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Caramelized Onion and Apple Cornbread

November 10, 2018 Colleen Stem
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You know when you eat something that you haven’t had or haven’t had in a long time and it’s all you want to eat?

I am having a moment with apples and onions. Roasted and raw, it’s on my mind every time I am making food. Weird? I don’t know, but it’s sweet and savory and all fall like and comforting. It’s a good moment.

So now I am passing on my moment in the form of cornbread. Why cornbread? Well I think cornbread is a fine fine vessel for things that could be perceived sweet of savory. This cornbread is in fact not sweet, but not not sweet. It is a little both and suits the the apple and onion moment quite well.

People ate it, at first somewhat suspect that it was not going to be good, but after a bite or two they too appreciated the apple onion combination. And the cornbread. Even got a lady that doesn't even like cornbread to like this so that is something right?

Embrace the moments.. To the cornbread!

The stuff. A couple apples, an onion, cornmeal, flour, salt, and baking soda. Also soy milk, oil, apple cider vinegar, maple syrup, pepper, Sansa little earth balance.

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Start by thinly slicing the onions. Toss them into a oven safe skillet with about a tablespoon of earth balance and place on a medium heat.

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Once the onions are cooking, thinly slice the apples too.

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Toss the apples in with the onions and stir around wait a few minutes and stir around some more until the stuff all looks like…

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This. The apples ans onions are super tender sans soft and amazing and do not eat them all, but maybe have bite or two.

Scoop the mixture out of the skillet ans melt another tablespoon of earth balance into the skillet, trying to evenly coat the bottom.

Now to the cornbread. Mix together all of the dry ingredients.

Then add in all the wet and gently mix until completely incorporated.

Pour the batter into the greased skillet

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Top with the apple union mixture then pop into the oven for about 40-45 minutes to bake.

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Golden crisp and amazing smelling. Check for donees with a tester stuck in the middle and when its done, its done.

Now the hard part. Let it cool. You can go right at it, but it will crumble and fall apart. This bread really needs a little time to chill.

Then it’s time. Eat what you need. Careful, it might be all of it.

-C


Caramelized Onion and Apple Cornbread

makes a 10 inch round skillet of bread

  • 1 1/2 cups cornmeal

  • 1 cup all purpose flour

  • 1 1/2 teaspoon baking soda

  • 1 teaspoon salt

  • 1 2/3 cups soy or other plant based milk

  • 2 tablespoon apple cider vinegar

  • 1/3 cup maple syrup

  • 1/3 cup neutral oil like canola

  • 1 large onion

  • 2 apples (macon or mac)

  • 2 tablespoon earth balance or vegan butter

  • Pepper

Note. This bread is baked in a cast iron skillet. If you don’t have one, you can use a 10 inch cake pan or a 9x9 square pan.

Preheat oven to 400

Start by cutting the onion in half length wise then slice the halves into very thing pieces. Grab a 8-10 inch oven safe skillet and place on medium heat with about a tablespoon of butter. Add in the onions, stir around, and let cook. Grab the apples, remove the cores and slice into thin pieces. Add the apples to the onions and stir. Keep cooking and stirring until the apples and onions are very tender and starting to brown. Place the mixture into a bowl then coat the bottom and sides of the skillet again with another tablespoon of butter. Set skillet aside for a minute.

For the cornbread, mix together the flour, cornmeal, salt, and baking soda in large bowl. Add in the soy milk, maple, oil, and vinegar and gently mix until completely incorporated and there are no big lumps. Pour batter into the greased skillet. Evenly top with the apple onion mixture, sprinkle with a little pepper, then pop the skillet into the preheated oven. Bake for about 40-45 minutes or until it’s a nice dark golden brown and a taster stuck in the middle comes out clean. Once cooked, remove from oven and let cool for at least a half hour. The cornbread needs the time to cool or else it will cut really crumbly.

Once cooled, eat. Left overs can be stored in airtight box at room temperature for a day, but any longer it should go into the fridge.




In bread, Dairy Free, side dish, Vegan, Vegetables Tags Caramelized Onion and Apple Cornbread, cornbread, vegan, plant based, thanksgiving, bread, apples and onions, sweet and savory, quick and easy, dairy free, king Arthur flour, cornmeal
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Everything Bagel Focaccia

October 20, 2018 Colleen Stem
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If you come around my house in the cold months, you will more times then not find yourself faced with fresh bread. Why? Well because I like to bake bread. But mostly, if I am honest, when I am cold, I bake. (We keep the house heat off until at least November 1. After that we keep the heat at a low 60 when it’s on.) I like the house to be kept on the colder side, but sometime, it’s a little brisk so if I am home and cold, I am probably just going to bake something, to stay warm of course. This focaccia was my first foray baking to stay warm of the cold season. It was 40 degrees out and the heat still wasn’t on, and I just so happen to be going through my spice drawer and found a batch of everything bagel seasoning that I had mixed up a couple months ago that needed to be used. Hence the bread.

Cold weather+found seasoning+I should make something for dinner=everything bagel focaccia. Or you can just make it because it is super easy and every time I make focaccia it gets gobbled right up. Especially this time. Barb and the mr ate half of it at dinner. And I think the other half was gone by the next day. To quote the mr. “This focaccia is professional”. He said it with a mouth full of bread. No shit dude. I am professional. Ha

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The stuff. Flour, yeast, warm water, everything bagel seasoning, sea salt, pepper, and olive oil.

Start with getting the yeast and warm water mixed together. Let it sit for a minute or 5, just to make sure it is active (this is more important to do if you are not using fresh yeast)

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Once you are sure your yeast is alive, add in the flour and mix together until you are having a hard time mixing anymore.

Dump dough onto a floured surface and start to knead. Probably for 5 minutes, until you dough looks like….

This. Kneaded until smooth and beautiful .

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Place dough into a deep bowl and drizzle with olive oil. Make sure the whole ball is coated. Then cover with a damp cloth and stick in a warm place to rise for about an hour, or until the dough has doubled in size.

Once dough has doubled, grab your baking sheet (can use a pan) and coat the pan with about 2 tablespoons olive oil.

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Place the dough into pan and spread it out using your fingertips. Flip the dough over if you need to and keep dimpling the dough until it hits all the sides. Drizzle on another tablespoon of oil on top.

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And don’t forget the seasoning. Sprinkle on all the everything seasoning along with the sea salt and some cracked pepper. Make sure to be somewhat liberal with the seasonings too because you know that’s what you want.

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Into the oven for 30ish minutes then out of the oven

Look at all the everything.

Drizzle the top of the bread with a little more olive oil, pop it out of the pan, stick it on a cutting board, and that’s it. Now watch your slab of bread disappear.

Happy bread baking. Stay warm.

-C


Everything Bagel Focaccia

make a 9x13 slab of bread

  • 4 cups all purpose flour (plus a little more for kneading)

  • 2 cups warm water

  • 2 teaspoon yeast (or one packet)

  • 3 tablespoons everything bagel seasoning*

  • 1 tablespoon sea salt

  • cracked pepper

  • about 1/3 cup very good olive oil

*Note To make your own everything bagel seasoning mix up equal parts dried minced garlic, dried onion flakes, sesame seeds, and poppy seeds. Or I think you can buy it now at the store with all the other spices. But it’s probably cheaper to make it yourself.

To start, place yeast and warm water in a big bowl. Mix until incorporated and let sit for a minute or two or until you see little bubble form, just to make sure the yeast is active. When your sure it’s good, add in 4 cups of flour. Mix with a wooden spoon or dough mixer until it becomes hard to mix anymore. Dump the dough onto a flour surface and start to knead, adding a little bit of flour as you go if it became to sticky, until the dough is smooth and uniform. Should take about 5 minutes. Place the kneaded dough back into bowl (scrap any of the extra bits out first) and drizzle with olive oil. Make sure the whole dough is coated. Cover the bowl with a damp towel and place in a warm spot. Let dough rise for an hour, or until it has doubled in size.

Preheat oven to 375.

Once dough has doubled, grab a 9x13 baking sheet or pan and coat with 2 tablespoons of olive oil. Really make sure the pan is well greased. Place dough into pan and with the tips of your fingers, smoosh and spread dough until it has filled up the pan. Drizzle with another tablespoon of oil then take your seasoning and evenly spread it all over the top. Sprinkle with salt and add a little cracked pepper. Now pop it into the preheated oven. Bake for 30 -35 minutes or until the bread has turned a nice golden brown.

Remove from oven and right away drizzle on another tablespoon or so of olive oil. Let sit for a few minutes to absorb then pop the bread out of the pan and place on a rack or cutting board and either let cool, or not. Warm focaccia is loved by all.

In Vegan, seeds, Savory, bread Tags Everything Bagel Focaccia, Focaccia, everything bagel seasoning, bread, vegan, veagan bread, easy bread, fast yeasted bread, yeasted bread, plant based, dairy free, dinner side
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Jalapeño Lime Corn Milk Biscuits

September 8, 2018 Colleen Stem
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I really am just trying to find new ways to use up as much corn as I can. The mr won't really eat it (he says he hates it, but doesn't really, but is now really not eating it) and the littles can only eat so much. I have some in the fridge pickled, some in the freezer, and yet every time I come home from farm share I end up brining like 15 more pieces home with me. So I had to get a little crafty with this last batch. I milked it and made biscuits. And it was exactly the right thing to do. Making corn milk was genius (which makes me a genius?) and I am now going to be baking everything with it until I use up all the corn. 

These biscuits are very versatile, like all good biscuits should be. I served them to Barb and the mr with chili and of course they loved them but also I smothered raspberry jam all over a few and the mr was into that. Butter or almond butter too, or just plain. They can be eaten in all sorts of yummy ways.  And if you really are into the corn milk part but not the jalapeño or lime-ness of the biscuit, just don't add that stuff in. A simple corn milk biscuit would be just fine too.  Aaannd if you have a corn hater in the house, they still will probably like theses, or so this goes my experience, although I still don't think he hate corn. But what do I know? 

To the biscuits.

The stuff. Corn, soy milk, a lime, a few jalapeños, and earth balance. In the bowl we have some  flour, baking soda, baking powder, and salt.

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Cook tha corn. A quick few minutes in boil water will do the trick. 

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Get all that corn off those cobs. Sure you can nibble, it's hard not to. 

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Fresh corn and soy milk go into the blender and blended until all smooth and creamy. Taste it.. it is pretty creamy dreamy.  

That is the corn milk. You could drink it just like this and it would not be weird. It is delicious. 

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Get you jalapeños, remove seeds, and give them a good small dice and toss them into the bowl with the flours and stuff. Also zest the lime into the bowl with the flour.

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Cold plant butter goes in first and cut in (I used fork, but you could use a pastry blender) until the dough looks crumbly. Add in the corn milk and the juice from the lime  and gently stir to just combined.

Dump the dough onto a floured surface and gather it all together then lightly press it down until  it's about an inch thick. 

This is the best part, ( Because I love the look of the cut out dough.. It apeals to me in some great way that I don't yet understand) cut the biscuits. I went and grabbed a biscuit cutter which I barely ever use, so that was a win.

Once you cut out the first biscuits, you can gather the dough and gently press it back together and cut out  more until you use all the dough.

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Place the cut out biscuits on a baking sheet and brush the tops brushed with a little corn milk then into the hot oven they go.

Out they come looking all biscuity and such.. And don't mind the red reflection. That be my shirt. Note to self and to all. Don't wear red while taking pictures with reflective materials. 

Letting the biscuits be cool, just for a few minutes.

Still slightly warm all cozied together. 

Nothing like a basket of biscuits to make people happy.

-C


Jalapeño Lime Corn Milk Biscuits 

makes about 15 smaller biscuits 

  • 2 1/2 cups flour
  • 2 ears of corn
  • 1 cup soy milk
  • 1 teaspoon salt 
  • 1 teaspoon baking podwer
  • 1/2 teaspoon basking soda 
  • 1/4 cup  cold vegan butter
  • 2 jalapeños 
  • I lime 

Cook corn by removing husks and  dropping into a pot of boiling water for about 5 minutes. When corn is cooked, remove from water and allow to cool.  Once cooled enough to handle, cut all the corn off the cob and place into the blender with the soy milk. Blend until smooth. It should measure out to be a little more then 2 cups. If you have less, add in more soy milk until is measures 2 cups.  Place corn milk in fridge for at least 1/2 hour to cool. 

Preheat oven to 450.

Place flour, salt, baking soda, and baking powder into a large bowl. Zest the lime in as well and mix it all together. Grab jalapeños, cut in half, remove seeds, then dice into very small pieces. Mix those into mixture.  Now cut in the butter with either a fork or pastry blender until the mixture is crumbly. Add in juice of the lime and 2 cups of  the cooled corn milk and mix until just barley incorporated.

Dump the mixture onto a flour surface. Gather it al together and then press it flat until its about an inch thick. With a biscuit cutter, or a knife if you want square biscuits, cut out biscuits. If you use a cutter, place cut biscuits onto a baking sheet then gather the remaining dough and gently press back together and cut out more biscuits until dough is used up.  Once all the biscuits are on the baking sheet, brush the tops with corn milk  if you have a little left over or just plain soy milk then place them into the hot oven.

Bake for 17-22 minutes or until the biscuits are a nice golden brown. Once baked, remove from oven and place on a cooling rack to cool, or toss into basket with a tea towel and serve warm.

Then eat them.

 

In Vegan, Dairy Free, bread, biscuits and such Tags Jalapeño Lime Corn Milk Biscuits, Corn milk, biscuits, vegan, dairy free, bread, King Arthur flour, food 52, plant based, jalapeño
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Lemon Fennel soda Bread

March 17, 2018 Colleen Stem
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Would you believe me that I totally forgot that it is St Patricks day and that this bread was in no way inspired by that? Well it's true. What inspired this soda bread was the Great British Bake Off which I am currently watching over again. (yes, over again but it is just such a good show and makes me feel like I can bake anything.)

 I make fresh bread just about every day, but I  mostly use my sourdough culture or if I am running low on time, yeast, but I never think about making a loaf of a savory quick bread. When I think quick bread or soda bread, my mind goes to bananas or berries, or anything sweet. After seeing all the contestants making all sorts of crazy stuffed and flavored savory breads I was all like, "why don't I ever do that?" So I did, all high on inspiration (every time I watch the show I feel the need to bake). I basically opened the spice drawer and grabbed a jar which was fennel, then figured lemon is a fine right pair so lemon fennel it was to be and yeah. I wanted to go a little more crazy (like they did on the show) and add a ribbon or pesto or chunks of some veggies or beans or whatever but this was good for the moment and good it was indeed.

And the smell of this bread.... The hole house filled up with the scent that I could only describe as amazingly lovely. It made me think of  gardens full of spring flower blooms, a clothes line full of sun bleach white linen, or the feeling of soft warn dirt  under your feet for the first time after a long winter. I swear I am not high. It just smelled so very good. 

After it was baked and cooled, but still slightly warm I cut into it and gave the mr a piece. The first piece the mr liked, the second he ate with mozzarella cheese which did not go well with him, but after that found that he really likes it with peanut butter, or plan, with a bit of butter. What that means is that you should just make it and eat it however you suits you because a quick savory bread is always a good choice when a choice is needed. And your house will smell amazing too. 

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The stuff. White and wheat flours, baking soda and baking powder, salt, fennel, soy milk, lemons, honey, and oil. 

All the dry, the fennel and the lemon zest into big bowl. 

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Lemon juice, oil, and Haney got mixed together with the milk. Let this mixture sit for about 5 minutes so the lemon sours the milk a bit. 

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Wet into dry and mix around with a fork until combined. Dump onto a floured surface and form a ball. 

Take the dough and place it on a lightly floured baking sheet then take a knife or dough scraper and give the dough a big deep X. Get about half an to an inch deep. 

And Ito the oven it goes. 

Just a mere 4o minutes later you have a crisp and golden loaf that smells like springtime and loveliness.

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Give it a little time to cool down but grab a slice when it's still a bit warm and eat it up. If you have butter to jam or honey on hand, it's not necessary but welcomed. 

-C


Lemon Fennel Soda Bread

Makes 1 loaf

  • 1 1/2 cups all purpose flour
  • 1 1/2 cups whole wheat flour
  • 2 tablespoons fennel seeds
  • 1 teaspoon salt
  • 1 teaspoon baking soda
  • 1 teaspoons baking powder
  • 1 cup soy milk
  • 2 tablespoon lemon juice
  • 1 tablespoon lemon zest 
  • 2 tablespoons vegetable oil
  • 2 tablespoon honey or maple syrup

Preheat oven to 375

In a large bowl mix together the flours, baking soda and powder, salt, fennel, and the lemon zest. In a separate bowl or jar, mix together the milk, lemon juice, honey or maple, and oil. Let sit for 3-5 minutes so the milk gets a chance to lightly sour. 

Dump wet mixture into dry and mix around until  incorporated. Dump dough onto a floured surface and form a ball then place dough onto a lightly flour baking sheet and either with a knife or dough scrapper, score the top with a x about an inch deep. Place into oven and bake for  40-45 minutes or until a nice deep golden brown and a tater stuck into the loaf comes out clean. 

Remove from oven and let cool on a rack.

Cut into it while it's a tad but warm and serve naked or with butter and honey or whatever you want. 

Bread keeps for 2-3 days or is good to be frozen sliced up. 

Tags Lemon Fennel Soda Bread, Vegan, quick bread, savory quick bread, soda bread, Irish soda bread, fennel, lemon, dinner bread, snack bread, vegan bread, no yeast bread, flavored savory bread, dairy free bread, egg free bread, breas, bread
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Banana Poppy Seed Muffins

February 3, 2018 Colleen Stem
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Banana bread never goes out of style. It is a clsasic, everyday, everybody type of food. Have a slice for dessert, maybe drizzled with some chocolate, definitely.  How about for a grab and go breakfast, sure sure.. A chunk slathered in peanut butter for snack time or anytime, well  isn't that's why you make it?  And who doesn't always have a banana bowl in the kitchen? A banana bowl that is always full of bananas because the banana just always makes it's way home. They seem to pile up, even when I don't mean for them to. And I know I am not the only one. I see it all the time. A fruit bowl in the kitchen with a least a couple of really really ripe bananas, waiting for that moment when you know there is no freaking way anyone in their right mind would eat those banana because gross. That's when you have it, the perfect banana for some banana bread, or in this case, banana muffins.  

Here I went muffin style because I had already made a loaf of banana bread earlier in the week and because I wanted to send half of the muffins to the boys at the front desk at the gym. (They give me coffee, I give them muffins) And also, muffins cook a lot faster then bread so if you are a little low on time, muffins are the way to go. But if you would rather bread, you can make it bread. Bananas are there for you and are not fussy. 

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The stuff. Ripe bananas, poppy seeds, brown sugar, oil, and apple cider vinegar. Also have flour, cinnamon, baking soda, baking powder, and a little salt in the bowl. 

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Mash the bananas in a bowl, like really mash them up until it turns to a sugar banana slop. Then add in the oil and the vinegar and mix together.

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Dump in the dry and the poppy seeds and mix it all up until combined but then stop. Don't over mix the batter or else you will get tuff muffins. 

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Scoop into well greased muffin pans and pop them into the preheated oven to bake. 

Done! And in only took like 20 minutes appose to an hour if I made banana bread. 

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And here is when you grab a coffee, a muffin, and have yourself a moment.

Stay good.

-C


Banana Poppy seed Muffins

makes 12-14 muffins

  • 2 cups flour
  • 1 teaspoon baking soda
  • 1 teaspoon baking powder 
  • 1 teaspoon salt
  • 1 tablespoon cinnamon 
  • 1/4 cup poppy seeds
  • 2/3 cups packed  brown sugar
  • 1/2 cup neutral flavored oil
  • 4 really ripe bananas (they need to be really ripe of the mixture will be to dry)
  • 1 tablespoon apple cider vinegar 

Preheat oven to 350

In a large bowl, mash the bananas with the sugar until the mixture turns wet and sloppy, but there are still a few little chunks of banana.  Mix in the oil and vinegar. In a separate bowl mix the  flour, cinnamon , baking powder and soda, salt, and poppy seeds together. Dump the dry into the wet and mix until all is combined but then stop. Don't over mix batter. 

Scoop mixture into well greased muffin tins and place into oven once it has preheated. Bake the muffins for about 20- 22 minutes or until nicely browned and a tester stuck into the middle of one comes out clean.

Remove from oven and let sit in tin for a few minutes until it cools down. Remove the muffins from the tin and let completely cool on a wire rack. 

Eat whenever and how many you want, store the rest in an air tight container for a couple of days or wrap a few and  freeze. 

In Sweets, snack, seeds, fruit, desserts, Dairy Free, breakfast, bread, sweet breads and muffins Tags Banana Poppy Seed Muffins, vegan, muffins, poppy seeds, bananas, fruit, breakfast, snack time, nut free, dairy free, plant based, everyday baking, vegan baking, bread, dessert
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