Peanut Butter Treats

November20

From Company’s Coming for Christmas

1/2 cup butter
1 cup smooth peanut butter
1 cup graham cracker crumbs
2 cups icing sugar
1/3 cup chopped walnuts

Heat and stir butter and peanut butter in large saucepan until smooth.

Add graham crumbs, icing sugar and walnuts. Mix well. Press into ungreased 8 x 8 inch pan.

Icing:
1 cup semisweet chocolate chips
3 tablespoon butter

Heat and stir chocolate chips and butter in saucepan on low until smooth. Spread over top. Let stand until set. Cuts into 25 squares.

Notes:
Doubled this into a 9 x 13 pan and I wish I had quadrupled it! Should have known the combination of peanut butter and chocolate would be heavenly. It is.

The dough was hard to mix. After adding the sugar and walnuts to the melted peanut butter/butter mixture, I ditched the rubber spatula – especially after I broke it – and hand mixed the graham crumbs into the mixture. Very worth it though as it comes out so rich. Might want to remember to cut smaller pieces to savour every crumb.

Oh, and I’m going to remember this icing recipe for future use on brownies as well!

posted under recipe | No Comments »

Bees Knees Squares

November20

From Company’s Coming for Christmas

1 cup butter, softened
1/3 cup honey
1 teaspoon vanilla
1 1/2 cup quick cooking rolled oats
1 1/2 cup all-purpose flour
1/2 teaspoon salt
1 cup butterscotch chips
1/2 cup slivered almonds
2 tablespoon honey

Beat butter, first amount of honey and vanilla in mixing bowl until smooth.

Stir in rolled oats, flour and salt. Add butterscotch chips. Stir. Spread in greased 9 x 13 pan.

Sprinkle with almonds. Push down to make them stick.

Heat remaining honey slightly until it is runny. Brush or dab over surface. Bake in 350 degree oven for 25 – 30 minutes until golden browned. Cool before cutting into 54 squares.

Notes:
Having just made Peanut Butter Treats, I accidentally started doubling this recipe’s ingredients even though it already inherently makes a 9 x 13 pan full. Oops. So, I had two cake pans of Bees Knees for the bake sale. Didn’t know how they’d go over, but apparently people were asking for more so it all worked out in the end.

One lady loved the name and inquired “Do bees even have knees?” Good question, I thought. What do you think?

posted under recipe | No Comments »

Cooking with Mary #2

November20

As it appeared in the Novermber 1974 Madonna House Restoration newspaper

By Catherine Doherty

The other day those of us working in the kitchen were confronted with a tragedy – a nice pudding made of coffee cake and sweet bread crumbs which just did not get baked thoroughly.

There it was. Nicely brown outside, and raw inside – sort of heavy. A big pudding for there was many of us. We just could not throw it out. That would be sheer waste. And waste is sinful with millions of people going hungry in the world. And for us who take promises of poverty, it would be a sin even if all men had had their daily fill of food.

Pudding to Pancakes

So we put our heads together, and thought up ways and means of using this pudding. And the idea struck us, why not make pancakes of it. For after all what was “a pudding”? It was originally flour, eggs (bread crumbs are flour too) – so we treated it as if it were just that. Try it some time when you have pudding leftovers – raw or well cooked.

Take said leftovers and adding warm milk and a few more eggs (if you have them) – or dispensing with them if you don’t (water can be used instead of milk too) – reduce the mass to that state of liquidity that any of your pancake recipes call for. Then leisurely proceed to fry them. Make small fat pancakes. Serve with jam or powdered sugar. Truly it is delicious, cheap and an ingenious way of disposing of the hardest thing to dispose of that we know: pudding leftovers.

Have a Heart

So much for leftovers. Let us share a nice cheap recipe with you that will go a long way in stretching that budget of yours. Buy some beef hearts. They are still relatively cheap at our butchers. One, or two, or more, according to your family size. Remembering too that hearts are rich in proteins, vitamins and minerals. Boil said hearts, in water, well seasoned. I suggest that you add onions and paprika to the seasoning (don’t throw the water away – it makes lovely soup).

Boil hearts until tender. Then grind through your mince meat grinder and grind fine.

In meantime boil peeled potatoes – enough to make double the amount of your minced hearts. Mash them fine, well, and dry. Now take one onion raw, and grate it fine into the potatoes. Mix meat and potatoes most thoroughly. Add well beaten eggs – one to a cup of mixture. Put the mixture which has been well seasoned (according to your taste) to bake in a nicely shaped and well-oiled baking pan. We like the oblong type ones. Bake until browned well on all sides at 300 degrees.

Just before dinner take out. Put on platter. Serve with green peas and mashed potatoes and brown gravy. Yum! Yum! Your family will think you bought them pate-de-foie-gras right from Paris! Whilst you will smile a contented smile knowing that this meal for 4 or 6 people was somehwat inexpensive!

If you really want “brown gravy” be sure to “brown” your dry flour before you put it into action!

posted under recipe | No Comments »
Follow me on Twitter
Follow me
Subscribe to my RSS Feed
Subscribe
 


  • Enter your email address & receive notifications of new posts

  • Recent Comments

      cecilia: "just omit the meat from your bean meals, like meatless chilli and spaghetti. we love lentils here, lentil soup, lentil curry over rice… I’ll put some more thought into this." (read)

      Kalanna: "Amazing, eh?! I’m going to have to read up on what to do with them next. hehe But it is lovely to have a bouquet of lavender on my kitchen table in late November. They kept blooming!" (read)

      Holli: "Wow! I love how they filled in!" (read)

  • my bookshelf

    Oryx and Crake
    tagged: canadian, own, currently-reading, and science-fiction
    In Other Worlds: Sf And The Human Imagination
    tagged: nonfiction, own, science-fiction, and currently-reading

    goodreads.com
  • Recent pins

    So pretty. A wonderfniceWonder Woman / Diana
    Love...lovelike
    mash-upskyrim valentinesign languages are t
  • people i love, people i know, people i read

  • 2011 Reading Challenge

    Adrienne has read 15 books toward her goal of 55 books.
    hide
  • "Love anything and your heart will be wrung and possibly broken. If you want to make sure of keeping it intact you must give it to no one, not even an animal. Wrap it carefully round with hobbies and little luxuries; avoid all entanglements. Lock it up safe in the casket or coffin of your selfishness. But in that casket, safe, dark, motionless, airless, it will change. It will not be broken; it will become unbreakable, impenetrable, irredeemable. To love is to be vulnerable." — C.S. Lewis