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Showing posts with label Holiday Dishes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Holiday Dishes. Show all posts

Thursday, December 8, 2011

Boompa's Spiced Roasted Pecans

Our three year old great-grandson calls my husband Boompa....as in "Mr. Hobbs Takes A Vacation", a 1960's movie starring Jimmy Stewart.  Last year Booma made these pecans, and we sent a batch in the Christmas box to our newest grandson ( he married our granddaughter), a Navy Corpsman, who was in the middle east.  Gene called us tonight and asked a favor...would we send some of these to a Marine buddy of his who has just deployed to that region?  A resounding yes!  I got the recipe out to make these tomorrow, so thought I would post it.  When you make ayour Christmas goodies, please consider sending a box to our military.  They are so far away for home, in dangerous circumstances, and anything from home is appreciated.   They always share their homemade goodies with their comrades.

Ingredients:
1 egg white
1 TBS water
½ C. sugar
1 ½ tsp. cinnamon
¼ tsp. salt
2 ¼ C pecan halves

Instructions:
Combine egg white and water in bowl; beat until fluffy.  Fold in pecans and coat evenly.  Combine dry ingredients in bowl; dump in pecans and stir until well coated.  Spread nuts in lightly greased rimmed baking sheet; bake in oven preheated to 225* until toasted and fragrant, about 1 hour.  Stir pecans about every 15 minutes.  Cool in pan, store in airtight container.  

Tuesday, December 6, 2011

150+ Year Old Hodges-Thomas Fruitcake Recipe

I know, I know, everyone hates fruitcake...but I just had to add this to my blog.  My grandmother used to make this cake every year after Thanksgiving, and put it in the refrigerator until Christmas.  My grandmother’s family has made this cake for Christmas for more than 150 years...my great, great, great grandmother used to make this, and she was born in 1818.  Measurements are not as precise as in modern recipes, and old terms are used.  “Sweet milk” is a Southern description for whole milk.  They used it to differentiate from buttermilk.
I do not know it's origin...but my heritage is British/Celtic.  This is not like a standard fruitcake.  It makes layers, with a  filling/frosting.  The ingredients/measurements have been refined very little from the original.   If you try it, let me know what you think.

Ingredients:
Cake:
6 eggs
1 C butter, softened
2 C sugar
3 C flour
1 C sweet milk (Southern for whole milk)
1 TBS baking powder
2 TBS allspice; ginger; cloves
1 TBS cinnamon

Filling/Frosting:
1 coconut, grated
1# raisins-put half in cake batter
1# currents-put half in cake batter
1# English walnuts, coarsely chopped
1# Brazil nuts, coarsely chopped
2 C blackberry jam
3 C sugar
½ C sweet milk
½ C butter

Instructions:
Cake: Cream butter and sugar; add eggs one at a time.  Mix dry ingredients and alternate adding to sugar mixture with the milk, starting and ending with flour mixture.  Blend in raisins and currents.  Pour into 4 greased and floured cake pans.  There are no baking instructions for this very old recipe, because it was originally baked in wood burning stoves, other than ‘bake until “straw” inserted in center of layer comes out clean’. (Bake at 350* for about 25-30 minutes. Test for doneness by inserting toothpick into center of layer.  (When it comes out clean, layer is done.)
Filling/Frosting: Put butter, sugar and milk in large pot, cook “a while” (until sugar melts).  Add rest of ingredients and cook, stirring, for “a while longer” (about 10 minutes).  Spread between layers, and then cover outside of cake with mixture.  Make cake a couple of weeks before Christmas and cover and refrigerate.