Cheese-Garlic Biscuits

Quick and  easy.  No rolling or cutting.  You can change the flavor by using different cheeses.

Ingredients:

  • 2 c Original Bisquick™ mix
  • 2/3 c milk
  • 1/2 c shredded Cheddar cheese (2 ounces)
  • 2 tbs butter
  • 1/8 tsp garlic powder  (or more)

Directions:

  1. Heat oven to 450ºF.
  2. Stir Bisquick mix, milk and cheese until soft dough forms.
  3. Drop dough by 9 spoonfuls onto ungreased cookie sheet.
  4. Bake 8 to 10 minutes or until golden brown.
  5. Stir together butter and garlic powder.
  6. Brush over warm biscuits.

Serves:  9

Source:  Betty Crocker

French Onion Garlic Bread

A yummy variation on garlic bread.  We add garlic to everything – hence the name.

Ingredients:

  • 1 loaf French bread
  • 1/4 lb butter, softened
  • 1 envelope Lipton Onion Soup Mix
  • 1 clove garlic, crushed (not in original recipe – but sooo good!)

Directions:

  1. Slice bread (like for sandwiches).
  2. Mix butter and soup mix (and garlic) until well blended.
  3. Spread on one side of each slice of bread.
  4. Push loaf back together.
  5. Wrap in aluminum foil.
  6. Bake at 350 ° for approx. 30 minutes.

Or:

  1. Slice loaf horizontally.
  2. Spread both sides with onion soup butter.
  3. Put back together.
  4. Wrap in foil.
  5. Smash 2 – 3 soda/beer cans flat.
  6. Place on grill.
  7. Place foil wrapped bread on top of them.
  8. Heat 10 – 15 minutes depending on the fire.

Serves:  One loaf (we plan on about 2 inches per person)

Source: Genius Kitchen, Recipe by LiisaN

B & B’s Biscuits

Always a favorite at Book Club.  Quantities were never given – really not necessary.

Ingredients:

  • tube biscuits cut in half (you know, Pillsbury or Pillsbury copy refrigerated biscuit dough)
  • milk
  • Rice Krispies, crushed
  • sesame seeds
  • butter

Directions:

  1. Preheat oven to whatever it says on the package.
  2. Mix crushed Rice Krispies with sesame seeds.
  3. Dip the biscuit halves in milk.
  4. Roll biscuit halves in Rice Krispies.
  5. Place on baking sheet.
  6. Brush with butter.
  7. Bake however long the package says.

Serves:    Makes twice the number of biscuits in the tube.  Plan on at least two per person.

Source:   Betty Andrews and Barbara Sayres

Grands!™ Monkey Bread

Not the fanciest – but more than good for quick and easy!

Ingredients:
  • 1/2 c  sugar
  • 1 tsp  cinnamon
  • 2 cans (16.3 oz each) Pillsbury™ Grands!™ Flaky Layers refrigerated Original biscuits
  • 1/2 c chopped walnuts, if desired
  • 1/2 c  raisins, if desired
  • 1 c firmly packed brown sugar
  • 3/4 c butter , melted

Directions:

  1. Heat oven to 350°F.
  2. Lightly grease 12-cup fluted tube pan with shortening or cooking spray.
  3. In large -storage plastic food bag, mix granulated sugar and cinnamon.
  4. Separate dough into 16 biscuits.
  5. Cut each into quarters.
  6. Shake in bag to coat.
  7. Arrange in pan, adding walnuts and raisins among the biscuit pieces.
  8. In small bowl, mix brown sugar and butter.
  9. Pour over biscuit pieces.
  10. Bake 30 to 35 minutes or until golden brown and no longer doughy in center.
  11. Cool in pan 10 minutes.
  12. Turn upside down onto serving plate.
  13. Pull apart to serve.
  14. Serve warm.

Serves: 12

 Source: General Mills

Sticky Buns with Butterscotch Pudding

Ingredients:

  • 1 package Bridgford bread roll – frozen (I cut them in half or quarters)
  • 1 package instant butterscotch pudding (or vanilla instant pudding)
  • 3/4 c brown sugar
  • 1/2 c butter, melted
  • 1/2 c nuts

Directions:

  1. Butter or spray a bundt pan. (Or crowd/layer in flat pan)
  2. Put rolls in the pan.
  3. Sprinkle pudding, brown sugar and nuts over the rolls in pan.
  4. Let rise overnight (8 HOURS).
  5. Bake at 350 for 30 minutes.
  6. Cool 10-12 minutes.
  7. Turn over on plate and remove bundt pan.

Serves: 6 – 8

Source: 5 Ingredients or Less, Gail McAuley, Lincoln High School, Stockton, CA

Puff Pastry Braid

A constant favorite at our KOA campouts.  We bake it in a cardboard box oven,  great fun!  We actually use the restaurant supply size puff pastry, but that is a lot for a family.

Ingredients:

  • 1 17.3-ounce package Puff Pastry Sheets, thawed
  • 1 can  cherry, blueberry, peach, almond pie filling

Directions:

  1. Heat the oven to 400°F.
  2. Line a baking sheet with parchment paper.
  3. Unfold the pastry sheet on the baking sheet.
  4.  Spoon pie filling lengthwise down the center of the pastry.
  5. Cut slits 1 inch apart from the 2 sides of the pastry rectangle to within 1/2 inch of the filling.
  6. Starting at one end, fold the pastry strips over the peach mixture, alternating sides, to cover the filling.
  7. Bake for 25 minutes or until the pastry is golden brown.  Let the pastry cool on the baking sheet on a wire rack for 20 minutes.(They never wait and they burn their tongues.)

Serves:  6

Source:  A variation on a Pepperidge Farm recipe.

Peach Pecan Kuchen

Breakfast bread – dessert –take your pick.  Plums or apricots would be tasty too.

Ingredients:

  • 1 pkg (18.25 oz) plain yellow cake mix
  • 1 c sour cream
  • 10 Tab butter, melted ( 1 1/4 sticks)
  • 1 egg
  • 3 c ripe peaches, sliced (about 1 1/2 lbs or 4 large)  I use canned peaches (a #2 1/2 can, drained)  and it was just fine.  Well drained frozen peaches work too.  Just add a little more sugar.
  • 1/2 c sugar
  • 1/2 tsp cinnamon
  • 1/2 c chopped pecans

Directions:

  1. Preheat oven 350°.
  2. Lightly grease a 9 x 13 pan.
  3. Place cake mix, sour cream, 4 Tab milted butter and egg in a large bowl.
  4. Blend with an electric mixer on low speed just until the mixture comes together, about 1 minute.
  5. Press the dough evenly over the bottom of the pan.
  6. Place the pan in the oven.
  7. Bake for 10 minutes.
  8. Mix sugar and cinnamon together.
  9. Remove pan from oven.
  10. Arrange peach slices in rows across the top of the warm cake.
  11. Sprinkle with sugar/cinnamon.
  12. Drizzle the remaining 6 Tab butter over the sugar.
  13. Top with chopped pecans.
  14. Bake 30 – 32 minutes – until golden and a toothpick come out clean
  15. Remove from oven.
  16. Place on wire rack and cool for 20 minutes.

Serves:  18 – 20

Source:   The Cake Mix Doctor

Grands!™ Lemon Monkey Bread

This double-lemon monkey bread is fresh and oh-so-sweet for spring!

Ingredients:

  • 1 c  packed brown sugar
  • 1 tab grated lemon peel
  • 1 box (4-serving size) lemon pudding and pie filling mix (not instant)
  • 2 cans (16.3 oz each) Pillsbury™ Grands!™ Flaky Layers refrigerated Butter Tastin™ biscuits
  • 3/4 c butter, melted
  • 1 c  powdered sugar
  • 2 to 3 tab fresh lemon juice
  • 1 to 2 drops yellow food color
Directions:
  1. Heat oven to 350°F.
  2. Generously spray 12-cup fluted tube cake pan with cooking spray.
  3. In large bowl, stir together brown sugar, lemon peel and pudding mix.
  4. Separate both cans of dough into 16 biscuits.
  5. Cut each into fourths.
  6. Place in another large bowl.
  7. Add melted butter.
  8. Toss to coat, making sure each piece of dough is covered with butter.
  9. Roll each piece in pudding mix mixture.
  10. Place in pan.
  11. Bake 38 to 42 minutes or until golden brown and no longer doughy in center.
  12. Cool in pan 10 minutes.
  13. Place serving plate upside down over pan.
  14. Turn plate and pan over.
  15. Remove pan.
  16. In small bowl, stir together powdered sugar and enough lemon juice until smooth and drizzling consistency.
  17. Add enough food color for desired yellow color.
  18. Mix well.
  19. Drizzle glaze over warm monkey bread.
  20. Serve warm; pull apart to serve.
  21. Store in airtight container in refrigerator.

Sevres16

Source:  Angie McGowan, General Mills

 

Five Minute Bread – The Master Recipe

Yes, I know you can buy frozen bread dough.  But sometimes it is fun to “do it yourself”.  Warning:  the dough is quite wet – and that is ok.  Just have faith in the directions.

Ingredients:

  • 3 cups lukewarm water
  • 1 1/2 Tab granulated yeast (1 1/2 packets)
  • 1 1/2 Tab kosher or other coarse salt
  • 6 1/2 cups unsifted, unbleached, all-purpose white flour, measured with the scoop-and-sweep method usi ng a 1 cup measuring cup.
  • cornmeal

Directions:

Mixing and Storing the Dough
1.  Warm the water slightly:
  It should feel just a little warmer than body temperature, about 100 degrees F.
2.  Add yeast and salt to the water in a 5-quart bowl or, preferably, in a large resealable, lidded (not airtight) plastic food container.  Don’t worry about getting it all to dissolve.
3.  Mix in the flour- kneading is unnecessary:  Add all of the flour at once, measuring it in with dry-ingredient measuring cups, by gently scooping up flour, then sweeping the top level with a knife or spatula.  Mix with a wooden spoon, a high capacity food processor (14 cups or larger) fitted with the dough attachment, or a heavy-duty stand mixer fitted with the dough hook until the mixture is uniform.  If you’re hand mixing and it becomes too difficult to incorporate all the flour with the spoon, you can reach into your mixing bowl with very wet hands and press the mixture together.  Don’t knead- it isn’t necessary.  You’re finished when everything is uniformly moist, without dry patches.  This step should only take a matter of minutes, and should yield a dough that is wet and loose enough to conform to the shape of its container.
4.  Allow to rise:  Cover with a lid (not airtight).  Don’t use any screw-top jars, which could explode from trapped gases.  Allow the mixture to rise at room temperature until it begins to collapse (or at least flattens on top), approximately 2 hours, depending on the room’s temperature and the initial water temperature.  Longer rising times (up to 5 hours) will not harm the result.  You can use a portion of the dough any time after this period.  Fully refrigerated wet dough is less sticky and is easier to work with than dough at room temperature.  The authors recommend that the first time you try this recipe, you refrigerate the dough overnight (or at least 3 hours) before shaping a loaf.

On Baking Day
5.  The gluten cloak:****  don’t knead, just “cloak” and shape a loaf in 30 to 60 seconds.  First prepare a pizza peel (or a cookie sheet or cutting board) by sprinkling it liberally with cornmeal to prevent the dough from sticking to it when you slide it into the oven.  Sprinkle the surface of your refrigerated dough with flour.  Pull up and cut off a 1-pound (grapefruit-sized) piece of dough, using a serrated knife.  Hold the mass of dough in your hands and add a little more flour as needed so it won’t stick to your hands.  Gently stretch the surface of the dough around to the bottom on all four sides, rotating the ball a quarter-turn as you go.  Most of the dusting flour will fall off; it’s not intended to be incorporated into the dough.  The bottom of the loaf may appear to be a collection of bunched ends, but it will flatten out and adhere during resting and baking.  The final product with be smooth and cohesive.  The entire process in this step should take no longer than 30 to 60 seconds.
6.  Rest the loaf and let it rise on a pizza peel:  Place shaped ball on cornmeal-covered pizza peel.  Allow the loaf to rest on the peel for about 40 minutes (it doesn’t need to be covered).  You may not see much rise during this period; more rise will occur during baking.
7.  Twenty minutes before baking, preheat the oven to 450 degrees F., with a baking stone placed on the middle rack.  Place an empty broiler tray for holding water on any other shelf that won’t interfere with the rising of the bread.
8.  Dust and slash:  Dust the top of the loaf liberally with the flour, which will allow the slashing knife to pass without sticking.  Slash a 1/4-inch-deep cross, scallop, or tic-tac-toe pattern into the top, using a serrated bread knife.
9.  Baking with steam:  After a 20 minute preheat, you’re ready to bake.  With a quick forward jerking motion of the wrist, slide the loaf off of your cornmeal covered surface and onto the preheated baking stone.  Quickly but carefully pour about 1 cup of hot water from the tap into the broiler tray and close the oven door to trap the steam.  Bake for about 30 minutes, or until the crust is nicely browned and firm to the touch.  Because you’ve  used wet dough, there is little risk of drying out the interior, despite the dark crust.  Allow the loaf to cool completely, preferably on a wire rack.
10.  Store the remaining dough in the refrigerator in your lidded (not airtight) container and use it over the next 14 days.  The dough “matures” over the 14 day period, improving flavor and texture of your bread.  Cut off, shape and bake more loaves as you need them.

Tips:

*I halved the recipe and ended up baking up two loaves within the week.
*I didn’t have a pizza peel, so I used a cutting board coated with cornmeal to let the bread rise. The first loaf I made, I didn’t use enough cornmeal and my dough stuck a bit to the board. I had to knudge it onto the pizza stone and it looked a little mishapen and wobbly. When it came out of the oven though, it was a perfectly baked round loaf. On my second try, I made sure to coat my board liberally with cornmeal and had no trouble at all sliding it onto my pizza stone.
*Since you can cut off as big a piece of dough as you want to bake, the method is perfect for large and small families alike.
*I’m excited to try out other recipes in the book using the base dough- from other rustic loaves and rolls to sweet treats.

Other things you can do:

Mix the dry ingredients first. Then store the “Dry Mix” in portioned zip-lock bags. In the morning, you mix in the water for as many loaves as you think you’ll need that night and let it rise while you’re at work. This method allows you to substitute some of the water for various other “wet” ingredients like buttermilk, beer, yogurt, eggs etc.

Also worth noting, is that many breads use the same proportions of the same ingredients, but the texture (and to a lesser extent, the taste) is altered by how much you work the dough. Many breads you may wish to make require 2 rises. Letting dough sit in the refrigerator for prolonged periods will break down the gluten bonds that give the bread it’s proper consistency. Ever wonder why grocery store Italian bread in no way resembles anything close to real Italian bread? It always has a consistency more lite French bread which uses a very similar recipe. The biggest reason for this is that the pre-made dough sits too long, the gluten is degraded and after the second rise it puffs up too much, becoming flaky and light instead of dense and moist as it should be. If you insist on mixing the wet ingredients in immediately and storing an active dough, don’t make more than you’ll use in the next few days if you want a heavier bread. For light breads it makes little difference.

For an easy time saver, combine 4 egg whites with 2 Tbsp of White vinegar, 1 Tsp salt, 1 Tsp of olive oil, and 2 Tsp water. Mix until you have a homogeneous solution (no floating egg slime). Now load into a clean food-grade spray bottle and store in the refrigerator. Shake before using. This egg-wash will apply evenly, is pre-made and you won’t mess up another bowl, whisk and brush every time you make bread.

If, like me, you brew your own beer, use the active beer yeast after your first racking. Breads and perhaps more important, Pizza Dough taste much better with a good ale yeast.

Another helpful tip: You’ll still need to flour surfaces or apply corn meal to your sheet pans. Store these in empty Twist-open 20oz Soda or Beer bottles. Hit the hardware store and buy a screen cap (sold for faucets and garden hoses). They’ll fit on the bottle and keep bugs out, and allow you to sift the flour as you pour it for a more even distribution and no lumping.

**** (from the web site – because who knows what  “gluten cloak”  is). The next day, or even a few hours later, the dough from the fridge will be much easier to handle.
About an hour before baking, pull the bin of dough out of the fridge, remove the lid, and dust the surface of a corner of the dough with a bit of flour. Dust your pizza peel (or cutting board, or rimless baking sheet) as well.

Make sure your hands are well floured. Reach into the bin and pull out a grapefruit-sized hunk of dough, cutting it off with the serrated knife.

GENTLY pull the outer surface of the dough around to the bottom of the ball, forming a gluten “cloak” around it. Less is more here. Don’t manhandle or squeeze the dough. This should take less than 30 seconds. Don’t worry about what the bottom looks like.

Yield: Makes four 1-pound loaves.  The recipe is easily doubled or halved.

 

Refrigerator Sweet Muffins

When you have overnight company – breakfast can be a challenge.  This dough can be made ahead and will keep for up to 5 days.  Fresh hot muffins for the win!

Ingredients:

  • 4 1/2 c flour, firmly packed
  • 1/2 c brown sugar
  • 1/2 c white sugar
  • 4 tsp baking powder
  • 1 tsp baking soda
  • 1 tsp salt
  • 2 c buttermilk (or 2 Tab vinegar or lemon juice and enough milk to make 2 cups.)
  • 3/4 c oil
  • 1 1/2 tsp vanilla
  • 3 eggs

Directions:

  1. Combine flour, brown and white sugar, baking powder, soda and salt.
  2. Blend well.
  3. In a small bowl combine buttermilk, oil, vanilla and eggs.
  4. Mix well.
  5. Add liquid ingredients to dry, stirring just until dry ingredients are moistened.
  6. Cover tightly,
  7. Refrigerate up to 5 days.

To bake:

  1. Heat oven to 375°.
  2. Choose one of the flavor variations.’ Grease bottoms only of 6 muffin cups, or line with paper cups.
  3. In a small bowl place 1 1/3 c batter.
  4. Fold in flavor ingredients.
  5. Fill cups 2/3 full.
  6. Bake 20-25 minutes or until a toothpick inserted comes out clean.

Flavor Ingredients:

  • Raisin spice: 1/3 c raisins, 1/2 tsp cinnamon,  1/4 tsp nutmeg, 1/4 tsp allspice, 1/4 tsp cloves
  • Maple walnut: 1/3 c chopped walnuts, 1/2 tsp maple extract.
  • Chocolate chip:  1/3 c miniature chocolate chips
  • Mixed fruit: 1/3 c chopped dried fruit
  • Banana nut:  1/2 c chopped banana, 1/4 c chopped nuts
  • Apple:  1/3 c peeled and chopped apple, 1/2 tsp cinnamon
  • Blueberry:  Combine 1/4 – 1/2 c blueberries with 1 Tab sugar, fold into batter
  • Cinnamon topped:  After baking, dip top of muffin in melted butter then a mixture of 2 Tab sugar, 1/4 tsp cinnamon, 1/4 tsp nutmeg

Serves:  Recipe makes 24 muffins

Source:   Mystery to me!