Food

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I’m trying to embrace Fall, I really am. I made pumpkin brownies, had a bonfire at a friend’s house the other night, and have made the pretty big switch from cool, crisp white wines to our seriously never ending collection of Cabernet Sauvignon. We went a little Cab crazy over the past few years, and now it’s everywhere! I’m loving the brightly colored mums I see around town, and I really like the creepy feeling that happens around Halloween. I am a big fan of ghost stories, scary movies, and other chilling things.

But I am already over the very dark mornings, being freezing during the work day (I literally wanted to put my feet in the oven after baking the brownies the other day.), and being hungry all the time. And when it comes to food, I never got my fill of tomatoes, fresh salads, cucumbers, and grilled vegetables. With the desire to start eating more healthily (again!), I visited The Fresh Market this Sunday after we dropped the boat off nearby for winter storage (sniffle). I  love The Fresh Market and take any chance I can get to visit.

I have been enjoying quinoa lately where I have not in the past. The difference? I really dislike any dry foods like rice and grains, but if I add some sort of nice sauce, I can eat them just fine. With this easy, healthy lunch recipe, I crossed over two seasons and came up with a beautiful result.

pattypan squash

A few cups of mini patty pan squashes, cut in half.

quinoa

Three cups quinoa, juice of one juicy lemon, and 1/4 cup of fruity olive oil

olive oil and lemon

Lots and lots of fresh cilantro

cilantro

1/2 chopped white onion

cilantro and onion

grape tomatoes

A pint of grape tomatoes

quinoa salad

Quickly cook the squash until tender while quinoa is cooking according to package directions. Once done, toss all ingredients together. I topped mine with kalamata olives and goat cheese and enjoyed every healthy bite. Yum.

This solved our lunch dilemma for a few days at least, and it was a valiant effort at bringing some fall flavors into our repertoire. Since discovering ways to make myself like quinoa and the like, I am really looking forward to incorporating more of these healthy things into my life.

Do you have any ingredients that you used to dislike that you have changed your mind on?

Tags: Food, Lunch, recipe, salad, vegan, Vegetarian

If you’ve read my blog for any amount of time, you will know that Kerrygold butter is a big part of my cooking and baking (And spreading on crackers for a snack!). Farm fresh butter, sourced from Irish farms, and other Irish dairy products such as Kerrygold’s delicious cheeses taste the best to me. When we visit Ireland, we go through gallons of milk, dozens of cups of yogurt, and multiple bars of Kerrygold butter and cheese. For my husband, it tastes like home. For me, it tastes like some of the best dairy products I have ever had.

Luckily, Kerrygold products have become fairly plentiful on this side of the Atlantic, and I was delighted to receive samples of their new naturally softer and reduced fat butters to use in a special recipe contest they are hosting.

Kerrygold butter

These new butters are for spreading and cooking, rather than baking, and before I could come up with spreadable ideas, I had to give both butters a try.

Kerrygold butter

The naturally softer butter tastes just like the regular Kerrygold gold bar of butter, only softer and creamier, perfect for spreading on multi-grain bread or crackers. And I was absolutely amazed to discover how delicious the reduced fat butter is. I normally do not do reduced fat anything, and especially reduced fat butter, but this tasted and felt like the real deal. I would not have been able to tell the difference in a taste test, and I like to think I know my butter. Winking smile 

And one thing I love to do with butter is to eat slivers of it, along with a sprinkle of salt, atop giant farmers market radishes. I have been known to make a dinner or lunch out of this, and I decided for my first use of the butter, I would make a radish butter with Kerrygold’s naturally softer version.

For this spread (which serves 2-3 as a spread for hearty bread) you will need:

2 large radishes, washed and cut into matchsticks

1/4 teaspoon salt

4 teaspoons of Kerrygold naturally softer butter (I left it out for a bit to make it even softer for mixing purposes)

 

radish

The spread is simple. Cut the radishes into “squares” by trimming off the rounded edges, then cut into even matchsticks.

radish

Set the cut up radish in a small bowl and sprinkle with salt, tossing thoroughly. Leave the radish in the salt for about 20 minutes. This gets some of the moisture out so you are not mixing butter with a ton of water.

salt

There’s no need to rinse the radish; simply drain it or use a slotted spoon to pull out the pieces, leaving the liquid to be thrown away.

radishes

In a clean bowl, use a fork to thoroughly blend salted radish and butter until a uniform consistency has been reached.

radish butter

Spread on delicious bread like this sunflower oatmeal loaf or a crusty, hot baguette (or little crostini, for a party appetizer) and prepare to enjoy a salty, sweet, crunchy, and creamy spread.

My second use of the new Kerrygold butter was inspired by one of my all time favorite dishes to make, Whiskey and Brown Sugar Salmon. This spread could be used to top hot salmon filets, but it’s sweet and tangy flavors would also be perfect on a pound cake, bread pudding, or even on a slice of bread for a treat on a cold winter night. And it can be prepared a couple of ways, either by whipping up a buttery spread, as I do below, or melted together on low in a saucepan, making more of a glaze or sauce than a spread.

For a serving for four, I used the following:

4 tablespoons Kerrygold reduced fat butter

2 tablespoons dark brown sugar

2 teaspoons Jameson Irish Whiskey

(Chopped walnuts would make a fabulous optional addition!)

brown sugar

Jameson Irish Whiskey

Again I let the butter sit out for a few minutes. It is, right off the bat, softer than bar butter, but I wanted to be able to really incorporate my ingredients.

Kerrygold butter

By hand or using a small food processor, whip the butter, brown sugar, and whiskey until soft, creamy, and a consistent light brown color throughout. Transfer into a glass or other mold, chill, and cut into desired shapes before serving.

whiskey brown sugar butter

You might be wondering if the alcohol curdled the butter at all. It did not, but it did change the consistency a little. That’s why I recommend really chilling it again or heating it all up together in a pan to make more of a buttery whiskey caramel sauce. Either way, the flavors are out of this world, and it is one of the easiest ways to add something spectacular to the everyday.

Thanks to Kerrygold for inviting me to participate in this contest and for providing the butter for me to play with. I did receive the butter free of charge, but if you know my blog, you know it’s been full of Kerrygold long before I was ever in contact with the brand!

What are your favorite ways to use butter?

Tags: butter, cooking, Food, Kerrygold, recipe, spreads, whiskey

If there’s one guarantee, it’s definitely that I will never get a job as a baker. I don’t know what the issue is, but I somehow manage to mess up everything I bake. Usually, despite measuring everything out, I end up with about 1/2 of what the recipe is supposed to create, leaving me scrambling to find another container to bake in or ending up with thin, oddly shaped results.

Luckily, most of my not-so-perfect creations end up tasting great, and while I wish my baking skills would allow me to make something I would actually serve outside my house, I do enjoy having home baked treats like these Pumpkin Spice Brownies, adapted from Yum Sugar who adapted Martha Stewart’s Layered Pumpkin Brownies.

pumpkin spice brownies

I gathered the ingredients for the brownies, mostly according to the recipe. I used the correct amount of flour, eggs, baking powder, etc. but decided to go my own direction with add-ons, grabbing some cacao powder and pumpkin pie spice in lieu of the individual spices the recipe called for. Surely, those changes shouldn’t have made the amount of batter so teeny tiny? I just don’t know.

pumpkin spice brownies

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

spices

 

I love spice and chocolate, so I definitely went crazy with the cayenne pepper, adding 1/2 teaspoon instead of 1/8. I also tossed in a generous shake of the pumpkin pie spice.

 

brownie batter

There comes a point where the basic batter is divided, and that’s when I realized I did NOT have two cups of each batter. I went with it, creating the fudgy chocolate brownie side in one bowl and the creamy pumpkin side in another.

pumpkin batter

Then I grabbed a smaller pan than planned and layered the brownies. The chocolate part, I am imagining due to the addition of cacao powder, was a little dry and more like fudge than a batter. But I went for it, pressing the doughy mix into my baking dish and topping it with a layer of soft pumpkin batter.

brownies

I kept a close eye on the brownies since they were in different dish and pulled them out about 25 minutes into cooking. I waited with baited breath until they cooled and was so excited when they came out looking like this and tasting great! I LOVE the spicy cayenne flavor, the rich chocolate, and the fall-spiced pumpkin, which gives the brownies a nice softness. This is a definite make-again recipe, perhaps for my Thanksgiving feast! But it also got me thinking. . . does anyone like the taste of pumpkin itself? Or is it just the spices and flavors that come with it? Because the smell and taste of straight up canned pumpkin definitely is not my favorite, but I love all things pumpkin. Your thoughts?

pumpkin spice brownies

 

Pumpkin Brownie Recipe, adapted from Yum Sugar

Layered Pumpkin Brownies
Adapted from Martha Stewart

INGREDIENTS

4 tablespoons (1/2 stick) unsalted butter, plus more for pan
3 ounces bittersweet chocolate, chopped
1 cup all-purpose flour
1/2 teaspoon baking powder
1/8 teaspoon cayenne pepper
1/4 teaspoon salt
3/4 cup, plus 2 tablespoons sugar
2 large eggs
1/2 tablespoon pure vanilla extract
1/2 cup plus 2 tablespoon solid-pack pumpkin
2 tablespoon vegetable oil
1/2 teaspoon ground cinnamon
1/4 teaspoon ground nutmeg
1/2 cup chopped walnuts, optional
1/2 cup semisweet chocolate chips, optional

DIRECTIONS

  1. Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Butter a mini muffin pan.
  2. Melt chocolate and butter in a heatproof bowl in microwave, stirring occasionally until smooth.
  3. Whisk together flour, baking powder, cayenne, and salt in a large bowl; set aside.
  4. Put sugar, eggs, and vanilla in the bowl of an electric mixer fitted with the paddle attachment; beat until fluffy and well combined, 3 to 5 minutes. Beat in flour mixture.
  5. Divide batter between two medium bowls (about 2 cups per bowl). Stir chocolate mixture into one bowl. In other bowl, stir in pumpkin, oil, cinnamon, and nutmeg.
  6. Fill the muffin pans with brownie mixture first and top with pumpkin batter. Can repeat to create several layers, if wanted. Sprinkle with nuts and chocolate chips, if wanted.
  7. Bake until set, 20 to 30 minutes. Cool on a wire rack.

Makes 36-48 mini muffins.

Tags: baking, brownies, dessert, Food, pumpkin, recipe

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