Vanilla Extract Update

I was having some issues earlier with my homemade vanilla extract that temporarily lead me to believe that I had mucked up the entire project and had not only wasted two perfectly good vanilla beans, but also perfectly good rum.  It just wasn’t getting that dark color we usually know vanilla extracts to have.  It looked like tea, and that wasn’t what I had expected.  Luckily, the internet is rich with the information that I needed and I discovered that, for this virgin batch, it is perfectly normal for the color to be light.  Just to be safe, I added two more vanilla beans to my bottle, ($6 from the World Market) and waited the full 8 weeks before I started using my extract.  It still is very light and when I smell it the predominant smell is still rum (of the memories of high school that come flooding in from that scent) but it is a usable product.

I wanted to give it a first try in a dish where I could tell if it had a vanilla taste to it or if I was just using tinted rum:  French Toast.  I always add a swill of vanilla extract to my egg wash for French Toast for a little extra flavor.  I was very happy when I served this breakfast and it tasted exactly as it always does.  Needless to say, I was feeling very pleased with myself that I had whipped up a HUGE batch of homemade vanilla extract for a fraction of the price of the store-bought stuff.  You really ought to try this out.  I give it my stamp of approval (like that means anything).

Finished Product

On a little admin note, please forgive me if my posts are few and far between.  My family and I are relocating from the Seattle area to the Philadelphia area at the end of August.  Right now we are eating out a lot and grubbing in order to clean out the pantry and freezer.  There are no exciting meals coming out of my kitchen right now because we are focused on getting all of our belongings packed up so that they can be loaded on a truck and driven across the country, safely I hope.  However, we will be staying with my mother temporarily (when we moved to the Seattle area from West Virginia, we got our apartment over the internet without first seeing it.  We had to because we didn’t know a soul out here and it was a mistake because our first place was in a scary scary area).  My mom is a big fan of cooking and looks forward to the possibility of my helping her in the kitchen.  My posts will kick back up once we arrive and even more so when we are able to secure a place of our own.

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My Brownie Conundrum

I really love brownies.  Well, let me rephrase that:  I really love good brownies.  I understand that good can be a very subjective word so I’ll give my definition of what makes a brownie good in my head.

I love thick, dense, fudgy, and soft brownies.  I don’t like light and fluffy or cakey brownies.  I don’t really love nuts in my brownies and I’m not crazy about coffee flavoring.  I want a straight forward brick of chocolate goodness when I am going to eat a brownie.

Brownies

Here’s my problem:  I have yet to find a homemade brownie recipe that measures up to the boxed brand that really gets my engine roaring.  I keep getting dry, cakey, light brownies.  Some call for “just a teaspoon of coffee because it brings out the chocolate flavoring” which is bull because, as someone who rarely drinks coffee, it makes the brownies taste like COFFEE!  I get recipes the rely heavily on the addition of nuts to help with flavoring and texture, and I get recipes that just taste bad.

I don’t want my brownies to taste like cake or cookies…I prefer something that is akin to what would happen if chocolate cake and fudge had a baby…that baby would be the perfect brownie.  Actually, the closest homemade thing that I have found to my perfect brownie is a molten chocolate cake.  That was close.

I’m writing this to let you all know that I’m frustrated.  I’m going to keep looking, but I don’t want to have to keep buying my perfect brownie from a box.  I want to make it from scratch.  If you have any recipes that you think are what I might be looking for, please submit them to me (my email is located to the left under the contact tag).

If you have a recipe conundrum like me, don’t get discouraged.  With the internet at our fingertips, it is both a curse and a blessing in our search for food perfection.  Don’t be afraid to use it, or the book store, or your local library.

VANILLA EXTRACT:  WEEK 3

Vanilla Extract Week 3

It’s getting great color.  It still smells like rum, but it’s looking great!  We’re about half way there.

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Spaghetti and Meatballs

This is one of those dishes that everybody eats and everybody makes.  There are so many different recipes out there for meatballs.  I’ve already documented on here how to make my tomato sauce, but I’ll write it again for simplicity’s sake.

Red Sauce for Pasta

(My Recipe)

2  (15 oz.) cans tomato sauce

3 Tblsp. dark brown sugar

1/2 Tblsp. garlic powder

1/2 Tblsp. onion powder

1/2 tsp. red pepper flakes

1 tsp. dried parsley flakes

1 tsp. dried oregano

1 tsp. dried basil

1/4 tsp. salt

1/4 tsp. black pepper

Cook together in a large pot for at least 5 minutes.  Cover and keep on a very low simmer in preparation to receive the meatballs.

The meatballs are something of which I am very proud.  I grew up eating hamburger meatballs (like many of us) and always had sort of lukewarm feelings toward them.  When I was in college, I had a friend who loved to cook and he always bragged about his meatballs.  When I asked him what he did differently, he told me that he used a combination of different meats.  That was all he would tell me, but I decide to play around with that idea.  This recipe is the one that tasted best and I have been making it for at least 5 years.

My Meatballs

Somer M. Canon

3 links mild Italian sausage, removed from casing

1 lb. ground beef

1 small onion, diced

2 cloves garlic, minced

¼ cup Parmesan cheese

2 eggs

Parsley, basil, and oregano (about 1 Tblsp. each)

Enough bread crumbs to make into semi-dry consistency

2 splashes Worcestershire sauce

Salt and pepper

Sausage

These sausages are the ones that seems to work best in this meatball recipe.  Feel free to use your own, but I really love the taste and quality of these.

Sausage Split

To remove these from their casing, simply split down the middle and pull the casing off of the meat.  Crumble the meat with your fingertips and put in the mixing bowl.

Combine ingredients in a bowl.  Use hands to ensure that the mixture is completely combined.  Roll into 2-inch balls.

Cooking Meatballs

Place in a heated skillet with olive oil and fry into done.  About 10-15 minutes per skillet, making sure all sides are cooked.  Serve in spaghetti, or alone covered in red sauce.

Spaghetti and Meatballs

I always make extra so that we can have meatball hoagies the next day for lunch.  My husband (who always told me that he didn’t like meatballs) requests these regularly.  They really are delicious.

VANILLA EXTRACT UPDATE:  WEEK 1

Week 1 Vanilla Extract

It is starting to take on a little bit of color.  I make sure to give it a good shaking every other day.  I haven’t opened it to take a sniff, although I really want to.  Maybe next week.  So far so good!

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