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Until next time,
Ann
On the 1st Day of Small Town Christmas, 23 Authors started a contest filled with stories from the heart! http://bit.ly/1cD8Ng6
12 Days of Small Town Christmas beginning Midnight Thursday Nov 28…
To kick off the holiday season 23 Harlequin American Romance authors have teamed up to bring you 12 Days of Small Town Christmas with Harlequin American Romance. Whether your ideal romance hero is a businessman, construction worker, cowboy, doctor, fireman, sheriff, or SEAL you’ll find him in an American Romance book where everyday women fall in love with the hero of their dreams!
Stay tuned for more information…..
Until next time,
Ann
This month I’m sharing some of my family’s favorite Thanksgiving recipes. The box pictured above isn’t one of mine. That’s right, I have SIX recipe boxes, crammed with delicious recipes! I inherited three of them from relatives. I cherish those not only for the recipes, but also for the hand-written notes and the peek into the past.
Both my hubby and I had a Great Aunt Rose. This recipe comes from his great aunt. I wasn’t privy to the recipe until I married into the family, and I’ve used it every Thanksgiving since.
The dressing is sweet, but I happen to love the combination of turkey with a sweeter dressing.
Ingredients and Directions
Note: ingredients are in bold type
2 quarts bread crumbs made as follows: remove crusts on approx. 15 slices of white bread; toast lightly (I place slices on a cookie sheet and broil on both sides until barely starting to brown). Cut into cubes and place in a large bowl
Gently stir on 1 cup sweetened condensed milk
Add and mix carefully in the order below:
1 1/3 cup seedless raisins, washed in warm water
2 1/2 cups unpeeled, diced apples (I like Granny Smith because this apple holds together so well)
1 medium onion, chopped and fried in butter until golden brown (I use ¼ cup butter)
2 Tbs sugar
½ tsp salt
¼ tsp pepper
Add:
½ tsp baking powder combined with ½ cup sweetened condensed milk
¼ cup warm melted butter
Makes a great stuffing in your turkey. If baked in a separate pan, pour some turkey basting juice in the bottom of the dish before adding the dressing. Cover with foil and bake slowly until raisins are cooked. I cook at 325 for approx 20-30 minutes.
Happy Eating!
Until next time,
Ann
This month I am sharing some of my favorite Thanksgiving recipes.
These delicious rolls contributed to many happy meals in my family. They’re great any time of the year, but I always make them for Thanksgiving. So did my mom and my grandma. They are light and fluffy, and no kneading required! The secret is to handle them as little as possible. Over-handling makes the dough tough, and who wants that?
The rolls are excellent straight from the oven, but they’re also great reheated the next day. I like to slather butter and jam or honey on mine. Or stick a slab of leftover turkey in the middle. Or dunk a warm roll in coffee and enjoy with eggs, bacon or sausage. Or…the list is endless. If you decide to make bread instead of the rolls (see below), the bread goes especially well with beef stew and soups.
This recipe feeds about 20 guests. Halve it if you want– or make it all and freeze for later use.
While mixture cools, in a small bowl combine 2 packages yeast with 1/2 cup tepid water; stir to dissolve. When Crisco mixture has cooled to tepid, add yeast, 2 beaten eggs and 7 cups flour. No need to knead this, just mix with a spoon (will be very gooey). Cover with a damp cloth, set in a warmish place, and let rise for 2 hours.
Flour a surface, turn out dough and roll to 1/’2 inch thick. Don’t over-roll!. Cut out rolls. I use a round cookie cutter, but a glass dipped in flour works well, too. Use a dinner knife to crease each roll, then fold over and pinch the edges together. Set on greased cookie sheets. Let rise 1 hour. Bake at 425 degrees for approximately 10 minutes, until golden brown.
For the bread:
After the letting the dough rise 2 hours, turn out onto floured surface and knead two-three times. Divide in half, roll into balls and place each ball into a greased bread pan. Let rise 1 hour. Bake at 350 degrees for 30 minutes.
Enjoy! And if you try these, let me know how you liked them.
Until next time,
Ann
Another Great September Recipe: Glazed Orange Coconut Cake
This recipe is freaking delicious!! Try it, you’ll love it… and so will the lucky people who get to enjoy it with you.
(Recipe courtesy of Global Table Adventure…. With a few tweaks by me. 🙂 )
Cake:
2 1/2 cups all-purpose flour
1 1/2 cups granulated sugar
3/4 cup finely shredded, unsweetened coconut
2 teaspoons baking powder
2 teaspoons baking soda
1/2 teaspoon salt
1 cup coconut milk
1/2 cup vegetable oil
2 eggs
1 teaspoon vanilla
1 cup fresh orange juice (2-3 oranges)
1 tablespoon finely grated orange rind
2 cups mini semi-sweet chocolate chips (my addition)
Orange glaze: (revamped by me)
Make after cake has completely cooled. Whisk together until smooth:
1 cup powdered sugar
2 Tbs milk
1 ½ tsp orange oil (found in special food stores)–or you could try 1 Tbs orange juice and cut the milk to 1 ½ Tbs. However, I prefer the pure orange oil.
1 Tbs light corn syrup
Instructions:
Preheat oven to 350F. Grease and flour a bundt pan.
In a mixing bowl, combine flour and next five ingredients (flour through salt).
In a small bowl, combine coconut milk, oil, eggs, vanilla, and orange juice and rind. Slowly add to dry ingredients and mix on medium speed until smooth. Pour into prepared bundt pan.
Bake 35 to 40 minutes, until a toothpick inserted in the center comes out clean. Let cool completely before removing from pan. If you don’t, it might break!
The chocolate chips will settle at the bottom, which becomes the top of the cake when you put the cake on a plate.
With a knife, add glaze to completely cooled cake, letting it run down the sides .
Happy Eating!
Ann
September Recipe: Blackberry Good Stuff
Here in the U.S., it’s blackberry season. In the Pacific Northwest, where I live, blackberries are everywhere. I pick them and freeze, so that we have blackberries all winter long. Freezing is so easy! Just pick, spread on a cookie sheet and freeze for several hours. Then pour into a freezer container.
One of my favorite recipes is a cobbler I call Blackberry Good Stuff. Once you try it, you’ll be hooked. This recipe calls for an 8 x 8 inch pan, but I like to make more than that… my family demands it! 🙂 If you want to make a bigger batch, double the crust recipe and use a 9 x 13 inch pan.
Preheat oven to 375 degrees.
Combine:
1 cups quick-cook oats
1/2 cup unbleached flour
1 cup sugar
Cut in 1/2 cup soft butter until crumbly.
Spread half this mixture in an 8 x 8 lightly greased pan. (Note: This stuff sticks, so greasing is essential. When I made this recipe last week, I substituted parchment paper instead and it worked, too.) Bake the crust at 350 for 10 minutes. While baking, mix filling:
Combine:
2/3-1 cup sugar
1/4 cup flour
1 1/2 Tbs lemon juice
t tsp tapioca
Pour over and mix gently with:
4 heaping cups fresh blackberries (actually, any berry should work)
Pour berries evenly over partially-baked crust. Sprinkle the remainder of the crust over the berries. Bake 45 minutes.
To die for! Great warm or cold, served plain or with vanilla ice cream.
Enjoy!!
I am woefully behind on posting here. My apologies. I’ve been busy writing.
First off, I would like to thank Tabitha Buckmaster, who sent me the most beautiful gift. I’ve hung this near my desktop in my office, where I can always see it.
Other news: I finished the first book of my new miniseries. It is now en route to my editor, who is sure to be surprised at receiving it a full week early! The book will be out next June.
If you want reminders of upcoming book publication dates, sign up for my newsletter. Enter my monthly contest for a free book here and you’ll automatically be subscribed: https://annroth.net/contest.html.
That’s it for now.
I’ll post a recipe soon.
Best wishes and happy reading,
Ann
I am hard at work on the first book of my Prosperity, Montana, minsieries. This story has absorbed me completely. I hurt for my characters and the suffering they must endure. Sharing their pain on the page is difficult, both for my characters and for me, but that’s how it is. What makes the whole thing bearable is that I know that in the end, they will find the happiness they deserve.
Genre fiction readers expect upbeat endings in the form of character growth and change, and the hope of something good to come. Those kinds of endings are the payoff for all that suffering we endure as we read the story.
When that payoff doesn’t come, I feel disappointed and cheated, and it’s a safe bet that won’t pick up another book by the same author. The same goes with movies. Make me suffer, make me sit on the edge of my seat and chew my nails to the quick, but please, let a satisfying ending justify all that agony I endured. That doesn’t mean I expect everything to be perfect. All I ask for is that things are looking up.
What about you? Agree or disagree?
Until next time,
Ann