Canola Part 2: Fry bread and tortilla chips

So, after the canola comes out of the field, it is processed into canola oil…which has a high flash point making it a good deep fry oil candidate and my oil of choice for the little deep frying I do.

Two weeks ago, I had a go at Indian Fry Bread.

The morning of my first try at the fry bread, it was wonderfully cool. I have an electric outlet just outside the front door so I set up the fryer there. A few minutes later, fry bread…

I love my cranberry-citrus marmalade but I thought these were best with butter and honey…and a strong cup of coffee…on the front porch!

Last weekend, round 2…in a cast iron skillet on top of the stove…

And since the oil was already hot…and I had homemade refried beans in the frig…I fried a few tortillas for chips as well.

All in all, an excellent use of canola oil as far as I’m concerned.

But for appearance and beauty…

Canola in the field.

Ginger ale: homemade

Lawnmowers could be heard running all through northwest Montana today….mine included. Midweek’s summer days gave way to a transition day of a couple of thunderstorms and more showers, but today dawned clear and cool at 43F.

Who would have thought I might someday make my own ginger ale??? NOT me! But I saw this post: Sweet Savory Planet’s Ginger Soda and Ginger Candy…and it called to me. If you are a new reader, you may be unaware that I have an addiction to Vernor’s Ginger Ale…search for Vernor’s to see past posts if interested…

To date, I have made 3 batches of ginger syrup and none have disappointed.

The process is simple. Peel and slice the ginger. Add ginger, sugar and water to a pan. Bring to boil, then simmer for an hour.

Pour all through a sieve. Put the syrup in a jar. Coat the ginger with sugar and dry in the oven for crystallized ginger.

Put some syrup in a glass. Add carbonated water – I have an ISI siphon/carbonator…works like the whipped cream thingy so I carbonate my own cold, clear and chlorine free well water :)!

Ginger ale…well, Ginger soda. And it beats Vernor’s big time.

AND…

…the ginger candy – YUM!

I love ginger, I love ginger soda, I love being able to make my own ginger soda.

And this morning ???

It looked like this:

A perfect day for a ginger ale: homemade

If there are cupcakes, it must be Friday

Dessert for two’s adaptation of ‘Better than sex’ cake recipe has been calling me since she posted it over a week ago. This morning, I said, “Enough!…time for cupcakes” and made the cake recipe as cupcakes with a modification on the topping. The topping calls for making a syrup of pineapple and brown sugar which is added warm over warm cake to be absorbed…then a whipped cream frosting with toasted coconut. Instead, I threw my large, unsweetened coconut flakes in the syrup at the last minute and poured that warm, over warm cupcakes and topped with a dollop of my own whipped cream. My own whipped cream…made with a local (Kalispell Kreamery) dairy’s cream, a bit of sugar free almond syrup and cinnamon.

It all works for me :)!

If there are cupcakes, it must be Friday.

Let me eat cake

FRIDAY!! – a week of long days of work, working and playing with Bear and Bob and avoiding yard work…the grass is nearing the 1 foot level :(

My sweet tooth is not large and I’m not much for cake but every once in awhile a piece of cake sounds good. And then I saw this sweet recipe: Texas chocolate sheet cake for two. Perfect! Even though I am one, cake for 2 is a better size than a cake that serves a crowd.

For my international readers, don’t despair – I didn’t know what “Texas” sheet cake was until I googled it and even the google results were mixed as usual. However, the majority of entries agreed that it is a rich chocolate sheet cake topped with a chocolate-pecan “frosting” when the cake is warm so that the frosting is kind of absorbed into the cake.

The frosting part was too much sweet and too much chocolate for me, but the tiny cakes – right up my alley!

The recipe mixes up and is in the ramekins in about 10 minutes. 30 minutes to bake, another 10-15 to cool and there is cake. I did fancy up one of them with some frosting, coconut and dried sweet cherries…

Oh, boy! Let me eat cake!

For Mother’s Day

First…Happy Mother’s Day to all mothers, but an extra special one to my own Mama who has been doing “yeoman duty” these past weeks…especially considering I am 55…racing toward 56 so in theory have been a grown up for awhile…

Oh, and Happy Birthday to my “little” brother who is 54!!! today :)!

I made a special breakfast today, even though my Mama is not at my house to share it…but just in honor of the day. And I ate it on the china from my grandmother Ruthie, my Mama’s mama. And lifted a coffee cup to my grandmother HaHa (Helen), my Papa’s mama.

Today’s fun actually started last weekend with the making of citrus cranberry marmalade.

This is only my second marmalade experience, but having discovered how easy, how much fun and how nice to make it myself, it is not going to be my last. This round, I had proper tools so even easier than my test run several months ago. And such satisfaction in seeing all of those pretty little jars of marmalade.

Although, the primary intended use is for english muffins and toast, I also like to heat a bit of marmalade with a bit of maple syrup to make a fruit syrup for pancakes or waffles…

Then…

I saw a recipe this week for Lemon Ricotta Souffle Pancake – perfect! The blog post that the link takes you to shows both a berry and a walnut variation. I thought WALNUT!!! – with citrus marmalade syrup and that’s what I did.

And yesterday, I made ricotta…yes MADE it. Another of those things that is so easy and fun.

The recipe link: Homemade Ricotta Cheese , but … it is 1 part buttermilk to 4 parts whole milk. Heat the combo over med-high heat until curds form. Remove from heat and scoop the curds into cheese cloth. Wrap the cheese cloth and let it drain for 15 minutes…drain less for creamier ricotta, more for drier ricotta.

Ricotta cheese! I used 1 cup buttermilk, 4 cups whole milk to yield 1 cup of Ricotta and about 4 cups of whey. I saved the whey and am using it in the protein smoothies I make. This whole thing took me maybe 30 minutes start to finish.

So…this morning…the souffle pancake…

Yum! A fluffy, pan cake – lightly lemon with walnuts and turbinado sugar making a slightly crunchy top and the citrus marmalade syrup providing just enough fruity sweetness.

I made bacon and it made me cry…because there was bacon left and Karl not there to share it. As reader Lou said in a comment… “the little things” – when you least expect them. But, the tears can be good and they are of short duration and replaced quickly by a joyful memory and a laugh…

…and a walk in the woods at sunrise, the snow topped mountains through the trees and dew on the greening woods grasses.

For Mother’s Day.

***the next day…the leftover “pancake” is good cold or warmed up. I ate it like coffee cake :)!