Wednesday, May 27, 2009

Apricot Nut Loaf




Apricot Nut Loaf

Dorcas Annette Walker


After us children were grown and my father died my mother seldom cooked. Working full time it was more convenient for her to eat at the hospital dining hall. On the rare occasions when she had company my mother ate at a restaurant. So I was quite intrigued when chatting with my mother during one of our weekly telephone calls to hear that she was seriously considering entering a cooking contest sponsored by the Bran Bud Cereal company. My mother loved apricots so she wanted to use them with the cereal to make some kind of a nut loaf. Since I cooked and baked all the time my mother asked my opinion what ingredients I thought would work best together. Suddenly I found myself being the one to encourage and bolster my mother’s self esteem like she had done so many times for me.


Several months later my mother called me all excited. She had won first place with her Apricot Nut Loaf entry! It was the only time my mother ever entered a contest. Her winning recipe lay forgotten as the years passed with only a mention now and then about our mother’s one spot of fame. As I was browsing through my recipes I came upon her Apricot Nut Loaf recipe and decided to feature it this month in honor of my mother.

Relative to peaches apricots are one of the first signs of summer. Apricots grow golden orange skins with the fruit having a faint tart taste between a plum and a peach on small trees from May through August. In the winter apricots are imported from South America so are available fresh year round. Buy slightly soft apricots as tree-ripened fruits taste best. Apricots are an excellent source of vitamin A and C, potassium, and dietary fiber. Nutrients in apricots help protect the heart and eyes and its fiber prevents constipation and digestive conditions.


Some say that apricots originally came from China spreading through Central Asia to Korea and Japan while other believe that apricots were first cultivated in India about 3000 BC. The first apricot tree arrived in Virginia in 1720, but the appearance of apricot trees in the United States didn’t become known until 1792 from seedlings carried to the west coast at Spanish missions in California. Today apricots are primarily grown in California with some in Washington and Utah.

My mother’s Apricot Nut Loaf is packed full of healthful ingredients with a fruity flavor. Her Apricot Nut Loaf makes a solid dense like bread with a nutty crunchy texture ideal as a healthy snack with a cup of coffee or tea. Variations of this recipe could be made with dried or fresh apricots- just add more sugar- and other fruits or substitute the sugar with honey. Preparation time for the Apricot Nut Loaf only takes ten minutes (not counting baking time) and this recipe makes one large loaf.

Apricot Nut Loaf


In a medium size bowl beat together:
½ c sugar
2 eggs
1/3 c cooking oil
1 c apricot jam
1 c milk
1 tsp vanilla


Add:
2½ c self-rising flour
1 c Bran Bud Cereal


Mix well and then fold in:
1 c chopped pecans
Pour into a greased loaf pan and bake for 45-55 minutes at 350º. Turn out on a rack and let cool then store the loaf in a closed container. Slice and enjoy with your favorite beverage!

Weekly tip: When baking nut or fruit loaves double the recipe and make two. You can always store the extra loaf or half a loaf in the freezer for a readymade snack!


Dorcas Annette Walker is a published author, columnist, speaker, freelance magazine writer, and photographer from Jamestown, Tennessee. Contact her at: dorcaswalker@twlakes.net. For more recipes check out her Creative Tennessee Mountain Cookin blog at: www.dorcasannettewalker.com

Friday, May 22, 2009

Nutty Cinnamon Rolls




Nutty Cinnamon Rolls

Dorcas Annette Walker


Motherhood is filled with stress juggling multiple tasks. Just ask any mother. Today we are bombarded with articles touting the importance of setting aside time to exercise to lower one’s heart rate and relieve stress, not to mention the flood of advertisements on a daily basis claiming that a certain machine is the best way to exercise. In my grandmother’s day a mother got plenty of physical exercise without using a tread mill or exercise machine. Weeding a large vegetable garden and flowerbeds, putting up produce for winter, washing clothes by hand, and cooking meals from scratch gave women lots of exercise.


Bread making was a known stress reducer. You could punch, pull, and slap the dough around to your heart’s content as the more the dough was kneaded the lighter the bread would be. Not only would women feel better after a session of working warm dough between her fingers, but her family got to enjoy fresh hot bread. The day would finish with satisfaction knowing that she was providing for her family’s basic necessities. Talk about an unbeatable combination. I don’t know of a nerve pill or exercise machine that can give those results. Maybe it would be smarter if women went back to making up a batch of bread each week.


Today there are zillions of recipes and methods on how to make bread varying from the old-fashion day-long bread, using frozen dough, or a bread machine. The one thing all bread recipes have in common is the guarantee of having your house filled with a heavenly aroma of baking bread and finishing with a mouth-watering culinary treat. A woman can’t go wrong making a bread product. Included within the assortments of bread recipes is a variety of rolls ranging from plain dinner rolls to elaborate dessert buns.


My Nutty Cinnamon Rolls are an easy version of the old-fashion cinnamon rolls perfect for a snack or with a brunch eaten either hot or cold. You can quickly mix up a batch of these rolls and let them rise while doing something else around the house. These Nutty Cinnamon Rolls have a soft velvety texture from using a cake mix, yet they still have the homemade yeast flavor. For a different flavor try a cream cheese or chocolate frosting. You can also substitute the nuts with dried fruit. My Nutty Cinnamon Rolls take only fifteen minutes to prepare (not counting rising or baking time) and this recipe makes two dozen cinnamon rolls.


Nutty Cinnamon Rolls


In a large bowl mix together:
4 c self-rising flour
2 pkg yeast
1 white cake mix
2 c warm water
Pour the dough out on a floured surface and knead for a couple of minutes until the dough is smooth.


Then roll and shape into a rectangle and spread on:
½ c shortening
3 c brown sugar
1 c chopped nuts (your choice)
Roll up the dough lengthwise and with a sharp knife cut into one inch pieces. Place dough rounds flat on a cooking sheet and let rise until double. Bake at 350º for 25-30 minutes until golden brown. Let the rolls cool for five minutes and then frost with a vanilla flavored icing. Garnish with cinnamon!


Weekly tip: For no clean-up baking trays first line the trays with parchment or wax paper. The baked goodies won’t burn and you always end up with a clean tray!


Dorcas Annette Walker is a published author, columnist, speaker, freelance magazine writer, and photographer from Jamestown, Tennessee. Contact her at: dorcaswalker@twlakes.net. For more recipes check out her Creative Tennessee Mountain Cookin blog at: www.dorcasannettewalker.com

Wednesday, May 13, 2009

A La Golden Rod




A La Golden Rod

Dorcas Annette Walker


I have been blessed with many memories of my mother that lives on even though my mother has been gone for almost sixteen years. One childhood memory I cherish is the rare times my mother made her favorite dish, A La Golden Rod. Every time I make A La Golden Rod I remember my mother. Both my children loved when I made A La Golden Rod as I would tell them stories about their grandma. Today I try to live up to the wonderful legacy that my mother left to pass it along to my daughter and granddaughter. I hope that your Mother’s Day will be filled with making or enjoying lots of memories.


Any beauty or sweetness that I have I owe to my mother, who believed that I could do or become anything that I wanted to be. My first book published, To Say Good-bye, is about my mother. You can find it on my website at: http://www.dorcasannettewalker.com/ I’m still awed by the strength and sacrifice my mother possessed in order to support her family, keep food on the table, and clothes on our body while somehow managing to give us children a private education. My mother was very talented and yet she stifled her desires and dreams to keep our family secure, take care of a disabled husband, and work fulltime. Her loving personality brightened the lives of her patients and coworkers. Everyone that met my mother fell in love with her.

Though never formally trained, my mother could draw and sketch. I remember early years when church services seemed to last forever and us children would become restless, my mother would take out her pen and a small piece of paper and draw pictures for us. We’d become so enthralled over seeing a blank piece of paper come to life that we’d hate when church was over. My sister, Lois, inherited my mother’s artistic gene and is a talented artist today. In college my mother wrote a couple of poems that were published and once a newspaper article. I like to think that I have inherited a small portion of my mother’s gift for putting words together.


Our mother had a knack of sending special cards. I’ve made books out of all the cards she sent me and placemats out of the cards she saved. Each year my sister and I have a tradition. We browse through all the Mother’s Day cards until we find one like our mother would send us. We carefully read each word and tenderly place it back on the shelf. Then we’ll find a card that says exactly how we feel and send the thought skyward to our mother.


A La Golden Rod is a perfect dish for lunch or a brunch. The creamy sooth white sauce on top of hot buttered toast is filling as well as a delight to the eye. My A La Golden Rod takes about twenty minutes to prepare and this recipe serves four.


A La Golden Rod


4 hardboiled eggs (chop the whites and mash the yolks with a fork separate)
4 pieces of buttered toast

In a large skillet melt 3 tb margarine. Add:
¾ c self-rising flour
4 c milk
chopped egg whites
1 tsp salt
Sprinkle on pepper
Stir slowly with a Wisk until thickened. Pour white sauce over toast. Sprinkle on mashed egg yolks and garnish with parsley!


Weekly tip: Store eggs broad side up. Yolks are less likely to break!


Dorcas Annette Walker is a published author, columnist, speaker, freelance magazine writer, and photographer from Jamestown, Tennessee. Contact her at: dorcaswalker@twlakes.net. For more recipes check out her Creative Tennessee Mountain Cookin blog at: www.dorcasannettewalker.com

Wednesday, May 6, 2009

Deviled Eggs




Deviled Eggs

Dorcas Annette Walker


One thing in my kitchen that gets used on a daily basis is eggs. There are many uses for eggs. You can scramble, fry, make omelets, poach, hard-boil, and use in custards and soufflés not to mention that anytime you bake a cake or dessert eggs are used. I enjoy having fresh eggs on hand from the henhouse and a big feature for my grandchildren when they come to visit is gathering eggs with Grandpa. Eggs are an excellent source of protein and fit with any menu.

Humans have been eating eggs since the beginning of time with ostrich and chicken being the most common. In ancient times Romans ate peafowl eggs while Chinese were fond of pigeon eggs. Phoenicians ate ostrich eggs. Turtle eggs have been highly prized and in starvation situations even alligator eggs have been eaten. Today quail eggs are packaged and available in the United States and Japan as gourmet food.


The origin of deviled eggs began in Rome in the 13th century where stuffed eggs were concocted. The first recipes for hardboiled eggs were printed in medieval European texts. These eggs were stuffed with raisins, goat cheese, and sweet spices such as marjoram, cloves and cinnamon. By the 16th century the practice of boiling eggs, combining the yoke with spices, and refilling the shells was all the rage and by the 17th century hardboiled eggs became a staple in households. The word “deviled” first appeared in print in 1786 to describe highly seasoned fried or boiled dishes. By the 1800’s “deviled” became a culinary term to describe hot spicy dishes.

The average weight of a hen’s egg is 2 oz. The color of the egg is determined by the breed. Chickens with white feathers lay white eggs while hens with red/brown feathers lay brown eggs. Brown eggs have thicker shells. We have two speckled (black and white mixed breed) hens that lay a pale blue and pale green egg. Our niece, Stacy, who is over in England as an exchange student told us that colored eggs are very expensive and highly prized over there. Use fresh eggs to poach or fry as the egg will hold its shape better while older eggs are better for hardboiled eggs as the shell will peel easier.


I have eaten all kinds of Deviled Eggs or Angel Eggs at church dinners and family reunions ranging from pickles or sugar added to the stuffing, while others used only mayonnaise with the yoke, and fancy eggs where an icing tip was used to put the stuffing mixture into the shell. The neat thing about Deviled Eggs is that you can make your Deviled Eggs to suit your family’s taste buds or try something exotic like adding hot peppers or olives to your stuffing. My recipe for Deviled Eggs takes about 50 minutes total preparation time and this recipe makes one dozen stuffed eggs.


Deviled Eggs


Place six eggs in a saucepan and cover with cold water. Add ¼ tsp of salt and bring to a boil. Boil for fifteen minutes, drain off the hot water, and immerse the eggs in cold water. Let sit for a couple of minutes, crack the shell, and peel the eggs. Place the peeled eggs in the refrigerator for ½ hour to chill.

Slice eggs in half and put the yolks in a small bowl. Crumble the hardened yolks with a fork and add:
1 ½ c mayonnaise
1 tsp mustard
Sprinkle of salt and pepper
Mix well then stuff the egg halves with the egg mixture. Sprinkle paprika on top. Cover and chill for a couple of hours before serving!


Weekly tip: You can tell when an egg is hardboiled by spinning the egg on its side- a fresh egg will spin smoothly while a hardboiled egg will wobble. To test an egg for freshness place the egg in a cup of water and add a tsp of salt. A fresh egg will sink!


Dorcas Annette Walker is a published author, columnist, speaker, freelance magazine writer, and photographer from Jamestown, Tennessee. Contact her at: dorcaswalker@twlakes.net. For more recipes check out her Creative Tennessee Mountain Cookin blog at: www.dorcasannettewalker.com