Sunday, December 26, 2010

Family Christmas Party 2010

Our family Christmas party this year was on Christmas Eve. Here was our menu. I didn’t do near as much cooking as I did at Thanksgiving because I was getting ready for Christmas dinner and Santa.

Menu:
Shrimp Plate
Roast Beef
Green Bean Casserole
Salad
Homemade Ranch Dressing
Mashed Potatoes
Sweet Potato Casserole
Rolls
Banana Creme Pie
Apple Pie
Blackberry Pie
Kool-Aid

Wednesday, December 1, 2010

Thanksgiving Dinner 2010

Thanksgiving was spent with hubby's family. As there are eighteen of us (soon to be nineteen) that means LOTS of food. I'm going to share a list of everything we had and then the recipes and/or thoughts for everything I cooked/prepared.

Menu:
Cheese Rolls & Crackers
Vegetable Tray
Spiral Cut Ham w/ Glaze
Roasted Turkey
Stove Top Stuffing
Gravy
Cranberry Sauce
Mashed Potatoes
Sweet Potato Casserole
Honey Glazed Carrots
Marshmallow Salad
Rolls
Soda
Peach Pie
Strawberry Pie
Pumpkin Pie
Homemade Whipped Cream
Ice Cream
Egg Nog

Spiral Cut Honey Glazed Ham

My mother-in-law got a ham from the local grocer. So all I had to do was mix the glaze, pour on and heat the ham. Done! I am not a ham fan, so I let everyone else enjoy this dish. The only ham I have ever had that I liked was from Heavenly Ham. But at their prices, I’m happy with letting the rest of the family enjoy a ham from the grocer and doing without myself.

Roasted Turkey

So, I am not a traditional oven roasted turkey girl. I use an electric roaster oven every year – they cook faster and have fewer issues with drying the meat out.

Remember, to completely defrost your bird. I have heard the electric roasters can actually cook frozen birds, but have never had the guts to try it. So, defrost! Remember that it’s approximately five hours per pound of meat to defrost. So if you have a 15 pound turkey, be sure to put it into the fridge at least three days in advance. And check your bird the day before. If it still seems too frozen, there is always the quick water defrost method. To defrost with water, be sure your turkey is in a waterproof package. Immerse in cold water. Change the water every 30 minutes. Allow about 30 minutes of thawing in water per pound. So if you have a 15 pound turkey, it’ll take about 7 hours.

On the day of cooking, take out your roaster’s insert pan and pre-heat your roaster to 450°F. While roaster is heating, pull your turkey out of the fridge and prep it. Remove packaging (but leave plastic hooks holding legs if yours have it) and organs and neck from cavity. Rinse with water, inside and out, and pat dry. Rub the bird with butter. Sprinkle your favorite kind of salt and pepper all over outside and inside of bird (we like to use seasoned salts and peppers). Place a stick of two of celery, one coarsely chopped onion and a stick of butter in cavity.

Place the bird in the insert pan on top of the wire rack that comes with your roaster. Make sure the handles are up, not tucked below, or it’ll be a pain to remove when done. Fill the bottom of the pan with water, but not so much that the water level comes over the wire rack (usually only a cup or two in mine). Place into the roaster oven and cover.

Roast at 450°F for 30 minutes. This is to give your bird a nice brown skin. After 30 minutes, turn the oven temperature down to 325°F. 8

The roaster will self-baste if you do not lift the lid, so you don't have to baste it every 20 minutes like you do in your conventional oven. So don’t life the lid during cooking time! Lifting the lid will increase your cooking time (as roasters lose their heat a lot faster than ovens) and can make your turkey dryer.

Check turkey for doneness. Your roaster should come with time tables for how long to cook a turkey. Make sure to follow it! Roasters cook faster, so if you go by the amount given for cooking a turkey in a traditional oven, it will be overdone and possibly dry! If you can’t find your roasters manual, figure to start checking about an hour before it would be done in a traditional oven. Final temps should be 165°D in the breast (be careful not to touch the bone). Juices should be clear, not pink.

Remember, if you’re using a pop-up thermometer, they stick sometimes. So you should have a regular meat thermometer to double check.

When done, remove from the roaster, tent with foil, and let rest for 20 minutes before carving.

Stove Top Stuffing

Yes, we use stove top stuffing for the holidays. It’s easy, it’s fast and everyone likes it. So don’t feel bad for cracking open a box of the name brand or store brand stuff!

Cranberry Sauce

No, I didn’t make cranberry sauce from scratch this year, though I'd like to try sometime. But I did want to comment on it. We have two tastes in our families when it comes to cranberry sauce. We have those that like the jellied sauce and those that like the whole berry sauce. So we typically purchase one can of each. The jellied sauce, we slip out of the can and slice, so that you have a plate of cranberry jelled circles. The whole berry sauce, we pour into a bowl and stir. I prefer whole berry sauce, personally, just tastes better to me.

Mashed Potatoes

These are definitely a southern way of making mashed potatoes and not healthy in any way. I introduced my husband’s family to these a few years ago (versus mashed potatoes made with just milk and butter) and now they ask me to make them whenever we’re having potatoes at a family get together. The measurements here are estimates, as I always make this without a recipe. I just know how it is supposed to look and taste. So feel free to adjust as needed.

8-10 baking potatoes, peeled and quartered
1 -2 cups mayonnaise
1 – 2 cup butter, cubed
1 tablespoon garlic powder
Whole milk, as needed

Place potatoes in large saucepan and cover with water. Bring to boil. Reduce heat; cover and cook for 10-15 minutes or until tender. Drain. Place potatoes in bowl and beat until smooth (an electric mixer makes this step much easier). Add mayonnaise, butter and garlic. Mix well. Mix in milk until potatoes are the consistency that you prefer for your mashed potatoes.

Sweet Potato Casserole

This is a family recipe that my side of the family makes every year for Thanksgiving and Christmas. We just love it! People are always afraid that I won’t be willing to share the recipe because it’s a family recipe, but that’s the point of good food!!! To share! My family wouldn’t have this wonderful recipe if someone hadn’t shared the base recipe with my grandmother years and year ago that she tweaked into our version of it.

Filling:
3 cans sweet potatoes (15 oz ea), drained
1 stick butter
2 eggs
1 tspn vanilla

Topping:
1 stick butter
2 tablespoons flour
1 cup brown sugar, packed
1 cup pecans, chopped

Mash filling ingredients together. Pour into 8x8 casserole dish. Mix topping ingredients together with a fork. Sprinkle over filling. Bake at 350°F for 30 - 45 minutes. Is done when top is nicely browned.
Let sit for 10 minutes, then enjoy!

Honey Glazed Carrots

This was the first time making these for Thanksgiving, on the request of my hubby. We normally just add butter and lemon pepper, but I wanted something a bit sweeter this year.

1 pound baby carrots
2 tablespoons butter
2 tablespoons honey
1 tablespoon lemon juice

Steam the carrots until tender. Mix in butter, honey and lemon juice in large bowl. Add carrots and stir until evenly coated with glaze.

Pumpkin Pie

This year I went simple on my pumpkin pie recipe because my fave recipe for the pie and crust is somewhere in storage and I couldn’t find it. So I used the Libby’s recipe on the back of their canned pumpkin – it’s good and reliable. I also used a store bought graham cracker crust shell. I normally make my crusts from scratch – but this was bought by someone else for me to make, so I just went with the flow.

3/4 cup white sugar
1 teaspoon ground cinnamon
1/2 teaspoon salt
1/2 teaspoon ground ginger
1/4 teaspoon ground cloves
2 eggs
1 15 ounce can pumpkin (make sure it's pure pumpkin, not pumpkin pie!)
1 12 fluid ounce can Evaporated Milk

Preheat oven to 425°F. Combine sugar, salt, cinnamon, ginger and cloves in small bowl. Beat eggs lightly in large bowl. Stir in pumpkin and sugar-spice mixture. Gradually stir in evaporated milk. Pour into pie shell - remember to have the pie shell on a cookie sheet (otherwise you will have a huge mess and possibly a bad burn when you try to take it out of the oven!). Bake for 15 minutes. Reduce temperature to 350°F and bake for 40 to 50 minutes, or until knife inserted near center comes out clean. Cool on wire rack for about 2 hours. Serve immediately or refrigerate (FYI - they don't do well in the freezer).

Homemade Whipped Cream

I never liked whipped cream as a kid, as all I ever had was store bought stuff like cool whip. But a few years ago, I got to try my first batch of homemade whipped cream. And man am I hooked. Considering how little effort it takes to make it, it surprises me that anyone buys the store stuff.

1 cup of heavy cream
1 tablespoon sugar

Beat with electric mixer until stiff peaks form (normally less than 5 minutes). Will yield about two cups. Yup, that's it! When I can, I start with a cold bowl and beaters, but it's not necessary. Also, some people add vanilla extract (about a teaspoon) or use powdered sugar. It's pretty easy to modify to your families personal tastes.