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Lemon Swirl Frosting
1 package (3 oz.) cream cheese, softened
1/2 cup soft butter
4 cups confectioner's sugar
1 tsp vanilla
2-3 tsp. grated lemon peel fresh or #01933 Watkins Lemon Peel)
about 3 tbsp lemon juice
Beat all ingredients until frosting is fluffy and of spreading
consistency. If necessary, stir in additional lemon juice, 1 tsp. at a
time.
Frosts a 9 x 13 cake or fills and frosts 2 8 or 9 inch layers.
www.watkinsonline.com/hutto
sunnywatkinsgirl@aol.com
Order: 765-271-9041
#21182 Mexican Soup and Seasoning Base can be used as a seasoning base to
spice up meat for tacos, or turn ordinary tomato sauce into enchilada
sauce. This soup base is on sale for the month of January.
Please see my website for the entire Watkins Catalog and what is on
sale.
Hey everyone, just thought i would share one of our favorite "warm
season" recipes. In the DFW area, it's been pretty mild this year. We just
went on a picnic last week.
This is a fun recipe that my daughter likes to help make. Sometimes we
make up all the ingredients and take them on a picnic for a different take
on the sandwich thing.
Dinner in a Cone
Make flour tortilla cones by making foil shaped cones out of Reynolds Wrap
foil. Mist tortillas w/ water and wrap around foil cone. Wrap a thin strip
of foil around middle of cone to hold in place. Bake at 300* for 25
minutes or so until toasted.
Meanwhile, mix:
1 cup chopped cooked chicken
1/3 cup corn (frozen or grilled)
1/4 cup chopped scallions
2 T Sweet Baby Ray's BBQ sauce (or your favorite brand)
Set to the side and in another bowl mix"
2 cups finely shredded lettuce or cabbage ( I use Romaine)
1/4 cup thin sliced red onion
2 T minced green apple
2 T mayo
1 t. cumin
Mix all well. Alternate filling ones with chicken and veggies. May
sprinkle with cheese if desired. Makes for a fun picnic lunch especially
for younger kids. My sister skips the making of the cones and just uses
ice cream cones ( the cake ones, not sugar) but I don't think they taste
as good.
Hope you all have a great day.
Lisa (East Texas)
Sue in the Jan. 13 n/l asked for a TNT chicken soup. This is my
version. Hope you enjoy it as we do. Let
me know Sue if you do or do not like it.
Barb in OKC
Barb's Chicken Soup
Buy 1 rotisserie chicken. Put into small pieces. Slice one whole onion
thinly. No need to dice. Sauté onion in small amount of olive oil. Sauté
until onions are very limp. Two to three minutes before they are finished
sautéing, add 40 cloves (grin) garlic, as much as you like.
We use the minced garlic you can buy in a jar at w-m. Add 3-4 15-16oz cans
saltless chicken broth and some chicken base mixed with water.
Note: Chicken and chicken base have plenty of salt. Add carrots, I used
carrot sticks; can use carrot chips or merely cut your carrots as you like
them. Add lots of cut celery. Slice celery in small pieces; don't dice. I
maybe used 4-6 ribs of celery. Add some more water. Taste the water as you
go along and make sure it's to your liking. Let soup simmer for a few
hours with a lid. Stir occasionally. At the end of cooking the soup, add
7-10 oz fideo pasta or vermicelli. I used 1 1/2 pkgs. of 7 oz pkgs. These
are thin and approx 1/2" long; great in this soup. Add 2-3 tb dried
parsley. Cook for approx. 9 minutes to cook noodles. I think this tastes
really good the next day, but pretty fine the same day too.
Hi Nancy
I was wondering if anyone had a simple recipe to use up some cream
cheese. I was looking for a main meal rather than a dessert. Thank You
Colleen
Hi there,
I just had to take a minute to write and tell you how wonderful I think
your recipe letter is! I am a very new member, just got my first email
letter today and loved it. There is so much information and recipes in it,
that I know it will take me all day just to read thru it and visit all the
places that are mentioned. : 0 It reads like a family newsletter and that
makes it even more special. I plan on sending my sisters the info for
this, I know they will want to join too.
Thank you so much for spending your time doing this for everyone, its the
best homey recipe site that I have ever seen.
Jan M
Three Bean Salad And Dressing
1 can each baby lima beans, peas, French style beans
1 sm. jar pimientos
1 sm. onion, chopped fine
4 stalks celery, chopped fine
Dressing
2/3 c. sugar
1/4 c. oil
1 1/2 tsp. salt
1/2 c. vinegar
Drain lima beans, peas and French style beans. Mix.
DRESSING: Heat to a boil, cool. Pour over mix and let stand
overnight. Drain before serving
Lisa
Good morning Nancy,
This is for Bobbie/Frankfort/IL who is looking for a Greek vinaigrette
salad dressing. Our favorite is the 2nd one that I mix and use on a Greek
Salad. We try to have this at least 2 times a month in the summer. It’s
great with a good French or Italian bread to sop up the dressing! Sorry
this is so long, Nancy, but these are great salad/dressing recipes and
quick and easy!
Chris in NM
Vinaigrette Dressing
1/2 tsp. oregano
1/2 tsp. dry English mustard
1/2 tsp. sugar
1/2 tsp. salt
1/4 tsp. freshly ground black pepper
1 c. olive oil
1/3 c. white wine vinegar
2 tbsp. water
2 tsp. fresh lemon juice
2 cloves garlic, peeled & crushed
1 tsp. Worcestershire sauce
Place the dry ingredients in food blender or in a medium sized food
processor. Grind for a few moments. Add the liquids and whip to an
emulsion, or until it is thick. Store in refrigerator for at least 1 1/2
hours before using. Makes 1 1/2 cups dressing. Will keep for several days
in refrigerator. Chris in NM
http://www.nancyskitchen.com/
Greek Salad Dressing recipe
3/4 cup olive oil
1/4 cup red wine or white vinegar
1/2 teaspoon salt
1/4 teaspoon oregano
1/4 teaspoon freshly-ground black pepper
Put all ingredients in small jar; shake thoroughly. Chill before serving.
Chris in NM
Tomato Salad With Feta And Olives
Be sure to serve this with thick slices of good bread to soak up the
dressing.
5 large tomatoes (about 3 pounds), cored, sliced – I use Roma
1 red onion, halved, thinly sliced
1/2 cup olive oil
1/2 cup red wine vinegar
1/4 cup chopped fresh parsley
3 large garlic cloves, finely chopped
4 ounces feta cheese (about 1 generous cup), crumbled
1/3 cup brine-cured olives, preferably Kalamata
Overlap tomato and onion slices on large platter. Whisk oil, vinegar,
parsley and garlic in small bowl. Season to taste with salt and pepper.
Pour over salad. Let stand at room temperature 1 hour or cover and
refrigerate up to 3 hours, basting occasionally with dressing. Sprinkle
salad with cheese and garnish with olives, if desired. *I put this in a
bowl and cover it in the fridge till ready to serve. The longer it “stews”
the better it is! Perfect for a summer lunch or picnic! Serves 6
http://recipegoldmine.com/
Chris in NM
Tomato & Onion Salad T & T
4 Roma tomatoes, sliced thinly
1/2 sweet onion, sliced thinly
3/4 to 1 c. small cubed mozzarella
Red Wine Vinaigrette*
Mix tomatoes, onion and cheese thoroughly. Drizzle with vinaigrette, cover
and refrigerate for 1 hour before serving.
*1/4 c. olive oil
2 tbl. red wine or raspberry vinegar
1 - 2 cloves, crushed
salt & pepper to taste
Mix well and drizzle over salad. Chris in NM
If you want to jazz it up a bit, use red onion instead of the sweet onion
and add salad shrimp. There! You have a full meal! Just serve crusty
French or Italian baguettes along side! Yummy!
http://www.recipe-recipes-message-board.com/
Chris in NM
Regarding the name Mert, I grew up with a girl named Marilyn that we
called Mert. I can't remember how she got that name. I also knew some
girls names Myrtle, but we never called them Mert. My goodness what
memories that brings back. I am pushing 70 really hard.
Marge in OH
Chicken Pecan
4 to 6 chicken breasts
1 c. Bisquick
1 tsp. salt
1 tsp. paprika
1/2 tsp. poultry seasoning
1/2 c. pecans, finely chopped
1/2 c. evaporated milk
1 stick margarine, melted
Skin chicken and set aside. Combine dry ingredients. Dip chicken
in evaporated milk and roll in dry mixture. Place chicken in baking
dish so that pieces do not touch. Pour melted margarine over top.
Bake at 350 degrees for 1 1/2 hours or until chicken is tender.
Lisa
Blueberry Muffins
1 egg
1 c. vanilla yogurt
3 tbsp. butter, melted
2-1/2 c. Bisquick
1 c. blueberries
In medium bowl, beat egg. Blend in yogurt and butter. Add biscuit mix,
stir until just moistened. Stir in blueberries. Fill 12
greased or paper-lined muffin cups 2/3 full. Bake at 400 degrees for 15
minutes. Remove to wire rack immediately. Serve warm.
Lisa
Beef Vegetable Soup
1 lb. ground beef, browned
1 can tomato soup
1 can vegetable soup
1 can bean and bacon soup
3 med. potatoes, cubed
5 carrots, diced
1 onion, chopped
Cook potatoes, carrots, and onion until tender. Add hamburger,
soups and water as desired. Add pepper to taste. Heat through and serve.
Lisa
Thank you to all that helped me with the place card site.
MC Fl
Hello Nancy & Gang,
A big thank you to Doris, Lisa, and Sandy for the recipe saving/software
info. I will investigate this once my little assistant here jas returned
home (Tootie).
For Sue-Here are my TNT Chicken Noodle Soups-the first one is my original
for 20 years, but while Tootie and I are both sick this week, I threw
Chick Chick together from the pantry and it is a keeper!! Serve with hot,
crusty bread, and you got a good meal!!
Mimi's Chicken Noodle Soup.
2 chicken breasts-cleaned and cut into thirds
(cooks easier and shreds better)
water
2 celery ribs with leaves-chopped
2 carrots-peeled-chopped
1 large onion-chopped
2 garlic cloves-minced fine
1 bell pepper-quatered
1 T Ms Dash Table Blend
4 chicken bouillon cubes
2 T fresh or dried parsley
salt & pepper
1 lb linguini pasta-broken into thirds or smaller if desired
**I have also added mushrooms to this if I needed to use them up-YUM!
Put all ingredients except pasta into a stock pot, filling pot 3/4 full of
water. Bring soup to a boil on high, reduce to med low and stir. Put a lid
on it leaving room for steam to escape (the trapped steam will make
chicken tender), and cook for 45 minutes at a light simmer (I do this step
earlier in the day and turn it off, cover it and just leave it alone for
at least 2 hours-you will have the most amazing taste or put a double
batch of this in the crock pot and use other half of chicken for another
dish) or add pasta and cook until pasta is tender-cut or shred chicken if
desired.
*Chop veggies as fine as you like in the soup.
Chick Chick Soup
8 c water
12 oz can chicken with broth-flaked
4 chicken bouillon cubes
1 T parsley
1 t onion powder
1/2 t celery seed
1 t Ms Dash Table Blend
2 T butter
salt & pepper to taste
8 oz linguine or medium egg noodles-broken up or 1 1/2 c raw rice
Put all ingredients into a Dutch oven and cook until pasta (or rice) is
done. Excellent cold fighting soup!!
Note: This was very good and I will be making it again!
French Onion Rolls
8 oz French Onion Dip
1/4 c milk
1 T fine parsley or chives
1 t garlic powder
dash of salt
1/8 t black pepper
2 c baking mix
2 T melted butter + dash poppy seeds
Whisk first 6 ingredients smooth. Stir in baking mix and divide into 12
equal portions. Drop on a sprayed baking sheet (or muffin tins) and brush
with poppy seed butter. Bake 7-8 minutes until golden-let stand 5 minutes
on pan-remove and eat warm with soup. These are great re heated in
microwave-wrap in damp paper towel and nuke 3-4 seconds. Make 12.
Note: I have added cayenne and/or cheese for a different taste.
Mimi & Tootie ^..^
For Mimi who is looking for recipe software, I recommend this site.
http://www.morriscookbooks.com/order/order_form.asp They send you
a free kit that contains a cd program for Typensave, which allows you to
print out your recipes or save on a disk. It is for fundraising, but also
for keepsake cookbooks, and best of all, it is free! You can also download
Typensave online from the site! Hope this helps!
Lindsey in da U.P.
Hello Nancy and the kitty gang. How I look forward to the newsletter. I
would like to request some Honey recipes, any kind at all. I went to Sam's
and bought a big jar of honey and now need some recipes to use it
up. Thanks so much.
Roz in Indy
For Carol in Maryland in reference to the IHOP Carrot Cake Pancakes. I
searched for a clone several months ago after eating these wonderful
pancakes. They are basically an oatmeal batter pancake with Walnuts,
Carrots, Apples & Raisins added in. I don't have the exact recipes I found
at that time, but I did find several close when I searched the web several
months back.
Susan in GA
Dream Pie
1 c. flaked coconut
1 can (15- 1/4 oz.) crushed pineapple, in its own juice
1 c. egg substitute
6 packets equal
1 c. low-fat milk
1 tsp. vanilla
1/2 c. reduced fat Bisquick mix
Spray a 9 inch pie pan with non-stick cooking spray. Sprinkle
coconut over bottom of pan. Drain pineapple, reserving juice;
sprinkle pineapple over coconut. Set aside. Put eggs and Sweet One
in a blender and blend well. Add milk to reserved pineapple juice
and pour into blender. Add baking mix and vanilla to ingredients in
blender. Blend on medium speed until well mixed. Pour mixture over
pineapple in pie pan. Bake at 350 degrees for about 35 minutes or
until a knife inserted into center of pie comes out clean.
Refrigerate until served.
Yield: 8 servings:
Calories: 163; Fat: 6 gm.; Protein: 5 gm.; Carbohydrate: 18 gm.;
Sodium: 167 mg. Cholesterol: 2 mg.
Weight Watcher Points - 4 Points
Source: http://www.equal.com
Cucumber Tomato Salad
Makes 6 servings
Weight Watcher Points - 1 Point
1/2 cup rice vinegar*
3 tablespoons Equal® Spoonful**
3 cups unpeeled 1/4-inch thick sliced cucumbers, quartered (about 2
medium)
2 cups chopped tomato (about 1 large)
1/2 cup chopped red onion
Salt and pepper to taste
* Distilled white vinegar may be substituted for rice vinegar;
** May substitute 4-1/2 packets Equal sweetener
Preparation
Combine vinegar and Equal®. Add cucumbers, tomato and onion; mix well.
Season to taste with salt and pepper. Refrigerate, covered, 1 to 2 hours
to allow flavors to blend.
Cooking Tip
Consult the Equal Equivalency Chart when using Equal packets in
recipes instead of table sugar. One Equal packet is as sweet as two
teaspoons of sugar.
Calories 27 protein 1g carbohydrate 5g fat 0g cholesterol 0
mg sodium 7 mg
Source: http://www.equal.com
Crockpot Pork Chops
Makes 4 (3 oz.) servings
Weight Watcher's Points: 5
1 (10 oz.) can reduced-fat cream of mushroom soup
2 tbs. reduced-sodium soy sauce
1 (12 oz.) can Diet Pepsi
4 (3 oz.) pork chops, trimmed well (or substitute a pork roast)
1/8 teaspoon salt
1/8 teaspoon pepper
Mix the soup, soy sauce, and Diet Pepsi together in the bottom of the
Crockpot. Place the chops in the mixture and cook on high med.
or High for 4-6 hrs. Meat will be very tender.
Per serving: cal 213, fat 9g, protein 25g, carbohydrate 6g,
cholesterol 66mg, sodium 434mg
Crockpot Pepper Steak
Serves 6
Weight Watcher Points - 1 point
1-1/2 pounds flank steak -- thinly sliced
1 large onion - slices
2 bell peppers -- any color sliced
2 tablespoons soy sauce
2 tablespoons sesame oil
1 tablespoon brown sugar
3 cloves garlic - sliced
Spray 3, 1/2 qt. crock with Pam. Put everything in the crock, mix
well. Cook on low 8-9 hours.
Per Serving: 269 Calories; 4g Fat; 23g Protein; 7g Carbohydrate; 1g
Dietary Fiber; 58mg Cholesterol; 424mg Sodium
For Judy (Alaska) in the 1/13 newsletter. Thanks for the Sock-It-To-Me
recipe. I have had/made this cake and the pound cake I am looking for
wasn't quite the same. Also, thanks to Andee in the same newsletter. The
cake I had was definitely a pound cake and not a coffee cake, however,
your coffee cake ideas sound good. I'll have to give them a try. I'll also
use the Sock-It-To-Me again as I like most anything with cinnamon and I
have two grandsons that are with me every-other weekend that also like
cinnamon. They frequently ask for cinnamon toast for breakfast or cinnamon
popcorn (just sprinkle cinnamon sugar on hot buttered popped corn) for an
afternoon snack. Either of these would be a good substitute.
Oma in LA
Dearest Nancy & Readers,
In the January 13th. newsletter, Sue (no
location given) asked what store brand of chicken soup is the healthiest,
with the lowest salt & fat content, AND tastes good. In the Jan. 2007
CONSUMER REPORTS magazine (p.8), they conducted blind tastings of 26
chicken soups & winnowed out those with obvious flaws such as tinny taste
or bitter herbs. That left 8 contenders for super soup (including
refrigerated, dry and canned. They also state that most of the soups are
low in fat but high in sodium. The soups are listed in order of overall
quality, from EXCELLENT to VERY GOOD to GOOD. There is also a breakdown of
cost, calories, fat (g), & sodium (mg), as well as a Comments column. Only
one falls under excellent, The Original SoupMan's Chicken Vegetable
(refrigerated); it's pricey-one cup costs about $3.00: "Like stew.
Flavorful, with mild, currylike spices, slight heat. Chicken, lots of
various vegetables, no pasta."
I'll just mention 2 more, from middle category, which are both very good
but different. Bear Creek is a flavorful broth, a bit "hot," with
vegetables & al dente pasta. It's even better if you add chicken. Lipton
Soup Secrets, the CR's "Best Buy," is tasty but basic (includes dry
chicken & pasta; no vegetables).
I'll work on her other request for a recipe for homemade Chicken Soup; my
Mom's recipe is the best, like everybody thinks their Mom's is the best,
but it really is out of this world!
Susan/Superior, WI.
Mushroom Salisbury Steak
1 can condensed mushroom soup
1/2 cup fine dry bread crumbs
1 egg, slightly beaten
1 1/2 pounds ground beef
1/4 cup onion, chopped
1/3 cup water
Mix thoroughly 1/4 cup soup, beef, bread crumbs, onion and egg. Shape into
6 patties. In skillet, brown patties, pour off fat. Blend
in remaining soup and water. Cover; cook over low heat 20 minutes or until
done. Stir occasionally. Makes 6
servings.
Sue
Cream Soda Cake
1 box yellow cake mix
1 cup boiling water
1 small package strawberry Jell-O
1 (12 ounce) can cream soda
Bake cake mix according to package instructions. After cake is done,
use cup of boiling water with Jell-O and cream soda, then punch
holes in cake with a fork. Pour mixture over cake.
Icing: Mix one cup of milk, small instant vanilla pudding, and small
tub of Cool Whip. Blend well, spread on cake.
You may use any flavor of cola that you wish. One of the best I've
tasted (other than this one) was made with Sprite and lemon Jello.
Linda NM
Lemon Crumb Dessert
2 pkgs (3 oz. each) Lemon Gelatin
1-1/2 cups sugar
1/4 teaspoon salt
2 cups boiling water
1 1/2 teaspoons grated lemon rind
2/3 cup lemon juice
3-1/3 cups (2 tall cans) undiluted evaporated milk, chilled
2/3 cup melted butter or margarine
4 cups vanilla wafer or graham cracker crumbs
Dissolve gelatin, sugar and salt in boiling water. Add lemon rind and
juice. Chill until very thick. Add evaporated mild and whip
until fluffy. Meanwhile, mix butter and vanilla wafer crumbs. Press firmly
into TWO 11x7x1 1/2 inch or 9-inch square pans or FOUR 8-inch pie pans,
reserving about 1/3 cup for garnish. Spoon gelatin mixture into pans.
Sprinkle with reserved crumbs. Chill until firm. Makes 24 servings.
Linda NM
To Kim in the Jan 13 newsletter you had homemade rice-a-roni with beef
granules. My question is when preparing the dish you have add a packet. Is
this mix for one packet or how much of the mix is one packet? Sounds very
good and I would like to try it.
Now for Patricia in Kentucky who has a connection with the name Mert. You
don't hear it often and it is also my nickname since 4th grade. My real
name is Murial, which is Muriel with an "a". It sounds pretty when
pronounced correctly, but one little classmate could not say it right so
he just said "Mert". Well, the rest is history. LOL. Thanks for
commenting..
Mert in WI.
This is in answer to a request from Sue, in the January 14th
Newsletter. She wanted a TNT recipe for Chicken Soup, so I am enclosing
mine...lots of ingredients make a rich, hearty soup and the bonus is a
delectable boiled chicken which falls off the bone and is tender never
chewy (the secret is in keeping the soup at a simmer, not a boil).
Barbie S
Chicken Soup Deluxe
1 small whole chicken, from 2 lbs to 3 1/2 pounds
1 med size onion, peeled and cut almost thru
1 med size leek, light green and white parts only, cut to fit pot
6 med or 4 large carrots, peeled and sliced into rounds or thick sticks
1 to 2 ribs of celery, with leaves left on, cut into rounds
1 small or half a large white turnip, peeled and sliced
1 med to large parsnip, peeled and cut into thick sticks
2 to 3 cloves of peeled garlic, smashed
about 10 pepper corns
fresh parsley, rinsed, about a small handful
fresh dill, 3 or 4 stems, rinsed
In a large deep pot, like a stock pot, set whole chicken inside, breast
side up and fill with cold water almost up to top of breast (I measured:
in my pot it was about 10 cups of water), set on high heat and bring to a
boil.
Lower heat to a simmer, begin skimming all the scum off the water: the
more you skim off, the clearer the soup will be.
Put in peppercorns, garlic, onion, celery, parsnip, turnip, carrots, leek
(all the veggies except the dill). Tie the parsley together with white
thread and put into pot. Simmer covered, for about one to 1.5 hours.
Adding the veggies brings the level of the water up. Do not boil, the
chicken will be dry.
Put in the dill (I use a tea ball so the dill doesn't get all over the
chicken), taste the soup...it will probably need about 2 tsp of salt, more
if you like. Simmer covered, another 5, 10 minutes.
(If you like matzoh balls, the box of matzoh meal has a good recipe. We
like very fine noodles.)
Serve piping hot and enjoy...Bon appetit!
In the January 13th newsletter,
Karen, SW Arkansas had a delicious sounding recipe for Strawberry Cream
Cake, and said it was hard for the layers to stay together, so I was
wondering if it wouldn't be possible to bake it in a 15 x 10 inch (jelly
roll size) pan, and just combine the topping ingredients and spread it
over the top of the cake and then put the strawberries over that? I
sometimes do that, if have to take a cake to a potluck, as is just easier
to tote and serve from a sheet pan, and less fuss!
To Betty in Maine I also couldn't find the milk chocolate & raspberry
swirl chips before the holidays this year, but I didn't look on the
website. We love anything raspberry, so hope they didn't discontinue them.
Maybe I will call the Nestle's Company and inquire. For you candy makers,
here is another quick and delicious microwave candy, that I make a lot,
and get many requests for.
Microwave Leche Quemada
(the name means "burned milk" in Spanish)
2 cups pecans (broken in pieces)
1/2 cup butter
2/3 cup brown sugar, packed
1 can (14 oz.) sweetened condensed milk
1 tsp. vanilla
Place pecan pieces on large glass plate and microwave on high for 8
minutes, stirring at 2 minute intervals. Set aside. In a 8 cup measure,
microwave butter on high for 1 minute. Stir in brown sugar and milk until
blended. Microwave on high for 7 minutes, stirring at 2 minute intervals.
Beat with wooden spoon until stiff, about 5 minutes. Stir in vanilla and
roasted pecans. Spread into a 8 inch square pan, that has been lined with
foil and lightly buttered. Chill until firm. Cut into squares. Makes 1-1/2
lbs.
Judy (in Alaska)
Sausage Cheese Bread
1 loaf of frozen bread, thawed
1/2 lb. sausage, cooked & drained
1 c. hot pepper cheese
1 egg
1/2 tbsp. parsley flakes
1 c. shredded Mozzarella cheese
Roll bread out flat into rectangle. Layer sausage (cooked and drained),
egg-well beaten, 1/2 tablespoon parsley flakes, Mozzarella cheese, hot
pepper cheese. Roll layered dough up jelly roll fashion. Secure ends. Tuck
all seams on bottom.
Bake 50 to 60 minutes at 350 degrees. Cover with foil last 15 minutes to
prevent over browning. Pepperoni may be substituted for sausage. You can
add onion, peppers, mushrooms, etc...
Tona in Bama
Chicken Pecan Salad On Pineapple Rings
2 c. cubed cooked chicken
1 c. sliced celery
2 tbsp. chopped pimento
1/2 c. roasted pecans
1/2 c. mayonnaise
2 tsp. lemon juice
Salt and pepper, to taste
4 fresh (or canned and drained) pineapple rings
Crisp salad greens
Combine chicken, celery, pimento, all but 2 tablespoons of the pecans,
mayonnaise, and lemon juice. Sprinkle with salt and pepper. Place
pineapple on salad greens and top with chicken salad and sprinkle with
remaining pecans. Makes 4 pretty servings.
Tona in Bama
Vienna Cheese Bread
1 lg. loaf French bread
8-12 oz. sliced Swiss cheese
2 tbsp. onion, minced
1 tbsp. dry mustard
1/2 tsp. Lawry's seasoned salt
1 tsp. lemon juice
1/2 lb. butter (2 sticks)
1 tsp. garlic powder
1 tbsp. poppy seeds
Cut the bread in criss crosses. Do not cut all the way through the bread.
Fill the slits with cheese. Mix melted butter with other ingredients.
Spoon into slits and across the top. Wrap in foil. Bake at 350 degrees for
35 to 40 minutes.
Tona in Bama
Chicken A La Can Can
1 can cream of chicken soup
1 can cream of celery soup
1 can water
1 can Minute Rice (use soup can to measure)
1 can French fried onions
1 cooked chicken, cut up
Combine soups, water and chicken. Add rice. Stir to mix. Bring quickly to
a boil. Cover. Reduce heat. Simmer 7 minutes. Top with onions, heated
according to directions on can. Combine with chicken. Serves 4-6.
Tona in Bama
Hi to all Nancylanders - thank you to everyone who gave me advise
regarding my search for a food processor. I think I am going to go with a
KitchenAid since they are made in the good ole' USA! You all have helped
me a lot. I knew I could count on you all for good advise. God Bless you
all! Thank you.
Ginny in Titusville, PA
Yes, buttermilk can be frozen and when defrosted turns out as good as
new---SUE
Chocolate Macaroon Crescent Bars
36 bars
1 (8 oz) can Pillsbury Refrigerated Crescent Rolls
2 cups coconut
1 (14 oz) can sweetened condensed milk (not evaporated)
1/8 - 1/4 teaspoon almond extract
1 (6 oz) package semisweet chocolate chips
2 tablespoons peanut butter
1/2 cup chopped almonds if desired
Heat oven to 375º. Spray 13x9" pan with nonstick cooking spray. Unroll
dough into 2 long rectangles. Place in sprayed pan; press over bottom and
1/2" up sides to form crust. Press edges and perforations to seal.
Sprinkle coconut over crust. In medium bowl, combine condensed milk and
almond extract; mix well. Drizzle over coconut. Bake at 375º for 16-20
minutes or until golden brown. Cool 15 minutes. Melt chocolate chips in
small saucepan over low heat, stirring frequently. Stir in peanut butter.
Spread chocolate mixture over bars. Sprinkle with almonds. Refrigerate 1
hour or until chocolate is set. Cut into bars.
Original recipe sent in by Tona
Resubmitted by Mary Alyce in WI
Chocolate Fried Pies
1-1/4 cup sugar
3 tablespoons flour
3 tablespoons cocoa powder
2 eggs
1 1/2 cups sweet milk
1/2 stick margarine
1 tablespoon vanilla
1 (5 count) Hungry Jack canned biscuits
Crisco
Mix first three ingredients. Then add eggs and milk. Stir well. Cook in a
double boiler or real slow on stove top til thick. Add to mixture
margarine and vanilla, then cool mixture. This is enough mix for 5 canned
biscuits. Roll out a 5 count can of biscuits real thin. Add about 2
tablespoons of filling onto 1/2 side of rolled biscuit. Fold over and go
around edge with fork. Heat about 1/2" Crisco shortening in skillet. Have
Crisco medium hot and brown pies on both sides. (Fix all pies before you
start to fry the first pie, that way Crisco stays the same temperature.)
Original recipe sent in by Tona
Resubmitted by Mary Alyce in WI
Doris in Oklahoma City~
Re your January 13 recipe saving
suggestion.
Even tho I've a Mac, I do it similarly--but in a word program (its
AppleWorks or Simple Text). One big advantage of it is that it's not
necessary to open an internet browser or a mail program to read and/or
print them out as they're available in "RECIPES" folder on my hard drive
desktop instead. If "Windows Explorer" is a word program, then we do it
basically the same way--PCs and Macs.
Carol/SoCal
From January 13th recipes, there's
one for "Grace's Banana Cake" from Lisa...unfortunately Lisa didn't
list the size of the pan(s) to use... I'm thinking it must be a loaf pan,
but rather than go thru the trouble of making the batter and choosing the
wrong size, I'd appreciate Lisa saying which size and shape to use.
Thanks! Barbara Bayside, NYC
To Nancy and the newsletter family... A couple of people have mentioned
the peanut butter stuffed Bugles, and I thought you all might like my
recipe for them, as it's a little different.
Filling for Bugles
1 c. creamy peanut butter (I sometimes use either the roasted honey nut PB
or the PB with honey put out by Jif)
1 c. sifted powdered sugar
1 T. butter, softened
Mix all ingredients together, then fill the bugles. I dip the ends in
either white, milk or dark chocolate. I then sprinkle on the little multi
colored balls. I think they look cute... like little ice cream cones!
Everyone loves these, they're very yummy.
Barb in San Diego
For Mimi and Tootie,
I started my own cookbook about 5 years ago, and used the process
Doris in Oklahoma City uses. I had a catch all drawer stuffed full of
recipe clippings from newspapers and magazines, etc., and finally decided
to put them all in my computer. Well, it took quite a while but I won.
When I finished all the ladies in my family wanted a copy so I started
burning CD's. That was a year ago. Being the recipe-a-holic that I am, I
started all over again. BUT, I found out about 4 months ago I should have
been including the person's name or site where the recipe came from if you
are going to post on the Internet or sell it. Also, if you use a recipe
using a name brand (one from a name brand site like Campbell's, Jello or
any other name brand, you must include their name as owner of the recipe.
Give it a try, you might like it and become the collector for your family
and friends. Also, give your creation a catchy name that suits you. Mine
is - Cindy's Yummies For Tummies, and I have about 400 new recipes to put
in Part 2. They make great gifts for people you want to recognize at
Christmas, but don't want to spend a lot for a gift. If I ever get brave
enough I will try to index them, but for now I like it the way it is. My
husband loves it and says it is a lot cheaper for a hobby than collecting
designer clothes or diamonds - after all, he reaps the benefits. You can
look at him and tell.
So crank up that puter of yours, it's not as hard as it sounds, it's easy,
and after a little while I was able to read a recipe and tell if it was
something we would like of not. Go for it Girlfriend and let us know how
you like it.
Scooch in Jacksonville, Florida
I would like to expound on Sandy in ND's message recommending
Mastercook. I agree with her and have used the program for 11 years. I
have close to 30 Mastercook books that have come with the programs and
have collected recipes from various lists and made another 22 cookbooks of
my own. I usually "top a book off" at 500 recipes just to make finding
something simple. However
it has a magical "Search" on it that finds everything quickly.
Just a couple of things that might help you decide. It works best with
Windows programs up through Windows XP. Vista came out AFTER the last
Mastercook 9 (most recent) and though it will work with it, you have to do
some adjustments to get it to work. ALSO - Do NOT download it from the
internet. The one that is available for download is flawed and does not
work properly. Just be sure you BUY the CD to install. If you are really
new at this, be sure you join the Discussion group that Sandy has
mentioned. They are FANTASTIC and will help you in minutes.
I cringe when I hear you people are typing out these recipes. All I have
to do is:
1) Keep a Holding File set up in Notepad on my Desktop. It's always there.
2) Copy a recipe from the list, paste it in the file on my desktop - it
will be in TEXT.
3) Run it (and ALL that I want to keep) through a small program called
McTagit that is available through the Discussion group. (It
FORMATS the recipe for Mastercook.)
4) Open the cookbook in Mastercook that I want the recipes to go in, and
export them. SHAZAM!
Of course there are several other very good programs and also some good
advice coming in on what is working for others. Now - if I will just stop
collecting and start cooking...
Barbara in AL
Frances in Wesley Chapel I too want to thank you for the best way to
copy recipes! Please send any computer tips you may have. I live near Dade
City! I hope road work at I-75 & 54 gets finished very soon!
Mary
For Mimi & Tootie
You wanted a way to save your recipes you copy. This is the way I do it. I
have Microsoft Word but I know a lot of people don't. Note pad is on all
computers.
Left click on the start button at the bottom of screen
Left click on My Documents
Over along the side it says (Make new folder) left click on it
Look over on the documents and you will see a folder that is highlighted
just start typing on it If you make a mistake and it quits flashing you
can right click it and where it says rename click on it and it will start
all over again.
Put in the name of a section you want your cook book to be ( meats,
desserts, pies. cakes, cookies etc) I Even made one for advice and tips
Keep making folders till you are finished with your titles.
I then make another folder I call (RECIPES ) or you can say COOKBOOK or
what ever you like it called
I then left click on each of the other folders I made and drag them over
to the recipe folder and drop them in. They will go in as soon as you
release the button
Now to (Copy and Paste)
Left Click on your Start at the bottom of the screen. Click on all
programs
Go to the top of the list and click on accessories Go down the list to
note pad and right click on it.
You will see pin to start menu. Click on it then close it.
Now left click on the start key at the bottom of screen and your note pad
will be in there along the side and easy to find each time . When you find
a recipe you would like to copy. Just highlight it an click on copy then
left click your start key and left click on your note pad to open it
Go to the top and hit Edit and when the drop down window opens click on
paste and put it in. Once it is pasted in I highlight the name of the
recipe Then right click on file at the top of page and click on the tab
that says (Save as)
A new file will open over the top of your recipe and if you look at the
bottom it will be flashing where it says name you can right click on it
and go down to where it says paste and left click on it and the name of it
will go in
At the top it will have a box where it says (Save In) Click the little
arrow and a drop down menu will appear
You want to click on (My Documents) you will then see your RECIPE folder
and you will (double) left click on it
Now down at the bottom again you want to click on save and it will go to
RECIPE folder
After I am done coping everything I want to copy for the day I then click
on My Documents and when it opens I click on my Recipe file and then drag
and drop each one I copied where I want it to go Pies,cookies etc.
I made 2 recipe cards that I have one of top of the other and have a text
box over it so I can type in it. I just copy and past 2 of the same kind
of recipes and then print them. I do it again and turn over my copy paper.
That way I have 4 recipes on one sheet of paper. I then put it in a page
protector in a three ring note book. You could just copy and paste two
recipes without the text book or card just keep some space between the two
and print it off. Turn the paper over and do it again with two more
recipes of the same type. Once I print it I put an X on it so I know it is
done and I put it in another file I called save to disk where I have the
same files in it I have in my recipe folder and every now and then I copy
it over to a disk and start over. That way you will never lose them if
something happens to your computer. I copy a lot of recipes but don't
print them all just the ones I know I will be using a lot. My book still
keeps getting bigger and bigger lol If I am looking for something I just
pop in a disk click on the category I want and start browsing till I find
it.
~Sharon ~ in Pa.
Nancy I have a non food question to ask for help. When I was in the
hospital and rehab my husband tried so hard to do things just right. Will
he wash some of my bras and one got in the dryer. How do I get it back in
shape so I can wear it. I have seen that you can use fabric softener or
shampoo to have items return to the normal shape. HELP HELP HELP! Thank
you great people out in this newsletter.
Everyone have a great day. Nancy and 4 legged associates take care and
stay safe.
Susie Indy
Hi Nancy and all Nancylanders,
This question isn't about recipes but hope all Nancylanders can help me.
My male cat Toby has started biting sometimes. He doesn't bite hard but it
is irritating and I don't want him to bite my grandkid's. Does anyone know
of a TNT way to get him to stop this. I have tried telling him NO in a
stern voice when he does it but it doesn't seem to help.
Dianne in Wisconsin