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Soaked Cream Cheese Breakfast Pastry

I’m trying to make more properly prepared grains these days. So this week I tried a Nourishing Traditions recipe for cream cheese breakfast pastries. You use homemade cream cheese to soak the flour. They turned out really well! If Justin approves of a soaked baked good I call it a winner. And they were quite simple to make. They are best served warm. They reheat very well. This makes quite a few pastries too, so now I have a stock in the freezer.

This post is linked to Fat Tuesday at Real Food Forager.

Cream Cheese Breakfast Pastries
makes 18-24

1/2 cup butter, softened
1 cup homemade cream cheese, softened
2 cups whole wheat flour
1/2 cup rapadura
1 Tbsp. vanilla
1 tsp. salt
1/4 cup melted butter
2 tsp. cinnamon
1/4 cup crispy pecans, finely chopped

Mix butter, cream cheese and flour using an electric beater. Leave in a warm place 12-24 hours.

Mix in rapadura, vanilla and salt (I used my hand mixer for this).

Roll out dough on floured surface to 1/4″ thickness. Brush with melted butter. Sprinkle with cinnamon and pecans (I also sprinkled a little cane sugar on). Roll up 1 1/2 turns and cut dough lengthwise. Repeat two more times. You should now have three long rolls. Cut the rolls crosswise into 1 or 1 1/2″ lengths. Place individual pastries on a buttered baking sheet. Bake at 300 degrees for 45 minutes. Serve warm.

These store well in the freezer or refrigerator and the flavor improves with time. Reheat before serving.

Apple Raisin Cake

Yesterday Rebecca and I made a simple “cake” for our baking project. The recipe is from my Vitamix cookbook. In the book it is called a bread. But it is baked in an 8″ pan and is a lot more like cake to me. The end product is very good. It’s quite moist from all of the dried fruit. Not too sweet (I do think you could decrease the honey a bit and be just fine, though). And I like the simplicity of being able to mix it all in the blender. That being said…it was not so simple when I actually made it. I followed the directions…and could not get the batter to mix at all. I was constantly scraping, trying to stir things, etc. I ended up adding extra water and starting and stopping at least 10 times. It turned into quite a mess 😛  If I make this again I think I’ll add more liquid right from the start. And possibly have an extra blending step before I add the dried fruit. I did not have lemon, so I just skipped that. And I skipped the orange peel.

Apple Raisin Cake

1 cup whole wheat flour (preferably freshly ground…3/4 cups wheat berries ground in the dry blender)
1/4 cup uncooked rolled oats
1 medium apple, quartered, seeded
1 thin slice lemon, peeled, seeded
2 Tbsp. water (I probably used about 1/3 cup)
1 thin slice orange with peel
1/2 cup honey (I’ll probably use 1/3 cup next time)
1/2 tsp. ground cinnamon
1/4 tsp. salt
1 tsp. baking soda
1/4 tsp. allspice
1 cup raisins, dates or other dried fruit (I used a combo of raisins, dates and dried cranberries)

Heat oven to 350. Grease an 8″ baking pan.

Place flour adn oats into blender. Blend on  high 1 minute.

Add the rest of the ingredients in the order listed. Blend for 30 seconds, or until mixture is smooth and batter-like. (Next time I will do this in two steps…all of the ingredients except the dried fruit, blend, then add fruit and blend again). Pour into baking pan.

Bake for 25-30 minutes.

Soaked Whole Wheat Muffins

I had some buttermilk to use up, so I looked in my Nourishing Traditions cookbook for a recipe. I came across the Basic Muffin Recipe. A super simple soaked muffin that you can make in just about any flavor you want. I baked a batch of blueberry muffins this morning. Very good! And very easy. Now that I’m hoping to try a small amount of grains soon, and since I’m trying to really get back on track with healthy eating for the whole family, I figured it was good to get back into the habit of soaking grains. This is a great basic recipe. I’ll use it again for sure.

Soaked Whole Wheat Muffins
makes 15-20

3 cups whole wheat flour
2 cups buttermilk, kefir or yogurt (I used half buttermilk and half yogurt)
2 eggs
1 tsp. salt
1/4 cup maple syrup
2 tsp. baking soda
1 tsp. vanilla extract
3 Tbsp. melted butter

Soak flour in buttermilk, kefir or yogurt in a warm place for 12-24 hours (muffins will rise better if soaked for 24 hours). Blend in remaining ingredients. Pour into well greased muffin tins (I used paper muffin cups) about 3/4 full. Bake at 325 for 1 hour.

Variations:

Raisin – add 1/2 cup raisins and 1/2 tsp .cinnamon
Blueberry – add 1 cup fresh or frozen blueberries (do not add them to the batter, place them on top of the muffins after filling the tin so they don’t sink to the bottom)
Dried cherry – add 4 oz. dried cherries and 1/2 cup chopped crispy pecans
Fruit spice – add 2 ripe peeled, chopped pears or peaches, 1/2 tsp. cinnamon, 1/8 tsp. cloves, 1/8 tsp. nutmeg.
Lemon – add grated rind of 2 lemons and 1/2 cup chopped crispy pecans
Ginger – add 1 Tbsp. freshly grated ginger and 1 tsp. ground ginger. Omit vanilla.

Christmas Menu

Yesterday we had our final Christmas party. It was a brunch at our house. This was our menu. Quite a spread. I made everything except the fudge. Doing a brunch for Christmas is a lot of fun. So much yummy food 🙂

Egg and sausage casserole
Overnight french toast bake
maple pecan scones
carrots and cucumbers with ranch dip
mini dutch apple pies, cherry jubilee cups
ranch cheese ball with crackers
fruit salad
Christmas cookies, chocolate mint cookies
sugared nuts
fudge, chocolate covered pretzels
egg nog, coffee, juice, water

Overnight French Toast Bake

I found this recipe on my SIL’s blog and thought it would be a great addition to our Christmas brunch menu. I tried it last week to test it before making it for guests. It is easy and good!! And will be on the table Tuesday morning 🙂  Justin and Rebecca both really enjoyed it. I love that you don’t need to add syrup. It’s already plenty sweet and syrupy. Thanks for the recipe, Sara. I replaced the corn syrup with honey to make it healthier. I only made a half recipe when I was trying it. I’ll make the full version for our party.

Edited 12/28/11 – I made the full version yesterday. Instead of doing slices of bread I broke it all into chunks. I think that worked a lot better to absorb the eggs/milk evenly. And it was much easier to dish up.

Overnight French Toast Bake

2 Tbsp. honey
1/2 cup butter
1 cup brown cane sugar or sucanat
1 16oz. loaf whole wheat bread, gluten free bread or grain free bread
1 1/2 cups milk
5 eggs
1/2 tsp. salt
1 tsp. vanilla

In a pan on the stovetop, combine the honey, butter, and brown sugar. Simmer until syrup-like, about 7 minutes. Pour half of the mixture in the bottom of a 13×9 inch pan. Slice bread into 1-inch slices and place on top of mixture in pan. Pour remaining syrup mixture over top of bread slices.

Combine eggs, milk, salt, and vanilla. Beat until mixed well. Pour over bread.

Cover and refrigerate overnight. In the morning, uncover pan and bake at 350 for 40 minutes or until brown.

Meal Plans Week of 12-25-11

Merry Christmas!!! For unto us a child is born, unto us a son is given.

It’s Christmas…day and week for us. We’ve got 4 days in a row of celebrations/family time, starting today. So I am going to be crazy busy. I hope I can get everything done and still enjoy the parties.

Last week we were able to spend lots of time together as a family. It’s been so nice to have Justin home. The kids have loved having Daddy around to play with. We celebrated Christmas on Friday. Rebecca is having a blast with her new toys and doll. Abram is enjoying his little Noah’s Ark. And he’s really taking off in terms of sitting/crawling/standing. It seems like overnight he is starting to crawl normally (not just army crawl). And he gets grumpy if he’s not standing or propped up on something. If he is on his tummy it’s not long before he’s sitting up. And if something taller is near by he’s trying to pull himself up. He is also developing his verbal skills. He kind of makes horse and lion sounds. His horse sound is like a silly laugh. And he loves to growl at us.

The kitchen was definitely a busy place last week as I was trying to do as much prep work as possible. I think I got everything done that I could.

This week is all about family and Christmas parties. Until everyone is gone…then we get to relax 🙂  Today is church. Then we are headed to my parents’ house for our extended family party. Monday I have to pick up milk in the morning. Then we have a brunch with some of my extended family that lives in town (grandparents, cousins, etc.). After the party it’s back home for naps…then my in-laws will be here. They’ll be staying a couple days. Tuesday  morning is our Christmas brunch/party with Justin’s family. Our house guests leave on Wednesday. I think we might go out for dinner on Wednesday evening…give me a break after 4 days of Christmas baking and cooking. We might go shopping later in the week. Saturday we are going to a hockey game. It’ll be the first time for both kids. Rebecca is very excited.

I won’t list all of the things I need to get done in the kitchen this week. But there is a lot. And I have to squeeze it in between parties, travel and milk pick up. So my plans will be fairly detailed this week. I don’t want to forget anything.

I’m doing pretty well overall. I’ve been making sure that I eat lots of healing, nourishing foods lately. That really helps. I just need to be better about staying away from all of the goodies around the house 😛  I know my anxiety/stress levels over the next few days will take a toll on my gut. But I’m trying to do what I can to keep it under control. Hopefully I can still enjoy all of the parties and be sane by the end of the week.

Here’s what’s on the menu.
———————-
S (prep salad and dressing, prep lunch, church, Christmas party)
  L – light/quick – chicken salad sandwich, chips, strawberry shake (Justin), chicken salad, veggies (me)
  D – party (I’m bringing salad w/ cranberries, walnuts, parm cheese, cucumbers and croutons; poppy seed dressing and homemade honey mustard dressing)

M (prep dinner, prep veggies and dip, milk pick up, make yogurt, make kefir, Christmas party, guests, prep casseroles, make dip, thaw/drain spinach, make cheeseball, make jubilee cups, make fruit salad)
  Brunch – party (I’m bringing veggies w/ dip and grain free breakfast bars)
  D – pea soup w/ carrots and ham, pumpernickel bread, pesto rolls, applesauce

T (prep brunch – bake casseroles, slice veggies, bake scones, bake pies, Christmas party, guests)
  Brunch – party: egg and sausage casserole, french toast casserole, carrots and cucumbers w/ ranch dip, maple pecan scones, fruit salad, baked spinach, crackers w/ cheese ball, Christmas cookies, sugared nuts, chocolate covered pretzels, mini apple pies, egg nog, chocolate mint cookies, fudge, cherry jubilee cups, candy
  D – meatloaf, baked potatoes w/ butter and sour cream, beans


W (guests, skim cream, make yogurt, make sour cream, make ice cream, make butter)
  B – leftovers
  L – leftovers
  D – out to eat

Th (shopping?)
  D – TBD w/ spaghetti squash (lasagna?, casserole?, spaghetti?)

F ()
  D – fish sticks or salmon

S (NYE, hockey game)
  D – at the game

Baked Peanut Butter Oatmeal

We celebrated Christmas as a family yesterday. So I decided to make something new for breakfast. I tried baked peanut butter oatmeal. I got the recipe from Lynn’s Kitchen Adventures. I’ve never made baked oatmeal before. To be honest it’s very rare that I make oatmeal of any kind at all. But this sounded good. And very simple! Justin and Rebecca both liked it. Although Rebecca had her usual chewing issues with oats. A small piece took her an hour and some tantrums to get through. She just won’t chew oats. So she won’t be eating the leftovers today 😛  I served it with homemade vanilla yogurt (poured on top). That worked well. You could pour milk on too. Or just eat it plain. It can be served warm or cold. It’s actually firm enough that you could eat it as a bar for an on the go breakfast or snack. For the first attempt I made the recipe as is. Next time maybe I’ll try soaking the oats and using rolled oats instead of instant. This is a filling quick prep breakfast. I think I’ll be making baked oatmeal more often. There are so many flavors you could make. Today Justin gets it with homemade banana yogurt. Peanut butter and bananas…yum 🙂  I’m guessing you can prep this the night before to make it even easier. I made a half recipe in a 9″ pan.

Baked Peanut Butter Oatmeal

3 cups quick cooking oats
1/2 cup brown sugar
1 cup milk
2 Tbsp. butter, melted
2 eggs
2 tsp. baking powder
3/4 tsp. salt
2 tsp. vanilla
1/2 cup peanut butter

Mix all ingredients together and stir well. Spread in a greased 9×13 pan. Bake at 350 for 20-25 minutes. If you like it a little crunchy on top cook for a few minutes longer. Serve with warm milk or yogurt poured over top.

Salted Caramel Dip (grain free, dairy free, egg free, GAPS-legal)

One of the moms at my MOPS table posted a link for a caramel dip from My New Roots on FB recently. It looked super easy and sounded good. Plus it’s sugar free and GAPS legal!! Last week I finally got around to buying dates so I could try it. I made it yesterday morning. It was very easy to make. And it’s good!! Honestly I like it better plain than using it for an apple dip. Although I did really enjoy it last night as a dip for dried apple chips. It’s a great way to get your sugar fix without actually eating sugar. I’m glad I tried this. It’s a healthy, delicious treat. Plus I discovered that I love dates!! And they are great natural sweeteners. I will be using dates more often for sure. I even reserved the soaking liquid and have been using it to sweeten smoothies and drinks.

Unfortunately Rebecca doesn’t like it. I think it’s a texture issue with her. I’m guessing if I made it a bit thicker (increased the ratio of nuts to dates) she’d like it. Maybe I’ll try that next time.

This is a great treat for breakfast, a snack or a dessert.

This post is linked to Fat Tuesday at Real Food Forager.

Salted Caramel Dip
Makes 2 cups

2 cups pitted Medjool dates
¼ cup raw nut or seed butter (almond, cashew, sesame tahini, sunflower) (I used some whole crispy almonds and some natural crunchy peanut butter…I used more than 1/4 cup)
4 tsp. fresh lemon juice
½ tsp. sea salt (or more to taste)
1 vanilla bean, seeds scraped (I used a little splash of homemade vanilla)
soaking water as needed

1. Soak dates for at least 4 hours in water.
2. Drain dates, reserving the soak water**.
3. Add dates to a food processor along with all other ingredients, except for soaking water. Blend on high until dates are smooth. Add soaking water, 1 tablespoon at a time until the desired consistency is reached (for a sauce to pour or drizzle, add more water).
4. Store in an airtight glass container in the fridge for up to a week.

**Reserve remaining soaking water to use as a simple syrup/sweetener.

Avocado Bird’s Nest (grain free, dairy free, nut free, GAPS-legal)

I’ve been watching The Next Iron Chef on Food Network. And on this week’s episode someone made a bird’s nest using avocado. I’ve seen it done with bread, zucchini, various things. But never avocado. I thought it sounded like a neat idea since one of my absolute favorite things to eat with egg is avocado. So I made one for lunch yesterday. Yum!! I don’t think I’ve ever actually cooked an avocado. But they are quite good when they get warmed. This is a quick, nutritious breakfast, lunch or dinner. I let the yolk sit in the hole and the whites run over the edges to cook. I’ll definitely make this again! I added a little extra butter and another egg yolk to mine for extra nutrition just before taking it out of the pan.

This post is linked to Fat Tuesday at Real Food Forager.

Avocado Bird’s Nest

1/2 avocado
1 egg
butter, coconut oil or lard for cooking

Remove pit from avocado. Slice a little piece off the back of the avocado so it can sit flat. Make the hole large enough for an egg yolk all the way through. Heat butter in skillet. Add avocado. Crack egg over avacado so the yolk sits in the hole. Push the whites over the edge/onto the pan surface to cook. Sprinkle with salt. When the whites are cooked remove the bird’s nest.

Cooked Yogurt

After making raw yogurt I decided to try a cooked version. At first it looks hard. It seems like there are a lot of steps. But in reality it’s very easy. You’re basically doing 4 things – heat the milk, let it cool a little, add the culture and let it sit. So it’s really not much more work than making raw yogurt. You just have to heat it and let it cool a little first. I followed my SIL’s directions at Today’s Menu Take It Or Leave It. Very easy to follow.

And the outcome…great! This produced a very smooth, creamy, flavorful yogurt. I made some vanilla yogurt with it for Justin this morning. He thought it tasted great. I’m sure Rebecca will like it too. This will definitely be my go-to method for making yogurt. I still want to play around a little with how long I let it culture. This batch was very mild…not much of the tang of normal plain yogurt. But that’s not a bad thing.

I’m so glad I FINALLY got around to making my own yogurt (I’ve been wanting to for about a year now…don’t know why I never did). There are several reasons I’m glad to be making this now. First…it’s healthy! Lots of healthy bacteria. Second…it will save a lot of money! That’s a big one. I buy yogurt every week. It’s one of the biggest expenses. I hate spending so much for so little. This will be a huge money saver…especially since we’ve got all this great raw milk to use up anyway. Third, it will save me trips to the store 🙂  I don’t have to worry about running out of yogurt. If we’re getting low I can just make more. This will really help me with my goal of only going to the grocery store every other week instead of every week. Finally, you can make any flavor you want 🙂  If I want to buy organic full fat yogurt at the store I can get plain, vanilla, strawberry or chocolate. That’s it. Now I can make whatever flavors we want. I made vanilla this morning. But we can make any kind of fruit flavor, peanut butter, chocolate, apple cinnamon, whatever. And I don’t have to worry about feeding my family unhealthy sugar. I can use honey or maple syrup to sweeten it…and I’m sure less of it than the boughten variety.

Now that we have this great yogurt I am so anxious for me to be able to eat it!! Yogurt is one of the foods I miss the most from going dairy free. I used to eat it daily. Hopefully in a week or two I can add it back in. That will be a happy day 🙂

If you have never made your own yogurt I encourage you to try it! It really is very easy. It does not require much hands on time at all. And if you get it going in the morning you can have some ready by the afternoon. I thought it was easy the first time I made it. So I’m sure it will be even easier now that I know how. Even if you don’t have raw milk, you can make your own yogurt. It will still be healthy and much cheaper.

I didn’t take step-by-step photos like my SIL did. If you want a really detailed description check out her blog. Here’s the slightly condensed version of her recipe.

Homemade Cooked Yogurt

Ingredients and Equipment:

milk (preferably raw, but pasteurized willwork…NOT ultra-pasteurized)
yogurt starter (I used some plain, boughten yogurt for my first batch and I’ll use my homemade yogurt from now on)

quart sized jars with lids
large stockpot with lid
water for boiling
a dish rag
a thermometer, either candy or meat will work
a large cooler or incubator
a large towel

Put your dish rag in the bottom of your stockpot. This helps stabilize the jar(s). Then pour milk into your quart sized jars. Make sure you leave about an inch or so of room from the top of the jar. Place the jar in the pot and fill the stockpot with water at least half-way up side of jar. You’ll want to bring this to a boil. I place my thermometer in the water so that it sterilizes.

Once your water is boiling, turn the heat down a little, to around medium to medium-high… enough to maintain a good simmer. Move your thermometer to a jar of milk… having it in the water till boiling sterilized it. You’ll want to keep it going until it reaches 180-185 degrees (this only took a few minutes for me once the water was boiling).

Once the milk has reached 180-185 degrees, turn the burner off. Lift the jar out of the water and onto the counter. Put a cap on the jar. Do not pour the water out of the pot. Put a lid on the pot and place it inside your cooler, making sure the towel surrounds the pot so that it doesn’t melt your cooler. Leave the lid on the pot and put the lid on your cooler.

Now you wait for your milk to come down to between 90 – 120 degrees. I’ve found that between 100 – 105 is optimal for me… this makes a nice, thick, creamy yogurt. This takes about an hour and a half. You can either check the temperature with your thermometer once you think it could be reaching the proper temperature. Or you can just feel the outside of the jar. Remember that our body temperature is 98.6 degrees, so you want it to be slightly warmer than your hands. If its too hot to hold, its not there yet. I checked the temperature with the thermometer the first time I made yogurt, but haven’t checked it since. I just go by feeling the heat on the outside of the jar.

Once your milk is at the proper incubation temperature, you will need to stir in about 2 Tablespoons of yogurt starter into each quart of milk. Be sure to stir gently, as you are stirring in living organisms and don’t want to jostle them too much.

Next, place the lid back on the jar tightly. Open up your cooler and place the jar(s) into your cooler next to the warm pot of water. Remove the lid from the pot and be sure the towel is nestled around your jar(s). Place the lid back on the cooler and let it incubate for 4-24 hours.

The longer it sits, the more tart it will get. I’ve incubated my yogurt for anywhere from 6 hours to 14 hours. I found that at 6 hours, it wasn’t quite thick enough for my liking. 8 hours seemed to produce a good, thick, creamy yogurt with a hint of sweetness. I didn’t notice much change in thickness by increasing the time, just a more tart taste. I try to only let mine go 8-10 hours normally (I did 8 hours…it was good!)

Once your incubation time is up, transfer your jar(s) to the freezer for about an hour. Don’t open them before you do, just put them right in there. After that time is up, transfer them to the refrigerator. You’ll get a true sense of the consistency of the yogurt at this point. Don’t be alarmed if there is some whey on top of the yogurt, this is totally normal. Just stir it into the yogurt.

Before you start enjoying your new batch of yogurt, be sure to reserve a couple tablespoons of your fresh yogurt in a small glass jar in the fridge. This will be your yogurt starter for your next batch. And remember to reserve more than a couple tablespoons if you make more than a quart at a time.

———————-
That is a lot of wording for a simple process. Here is the shortened version:

1. Heat milk in a quart jar in a pot of boiling water to 180 -185 degrees.
2. Remove from water, cover and let milk cool on counter to 90 – 120 degrees.
3. Stir in yogurt culture.
4. Cover and keep in a warm spot for 4-24 hours to culture.
5. Chill.

Flavored Yogurt

You can mix in anything you like to flavor your homemade yogurt. To add extra nutrition stir in egg yolks and coconut oil. Here are some ideas:

Vanilla – stir in homemade vanilla extract and maple syrup or honey
Fruit – blueberry, strawberry, cherry, raspberry, peach, banana (you can mush up whole fruit, mix in pureed fruit or use homemade fruit preserves/jams) with honey or maple syrup for sweetness if needed
Apple Cinnamon – stir in homemade apple butter and honey
Pumpkin Pie – stir in pumpkin puree, honey and cinnamon (we’ve even added a little crumbled pie crust for a real treat)
Peanut Butter – stir in smooth, natural peanut butter and honey (or any kind of homemade nut butter) (add a few chocolate chips for a real treat/dessert)