Heritage House Blueberry Muffins

Taste of Home is a fantastic cooking magazine.  I just recently ended my subscription with them due to the fact that I had about 20 magazines stacked in my kitchen and each one of them contained at least two recipes that I wanted to try.  I am now in the process of getting all of these recipes together into one place (via Word document) so that I can eliminate some clutter in my house.  But I digress.

I first became familiar with the Taste of Home magazine shortly after my grandmother died.  My mother was executor of her estate and all of her mail was forwarded to our house.  One thing sent to us was a Taste of Home magazine.  I tried a few of the recipes contained therein and absolutely loved them.  Readers send in recipes and that’s how they are shared.  The recipes you find are like your mother’s recipes or grandmother’s recipes.  That speaks to me and I love it.

Inside of this first magazine sent to my deceased grandmother was a recipe for a blueberry muffin from a small restaurant in Chesaning, Michigan called the Heritage House.  Instead of bread baskets at your table, guests were served baskets of these blueberry muffins.  The story intrigued me and I tried the recipe and was delighted at the outcome.  What I got was something that was not as dense as muffins sometimes are but was moist and fluffy, like a good cake.  And also I adore blueberry muffins.

Bonnie’s Blueberry Muffins

Heritage House, Chesaning, Michigan

TOH Collector’s Edition 1997

2 cups AP flour

2/3 cup sugar

1 Tblsp. baking powder

½ tsp. salt

2 eggs

1 cup milk

1/3 cup butter, melted

1 tsp. ground nutmeg

1 tsp. vanilla extract

2 cups fresh or frozen blueberries

Additional melted butter

Additional sugar

I’d like to insert a quick note about ingredients before we get started here.  When baking, if you expect a superior end product, then you must make sure that the ingredients are superior.  This doesn’t necessarily mean that you must buy the most expensive ingredients, but you must make sure to get quality.

Whole Nutmeg

For instance, this recipe calls for ground nutmeg.  Instead of buying the little jar of nutmeg powder, buy whole nutmeg and use a microplane to make it a powder.  The taste is much more pungent and fresh.  Also, when using vanilla extract, use real or pure vanilla extract instead of imitation.  It costs a little bit more, but I use a generic brand that is not much more than the imitation stuff.  The flavor is much more superior and you do notice a difference.

Frozen Blueberries

Depending on the time of year, you can either use fresh or frozen blueberries in this recipe.  A bag of frozen blueberries is a staple in my freezer.  I use it for making blueberry pancakes and muffins all the time.  I love blueberries.

If you are using frozen blueberries, measure out the 2 cups needed for this recipe and rinse them well.  Then pat them dry and place them in a bowl.  Sprinkle with 1-2 Tblsp. of flour to make sure that the berries become suspended in the batter and don’t sink to the bottom.  You only want a very thin coating of the flour on the blueberries.  No more.

In a mixing bowl, combine flour, sugar, baking powder and salt.  In another bowl, beat eggs.  Blend in milk, butter, nutmeg and vanilla;

Dry Ingredients and Wet Ingredients

pour into dry ingredients and mix just until moistened.  Make sure not to overmix.  If you over mix this batter, the gluten in the flour will activate and you will get a tough muffin rather than a fluffy muffin.  Fold in blueberries, gently.

Muffin Batter

Fill greased or paper lined muffin cups two-thirds full.  Bake at 375 for 20-25 minutes.  Brush tops with melted butter and sprinkle with sugar as soon as they come out of the oven.

Muffins Brushed with Butter and Sprinkled with Sugar

YIELD:  1 dozen

Bonnie's Blueberry Muffins

As a side note, it seems that the Heritage House of Chesaning, Michigan is no longer in business.  That’s a shame.  But I hope that you enjoy the recipe as much as I do.  Enjoy everybody!

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Roast Chicken and Vegetables

This is a dish that I make all of the time.  It’s a dish that is satisfying in all four seasons.  I love it.

I always have at least one whole chicken in my freezer.  A chicken with the bones and skin still intact will have more flavor when you cook it.  The bones and skin lend a richness and a “chicken” taste.  I do keep a bag of boneless skinless chicken breasts as well, but when I prepare those, there has to be a lot of hoopla to make them appetizing and they certainly aren’t tasting like a chicken.  I like to roast a whole chicken or cut it up and make Coq Au Vin or fried chicken.  Whole chickens are good.

I use a roasting pan for this dish with a rack.  This is so that the chicken will cook over the vegetables and drip lovely yummy juices all over them and make them gorgeous.  I think I got it at WalMart for $10.  I use it ALL the time and I got a great big one so that I can make my 20lb. Thanksgiving turkey.  Today I made a 6lb. chicken.

Vegetables for Roasting

Cut up 4 large potatoes, 5-6 carrots, 1-2 onions, and any other root vegetable (like parsnips) that you’d like to roast.  Drizzle with extra virgin olive oil and the sprinkle with salt and pepper.

Now clean your chicken making sure you remove the neck and giblets from the cavity.  Wash the skin and pat it dry with a paper towel.  Put it on rack and place the rack in the roasting pan over the vegetables.

Depending on the size of your chicken, you add a quartered onion, 3 cloves of garlic cut in half, and 1 quarter of a lemon.  Since these won’t be eaten, you don’t need to peel them or anything.  Just shove them up in there. You’ll also need to bend the wings back on themselves..just fold them behind like the chicken is relaxing.  You don’t want them to burn.

Now this part os going to sound weird, but trust me…it adds so much.  Where I am from, you would have a hard time finding a kitchen that doesn’t keep their bacon grease stored in an airtight container in the refrigerator or in a crock on the counter.  It’s an easy way to add a smoky flavor to dishes without having to waste some perfectly good bacon that would go better on a sandwich or with eggs.  Melt about 3 Tblsp. of bacon grease and baste it over the chicken.  This will make the skin crispy and OH SO DEEEEELICIOUS.  You could also just lay 3 strips of bacon over the top of the bird but, again, I’d rather save my bacon for better things.  Add a little bit of salt and pepper to the skin.

Dressed Chicken

Now put some foil over the whole thing and place it in a 375 degree F oven.  Again, depending on the size of your bird you’ll need to cook until done.  For my little bird I cooked it covered for 2 hours and then uncovered it for 30 minutes.  When you take the roasting pan out of the oven, take the chicken (still on the rack) out of the pan and place on large cooking board or plate and cover with aluminum foil to rest.  The meat needs to rest for at least 15 minutes.  Stir the vegetables and incorporate all the flavors.

Roasted Chicken

Besides the roasted vegetables, I always like to serve a salad with this dish.  Some simple greens or a Spring Mix are perfect.  I also always like to make my own vinaigrette or dressing.  We’ll talk about those later.  For now just use up that bottled crap you’re using now, but don’t plan to buy any more.

A Gorgeous Meal

This meal is so good and it makes the house smell so damned good.  When you’re done picking most of the meat off of this, DON’T DISCARD THAT CARCASS!  We’re making chicken stock tomorrow…and you need a chicken carcass for that!  And those veggies taste magnificent cold as a quick midnight face-stuff.  Enjoy!

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Braised Lamb Shanks and Risotto

Oh, baby I get happy just typing those words.  That’s right, this household ate well tonight.  I ought to charge for this recipe…but it’s ok.  I love you guys.  (NOTE:  I should let it be known that unless I give credit to another person, the recipes given on this site are my own [products of my own adorable noggin] and if you plan to use them, please be sure to give me credit.)

First thing first, preheat your oven to 315 degrees F.

Aromatics

Dice 1 large onion, 2 cloves of garlic, and 2 stalks of celery.  Put a dutch oven over medium heat and add 1 Tblsp. of extra virgin olive oil.  When the oil is hot, add the onions first and cook until tender.  Add the garlic and celery and stir for 2 minutes.  Now we go back to our pantry staple, canned tomato sauce.  You’ll need two 15oz. cans.  Just dump them in.  When the mixture is hot, add 3 cups of chicken stock.  Now it’s time for spices….and this braising liquid has a LOT of spices.

1 Tblsp. dark brown sugar, 1/2 tsp. ground cardamom, 1/2 tsp. ground cinnamon, 2 bay leaves, 1/2 Tblsp. garlic powder, 1/4 tsp. cayenne pepper, 1 tsp. ground cumin, 1 tsp. ground coriander, 1/2 Tblsp. salt and 1/2 tsp. black pepper.  Put all of these in the braising liquid,  and stir.  Now it’s time for the meat that is to be braised.

Lamb Shanks

Today I happened to have a hankering for braised lamb, but I have used this braising liquid to braise everything.  One of my favorites is pork chops.  When you go to the store, those bulk packages of pork chops are always on sale, but I get so sick of pan fried pork chops that I can’t see straight.  So I braise them and they taste fabulous.

Depending on the size of the meat I am braising and if it contains a center bone, I may or may not sear the meat first.  Pork chops I don’t sear.  Turkey legs I do sear.  I tried to sear the lamb shanks but I don’t have a pan big enough to make them sit flat…so that’s ok.  Just season the meat with salt and pepper and add it right to the liquid.  Set the heat under your dutch oven to medium-high and bring to a boil.  When the liquid is boiling, cover with a lid and put the entire pot in your oven.  But wait!  Did you make sure that your pot is oven safe?

Oven Safe Pot

I know it looks like a spaceship now, but that is an oven safe pot!  It has plastic handles and a plastic button on the lid so I simply added two layers of aluminum foil to these surfaces and this pot can survive a lifetime in my oven.  On this occasion, though, the pot only needs to stay in the oven for 2 hours.

We need a side dish, and I always like sauteed baby spinach or a light salad but today I wanted some risotto.  I LOVE LOVE LOVE risotto.  When I was pregnant with my son, I used to make big pots of risotto and stand in the kitchen and eat it all while dinner was cooking.  Ok, I do that when I’m not pregnant too.

Now some people will tell you that you need to use only arboreal rice for risotto, but I have made it with the more economical long-grained white rice and it was perfect.  The trick to risotto is the way in which you cook it.  I warn you, your stirring arm is going to get tired.

If you have a second dutch oven, get it out along with a sauce pan.  In your sauce pan, heat 3-4 cups of chicken stock.  You want this to be stock or broth and not water because of the richness it adds to the overall dish.  Try not to boil the stock, just get it nice and hot.

In your dutch oven (over medium heat) melt 2 Tblsp. of butter.  Now add 1-1/2 cups of a white, starchy rice and stir for 5 minutes.  The rice needs to become translucent and have a nutty flavor.  When this happens, add 1 cup of white wine.  Use a real wine…a wine that you would drink.  Most recipes would only use 1/2 cup of wine, but I like using an entire cup because it adds a really fresh and fruity flavor.  Stir constantly until absorbed.  Now start adding the hot stock to the rice one cup at a time.  Wait until the previous cup is absorbed until you add the next, stirring constantly.

Risotto

The mixture will start to resemble a thick, creamy rice pudding.  This is because the slow incorporation of the liquids and the constant stirring encourages the development of the starches in the rice.  When the liquid is all absorbed, add 1 cup of Parmesan cheese and stir until melted.

You’re not going to put that canned stuff in this gorgeous risotto are you?  ARE YOU?!?  No, no, no, no!  Spend a little bit more on a wedge of Parmesan cheese from your grocer’s cheese case.  You can splurge and get Parmigiano Reggiano (the best) or any other, as long as it is not pre-shredded.  It loses taste and freshness and you want this to be good because it’s a large part of this risotto’s flavoring.  (A note on Parmigiano Reggiano:  There are a lot of impostor Reggiano’s out there.  The easiest way to tell if it is authentic;  don’t read the label.  Read the rind.  Only authentic Reggiano has a rind stamped with it’s name like below.)

Parmigiano Reggiano

And now for the finished product:

Braised Lamb Shanks with Risotto

You see how the meat is pulling away from the bone like that?  That’s gorgeous.  This meat was tender, juicy, and perfectly flavored.  I like to serve some of the hot braising liquid on the table in a gravy boat  so that you can soak the meat even more in the flavorful liquid.  I know you’re going to love this one.  The next time you are having company over for dinner and you are short on money, use this trick with some pork chops.  Won’t you look like the clever one.

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