Meatballs
are quite delicious on their own, but add adding a river of cheese to the
centre of them really steps them up a notch.
Sunday, May 7, 2017
Sunday, April 16, 2017
Bacon Dog Treats
My first recipe for homemade dog
treats appeared on the blog back in 2011.
I took a photo of my dog, Raya, holding a bone shaped cookie cutter in
her mouth, and the photo ended up appearing on the popular website “Post
Secret”, making my senior pup famous for the week it was on the front page. After being in our lives for nearly 14 years,
Raya sadly passed away last winter.
Sunday, March 5, 2017
Jiggs Dinner
This upcoming Sunday, I’ll be helping
cook a traditional Newfoundland Jigg’s Dinner for the largest crowd I have ever
cooked for to date - alongside my friend Allan, Newfoundlander and fellow
foodie.
Sunday, February 19, 2017
Sesame Ginger Japanese Eggplant Skewers

I just love it when you wing a recipe and it turns out perfectly on the first first try. This recipe was exactly that. Yesterday my husband and I purchased a new fridge, so as a result I ended up cleaning out our old fridge and getting rid some expired/freezer burnt food. The result was a gorgeously clean new fridge - with very little groceries inside. It inspired me to go grocery shopping, and while at the store I picked up a couple of veggies I hadn't tried before - Japanese Eggplants being one of them.
Sunday, February 12, 2017
Slow Cooker Maple Baked Beans
This recipe appeared as my column in the February 9th edition of The Hinton Voice.
[I fell in love with Maple
Baked Beans on my first trip out east. I
was staying a mere 18 km from the Montreal border and beans were a staple at
every single store I walked into. In
fact, even the tiny town I was staying in had their very own bean factory that
had line ups well into the afternoon, until they inevitably sold out for the
day. Every local I visited had beans in
their fridge, and they came out at breakfast, lunch, and dinner. Needless to say, once I was back home in
Alberta, the flavour of freshly baked beans were ingrained in my memory, and I
knew I had to try to re-create them at home.
Tuesday, December 20, 2016
Single Serving Mac & Cheese Au Gratin
Friday, December 9, 2016
Sugar Cookies with Royal Icing
I have been infatuated with decorated
sugar cookies for as long as I can remember, especially with the increase of
the foodie how to videos that have fast become an adult version of a bedtime
story before I fall asleep for the night. Over the years I’ve collected all of
the necessary supplies, but I’ve never actually sat down and worked with royal
icing before. I mentioned to Sarah that
I had been making the dough and cutting out cookies in hopes to decorate them
this week, and before we finished our conversation she already had a dough of
her own happening in her kitchen. We
decided to combine forces and the next night her son and daughter in law
stopped by we all listened to Christmas music and decorated sugar cookies until
late into the night. We had so much fun;
both of us are already planning our next batch for tomorrow.
For the cookies, we adapted
this recipe from The Pioneer Woman:
Ingredients
Cookies
- 2/3 cup shortening
- ¾ cup sugar
- ½ tsp grated lemon
zest
- ½ teaspoon vanilla
bean paste (or extract)
- 1 large egg
- ¼ cup milk
- 2 cups flour
- 1 ½ tsp baking
powder
- 1 ½ tsp salt
Royal Icing
- 3 tbsp meringue
powder
- 4 cups sifted icing
sugar
- 5 tbsp water
Directions
Cream together
shortening and sugar until light and fluffy.
Stir in lemon peel, and vanilla.
Beat egg, and add mixture. Stir
in the milk and mix thoroughly.
Sift flour, baking
powder, and salt together, then add to cream mixture mixing until well blended.
Divide dough in half,
and shape into disks. Wrap with plastic
wrap, then refrigerate for a minimum of 1-2 hours, overnight if possible.
Once dough has been
chilled, roll out onto a lightly floured surface to approximately ¼ inch thick
and cut into shapes using your favourite cookie cutters. Transfer to a cookie sheet lined with parchment
paper and bake at 375 for approximately 6 minutes, being sure that cookies
don’t brown. For best results, allow
cookies to cool and harden 1-2 hours (or overnight) before decorating.
For icing:
Whip ingredients
together in a stand mixer set to medium speed for 7-10 minutes, or until stiff
peaks form and the icing loses its glossy sheen. If using a hand mixer, increase whipping time
to 10-12 minutes.
This icing is now
ready for edging consistency. Add
food coloring to the icing, then split 1/4 of the icing into a piping bag or
squeeze bottle with a small round writing tip (Wilton Tip 1 or 2).
For flooding constancy, add water to
remaining icing ¼ tsp at a time until you have what’s called a 5 second icing. This means that the icing will easily run off
the spoon and lay smoothly back in the bowl after 5 seconds. Youtube is your friend here. Add icing to a squeeze bottle (or piping bag
if you don’t have a squeeze bottle) fitted with a larger round tip (the size
will be dependent on a number of factors, though I used a Wilton Tip 3 for ours).
Use the edging icing
to create an outline around the edges of your cookies to help contain the
flooding icing. Once the edging has
set, flood the cookie with the flooding icing, using a toothpick to spread the
icing to the edges. Use a different coloured flood icing to create designs (it
will dry completely flat). Allow cookies
to dry for 1-2 hours (or overnight).
Enjoy!
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