Lucky girl!

I am such a lucky girl I should have rabbit’s feet!

Two (Count them wha ha ha!!!) Two, birthday cakes for me.

My sister, Tonya, and her lovely family were here for my birthday a couple of weeks ago and she was kind enough to want to make a birthday cake for me so I gladly said yes- do it please! Then of course, my sweet husband usually makes my birthday cake and I didn’t want to miss out on that- so greedy little me got two this year. Oh boy!

Here is a picture of the beautiful Ms. T wearing my favorite new apron made by my super-talented friend, Jill. These will be sold shortly on One Wish World a very fabulous website, created by our very fabulous friend, Mindy. It is a website with a heart that reaches out to help the world and at the same time brings you creations from very talented artists that you won’t find anywhere else.

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Rick made a Favorite Fudge cake and put some lovely little bees and a flower on it just for me. If I haven’t told you – I love bees and one of my ambitions (out of many) is to be able to keep a couple of hives someday. The recipe for the cake is in the archives under Five little chocolate wedding cakes all in a row, so I won’t repeat it here. It is so yummy and it just gets better each day- of course it never lasts too long round here.

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My sister made a variation out of Dorie Greenspan’s  ( Baking From My Home to Yours -one of my favorite new cookbooks) using the recipe for Black and White Chocolate Cake, and turning the Dark Chocolate cream part into a Grand Marnier flavored cream and then pouring a Chocolate ganache over the top and topping with yet more ganache this time in White Chocolate. It was so yummy too! Thanks T.

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We had a picnic in the park with family and the day was complete. Two of my nephews are learning Cricket so they taught the other kids. Sticky wickets! I forgot my camera so no pictures of the picnic.

The menu for the picnic was:

  1. Oven “Fried” Chicken
  2. Pressed Picnic Sandwich in a Sourdough hubcap
  3. Pasta salad
  4. Coleslaw
  5. Deviled Eggs
  6. Clam Dip and chips and Veggie platter
  7. Green Onion cheese-ball with almonds and Parmesan garlic bagel crisps
  8. Assorted Olives and Pickles
  9. Home made Zatarain’s Root-beer
  10. Watermelon

It’s surprising that we could stuff cake and ice cream down after that- but we pulled through and did them both justice.

I scream, you scream, we all scream for Ice Cream!

Lately I have taken to making ice cream quite frequently. Of course experiencing temperatures in the triple digits for an unusual number of days this year has driven me to find comfort in one of the few real comfort foods of Summer. Yum Sugar is hosting a one off event over at Is My Blog Burning?, called For the Love of Ice Cream Challenge that worked in nicely with my latest burning (okay freezing) obsession. And Rick says if I could only make garlic mashed potatoes work into an ice cream then I would really be the Queen of Comfort in the Summer too.

Recently, I made an “Ibarra Mexican Chocolate Ice Cream.”

I think I can safely say that Mexican Chocolate, in general,  is one of Rick’s favorite flavors. He said that my latest version was the best he’s ever had and “Whoohoo Jackpot!” -that’s what I was aiming for! I started with a recipe off of Epicurious.com that had good reviews and of course I couldn’t leave well enough alone so I spiced it up with 4 types of cinnamon flavor and some vanilla and almond extract. So here is my version:

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Ibarra Mexican Chocolate Ice Cream

  • 3-3/4 Cups Organic Half and Half

  • 1 whole vanilla bean, split and scraped

  • Ibarra sweet chocolate, grated or chopped finely (a serrated knife works great for this) use 3-1/2 disks out of the 18.6oz pkg.

  • 3 whole eggs

  • a good pinch of salt

  • 1 teaspoon pure vanilla extract

  • 1 teaspoon pure almond extract

  • one good pinch each of Ceylon Cinnamon, Chinese Cassia Cinnamon, Vietnam Cinnamon

  • LorAnn Cinnamon Oil -you will use a very small amount of this.

First of all use good ingredients, I always use organic products where available. Ibarra Chocolate is available at some grocery stores and most Latin or Mexican markets. All of the Cinnamon varieties and vanilla beans are available at Penzeys. LorAnn oil can be found at some grocery stores or any confectionery supply store or at the link above. (It’s the kind we used to make cinnamon toothpicks when we were kids. -Did you make those too?)

Before you begin, chill your ice cream maker’s canister and have ice and rock salt at the ready if you are using a crank style freezer or freeze the bowl of a Donvier or Cuisinart style maker. Have a thin-walled metal bowl in an ice bath in a larger bowl at the ready and a stainless steel fine mesh strainer.

Then split the vanilla bean and scrape the seeds out with the back of a small paring knife. (Note: Reserve the empty bean and put it in your sugar canister to make vanilla sugar if you like. Good in coffee etc.)

Place the scraped seeds in a medium size, heavy-bottomed sauce pan and add the half and half and the chopped chocolate. Cook over medium heat stirring constantly until it starts to boil. Remove from heat.

Break the eggs into a small bowl and add a good pinch of salt (use your thumb and first two fingers for the pinch) then whisk, add the vanilla extract, the almond extract and the powdered cinnamon (3 kinds).  Whisk a ladle full of the hot chocolate mixture into the eggs to temper them- go slowly and whisk hard you don’t want scrambled eggs here. Then whisk the tempered eggs into the hot chocolate and return to low-med heat until the mixture reaches 175degrees F. It may already be there- hold for a minute or two to cook the eggs into the custard.

Pour immediately through the strainer into the metal bowl in the ice bath. Use a flexible spatula to push it through the strainer leaving the solid bits behind. Stir it occasionally while in the bath until it is quite chilled.  Now for the secret ingredient: take a toothpick and dip it about 1/4 inch** into the LorAnn cinnamon oil, then swizzle the toothpick through the custard. Stir it in thoroughly with a spoon. **don’t use too much- be careful this oil is very strong! **

This is now your custard. Once chilled you can refrigerate it further to reduce churning time or churn right away. Follow your manufacturer’s directions for churning. Muy Delicioso!

My note: I personally don’t care for the canister type freezers since it is impossible to further chill them once you start. You can add more ice and rock salt to the old fashioned kind to keep the temperature lowered. Of course if you are lucky enough to have a self-refrigerating kind – go for it -more power to you I say! Mine is an inexpensive electric model that uses ice and salt and I bought it for under 20 dollars. I sold my more expensive freezer canister model at our last garage sale. 🙁

Also this month, I made an Apple Cider Carmel Ice Cream that was pretty fabulous too. Danielle at Habeas Brulee gave me the idea. I did already have Kate Zuckerman’s book The Sweet Life, but I had not tried that recipe until Danielle wrote about it in her post. It is a very grown up type ice cream with a bit of a tang- a definite Tarte Tatin flavor. Kate, who is the pastry chef at Chanterelle restaurant in New York City, recommends pairing it with her Walnut, Currant and Cinnamon Rugelach and I haven’t tried that yet, but I will soon. It has Autumn type flavors for me so I will be revisiting it throughout Summer and into the Fall.

The Trouble with Tribbles = Nibble and Dribbles

It’s been such a busy month with vacation and visits from family- I have hardly had time to post.

Last month I was looking forward to the Sci-Fi Blog Party hosted by Stephanie, The Happy Sorceress at Dispensing Happiness-but I missed the deadline. Luckily for me this month’s blog party is Blogger’s Choice and I can post my  “Troubles with Tribbles Nibbles and Dribbles”, after all.

I grew up on Star Trek and at the age of five I even tried to get my ears to go all pointy so I could be more like Spock (or an elf depending on my mood.) I am geekily proud to say that I can lift one eye brow in sarcastic gesture when necessary.

My favorite episode was “The Trouble with Tribbles” where the U.S.S. Enterprise becomes overpopulated with fuzzy little creatures that multiply faster than you can say “rabbit” or “introduced species.”

So this is my homage to them and the only problem is they disappear rather than multiply:

Tribble nibbles

So the Tribble Nibbles are:

1 package frozen shrimp balls, can be found in your local Asian Market

cornstarch or rice flour to coat before “breading”

2 egg whites, whipped to soft peak stage

a dash of Sriracha chile paste, ditto on the Asian Market

a few strands of picked ginger, minced

a bit of minced garlic- to taste

1-1/2 Cups shredded sweetened dried coconut

Thaw the shrimp balls and pat dry. Coat with a little cornstarch or rice flour.  Whip the egg whites to soft peaks and fold in chili paste, ginger and garlic. Dip shrimp into whipped egg white mixture and then into coconut. Bake at 350 degrees F. for about 15 minutes or until coconut is toasted and shrimp is heated/cooked through. Serve with sweet and sour sauce or a dumpling sauce for dipping. Serves 2-4-6-ate.

The Dribbles with Nibbles also known as a Pomegranate “Martian-tini” :

For two, chill two martini glasses. Fill a cocktail shaker half way with with ice and add:

2 Ounces Vodka,

1 Ounce Cointreau or Triple Sec,

1/2 Ounce Grand Marnier

4 Ounces good quality Pomegranate Juice such as Pomi

The juice from 1 lime squeezed (Cut some zest for garnish first with a knife or large “church key” type zester.

Shake, shake, shake and pour into pre-chilled glasses, garnish with lime peel. …Delectable mmmm.

For Teetotalers: Pomegranate juice and limeade with sparkling water are a good mix over ice and have it in a cocktail glass just for the style and fun of it!

Enjoy.