Fruit & Nut Rum Balls
Brittany wrote this on 22 December 2011
There might be some kind of rule that says I have to post lots of Christmas cookie recipes in December but I don’t really care. I actually have so many cookie recipes I could post here (literally dozens and dozens) that I couldn’t choose between them and decided to share this recipe instead. I make these-I call them candy I guess-every single year. And every year I say to myself, “Self? These are really good!” I don’t know why I forget about it for eleven months and then am surprised every year but I don’t know why people buy food to feed squirrels either. Both are a mystery to me.
Back to the food, the beauty of this recipe is that, well…its beautiful! I love the colors of the dried fruit. Actually, it just occurred to me that it is kind of like fruit cake, but without the cake part. Hmmm. You would think I would have noticed that before now…Any-hoo, don’t be turned off by that! These little nuggets are sticky and sweet and chewy and rich and mmmmm. Years ago, when I made them the first time, my Mom and my sisters were there to test them out with me. We all took a bite and our eyes got big and round! “Wow! These are great!” was the general consensus. So I have been making them ever since. I like the fact that they aren’t just the same old thing you find on a cookie tray and they are really fun to pass out to the neighbors. Bonus! They are no bake! They are just so darn festive I hear Jingle Bells playing in my head every time I eat one!
One Year Ago: Brown Sugar Shortbread
Fruit & Nut Rum Balls
Recipe adapted from Eating Well
1/2 c dried cranberries
1/2 c chopped, dried apricots
2 eggs
3/4 c sugar
1 c chopped walnuts and pecans (1/2 c each)
1 tsp rum extract
shredded, sweetened coconut
Stir together the first four ingredients in a medium sized sauce pan and place over medium heat. Cook stirring constantly until the mixture turns a kind of pale yellow and it starts to thicken. This will take about five minutes. As soon as you notice that it is starting to get thick (this will be around 165-170 degrees on a candy thermometer if you want to get technical) pull it off the heat and stir in the chopped nuts and the rum extract. Set aside to cool. Once it is cool enough to handle, scoop out scant teaspoonfuls onto a sheet pan covered in wax paper. You should get about 2-2 1/2 dozen out of this recipe. Chill the sheet pan if necessary to make them sticky enough to hold a ball shape. When your mixture is stiff enough (either right out of the pan or after it has chilled a bit) roll them gently into a small ball and then roll in coconut. Chill completely and store in an airtight container in the fridge for up to five days. You can freeze these for up to a month too!
Note: Chopped dates, chopped dried cherries, and raisins work well here too. So do chopped pistachios so feel free to experiment!
Hot Chocolate #2-Chocolate Chai
Brittany wrote this on 21 December 2011
It has been raining here. A lot. And for days. It is wet, damp, drippy, grey, dark, cloudy, and frankly a little sad. My kids have colds and I am not feeling too hot myself. Naturally, I have been living off of hot chocolate.
As previously mentioned in the post Hot Chocolate #1, I am a fan. I really love hot chocolate. Make it a peppermint hot chocolate and I am good to go. But when it comes right down to it, I am not discriminatory so I like to try new things. So far, Hot Chocolate #1 is the formula I have been using as a base for experimentation. I really like the dark, not-to-sweet flavor of cocoa powder. In the interest of variety, I added some chai tea bags to the recipe to see what would happen. And it was oh so nice. The spice is not overpowering, and it is much easier than going out and actually purchasing all the different spices you need to create the flavor of chai. This is just special enough that it is deserving of a Christmas mug, but not so complicated you can’t enjoy it any day when the temperature takes a dip. Merry Christmas!
One Year Ago: Mini Corn Muffins
Chocolate Chai
This recipe is just a slight adjustment to the first hot chocolate recipe. Enjoy!
In a medium saucepan stir together:
1/2 c sugar
1/3 c cocoa powder
pinch of salt
1/3 c hot water
Whisk to combine ingredients over medium heat until it comes to a boil. Keep stirring and boil one minute to dissolve the cocoa powder and sugar. Add: 4 c of milk (I use 3 c of 1% and 1 c of cream or all whole milk) and 6 chai flavored tea bags! Heat gently and slowly over medium low heat until it is hot and at serving temperature, stirring occasionally. Let the tea bags steep another 5 minutes in the hot cocoa. Remove the tea bags, carefully squeezing the excess liquid from them. Serve with whipped cream.
Potato Gratin
Brittany wrote this on 18 December 2011
Ah. We have now come to the part of Christmas dinner that people could really care less about: the side dish. For some reason, food that accompanies the main protein at Christmas, usually beef or ham and sometimes another turkey, gets forgotten. At Thanksgiving, people go on and on about the potatoes and the cranberries and the *gulp* green bean casserole. But because Christmas dinner varies so much from family to family, plates of cookies and fudge get all the attention. Well, this potato dish will definitely be what you and your guests end up talking about long after all the presents are unwrapped and you are standing in line trying to return the stirrup pants you got from cousin Ned. A few simple ingredients and you have a dish that could be really boring-they are just potatoes after all-but instead is swoon worthy. Don’t be surprised if you end up rolling your eyes to the heavens in food euphoria. I warned you.
Please note that this dish is extremely indulgent. This is not something you should make on a regular basis or shrug and have four helpings of. Well…I mean, you could, but I don’t want to be blamed for your cholesterol levels at your next check up. The great thing about this though is that it goes great with any kind of roasted meat so it does not matter one iota what you are making. I really love it with beef but it tastes great with ham, turkey, chicken, duck, venison-even just a big green salad! So enjoy, indulge, and then get on the treadmill.
One Year Ago: Indian Summer Chili
Potato Gratin
Adapted from Tyler Florence
2 pounds of potatoes, peeled and sliced as thin as you can get them
2 c heavy cream
2 garlic coves, minced
1 heaping tsp fresh thyme
1/4 c chopped chives
1 c grated Parmesan cheese
salt and pepper
Mix all ingredients together and pour into a buttered casserole dish. Using the back of a spoon or spatula, gently flatten the potatoes so that everything is settled down into the cream and it is fairly smooth and even on top. Bake at 375 for 30-40 minutes. The gratin will be bubbly and brown on top and a knife inserted in the potatoes in the center will slide in easily. Cool 10 minutes before serving.