As requested, here are Danny's State Fair recipes. The published book will be out, and available for purchase at next year's fair, and we'll have some give-aways then. Meanwhile, if you're anxious to make some bread and jam, here you go.
Oatmeal Cookies
1 cup granulated white sugar
1 cup dark brown sugar
1 cup vegetable shortening (I used
Crisco)
1 cup sunflower seed butter *
2 large eggs
1 ½ cups all purpose flour
1 teaspoon baking soda
1 teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
2 cups quick oats
1 cup mini chocolate chips
Preheat oven to 350 degrees F. Line
two large baking sheets with non-stick parchment paper or grease the
pans lightly.
Cream together sugars and shortening.
Add the eggs one at a time, and then the sunflower seed butter. Mix
well. Sift together the flour, soda, and salt. Add gradually to the
mixture. Beat in the vanilla extract. By hand (with a wooden spoon)
stir in the oats and chocolate chips.
If your kitchen is very warm, chill the
batter in the bowl for 5 minutes. If not, proceed by dropping heaping
teaspoons of batter onto cookie sheets about 2 inches apart.
Bake about 15 minutes or until cookies
are just firm-they harden upon cooling. Let stand a minute before
removing from pans with a thin spatula to a cooling rack.
These cookies keep best in a metal tin
rather than a crockery jar. They freeze well tightly wrapped in
freezer paper, and then placed in Zipper freezer bags. Thaw at room
temperature.
*I have peanut and tree nut allergies,
so I use sunflower seed butter in baking. I have also made these
successfully with soy butter which is a bit less expensive than
sunflower. I can't vouch for peanut or other nut butters in this
recipe, but I'm told that the sunflower seed butter is
indistinguishable from peanut butter as far as taste from
non-allergic members of my family.
Baking Powder Biscuits
2 cups all-purpose flour
1 teaspoon salt
1 tablespoon aluminum-free baking
powder
2 teaspoons granulated white sugar
1-1 ¼ cups heavy whipping cream
4 tablespoons melted butter
Preheat oven to 425 degrees F. Grease a
baking sheet. Sift together the dry ingredients in a large bowl. Add
the cream slowly (you may not need it all) working the dough as
little as possible until it just comes together. The less you handle
biscuit dough, the more tender they will be.
Gently pat out the dough to ¾ inch
thickness (less if you prefer flatter biscuits). Using a biscuit
cutter (or a glass if you don't have one) cut the biscuits and then
dip them one at a time in melted butter before arranging on a baking
sheet. You may be tempted to skip this step, but I promise you it is
worth the extra calories! Bake about 15 minutes or until biscuits are
nicely browned. Biscuits are best served hot (with more butter!) but
they may be kept warm in a bowl lined with a tea towel.
These biscuits re-heat perfectly in a
microwave oven next day. Heat them at half power in twenty second
intervals until they are hot. The biscuits may also be frozen wrapped
tightly in individual plastic sandwich bags. Re-heat in a slow oven,
or in the microwave as described above.
Makes about 8 biscuits if you're being
generous, 12 if you're feeling thrifty.
Cherry Coconut Lime Quickbread
1/3 cup melted, unsalted butter
1 ¼ cups granulated white sugar,
divided
2 large eggs
1 ½ cups all-purpose flour
1 teaspoon baking powder
1 teaspoon salt
½ cup 2% milk
½ cup flaked, sweetened coconut
1 cup dried sweet cherries tossed
lightly with a teaspoon of flour
Grated peel of a whole lime
3 tablespoons freshly squeezed and
strained lime juice
Preheat oven to 325 degrees F.
Generously butter a standard loaf pan 8 ½ x4 ½ x2 ¾ .
Blend the butter with 1 cup of the
sugar and beat in the eggs one at a time until well blended. I use a
wooden spoon for mixing quick breads as mixers have a tendency to
over-mix delicate batters. Sift together the dry ingredients and add,
alternating with the milk in two additions. Fold in the coconut, lime
peel, and half the cherries. Pour into prepared pan and scatter
remaining cherries on top. Let batter rest ten minutes before
baking-this helps keep the top from cracking too much. Bake until
cake tests done-about 80 minutes in my oven, but to be safe, start
checking around 1 hour.
While cake is still hot, and in the
pan, mix together the remaining sugar and lime juice leaving the it
somewhat crystalline. Brush over the hot cake and let cool in pan on
a rack until mostly cooled (about 30 minutes). Turn out onto rack and
let cool completely before wrapping tightly in wax paper, and then
again in cling film. The cake should be left to mature at least 1 day
before serving. Cake freezes well.
White Cake
1 cup egg whites at room temperature
1 cup granulated white sugar
1/8 teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
1 cup sifted all purpose flour
1 teaspoon baking powder (I use an
aluminum-free brand for better taste)
½ cup unsalted butter, melted and
cooled
Butter to grease pan
Confectioner's sugar to dust pan
Prepare a 2 quart tube or Bundt pan by
greasing generously with butter and dusting with confectioner's
sugar. Knock out any excess sugar. Set aside. Preheat the oven to 350
degrees F. If using a dark coated or non-stick pan reduce the heat to
325 degrees F.
In a large bowl, whip the egg whites
until they look foamy. With a hand mixer on the highest speed, add
the sugar a tablespoon at a time beating well with each addition.
This is slow work, but it builds higher egg whites and keeps the
sugar from making the cake too grainy. Patience is rewarded here.
When whites hold stiff peaks, beat in the salt and vanilla extract.
Don't over-beat the whites-they shouldn't be dry.
Sift the flour, measure, and sift again
with the baking powder. Although most flour is pre-sifted today, this
does help to ensure even measuring and will sort out any hard pieces
of flour. Sift the mixture over the egg whites and with a flexible
rubber spatula gently fold the flour in. It should be well
incorporated, but don't panic if you see a streak of flour as it will
disappear with the next step. Fold in the melted butter until
blended.
Pour batter into prepared pan, and
place pan on a baking sheet to avoid any mishaps (trust me, the one
time you fail to do it, the cake will overflow!). Bake about 1 hour
or until cake springs back when touched lightly on top. Remove the
cake immediately from the pan onto a cooling rack.
Cake keeps well at room temperature
under a dome for about a week. For longer storage, wrap tightly in
cling film and store in the fridge.
Cinnamon Buns
Cinnamon Buns
Dough:
(About) 4 cups all-purpose flour
¼ cup (4 tablespoons) unsalted butter
1 teaspoon salt
¼ cup granulated sugar
1 cup 2% milk, scalded
2 ¼ teaspoons granulated dry yeast
(not instant)
¼ cup lukewarm water
1 large egg, slightly beaten
(about 3 tablespoons softened butter)
Filling:
4 tablespoons very soft butter
¾ cup cinnamon sugar mixed to taste
(we prefer about 2 teaspoons cinnamon to ¾ cup sugar)
Icing:
2 cups confectioner's (powdered) sugar
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
1-2 tablespoons water or enough to make
a smooth paste
Sift the flour, and set aside. Although
flour is sold pre-sifted, I find it still benefits from an additional
sifting. Place the butter, salt, and sugar in a large bowl and add
the scalded milk. Stir to dissolve the sugar and melt the butter.
Meanwhile, soften the yeast in the warm water. When milk mixture is
cooled, add the yeast mixture to it along with the beaten egg. Stir
in 3 ½ cups of the flour by hand with a wooden spoon a cup at a time
giving it a very thorough mixing. When the flour has been
incorporated, scrape down the sides and brush the top of the dough
and the sides of the bowl with the softened butter. You'll want to
use the full 3 tablespoons, but if the dough looks dry, or your bowl
is quite large, feel free to use more as needed. Cover the bowl with
cling film and let rise in a warm spot for about 2 hours or until
ALMOST doubled in bulk (about ¾ of the way).
Place the dough on a floured surface
and knead gently adding flour as required until dough is no longer
too sticky to handle. Resist over-flouring as it makes rolls tough.
You shouldn't need more than ½ a cup if any at all. Let dough rest
five minutes.
Roll out dough on a lightly floured
surface into a 10x24 inch rectangle. Spread the top with 4
tablespoons of very soft (but not melted) butter. Sprinkle with the
cinnamon sugar mixture and using a butter knife gently spread it
smooth. Roll the dough into a log (you will get more buns if rolled
the long way, larger buns the short way-it is a matter of personal
preference). Cut the buns about an inch thick (again, if you prefer a
shorter or taller bun do as you see fit) and place in a generously
buttered pan (cut the long way, the recipe will fill two 9x11 pans.
It is also attractive baked in round pans for special presentation).
I always place the pans on a baking sheet as the butter can sometimes
drip and I don't enjoy cleaning the oven. Let rise until light-about
25-30 minutes in a warm-ish kitchen. Meanwhile, preheat the oven to
350 degrees. Bake 10 minutes, then rotate pan and bake an additional
10-15 minutes depending on the size of the buns. You can test to see
if they're done by gently pulling them apart with a fork. Remove from
pan to a rack over a baking sheet. Mix together the icing and spread
on still-warm buns. Makes 24 buns.
Wheat Bread
2 ¼ teaspoons granulated dry yeast
¼ cup lukewarm water
½ teaspoon granulated sugar
1 ¾ cup lowfat buttermilk
4 tablespoons corn oil margarine or
other good quality (not, “Light”) margarine
1 scant tablespoon coarse or kosher
salt
2 tablespoons honey
2 cups high gluten bread flour
3-4 cups whole wheat flour
Extra margarine to grease pans
In a small bowl combine the water and
sugar. Gently sprinkle the yeast on top and stir to dissolve. Let sit
5 minutes or until foamy. Meanwhile, gently heat the buttermilk and
margarine until just warm, and the margarine is softened. You can use
butter, but the margarine gives the wheat bread a softer crumb, and
extends the shelf life. Combine with the proofed yeast mixture in a
large bowl and add the salt and honey.
Add two cups of high-gluten bread flour
and beat 5 minutes on high with a hand mixer or with a stand mixer
fitted with a dough hook. In the absence of either, roll up your
sleeve and get out your best wooden spoon to tackle the job!
Slowly add the wheat flour a cup at a
time until you have a dough that can be removed to a floured surface
for kneading. Add slowly as you may need less flour than you think.
When you have a somewhat shaggy dough, let it rest a few minutes
while you wash out, and then grease the bowl. This allows the gluten
molecules to line-up, and you'll find the dough less sticky than
before. Add any additional flour you must, and knead well until
elastic-about 5 minutes. Place the dough in the greased bowl, turn
once to coat and then cover tightly with cling film. Let rise until
doubled, 1-2 hours depending on the temperature of your kitchen.
Punch down dough and cover again. Let
rise another 30 minutes. Meanwhile generously grease two standard
loaf pans or one large Pullman-style pan.
Shape dough into loaves taking care to
pinch the bottom to stretch the top smooth. Place in pans seam-side
down and cover lightly with a tea towel. Preheat oven to 400 degrees
F. Let loaves rise until almost doubled-about 45 minutes. Carefully
slash the tops before loading into the hot oven. Immediately reduce
the baking temperature to 375 degrees F. Bake loaves 20 minutes,
then rotate pans front-to-back and bake another 15 minutes. It is
hard to tell when wheat bread is golden, so an instant-read
thermometer is helpful. The loaves should read 200 degrees F.
internally. Alternately, you can remove the breads from the tins and
gently rap the bottom with your knuckles. If they sound hollow,
they're done. Generations of bakers have made-due without instant
read thermometers, so don't worry if you have to use your knuckles-my
mother does!
Cool breads on racks. Because of the
margarine they have an excellent shelf life when wrapped tightly in
waxed paper and then in cling film. The bread also freezes well.
White Bread
2 ¼ teaspoons granulated dry yeast
¼ cup lukewarm (not hot) water
½ teaspoon granulated sugar
1 ¾ cup lowfat buttermilk warmed but
not scalded
4 tablespoons unsalted butter (softened
in milk)
1 scant tablespoon coarse or kosher
salt
2 tablespoons honey
(about) 4-5 cups high-gluten bread
flour
Extra butter to generously grease pans
In a small bowl, place the warm water
and sugar together. Sprinkle the yeast on top and gently stir to
dissolve. Let sit until foamy (about 5 minutes). Meanwhile, gently
heat the buttermilk and butter taking care not to bring it to a
scald. It should be just barely lukewarm to soften the butter.
In a large bowl, combine the yeast
mixture, the milk and butter, and stir in the salt and honey. With a
hand mixer (or a stand mixer fitted with a dough hook if you have
one) beat in two cups of the flour starting on low speed and
increasing to high once the flour is incorporated. Beat on high for
five minutes, scraping the bowl as needed.
Slowly add additional flour a cup at a
time until you have a slightly sticky dough that can be gently
kneaded. Let it rest for a few minutes in the time it takes to wash
and grease the bowl. This helps the gluten strands develop, and you
may not need to add as much flour as you would have a few minutes
earlier. The amount of flour needed will vary with humidity in the
air and the brand of flour you use. Always add in small amounts as
the less flour used, the less chance of the loaf coming out dry.
Knead the dough until it is elastic and no longer sticky. This will
vary, but is generally about five minutes.
Place the dough in a buttered bowl and
turn once to coat it. Cover the bowl tightly with cling film, and
place in a warm spot away from drafts. Let rise until doubled. In a
warm kitchen that's about an hour, but in winter it can take as long
as two.
Punch down dough, and let rise again
for 30 minutes or until ¾ of the way to doubled. Meanwhile,
generously grease your bread pans. This recipe will make one large
loaf, or two standard ones. The bread will develop a beautiful crust,
but you must not skimp on the butter. Figure about 1-2 tablespoons
for each pan.
Shape your loaves being careful to
stretch and pinch the dough on the underside to ensure a smooth top.
You can leave the tops as-is, or lightly dust them with a tablespoon
of flour sifted through a fine sieve. Cover lightly with a tea towel,
and let rise until doubled-about 45 minutes. Meanwhile, preheat the
oven to 400 degrees F.
Before baking the bread, slash the tops
with a sharp knife. Upon loading the breads on the middle rack of the
oven, immediately turn the heat down to 375 degrees F. Bake 20
minutes, then rotate the pans front to back in the oven to ensure
even baking. Bake another 15-20 minutes or until loaves are golden
and sound hollow when rapped on the bottom with your knuckles. If you
own an instant read thermometer, it should be 200 degrees F.
internally as the ideal. Cool on racks.
Pickled Mushrooms with Onions
Pickled Mushrooms with Onions
1 lb. Fresh, whole mushrooms (look for
small ones)
2 medium sweet onions cut thinly into
rings
1 ½ cups malt vinegar
1 ½ cups water
1/2 cup packed dark brown sugar
4 teaspoons pickling salt
1 teaspoon crushed, dried tarragon
1 teaspoon black, whole peppercorns
Wash and dry the mushrooms trimming
stems. In a large, non-reactive pot combine onion rings, vinegar,
water, brown sugar, pickling salt, tarragon, and peppercorns. Bring
the mixture to a boil. Add the mushrooms, and reduce heat to a
simmer. Simmer five minutes.
With a slotted spoon, remove the
mushrooms and onions from the liquid. Pack into hot, sterilized jars
leaving ½ inch headspace. Bring liquid back to a boil. Add liquid to
jars leaving ½ inch headspace. Remove air bubbles, wipe treads, and
adjust lids and bands. Process 15 minutes in a boiling water bath
canner adjusting for your elevation. After processing time is up,
turn off heat, remove lid from canner, and let jars stand 5 minutes
to cool down. Remove jars to a heat-proof, draft-free spot and let
cool 12 hours before checking for seals. Makes about 4 half-pints.
Rosewater Cherry "Jelly"
("Jelly" means clear jam in the US, not gelatine)
("Jelly" means clear jam in the US, not gelatine)
3 quarts cherry juice
6 tablespoons dry pectin
2 tablespoons lemon juice
5 cups sugar
1 tablespoon rosewater
Combine cherry juice, pectin, and lemon
juice in a large pot. Bring to a boil over high heat. Add sugar,
stirring until dissolved. Return to a full rolling boil.
Boil hard 1 minute, stirring to keep it from boiling over. Remove
from heat. Add rosewater, and skim any foam from top.
Pour jelly into hot, sterilized, half-pint jars leaving ¼ inch
headspace. Wipe treads clean, adjust lid and band securely, and
process 10 minutes in a boiling water bath canner (adjusting time for
altitude as needed). Turn off heat, remove lid from canner and let
jars cool down 5 minutes before removing to a heat-proof surface free
from drafts. Let stand at least 12 hours before checking seals. Makes
about 5 half pints.
Note-Cherry jelly takes a couple weeks to fully set, so don't panic
if it seems to runny immediately after processing.
Apricot Raspberry Jam
Apricot Raspberry Jam
4 cups apricots peeled, pitted, and
sliced
1 ½ cups raspberries
3 ½ cups granulated white sugar
½ cup water
In a large pot, combine water and
apricots. Cover, and gently simmer about ten minutes until slices are
translucent. Add sugar and raspberries. Bring to a boil and cook to
the jelling stage (I used the spoon test) stirring constantly to
prevent sticking and sputtering.
Fill hot sterilized jars leaving
¼ inch headspace. Remove air bubbles, wipe treads clean, and adjust
lids and bands securely. Process 10 minutes in a water bath canner.
Turn off heat, remove lid from canner and let jars cool down 5
additional minutes before removing to a heat-proof surface in a
draft-free spot to cool for 12 hours before checking seals. Makes
about 4 half pints.
Apricot Butter
Apricot Butter
2 pounds apricots
½ cup water
3 cups white granulated sugar
2 tablespoons bottled lemon juice
For the pulp:
Wash and blanch apricots, then plunge
immediately in cold water to stop the cooking. Peel, halve and pit
apricots. Combine apricots and ½ cup water in a large pot. Simmer
gently until apricots are soft. Puree with a food mill (you can use a
food processor if you have one). Measure 1 ½ quarts pulp.
For the butter:
Combine pulp and sugar in a large pot.
Cook until thick enough to mound up on a spoon. It is really
helpful to use a spoon with a long handle because butters really
start to spit as they cook down. You should watch it, and turn down
the heat as needed, but wear long sleeves, and use the longest
handled spoon you own.
When
butter is moundable, add the lemon juice, and stir. Ladle the hot
butter into hot, sterilized
jars leaving ¼ inch headspace. Remove any air bubbles, wipe the
treads clean, and adjust the lid and band securely. Process jars 10
minutes in a boiling water bath canner.
Makes about 3 pints
Spiced Cherry Jam
Spiced Cherry Jam
It wouldn't be Christmas morning at our
house without this jam to spread on stollen.
1 quart pitted, chopped sweet Bing
cherries
6 ¼ cups granulated, white sugar
2 tablespoons bottled lemon juice
2 pouches Ball liquid pectin
1 tablespoon mixed spice (ours has
cinnamon, cloves, nutmeg, coriander, mace, allspice, and ginger)
Combine cherries, sugar, lemon juice,
and mixed spice together in a large pot. Bring to a boil, stirring
until sugar is dissolved. Stir in liquid pectin. Return to a full
rolling boil, and boil hard 1 minute, stirring constantly (this is
important because it has a tendency to foam over if you don't).
Remove from heat, skim any foam and ladle hot jam into hot,
sterilized jars leaving ¼ inch headspace. Remove any air bubbles,
wipe treads, and adjust lids and bands securely. Process 10 minutes
in a boiling water bath canner adjusting as needed for elevation. At
the end of processing time, turn off the heat, remove the canner lid
and let the jars cool down 5 minutes before removing to a heat-proof
and draft-free spot to cool for 12 hours before checking seals. Makes
about 8 half-pints.
There you have it. I hope you find something interesting to try.
8 comments:
All I can say is YUM!!!!
These all look good but sunflower seed butter in oatmeal cookies! As soon as it cools off a little around here I'm going to fire up,the oven and give them a try. Yum!!
@Connie
The sunflower seed butter is a strange thing, but it does an excellent job mimicking peanut butter. These cookies are a bit like a crunchy granola bar. If you like chewy oatmeal cookies with raisins-this isn't it. I was shocked to see it get first place as it is so far from a traditional oatmeal cookie, but it is rather like getting two cookies in one.
Time to make this into a book with photos of the prize winning produce. Name, Danny's Delights from mummas Kitchen?
Holy shizzer, what a glorious repast, and a WINNING repast no less! WOOHOOOO! XXXXX
Danny, King of the Kitchen!
Thanks for sharing the recipes. xxx
Thanks everyone for your sweet comments.
Wow, highly impressive!
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