Browsing the blog archives for March, 2012.

Forgotten Kisses Cookies

Domestic

I confess, I made these at Christmas for my annual cookie tin. Yes, I know it’s March – that doesn’t make them any less delicious! I’d be more apt to call these little treats Hidden Kisses or Surprise Kisses or something like that, but Forgotten Kiss is the name of the original recipe so we’ll go with Forgotten Kisses, since you know, many kisses are better than just one, yes? Or, I guess, oui?

This is one in a series of cookies I made last year with random things baked into them! First I made Rolo Stuffed Cookies, then came Peanut Butter Stuffed Double Chocolate Chip Cookies and somewhere in there I also whipped up some Brownie Stuffed Chocolate Chip Cookies. Phew. The kids have been happy!

forgotten kisses cookies

Forgotten Kisses Cookies via Tasty Kitchen
1 cup butter, softened
1/3 cup sugar
1/3 cup packed light brown sugar
1 teaspoon vanilla
2 cups flour
1 cup mini chocolate chips
1 9oz. bag hershey kisses

forgotten kisses cookies
forgotten kisses cookies
Preheat your oven to 375F, then cream the butter with the sugars ad add the vanilla. Then add the flour.
forgotten kisses cookies
forgotten kisses cookies
Keep mixing till it’s creamy! Now go ahead and add the chocolate chips. The original recipe suggests you can use mini M&Ms instead of chocolate chips.
forgotten kisses cookies
Unwrap all of your Christmasy kisses! Or whatever kind of kisses you’re using. I made these at Christmas for the first time so I used peppermint kisses.
forgotten kisses cookies
forgotten kisses cookies
Roll the dough into a ball and flatten it a little. Put the kiss in the middle and form the ball of dough around the chocolate.
forgotten kisses cookies
forgotten kisses cookies
Then do it again and again and again! Bake for about 10 minutes or so and voila!
forgotten kisses cookies
They look like innocent chocolate chip cookies!
forgotten kisses cookies
But they’re way tastier than that!!
No Comments

Pixie Purses (with Bacon & Goat Cheese)

Domestic

Today, I’m participating in Tasty Tuesday at 33 Shades of Green.

I know technically these little bundles of deliciousness are called Beggar’s Purses but I made them for my mother’s Pixie-themed 60th birthday party (my mother loves fairies and anything to do with fairies), so Pixie Purses they are! Bacon + goat cheese? OMG. I’ve recently given up the bacon but I’d probably still snarffle down a few of these little babies. They were a hit with everyone that tried them and the only treat I made for my mother’s party that didn’t have any leftovers!

You could make these suit your needs however you like! You could fill them with fake cheese and tempah or with mozza and chicken or or or…endless combinations really. They also look really snazzy but don’t require too much effort.

pixie purses with bacon and goat cheese

Pixie Purses (aka Beggar’s Purses, aka Goat Cheese Phyllo Purses) via Confessions of a Foodie Bride
5 oz goat cheese, softened
2 tablespoons chives, chopped
I also added a few tablespoons of fresh chopped parsley
4 slices of bacon, cooked to a crisp
black pepper
6 sheets of phyllo dough
6-8 tablespoons of melted butter
Chives or strips of the tops of green onions for tying

pixie purses with bacon and goat cheese
pixie purses with bacon and goat cheese
Preheat your oven to 400 F and mash together your goat cheese, chives, parsley (if you’re using it) crumbled bacon, and black pepper.
pixie purses with bacon and goat cheese
pixie purses with bacon and goat cheese
The thing about phyllo is it pretty much always starts out the same. Lay a single piece on your counter, use a pastry brush to paint melted butter all over it, then add a second sheet and attack that with melted butter and again with a third piece. Then cut it into four equal pieces and put about 1 1/2 to maybe 2 tablespoons of the mixture into the middle of each square. Then gather the phyllo around it like a little package and tie with your chive or strip of green onion.
pixie purses with bacon and goat cheese
pixie purses with bacon and goat cheese
So cute!!! It’s looking pretty pale on the left! I brushed the tops of each one with a little butter and made a bunch more. I put all of them in a shallow dish and baked them for about 8 minutes. Check on them though!! If your oven runs hot they’ll be incinerated in a heartbeat! Let them cool for a bit so you don’t burn yourself with 400 degree goat cheese!
pixie purses with bacon and goat cheese
pixie purses with bacon and goat cheese
No Comments

Homemade Ice Pops

Healthy

Today I’m participating in Social Sunday at The Bewitchin’ Kitchen, Sharing Time Sunday at Raising Memories, and Social Sunday at Quick Tattletails.

As I write this there is about a foot of snow in my backyard and maybe 3 feet or so in the drifts on the side of the house. Ice Pops are not necessarily on the minds of my neighbors, I know but I? Am always thinking of summer. Don’t get me wrong, I’m a stellar Canadian and I love the snow and all the ridic things that we as a culture do in the snow, aside from the average fare like snowmen and forts and snowball fights we as a family are big on riding the quad through the snow, going even further north to my husband’s parent’s house to go sledding and snowshoeing and abuse their snow machines. Way fun. Almost 18 months ago, we moved to the ‘snow belt’ of Ontario and holy shitballs living in snow valley can really make playing in the snow get old pretty fast. So I will make ice pops and think of the beach, thankyouverymuch.

There are so many different ice pops recipes and then almost endless variations on those recipes, they can really be whatever you want them to be. Martha has a good basic recipe to use as a jumping point like I did with these babies. This recipe is heavy on the yogurt and light on the fruit which is the opposite of how I made mine, but again you can just adjust for your own taste.

The two I made here are mango and strawberry. Both times, I used about 2 cups of chopped fruit, 1/2 cup of sugar and 1 cup of yogurt. The sugar isn’t for taste, you need it to help with the freezing. If you leave out the sugar your ice pops will harden like, well, like ice. Not so fun to eat. If you add the sugar, the ice pops stay softish and turn out way better! This is especially good when you’re serving them to kids because you don’t want them to bite into a rock hard ice pop, plus they’re full of fresh fruit and yogurt so that’s a healthy win!



ice pops

2 cups chopped fruit
1/2 cup sugar
1 cup yogurt

ice pops
ice pops
Blend the fruit in a food processor until it’s as smooth as possible. Not pictured, whisk the sugar and the yogurt together.
ice pops
Fill your ice pop mold about 1/3 of the way (or however you want the ice pop to look).
ice pops
Then add a layer of the sugar/yogurt.
ice pops
Mango Ice Pops!
1 Comment

Pink Lips, Purple Eyes with BH Cosmetics

Pretty

This palette is so fun, you can literally play around with all of the shades in the same color family and come of it looking cute. I used the 120 Color Palette 1st Edition. I used the three darkest purples on my lid, the next three lightest purples blended in the crease and the very lightest purple mixed with white on the brow bone. Love!

My new daily lashes are Quo #807, but these babies went with the eyes I thought! They’re also from BH Cosmetics, the China Doll lashes. I’m not even going to lie, I totally love it when my lashes are so big they cast a shadow. Lipstick is BH Cosmetics lip liner in Blossom, with a little Urban Decay lipstick in Wicked (they don’t make Wicked anymore but Sellout is very very close). I honestly can’t remember the brow pencil I used, it was likely my tried and true Wet n Wild in basic brown!



bh cosmetics purple and pink eyes

Urban Decay Lipstick in Wicked BH Cosmetics Lip Liner in Blossom BH Cosmetics Lashes 'China Doll' BH Cosmetics Eyeshadow Palette 1st Edition Image Map
bh cosmetics purple and pink eyes
bh cosmetics purple and pink eyes
bh cosmetics purple and pink eyes
1 Comment

Hummus and Whole Wheat Flatbread

Healthy

This week, I’m participating in a few blog hops! Party #1 at Jillify It, Tasty Thursdays at The How To Mommy, Thursday Blog Hop at Bassgiraffe and What’s Cooking Thursday at Feeding Four.

Oh hummus. Oh flatbread. Two mostly healthy things I wont stuff my face with – separately. If they are served together, I cannot be held responsible for how much of this stuff I put away. Om nom nom. I mean, I’ll dip a few carrot sticks in a bowl of hummus, sure. And yeah, I’ll wrap up some kind of tofu and veg and fake cheese situation in a warm flatbread and munch away. But I will not return to the buffet for either of those treats. So, as you’ll note from my creative background choice in one recipe and then, well, not in the other – I made these on separate occasions. Also, I’ll level with you, as healthy as this flatbread is, it’s not so great after it’s cooled off. I As I already mentioned when I talked about the Crack Wrap from Peas and Thank You, you’re going to want to buy the book and make Mama Pea’s flatbread – aka La Hacienda de Peas Tortillas.

Moving along.

Before I discovered Crap Wraps I used these recipes for Hummus and Flatbread.

hummus-whole-wheat-flatbread

Hummus: – from Everyday Food, June 2007
2 cans (15.5 ounces each) chickpeas
1/3 cup fresh lemon juice
1/4 cup tahini
2 cloves garlic, chopped
1/8 teaspoon cayenne pepper
1 1/4 teaspoons coarse salt
Tortillas: – from Jazibes Recipes
1 kg Flour (all purpose) + 1 cup for rolling surface
1 1/2 cup vegetable oil
1 tbsp. Baking powder
2 tbsp. Salt
1 1/2 cup warm water
hummus-whole-wheat-flatbread
hummus-whole-wheat-flatbread
The hummus comes together as expected, you just mash everything together in the food processor (or two batches in the Magic Bullet)
hummus-whole-wheat-flatbread
hummus-whole-wheat-flatbread
Mix all the dry ingredients and make a well in the middle, add the oil and the water and knead away! When the dough holds together, break off small amounts and roll into balls.
hummus-whole-wheat-flatbread
hummus-whole-wheat-flatbread
Flour your counter (or whatever) and roll out each ball to about 6″, once they’re all done you just toss them one by one on a grill or a hot pan and watch them puff up a little and become tortillas!
hummus-whole-wheat-flatbread
hummus-whole-wheat-flatbread
I found that when these were warm, I could stuff them with whatever I wanted to and they rolled up or wrapped up beautifully, but once they cooled off they were brittle and hard to pretty much impossible to form. They were great as chunks in cheesy dip at 2am after we emptied all the wine!
2 Comments
Newer Posts »