Tuesday, March 8, 2022

Flakey Guinness Cheddar Scones #BreadBakers

Grated butter and cheese add little pockets of flavor and flakiness to these Guinness Cheddar Scones. They are perfect for breakfast or snack time and go great with soup!

Food Lust People Love: Grated butter and cheese add little pockets of flavor and flakiness to these Guinness Cheddar Scones. They are perfect for breakfast or snack time and go great with soup!

I’ve baked with stout quite a few times and love how much depth and flavor a dark brew adds to any batter or dough. For example, check out my mocha stout brownies, London Porter cake and oatmeal stout loaf, just to name a few. All lovely! 

If there is any product more iconically Irish then Guinness Stout, I don’t know what it would be. Anytime Irish teams are playing in a tournament, ubiquitous Guinness shows up as a sponsor. When our host for this month’s Bread Bakers chose Irish bread as our theme for March, I knew I wanted to use Guinness in the recipe. 

NOTE: Start this recipe far enough in advance of when you've like to serve them to leave plenty of time for freezing the scones before baking. Depending on your freezer, a couple of hours ought to do it. 

Flakey Guinness Cheddar Scones

This recipe is adapted from Coley Cooks. It’s been a while since I saved it so the author has updated the post name and the URL and these are now called biscuits, which I find very odd for an Irish recipe. Back when I found it, they were called, quite rightly, Irish scones with a URL to match.  Whatever you call them, bake these. They got four thumbs up from my family!

Ingredients
2 1/2 cups or 312g flour
2 1/2 teaspoons baking powder
1/2 teaspoon baking soda
1 teaspoon sugar
1 teaspoon fine sea salt
1 tablespoon Dijon mustard
1 cup or 240ml Guinness, cold
1/2 cup or 113g unsalted butter, FROZEN, plus 2 tablespoons (28g), melted
7 oz or 200g mature cheddar or extra sharp cheddar cheese, grated

Method
Whisk together the flour, baking powder, baking soda, sugar and salt in a mixing bowl.

The dry ingredients

Using a box grater, grate the frozen butter, then quickly transfer it to the flour mixture and use a fork to gently mix and coat all the butter pieces with flour. 

Adding the grated butter to the flour mixture

Add the grated cheese and mix to combine, being sure to coat all pieces with flour.

Adding the cheddar to the mixture

In a separate bowl, whisk together the Dijon mustard and Guinness.

Make a well in the center and pour in the beer mixture.

Adding the Guinness and mustard to the mixture

Carefully mix until it forms a shaggy dough.  Do not overmix. 

A shaggy dough

Dump the mixture out onto a lightly floured surface, then roll out into a long strip about 7x14 in or 18x36cm.

Rolled out into a rectangle

Fold one side half way up, adding in any loose bits.

The first fold

Then fold the other side over top, like a letter.
 
The second fold

Rotate the dough 90 degrees, roll out and repeat the two letter folds again. Rotate again and fold for the final two times.

Roll the dough into a rectangle about 1/2 in or 1 cm thick. Cut the scones out with a cutter and place them on a pan lined with baking parchment.  

Roll the dough out and cut into scones with a cookie cutter

Roll the dough out again and cut scones until you run out of dough. As you can see, I got 14 scones out of my dough.

Fourteen scones, ready for freezing

Place the baking pan in the freezer. Freeze till solid or overnight. Once frozen, transfer the scones to a sealed bag. For maximum rising and flakiness, the dough needs to be kept very cold. The beauty of this recipe is that once the scones are frozen, you can bake as many or as few as you’d like. 

Preheat your oven to 400° F or 200°C.

When the oven is preheated, remove the number of scones you’d like to bake from the freezer, and put them on a parchment or silicone-lined pan then put it into the oven immediately.

Six scones, ready for the oven

Bake for about 20 minutes or until the scones has risen well and are golden brown, rotating the pan halfway through so they brown evenly.

Just out of the oven

Brush the tops with the melted butter.

Brushing the scones with melted butter

Serve warm with extra butter, if desired. I'll be honest. I only buttered the one you see below. They really don't need it. 

Enjoy! 

Food Lust People Love: Grated butter and cheese add little pockets of flavor and flakiness to these Guinness Cheddar Scones. They are perfect for breakfast or snack time and go great with soup!

As I mentioned above, it’s time for Bread Bakers, always the second Tuesday of the month, and Irish bread is our theme. Check out all the great recipes we are sharing ahead of St. Patrick’s Day below! Many thanks to our host, Wendy of A Day in the Life on the Farm. 

BreadBakers
#BreadBakers is a group of bread loving bakers who get together once a month to bake bread with a common ingredient or theme. Follow our Pinterest board right here. Links are also updated each month on this home page. We take turns hosting each month and choosing the theme/ingredient.

Pin these Flakey Guinness Cheddar Scones!

Food Lust People Love: Grated butter and cheese add little pockets of flavor and flakiness to these Guinness Cheddar Scones. They are perfect for breakfast or snack time and go great with soup!

.

Sunday, March 6, 2022

Homemade Celery Salt

This tasty homemade celery salt recipe takes advantage of the celery leaves by drying them out then grinding them with salt. It's easy and full of flavor!

Food Lust People Love: This tasty homemade celery salt recipe takes advantage of the celery leaves by drying them out then grinding them with salt. It's easy and full of flavor!

Whenever I needed celery for a recipe (looking at you, chicken and sausage gumbo!) when I was first on my own and cooking in my own kitchen, I’d cut the leaves off and chuck them. After all, the recipe called for stalks of celery, which I assumed, naively perhaps, did not include the leaves. 

Then we moved overseas and in many countries celery was hard to get. Often imported from colder climates, it was also expensive. I learned to not only use the whole bunch, with leaves, but to chop and freeze any leftovers in a snug bag for future recipes. As long as you are going to sauté the chopped celery for a soup or stew, frozen works perfectly. 

Another great use for those leaves which make them (and their flavor) last a long time is homemade celery salt. Store-bought celery salt is made with celery seeds, which have a very strong flavor. Celery salt made with the dried leaves is a bit more subtle but the celery flavor it definitely prominent. And if, like young me, you were throwing out or composting the leaves, now you can feel good about using the whole plant!

Homemade Celery Salt

If you don’t have flakey sea salt, you can substitute regular salt but use half the amount or your celery salt may be too salty. I use a clean coffee bean grinder that I reserve for spices for this job but you could use a mortar and pestle or a blender. This recipe makes about 2 tablespoons of celery salt.

Ingredients 
1 cup celery leaves tightly-packed, 56g
1 teaspoon flakey sea salt (like Maldon) 

Method
Pick the leaves from the celery, leaving the stalks behind. Use both the outer dark leaves and the pale inner leaves. Rinse the leaves two or three times in a salad spinner, then spin them dry. 

Rinsing the celery leaves

Lay the leaves out on a clean towel then roll it up. Unroll and leave to air dry for at least 30 minutes. 

Air drying the leaves

Meanwhile, preheat your oven to 200°F or 93°C degrees. 

Line a baking pan with baking parchment or a silicone liner and arrange the celery leaves single layer in the pan. 

One layer of celery leaves in the pan

Bake 20 minutes, rotating the pan halfway through baking time so that the leaves dry evenly. Remove from oven and cool. 

The dried leaves, cooling

Transfer to your coffee/spice grinder and add the salt.

Leaves and salt in the grinder lid

Process until finely ground. Make sure it’s completely cool before storing in a sealed container or spice shaker.  

Food Lust People Love: This tasty homemade celery salt recipe takes advantage of the celery leaves by drying them out then grinding them with salt. It's easy and full of flavor!

This homemade celery salt is excellent for any recipe that calls for celery salt. It’s also a tasty topping for boiled eggs and cream cheese filled celery sticks. Isn't it a pretty color?

Homemade celery salt on eggs and cream cheese stuffed celery sticks

Enjoy!

It's Sunday FunDay so today my friends and I are playing like Sesame Street. This post is brought to you by C for Celery! Check out all the celery recipes below. Many thanks to our host, Wendy of A Day in the Life on the Farm

 
We are a group of food bloggers who believe that Sunday should be a family fun day, so every Sunday we share recipes that will help you to enjoy your day. If you're a blogger interested in joining us, just visit our Facebook group and request to join.


Pin this Homemade Celery Salt! 

Food Lust People Love: This tasty homemade celery salt recipe takes advantage of the celery leaves by drying them out then grinding them with salt. It's easy and full of flavor!

 .

Monday, February 28, 2022

Banana Jam Muffins #MuffinMonday

These banana jam muffins are made with homemade banana jam – so easy! – swirled through buttermilk muffin batter then baked to golden perfection. 

Food Lust People Love: These banana jam muffins are made with homemade banana jam – so easy! – swirled through buttermilk muffin batter then baked to golden perfection.

I was awake in the middle of the night last week, as I often am a few days before Muffin Monday when I don’t have a muffin planned. I ran through the options of 1. what I already own ingredient-wise and 2. what my family is most likely to eat. 

The bottom line is that sweet muffins are more popular than savory so I discarded thoughts of Boursin, cheddar and blue cheese. That left me with blackberries (which I used last month so never mind), raspberries, pears and bananas. Pretty sure I've baked muffins with each of those before and several with bananas.

And then suddenly a thought popped into my head: Can a person make ripe bananas into jam? Is banana jam even a thing? Yes, my middle-of-the-night brain is a weird and wonderful thing. Banana jam was the first thing I googled as soon as I got out of bed that next morning.

You’ve seen my title so you know it is a THING. I’m here to tell you that it’s also delicious. I only made enough for these muffins but next time I’m going to double or treble the recipe because it would be lovely spread on toast with peanut butter. If you decide to do that right now, (and I highly recommend you do) store it in a clean jar in the refrigerator. This banana jam is not acidic enough to be safe for very long as a canned jam. 

Banana Jam Muffins

The banana jam can be made ahead. Just store it in a clean vessel in the refrigerator until you are ready to bake. No buttermilk? Add 1 1/2 teaspoons of lemon juice or white vinegar to your measuring cup then pour in the milk to the half-cup mark.  The jam recipe is adapted from one on FOOD52.

Ingredients
For the banana jam:
2 small ripe bananas (about 4.75 oz or 135g, post-peeling)
1/3 cup, firmly packed, or 66g light brown sugar
1 tablespoon lime juice
1/8 teaspoon fine sea salt
1 tablespoon aged rum
1/4 teaspoon vanilla extract

For the 6 muffins:
1 1/4 cups or 156g flour
1/3 cup or 66g sugar
1 teaspoon baking powder
1/2 teaspoon baking soda
1/4 teaspoon salt
1/2 cup or 120ml buttermilk
1 egg
1/4 cup or 60ml canola or other light oil
1/2 cup or 150g banana jam

Method
First, we’ll make the jam. Combine the bananas and sugar in a small pot. Before you put it on the stove, mash the bananas with a fork until the fruit is chunky and the sugar syrupy. 

Mashing the banana with a fork

Set over medium-low heat and bring to a simmer. Add the lime juice and salt. 

Simmering!

Continue to cook at a steady simmer - stirring occasionally - for about 10 minutes, until the jam thickens. When you can pull a spatula through it and the gap doesn’t run closed immediately, it’s done. 

It's done!

Remove the bananas from the heat and stir in the rum and vanilla.

With the rum and vanilla

Set the banana jam aside aside to cool while you assemble your muffin ingredients and prepare the muffin pan.

One half cup of banana jam cooling

Preheat your oven to 350°F or 180°C and prepare your 6-cup muffin pan by greasing it with oil or butter or lining it with paper muffin cups.

In a large bowl, whisk together the flour, sugar, baking powder, baking soda and salt. 

The dry ingredients

In a smaller mixing bowl whisk the egg, milk and oil together. 

The wet ingredients

Pour the wet ingredients into the dry ingredient bowl. Fold to combine. Do not over mix.

Adding the wet ingredients to the dry

 Gently swirl in the banana jam.

Swirling in the banana jam

Divide the batter between the muffin cups in your prepared pan. 


Q1. Did I over fill these cups? That depends on how you feel about very large muffin tops. Q2. Could you bake this batter into 7 or even 8 muffins? Absolutely. Should you? See question 1. 

I stand by my six muffin decision.

Bake the muffins in the preheated oven for 20-25 minutes or until golden and a wooden skewer comes out clean. Yeah, they touch. Fight me. 


Remove from the pan after they’ve cooled a few minutes and put them on a wire rack to cool completely before storing in an airtight container. 

Food Lust People Love: These banana jam muffins are made with homemade banana jam – so easy! – swirled through buttermilk muffin batter then baked to golden perfection.

Enjoy!

Food Lust People Love: These banana jam muffins are made with homemade banana jam – so easy! – swirled through buttermilk muffin batter then baked to golden perfection.

It's the last Monday of the month so that means it's time for Muffin Monday! Check out the great muffin recipes we have for you today. 


#MuffinMonday is a group of muffin loving bakers who get together once a month to bake muffins. You can see all of our lovely muffins by following our Pinterest board. Updated links for all of our past events and more information about Muffin Monday can be found on our home page.

Pin these Banana Jam Muffins!

Food Lust People Love: These banana jam muffins are made with homemade banana jam – so easy! – swirled through buttermilk muffin batter then baked to golden perfection.

 .

Sunday, February 27, 2022

Hobak Jeon - Korean Zucchini Pancakes

Hobak Jeon aka zucchini pancakes are a savory snack popular in Korean cuisine that are made with small pieces of zucchini in a thick batter and fried until crispy with a little oil. Dip them in a spicy sauce to complete this delicious dish!

Food Lust People Love: Hobak Jeon aka zucchini pancakes are a savory snack popular in Korean cuisine that are made with small pieces of zucchini in a thick batter and fried until crispy with a little oil. Dip them in a spicy sauce to complete this delicious dish!

When I was growing up, I only knew about two kinds of pancakes. The regular fluffy kind that was served with butter and syrup and the thin ones we ate sprinkled with lime juice and sugar. We called those crepes but my British friends and classmates in Trinidad called them pancakes. 

Who knew that there is a whole world full of other delicious pancakes out there! In fact, starting on 28 February, we celebrate Pancake Week, which includes Pancake Day on 1 March, also known as Mardi Gras or Shrove Tuesday. I’ve asked my Sunday FunDay friends to share their favorite recipes with you so you can join the festivities. Make sure to scroll to the bottom to check out the list. 

I must confess that hobak jeon are new to me and I found them originally on a Wikipedia list of international pancakes. Hobak means zucchini and jeon is pancake or fritter. Since then I’ve discovered that there are many varieties of jeon. They can contain meat or fish, diverse vegetables, even kimchi. Some look more like Japanese tempura – ingredients dipped in a batter - with vegetables sliced in large pieces rather than small chopped bits. Some batters use eggs, many do not. 

I think we could do an entire event just making variations of jeon! What a wonderful, tasty experience that would be! Who's game? 

Hobak Jeon - Korean Zucchini Pancakes

This recipe is adapted from Gastronomy Recipes. The batter could not be simpler so the zucchini flavor gets to shine. Do not skip the dipping sauce though. Its spicy saltiness complements the pancakes perfectly.

Ingredients
For the 8 pancakes:
2 small zucchini, approx. weight 9 oz or 255g before trimming
1 cup or 125g flour
1 teaspoon fine sea salt
3/4 cup or 180ml water
Sesame oil
Canola or other light oil

For the dipping sauce:
3 tablespoons soy sauce (I use the lower sodium type.)
1 1/2 tablespoon vinegar (I use aged Chinese black vinegar.)
1 tablespoon minced onion 
2 small cloves garlic, minced 
1 hot chili pepper, sliced

Method
Combine all of the ingredients for the dipping sauce and set it aside. Making this ahead allows time for the garlic, onion and pepper to infuse the soy sauce and vinegar while you mix and pan fry the hobak jeok. 

The dipping sauce ingredients

Cut the ends off of the zucchini and slice them in half lengthwise and then in half again. Trim off the seedy middle and discard. Cut the zucchini in half again through the middle so you have two long, thin pieces for each quarter zucchini. 


Slice each thin piece into smaller sticks. 


Place the zucchini sticks into a bowl and add in the flour and salt. Stir to coat the zucchini with the flour. 


Add the water and combine well with a spoon.


Heat a non-stick pan or griddle over a medium flame and drizzle in 1 tablespoon of oil. 

Scoop about 1/3 cup of batter into the pan and pat it so it spreads out a little with the back of your scoop.


Continue with this process till you have three or four pancakes cooking. Do not overcrowd your pan because you need room to flip the pancakes over with a spatula. 

As the bottom of the pancakes begin to brown, drizzle a little sesame oil into the pan, along the edges of the pancakes. Tilt and shake the pan so that the sesame oil spreads underneath the pancakes.


Cook for another minute until the bottom turns light golden brown and crispy, then turn the pancakes over with a spatula. 


Cook for another 2-3 minutes or until the other side is nicely browned. Repeat with the rest of the batter. Continue cooking pancakes until all the batter is used. 

As the pancakes are ready, put them on a warmed plate. Serve while hot, with the dipping sauce. 

If you aren’t serving them right away, I suggest warming the pancakes in a hot pan again to crispy them up before serving. 

Food Lust People Love: Hobak Jeon aka zucchini pancakes are a savory snack popular in Korean cuisine that are made with small pieces of zucchini in a thick batter and fried until crispy with a little oil. Dip them in a spicy sauce to complete this delicious dish!

Enjoy! 

As mentioned above, it’s Sunday FunDay and today we are sharing pancake recipes! Anything made with a batter is fair game.  Check out the links below. 

 
We are a group of food bloggers who believe that Sunday should be a family fun day, so every Sunday we share recipes that will help you to enjoy your day. If you're a blogger interested in joining us, just visit our Facebook group and request to join.


Pin these Hobak Jeon - Korean Zucchini Pancakes!

Food Lust People Love: Hobak Jeon aka zucchini pancakes are a savory snack popular in Korean cuisine that are made with small pieces of zucchini in a thick batter and fried until crispy with a little oil. Dip them in a spicy sauce to complete this delicious dish!

 .

Sunday, February 20, 2022

Pecan Praline Cookies

Nothing says Mardi Gras party quite like the sweet chewy bite of pecan praline cookies! These bake up quick and easy, lighter than air, but with the rich taste of brown sugar and toasted pecans.

Food Lust People Love: Nothing says Mardi Gras party quite like the sweet chewy bite of pecan praline cookies! These bake up quick and easy, lighter than air, but with the rich taste of brown sugar and toasted pecans.

When I talk about home, I have a few places that fit that description. Several countries where I've lived overseas; Houston, which I call my hometown because it’s the place I’ve lived the longest at one stretch – the years from fourth to 12th grade, and now two years of pandemic; and New Iberia, Louisiana, where I was born and where my mom made sure we went every time she could find three days off in a row when I was growing up. 

New Iberia was not just where I was born. It is also where both of my parents grew up, where almost all of my extended family still lives. Cajun country. Home of good and spicy home cooked food, heavily laden pecan and fig trees, fields of sugar cane and elderly relatives who spoke French before they learned English in school and loved to pinch my cheeks.

We stayed with my maternal grandparents but my father’s mother lived just a block or so away so every morning, before anyone else was up, I’d pull on shorts and a t-shirt, slip out of the front door and walk to my grandmother’s house. She didn’t seem to sleep much, was always up before the birds, so I knew I’d find hot coffee milk and something good for breakfast in her warm kitchen.

Occasionally we’d make the longer drive all the way to New Orleans to visit my Aunt Karen, my mom’s closest sister. New Orleans meant fun with my cousins, beignets in the French Quarter and, if the timing was right, Mardi Gras parades. 

What a thrill it was to stake out a spot on the parade route and see that first festive float glide graciously into view! “Throw me something, mister!” we’d shout, jumping wildly, wrapping the beads around our wrists like bracelets and draping them around our necks. I was richer than Midas, more brilliantly festooned than the most famous queens of history, never mind the short shorts and skinned knees of a tomboy childhood.

Some of my fondest memories over these last 50 plus years are steeped in Louisiana history where native pecans feature prominently in many baked goods. When my grandparents were still around, I could count on them for a steady supply of freshly shelled Louisiana pecans, which they’d crack and pick, putting aside bags for the whole family. Now when I’m home, I buy them from a farmer’s market and store them – carefully sealed – in the freezer for great recipes such as this one.

Pecan Praline Cookies

Recipe credit goes to Eva Schexnayder who shared these pecan praline cookies in a charity cookbook sold to benefit Shadows-on-the-Teche, an antebellum mansion and National Trust for Historic Preservation property on the banks of the Bayou Teche in New Iberia. If you ever get down that way, I highly recommend a visit.

Ingredients – for 3 dozen cookies
1 large egg white
1 cup, packed, or 200g brown sugar 
1 teaspoon vanilla
2 cups, chopped, or 225g pecans

Method
Preheat your oven to 275°F or 135°C and line your cookie sheets with baking parchment or silicone liners.

Beat your egg white in a clean mixing bowl until stiff peaks form.

Whipping the egg white to stiff peaks

Mix in the brown sugar.

Mixing in the brown sugar

Fold in the chopped pecans and the vanilla.

Folding in the pecans and vanilla

Drop by heaped teaspoons on to the prepared cookie sheets.

Dropping by heaped teaspoons on the prepared baking pan

Bake for 23-­28 minutes or until puffy and cooked through.

The baked pecan praline cookies!

Leave to cool for a few minutes and then transfer with a spatula to a wire rack to cool completely. I have to tell you that as delicate as these would seem to be, I have stacked them in a plastic container where they traveled from Dubai to Bali in my luggage and arrived in perfect condition! Don't be afraid to ship some to a friend who might need cheering up.

Food Lust People Love: Nothing says Mardi Gras party quite like the sweet chewy bite of pecan praline cookies! These bake up quick and easy, lighter than air, but with the rich taste of brown sugar and toasted pecans.

Enjoy!

It’s Sunday FunDay and have I got a treat for you, seven special Mardi Gras recipes for your celebration. Many thanks to our host, Sue of Palatable Pastime

 
We are a group of food bloggers who believe that Sunday should be a family fun day, so every Sunday we share recipes that will help you to enjoy your day. If you're a blogger interested in joining us, just visit our Facebook group and request to join.

If "praline" is one of your OMG, I love that! trigger words, you might also like my coconut pralines with pecans, my black bottom pecan praline bars or my chocolate praline pretzels. Check 'em out.

Pin these Pecan Praline Cookies!

Food Lust People Love: Nothing says Mardi Gras party quite like the sweet chewy bite of pecan praline cookies! These bake up quick and easy, lighter than air, but with the rich taste of brown sugar and toasted pecans.

 .