Showing posts with label condiments. Show all posts
Showing posts with label condiments. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 29, 2012

Marinara Sauce with Canning Instructions

Having jars of ready made sauce on hand can make dinner a cinch! Simply boil your favorite pasta, prepare salad, open sauce...
However, some grocery store pasta sauces have high fructose corn syrup, msg, and a boat load of other unhealthy ingredients, making your own is simple and healthy. If you don't want to can it then just freeze it in jars or ziploc bags.


Ingredients:
Amounts will vary according to how much you want to make and the size of the pot. It really is one of those "throw it in and taste it" things. Trust me!
Tomatoes
Onions
Garlic
Italian seasoning blend or basil, oregano, thyme
Salt
Olive oil
Tomato paste if you want it thick
Optional:
a splash of white wine
parsley
a chopped carrot
chopped celery stalk
For Trim Healthy Mamas omit the olive oil so you don't mix carbs with fat.  And be sure to use Dreamfields Pasta to fit the low-carb plan.
In a large pot, over medium high heat, put about 3 tablespoons olive oil and saute the onions, carrots and celery if using, when tender add the garlic, stir occasionally.

If using wine, add before tomatoes, it will bring up the brown bits from the bottom of the pot which add a lot of flavor.
Add all other ingredients, season to taste, in a 6 quart pot I usually use 3-4 tablespoons of dry herbs and 2 teaspoons salt.





If it tastes too acidic then add a bit more olive oil.
From here you can serve over pasta, bag and freeze, or can.
To can, ladle into clean, sterile jars, leaving 1/2 inch headspace. adjust two piece caps. Process 35 minutes in a boiling water canner. (According to the Ball Blue Book)
After 35 minutes, remove from canner, allow to rest undisturbed for 24 hours, then wash, and label. Store in a cool dark place.
A few additional suggested uses, sub sauce, pizza sauce, add chicken stock and cream for tomato soup. Don't forget this is great for dipping bread sticks or mozzarella cheese sticks into, yum.
Go have fun with it, the work is finished; just pop the lid and enjoy!

Wednesday, March 21, 2012

Creamy Ceasar Dressing

Making salad dressing yourself can give you a much healthier product and cater to your personal tastes. I have two Ceasar dressing recipes that I like equally, one creamy and the other a rich olive oil version loaded with garlic, yum. I made this one today because I wanted it on more than salad, I drizzled this over a baked potato. I'm sure given enough time I could come up with a multitude of things to dip or drizzle over, this is just plain good.
1 cup mayo (I used Vegenaise because it is all grapeseed oil, but use what you prefer)
1/2 cup parmesan cheese
3 tablespoons olive oil
2 tablespoons water
2 tablespoons lemon juice
1 large or 2 small garlic cloves
1 table anchovy paste
1/4 teaspoon black pepper
1/4 teaspoon salt
1/2 teaspoon parsely
I put all of this in a cup and use my smart stick to blend it, a blender or magic bullet works well too.
It is that easy. Really.

Friday, January 27, 2012

Orange Honey Butter-Rich and Sweet

Nothing dresses up a tray of muffins, bread or a plain potato like a compound butter.
  On fresh bread...
It is also one of the easiest ways to add flavor.
Ingredients:
1 stick butter (the real thing), room temperature
4-5 tablespoons honey
1 teaspoon orange zest or 1/2 teaspoon orange extract
Stir it all together.

Put it in a small crock or serving dish. Or roll in wax paper to form a log and refrigerate for later use, when cold it can be sliced into discs and arranged decoratively on a serving plate alongside muffins or toast.
So yummy!

Thursday, October 6, 2011

Boiled Apple Cider

This humble little bowl of brown liquid is an exquisitely powerful, flavor packed element to be used liberally in a multitude of baked goods or drizzled over pancakes, biscuits or whatever you come up with.
I took a 1/2 gallon of fresh cider from the orchard up the road and boiled it down to 1 1/2 cups making it syrupy and pungent. Boiling it down to syrup gives you the flavor with such a small amount you don't have to compensate for additional liquid.
I added 4 tablespoons of this to a batch of muffins then sprinkled the tops with cinnamon sugar. It really increased the flavor.
A few days later I tried it in a cheesecake, both the batter and the apple topping.
I would love to hear what you try it in.
Store in the refrigerator for a week or two if it lasts that long.

Monday, August 8, 2011

Salsa! Fresh or Canned Make it Now

When you saw the post title, did you start dancing? Your mouth might dance with happiness if you fill it with this yummy goodness.
We've been using this recipe for several years, 12 or so. If you want your salsa thicker just add some tomato paste until you have it the desired consistency, you can do this either before or after the canning process.
I got the original recipe from my friend Holly, she is an amazing cook! I made a few changes to suit my own preferences, like more garlic and fresh cilantro instead of dried.
Salsa:
Into a large stock pot or bowl, you are not going to cook it you just need something large enough to stir everything together.
16-18 pounds tomatoes, diced
6 onions, diced
jalapenos,diced finely to taste ( I use 4-6 )
6 teaspoons salt
6 tablespoons lime juice, add the zest too if you like
1/4 cup minced cilantro (or more)
1/2 cup white vinegar
10 cloves garlic, minced



Stir together, can in quarts or pints, makes about 9-10 quarts, and , of course, twice as many pints.
Can in boiling water canner, 15 minutes for pints and 25 minutes for quarts.


Don't forget to have some fresh with chips while you can the rest! Or on top of some black beans and rice--add lots of cheese for me!
Last month I cooked some chicken breasts in the crock pot with a jar of salsa, after 6 hours on high I just stuck a fork in and broke them all up into a wonderful shredded chicken I used to fill tortillas for dinner.
Need some more ideas? Let me know.

Thursday, July 28, 2011

Our Favorite Dill Pickle Recipe With Canning Instructions

For years I would ask around with in my husband's family for Granny's pickle recipe only to be told that Uncle Bud had it and no one else. Finally, Connie got it for me, I received it a few years ago and have been playing around with it every summer.
 If you like your dill pickles salty this is the recipe for you. Loads of dilly flavor, peppery and extra garlic (one of my additions).
This year my daughter picked up pickles at a produce auction.
There were some blackberries too but that's another story. We have a few of our own raspberry and blackberry bushes but we use a great deal more than we harvest so far.
Do your prep work first and canning anything is easy, lots of work but not difficult.
Make sure you have all your ingredients gathered.
Wash everything, jars, rings, canner and have all the new lids you will need, you don't want to run out part way through processing.
Here is the basic recipe that I have tweaked and use with very few variations at this point.
Brine:
1 cup canning/pickling salt (yes, it is different from table salt)
1/2 cup plus 3 tablespoons white vinegar
1 gallon of purified water
Per quart jar:
1/2 teaspoon mustard seed
1/2 teaspoon black peppercorns
1/2 teaspoon dill seed or one whole dill stalk with leaves
2-5 garlic cloves, depending on size or how much you like garlic
I use these amounts for cucumbers, for banana peppers, I increase the garlic and pepper and decrease the dill. I play around with the spices for each different vegetable.
Prep:
Clean jars.
Clean cucumbers and peppers.
Heat brine, you will have to remake this several times depending on the amount you are canning. I know, it looks like a pot of water but really, it has the vinegar and salt in it too and is simmering that's why it appears blurry.
Sterilize the lids by simmering for just a couple minutes.
Halve, quarter or slice the cucumbers.
Seed the peppers and slice.
Fill the canner about half full, yes, I'm a "half full girl", and start the water heating. You want it about the same temperature as the brine so the jars won't crack. If it looks hot it is hot, not rocket science.
Fill jars with cucumbers and/or peppers.

Line up the full jars and add the spices.


Fill with hot brine to 1/2 inch from top, this is called head space.
Place lid on jar,
 screw on ring and place carefully in the canner.
Bring up to rolling boil then start timer for 10 minutes, no longer or you will have mushy pickles.
You must fill the canner or the jars will bump around and crack, if you don't have enough pickles for the last load in the canner then fill a jar with hot water and put it in to fill the empty space.
Remove jars with a jar lifter.
Place hot jars on a towel and leave, as in DO NOT MOVE THEM, over night. The lid should vacuum in and you will hear a little pop on each jar. If this does not happen then the jar did not seal for a variety of reasons, just place jar, once cool, in fridge and in 3 weeks, not before or it will taste like vinegar, eat them.
The next day, remove the rings, wash the sealed jars and label with date because you want to wait the same 3 weeks before opening. Always date the jars so next year you use the older ones up first.

 I am going to experiment with refrigerator pickles soon, I'll let you know.

Wednesday, July 13, 2011

Spicy, Sweet Peach BBQ Sauce

I wanted something sticky sweet to brush over some chicken breasts so I started with some peaches I had in the freezer.
This peachy experiment turned out so well we will be using it often.
Start with about 1 1/2 cups fresh or frozen peaches in a small saucepan.
Add the juice of 1 lemon.
Add 1/2 cup ketchup, and 2 tablespoons adobo sauce, 1 teaspoon chili powder, 1 teaspoon liquid smoke, 1/2 teaspoon salt, 1/2 cup water.
Simmer for 15 minutes or until smooth and thick. Use a smart stick to puree or allow to cool then puree in a blender.
Now brush this beautiful, sticky concoction on some chicken and allow to rest in refrigerator for a couple hours. Bake for 45 minutes at 425F. or grill. Grilling would be my preference but I had too much inside work this time.
I served this with potato salad and a garden salad. Good stuff!