Monday, March 11, 2013

Cooking with Cast Iron


I got my husband to write a blog about cooking with cast iron. We love cooking with cast iron and you should try it. 

Over the last few years Court and I have tried very hard to simplify our cooking and eating habits. While we’re not perfect, we check labels incessantly and research like crazy, doing the best we can to limit our intake of processed foods and chemicals. There is something incredibly unnatural however that many people use on a weekly basis and don’t even realize it – we didn’t for the longest time. When we got married we were given an incredibly nice set of Calphalon pans. They we’re heavy and cooked wonderfully. Over the last few years however, we noticed that continuous use has begun to scrape the Teflon off of them. Being the research nut I am, I looked into what Teflon can do when it leeches into your food – holy cow!!! How in the world did we ever let this stuff touch our food! Many people believe Teflon can cause cancer, tumors, headaches, etc. Why take the chance? 

After reading up I headed into the garage, cracked open my old camping gear and dug out my cast iron skillet. It had never been used for anything but cooking over a campfire and had never been properly seasoned, but I figured anything was better than letting flakes of baked chemical leach into our food. I then began the long process of learning how to properly use cast iron, and since then we’ve fallen in love with it. It’s not difficult, but like many things, if you don’t follow the process, you’ll be sorely disappointed. The benefits are simple: They cost 10% of what an over-priced, foreign-made pan does and will last 5 lifetimes. They give you your daily requirement of iron (really!), take almost no time to clean, and cook more evenly than a $400 pan ever could. Cast iron has literally changed the way we cook!

Choosing Cast Iron
There are many types of cast iron, and all are not created equal, but just about all will work. If you feel like investing the time into getting something classy and quality, head down to your local antique mall or thrift store. You are looking for a skillet made by Griswold or Wagner. The brand is on the bottom. Other brands are good – these are great. You’ll want a size somewhere between 8 and 12 inches depending on your cooking habits. You’ll most likely walk away spending $30 on something gross and covered in rust. Good – you’re making progress. The old seasoning on it won’t do you any good, so be prepared to destroy it. It’s ok, you’ll make it better. Get the pan wet and with heavy duty sandpaper, get to work. You’re trying to get the surface on the outside and inside smooth. Sometimes I take a metal brush on my drill and lay into it as well. If you can get it down to the silver color, you’re doing great. You literally can’t destroy it, so give yourself a workout. The main thing is, get as much gunk off as you can. You want it smooth – the oven will do the rest. Rinse it well with hot soapy water and dry it completely. Then toss it in the oven on a low 2 hour cleaning cycle. This should loosen the rest up and turn it to ash. You’re halfway there now. Once it’s cooled (it can take 4-6 hours!), take it out, rinse it again with hot soapy water (this will be the last time soap touches your pan so enjoy it) and dry it thoroughly. Water causes rust. Rust is bad. Savvy? 

If you don’t want to go thru the trouble of investing in a quality older pan, you can head down to Walmart and pick-up a Lodge skillet. Lodge and similar brands are cast, not milled, so they will have a rougher surface. Milling grinds the metal down to a smooth surface, casting basically fills a mold with iron. Despite the name, old cast iron is milled, new cast iron is casted. With proper and continuous seasoning it won’t matter, but it does take more work to get newer ones cooking like the older ones. 

Seasoning
Seasoning your pan is the most important step. Without it, you’ll attempt to fry your first egg and end up in the corner in a fetal position crying. Trust me, it’s not fun for you, the pan or the egg. Seasoning creates the natural “Teflon” that allows you to slide an egg around a hot pan without anything oil and without sticking. A properly seasoned pan works 10:1 better than Teflon and probably won’t kill you in the long run. I consider this a plus.
Grab a tub of Crisco or generic shortening (lard works too). I know it’s unhealthy, but you’re not making a PB&J with it, so you’ll get over it. Cover a large cookie sheet in foil, set your pan on it and put on a rubber glove – it’s about to get messy. You’ll now proceed to grab a handful of shortening and rub the entire pan – EVERYTHING… inside, outside, handle and all - down with shortening. You want a nice white coat covering every inch. Wipe down the build-ups, but make sure it’s coated like you’re buttering bread. Once you do, set your pan upside down on the cookie sheet and place it in the oven on 340 degrees for 2.5 hours. Once the timer goes off, turn off the oven and let it cool with the pan inside. Once it cool, take the pan out, lightly wipe down with a paper towel to clean up excess shortening that hasn’t hardened, then do the whole process over again – shortening, glove, the whole bit. Put it back in for the same amount of time. By the time you do this twice, you’ll have a nice seasoning layer that is beginning to build up. You’ll notice your pan has changed from silver/grey to black/brown. That’s good. As you continue to cook on it more seasoning will build up, making that surface slicker and slicker. Years of seasoning is what gives cast iron it’s reputation. This is why grandma’s cast iron is so valuable. When properly maintained, a cast iron skillet can last 100+ years and never require re-seasoning. If you do notice the seasoning starting to fade, use the Crisco trick. And if you REALLY need to start from scratch, pop it in on another cleaning cycle and lather, rinse, repeat. 



Care and Daily Use
This is the easiest part, but goes against everything you’ve ever learned. Repeat after me – I WILL NEVER, EVER WASH MY CAST IRON WITH SOAP NOR WILL I SCRUB IT WITH A SPONGE. One more time. Seriously. Please promise me this. Doing so will DESTROY your seasoning and make you and me cry. Your cleaning tools will consist of water, a good metal spatula (which works great for cooking with too – I recommend a Dexter), and a paper towel.
Once you use your properly seasoned cast iron to make the best darn eggs of your life (or vegetables, meats, beans, cornbread, etc.) your cleaning habit is simple. Wipe it out with a damp rag. That’s it. For the tough messes, scrape with a metal spatula (firm but not hard enough to eat into your seasoning), rinse with nothing but water and then wipe out. For the impossible messes, fill it 60% with water and boil for 20 minutes. Then pour out and wipe out. They clean easiest when they’re still warm. Lastly – and do this every time – once it’s clean, pour a quarter sized drop of olive oil in the pan and use a paper towel to coat the pan with said oil. This will keep the seasoning from drying. That’s it. No chemicals, no scrubbing, no dishwasher. Just a good old-fashioned wipe down.

I’m sure Courtney will cover cast iron cooking techniques and recipes later on down the line, but she figured since I do all the pan-prep I might want to chime in a bit. Enjoy prepping and using a pan that you will most likely hand down to your kids and grandkids.

-Nick

Sunday, March 3, 2013

Event Planning -- Baby Shower Fun!

The baby boy is already 2 months old, so I am really late with this post. I've been meaning to post this for a while… Oh well!

A couple in our life group was pregnant so all us girls decided to plan her a shower.

We all chipped in on the planning, so that was a great help. We decided to do a casual brunch shower and there were about 20 people that attended. 

The inspiration for the colors was an orange and white chevron rug in the baby's room. Plus mommy and daddy both went to OSU, so the orange fit perfectly.

I designed the invitations and put them together which helped save on cost and they turned out fantastic! We made signs for the different food and drink stations and we even had a cute menu.

We found this great shop online, ShopSweet Lulu where we found orange and white rectangle plates, striped straws, striped napkins and orange and white tissue balls to hang. They have the cutest stuff at the shop—check it out! We also used mason jars as cups, which was super cute.

For food, we had mini quiche, mini fruit and yogurt parfaits, fruit, cinnamon rolls and blueberry scones. Then for drinks we had mimosas, coffee and water. We only played one game—bingo! Bingo was played while opening gifts. Everyone filled the squares with gifts they thought mommy would receive and if she opened that gift, then you could cross off the square. It really was a fun game.

Overall the baby shower was a success. The food was great, decorations were great and we all had fun. What is even better, is that baby boy is healthy! His mom is also super mom, because she birthed a 10 pound boy! Oh man!

I love the awesome ladies in my life group and I had so much fun planning the shower with all of them! I think we make a pretty good team. 

Hope you enjoy the photos. 

~Court

Friday, February 22, 2013

Food, Food, Food

Life has been crazy busy, but I have been trying to make some time to try a couple recipes. Here are a few that turned out delicious!!!!
Brown Sugar Snickerdoodle Cookies. Of course I found it on pinterest. I made over 30 cookies and they were all gone within 20 minutes. I can't wait to make them again. They were sooooo scrumptious. Here is the link http://www.ambitiouskitchen.com/2012/10/brown-butter-snickerdoodle-cookies/

Here's something on the healthy side, Quinoa Pudding. Similar to rice pudding but less than half the calories. I've had it in the fridge and I heat it up each time and it's good! I want to try adding nuts and dried fruit next time. Here is the link http://bookcooking.net/showthread.php?tid=4432

And here's the last recipe for the night, Slow Cooker Chicken Tortilla Soup! This is a great dinner to make during the week when you're super busy, because you trow everything in the crockpot and let it cook all day. Chet said it was his favorite tortilla soup ever.
Here is the link http://www.bakedbyrachel.com/2012/09/slow-cooker-chicken-tortilla-soup/

Fish Fudge...Homemade doggy treats

As you know we got a puppy right before Christmas, Reagan. He is a black lab and is almost four months old. He's so adorable, energetic, crazy at times, lovable, and mischievous. Just yesterday I brought him in town with him because he had to go to the vet. Afterwards, I went grocery shopping and had to make two stops. After I did my first half of the grocery shopping I then went to Costco and left him in the car. Well.....bad idea when I have a ton of food in the back of the car. So I came back with a cart full of food and find Reagan sitting in the back of the car eating cinnamon bread. He decided to eat ten of the twelve pieces of cinnamon bread while I was grocery shopping. It was supposed to be for a breakfast recipe for the B&B guests, and now I need to go back to the grocery store and buy more. I couldn't believe he did that! Needless to say, that ended up being his dinner and I hope he learned his lesson.
On to the recipe. A coworker of mine makes all his own doggy treats and he gave the recipes to me. I made fish fudge, which was so easy and Reagan goes crazy over them (so does Gus, my in-laws dog). I made it in a 9x12 pan and cut them in little squares. I keep three pieces in the fridge at a time and the rest I freeze. They don't last longer than four days in the fridge. If you have a dog and have five extra minutes then try this treat recipe for your dog. It's healthy and has a 1/4 if the ingredients and junk most treats have.
2 cans salmon, drained

6 eggs
1/2 C flour. I us wheat flour. Or you could use oat or rice flour
1/2 C cheese. Any kind works. I used shredded cheese
Mix it all together and put in a greased 9x12 pan and cook for about 20 minutes

Friday, February 15, 2013

Shane Truman Todd's Article in FT

My brother-in-law, Shane Todd, was murdered, in Singapore, last June. Here is the article, in Financial Times, that came out today! It's very powerful and you should read it!!!!!!
Here is the link. http://www.ft.com/intl/cms/s/2/afbddb44-7640-11e2-8eb6-00144feabdc0.html#axzz2Kyp6A6BY

Love,
Corynne


Friday, February 8, 2013

Cauliflower Pizza Dough


When I was trying to not to eat gluten I found a cauliflower pizza dough recipe on pinterest, which is gluten free! I typically make my own pizza dough in our bread maker so we're used to that, but I was very surprised how good it was. Obviously it wasn't the same taste, but it is something I'd definitely make again. After that was done I added my sauce, cheese, bell peppers, mushrooms, garlic, onions, ham, pineapple, jalapeno's and seasonings! We had the works pizza and it was delicious!
And here's the link to the recipe: http://www.eat-drink-smile.com/2011/04/cauliflower-crust-pizza.html

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spices and trying not to waste

First off, I really enjoy cooking and making delicious meals, so in order to do that you have to have a decently stocked pantry and a good spice cabinet. Nick and I kind of went overboard on the spice cabinet but we have everything you need, so that's a big benefit. Its amazing what spices can do for a meal. A friend recently gave us a spice mix from savory spice shop called bohemian forest rub. Wow!! Its awesome and good on a variety of things. The shop is a chain, so there are various locations (but not one in Tulsa) and here is their website savoryspiceshop.com. Its fun trying new spices-I challenge you to buy a new one this week. Smoked paprika is a good one if you have not tried it before.

One of my goals is to not waste, especially food. I hate throwing away food because I didn't eat it before it went bad or veggies start to mold in the fridge. I try to plan out meals and buy food only for that week, but plans always seem to change and one of the meals doesn't work out. So one of the things I do is go through my fridge to see what is going to expire soon and I make a meal with those items. So this last week I realized I had some brie cheese in the fridge that I bought for Christmas day. Nick and I were booths battling sinus infections on Christmas so brie was not really appealing. I did a little Google search and decided to make apple, cranberry and brie stuffed chicken.  Luckily I had everything on hand for the meal and it turned out awesome.  I served this with green beans.
Here is the original recipe and below is my version with a few tweaks to the original, I hope you enjoy!


Cranberry, Apple and Brie Stuffed Chicken
  • 3 good sized boneless skinlesschicken breasts, pounded out to about  
  • 1 package of brie cheese (about.55 lb pkg), remove the outer white part
  • 3/4 cup of cranberries
  • 1/4 apple diced small
  • 3 pieces bacon
  • Desired seasoning – I used seasonedpepper, salt and bohemian forest rub

In a medium size bowl mixthe brie, cranberries and apple. Take your rings off and dive in with yourhands, the best way to mix this is to knead and mix with the hands. After thisis done and the chicken is pounded a little flatter, put this mixture on halfthe chicken breast, then folder over the other half. Wrap each stuffed breastwith one piece of bacon to help hold in the mixture. Season the wrapped-stuffedchicken.  Bake at 350 degrees forabout 45 minutes.