Showing posts with label Grandma. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Grandma. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 17, 2018

The Quest for Snails (Schnecken)

When I went off to college, there was one recipe I asked my Grandma Riesterer for: Snails.  No, not the shelled gastropods also known as escargot, the German cinnamon-roll like pastry also known as Schnecken.  Grandma would make them on the occasional easter or other special occasion, and they were always my favorite.  That recipe card hung on my fridge through my first two apartments.  Then I moved to California, and somehow the recipe card didn't make the move.  It was a tragedy.  By then, Grandma wasn't in great health, and I'd already been given most of her recipe books and cards.  Alas, the coveted snail recipe was not found among them.  Fast forward 7 years to today, when I just wanted to make a nice coffee cake and thought one of Grandma's old books might have a good option.  As I paged through the bread and cake section I came across a Schnecken recipe and immediately decided I would try to replicate Grandma's snails instead.  I knew right away this wasn't the exact recipe; Grandma's used chocolate chips instead of nuts, but the yeasted milky dough looked close so I decided to give it a whirl and wing it on the filling.  Grandma's also had a simple icing on top that this recipe didn't call for.

The Settlement Cook Book, page 82.  Copyright 1976

As a first attempt, I'm pretty happy with the results.  Happy enough to write down what I did and continue to iterate until I get it right at least.  While Snails look like a cinnamon roll, they're much drier than a typical American sticky bun.  The dough is drier, almost biscuit like, and the filling shouldn't be gooey except for the oozy chocolate chips when they're fresh out of the oven. 

You may have noticed that the recipe is quite vague on some important details, like how thick or wide to roll the dough, how long to let them rise, and how long to let bake.  I did some googling for Schnecken and combined what I found on the internet to make this starting recipe:

Dough:
1 Package Active Dry Yeast
1/4 c warm tap water
1 c butter, slightly softened
5 egg yolks
3/4 c lukewarm cream
3 c flour

Filling:
1/4 c brown sugar
1/2 c chocolate chips
1/2 tsp ground cinnamon

Icing:
5 Tbsp cream
125 grams powdered sugar

Yield: 24-27 rolls (Mine made 27, but the thicker ones were better so aim for only 24)

Set the butter, eggs, and cream out on the counter for an hour or more until everything is room temperature.

When you're ready to begin, lightly stir the yeast into the warm water and put in a quiet place so it can bloom.  Cream the butter on medium-high for about 10 minutes.  Add the eggs yolks, one at a time.  They looked kind of like scrambled eggs when I decided they were done. 



Reduce the mixer speed to medium low and slowly add the cream, then the yeasty water.  I stopped to scrape the bowl fairly often.  Switch to a pastry hook and add the flour a little at a time, until it pulls away from the bowl and forms a ball.

Turn out the dough ball onto a silicone baking mat and knead a few times, then shape into a rectangle.



Using a rolling pin, roll the dough into a large rectangle.  My baking mat is 14x20 inches, and I rolled it nearly to the edges.

In a small bowl, mix the brown sugar. cinnamon, and chocolate chips, then sprinkle over the rolled dough.



Roll the dough tightly from the long side into a log.  Wrap in plastic wrap and refrigerate for an hour or so to make the dough easier to slice.



Using a sharp knife, slice the log into 1/2" rounds and place a few inches apart on a baking mat.  If not using baking mats, I would grease the pan or use parchment paper.  Place the rolls in a warm place to rise.  I let mine rise on the top of a warm oven for about 90 minutes.  Here's the before and after:
before rising
After rising.  They didn't rise much, just rounded out a bit

Bake in a 400 degree oven for 10-15 minutes or until just beginning to brown.  Transfer to wire racks to cool 3-5 minutes after removing from oven.  


Mix the cream and powdered sugar for the icing together with a whisk in a small bowl.  Lightly spread the icing on the warm Snails.


The end result was a dry but not quite crunchy confection that is not very sweet.  It's somewhere between a cinnamon roll and a shortbread cookie in texture and flavor. As I mentioned above, they were a good first attempt.  These are supposed to be dry, but the ones I cut a little on the thin side were almost too dry, and I don't think they were quite sweet enough unless I really piled on the icing.  In the future, I will try doubling the cinnamon sugar in the filling, adding a quarter cup more chocolate chips, and also experiment with using whole milk instead of heavy cream in the dough.  Most of the recipes I googled called for milk, and I'm curious to see how that changes the end result.  If you make these, let me know, especially if you grew up eating them, too.  I'm eager for feedback!



Saturday, August 20, 2016

Grandma's Recipes #25 - Corn Flakes Cookies

These aren't cookies I remember, but they do sound interesting.  I'm not a fan of raisins, but dried cranberries or cherries might work just as well.  Grandma didn't include baking temps or times, but I'd try 350 - 375 for 9 minutes to start and adjust from there.  She also didn't include mixing directions, so I included what I'd do in [gray brackets].

1 cup sugar
1/2 c lard
2 eggs
3 Tbsp sweet milk
2 c flour
1 c chopped raisins through food chopper
1 tsp soda
1/2 tsp baking powder
1/2 tsp vanilla
Corn flakes

[In small bowl, combine four, soda, baking powder.  Cream sugar and lard.  Add eggs, vanilla, and sweetened condensed milk.  Slowly mix in flour mixture.  Stir in raisins.]  Spoon out cookie dough and roll in corn flakes.  Flatten a little and bake.

Grandma's Recipes #24 - Corn Flakes Candy

Now I know where my dad got his obsession with dipping obscene amounts of random things in chocolate at Christmas.  We dipped corn flakes and cheerios and chow mien noodles and nuts, nuts, and more nuts.  Dad did not bake, but he would sit for hours with his great big bar of bakers chocolate from Fleet Farm and dip everything crunchy in the house.  It was kind of ridiculous, but I will always fondly remember little piles of chocolate haystacks covering our kitchen counter while growing up.



Corn Flakes Candy
1 1/2 lb dipping chocolate
2 squares bitter chocolate
5 cups cornflakes
Hunk butter.  


Grandma's Recipes #23 - Freezer Corn

I remember Grandma pulling this out of the freezer for lunch when I'd stay home sick from school.  It looks like an efficient way to preserve fresh corn all winter long, although I have no idea what "barn salt" is.


20 cups corn cut off the cob
1 cup sugar
1/4 cup salt (barn salt)

Mix the sugar and salt together and then mix with corn.  Let it stand for awhile until it's all moist.  Put in containers and freeze.

Grandma's Recipes #22 - Broken Glass Torte

Broken glass torte is a staple of Northeast Wisconsin potlucks.  It looks pretty in a bowl, and can be made with the jello flavors of your choice, although I think lime, cherry, orange, and lemon are most popular.  Grandma had two recipes for this classic in her box, which are very, very similar.



Broken Glass Torte Large Bowl
Graham cracker crust 11 x 15 pan
3 small packages jello - red, yellow, and green (top) or orange, red, and green (bottom)
1 can crushed pineapple w/ 1/2 c pineapple juice
1/2 cup cold water
1 package gelatin
2 packages Dream Whip or 1/2 pint of whipped cream
2/3 c sugar

Dissolve each package of jello in 1 1/2 c boiling water.  Put in large bowl (bottom) | flat dish (top). When set, cut in small squares.  Pour 1/2 pineapple juice out of can of pineapple.  Boil pineapple juice, cold water, and gelatin to dissolve.  Whip 2 packages dream whip or 1/2 pint of whipped cream with 3/4 c sugar.  Mix cream, juice mixture, jello and crushed pineapple by hand.

Grandma's Recipes #21 - Big Batch Brownies


Big Batch Brownies
Beat together: 
  • 1/2 c vegetable oil
  • 1 c sugar
  • 4 eggs
Add
  • 1 c flour
  • pinch of salt
  • 16 oz can Hershey's chocolate syrup
  • 1/2 c chopped nuts
Bake in a 10" x 15" greased and floured jelly roll pan 30-35 minutes at 350 degrees.  

Grandma's Recipes #20 - Butter Horns

At first I thought this was a cookie recipe, but on closer inspection I think it's a homemade crescent roll dough.  


1 c     cooled boiled milk
3/4 c  lard
3 Tbsp sugar
3 eggs, beaten
4 c flour
3 tsp yeast

Mix sugars, flour, shortening like pie and beat eggs, milk, yeast.  Set in ice box over night.  In morning, roll out like noodles.  Roll like horns.  Let raise.  Bake in 375 oven for 20-25 min.  Brush with butter.

Grandma's Recipes #19 - Caramel Frosting

I'm not sure what the recipe on the left side of this card is for.  It doesn't seem like a merengue because it uses whole eggs, not just the whites.  It's not a cookie or a cake because there's no flour.  It will remain a mystery.  The "carmel" frosting on the right hand side looks delicious though, and just may grace the next cake I make.



Caramel Frosting
1 1/2 c   brown sugar
3/4 c      milk
2 Tbsp   butter
              vanilla

Cook sugar and milk till it forms balls.  Add butter and vanilla.  

Grandma's Recipes #18 - Cherry Jumbo Torte



Cherry Jumbo Torte
2 cans sour cherries and juice
1 dry white or yellow cake mix
3/4c butter, melted
1 cup pecans, cut
Whipped cream

Put cherries in a 9x13" ungreased pan.  Put dry cake mix on top.  Top with pecans.  Pour melted butter over the top.  Bake at 350 for 50 minutes.  Serve with whipped cream.

Grandma's Recipes #17 - Chocomint Dessert


With a name like "Chocomint," you might expect a dessert with some kind of peppermint in it.  While this dessert appears to look like an Andes Candy with the green filling and chocolate wafer cookie crust, it is, in fact, a lime and chocolate dessert.  Not mint.  Lime. Because nothing says, "Mmm good" like chocolate pudding, Oreo cookies, and lime jello.  



Chocomint Dessert
2 c     finely crushed chocolate wafers
1/2 c  melted butter
13 oz Richwhip topping
3 oz pkg lime jello (lemon)
8 oz   cream cheese
1 c    sugar
several drops green food coloring (yellow) (optional)
1 4.5 oz pkg instant chocolate pudding
1 1/3 c milk

Combine crumbs and butter and reserve 1/3 cup for topping.  Press remainder in 13x9" pan.  Whip the Richwhip topping.  Meanwhile, dissolve jello in 1 cup boiling water; let stand 30 minutes.  Beat together cream cheese and sugar.  Gradually beat in jello and food coloring.  Fold in cheese mixture into the Richwhip topping.  Spread half over crust, chill 1 hour.  Keep remaining mixture at room temperature.  Beat together pudding mix and milk.  Let stand 2 minutes.  Spoon over layer in pan.  Top with remaining cheese mixture, sprinkle crumbs over.  Chill.  

Grandma's Recipes #16 - Biscuits

No Bisquick here!  This biscuit recipe calls for cake yeast and lard.  I don't buy lard often, but now I know what to do with the leftovers next time I make Grandma's Gingerbread Cookies.  Unfortunately, this recipe doesn't say how long to let the biscuits rise, what temperature to bake them at, or how long.  I also assume they need to be kneaded, but I can't find a recipe that's similar enough to compare these to, and I don't remember Grandma making anything other than the dinner rolls you buy as a large tray in the bread aisle.


Biscuits
1 tsp              sugar
1 [pkg? tsp?] cake yeast
1/4 c             warm water
1 c                boiling water
2 Tbsp          lard
1/4 c             sugar
3/4                tsp salt
2                   eggs
4 c                flour

Pour boiling water over the lard, [1/4 c] sugar, and salt.  Let cook.  Dissolve yeast and [1 tsp] sugar in [1/4 c warm] water.  Put in yeast and eggs.  Mix the flour mix and let rise.

Thursday, August 18, 2016

Grandma's Recipes #15 - Blueberry Torte

This recipe is pretty easy to customize by swapping out the canned blueberry filling for any other pie filling of your choice.  I definitely remember it being made with cherries.


Blue Berry Torte
Graham cracker crust
8oz cream cheese
1 c powdered sugar
2 packages Dream Whip

[Make a graham cracker crust in a 9x13" pan.]  Mix cream cheese and powdered sugar.  Blend with 1 package of Dream Whip.  Pour on crust.  Put on 1 can of blueberry pie filling.  Pour on the mixture then mix another package of Dream Whip on top.  Put [graham cracker] crumbs on top.

Grandma's Recipes #14 - Sweet and Sour Beets

I remember sitting at the kitchen table with my dad going through the recipe box asking him if there were any he remembered.  This was one he pulled out.  He said he hated them.  My dad was never a fan of beets.  I, however, love them and think this recipe sounds intriguing.  It's beet season at the farmer's market now, so I'd love to put these on the table next week.  That'll be difficult though because Grandma didn't include any cooking instructions.  I don't know if this is her recipe for canning beets or if this is a sauce that she put over canned or fresh beets.  Googling brings up similar recipes that use canned beets, and that sounds familiar from what I remember of the conversation with Dad.  Either way, I think beets are tasty and I like the idea of adding some Chinese 5 Spice powder to give them an Asian flair.  That's definitely NOT the spices Grandma had in mind, but I will likely experiment with this one and report back.


Sweet and Sour Beets
2 c       vinegar
1 c       water
1-1/2 c sugar
Salt to taste (1/4 tsp)
Spices


Grandma's Recipes #13 - Cream Puff

I have made these and they are fantastic.  Unfortunately, I can't find the picture of them.  The recipe is for the shells only.  I think Grandma filled them with traditional plain whipped cream.  I did a chocolate orange cream and then drizzled them with melted chocolate and they were divine.  They're putsy to make and you need to keep them cold or the cream will melt all over and make a mess though, so they do require some planning ahead.  They're definitely worth the effort though.  It's been over a year since I made them.  I believe I baked them at the lower temperature for longer because that was clearly Grandma's note, where the rest of the recipe must have originally come from a friend.


Cream Puff
1 c    flour
1/4    tsp salt
1 c    boiling water
1/2 c butter
1/2 c lard
4 eggs

Add the salt, butter, and lard to water.  When this boils, add all the flour stirring constantly until mixture leaves the pan.  Remove from the heat, add unbeaten eggs, one at a time, beating continually.  Drop by teaspoon on buttered cookie sheet.  Bake at 425 for 15 minutes or 325 for 25 minutes.

Grandma's Recipes #12 - Banana Cake

This recipe calls for sour milk, which most modern recipes would just refer to as buttermilk.  If you don't have buttermilk in the fridge, add 1 tbsp vinegar or lemon juice to a scant cup of regular milk, preferably whole milk.  As is unfortunately so common in Grandma's recipes, ingredients or amounts are missing.  In this case, the bananas are completely missing from the ingredient list.  I did some Googling to try and find similar recipes, and I would suggest starting with 2.  As always, [gray brackets] are my additions.


Banana Cake
1/2 c    shortening
1/2 c    sugar
2          eggs
[2        bananas]
1 tsp    vanilla
2 c       flour
1 stp    soda
1/8 tsp salt
1/2 c   sour milk
1/2 c   chopped nuts

Cream shortening and sugar.  Add eggs.  Add bananas.  Add dry ingredients alternately with milk.  Fold in nuts.  

Bake at 350 for 45 to 50 minutes [in a 9x13" pan.  Frost with cream cheese or chocolate frosting].  

Grandma's Recipes #11 - Frozen Beans

This one is definitely in Grandma's handwriting, which means it is nearly impossible to decipher.


Frozen Beans
Cook in water for about 10 minutes, then take them out and put them in ice water.  Let [cool?  drain?] good then put in jar without anything and freeze 'em.  Add [pork?]

Grandma's Recipes #10 - Beans!

There are two identical canned bean recipes in Grandma's little tin with very different handwriting.  Neither recipe specifies what type of bean, and I don't know what kind she grew in her garden.  I think this recipe is for green or yellow beans, and doing a little googling seems to confirm that others have used vinegar and salt to can those varieties.  Grandma moved off the farm when I was six, so I don't have a lot of memories of it.  Most of the garden memories I do have revolve around heaping bowls of snap peas that we'd eat while watching Days of Our Lives and shooting Stefano and John Black with a suction cup gun (something like this, but covered in the slobber of 7 grandchildren who were all convinced that licking the suction cups made them stick to the TV better).   I've never canned, but given how prolific my green bean plants were this year and how much tater tot casserole my husband can eat, this is one I may need to try.


Beans
4 c         water
4 tsp      salt
4 Tbl     vinegar
3 quarts beans

Boil this for 7 minutes.  Pack beans in a jar and add the brine.

Grandma's Recipes #9 - Apple Torte with Meringue Topping

This is another recipe that I don't remember ever having, but it's been clearly well-loved.  This is another one to come back to this fall.  Unfortunately, the bake time in the last instruction is really, really difficult to make out.  I think it's 20 minutes, but will gladly take input from others if they're able to make it out.  


2 c           flour
2 Tblsp    sugar
1 c           butter
Dash        salt
12            large apples sliced
1 c           sugar
1 tsp        cinnamon
2 regular or 1 large vanilla pudding
5 or 6       egg whites
1/2 c        sugar

Combine flour, 2 Tblsp sugar, butter, salt.  Spread in 9x13" pan.  Combine apples, 1 cup sugar, and cinnamon.  Put over crust.  Bake at 375 for 45 minutes.  Remove from oven.  Cook pudding following directions.  Pour over apples.  Beat egg whites into stiff peaks.  Add 1/2 c sugar, 1 teaspoon at a time.  Spread over pudding.  Return to oven.  Bake 20(?) minutes or until brown.

Thursday, August 11, 2016

Grandma's Recipes #8 - Apple Dessert

I haven't tried this recipe yet, but it resembles an apple crisp without the oatmeal.  It sounds tasty, so I may come back to it this fall once apples are in season and update with a picture of how this turns out.


Apple Dessert
6 or 8 apples (peeled and sliced)
3/4 c brown sugar
1 tsp cinnamon
3/4 c sugar
1/2 c butter
3/4 c flour

Slice apples into a 9 inch baking pan.  Sprinkle with brown sugar and cinnamon.  Cream sugar and butter; add flour and mix then cover apples with this mixture.  Bake at 350 until the apples are cooked and the top is brown.

Grandma's Recipes #7 - Angel Lush

This is another one that I'm not sure how to reproduce.  It calls for pudding, but I have no idea how much of what flavor.  My guess is one box of vanilla.  Where does the pineapple go?  And finally, is it Cool Whip or Kool Whip?  The recipe card doesn't seem to know either.


Angel Lush
1 can of ?? crushed pineapple undrained
1 cup thawed cool whip

Mix dry pudding in medium bowl.  Gently stir in Kool Whip.