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A Hospitality Portfolio: Soups

 

I love soup. I really love soup when it is chilly outside. When we lived in Dallas we started a Christmas Eve tradition of making the Feliz Navidad Tortilla Soup and a Christmas Salad with easy field greens, mandarin oranges and pomegranate seeds. Our daughter Mackenzie makes her special dressing olive oil, balsamic vinegar a dab of honey with a splash of red wine vinegar. It is fantastic with Tortilla Soup!

Soup is the perfect choice for casual hospitality—just add bread and dessert for a wonderful, warming meal. Soups that can be made ahead and frozen or just reheated area a bonus. Here are four of my very favorites.

Feliz Navidad Tortilla Soup

Autumn Squash Soup

Warm Baked Potato Soup

Wild Rice Soup (even low fat!)


Feliz Navidad Tortilla Soup

 

Tammy Maltby and Anne Christian Buchanan, The Christmas Kitchen: The Gathering Place for Making Memories (Nashville: Howard, 2009).

4 cups chicken broth

3 whole skinless chicken breasts (about 2 pounds total)

½ cup chopped onion

1 cup corn

1 tsp. ground cumin

1 clove garlic, minced

1 Tbsp. cooking oil

1 14½-ounce can diced tomatoes

1 8-ounce can tomato sauce

1 4-ounce can diced green chiles (double this amount if you like)

½ cup snipped fresh cilantro

2 Tbsp. snipped fresh oregano or 2 tsp. dried oregano, crushed

6 5½-inch corn tortillas

Cooking oil

1½ cup (approximately 6 oz.) shredded cheddar or pepper jack cheese

1 8-ounce container of lowfat sour cream

1 avocado, cubed

Place broth and chicken in large saucepan or Dutch oven. Bring to a boil. Reduce heat and simmer, covered, about 15 minutes or until chicken is tender and no longer pink. Remove chicken from broth (reserve broth). Let stand until cool enough to handle. Finely shred chicken and set aside.

In same saucepan, cook onion, cumin, and garlic in 1 Tbsp. hot oil until onion is tender but not brown. Stir in broth, undrained tomatoes, tomato sauce, corn, peppers, cilantro, and oregano. Bring to boil, then reduce heat and simmer, covered, for 20 minutes. Stir in chicken; heat through.

Cut tortillas in half, then cut them crosswise into ½-inch strips. In a heavy medium skillet, heat 1/4 inch oil. Fry strips in hot oil, half at a time, about 1 minute or until crisp and light brown. I like to add a little garlic salt and pap pepper. Remove with a slotted spoon and drain on paper towels.

Divide tortilla strips among 6 bowls. Ladle soup over tortilla strips. Sprinkle each serving with pepper jack cheese, a spoonful of sour cream, and cubes of fresh avocado. Serve immediately. Makes 6 hearty servings—but I like to double the recipe and freeze in 2-3 cups servings.

Autumn Squash Soup

 

 

This rich soup tastes like autumn to me. I love its warm, velvety taste and texture. For a dynamite presentation, serve it in miniature pumpkin shells with a dollop of sour cream or thick yogurt, some butter croutons, and a little crumbled-up bacon—or hollow out a big pumpkin to serve as a soup tureen.

3 acorn squash

3 carrots, scraped and sliced

1 medium onion, sliced

1 cup chopped tart green apple (such as Granny Smith)

3-1/2 cups canned chicken broth, divided

1/3 cup apple cider

2 Tbsp. butter

1 Tbsp. all-purpose flour

½ cup cooking sherry or ½ cup additional cider with 1 tsp. vanilla extract

1 tsp. vanilla extract

2 tsp.s peeled and grated fresh ginger root

1 tsp. salt

1 tsp. black pepper

1/8 tsp. paprika

1 pinch ground allspice

1/2 tsp. nutmeg

1 cup half-and-half (I use fat free)

Fresh thyme for garnish

Preheat oven to 350º F. Cut squashes in half and remove seeds. Place on shallow pan, add about ½” of water to keep it from drying out, and bake for about 55 minutes, until soft. Allow to cool, then scoop out the pulp.

Place carrot, onion, and apple in ½ cup water in a saucepan. Bring to boil, cover, and cook for 15 minutes, until softened. Drain and mix with squash pulp, 1 cup of the chicken broth, and the apple cider. Puree mixture in a blender or food processor, processing in batches if necessary. Place puree in a slow cooker or large saucepan.

Melt butter in a large saucepan over low heat. Add flour and stir till smooth. Cook over medium heat about a minute, stirring constantly, until thick and bubbly. Add pureed squash and carrots, along with remaining 2½ cups chicken broth, cooking sherry (or cider and vanilla), ginger, salt, pepper, paprika, allspice, and nutmeg. Heat the soup for a few minutes. Stir in half-and-half just before serving.

To serve in pumpkin shells: Cut off tops of miniature pumpkins (1 per serving) and scoop out pulp and seeds. Place on a cookie sheet and warm in the oven (200º F) for about 10 minutes. Ladle in soup and top with sour cream, chives, croutons, and bacon.

 

Warm Baked Potato Soup

 

What you will love about this recipe is the ease of it…and if you can add more or fewer veggies depending on what you have. You can delete the cayenne if you don’t do spicy—but it’s really good.

8 slices bacon (I use turkey bacon)

1/2 cup butter (I generally use only 1/3 cup)

2/3 cup all-purpose flour

5 cups milk (lowfat is fine) or evaporated milk

2 cups chicken broth (or 1 cup broth and 1 cup white wine)

5 large baked potatoes, peeled and cubed

4 green onions, chopped

1 cup chopped celery

1 cup chopped carrots

1 1/2 cups shredded Cheddar cheese (I love using jalapeno jack cheese!)

1 cup sour cream (light is good)

1 tsp. garlic salt

1 tsp. ground black pepper

As much cayenne you can handle (I love the spice!)

Place bacon in a large, deep skillet. Cook over medium heat until browned. Drain, crumble, and set aside. In a stockpot or Dutch oven, melt butter over medium heat. Whisk in flour until smooth. Gradually stir in milk, chicken broth and wine, whisking constantly until thickened. Stir in potatoes and veggies. Bring to a boil, stirring frequently.

Reduce heat and simmer 15 minutes. Stir a few times while cooking. Mix in most of the bacon and cheese (saving a little for garnish), sour cream, salt, and pepper. Continue cooking, stirring frequently, until cheese is melted. Top with additional bacon and cheese.

My Brother Dean’s Fabulous Wild Rice Soup

 

You’d never guess this creamy, comforting soup is lowfat, but it is. It’s also absolutely delicious.

1 cup uncooked wild rice

3 cups water

½ tsp. salt

Optional: 2 Tbsp. wild rice seasoning (available from specialty stores or online)

½ cup finely chopped onion

2 Tbsp. butter, melted

Two 10¾ ounce cans cream of mushroom soup, undiluted (I use reduced fat, reduced sodium variety)

4 cups skim milk

1 can nonfat evaporated milk (not condensed!)

2 Tbsp. all-purpose flour

2 Tbsp. cornstarch

¼ cup water

3/4 finely grated carrots

1/4 cup chopped celery

1/2 cup chopped mushrooms

1/2 tsp. ground black pepper

½ cup slivered almonds

2 chicken breasts, cooked and diced

5 chicken bouillon cubes

Optional: 2 potatoes, cut into ½-inch cubes

Minced parsley to garnish

Combine wild rice, water, salt, and wild rice seasoning (if using). Bring to boil, lower heat, and cook 45 to 50 minutes, until water is gone. While rice is cooking, saute onion in butter. Add soup, skim milk, and evaporated milk. Combine flour, cornstarch, and water, then whisk into milk mixture. Add carrots, celery, mushrooms, pepper, almonds (if using), chicken, rice, bouillon cubes, and potatoes (if using). Heat to boiling, reduce heat, and simmer 20-30 minutes. Sprinkle with minced parsley.

Feliz Navidad Torilla Soup Featured in The Christmas Kitchen by Tammy Maltby with Anne Christian Buchanan. All rights reserved.

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December 12th is National Cocoa Day!

Did you know that?

It doesn’t get any better than this! Homemade hot chocolate with marshmallows. It’s old fashioned, it’s comforting and it’s good for the soul.

Christmas isn’t just about presents. Yet Christmas is a festive celebration of giving—and the Christmas Kitchen is one of your best resources. It can be both an inspiration and a workshop for creating gifts that delight the heart and the soul . . . not to mention the taste buds.

And giving from your kitchen is its own reward.

What can be more satisfying than to whip up something beautiful and delicious, wrap it beautifully and imaginatively, and place it in someone else’s eager hands?

If your heart is telling you to dedicate a day or days to making gifts from the kitchen, I think you should listen. Much joy can be found putting a little more time and talent into your gifting than you can easily afford. It’s Christmas, after all! So put on some holiday music, maybe invite someone to help you, and go for it! You can even make extras of whatever you’re giving and keep them on hand for spur-of-the-moment gifting opportunities.

Through it all, remember that the best gifts, after all, are simply messengers. They’re concrete ways of saying, “I see you,” “I’m thinking about you,” “I care about you,” “I want to share this wonderful season with you.” And there are many ways to send that message. A shared cup of coffee and a cookie can be a gift. A phone call or a note can be a treasured gift. A meal for your family is a gift of love. There’s a gift in the stories that are told by the sink and stove, the memories that are made around the table.

All gifts from the Christmas Kitchen.

All fitting tributes to the One who is the greatest gift of all.

Cohen my first grandson making Gourmet Hot Cocoa with me for his teachers!

Gourmet Hot Cocoa Mix

This fancy version of a traditional hot cocoa mix is a perfect and yummy gift for teachers and neighbors—but keep some at home, too, for your family and for impromptu hospitality. (I love to add a little to my coffee.)

4 cups instant nonfat dry milk

2 cups sifted powdered sugar

2 cups powdered French vanilla nondairy coffee creamer

2 cups powdered chocolate milk mix (the store brand works just fine)

1 5-ounce package cook-and-serve (not instant) chocolate pudding mix

¼ cup unsweetened cocoa

2 cups miniature marshmallows and/or miniature chocolate chips

Crushed candy canes.

Combine all ingredients and stir well.

Store in air tight container. Makes 8 cups mix, or 32 servings.

To serve, place ¼ cup mix in mug or cup. Add ¾ cup boiling water or hot milk and stir well.

To give as a gift, put mix in a pretty, covered glass container. Use ribbon to tie on two decorative mugs. You could also attach miniature bottles of liquid flavoring (cherry, amaretto, Irish crème, etc.) from a coffee shop, peppermint or cinnamon sticks for stirring, a lovely ornament . . . use your imagination. Be sure to attach the recipe or you will be getting calls for it!
Simple Variations

• Minted Hot Cocoa Mix: Omit marshmallows and add 1 cup mint chocolate morsels.

• Mexican Hot Cocoa Mix: Omit marshmallows and add 2 tsp. cinnamon. If you’re brave, stir in a little cayenne pepper too.

• Rich Mocha Mix: Use mocha-flavored creamer and add 1 cup instant-coffee granules to mix.

• Guiltless Indulgence: Combine 3 cups nonfat dry milk, 1 cup artificial sweetener (such as Splenda), ½ cup unsweetened cocoa, and 1 small (.8 ounce) package fat-free, sugar-free vanilla pudding mix.
Simple Idea

Always include recipes with any gift from your Christmas Kitchen. That way the recipients won’t be calling up at inconvenient times to ask for it, they’ll be forewarned of any ingredients they may be allergic to, and the recipe itself will be a bonus gift.
Simple Idea

I always bring food instead of flowers as a hostess gift. Wrapping it beautifully will give the message that you don’t expect her to serve it immediately to the guests.

The Christmas Kitchen makes a wonderful Christmas and hostess gift. Bring some of this amazing cocoa mix with the cookbook!

Recipe from The Christmas Kitchen by Tammy Maltby with Anne Christian Buchanan. All rights reserved.

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My daughter Mackenzie Maltby Tamayo is one fantastic cook. AND she loves everything green. I must admit I love everything butter.

She has been trying to get me to eat Kale for the longest time. I wasn’t so sure. Seemed like I was eating stiff grass!

Enter Black Bean Jalapeno and Lime Marinated Kale Tostada which was originally posted on www.notwithoutsalt.com (Great site by the way)

DELICIOUS! I mean it was outrageously good. The avocado, lime, Cotija cheese and the meatiness of the black beans were amazing. I had three.

It will make even you a believer!

We really splurged and Mackenzie fried the tortillas in a bit of olive oil. Totally worth it.

4 flour tortillas

2 teaspoons olive oil

Or brush 4 tortillas with butter or olive oil, sprinkle with salt then bake at 400* for 10 – 12 minutes or until completely crisp.

Kale Marinade

¼ cup fresh lime juice

2 T olive oil

½ jalapeno, seeded and finely chopped

¼ cup cilantro

¼ teaspoon salt

½ teaspoon ground cumin

4 cups kale, washed, thick ribs removed and roughly chopped

Mix first 6 ingredients in a large bowl. Add the chopped kale and toss to coat. Let sit for 30 minutes. This is key for great a great kale salad. The resting time softens the kale and allows the flavors to come forth.

Black Beans with Garlic

 

2 teaspoons olive oil

2 garlic cloves

1 T onions finely chopped

salt

pepper

1 can black beans, rinsed and drained

In a small sauce pan saute garlic and onions in oil over medium heat until just fragrant. Add beans and simmer about 5-7 minutes, until soft and warmed through.Add salt and pepper to taste.

Assemble

1 avocado, roughly cut

1/4 cup crumbled Cotija (available at Mexican markets or many fine grocery stores. If you can’t find it you may substitute Feta or Chevre)

Place baked tortilla on plate, top with warm beans, marinated kale, chunks of avocado and about 1 Tablespoon crumbled Cotija. You can really be creative here and add red or yellow peppers with corn. Beautiful and delicious!

 

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“To be a good host don’t pretend to be other than what you are.” Emily Post 1922

I would say that would be true of being a guest as well.

I think one of the most important parts of hospitality is learning to find your own style and feeling good in your own skin both as a host and as a guest. Learning to walk out lifegiving with comfort and care. Making room for yourself and others to just be.

No pretending. No performing.

Isn’t that what we all want anyway? A place we can go and just be our true authentic selves? No matter what the season.

I was talking to a friend this week who shared how difficult Christmas was for her last year. Her family has experienced a tragic loss and there was only energy to get though each day. She was feeling stress thinking she needed to get her act together but truthfully didn’t have any desire to put up a tree or wrap one gift. She said, “I still just need time. I feel like a foreigner to this season and what I really crave is comfort and quiet. A few close friends who get it and can handle my pain. A few friends that I can share a meal with and feel okay about both laughing…and crying. I just need to be.”

Lifegiving Hospitality is just that. “Lifegiving”…giving true life. For yourself or someone that sits at your table.

This season I encourage you to make room for yourself and others to be their true authentic selves.

In my opinion it is the best gift of all.

A Christmas Tea for Friends

 

Start simply. But simply start. Remember hospitality is giving others a message about their value. So sometimes just a great sandwich filling for an afternoon tea is just about the most comforting thing around. Finger sandwiches are classic fare—and these fillings are to die for! You will love the hot tea recipe. And your home will smell simply divine!

Salmon and Lemon-Caper Cream Sandwiches

½ cup mayonnaise

1 Tbsp. drained capers

½ tsp. finely shredded lemon

½ tsp. Dijon mustard

1/8 tsp. white pepper

Butter or mayonnaise

32 slices bread (your choice)

Curly endive or lettuce leaves

8 ounces thinly sliced smoked salmon (lox) or smoked turkey

In a small mixing bowl, stir together first 5 ingredients. Spread 32 slices of bread with butter or mayonnaise. Top 16 slices with greens and divide salmon or turkey on lettuce. Top with 1 tsp. mayonnaise mixture per sandwich and finish sandwich with remaining bread slices. If desired, garnish with fresh dill. Serve at once. Makes 1/3 cup dressing, or 16 servings.

Curried Chicken-Cashew Sandwiches

 

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Here’s another amazing tea sandwich that’s great for luncheon as well.

½ cup plain yogurt

2 Tbsp. soft-style cream cheese (from a tub)

2 Tbsp. snipped chives or thinly sliced green onion

1 tsp. curry powder

¼ tsp. salt

1½ cups (8 ounces) cooked chicken or turkey, finely chopped

¼ cup cashews (or almonds), finely chopped

Butter or mayonnaise

24 slices bread (your choice)

Curly endive or lettuce

In a bowl, stir together first 5 ingredients, then add chicken and cashews and blend thoroughly. Spread 24 slices of bread with butter or mayonnaise. Top 12 slices with greens and 2 Tbsp. chicken mixture. Top with snipped chives or thinly sliced green onion and cover with remaining bread slices. Makes 1½ cups filling, or 12 servings.

Simple Tip

Use the bread of your choice to make tea sandwiches—regular white or wheat, pumpernickel or rye party slices, tiny croissants, or miniature bagels. If your bread has crusts, cut them off before filling. (You can stack 6 slices of bread at a time to cut off crusts.) Always spread bread slices thinly with butter or mayonnaise to keep the bread from becoming soggy.

Simple Tip

The best tea sandwiches are practically bite-sized. Use a serrated knife to cut large sandwiches into triangles or small squares. Or try cutting out simple shapes with a Christmas cookie cutter! If you do this after the sandwiches are filled, the cutter will seal the edges and help keep the filling from leaking out.

Simply Beautiful Tip

Hold sandwiches together with toothpicks stuck through a sprig of herbs or a slice of green stuffed olive—or sprinkle top of sandwich with chopped basil or dill. Arrange on a pretty platter topped with a paper doily.

Simple Tip

For a very simple, delicious, and beautiful tea sandwich, spread thin slices of your favorite fruit-nut bread with flavored cream-cheese spread from a bagel shop.

Christmas Tea

 

Sweet with a hint of spice - Great for parties, easy to make in large batches

  • 2 cinnamon sticks
  • 6 to 12 whole allspice
  • 1 teaspoon whole cloves
  • 12 cups water
  • 12 individual tea bags
  • 1 cup packed brown sugar
  • 1 cup cranberry juice
  • 1/2 cup orange juice
  • 1/4 cup lemon juice

Directions

  • Place cinnamon sticks, allspice and cloves on a double thickness of cheesecloth. Bring up corners of cloth; tie with a string to form a bag.
  • Place water and spice bag in a large saucepan; bring to a boil. Remove from the heat. Add tea bags; cover and steep for 5 minutes. Discard tea bags and spice bag. Stir in brown sugar until dissolved. Add juices; heat through. Serve warm. Yield: 3 quarts.

Russian Tea

 

I triple the recipe and add a 9.5 oz bag EACH of red hot candies and lemonheads into the mix-after mixing the rest of the ingredients. Then using a canning funnel, I pack the mix into 1/2 pint, pint and quart jars. Try layering it is beautiful and makes a wonderful Christmas gift!

  • 3 cups instant tea with lemon-flavoring dry mix
  • 3 cups orange-flavored drink mix (e.g. Tang)
  • 1-1/2 teaspoons ground cinnamon
  • 3/4 teaspoon ground cloves

The Christmas Kitchen Pinery 2

From The Christmas Kitchen a gathering place for making memories:

by Tammy Maltby with Anne Christian Buchanan. All rights reserved.

Purchase The Christmas Kitchen at http://tammymaltby.com/the-christmas-kitchen for more wonderful holiday favorites!

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Serving up Love.

Christmas Rice Pudding.

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The top of this pudding is custard and the rice settles to the bottom…and the whole thing is amazingly yummy!

We lost this recipe for almost eight years and tried about twenty-five other rice-pudding recipes, but could never get it so creamy and yummy. While working on my cookbook I went though all my recipes and books–trust me, this was no small task!—and found it! My kids went crazy!! That very night we made two recipes and—can you believe it?—we ate it all!

(This wonderful pudding may be made with Almond Milk and turns out wonderful. Ck note below).

Enjoy!

8 cups whole milk, divided

1 cup jasmine rice (regular rice works great too)

1 cup golden raisins

½ cup butter

4 cups whole milk

8 beaten eggs

2/3 cup sugar

1 tablespoon vanilla

1 teaspoon salt

Ground cinnamon, nutmeg, or allspice

Fresh whipped cream or half-and-half

Fresh raspberry’s in a sugar sauce

In a four-quart heavy sauce pan bring 4 cups of milk, rice, and raisins to a full boil, then quickly reduce heat. Cover and cook over very low heat until rice is tender, stirring several times. (Watch carefully to prevent boil-overs.)

When rice is fully cooked—approximately 15 minutes—remove from heat and stir in butter until melted. Meanwhile, in a large bowl combine remaining 4 cups milk, eggs, sugar, vanilla, and salt, and gradually stir into the cooked rice mixture. Pour into a well-greased 3-quart baking dish. Bake uncovered at 325 for 30 minutes. Stir and sprinkle with cinnamon, nutmeg or allspice (I generally use two of the three). Return to oven and bake another 25 minutes, until edges are set. The center will still be “wiggly.” Let sit 10 minutes. Serve with fresh whipped cream or half-and-half and a raspberry sugar sauce.

NOTE: My daughter and grandson can not eat diary. Thus we tried this recipe with almond milk and it was amazing. Almond milk is low in fat, despite originating from a high-fat nut, and the flavor is surprisingly mild. Cooked down, it gives the pudding a very creamy taste and yummy mouth-feel. You, your hips and your cholesterol count won’t miss the dairy at all.

Recipe from The Christmas Kitchen A Gathering Place for Making Memories by Tammy Maltby with Anne Christian Buchanan. All rights reserved.

 

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This is one of my favorite make-ahead recipes—and a fabulous way to use leftover Thanksgiving turkey. A perfect “white” enchilada recipe. Originally this recipe came from Beverly Wendt by way of her daughter, my friend Susan Kennedy.

I’ve changed it up a bit as I like my Enchiladas to be more spicy and black beans are just a must. I have also given you a couple of variations to this fantastic recipe.

I use disposable foil pans for easy freezing, cleanup, and gift giving .

Meemaw’s Turkey Enchiladas
6 cups cooked turkey or chicken, shredded
4 cups chicken or turkey broth
Nonstick cooking spray
1 can condensed cream-of-chicken soup, undiluted
1 8-ounce carton sour cream (low-fat or nonfat works fine)
1 4-ounce can chopped green chilies, juice included
4 cups Monterey Jack cheese, shredded
4 cups Mexican shredded-cheese mix
1 onion, finely chopped
1 large Tbsp. garlic, minced
1 6-ounce can sliced black olives or 1 14½-ounce can black beans, rinsed well (optional)
2 Tbsp. cumin

One bunch cilantro, chopped
1 10-inch package flour tortillas (try sun-dried tomato or pesto flavors for a green or red Christmasy look)
To make filling, combine shredded meat, soup, sour cream, green chilies, Monterey Jack cheese, 2 cups of Mexican cheese, onion, garlic, black olives or beans (if desired), cumin, cilantro, and 4 Tbsp. of the broth to form a firm mixture. Spray 9×13-inch pan with cooking spray. Fill each tortilla with approximately 2 heaping Tbsp. chicken mixture, roll, and place seam- down in pan. Mix remaining filling with chicken broth until filling is runny. Spread over top of tortilla rolls and sprinkle the remaining 2 cups of Mexican cheese mix over the top. Freeze at this point if desired, or cook uncovered in the oven 40 min at 350º or until bubbly. To cook the frozen enchiladas, you can thaw overnight in the refrigerator and bake as above or bake the frozen casserole for about 85 minutes, until bubbly. Fresh cilantro on top is optional but adds a fantastic fresh pop of flavor to the entire dish.

Makes 10–12 servings.
Simple Variations
Add a 4-ounce can of chopped jalapeños in addition to green chilies. Add 1 can of marinated artichoke hearts, chopped, and 1 can of sun-dried tomatoes. Roll several leaves of baby spinach into each enchilada. For vegetarian enchiladas, omit turkey, use vegetable broth, and use 2 cans of black beans.

Recipe featured in The Christmas Kitchen a gathering place for making memories by Tammy Maltby with Anne Christian Buchanan. All rights reserved.

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Talk about a wonderful change up for a Sweet Potato Casserole!

Mackenzie my daughter found this recipe and made it her own. It was fantastic. (Though she did tell me pealing 20 pounds of potatoes and 15 pounds of sweet potatoes today was no small task!)

The gingersnaps add such a fun flavor. Not to mention the Amaretto!

Happy Thanksgiving dear blogging friends! We have so much to be grateful for.

 

 

6 cups mashed sweet potatoes (about 3-1/2 pounds)
6 tablespoons plus 4-1/2 teaspoons butter, melted, divided
1/2 cup packed brown sugar
1/4 cup Amaretto liqueur or 1/4 teaspoon almond extract
1/2 teaspoon salt
1/2 to 1 teaspoon ground ginger
1/2 teaspoon cinnamon
1/2 cup chopped pecans
1/4 cup apricot jam
6 gingersnaps, crumbled
Directions
In a large bowl, combine the sweet potatoes, 6 tablespoons butter, brown sugar, amaretto or extract, salt, ginger and cinnamon; beat until smooth. Stir in the pecans and jam.
Transfer to a greased 11-in. x 7-in. baking dish. Toss gingersnaps with remaining butter; sprinkle over casserole. Bake, uncovered, at 325° for 30-35 minutes or until heated through. Yield: 8 servings.

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Creamy Corn Casserole. Just like your Mama used to make.

Originally I got this recipe from my dear friend Tracy Hoogenboom who simply is a fantastic cook. I added the chilies for more of a kick and cumin for a bit more Mexican flavor.

I make this for Thanksgiving every year…it is always everyone’s favorite side dish!

Creamed Corn Casserole

2 (20-ounce) packages frozen corn (Fresh cooked corn off the cob is the best. But if you don’t have time to for frozen…but never canned!)
1 cup (8 ounces) whipping cream (OR fat-free half and half works)
1 cup (8 ounces) milk (low fat works!)
1 4 oz can of green chilies
4 tablespoons finely chopped onion
1 teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon cumin
6 teaspoons sugar
Pinch of white pepper
3 tablespoons melted butter
4 tablespoon all-purpose flour
1 C grated Parmesan

1 cup sharp cheddar cheese with jalapenos

1. Combine all ingredients, except butter and flour, in a pot and bring to a boil. Simmer 5 minutes. Add 1C parmesan.
2. Blend butter with flour, add to the corn, mix well and remove from heat.
3. Bake 20 - 30 minutes @ 350 (covered) topped with sharp cheddar cheese. Uncover last 5 – 10 minutes.

Serves 8.

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I was a guest on a TV show years ago and watched a chef whip up this special holiday version of one of my favorites. I think I ate the whole bowl by myself! Since then, I’ve changed it up to suit my own tastes. I love the Christmasy colors as well as the spectacular taste. This is a world class appetizer!


3 ripe Hass avocados, seeded, peeled, and coarsely mashed
½ cup canned salsa verde (green salsa)
4 Tbsp. chopped fresh cilantro or parsley leaves
1 fresh jalapeño, seeded and finely chopped
1 tsp. coarse garlic salt
Juice from 1 large lime
1 cup dried sweetened cranberries (such as Craisins) or dried cherries, soaked in water for ten minutes, drained, and squeezed dry. (Or if you prefer you can use fresh cranberries but I love the Craisins…a bit sweeter!)
Coarsely mash avocados and fold in remaining ingredients. Guacamole is best made as close to serving as possible. For short-term storage, seal in an airtight container with a piece of plastic wrap pressed against the surface of the guacamole. Serve with tortilla chips—red and green if available. Makes about 12 average servings—or 6 for me. (I love guacamole!)
Simple Idea
Make your own chips by cutting flavored flour tortillas into pie wedges—or use a cookie cutter to cut out shapes from pesto flavored (green) and sun-dried tomato flavored (red) tortillas. Brush with olive oil, sprinkle with garlic salt and cumin, and bake at 350º until crisp.
Simpler Idea
If time is really short, just buy commercial guacamole and add the cranberries to it with a squeeze of lime juice to freshen the taste.

 

Recipe featured in The Christmas Kitchen a Gathering Place for Making Memories with Tammy Maltby with Anne Christian Buchanan. All rights reserved. Buy now http://tammymaltby.com/the-christmas-kitchen

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Start a New Tradition!

This is a beloved activity in our house. Every Thanksgiving evening, we gather to make these fun gingerbread houses. Because I typically have a large crowd over for Thanksgiving, we like to divide into family teams (one family per house), but you could do this any way you want. If you’re a small group, why not build a large house together?

This year start a new tradition. Building Gingerbread houses is a great place to start. Your children and grandchildren will love it!

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For each house you’ll need the following:

A ready-baked gingerbread house kit (from a hobby or cooking store,or Costco has them for 10 dollars right now)

A base—I usually use a piece of heavy cardboard covered with foil

Hot glue gun and glue sticks

Icing “cement” to attach decorations (recipe below)

An assortment of candy, cookies, and other items for decoration (suggestions below)

Friends and family to make the house!
Icing Cement for Gingerbread Houses

This kind of icing, also called royal icing, dries hard and is perfect for attaching decorations to gingerbread houses. Use this recipe, or purchase a can of dried egg whites and follow the recipe on the label for royal icing. Plan to make extra batches. Keep the icing covered with a moist towel when not in use. And keep extra ingredients on hand to make more—we always run out!

2 large egg whites

1/8 tsp. cream of tartar

2 tsp. water

3 cups sifted powdered sugar

With a mixer, beat egg whites, cream of tartar, and water until frothy. Blend in sugar on high speed until stiff, 5 to 10 minutes. Use immediately or cover and use within 8 hours. Makes about 1½ cups.
Decoration Ideas for Gingerbread Houses

This is the fun part. Use your imagination and set out a variety of goodies to decorate the houses. The list below is just a start!

• Candy: gumdrops; chocolate bars and kisses; peppermint sticks, canes, and rounds; licorice; cinnamon candies, candy wafers; caramel squares and rolls (such as Tootsie Rolls); jelly beans; hard candies; breath mints, Gummi candies.

• Marshmallows: white and colored and marshmallow snowmen and Santas.

• Chewing gum: small squares, colored and striped strips

• Fruit leather and candied fruits

• Cookies and crackers: vanilla and chocolate wafers,; graham crackers, cookie shapes

• Cereal: miniature shredded-wheat biscuits, plain and frosted; square checkerboard cereal (such as Chex); round oat cereal (such as Cheerios)

• Pretzels

• Ice-cream cones

• Raisins, cranberries, nuts

• Spices: cinnamon sticks, allspice, whole cloves, whole nutmeg

• Cake decorations: gel icing in tubes, sprinkles, nonpareils, powdered sugar

Gingerbread on the Side

 

http://www.copykat.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/09/gingerbread.jpg

This is the best gingerbread—a variation on a recipe given to me by a dear friend in Dallas named Susan Lovvorn. It practically melts in your mouth, and it makes a wonderful gift. You can make it as muffins, mini loaves, or big loaves. But any way you bake it, it won’t last long.

1½ cups light brown sugar

1–1½ cups white sugar

1 cup vegetable oil

4 large eggs

2/3 cup water or apple cider

1 16-ounce can pumpkin or 2 cups fresh pumpkin puree

3½ cups flour

2 tsp. baking soda
1½ tsp salt

½ tsp. baking powder

3 tsp. ground ginger

1½ tsp. allspice

1½ tsp. cinnamon

1½ tsp. cloves

½ tsp. nutmeg

Preheat oven to 325º. Grease well 2 5×9-inch bread pans, 2 muffin tins, or 6 miniature loaf pans. In a medium bowl, beat sugar, oil, and eggs until smooth. Add cider and beat until well blended. Beat in pumpkin. In a large bowl, mix together flour, baking soda, salt, baking powder, and spices. Add pumpkin mixture and stir just until incorporated. Pour batter into pans and bake 70 minutes for loaves, 25 minutes for muffins, or 45 minutes for mini-loaves. The gingerbread is done when a toothpick inserted in the center comes out clean. Serve warm with whipped cream, top with cream-cheese frosting (recipe below), or simply sprinkle with a little powdered sugar. Serves 12.
Simple Variation

Add golden raisins, dried cranberries, chopped pecans, chocolate chips, or cinnamon chips.
Simple, Healthier Variation

Replace oil with unsweetened applesauce and sweeten with sweetener (such as Splenda). Still tastes great!
Easy Cream-Cheese Frosting

This recipe will frost 24 muffins, 2 loaves, or a 13x9x2-inch cake. Double the recipe to frost an 8- or 9-inch layer cake.

1 8-ounce package cream cheese, softened

½ cup butter (no substitutes!), softened

2–3 tsp. vanilla or almond extract

6–6¼ cups powdered sugar, sifted

Optional: 1 tsp. pumpkin pie spice (delicious for gingerbread frosting) or ½ cup unsweetened cocoa (for chocolate cream-cheese frosting)

Beat cream cheese, butter, and vanilla with electric mixer until light and fluffy. Gradually add 1 cup of the powdered sugar, beating well. Continue to beat in powdered sugar to reach spreading consistency. To make chocolate cream-cheese frosting, prepare as above, but beat cocoa powder into cream-cheese mixture and reduce powdered sugar to 5¼–6 cups. Makes about 2 cups of frosting.
Simple Hint

I freeze this frosting if I have extra. It keeps its texture and spreads beautifully when thawed.

Recipes featured in The Christmas Kitchen by Tammy Maltby with Anne Christian Buchanan. All rights reserved.

Buy The Christmas Kitchen here: http://tammymaltby.com/the-christmas-kitchen/

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