Sunday, July 12, 2009

Meet my friend Maggie Brendan


Maggie has agreed to share an article from her blog about cast iron skillets, a utensil that allows a southern woman to cook really southern dishes. If you use a cast iron skillet, leave a comment and tell us about it. Ann




The Humble Cast Iron Skillet


From the time I was old enough to fry an egg and long before Teflon coated frying pans, we used a cast iron skillet for cooking. Being raised in the South, I know from experience, that any Southern woman worth her salt owned a standard 10 inch cast iron skillet for making cornbread. It can also be used to fry up a batch of fish or fried chicken, sweet potatoes, pancakes, or you can fry a hamburger, sear meat or make an omelet in it. I use mine to whip up delicious gravy, too. As a young girl just learning to cook, I thought the skillet was heavy. It was. The weight helps cook food evenly even when used over high heat. It can be used on the top of the stove or in the oven. The best cornbread you’ll ever taste, is made in the cast iron skillet.

The cast iron gives a distinctive flavor to every dish prepared in it, but we benefit from the iron it imparts, especially when cooking acidic foods. I simmer my spaghetti sauce in a cast iron Dutch oven for added dietary source of iron. Cast iron has been around for centuries, beginning with the three legged black cauldron and used over the open fire. Back then, cooking was done over the fireplace or hearth. In the late 1800’s, cast iron cookware became very popular.

It’s extremely durable cookware in the kitchen, but there are fast and hard rules about the use and care of cast iron. When you purchase a new skillet, which is usually medium gray, it must be seasoned first before using. Wash the skillet in hot sudsy water, then dry thoroughly. Using a paper towel, simply coat the outside and inside of the skillet with a little cooking oil. Next, slide it into the oven and allow to bake an hour at 250 degrees. Every time you use it, it will continue to darken and after years will turn black, thus keeping food from sticking to its sides. This is the mark of a well used skillet. Clean your skillet after use with warm water while it’s still hot, scraping away any food particles, but NEVER use soap or scouring pads—that will break down the seasoning of your cast iron. Always dry your cast iron thoroughly and store it without a lid. Many times I would dry mine by simply placing it on the cook top and turning on the flame for a second or two. That’s a trick my mother taught me. If rust should appear, just simply re-season it.
You can tell when your skillet is hot and ready to use by dropping a bit of water onto its surface and it sizzles. When I make cornbread, I place a teaspoon of bacon grease in the bottom and put it in a 450 degree oven and when it’s hot, pour the batter in. That makes a nice crusty bottom on your cornbread.

This picture shows most of my set of cast iron that I’ve collected and cooked many a meal in through the years. The skillet on the left, inside the big 12” skillet, was one my mother’s. She had three or four of them and we divided them amongst us when she died. It represented the legacy of her great southern cooking and tradition, and I wouldn’t take a million bucks for her skillet that I still use to this day. The small cauldron in the foreground is one from a set used for chili.

It was said that Lewis and Clark wrote on their expedition, that an important tool was a Dutch oven, and George Washington’s mother bequeathed her cast iron in her will. I seasoned a skillet for each of my children and gave it to them when they were married. Mine will no doubt be an heirloom passed on to them when I’m gone. Treat your skillet well, and it will give you a lifetime of use and compliments on your cooking, too! Its pitch black color makes me proud because it symbolizes years of MY cooking and a well loved utensil. The cast iron skillet is truly a symbol of my Southern heritage and a part of who I am. Happy cooking on along your trails…

Maggie Brendan
http://southernbellewriter.blogspot.com/.
http://www.bustlesandspurs.com/.

Sunday, June 28, 2009

Our Friends Sent Us Recipes

Hello again!

Are you ready for another great recipe? We have had several submitted this week and the one I have chosen for you has a strange title: "Mrs. Dollie's Boiled Cookies". I had never made boiled cookies until Mrs. Dollie sent me this recipe. She says some folks call them "Fudgies," but they are really boiled cookies, quick to make, never-fail, and delicious. Mrs. Dollie is a great-grandmother and she ought to know!

Preparations: Measure everything and have it ready before you begin cooking. Place a hot pad on the table or counter to set the pot on as you dip the cookies out. Place waxed paper on the table to put the cookies on.

Ingredients:

1 stick margarine
2 T. cocoa
2 cups sugar
1/2 cup milk
2 1/2 cups outmeal (quick cooking kind)
1 tsp. vanilla flavoring
1/2 cup peanut butter
1 cup chopped pecans

Cut margarine into small slices to melt faster. Bring margarine, sugar, cocoa, and milk to a boil on medium heat in a heavy boiler (sauce pan). When it comes to a full boil, cook for EXACTLY 1 1/2 minutes. (Use the second hand on your watch or clock to time it, stirring all the while.) Remove from heat and set the pot on the hot pad. Add oatmeal first and stir for 2 minutes. (Helps cook the oatmeal). Add peanut butter and vanilla and stir well. Add chopped pecans, stir again. and then drop by teaspoonfuls on the waxed paper. They will be soft for about 15-20 minutes. Wait patiently; then eat with gusto! Quick and easy to make for the grandkids or to share with a friend.

Enjoy your fudgies and don't forget to send in your recipe next week. See last week's post for instructions for sending it in. Copy and paste the form in an e-mail and send to annknowles03@aol.com.

Cooking with Love,
Ann

Tuesday, June 9, 2009

Cooking with Ann

Welcome to "From Ann’s Kitchen with Love." We hope you'll find something here to brighten your day and make cooking fun.

No two people can cook up the same recipe in exactly the same way. There’s a secret ingredient and it’s in the cook, not the recipe.And so it is with “home cooking.” The basic foods are common to all of us, but the methods of their preparation vary from kitchen to kitchen. Recipes have been handed down from mother to daughter for generations, each adding her own touch of seasoning, her touch of love.

These recipes, some old and treasured and others new, are tried and tested in Ann’s kitchen and found to be true “soul food.” We hope they will tantalize your pallet and provide your family a delightful taste of genuine southern cooking.Thanks to all our friends who have shared their recipes with us here at "Cooking With Love from Ann’s Kitchen." Stop by every week to see what’s new. You’ll find new recipes to try out in your kitchen, inspirational quotes, and tips on how to make meal preparation a cinch.

We welcome your comments.Let us know what you think of "Cooking with Love" and the recipes you find here. You are invited to share you favorite recipe with our readers. (Please do not send recipes that you have not tested in your kitchen.) Simply complete the following form and e-mail it to us. Ann will select recipes and print them at the appropiate time.

Name:

Address:

City:

State:

e-mail address:

Your recipe:

Now here's our recipe for this week:

Recipe of the week

Sunday Dinner: A chicken and rice casserole that cooks while you’re at church. Add vegetables and you’re ready to eat in minutes after you walk in the door. It’s a dish you can “stretch,” so invite a friend from church.

Baked Chicken and Rice

2 cups rice
1 pkg. Lipton’s Onion Soup
1 can Campbell’s Mushroom Soup
1 whole chicken or 4-6 pieces of chicken breast
4 cups water

Sprinkle 2 cups rice in large baking dish. Sprinkle 1 pkg. Lipton’s Onion soup over rice. Salt and pepper chicken and place on rice. Spread mushroom soup over chicken. Add 4 cups of water.

Cook uncovered in 350ยบ oven for 1 hr. 15 in. If rice appears hard and dry around edges of dish, stir rice, add a little water, cover and cook for 10 more minutes.

Yum! Yum! Let us know how you liked our baked chicken and rice caserole.
Keep on cooking up tasty delights for your family and friends. And we'll see you next week.

Ann