The sea
A beautiful sunset on our last night
It appears that this blog will give you the last first. Need to work on what I've done wrong, but anyway I hope you enjoy visiting our Sister Chick vacation.
It’s been kinda quiet on the cooking front, due to the business of Christmas and a new year that bought with it some expected and some unexpected family needs that took over our lives; some for a short time others still ongoing. It is only now, 3 months after being made redundant and deciding that it seemed a good time to retire, that I am finding little bits of time to myself. Hence a few weeks back I was once again enjoying a coffee and watching the Barefoot Contessa on TV. Oh my what a lot of lovely food, but way too much salt, fat, cream, and oil for us Brits.
However the cheddar and dill cornbread looked good, so I took down the recipe and though it would be good to blog on my attempt to make it.
Well as usual I did not keep to the recipe. I halved the quantities as below:
1½ cups of self raising flour
½ cup cornmeal – vegetarian shop had none but the guy had made cornmeal muffins using polenta so that’s what I used
1/8 cup sugar – not sure why sugar was required in a savory dish but I did put it in!
1 tsp of baking powder
1 tsp of salt
4 oz butter [= 1 stick I think]
1 large egg, plus extra milk [hard to divide 3 eggs in half!]
1 cup of milk
1 cup sharp cheddar cheese – keep a handful for top of bread [I used left over red Leicester]
1 cup chopped dill [could not find fresh or dried dill so used 1 tbs of Mediterranean herbs]
Whisk egg and milk together and add melted butter. Pour into dry ingredients. Do not stir too much and let it stand. This went into a 6” x 12” dish and was baked for 25-30 mins at 350F [150C].
Considering the recipe is similar to a UK scone, this bread was so much lighter. Was that the baking powder or the polenta? I put baking powder into my scones but the result is not so light. I froze half the cornbread and have enjoyed eating the rest over several days with a variety of meals. Will definitely make this again. Maybe for Church lunch.
I used the recipe from a Woman’s Day magazine that did the classic meat loaf plus variations. So I did the classic with ground beef for my other half and the lentil one for myself – and yes once again with some variation to the original recipe including halving the ingredients!!! This made 5 small ‘cakes’ rather than loaves.
1 large egg
1 tbs oil – [not used]
½ a 15oz can lentils rinsed – [used 8oz of red lentils cooked as directed on package]
1 cup baby spinach chopped, about 2 oz –[used 4 cubes frozen, cooked as instructed]
½ jar roasted red peppers – [used frozen roasted mediterranean vegetables cooked as instructed – about 1 ½ cups]
1 oz feta cheese crumbled – [used mini baby bel one per ramkin dish]
3 oz of falafel mix or herb stuffing – [missed this out]
I drained the cooked lentils and mixed with the cooked spinach and roasted veggies. Add the beaten egg. The roasted veggies were flavoured so I did not add any extra seasoning. I greased 5 ramkin dishes – 3 ½ ” diameter and 2 ¼” deep. The mixture was quiet runny and as I was spooning it into the 3rd dish realized that I had not added the cheese!!! So I quickly removed some of the mixture and placed a mini baby bel cheese in the middle of each dish and then added more mixture. They cooked at 350F [150C] for abut 20mins. It was a bit of guess work as the original was done in a 9x3 ½ loaf tin for 35 mins.
These were much better than expected. Can’t remember if I added any oats to the runny mixture or not. Panic set in when I realised I had not added the cheese. I kept one for the following day and 3 are in the freezer yet to be eaten.
So, two good dishes to do again, neither very costly. An important part of food planning with the rising cost of food.
At last I got around to making this stew. I shopped for ingredients on the Saturday morning then cooked the meal Saturday evening and left it to stand overnight. It made a lovely quick Sunday lunch. I used a can of black eyed beans and a can of corn plus the other ingredients. The cut courgettes looked colourful against the red of the canned tomatoes. I did not have any fresh chillies so used a small sprinkling from a packet of chilli flakes. Also had to google ‘cilantro’ as I had no idea what that was. When I found out I still did not have any [Italian type of parsley] so went without. I did the full amount so had the stew on the Sunday and Monday with boiled rice as I did not cook the wild rice fritters. Still plenty left over so have frozen 4 portions. This is a recipe I would certainly do again and have already passed the recipe to a vegetarian friend.
Well........... there was a photo to go with the blog - but it uploads on its side!!!! not sure why so have left it out.

JC: 21 July 2010. Wild Rice Fritters, Three Bean Stew and Pumpkin Bread
For various reason I decided to cook each of the above on separate occasions. Three bean stew is still to be cooked, but the fritters and pumpkin bread have been cooked, eaten and enjoyed – though not without problems/disasters!!!
Pumpkin Bread vs 2 – I could not find any canned pumpkin puree at my local supermarket despite the fact that I have got it from there for an earlier recipe. So in my ‘UK wisdom’ I though if I pureed a can of peaches that would be ok. However, when I checked with JK across the pond the answer was NO, too moist. So sweet potatoes were used instead.
The 1st version taught me that a; I really should use the measuring cups and not think ‘I know better’. And b; that I really should wear my reading glasses when looking at ½ cup measurements. ¼ can easily look like ¾ which resulted in a loaf that looked more like bread pudding. Tasted ok though.
2nd version was great. I did increase the cranberry and walnuts to ½ cup of each. It cooked in about the 50mins stated and made the kitchen smell wonderful. I’ve sliced some to eat and some to freeze. Nice with a cup of tea.
Wild Rice Fritters. – A great success. I did half the recipe and ate half hot that evening and took the rest [3] into work the following day to eat cold with a hummus dip. I got gram flour [used for onion bhajis] rather than wholewheat – just because it was on the self. Glad I did as it made the fritters nice ‘n yellow. I did get some wild rice from Waitrose – the quick cook version – but did not use it for the fritters as JK sent some of the ‘real thing’ across the pond. Waitrose sell a Canadian wild rice – 500 grms for £5.75 – somewhat more costly than regular rice. I though I would be able to get the black wild rice at my local health food shop – but even they only had Canadian ‘Red’ wild rice.
Cooking went well. I had four keeping warm in the oven and 3 sizzling in the pan when there was a great record on the radio. Mmm I thought. This would be good to line dance to. So I kind of danced up the kitchen only to be met with the microwave blinking at me to ‘open door’!!! ‘Oh bother’ I said [just as Winnie the Pooh said as he fell out of the tree]. I knew exactly what was in the microwave – the corn that should have been in the fritters. Oh well I thought, the corn can be placed on the plate by my salmon with the wild rice fritters at the side. And very nice they were. Forgot to take pictures – too occupied with the missing corn!
Wild Rice and Corn Fritters - ingredients, besides wild rice, include: whole wheat flour, corn kernels, green onions, an egg, and beer.
(Also includes freshly grated Parmesan cheese, but I left that out.)
My daughter doesn't care for bell peppers, so I left them out. Instead of pinto beans (in the photo), I used (small, green) Fordhook Lima beans. It's not yet fresh corn season, so I used frozen kernels.
We have an Anaheim pepper (chili) plant, so I used one that was about 5 inches long. I scraped the seeds out, but could have left them in -- not very 'hot.' Instead of pumpkin, I used several small zucchini (courgettes), sliced in half lengthwise and then in about 1/2 inch "half moons."
North American Foods & Recipes. I followed the recipe faithfully, but... I should have realized that 300 degrees is NOT enough heat to bake a "quick bread." It had been baking an hour when I finally looked in a regular cook book. Oops! 350 degrees! I moved the temperature up and cooked it about 25 mins longer. I was surprised that it ended up cooked throughout and not dry at all.


