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knitterati Beatification Candidate |
I’m on a cinnamon roll kick. This recipe has you pour heavy cream or half and half over the rolls before baking. C6CF1B5B-65EB-4C81-9CFA-9B9EBE1002A2 by pianomom2001, on Flickr Results were excellent.
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Has Achieved Nirvana |
Because everything is better with heavy cream! Tripped over this today: Lucy's Peanut Butter Brownies Now how to decide which one to make first, cinnamon rolls or deadly brownies.....
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knitterati Beatification Candidate |
I’d do cinnamon rolls! But Mr. AM would probably choose the PB brownies; he loves peanut butter. I think I read somewhere that the processed hydrogenated PB is better for baking/cooking, but I use the natural, because that’s what’s on hand here. Do you know about the 3 (or 5) ingredient PB cookies? Gluten-free because there’s no flour. Mr. AM says these are his fave cookies ever. if you double the recipe, you use one 16 oz jar of PB, so less measuring. But I’ve decided the 1/2 jar (1 cup) is better for natural PB, because you can stir, make cookes, and have the other half of the jar in the fridge for normal use. (Recipe here.) Also! Stirring natural PB is easy with electric hand mixer. Only put one beater in, and stir on low speed. So much better than trying to do it with a spoon. Onward!
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Has Achieved Nirvana |
OK, so we're peasants. We really liked the three ingredient mac and cheese. And talk about stupid simple. I used TJ's Wisconsin extra sharp cheddar. I had never tried it before and when I nibbled on a sample slice of it I thought it might be too mild, but it was perfect when it was melted into the dish. I think using different kinds of cheeses could be very interesting. Or adding extras like chicken or peas or.... I bought a couple of extra cans of TJ's fried onions when they were available during the holidays, and picked up some fried jalapenos when we were there today. They were great toppings for the mac and cheese. Ready to plate up:
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knitterati Beatification Candidate |
Your mac looks prettier than mine did! I used farfalle and Tillamook extra sharp cheddar. Peasant food? I want to make this. I’m subbing Impossible Burger or Beyond Meat for the ground beef. And I may do as many commenters said, and use a can of soup instead of making my own soup with a roux, because there are a couple cans in the cupboard that need to go somewhere. Tater Tot Casserole, aka hot dish The comments are hilarious, too.
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Has Achieved Nirvana |
Flourless chocolate cake, recipe from Zuni Cafe in San Francisco. https://getpocket.com/explore/...source=pocket-newtab
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knitterati Beatification Candidate |
If you like that, you may also like this. It’s basically a fallen chocolate souffle, filled with whipped cream. Richard Sax’s chocolate cloud cake from Food52
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Has Achieved Nirvana |
Easiest Minestrone recipe ever: Open a can of Cento Minestrone, heat it and eat it! I make good Minestrone but this stuff is so good I may not bother in the future. We found it in an Italian deli in PHX - one of those places where they have all sorts of Italian products you never buy because you don't know how good they are and they're kind of $$. I may buy more stuff like it in the future.
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Has Achieved Nirvana |
The minestrone sounds great, but when I checked the nutrition facts turns out it has a ton of salt, like so many canned soups. Bummer. Cento products are available around here...will have to check out some of the others....the ones listed on their website look pretty interesting.....
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Has Achieved Nirvana |
Grandson Jack is on a mac and cheese kick right now and I think I’ll make a batch for him. I can’t find the article right now, but there’s a guy who tested some 10 kinds of boxed M and C mixes. Of all things, Walmart’s house brand came out #1 and it’s dirt cheap. Kraft, our usual go-to, came out way down the list. [edit]. Lots of salt, as it turns out. I don’t usually look at salt content but maybe I should. I wonder if salt is a problem for little kids.
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Has Achieved Nirvana |
If the test of a great recipe is that it makes you swear at the first taste (By the Gods - this is delicious!) then this is the recipe to try. Best soup I’ve ever eaten, maybe the best dish I’ve ever eaten of any kind. Base recipe: https://thecozycook.com/sausage-potato-soup/ Cooks notes: * In the interest of cleaning up our act, Sharon subbed in Jenny O hot Turkey sausage and it made all the difference. Add a glug of olive oil. You can taste each individual ingredient. * The cream makes it almost sinfully rich, but I don’t see why coconut milk wouldn’t work. * Sharon made it with my homemade chicken broth. If using box broth add a little BtB. * As a happy accident, Sharon used twice as much chicken broth as is called for because she didn’t understand how I package it. She doubled the spices and the broth is so good you can eat it by itself. I’d eat it out of a gym shoe. * Can’t be frozen because the potatoes turn to mush. Eat it up quick! Damn! It’s good!
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knitterati Beatification Candidate |
This is a level up from my usual sausage/potato/kale soup. I’ll give it a try. Subbing Beyond Sausage for the sausage (Mr. AM not eating meat), and use half and half instead of heavy cream (my usual sub for soups).
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Minor Deity |
That's a true story. I had a half sandwich and some Campbell's chicken noodle soup for lunch. I add a tsp of cream to the soup, and it makes all the difference in the world while adding very little calories.
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Has Achieved Nirvana |
Jennie-O is the turkey sausage I use, both the mild and the spicy. Recipe sounds great, Steve. Will definitely put it in the queue to try. I wonder how it would taste with part sour cream, part cream....
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Has Achieved Nirvana |
I think sour cream or half and half would work just fine. I’m also going to try it without any cream at all.
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