Showing posts with label green bean casserole. Show all posts
Showing posts with label green bean casserole. Show all posts

Thanksgiving recipes? Betty Crocker, on the line!

Saturday, November 20, 2010

This is the time of year when I start feeling like the one-woman version of the Betty Crocker Hotline. My phone and e-mail inbox are already lighting up with queries like this one: "Hey, do you have any new riffs on our favorite stuffing?" writes my dear friend Kathy. "I want to change things up a bit. I saw a recipe that used olive rosemary bread and thought adding some of that with the cornbread would be good. Less apple, maybe? Some dried cranberries or apricots instead?"
Sorry, Kath: I don't have any new riffs on our favorite Silver Palate stuffing recipe, having already tweaked it over the years by using cornbread stuffing-mix rather than fresh cornbread, and subbing rye bread for whole wheat. That said, I think you're on the right track. And what about tossing some dried cherries in with the mix?

My go-to guide for stuffing (among other long-loved recipes) is the original Silver Palate Cookbook. That's where you'll find this, the original recipe for Cornbread-Sausage Stuffing with Apples. For my (slightly) tweaked version, looky here.
Next up, my pal Glenda gave a shout, asking for my no-knead bread recipe (she wants to take a loaf to a friend's house for use with appetizers). She also pleaded for directions for making my "famous rolls" (as she calls them), having sampled those back when she came to my house for Thanksgiving. I forgave her for forgoing my Thanksgiving table again this year, and swiftly sent along this recipe for "Heavenly Flour-Bread Rolls," my adaptation of a Southern biscuit recipe. And I also sent this blog-post, with links to my original post on no-knead bread (try it, it's easy), and a brown-bread version that Mac thinks tastes even better!

My claim to fame, roll-wise. You'll find DIY-directions on this blog-post.


Jim Lahey's Irish Brown Bread: give thanks! I did.
Any minute my sister Sherry will be ringing me up from her Pennsylvania kitchen to ask whether I think she'll be making a mistake by using the butter-soaked cheesecloth method while basting her turkey. (Nope! I swear by it.) And no doubt my neighbor Lori will call wondering whether she can use the salted butter she has on hand rather than unsalted butter her recipe calls for. At which point I'll send Nate down the street with a pound of unsalted butter from our basement freezer, though I'd send you to this post on the subject.


"Betty Crocker Hotline! How may I help you?"
I don't know why anyone would make any cranberry sauce other than the one I've been serving since Kathy (see: stuffing query) turned me on to her favorite recipe way back when: this Pasta & Company recipe for Cranberry Sauce with Sour Cherries and Rum. And I'd put big money on a bet that after preparing this year's Thanksgiving spread, Eater Eileen Kirkpatrick will agree. In today's batch of e-mail came this, from Eileen, bearing the subject-line: Cranberry Sour-Cherry Sauce Recipe:
"I've been looking for this recipe on your blog and beyond and for some strange reason cannot find it," she wrote. "I did see it about a week ago and forgot to save it. Would you please send it to me? I want to try it this year for Thanksgiving." Sure enough, she'd seen it in last Wednesday's Holiday Cuisine guide -- a pretty pull-out that ran in print and is available online for posterity, featuring 30 great recipes and video on how to carve a turkey, make gravy and prepare a flaky pie crust.


Hey, Eileen! Make a double batch so you'll have plenty of leftovers to tuck into those rolls, along with a schmear of mayo and some leftover turkey. No fan of rum-pa-pum-pum? The sauce works well without the boozy-addition.
Speaking of turkey: surely you've heard me go on and on about the joys of making two birds. That way, when you've got a crowd coming as I always do, you're sure to have enough thighs, breast-meat and leftovers to go around. Each year at my house we make "his-and-hers" turkeys. I roast one in the oven and serve it with gravy (see recipe, here) while Mac lightly smokes his on the Weber (his recipe here).
If we were preparing only one bird though, it would most definitely be Mac's Weber-fied version. It's the better-tasting of the two, and if you're cooking outdoors, that leaves the oven free for reheating sweet potato casseroles. Or better yet, for baking my Heavenly Flour-Bread Rolls at the last minute, so they're still warm and "heavenly" when they come to the table.


Here's what our Weber-smoked turkey looks like after it's roasted in our backyard. For real (hold the food-porno garnish, added for photographic flair). Isn't it a beauty? If you're new to the idea of using a kettle-grill to roast poultry, here's a blog-post how-to, explaining the physical set-up. [Photo courtesy http://www.barrywongphoto.com/.]
And whether you're preparing Thanksgiving dinner for the first time -- or the 100th -- you might be pondering what kind of equipment you may want, or need, to make things easy and/or festive. Everyone's got their favorite tools of the trade, and back in 2007, I offered readers this mighty arsenal for their holiday tool-chest.


Nesting bowls for my mise-en-place? These Mario-branded bowls are handy, inexpensive and well-used in my kitchen. [photo at left Seattle Times/Thomas James Hurst]

What amazes me in retrospect is that I didn't speak up then for owning a Silpat (or two). That's because I bought my first one only a couple years ago (seen below, supporting the rosemary-olive rolls that would also make a fine addition to your holiday table, recipe here). Seriously, I don't know how I've lived without one.


I heart my Silpat. And here's a blog-post explaining how I make those rolls.

Looking for more Thanksgiving-ready info? You'll find thawing times, cooking times, and other turkey-prep basics here. What's more: there's a world of recipe ideas available if you peruse the ever-growing shelves of Northwest cookbooks, like the ones I touted in 2008. You'll find holiday-worthy recipe ideas culled from those books right here.


Cooking the books! -- Northwest-style. [Seattle Times/John Lok]

I'll be busy cooking next week -- while wiping my flour-y paws on my grandmother's apron -- so you might want a list of phone numbers and on-line helplines where "Operators are standing by!" You'll find plenty of those in this story about where to turn for help in the kitchen on T-day.
READ MORE - Thanksgiving recipes? Betty Crocker, on the line!

Green bean casserole creator says onions made dish iconic

Dorcas B. Reilly mixed and cooked and stirred and tested hundreds of recipes during the more than 25 years she worked as a home economist in the Creative Food Center for Campbell's Soup Co.
Every day, she and a handful of co-workers concocted new dishes, bringing them to the group to test on each other's taste buds. Some went back for more work. Some went to the trash.
One side dish Reilly created became a culinary cultural icon. In 1955, she reconstituted some Campbell's cream of mushroom soup, mixed in a can of green beans, stirred in some fried onions and poured it all into a casserole dish for baking.
Fifty five years later, it's difficult to remember a time when the green bean casserole wasn't a Thanksgiving staple. The creamy, crispy side dish became so iconic, Reilly's recipe card became a part of the collection at the National Inventors Hall of Fame in Akron, Ohio.
Not that Reilly knew of her success at the time. Now 84 and living near her two children and four grandchildren in Haddonfield, N.J., she says it took more than 20 years for her to get a sense that the dish she created and her co-workers honed had found a permanent place at the holiday table. In the mid-1970s, a Campbell's researcher found that the recipe was the most requested in company history.
That fact amazed her, but she could understand why. After all, green beans are a popular food item. It helped that green beans and soup were not expensive in 1955. The dish also didn't require a lot of preparation.
The key was the fried onions, she says. Crispy and sweet from the carmelization during frying, she added them to give the dish another texture. Back then, fried onions were a gourmet novelty.
"It upscaled the dish," Reilly says.
"It made the casserole much more attractive. If it had just been green beans and soup, it would have been flat and almost colorless. It elevated it into another category."
As she's done every year since creating it, she will make the casserole for her family's Thanksgiving meal the same classic way. Unless the test kitchen cook in her comes out.
"At one point years ago I put some carrots in with the green beans for some color," she says. "I haven't done that for a while, but now that you mention it. I might do that this Thanksgiving
Associated Press file photo
Dorcas Reilly, creator of the Original Green Bean Casserole for Campbell's Soup, celebrates the recipe's induction in 2002 into the Inventor's Hall of Fame.
READ MORE - Green bean casserole creator says onions made dish iconic