Showing posts with label in the kitchen. Show all posts
Showing posts with label in the kitchen. Show all posts

Homemade Veggie Burger Recipe: Quick, Easy and Freezer-Friendly


,It's only been in the past month or so that I've had the energy and time to start getting creative in the kitchen again. (Although, notably, most of my culinary efforts of late have been whipping up simple foods for Claire to try!).

Which is why I love this recipe, which I first tried late in my pregnancy: It's so forgiving (you cannot mess it up, it's so easy!) and it makes a ton, which I was able to freeze and then heat up whenever I needed a quick meal once Claire was here. As a new mom, those two elements cannot be under-appreciated!

This is a recipe for making homemade veggie burgers. Besides making a bunch of patties (18 for me, though that depends on how large you make them), I also like that these stick together really well—an important element for any burger!



HOMEMADE VEGGIE BURGER RECIPE
1 package of firm tofu (14-16oz.)
2 cups rolled oats
3 cups black beans (or two 15oz. cans, drained)
3 cups cooked barley or rice
2 garlic cloves
½ cup orange juice
3 tablespoons lime juice
4 teaspoons cumin
2½ tablespoons oregano
¼ cup olive oil
2 teaspoons salt

Combine in a food processor until blended. Form into patties, and fry until browned on heated skillet. (Spray or add oil to pan if necessary to avoid sticking.) Flip to brown other side. Depending on the size you make them, recipe should make between 16-20 patties.

If you want to freeze these, form them into patties but do not fry on skillet! Instead, line a cookie sheet with wax paper and add patties then freeze. Once hard, you can peel them from paper and seal in a freezer bag. Then, when you want to cook them, remove from freezer and you can add them directly to hot skillet (no defrosting necessary; just make sure they brown on both sides and are heated through).



Related Posts
Homemade Black Bean Burgers Recipe
Chicken Burger Recipe: The Secret to The Perfect, Juicy Burger

READ FULL POST >>

Say Hello to Our New Kitchen Accessories

It was bound to happen at some point: My trusty bread machine kicked the bucket. It’s a gadget I use at least on a weekly basis, if not two or three times each week to make everything from sandwich bread to hamburger buns. So much so that I can’t remember the last time I had to buy a bread product!

So, when it stopped working, I tried my best to fix it. I took the cover off and tried to figure out what was causing the gears not to turn to rotate the kneading paddle in the bread pan. No luck. Try as I might, I had to admit defeat.

And then? I got shopping.
As I started doing some research, I realized that to get a bread machine capable of the kind of load I’m doing (particularly using 100% whole wheat flour that I mill myself) and that will last more than a year or two doesn’t come cheaply. I finally settled on getting the #1 recommendation: a Zojirushi Home Bakery Virtuoso.

I’m not typically one to buy the top-of-the-line anything, but I also didn’t want to have to be buying a new bread machine every year, which seemed to be the case for a lot of the machines I was reading about in online reviews. If I was going to pour money into this product, I wanted it to last, which would hopefully make it end up being cheaper in the long run. Just like with my hair straightener.

Soon after that we welcomed the new bread machine into our house, another new device made its way into our kitchen; this time one for my husband: a juicer (this one to be exact).

He’s been wanting one for who knows how long, and his wish finally came true! He’s been mixing up some bright and colorful concoctions ever since, sipping on carrot and kale, ginger and Granny Smith apple juice and whipping up some specialties for me and the baby to boot.

I told my husband our kitchen must be the most expensive room in the house. I may not have a flat screen television or a fancy smart phone, but I sure have kitchen gadgets!

(You can check out some of the other items that live in our kitchen in this round-up of my favorite kitchen gadgets.)

What make for your favorite kitchen gadgets? Any new finds lately that you’ve been loving? Share them in the comments!
READ FULL POST >>

Sweet Corn Salsa Recipe



Tacos have always been a mealtime staple around here, usually making a weekly appearance on our dining room table.

We’ve experimented with the different salsas we buy, testing out ones made with everything from mangoes to garden veggies. One of our favorites that we came across was a corn chili salsa from Trader Joe’s, and we always added a little spoonful of it to our regular tomato salsa.



The thing I loved about this corn salsa was that it gave the dip a sweet kick, a nice twist on your typical tex-mex. We went through jar after jar of this until I turned it around, looked at the ingredients and thought to myself, “I bet I could make that myself…”

After doing some research online (and a couple of trail and errors in the kitchen!) I finally hit the jackpot with an easy corn salsa recipe that is every bit as good as our favorite storebought variety, but made in my very own kitchen.



2 cups corn
1 cup onion
½ sweet bell pepper
½ jalapeno pepper
½ cup sugar
1 Tbsp. salt
¾ tsp. ground mustard
¼ tsp. Pepper
¼ tsp. cumin

Mix all ingredients together in a sauce pan on the stove, and heat until almost boiling. Let cool and then transfer into a resealable container. Store in fridge for up to a month.

Related Posts
Balsamic Barley Salad Recipe 
Homemade Corn Dogs
READ FULL POST >>

Adventures in Trying New Foods: Quinoa Update



Over the past couple of years, trying out more grains (or grain-like foods) has been something I’ve been interested in. I love going into places like Whole Foods, where you can grab a few spoonfuls of out-of-the-ordinary grain salads, made out of quinoa or couscous, barley or wheat berries.

And yet, I haven’t tried too much of that at home, save for my Balsamic Barley Salad.
So I was looking forward to the quinoa challenge for the month of June as a part of my Adventures in Trying New Foods challenge.

I started off strong, picking up a box of plain quinoa, as well as a package of pre-seasoned, Mexican-inspired quinoa and black beans. As my foray into the world of quinoa, I started the month off with the quinoa-in-a-bag, since I figured that would be the easiest.

It was so simple; just rip open the bag, pour into a pot with some water, boil it for 15 minutes or so, and it was delicious. I added a cup or so of additional black beans, and we spooned some salsa over top. I’m not typically a big pre-packaged fan, but this stuff was totally worth it, although I’d really love to figure out how to recreate it on my own. I haven’t found a good replacement recipe yet.

With that attempt stamped successful, I decided to venture out into trying making a quinoa dish from scratch. I received the book Quinoa Cuisine for review with this challenge, and it’s filled with 150 different recipes for using quinoa, whether it’s whole quinoa or quinoa flour and flakes. Some of the recipes in it were more obscure or involved than I was looking for (particularly the ones using quinoa flour, since I don’t have a gluten allergy and can readily use wheat flour).

However, I did try the traditional recipe for mixing up a tabouleh salad, a staple of Middle Eastern cuisine. It came out okay, but I think in the future I want to try using less mint. The book also has some tasty looking recipes for a black bean, corn and quinoa salad as well as a dish of quinoa, sweet potato and orange pilaf, which is supposed to make a super-healthy version of your typical sweet potato casserole. I never got around to making either of those for this challenge, but really want to.

I also tried a quinoa pizza casserole recipe I’d found on Pinterest that was okay, but not one I’m in any hurry to repeat. Plus it was kind of involved to make your own sauce, when I imagine I could have just used some of my own pizza sauce and called it a day.

Finally, I also tried whipping up a quinoa creation of my own, loosely inspired by the original Mexican one from the bag. I cooked some quinoa, threw in some corn, black beans, red peppers and scooped some salsa over top and ate it with tortilla chips. Pretty good, but I still need to figure out the seasonings to add. I’m thinking some lime juice, cumin and crushed red pepper maybe?

We’ll see, but in the meantime, I’m still experimenting with this new-to-me food and enjoying branching out, especially since quinoa is a super good-for-you food (packed with protein) that the Incas referred to as “gold.”

Do you have any good tips or recipes for making use of this “gold” in your own kitchen? I’d love to hear any of your recommendations in the comments!

(You can read up on all the posts in this challenge here.)

Related Posts
Adventures in Trying New Foods: Brussels Sprouts
Adventures in Trying New Foods: Kale Update
READ FULL POST >>

I Used to Hate Grocery Shopping. What Has Happened Since Then…



You know what’s funny? I remember a time—not all that long ago, mind you—when I used to hate grocery shopping. It was my nemesis, my tormentor, forcing me to wander around a bleak store pushing a hulk of a shopping cart down aisle after aisle, lined up in rows like dominoes.

That’s how it felt then, when I went to the store once a week, with my paltry list that read of basics like bread and butter, Boca burgers and bananas.

It’s funny what learning to cook can do for you.

Now, when I go to the store, I have a pretty good idea where the wheat germ should be, even if I’ve never bought any in that store before. I know that the roasted red peppers will be near the pickles and that hydrogen peroxide is in the first-aid aisle.

Now, when I go to the store, I’ve done it enough and paid attention enough to know when something is a good sale price and to grab a couple to throw in the freezer to feast on later. I enjoy discovering these sales and mark downs (maybe even using a coupon or two), finding ways to keep our grocery spending under budget but making meals that bespeak nothing of lack.

Now, when I go to the store, I know enough about cooking to know whether I ought to stray from my list and pick up this or that, whether I have enough at home to make a full meal of it and use it all. There’s some security in knowing how to use all these ingredients and pair them together and no longer be intimidated by it all.

Because not too long ago, that was exactly how I felt. (I wrote about that feeling of being intimated by cooking and grocery shopping and all that goes into that element of housewifery here.)

And today?

Today, my list of errands includes two grocery stores. And you know what, I’m actually looking forward to it. Somehow, what once was a bother in my routine is now something that I can actually say, I enjoy.

Related Posts
Sale Shopping at the Grocery Store
Grocery-Shopping with Coupons
READ FULL POST >>

Homemade Banana Bread Recipe



It seems with warmer weather, my bananas always seem to ripen a lot faster than I'd anticipated. Without fail, by the end of the week, I find myself with a handful of really brown, practically baby-food-soft bananas that just aren't appetizing to eat.

Unless of course, they're in banana bread.

Which is how I've been making use of these lately. Enjoy!





BANANA BREAD RECIPE
1/2 cup brown sugar
1/4 cup vanilla almond milk (or regular milk will do, too)
1/4 cup canola oil
3 medium or 2.5 large well-ripened bananas
2 cups whole wheat flour (preferably freshly milled)
1 teaspoon apple cider vinegar
1 teaspoon vanilla
1 teaspoon cinnamon
1/2 teaspoon salt
pinch nutmeg

Preheat oven to 350 degrees.

Combine all ingredients into a mixing bowl. (As you know, I've been milling my own whole wheat flour for the past couple of months now, thanks to my electric WonderMill Grain Mill.)



Using a hand mixer, blend all the ingredients so that they are smooth. Alternatively you can run the mixture through a food processor, but I find the mixer is sufficient.

Lightly grease a loaf pan (I like to use my Misto). Pour the mixture into the loaf pan.

Bake at 350 degrees for an hour, until golden. I like to turn off heat and let it sit in the warm oven for another 10 or 15 minutes so that it fully sets without worrying about it getting too brown or tough.

Remove from oven, and let cool before slicing. (This is the bread knife I use and recommend.)

Enjoy!



Related Posts
A Few of My Favorite Things: Kitchen Tools & Gadgets
I Started Milling My Own Whole Wheat Flour... 
READ FULL POST >>

Homemade Whole Wheat Hot Dog Bun Recipe



What is summer without a good, grilled hot dog? Let me tell you, it's eating that hot dog on a homemade bun!

And, it's a lot easier than you might think!





This whole wheat hot dog bun is another that takes advantage of my already-established favorite kitchen: my bread maker. I use it to mix together the dough, and once that cycle’s completed, I can come back and shape the dough into the buns to bake in the oven. (If you’re looking for some other recipes to take advantage of using a bread maker, some of my favorites include making whole wheat sandwich bread, pizza dough, soft pretzels, and bagels.)

As I've mentioned before, I've recently started milling my own whole wheat flour, as well, thanks to my electric WonderMill Grain Mill, so that I can have super-fresh flour, anytime I need it. (You can read more about why I have started milling my own flour in this post here.)





So, without further ado, here's how to bake up a batch on your own!


INGREDIENTS
1 cup warm-ish water
1 egg (if you don't have an egg handy, find an easy substitute here)
¾ tsp. salt
¼ cup butter, melted (alternatively, you can also use canola oil)
¼ cup sugar
2 cups unbleached all-purpose flour
1 cup whole wheat flour, preferably freshly milled
3 tsp. bread machine yeast

DIRECTIONS
If you're milling your own whole wheat flour, measure out ⅔ cup of wheat berries and grind in your grain mill of choice (I use the electric WonderMill Grain Mill) to a fine flour, suitable for bread-making.

In your bread machine (mine is similar to this one), add ingredients from the water to the flours, in the order given in the recipe. (So, you'll add the water first and the whole wheat flour last.) 

Once you've added the last of the flour, use a spoon to hollow out a little dent in the middle of the flour. Into this, add your yeast. Program your bread machine on the "Dough" cycle. Press Start.

Let the bread machine mix the dough and go through the rising cycle. At the end, it will beep. Remove the ball of dough from the bread machine's pan, and turn dough out onto a lightly floured countertop. Using a dough scraper (or a sharp knife), divide dough into 12 equal pieces for regular-sized hot-dog buns. Alternately, if you plan on using jumbo-sized franks, only cut the dough into 10 pieces.

Place each rope onto a lightly floured baking stone (here's the baking stone I use) or cookie sheet, leaving about two inches of space between buns. (For adequate spacing, you might need to use two baking stones.)

Here's how mine looks at this point:




Cover dough with a cotton dish towel or cloth napkin, and set in a warm place to rise for about 45 minutes. (For an easy way to let your bread rise, read my breadmaking tips and tricks article.)

Turn your oven on to bake at 400-degrees. Remove the dish towel from the dough, and let it bake in the oven for about 12 to 15 minutes, until golden. Remove from oven and let cool.

Once cool, split buns in half along the top, cutting only about three-fourths of the way deep, making sure not to cut all the way through. (Meaning, both halves of the bun should still be connected along the bottom.) Then, you can slide a hotdog into the slit, like this:


Store slices in a sealed bag or airtight container for up to a week, preferably in the fridge, or you can keep them in the freezer if you aren’t planning on using them right away. Makes 12 hot dog buns.

If you like this recipe, click here to pin it to Pinterest. You can also follow me on Pinterest here.

(Plus, take a peek at my breadmaking tips and trick article, which will provide some good insights about how to overcome common problems, easy substitutions you can make if you run out of some ingredients, and some of my favorite breadmaking essentials. Read the article here.

P.S. If you are new to this blog, thank you so much for stopping by! You can feel free to browse all my other posts about my journey toward a lifestyle of simplicity and DIY, as well as some of the ways my husband and I are learning to save money. I also write about my faith, my marriage and everything in between, which you can explore in the archives.

Related Posts
Homemade Black Bean Burgers Recipe
Chicken burgers: Recipe for the weekend

READ FULL POST >>

Homemade Whole Wheat Pita Bread Recipe



For some reason, making lunch in a homemade pita pocket just makes a sandwich feel a little fancier. I'm a firm believer that you can never go wrong with a sandwich, which is why I quickly added learning how to make pitas to my arsenal of bread-making.

Making pitas feels a bit like a science experiment, because part of it involves watching the pitas puff up with steam in the oven and then pitching them into a brown-paper bag to cool. I don't exactly know why it works, but I know that it does work. And that's all that really matters when I'm smearing some homemade hummus and trimmings onto my freshly baked whole-wheat pita bread.

Like my other bread-making recipes (for making whole-wheat sandwich bread and bagels), this one involves using a bread machine, which I think is one of the most oft-used tools in my kitchen. I can't recommend getting one enough!





Homemade Whole Wheat Pita Bread Recipe
Ingredients
1⅛ cups warm water
1 tablespoon oil
1½ teaspoons sugar
1 teaspoon salt
3 cups whole wheat flour
1½ teaspoons bread machine yeast

Instructions
  1. I have been grinding my own fresh flour using the electric WonderMill Grain Mill. For fresh-ground flour, use 1 cup hard winter red wheat berries and 1 cup hard winter white wheat berries (shown below) and grind to a fine flour suitable for bread-making. (Note that two cups of grains will grind up to three cups of flour.)



  2. In your bread machine (mine is similar to this one), add ingredients from the water to the flour, in the order given in the recipe. (So, you'll add the water first and the wheat flour last.)
  3. Once you've added the last of the flour, use a spoon to hollow out a little dent in the middle of the flour. Into this, add your yeast.
  4. Program your bread machine on the "Dough" cycle. Press Start.
  5. Let the bread machine mix the dough and go through the rising cycle. At the end, it will beep.
  6. Remove the dough from the pan, and turn out onto lightly floured countertop, stretching into a log-shape (like that of a large hot dog) that's about 12 inches or so in length. Try to make the log the same thickness all the way around.
  7. Cut the log into 8 equal-sized slices. (Usually, I'll cut it in half, and then divide each of those sections in half and then each of those in half again.)
  8. Lightly flour one or two cookie sheets, and set aside.
  9. Lightly flour your countertop. Then use a rolling pin to flatten each slice into a 6- or 7-inch disk, being careful not to tear or crease the dough, as this will cause them not to "puff" during baking. After you roll out each piece of dough, place onto the cookie sheet.
  10. Once all pieces of dough are flattened and arranged on the cookie sheets, cover them completely with dish cloths or tea towels, and let the dough rise for about 45 minutes to an hour. (At this point they will look ever-so-slightly puffy. You'll be able to tell when you pull them from the cookie sheet and the surface will look like it's "cracking" a little.)
  11. Preheat your oven to 500 degrees. Place two or three pitas onto a wire cake or cooling rack, and then place in the oven. Bake them for 4 to 5 minutes, once they are puffed and the tops are starting to turn brown. (Note: I've found that the wire rack is essential to getting the pitas to "puff up." If you don't have a rack, you can try using cookie or baking sheets, but they don't guarantee as good of results as the wire rack, or placing them directly on your oven's rack. Just be careful not to get burned!)
  12. Once they've puffed up and the tops are slightly browned, remove from the oven, and place them immediately in a brown-paper bag. Close the top of the bag using a clip.
  13. Continue to bake the remaining pieces of dough and placing them in the brown-paper bag once baked.
  14. Let them sit in the bag for about 30 to 60 minutes, until the pitas are soft. Then you can remove and store in your fridge for several days or you can freeze them for one or two months. Store in plastic bags or other containers you can seal.
Then, enjoy!

 P.S. If you are new to this blog, thank you so much for stopping by! You can feel free to browse all my other posts about my journey toward a lifestyle of simplicity and DIY, as well as some of the ways my husband and I are learning to save money. I also write about my faith, my marriage and everything in between, which you can explore in the archives.

Related Posts
Homemade Hummus Recipe
Recipe to Make Your Own Bagels

READ FULL POST >>

Pesto, Artichoke & Caramelized Onion Pizza on Homemade, 100% Whole Wheat Dough



As a part of my New Year’s resolution to try cooking with a new food each month, my challenge for the month of May was to use artichokes. In doing so, I discovered one of my new favorite recipes: Pesto, Artichoke & Caramelized Onion Pizza.

While on a trip to Washington, DC, my husband and I ordered a similar pizza, so when we came home, I knew I wanted to try to recreate it for my Adventures in Trying New Foods challenge. So, I went to task and came up with this veggie lover delight, which you can make with or without cheese. (Really it doesn’t need any additional cheese, but I’ll let you be the judge of that!)

I loved it so much that I whipped up two of these pizzas in one week and then have made another almost every week since. This recipe is a keeper.

So without further ado, the recipe for how to make Pesto, Artichoke & Caramelized Onion Pizza, from making a 100% whole-wheat crust to adding the toppings. Enjoy!



100% WHOLE WHEAT PIZZA DOUGH RECIPE

⅔ cup hard red wheat berries
1⅓ cup hard white wheat berries

Grind the wheat berries in your grain mill of choice (I use the electric WonderMill Grain Mill) to a fine flour, suitable for bread-making.



1 cup water
2 Tbsp. olive oil
1 tsp. salt
1 Tbsp. sugar
Freshly milled flour (alternatively, you can use my recipe here for making pizza dough with store-bought flour)
2 tsp. bread machine yeast

Combine all ingredients in a bread machine (mine is similar to this one) in the order listed above (meaning, add the water first and add the yeast last). For the yeast, make a shallow well in the middle of the flour and add the yeast there.

Select "Dough" setting on bread machine, and press "Start." When the dough has risen long enough, the machine will beep. Turn off bread machine, remove bread pan, and turn out dough onto a lightly floured surface. (I like to use my trusty baking stone for this.)



Use rolling pin to flatten dough into a disk. (It should make one 12-inch pizza, or you can divide the dough in half to make two smaller pizzas.)



PESTO, ARTICHOKE & CARAMELIZED PIZZA TOPPINGS
1 cup onion, finely diced
2 Tbsp. olive oil
1 Tbsp. balsamic vinegar
2 Tbsp. sugar
1 cup pesto
1 cup tomatoes, finely diced
½ cup red pepper, finely diced
½ cup marinated artichoke hearts, finely diced

In a saucepan on the stove, combine the onion, olive oil, balsamic vinegar and sugar. Stir to combine and bring to a boil. Let simmer until onions are caramelized.

Meanwhile, spread pesto onto rolled-out pizza dough. Add all the other toppings, including the caramelized onions.

Bake in oven at 350 degrees for about 20 to 25 minutes, or until crust is starting to turn golden. Remove from oven, and let cool for about 5 minutes before serving.



Related Posts
Build a Better Pizza: Make Your Own Pizza Dough 
A New Years Resolution: Adventures in Trying New Foods
READ FULL POST >>

Adventures in Trying New Foods: Artichoke Update



Since January, I’ve been challenging myself to try cooking with a new food each month. So far, I’ve tried kale, Brussels sprouts, lentils and cabbage. But I think this past month’s challenge has been my hands-down favorite so far: artichokes.

Yep, you read that right. Artichokes. My favorite.

I’m just as surprised as you are.

It really comes down to one single recipe I tried that has made me fall in love with artichokes and that has spurred a collection of jars of artichoke hearts to grow in my pantry.

But before I get to that, I should also say that it took a couple of disappointing attempts before I found a recipe that really worked for me using artichokes.

At the beginning of the month, I picked up a couple of fresh artichokes to get me started. I first tried out a recipe I found online whereby I roasted them in the crockpot with some garlic and butter and pulled them out when they were pull-apart soft. I put them on our dinner plates, and my husband asked me, “How do we eat these?”

Frankly, I had no idea. I kind of thought you just chewed the leaves and was ready to just go with my gut. He wasn’t convinced, so we took a break from the table and went to find out online, by searching: “How do you eat an artichoke?” No shame in admitting it, right? Well, turns out you don’t eat the entire leaf, so my husband was pretty glad he’d insisted on looking up instructions first!

Even armed with the correct way to eat them, I wasn’t too impressed with the crockpot-roasted artichokes. Undaunted, I tried another recipe where I steamed them and sprinkled garlic salt atop them and dipped them in mayonnaise. Still, I didn’t enjoy the process. It’s pretty messy and a lot of work for the little bit of “meat” that you can get off of each artichoke. Not worth it for me.

Then I turned to jarred artichoke hearts—which was where I hit the jackpot.

When my husband and I traveled to Washington DC earlier this spring, we got an artichoke-and-pesto pizza that we devoured. Back home, I decided I wanted to recreate it, and let me tell you, it is divine. I created it using the memory of that restaurant pizza along with some magazine-clipping ideas for making caramelized onions. And you don’t even need to add any cheese, it’s that good all on its own!

Here's a link to the recipe: Pesto, Artichoke & Caramelized Onion Pizza. I'll warn you that I loved this recipe so much that I made it twice that week. And the week after. And the week after. It has become a rotating fixture in my menu planning ever since.

This is the reason I’m so glad I made this challenge to myself to try a new food each month! I’m not sure I’d have picked up a jar of artichoke hearts and discovered just how much I really love them had it not been for my Adventures in Trying New Foods challenge. (You can read up on all the posts in this challenge here.)

Related Posts
Adventures in Trying New Foods: Brussels Sprouts
Adventures in Trying New Foods: Kale Update
READ FULL POST >>

I Started Milling My Own Whole Wheat Flour... (Plus, a 100% Whole Wheat Sandwich Bread Recipe)



Making bread has become a regular part of my weekly routine, pulling together the most ordinary of ingredients and pulling out a loaf of bread when the oven’s done its magic.

I guess it’s almost been two years now that I’ve been making my own sandwich bread, something that is no little feat given the fact that when my husband and I were first married, I hated to cook! Fortunately, though, baking bread really is not as hard as you might think, especially if you take advantage of using a bread machine, like I do. (You can check out some of my favorite cooking and baking essentials here.)

But lately, I’ve taken my bread-making to a new level: I recently started milling my own flour. The biggest perk to milling your own flour is that in doing so, you’re preserving more of the grain nutrients that start breaking down as soon as the wheat berries get milled. If you can use fresh-milled grain (rather than flour that’s been sitting on a store shelf), then you get to put more of those nutrients in your body and reap the health benefits.

By the way, this is what wheat berries look like, before they're ground into flour (kind of similar to rice):


I loved the idea of getting even more from my bread making. But I was also really intimidated by the idea of milling my own wheat flour and how doing so would affect all the bread-making recipes that I already use and love. Would I have to scrap them and find new recipes? Could I really bake with 100% whole wheat without having to add in all-purpose to keep the baked goods from going dense and bland?

Thanks to the WonderMill Electric Grain Mill that I received as a participant in the The Grain Mill Wagon, I’ve had the chance to put all those questions and fears to the test. And I’m here to tell you that it is so easy and so simple to implement into your bread-making routine!




For my foray into baking with freshly milled flour, I decided to try my tried-and-true whole wheat sandwich bread recipe. Upon the recommendation of the worker at the local bread-making store where I bought my wheat berries, I decided to start off using a 1:3 combination of hard red to hard white wheat berries. The hard red is supposed to be healthier but can have a strong flavor, which is why she recommended mixing it with the milder-tasting hard white.

Once you have your berries (which look a little like rice), all you have to do is plug in the WonderMill grain mill, pour in your wheat berries, and within less than a minute, you have fresh flour, just like this:



The WonderMill is no louder than my food processor and it’s not messy at all. Plus, when I was at a local bread-making shop buying my wheat berries, I overheard one of the workers telling another customer about the different grain mills that they sell, and she said that they recommend the WonderMill because it’s faster and quieter than competing brands, which cost just as much.

Then, you just swap your freshly milled flour in place of what you’d normally use and proceed as usual to get a loaf of bread that is about as fresh as you can get! I was impressed by how easy it was to substitute 100% freshly milled wheat flour for the wheat-and-bread-flour mix that I’d been using. It’s the first time I’ve been able to make a soft, springy loaf of bread using 100% wheat! And it tasted just as good as every other fresh-from-the-oven loaf I’ve made, too!

Here’s the recipe I used to make my sandwich bread using freshly milled wheat flour and a bread machine. (And, if you don’t have a grain mill, you can always reference the original recipe for my sandwich bread here.)



Recipe: 100% Whole Wheat Sandwich Bread using Freshly Milled Flour

⅔ cup hard red wheat berries
1⅓ cup hard white wheat berries

Grind the wheat berries in your grain mill of choice (I use the electric WonderMill Grain Mill) to a fine flour, suitable for bread-making.

⅝ cup lukewarm water
⅜ cup milk
1 egg
1½ tablespoons canola oil
1½ tablespoons honey
1½ teaspoons salt
Freshly milled flour (the 2 cups of grains will now be about 3 cups worth of flour)
2 teaspoons bread machine yeast

In your bread machine (mine is similar to this one), add ingredients from the water through the flour, adding them in the order given above. (Meaning, pour your water in first, then your milk, etc.) Once you've added the last of the flour, use a spoon to hollow out a little dent in the middle of the flour. Into this, add your yeast.

Program your bread machine on the "Dough" cycle. Press Start. Let the bread machine mix the dough and go through the rising cycle. At the end, it will beep.

Prep a loaf pan by spraying it with non-stick spray. Remove the ball of dough from the bread machine's pan, and put into the loaf pan. Press it down a bit so that it flattens to fit the shape of the dish. Put a cotton dish towel over the dish, and set in a warm place to rise for an hour. After an hour, it should have about doubled in size. (For an easy way to let your bread rise, read my breadmaking tips and tricks article.)

Turn your oven on to bake at 350-degrees. Remove the dish towel from the dough, and let it bake in the oven for about 20 to 25 minutes, until golden. Remove from oven and let cool.

Once cool, cut into slices using a good-quality bread knife. (This is the bread knife I use and recommend.) Store slices in a sealed bag or airtight container for up to a week. (In hot weather, I'd recommend keeping the loaf in the fridge to keep it from going moldy too quickly.) Recipe makes one medium-sized loaf of wheat bread.

Related Posts
Homemade Breadmaking Tips & Tricks 
A Love-Hate Relationship with My Bread Maker
READ FULL POST >>

Homemade Pizza Bites Recipe

One of my favorite things to do in the kitchen is to learn how to foods that typically aren't very good for you and make them so that they're not only healthier but, oftentimes, even better than the storebought version. (You can check out my homemade corndogs and my homemade vegetarian fish sticks for examples.) ...



One of my favorite things to do in the kitchen is to learn how to foods that typically aren't very good for you and make them so that they're not only healthier but, oftentimes, even better than the storebought version. (You can check out my homemade corndogs and my homemade vegetarian fish sticks for other examples.)

So it was when I decided to make my own pizza bites.

I can't remember the last time I had pizza bites—late night during college, likely. But I do remember that they were never really that good.

But one night, when my husband was gone and I couldn't justify whipping up an entire pizza for myself, I got an itch to try to make my own. I'd picked up a package of wonton wrappers at the store, and figured they'd make good candidates for the process. So, with some of my homemade pizza sauce, pizza seasonings and cheese, I got to work.



Admittedly, they're more time consuming to make from scratch than the open-a-box-and-pop-'em-in-the-microwave variety. But I'd say the effort is worth it, with mini pizza bites that you can whip up for dinner tonight and freeze any leftovers to bake for a quick go-to meal in the future.

Here's how I made mine:



Ingredients
- One package of square wonton wrappers
- About 2 cups of pizza sauce (here's my recipe to make your own pizza sauce)
- About 2 cups of cheese
- Olive oil
- Pizza seasonings (here's my recipe to make your own pizza seasoning mix)

It's best to only work on a couple of pizza rolls at a time, as the wonton wrappers can dry out if left out in the open air for too long. So, first, take a couple of wonton wrappers and lay them out on your workspace. You'll want to keep a small dish of water handy, too.

Using a spoon, put about a tablespoon of pizza sauce into the middle of each wonton wrapper. (Use more or less, depending on how much sauce-to-cheese ratio you prefer.) On top of the sauce, add about a tablespoon of cheese.

Dip your finger into the water and wet the edges of the wonton wrapper. Fold the wrapper in half along the diagonal so that, folded, it looks like a triangle. Press around each of the edges to seal shut. (If a lot of sauce or cheese oozes out, you've used too much and need to readjust your ratio.)

Place wontons on a baking stone (here's the one I use) and cover with a dish towel to keep from drying out. (Alternatively, if you want to put them in the freezer for later use, place directly on a piece of wax paper atop a freezer-ready dish. If you do freeze them, you can take them directly from the freezer when you're ready to bake them and proceed to the next step.)

Then, spritz each wonton with some olive oil. (I like to use my Misto for this step!) Top with about ¼ teaspoon of my pizza seasoning mix on each pizza roll. (Alternatively you can use a dash or two of sea salt, freshly ground pepper and Italian seasoning.)

Bake the wontons at 350 degrees for about 20 minutes or until the edges start to turn a golden brown. Remove from the oven and let cool for 5 minutes or so; they'll continue to darken a bit once you've removed them so don't let them get too dark in the oven!

Serve them with a side dish of pizza sauce for dipping. I like to serve about 6 pizza rolls per person, but you can adjust that to how hungry you are! Makes an entire package of wonton wrappers, about 48 in a 12 oz. package. (You can also use round wonton wrappers, but they're smaller so you'll have to adjust the amount of sauce and cheese you use on each pizza bite accordingly.)



Related Posts
My Recipes to Make Your Own: Pizza Dough & Pizza Sauce & Pizza Seasoning 
A Few of My Favorite Things: Cooking & Baking Edition
READ FULL POST >>
Previous Post
Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...