Showing posts with label giveaway. Show all posts
Showing posts with label giveaway. Show all posts

4/28/10

Mother's Day Menu 2010 -Part 2 Parmesan Baked Potatoes and Giveaway! CLOSED







This is one of Di's easy and yummy go-to recipes. It's the perfect accompaniment to our Mo Day main dish, which I'll post later this week. Another dish Mom's going to luh-huv.

Giveaway time! Just in time for Mother's Day.


From the Hip Hostess- A Demi Style apron of your choice:

The Hip Hostess is a Mother/daughter team (you won't believe they are mother-daughter when you see their pic!) who design and sell darling 100% cotton aprons for all occasions.

Hip Hostess special deal to A Bountiful Kitchen readers -
20% off on your order-Expires May 10th. Promo code: KITCHEN





From Jennifer Curtis, Pink Chandelier Jewelry designer,
one custom made charm:






From yours truly :) at ABK - two cookbooks:
one for you, and one for your mom...

The Complete Magnolia Bakery Cookbook


and the tried and true New Better Homes and Gardens cookbook:


To enter- Share what you love most about your MOM or what you love most about being a MOM. All entries must be posted by Friday, April 30 at midnight. Winner will be chosen by Random.org Winner announced on Saturday May 1st.





Parmesan Baked Potatoes

6 tablespoons butter, melted
3 tablespoons fresh grated Parmesan
8-10 medium red potatoes, scrubbed and halved

Pour butter into a 9x13 pan. Sprinkle grated cheese into pan. Place potatoes cut side down on top of cheese. Bake at 400 degrees for 40-45 minutes or until tender. Sprinkle generously with Kosher salt and pepper. Serve while hot. You may bake these and keep warm, covered with foil in a 200 degree oven.

3/16/10

Spinach, Chicken and Bowtie Pasta Salad







Loved reading all of your thoughts about Spring! Winner of the "Bliss" cookbook is Leanne, who said:

"My very favorite thing about Spring is the parallel it draws from Winter---Winter allows the rain and snow, for a couple of months, from dark, threatening clouds. Then, as if nothing ever happened, we rise to a perfectly sunny, cloudless day. A lovely, clean slate from the seemingly neverending cold. Forgiveness.It is my favorite time of year."

Beautifully said, Leann!

Spring always steers me in the direction of salad instead of soup. Found this recipe years ago in the cookbook "Favorites". It's another local cookbook, put together by the Ivory family. If you live in our neck of the woods, the Ivory Homes name is familiar. I talked to one of the authors right after she finished this book and she told me it was a compilation of family and friend recipes they had used and grown to love over the years. They originally printed the cookbook for giving to family, and quickly had requests for so many they decided to do a second printing. Ten years later, they are still printing and donating the proceeds to the Make A Wish Foundation. It's available here.
I made this salad last week, much to my son's dismay. Fruit in pasta salad? They hate it.
I love it.
They would, on the other hand, rather eat a frozen (breakfast) burrito (yes, for dinner). Personally, I would rather gnaw my hand off, than eat one of those burritos.

Happy Spring!



Spinach, Chicken and Bowtie Pasta Salad
adapted from Favorites, A Collection of Ivory Family Recipes

Pasta:
16 oz Bowtie pasta, cooked al dente

Dressing:
2/3 cup vegetable or canola oil
2/3 cup teriyaki sauce
2/3 cup cider vinegar
1/3 cup sugar
1/2 teaspoon salt
1/2 teaspoon pepper

Salad:
1 1/2 bags fresh spinach (about 8 cups)
1- 6 oz bag craisins
3- 11 oz cans mandarin oranges, drained
2-8 oz cans sliced water chestnuts, drained and chopped
1/2 cup parsley, chopped
1 bunch green onions, chopped, green part only
1/4 cup sesame seeds
1 small can honey roasted peanuts or cashews (about 2 cups)
2-3 cups cooked chicken, cut into slices

Blend dressing ingredients together in blender or food processor. Mix dressing and cooked pasta in medium bowl and marinate for two hours. Combine rest of salad dressing (except nuts) in large salad bowl, add pasta and dressing and toss gently.
Add nuts just before serving.

Tips:
-I like to marinate the chicken in about 1 cup of teriyaki sauce overnight in the refrigerator. Drain the chicken and discard the sauce. Broil the chicken for about 7-10 minutes. Remove from oven and cool completely before adding to salad.
-"Very Very Teriyaki" is my favorite sauce. If using this brand, reduce the amount of teriyaki sauce to 1/3 cup. Make sure to shake the bottle well before using.
_ I usually skip marinating the pasta after it is cooked, I like the pasta to be lighter in color, and the chicken to have a darker color.

3/15/10

Oreo Brownies and Cookbook Giveaway!






Remember the Cranberry Salsa I made back in December? Loved that recipe. It came from this cute book-


I purchased "Bliss" last month, and found this recipe for Oreo Brownies. Since Oreos are my fave store bought cookie, and I love brownies, I had to give this recipe a try. They were quick to put together and a real kid pleaser. More like a bar cookie than a brownie, similar to Nordy Bars. Great for an easy semi-home made treat.

The cookbook: I loved the clean look of this book. Love that's it's a local author (Utah) and thought A Bountiful Kitchen readers would love it too. Great cookbook to add to your collection!

To Enter/Win (the power of pos thinking, right?)
1. Leave a comment sharing what you love most about SPRING. It's almost here! One entry per person.
2. If you post a link to this giveaway on your blog, three entries for you.
3. Please leave each of your comments separately.
4. You have until Wednesday March 17th at midnight to enter.

Winner selected by The Random Counter and announced on Thursday March 18th.




Oreo Brownies

1 package Oreo cookies, chopped
4 tablespoons butter, melted
1 cup chocolate chips, milk or dark
1 cup vanilla or white chocolate chips
1 1/2 cup mini marshmallows
1 cup chopped walnuts
1 (14 oz) can sweetened condensed milk

Preheat oven to 350.

Line an 9 x 13 pan with foil, leaving an overhang of foil around the edges. Lightly grease the pan.

In a large bowl, mix the chopped cookies with the butter. Pour half the mixture into the prepared pan. Sprinkle with the chips, marshmallows, and nuts. Top with the remaining cookie mixture. Pour the sweetened condensed milk evenly over the top.

Bake for about 25-30 minutes, or until lightly golden. Let cool to room temperature and lift the bars from the pan. Peel back the foil and cut into serving pieces.

Tips:

-I omitted the nuts, partly bc I thought most kids don't love nuts, and partly bc I thought nuts with this combo didn't sound good.
-I used closer to 1 1/2 cups each of choc chips and white chips, and used closer to 2 cups marshmallows total.
-Also, think I would like this better cooked in an 8x8 or 9x9 pan, the brownies were a little on the thin side for me.

1/18/10

Chocolate Chip Oatmeal Cookies with Dried Cherries and WINNER!







Wow. Loved reading your hopes for 2010.
The winner of "The Sweet Melissa Baking Book" is Debbie L. who wrote:

"I hope that by the end of 2010 the people in Haiti will be on their way to recovery. It is going to take a long time."

Debbie, send me an email at ABountifulkitchen@gmail.com and I'll send out your book!


It snowed last night. So, I'm feeling a - stay at home and bake week, with the rain/snow forecast for every day this week. With the kids home today, it's the perfect day to make some yummy hot-from-the-oven cookies. I tried these a few weeks ago and loved them. I know, you are thinking- really, what a surprise.


This is what makes the cookie so yummy. Big, soft chunks of tart & sweet fruit with chocolate.
I'm not a fan of chocolate covered cherries. You know those icky gooey cordials. SICK. I'll save the rant. But I do love a good chocolate-fruit combo in a dessert. Anyway, these cookies are delicious. If you know a chocolate-cherry lover, bake up a batch and share.




Chocolate-Chip Oatmeal Cookies with Dried Cherries

1 cup (2 sticks) unsalted butter, room temperature
1 cup (packed) golden brown sugar
1/2 cup sugar
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
2 large eggs
2 cups old-fashioned oats
1 1/2-1 3/4 cups all purpose flour
1 teaspoon baking soda
1 teaspoon salt
1 1/4 cups dried tart cherries (6 ounces)
1 1/4 cups semisweet chocolate chips

Position 1 rack in bottom third and 1 rack in top third of oven; preheat to 375°F. Line 2 large baking sheets with parchment paper. Blend first 4 ingredients in processor 30 seconds. Add eggs; process to blend. Add next 4 ingredients. Using on/off turns, process until oats are coarsely chopped and mixture is blended. Transfer to large bowl. Mix in cherries and chocolate chips.
Spoon batter by rounded tablespoonfuls onto prepared baking sheets, spacing 2 inches apart (cookies will spread). Bake until tops of cookies are golden brown, rotating baking sheets after 6 minutes, about 12 minutes total. Transfer cookies to rack; let cool. Repeat with remaining batter.




Tips:
-I used a Kitchen Aide mixer, and creamed the butter and sugars, added the eggs and vanilla, then all of the dry ingredients at once, until just blended. Mixed in the fruit and chocolate after adding the dry ingredients.
-Dried Montmorency cherries can be purchased at Costco. Found with the other dried fruits- the brand- Stoneridge Orchards. So good for snacking too. Especially if eaten with some chunks of dark chocolate.
-I used about 1 3/4 cups flour.
-The original recipe did not suggest, but I refrigerated the dough for about 1 hour.
-If you have a convection oven, bake at 375, you will not need to rotate the pans on different levels of the oven. Bake for about 7 minutes total at 375 convection setting.

1/13/10

Black Bottom Brownies and GIVEAWAY








First. If you love cream cheese brownies and have a New Years resolution to stay away from really sinful desserts, exit this page. Now.
If not, and you want to enter A Bountiful Kitchen's first giveaway of the year, stick around.
I dropped a plate of these brownies off to a darling group of 16-18 year old girls this week. The feedback - well, let's just say, the plate came back empty. This recipe came from the "Sweet Melissa Baking book". Everything I have tried out of this book has been a winner. The last recipe I made and loved: Butterscotch Cashew Bars. Melissa Murphy is the owner/chef of the Sweet Melissa Patisseries in Brooklyn, NY.




Black Bottom Brownies are not for lily livered chocolate/cream cheese lovers. This is quite possibly the most dense cream cheese brownie I have ever eaten. Since I am not a huge cream cheese dessert fan, I always like to top anything cream cheese with frosting. So here is the run down: thick, dense brownie layer (includes 6 eggs and 1/2 lb butter), topped with a pound of cream cheese, 6 MORE eggs (yes, 12 eggs total), and two cups of chocolate chips. Add a layer of chocolate frosting.


Hello. Bring on the Lipator.


Giveaway time! Leave a comment. Tell us: What is your hope for 2010?
One entry per person. Three entries if you become a follower or if you are already a follower. Wow, finally a reward for being a follower! Don't worry I won't tell your mother. Please place the entries separately. The Random Counter will choose a winner at the end of the day on Saturday, January 16th.
Oh - the prize? Your very own copy of "The Sweet Melissa Baking Book".
Good Luck!





Black Bottom Brownies
adapted from The Sweet Melissa Baking Book by Melissa Murphy

For the brownie bottom:
5 ounces unsweetened chocolate
½ pound (2 sticks) unsalted butter
1 2/3 cups all-purpose flour
½ teaspoon baking powder
½ teaspoon kosher salt
4 large eggs plus 2 large egg yolks
2 cups sugar
1 tablespoon pure vanilla

Cheesecake layer:

1 pound (two 8-ounce packages) cream cheese, at room temperature
1 ½ cups sugar
¼ teaspoon kosher salt
6 large eggs
1 ½ teaspoons vanilla extract
2 cups semisweet chocolate chips


Position a rack in the lower third of your oven. Preheat the oven to 325 degrees. Lightly butter a 9×13-inch pan. Line the pan with parchment paper or aluminum foil.

Brownies:
In the top of a double boiler over simmering, not boiling water, melt the chocolate and the butter, stirring to combine. Set aside to cool to warm. In a medium bowl, whisk together the flour, baking powder, and salt. In a large bowl, whisk together the eggs, egg yolks, sugar, and vanilla until smooth. Pour the chocolate mixture into the egg mixture and combine with a whisk. Add the flour mixture to the chocolate/egg mixture and stir until just combined. Pour the brownie batter into the prepared pan, and spread evenly.

Cheesecake layer:

In the bowl of an electric mixer fitted with the paddle attachment, cream together cream cheese, sugar, and the salt until light and fluffy, about 5 minutes. Add the eggs, mix well after each addition. Scrape down the sides of the bowl. Stir in vanilla. In separate bowl, toss chocolate chips with 1 tablespoon flour. Fold chocolate chips into cream cheese mixture.

Pour the cheesecake mixture over the brownie layer. Bake for about 1 hour and 10 minutes, or until lightly golden. The brownie layer will be set, but will still stick to a knife when inserted into center of brownies. Do not over bake. Remove to a wire rack to cool. Cool completely. (If you want to speed up this process, place in freezer for about 1/2 to 1 hour after cooled a while on the counter.

Chocolate Frosting:
1/2 cup butter, softened
1/2 cup unsweetened cocoa powder
3-4 cups powdered sugar
dash salt
1 teaspoon vanilla
1/4 cup milk

Cream butter, add cocoa and powdered sugar. Add salt and vanilla. Beat until smooth, adding milk until desired consistency. Add more powdered sugar if too thin, a little more milk if too thick. Spread on top of brownies when completely cooled.


Top with chocolate frosting if desired. May be served cold or at room temperature.

Tips:
-This recipe makes a full 9x13 pan. It is hard to see in the pics, but the brownies raise to almost the top of the pan.
-The recipe says to cut the brownies into 12 pieces. hmmm. You would have to be a complete GLUTTON to want to eat 1/12th of this pan of brownies by yourself.
I think about 20-24 brownies per pan.

11/15/09

Creamed Corn with Cheese and Cilantro and Giveaway Winner!






Thanks to all who left comments about what we are most grateful for this time of year! The winner is - Betsy who said:
" I am most grateful that my father is now cancer FREE! & going strong again :]"
Send your address to me at: abountifulkitchen@gmail.com and I will send your cookbook out tomorrow. Happy cooking!


Just before the harvest was over, I bought some corn from our local farmers market, and made a batch of this creamed corn.

I love this recipe that combines cheese, corn and cilantro. Yum! This is not your mama's (canned) creamed corn. Different from the usual bowl of corn at Thanksgiving, it's a dish that adds a rich and slightly creamy texture to your holiday table. The original Gourmet recipe said it served 6 (this could only be true if you were having CORN as your entree), but with a large holiday meal, it would easily serve 10-12 as a side dish. Put this on your list of sides for Thursday, Nov 26th.





Cheesy Creamed Corn with Cilantro
adapted from Gourmet

3 tablespoons unsalted butter
1 1/2 cups chopped scallions (about 6 large)
12 ears corn, kernels cut from cobs or 8-9 cups frozen corn
2/3 cup cream
2 teaspoons cornstarch
1 large garlic clove (optional)
6 ounces queso fresco or mild feta, crumbled (1 1/3 cups) OR
1 cup grated white cheddar and 1/2 cup grated Parmesan
1 cup cilantro sprigs

Heat butter in a deep 12-inch heavy skillet over medium-high heat until foam subsides, then cook scallions, stirring occasionally, until softened, about 2 minutes. Add corn and 1/2 teaspoon each of salt and pepper and cook, stirring occasionally, 5-7 minutes.

Stir together cream and cornstarch in a small bowl until thoroughly combined, then add to corn and simmer, stirring, until slightly thickened, about 3 minutes. Transfer 1 1/2 cups corn mixture to a blender with garlic and puree until smooth (use caution when blending hot liquids). OR if you have an immersion blender, place it in the pan and pulse in several places, blending about a third of the corn mixture. After blending return corn to skillet and cook, stirring, until just heated through.
Transfer corn to a large shallow serving bowl. Sprinkle remaining cheese and cilantro over top.

Tips:
- I used 1 cup of grated white cheddar and 1/2 cup grated Parmesan folded into the corn before spooning into the serving dish. Then, topped the corn with a little crumbled feta and fresh cilantro.

11/11/09

Fresh Apple Cranberry Pie and GIVEAWAY! Closed








Of all the pies I make at holiday time, this is our family favorite. It's fresh, tart and sweet. Love the hint of almond flavor. What would Thanksgiving be without PIE? I don't even want to go there. You know how I love this holiday weekend. Family, friends, time to reflect on all of our blessings. Throw in football -the UTAH 8-1 (yay!) vs byu 7-2 (boo) game, food, the family turkey bowl, shopping. Love it. Making special food for the people I love is my favorite part. Baking PIE is my absolute fave.


I know that many of you are intimidated by our friend, PIE. So, I thought this giveaway might help ease you into a friendly encounter with pie making. Pie, the cookbook is 640 pages long and contains 300 pie recipes! There are 57 pages devoted to pie crust alone. This is the pie bible. Which reminds me - the other day my dear friends Laura and Melinda gave me a huge Cooks Illustrated (America Test Kitchen) book for my bday, containing TEN YEARS worth of Cook's recipes. I was so excited. So excited, that I blurted out, 'These are like scriptures!" Ok, so I got a little carried away. Anyway - you are going to love this cookbook. PIE is written by Ken Haedrich, a man who must have devoted an extraordinary amount of time in the kitchen covered in flour to produce such a comprehensive cookbook about Pie.



Here is the deal:

Leave a comment about what you are most grateful for this time of year. The winner will be picked by the Random Counter. Entries must be in no later than Saturday, November 14 at midnight. You'll have this book in your hands in time for Thanksgiving week!



Fresh Apple Cranberry Pie
print recipe

Filling:
6-7 apples any type, peeled, cored and sliced ( I like Granny Smith)
1 1/2 cups fresh cranberries, washed
1 1/4 cups sugar
1/2 cup flour
1 teaspoon cinnamon
1 teaspoon almond extract
juice from 1/2 of a lemon (about 2 tablespoons)
dash salt

Crust:
2 cups flour
3/4 teaspoon salt
1 cup solid shortening
1/2 cup cold water

Preheat oven to 375 degrees. Place rack on bottom third of oven. 
Place flour and salt in medium sized bowl. Cut in shortening with pastry blender. Add cold water all at once, stir with fork, just until all of the flour mixture is moistened. Gather the dough together in a ball. Split the dough in to two parts. Flour a surface and rolling pin. Mold half of the dough into a ball. Roll out from center to about 1/8 inch thickness. Fold dough in half. Lift onto a 9" pie plate. Open and shape to pan. Roll out the other half of dough, and set aside.
Place apples in large bowl and mix with cranberries. Add rest of filling ingredients and mix well. Fill bottom crust with apple cranberry mixture. Place other half of rolled out dough on top of filling in pie plate. Crimp edges. Make slits on top of pie for steam to escape. Brush with egg wash if desired, sprinkle with 2 tablespoons sugar.
Place pie onto foil lined cookie sheet (important, this usually bubbles over a bit.
Bake for about 60 minutes. Cover loosely with foil if pie is getting too brown.
Continue baking for about 10-15 minutes or until pie is bubbly and golden. Total baking time is usually 1 hour and 10 minutes.


9/11/09

Amy's Bakery Yellow Cake with Pink Buttercream Frosting & Giveaway WINNER!







Thanks for all of the fun comments about your favorite food memory of summer '09. The winner of a million dollars and the "Sweeter Side of Amy's Bread" cookbook is ... comment #19 (chosen by the random counter) Michelle, who said:
"First I want to tell you how much I enjoy your blog. I have tried so many of your recipes and love every one! My favorite summer food memory was sitting at Fisherman's Wharf eating the most incredible clam chowder with three of my favorite boys Mark, Dan and Sam."

Congratulations Michelle! I hope you love Amy's cookbook. For all of the non winners out there, you can still try Amy's recipes, many are found online, or to order a copy of her beautiful book online go to: Amy's Bread .






When we were in NY, we ordered a slice of this yummy cake at lunch. The cakes looked so delicious, it was hard to make a choice. Since we were already toting around a to-go sack from the Little Pie Company (with some of their oh-so-delish sour cream apple walnut streusel pie and a brownie and a Red Velvet cupcake) we decided on some ginger snap cookies and a slice of this yummy "Simply Delicious Yellow Cake with Sweet Pink Buttercream Frosting". We were not disappointed. The frosting is sweet, and goes perfectly with the not too sweet cake. Amy's book recommends using a scale to measure ingredients by weight, instead of volume. I decided to give it a try. Purchased a small inexpensive digital scale, and set out to re-create our NY experience, here in B-town. Goodness. The results were mmmmm. Wouldn't this be the perfect cake for a little (or big) girl's birthday party? So beautiful. Oh and the million dollars? Just wanted to see if you are still paying attention. Happy Friday!





Simply Delicious Yellow Cake with Buttercream Frosting
adapted from Amy's Bakery
adapted to mountain elevation on 10-1-09 see measurements in ( )
print recipe

Unbleached all-purpose flour, sifted 3 cups or 14.81 oz (3 cups +2 tablespoons)
Baking powder 1 tablespoon + 1 teaspoon or .71 oz (2 teaspoons)
Kosher salt 3/4 teaspoon 3/4 teaspoon
Milk 1 1/4 cups + 3 tablespoons or 12 oz (1 cup)
Vanilla extract 2 teaspoons
Unsalted butter, slightly softened 1 1/4 cups + 2 tablespoons or 11.29 oz.
Sugar 2 3/4 cups + 2 teaspoons or 19.75 oz
Eggs 5 large or 9.17 oz
Sweet Pink Buttercream Frosting

Preheat the oven to 350ºF (325 for mountain elevation). Grease the cake pans. Line the bottoms with rounds of baking parchment then dust them lightly with flour. Shake out the excess. Or use Baker’s Joy baking spray that contains both oil and flour, so you don’t have to flour the pan. With Baker’s Joy, put the parchment liner in after you spray the pan.
In a large bowl, combine the flour, baking powder, and salt and whisk them gently for even distribution. In a separate bowl combine the milk and vanilla.
Using an electric mixer with a paddle attachment, cream the butter and sugar on medium speed until it is light and fluffy, 3 to 4 minutes. Add the eggs gradually, mixing well after each addition, scraping the sides and bottom of the bowl often.
Lower the mixing speed to medium-low and add the flour mixture to the butter in 3 parts, alternating with 2 parts of the milk mixture, beginning and ending with the flour. Mix just until it is evenly incorporated. This is a thick, fluffy batter, resembling whipped cream. There should not be any lumps or dry pockets of flour remaining. If the batter has a curdled appearance it has not been mixed enough. Increase the speed to medium and mix for another minute or until it is thick and fluffy.
Divide the batter equally between the 2 or 3 prepared cake pans. Weighing the batter into the pans is the most accurate way to do this. This ensures that both layers are uniform in size, and finish baking at the same time. You’ll have approximately 930 g/32.8 oz. of batter per pan. The pans should be about ⅔ full. Smooth the batter so it fills the pans evenly. Place the pans on the center rack in the preheated oven. Bake them for about 35 to 40 minutes (40-45 min), or until the cake is almost ready to pull away from the side of the pan and a toothpick inserted into the center of the cake comes out with a few moist crumbs. Rotate the layers carefully from front to back after 20 minutes, for even baking if pans are unable to bake side by side.
Cool the pans on a rack for 10 minutes, then invert them onto a wire rack that has been sprayed with cooking spray and lift off the pans. To prevent cracking, carefully right each layer so the top side is up and the parchment-lined bottom is down. This is where I use the wrap and freeze method. Wrap all layers in saran wrap and freeze immediately. When cakes are completely frozen, remove from refrigerator, and frost. Cool them on the rack completely. Before frosting, be sure to remove the parchment from the bottom of each layer. While the layers are cooling, prepare the frosting. To assemble the cake:
Place one layer, top side down, on a flat serving plate. Cut several 4-inch-wide strips of parchment or waxed paper to slide under the edge of the layer, to keep the plate clean. Using a thin metal spatula, spread the top of this cake round with a ½-inch thick layer of frosting, leaving a ¼-inch unfrosted border around the edge. Place the second layer top side up on the first, aligning the layers evenly. Spread a generous layer of frosting around the sides of the cake, rotating the plate as you work so you’re not reaching around the cake to frost the other side. Try not to let any loose crumbs get caught in the frosting. Let the frosting extend about ¼ inch above the top of the cake.
Starting in the center of the cake, cover the top with a generous layer of frosting, taking it all the way to the edge and merging it with the frosting on the sides. Try to use a forward-moving, circular motion, not a back-and forth motion to avoid lifting the top skin of the cake. Rotate the plate as necessary. Use the spatula or a spoon to make decorative swirls. Slide the pieces of paper out from under the edge of the cake and discard them. Store the cake at room temperature.



Pink Buttercream Frosting

Confectioner’s sugar 7½ cups or 29.80 oz
Unsalted butter, slightly softened 1⅓ cups or 10.56 oz
*Poured (not rolled) fondant generous ⅓ cup or 4.87 oz
Milk, whole ¼ cup or 2.19 oz
Vanilla extract 1 tablespoon + ¼ teaspoon or .46 oz
Kosher salt ⅛ teaspoon
Red food coloring 1 to 2 drops
In a mixing bowl, using an electric mixer with the paddle attachment, beat 21 oz. or 5½ cups of the confectioner’s sugar, the butter, fondant (if using), milk, vanilla, and salt in the bowl until they are smooth and creamy, 2 to 3 minutes; start out at low speed and increase the speed to medium when the powdery sugar has been moistened. Gradually add the remaining sugar 1 cup at a time until the frosting is of good spreading consistency, scraping the sides and bottom of the bowl often. You may not need to use all of the sugar. The frosting should be stiff enough to hold its shape but not so stiff that you’ll be unable to spread it easily on the cake. Add 1 or 2 small drops of red food coloring and continue beating the frosting on medium-low speed until you have a uniform pale pink color. This frosting is heavy but it should still have a fluffy quality.
The frosting can be used immediately or stored in an airtight container at room temperature, but it should be used within 3 days.

Tips:

-I measured and weighed everything, just to compare the difference. I know serious bakers weigh their ingredients, and swear by it. It was amazing to me to see the difference in the true volume vs weight. Sometimes a whole 1/2 cup difference!
-The recipe yielded more than the 32.8 oz of batter per pan. I believe it was around 40 oz per pan. One pan overflowed just a bit. Not enough to set off the smoke alarm, but just a tad. Next time, I will cut some of the liquid (milk) and baking powder. We are at about 4,300 ft. (elevation) so, normally I adjust cake recipes that are created in other parts of the country. I really wanted to try this recipe just as it was printed. When I experiment to suit mountain elevation, I will add the adjustments to the original recipe with an update. Updated 10-09 see changes for mt. elevation in red ( ). Still sank a little, one more try and we should have this perfect for high altitude!
-*I did not use the poured fondant. Simply made the frosting without the fondant addition.

7/20/09

Winner!

Thanks to all who entered the drawing for Barefoot Contessa's "Back to Basics" cookbook.  The Random Counter picked entry #5, Crazy Lady. 

Crazy Lady said...

I have made her homemade marshmallows. My friends almost knocked on her house once in the Hamptons. chickens.

Send your address to:  Fostersi at msn dot com, and I will mail your book this week. For all of the um, losers out there (don't you hate it when some one says "you're all winners!!) I'll have another drawing soon.

7/15/09

Giveaway!


I've been thinking about having a giveaway for a while now. A little way to show appreciation to all of A Bountiful Kitchen's loyal readers!  Hmmm...What to give? Gadgets I love? Food Products? One of my children? I finally decided on cookbooks. I have been collecting cookbooks for years.  I love to pick up cookbooks whenever we travel, and Grant buys all types of cookbooks and brings them back to me when he travels on business.  Friends and family tote books home for me when they travel, too.  The Internet is, of course, an amazing resource but there is just something special about having a book in your hands, and on your shelf. I know I'm weird, but I read cookbooks, like book group women read novels.  On any given day, I have a stack of cookbooks piled next to my bed.  Currently, I'm reading a Cooks Illustrated "Best American Classics", "Favorites" a local family cookbook, "Seasons in Thyme" the Jr. League of Birmingham, Michigan and "The Sweet Melissa Baking Book".   One of my favorite collections of books are Ina Garten's "Barefoot Contessa" cookbooks.  The Photographs are beautiful, recipes simple and easy to follow.  I've had good luck with almost everything I've tried out of the 6  Barefoot Contessa books I have.  So, this month, I'm giving away one of my favorites - her newest book ( I think it's still her newest book?)- 

Barefoot Contessa Back to Basics

Just leave a comment about any Barefoot Contessa recipes you have tried.  If you haven't tried any, no problem! Tell me why you would like to have "Back to Basics".  You have till midnight, Saturday, July 18.  The winner will be announced on Monday the 20th.  Good Luck!

PS - I'm new at this - I should have explained earlier, I'll be using a random counter to choose the winner!