)
Bag of frozen mixed vegetables
2 cups rice (I used brown)
3 cloves garlic
Some lemon pepper
Some thyme
Some basil

Preparation

Throw (or place) everything in the crockpot except for the rice and leave on high for 2-3 hours. Throw the rice into the pot for another hour and you should be good to go!

I will post a picture later - I took one using my phone.

Monday, March 14, 2011

Mackay Family Chocolate Chip Cookies

This recipe is top-secret and only kept in the domains of the Mackay family. But I guess since you're family too, I might as well post it here rather than taking it to the grave with me. The recipe has five secrets to making excellent looking and tasting cookies. Follow them and you shall be well-rewarded.

1 cup white sugar
1 cup brown sugar (packed well)
1/2 cup melted margarine (secret #1)
1/2 cup butter shortening (secret #2 in combination with #1)
2 eggs
2 tsp. vanilla

3 to 2 & 1/2 cups flour
1/2 tsp. baking soda
1/2 tsp. salt
1 TBSP baking powder
1 pkg. chocolate chips

Cream together sugars, margarine, shortening, eggs, and vanilla. Sprinkle in baking soda, salt, and baking powder. Mix in flour, adding more to account for a humid day and if batter is too sticky and wet (a fine balance is secret #3). When well mixed, add in chocolate chips. Chill in refrigerator for at least a couple of hours or even overnight (patience is the key to secret #4). Spoon out onto cookie sheet and bake in preheated oven at 375 degrees for 9-10 minutes (turning pan around for even baking after five minutes for secret #5).

Bonus secret: dough may be frozen in individual balls and baked at a later date to satiate those late-night cookie cravings.

Heavenly Angel Food Cake

I must admit that I've never really liked Angel Food cake. Why? I think the store-bought version(s) taste and feel like stale Styrofoam. I've now changed my mind. I DO like Angel Food cake! BUT only if it's homemade. Yeah, call me stuck-up and picky. Then, try this recipe and you'll side with me. (Recipe carefully selected from allrecipes.com and personally tested in my own kitchen.) And it really isn't that hard if you follow the recipe directions closely. 10-12 egg whites (1 & 1/2 c. egg whites) 1 & 1/4 c. confectioner's sugar 1 c. all-purpose flour 1 & 1/2 tsp. cream of tartar 2 tsp. vanilla extract 1/4 tsp. salt 1 c. sugar Put mixing bowl and flat beater in fridge. Meanwhile, sift confectioner's sugar and flour together three times with a sifter (give those hands a nice workout). Set aside. Separate eggs until you have 1 & 1/2 cups (this is where the amount of eggs varies and a clear glass measuring cup works best). Save yolks for scrambled eggs or custard. Throwing such delicacies away would be such a waste! Pull out chilled mixing bowl and beater and add egg whites into the bowl. Add cream of tartar, vanila extract, and salt. Beat on high speed (8-10 works best on a Kitchenaid stand mixer) while gradually adding 1 cup regular sugar. Continue mixing on high until stiff peaks form and the batter doesn't fall off the beater when it is lifted up. You want it stiff but DON'T OVERDO IT or else the cake will turn out tough. This step takes about 7-9 minutes. Next, GENTLY fold sifted flour and sugar mixture, 1/4 cup at a time, into the stiff egg white mixture. DO NOT OVER-MIX! GENTLY spoon into UN-GREASED angel food cake pan. Cut through batter with a knife to remove any air pockets. Bake at 350 degrees for 35-45 minutes or until cake springs back when lightly touched. Immediately invert pan onto a cooling rack and cool completely before attempting to remove the cake from the pan. Serve with a lovely dollop of whipped topping and fresh strawberries. And even Lizzy Ellen can have it because she's over her egg allergy! YAY!