Good 38º drizzly morning.
Weather yesterday... sun came and went early on and then rain rain rain!
Another 3/4" from yesterday afternoon about 3pm until now... almost 5" total for
this storm...
The Rogue River looks like it's back up to "normal" and my seasonal creek
is filled with water! Yes!!!
I was out yesterday and this is what the driving was like:
I took this picture 2 years ago today... 4pm... snow!
And this morning on the Siskiyou Summit...
Breakfast..... plain non-fat yogurt drizzled with some Laney Orange Blossom
Honey, hard boiled egg drizzled with Jen's Ranch Dressing, and coffee with
Pumpkin Spice creamer!
YUMMMMMM!
Last night's football....
OK, THIS ISN'T THE FIRST TIME I HAVE DONE THIS.... THESE HAPS AND BIRTHDAYS ARE FOR THE 12TH OF DECEMBER, NOT TODAY. OOPS... SORRY. NOW YOU ARE A DAY AHEAD!
Historically this date..
1941 – Adolf
Hitler announces extermination of the Jews
at ameeting in the Reich Chancellery
... Oh what a shame he wasn't caught and taken apart piece
by piece and made to suffer forever!!!
1985 – Arrow Air Flight 1285 crashes
after takeoff in Gander, Newfoundland killing 256,
including 236 members of the United States Army's 101st Airborne Division.
Oh thank God, it was Bush and not Gore, that self serving
lying piece of s**t!!!!
And births this date include....
1893 – Edward G. Robinson, American
actor (d. 1973)
1900 – Sammy Davis, Sr., American
dancer (d. 1988)
Jr. sure looked like Sr. !
1915 – Frank Sinatra, American singer
and actor (d. 1998)
1937 – Buford Pusser, American law
enforcement official (d. 1974)
1938 – Connie Francis, American
singer
1940 – Dionne Warwick, American
singer
1952 – Cathy
Rigby, American gymnast and
actress
How about this... Pesto Garlic Rolls:
2 cans refrigerated biscuits (7.5 oz ea)
4 oz Mozarella cheese cut into 20 equal cubes
8 oz jar bazil pesto
4 T. melted butter
2 cloves garlic
1. Cut biscuit dough in half. Flatten, spread a teaspoon of pesto in the
center of the dough, place a mozzarella cube on top, pinch the sides around the
cheese so the pesto and cheese are completely encased by the dough.
2. Place stuffed dough balls in a cast iron pan.
3. Crush garlic and mix with melted butter. Brush garlic butter over each
ball.
Bake for 20 minutes 400º or until golden brown. Serve warm.
Dinner was reruns. Tonight something new... maybe turkey tacos. We'll
see...
Later it was chair, wine, and Blue Bloods episodes. Ahhhh... nice.
All I know. Nuff said. Happy TGIF. Ciao.
xo Sue Mom Bobo
December 11th
National Noodle Ring Day
CHEESED NOODLE RING | |
1 lb. noodles
1 tsp. salt 3 tbsp. butter 2 c. shredded Cheddar cheese 1 1/2 tsp. Worcestershire sauce
Cook noodles,
drain, add butter, toss until butter has melted. Pour into greased ring mold,
place mold in pan of hot water and bake at 350 degrees for 25 minutes.
Turn onto serving plate; melt cheese and stir in Worcestershire
sauce; pour over noodle ring. Serve. 6
servings.
|
Grandma’s Noodle Kugel (Noodle Pudding)
Grandma, who never heard of
ricotta, used pot cheese or farmer’s
cheese. Today’s cooks, who never heard of pot cheese, will use ricotta. If you
don’t have ricotta handy, you can use cottage cheese. If you live in the
metropolitan New York area, you have access to farmer cheese, which sounds less
glamorous than ricotta but is delicious and
authentic—and kugel is comfort food, not glamour food (get the salted
variety).
There are many sweet kugel recipes: With raisins, apples and other fruits; with cottage cheese
or a cream cheese-cottage cheese mix; with cinnamon or more exotic spices. Most
can be made and baked within 90 minutes. This one is “marinated”
overnight.
The history of kugel: Kugel originated in Eastern Europe.
According to Wikipedia, the first kugels were made from bread and flour and
were savory rather than
sweet. Around 1200 C.E., German cooks replaced bread mixtures with noodles or
farfel (noodle pellets), eventually adding eggs, then cottage cheese and milk to
create the custard-like noodle pudding we know today.
Sugar became available in the 17th
century, creating sweet kugels for side dishes and
desserts. Polish-Jewish recipes included raisins, cinnamon and sweetened
farmer’s cheese; Hungarians sprinkled their kugels with sugar and sour cream. In the late 19th century, in Jerusalem, caramelized
sugar and black pepper were added
to the “Jerusalem kugel.”
If the kugel is made in a ring mold, it
is called a noodle ring (or kugel ring). December 11th is National Noodle Ring
Day.
Kugel can be served an entrée, a side
dish (popular with brisket) or a dessert. There are savory kugels (potato kugel with
onions and eggs is another main recipe), as well as sweet ones like the recipe
below. There are as many variations as there are fruits,vegetables and spices;
the common denominator is broad, flat noodles. Most sweet kugels are served cold
or at room temperature.
Ingredients
- One 12-16 ounce package of broad noodles (egg noodles)
- 4 large eggs
- 3/4 cup sugar
- 3 cups whole milk
- 1-½ cups pot, ricotta or cottage cheese
- 1/2 cup each dark and golden raisins
- 2 tablespoons each sugar and cinnamon
- 1 tablespoon fresh ground nutmeg
Preparation
- SPREAD the uncooked noodles evenly across the bottom of a 9 x 13 inch pan. Distribute the raisins evenly among the noodles, taking care not to break them.
- COMBINE in a 3-quart bowl the eggs, sugar, milk and cheese. Pour over the noodles. Cover with plastic wrap and refrigerate overnight. Be sure all the noodles are immersed in the liquid.
- PREHEAT the oven to 350°F. Mix the sugar and spices, and sprinkle across the top of the kugel. Cover with foil and bake for 35 minutes. Uncover, and bake another 40 minutes, until firm in the center, puffed and browned on the top.
Kugel can be served hot or at room
temperature. Leftover kugel can be re-heated or eaten cold.
3 comments:
YAAAAA Some of your rain came down here last night. I wasn't expecting it so my silk flowers got drenched on the patio. John had put bags of oranges, tangerines and grapefruit on the patio table and now they are coming apart. Oh fine. I need to make juice out of them anyway but too much to do right now!
Wouldn't you change your name if you were named Buford Pusser. I can imagine he was teased all his life.
XOX Trisha
Glad you got the rain. Apparently you and John didn't understand my power of blowing clouds your way! LOL! As for Buford, yes, I'd change my name. Jerry had a cousin whose last name was Hogg. Her first name was Ima. Come on............... Texans!!! xo
Thank you for the rain . And for the blog. No coffee - it was nice to have one "mornal" traditional start to the day.
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