Baby Shower!

I can’t tell you how thrilled I am, this past weekend was my baby shower! I never shared the news but it’s a GIRL! After all those boys, both sides of the family are thrilled. It’ll be the first grand-daughter for each side. Of course our sister-in-law is also pregnant, due 4 days after me (my original due date) so she might have a girl too, 50/50 shot!  We aren’t disclosing her name yet since it’s original and also a family name. Silly to say but I want to ‘protect’ it. The theme is Dr. Suess,  One Fish Two Fish and I had so much fun planning it. I have a bunch of pictures to upload but for now I’ll upload the cake! I absolutely loved doing that too! It was a blast to try and make it look like the invites and thank you cards we had. We had fish shaped sugar cookies that I decorated with pastel royal icing as favors, chicken and ham salad sandwiches, goldfish crackers, swedish fish and goldfish pretzels. We got a ton of books to start her library with and I’ll be super thrilled to read them to her. Sorry to go on, I’m just bursting with excitement! Here are the cake and cookie pics!

I absolutely love Sweetopia’s Sugar Cookie Recipe and it works wonderfully with royal icing!

Ingredients:

2  1/2 cups butter (at room temperature)

2 cups sugar

2 large eggs

seeds from 1 vanilla bean (or 3 tsp vanilla)

5 cups flour

1 tsp baking powder (*take this out if you don’t want your cookies to spread)

1 tsp salt

Instructions:

1. Cream the butter and sugar together in the bowl of an electric mixer on low to medium speed.  (Use the paddle attachment).  Mix until thoroughly incorporated – for about one minute.  Scrape down the sides of the bowl with a plastic spatula and mix again for a few seconds more.

Over mixing the butter and sugar in this step will cause too much air to be incorporated into the dough.  If you’d like a light and fluffy cookie, that’s ideal, however the dough will spread more during baking; not ideal if you’d like the cookie to hold its shape.

2. Add eggs slowly and mix.  Scrape down the bowl with your spatula at least once and mix again.

3. Cut open your vanilla bean and scrape the seeds out.  Add to mixing bowl.  Alternatively, add liquid vanilla extract.  Stir briefly.

4. Sift your dry ingredients together.  (Flour, baking powder and salt).

5. Add all of the flour mixture to the bowl.  Place a large tea towel or two small tea towels between the edge of the bowl and the electric mixer so that the flour won’t escape.  Mix on low speed for 3o seconds.  Remove the tea towels and observe the dough mixing; when it clumps around the paddle attachment it’s ready.  It’s also important at this stage not to over mix the dough (the glutens in the flour develop and the dough can become tough).

6. Roll the dough out between 2 large pieces of parchment paper.  Place on a baking sheet and into the fridge for a minimum of 1 hour.

7. Roll out the dough further if you need to, and cut out cookie shapes.  Place on parchment paper-lined baking sheet.  Re-roll scraps and repeat.

8. Put cookie dough shapes back into the fridge for 10 minutes to 1 hour to chill again.  They will then hold their shape better when baked.

9. Preheat your oven to 350°F or 176°C.

10. Bake cookies for 8-12 minutes or until the edges become golden brown.  The baking time will depend on the size of your cookie.

I’ve found that taking them out almost immediately when they start to turn, the cookies are soft and moist, like those iced sugar cookies you can buy at the grocery store. Only these, are WAY better! Also, I’ve made half batches and whole batches, both turn out equally well!

 

Royal Icing

2 lbs (1bag) confectioner’s sugar
1/3 c. plus one Tbsp. meringue powder

3/4  c. warm water

1-2 Tbsp. OIL FREE extract

Mix dry ingredients first, slowly mix with paddle attachment.

Add the extract to the water, slowly add to dry mix. It will seem to be more like a liquid than solid.

Mix at medium-high until fluffy and stiff peaks form, between approximately 7-10 minutes. Stop mixing as soon as it forms stiff peaks! Over mixing and oil-containing extracts can keep the icing from setting up.

If you’re using it to pipe/flood a cookie, keep it thick until you’re ready to use it. I typically thin it to a “15 second” icing (video coming soon!) so I can both pipe the outline and go back to flood without having to switch bottles/bags out.  Use very little water at a time to thin as you can’t take away excess. It’s so much easier in that you only color this stuff once, no need to match! Once you finish flooding the cookies, let them dry for 6-8 hours. Perfect!

 

 

National Baking Week

Hi everyone! A bit late on this but last week was National Baking Week. At least according to Better Homes & Gardens Magazine (which I have a NEW addiction to!). Along with the “baking” of this little bundle that’s been happening, (Month 4 already!) I’ve been hanging with my favorite (i.e, only) sister a lot lately since being stuck in an ovenless apartment with just Mavs, is not my idea of fun. On the first day of “Baking Week”, I headed into the next county and spent some time with my youngest nephew. Most don’t know, I’ve been on a new “kick”. There are a lot of edible flowers and plants in your backyard you probably aren’t aware of! Included are dandelions, violets, pansies, marigolds and even some plants usually classified as weeds. P decided he wanted to take a walk and since it was gorgeous out, we couldn’t really deny him. On the walk, P kept asking if he could pick flowers. We instead let him start his “rock collection”. We got on subject about the edible plants and making different cookies. I asked Tiff if she had a few ingredients and she said she did. P was pretty excited you could eat some flowers and since I already said dandelions were, he was even more thrilled to pick them when we hit their yard. The front yard was a bit bare, but the back was plentiful. After gathering a decent amount, P saw a bee and decided he had enough for “Mom’s bouquet” so I just followed. I got the ingredients mise en placed after I washed the flower heads and then started “plucking” the flowers. You want to make sure you don’t get any of the bitter green parts when you do this. Hold all of the green back, grasp the petals and twist as you pull. I only needed 1/2 C. but it was enough plucking to stain my hands for a while afterward. You want to lightly oil the baking sheet as well since the oil in the dough gets absorbed. I found they were really simple and even the boys LOVED them! I was very surprised since they hate just about everything you put in front of them (or at least find something to “dislike”). I think P was a bit more excited since he helped make them and gather the flowers for it. B took a cookie, set it down, then went back for more. When Archie came to the house, he ate quite a few! She packed some up for us to take home and they were gone later that night…If you don’t let the idea of eating a “flower” or “weed” get to you, you will really enjoy them. The honey adds a touch of sweetness and they a “bit dry” according to Art, but adding more honey would easily remedy that. The cookies don’t spread out too much so I easily fit 20 on a sheet and got 40 2-bite cookies out of it. All in all, I think they’re a hit!

Also, be wary of the flowers you use for any sort of cooking! If you have animals that “wander” through the yard, the only flowers you have are close to the road, or have close neighbors that use pesticides (that may have traveled to your yard), do NOT use them!

Dandelion Flower Cookies
Ingredients:
1/2 cup oil
1/2 cup honey
2 eggs
1 teaspoon vanilla
1 cup unbleached flour
1 cup dry oatmeal (I used a mix of both old-fashioned and quick, use what you’d like)
1/2 cup dandelion flowers

Preheat oven to 375°F. Blend oil and honey and beat in the two eggs and vanilla. Stir in flour, oatmeal and dandelion florets. Drop the batter by teaspoonfuls onto a lightly oiled cookie sheet and bake for 10-15 minutes. Let cool and eat.

“WHOOPIE!” for whoopie pies! and cooked icing awe

Whoopie Pie. They go by many alias’ so don’t be alarmed if you have no idea what I’m talking about. When I was in college, most of my major (a whole 12 of us ladies) were from PA or outlying areas (NJ mostly). We were set to make whoopie pies one day and a girl from Southern Pa said, “what is THAT, it sounds dirty!?!” After we described it, a big glob of icing smooshed between two cake like cookies, she said, “Oh! You mean a ‘GOB’?”, One New Jersey chimed in, “No, that’s a ‘Black and White’”. So to most of us from Central Pa, they’re a “whoopie pie”, but to you they may be a “Gob”, “Black and White”, “Bob”, or a “BFO” (big fat oreo). Either way, it’s the same treat and yummy where ever you’re located!

I was checking out “the Pioneer Women” just the other day and was happy to find that she used a “cooked” icing on her Red Velvet Sheet Cake. A cooked icing is started by heating milk and flour, whisking until super thick, then cooling. You then take a fat (usually butter or shortening) and cream it with vanilla and sugar. For me, I grew up with a cooked icing recipe and we ALWAYS use it on whoopie pies. As you’d know, I was shocked when she said she’d never made an icing with flour until someone sent the recipe and persuaded her to try it. I know, flour and sugar seems more like a cake recipe than icing, but it is so fluffy and worth it in the end. Which brought me to another shocker the other day, when I checked out a blog and she also said she never made cooked icing until she found a recipe that needed for it. Even then, people see the flour and are super hesitant to try it. Sure you can easily mess it up (my mother did when she first started!). I’ll even say, the first time I made it by myself, I was on the phone with her (so really, she was there…) but still, it’s worth a shot! Maybe its just that I grew up in “Whoopie Pie Country” and my mother makes them literally, all. the. time. that I’ve engraved that icing recipe into my brain and have grown to love it, or maybe just because its delicious? Well, either way, I’ll post the recipe, and ya’ll can decide for yourself! =] And just for future sake, Maine is not where they originated from, they may have a paper trail from 1925 on, but I have recipes and books containing them, passed down from way before that! Plus a former flame’s grandmother was descended from Amish and she showed me her books and loose recipes as well. PA Dutch is where its at! =]

Cheater’s Whoopie Pie
1 cake mix (your choice of flavor)
3 eggs
1/2 cup of water
1/2 cup of vegetable oil
1/4-1/2 cup flour

Mix all ingredients, except flour, together. Add flour, a little at a time until you have a slightly thicker batter that doesn’t run too much.
Drop onto cookie sheets and bake at 350* for 10-12 minutes. Let cool. “Pair” up the cookies to ones of similar size. Fill with icing and wrap in plastic wrap. (If they sit on top of each other without wrap on, the bottom cake and top cake of the other wp will stick-use caution if you’re going on looks)

*Variation* Bake in cake pan as directed (9×13″ or 8-9″ circles). Let cool. Split cake in half, spread in some icing. Replace top of cake, spread on more icing. Enjoy your giant whoopie pie!

Cooked Icing
4 tablespoons flour
1 cup milk
2 Sticks Unsalted Butter (you could also use shortening, I find it leaves a “film” though)
1 cup granulated sugar
2 teaspoons vanilla extract

In a saucepan, whisk together flour and milk. Turn heat to medium and cook, whisking constantly, until mixture is thick and creamy. Let it cool completely.
Using your mixer, beat butter and sugar until fluffy. Beat in the vanilla. Beat in the thoroughly cooled flour mixture. Beat and beat until the icing is fluffy and no longer grainy.

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As promised…

Here are the pics! They are super cute so lemme know what you think! =]

Recipe and how-to: Here

 

Photos

Hey guys! I’ll be adding some sweet (no pun intended) red velvet valentine cookie pictures this weekend! I’d do it now but time got away from me and I’ll be losing the net connection I’ve got sooner than I’d like. Plus I’m on hubby’s computer sooo…needless to say, I hate it. I found adorable cookie recipe. I thought about taking the idea and making cheddar cheese “buttons”. At first, that’s what I thought they were! haha.

Peanut Butter Button Cookies
1 Package Peanut Butter Cookie Mix
Ingredients to make: Egg, Water, Oil
Chocolate (if desired)

Mix up the cookie dough (as directed) and roll into small balls.They should fit right inside the top of a 2-liter soft drink bottle cap.

Bake the cookies for about 8-10 minutes at 350 degrees.

As soon as you remove them, use the same bottle cap to press the cookies down forming a raised outer edge.

Use a straw and poke four holes in the center of each cookie. Poke and twist, the circles will fill up the straw leaving a vacant hole.

Let cool, and Done! Eat and Enjoy! =]

*Note* She also dipped hers in chocolate. I’ll do some with and some without because hey, chocolate never hurt!

Like I said, I plan on figuring out a recipe to do cheddar as well. First I’ll try the cheddar dough from to see how that works. If not, I’ve got a husband willing to eat anything! I’ll keep everyone updated!