I love soup. And I LOVE beans. Therefore, I love LOVE bean soup. I have a great recipe for white bean soup, which is lovely in the fall and winter. I’ll share it when the temperature drops below 70 degrees … Continue reading
I love soup. And I LOVE beans. Therefore, I love LOVE bean soup. I have a great recipe for white bean soup, which is lovely in the fall and winter. I’ll share it when the temperature drops below 70 degrees … Continue reading
When I crave chocolate, I MUST have it. One chocolate item that really satisfies my cravings is chocolate sauce. I’ve even been known to eat it straight. I am not ashamed. Dark chocolate is good for you. Now, I am … Continue reading
Thank you to Peggy Isaacs for nominating me for the Addictive Blog award. I’m so glad someone else enjoys my little furballs as much as I do!
Award Rules:
Why I blog:
I started this blog as a way to capture sweet memories and experiences in my life and share them with my family and friends. I was inspired by the Pioneer Woman, who I first discovered on the Food Network and whose blog I now read religiously. Even though I’m not a huge fan of writing, somehow writing posts (to go along with the absurd amount of pictures I now take) has turned into a sort of ritual of reflection through storytelling. It makes me feel more connected and appreciative.
Somewhat coincidentally, I started this blog just before I moved to a new place on my own and it has been a great way for my family and friends to keep tabs on me and see what I’m up to in my new hometown of Nashville.
Unexpectedly, I have met some wonderful bloggers through this journey, who make my day when they “like” my post or leave a kind comment.
I don’t know where I’d be without this blog.
Blogs I find Addicting:
Thank you to my nominees for making me smile, laugh, scratch my head and reevaluate my life on a regular basis. I’m hooked.
Y’all come back now, ya hear?
Sugarlump
I made and canned peach jam last week. My kitchen is still recovering from the mess I made. I’m finding little globs of stickiness everywhere. I got the peaches at the Nashville Farmer’s Market downtown. I have to say … Continue reading
To Amber at http://wordsbecomesuperfluous.com/, thank you for sharing the love and nominating me for the One Lovely Blog Award!
In accepting this award, it is my pleasure to complete the following:
Seven things about me:
To my lovely nominees: thank you for sharing your passions, talents, wisdom, and adventures.
Y’all hurry back!
Sugarlump
A great big thank you to Marcy at For Your Good Health (http://marcellarousseau.wordpress.com/) for nominating me for the Very Inspiring Blogger Award! I am so flattered. I really enjoy your photos and the great variety of topics you write about. Very inspiring!
In accepting this award, it is my pleasure to complete the following:
7 Things about Me:
And, now, my list of nominees who inspire me with their words and photos:
Y’all come back and visit!
Sugarlump
Thank you to Elisa Cashiola at http://elisacashiola.com/ for nominating me for the Sunshine Award! I am just tickled. 🙂 As a designer myself, I have a great appreciation for what you do and share. Your posts offer wonderful lessons on making … Continue reading
This past weekend, my sister came down for CMA fest. We missed my cousins who weren’t able to come, but there’s always next year! Eugene and I pinky-promised that we would make attending CMA fest a tradition. Here we are in … Continue reading
I love cookbooks. I especially love old cookbooks. I have begun to collect them, starting with the old church cookbooks from the county where my grandparents live. I am partial to these because I recognize many of the peoples’ names … Continue reading
Several years back, Grandmother and Aunt Anna introduced me to strawberry freezer jam, which I of course ate on a warm biscuit for breakfast just as I normally do with other homemade jams. It didn’t take me long to realize that this was basically strawberry shortcake in breakfast form.
Let me show you how to get some of this in your life.
First, we make the jam.
You will need fruit pectin to make the jam nice and thick. You may need more than one package, depending on how many pints of jam you would like to make. The instructions for how to make this jam as well as the ingredients and their quantities can be found in this box or here online, but I will take you through the steps with pictures because I think you’re swell.
You will also need some clean mason jars with lids. I forgot to take a picture of these, but I’m sure you know what they look like if you’re interested in making jam.
Next, you must procure some strawberries. But not just any strawberries.
It is absolutely CRITICAL that you start with fresh and perfectly ripe berries. If you do a little drive-by test with your nose, you should be able to smell their sweetness. It also doesn’t hurt to take a bite of one of the berries to confirm that on the inside they are not tough and white and tart, but instead juicy and red and sweet.
You don’t actually need this many berries unless you want to make over a dozen pints of jam, which you very well might once you taste this jam on a biscuit. Grandmother and I got a little ahead of ourselves on the quantity of berries we purchased and probably only used ¼ of this box for 4 pints of jam. We did, however, manage to eat the leftover berries for dessert in the form of strawberry shortcake just to mix things up. Ha.
Once you have determined that these berries are indeed perfectly ripe and sweet, please wash them.
Then, hull the strawberries to remove the greenery.
Measure out 2 full cups of strawberries. Really pack them in so you maximize the strawberry-ness.
This is the fun part (other than the most fun part: eating the jam): Mash the strawberries until completely broken down. I suppose there are several ways to do this, but a potato masher is my weapon of choice.
Once the berries are mashed up well, add an absurd amount of sugar (4 cups).
Mix the sugar into the berries until dissolved and give them some alone time for 10 minutes. Stir the mixture every now and then and make sure they are behaving.
Meanwhile, pour the package of pectin into a small pot and add ¾ cup of water.
Bring to a boil over high heat and stir the heck out of it so it doesn’t stick and burn or lump up. Once the mixture starts to boil, continue cooking for 1 minute and you’d best not stop stirring.
Then carefully pour the hot, thickened pectin into the strawberry mixture after its 10 minutes is up.
(Its dissolving 10 minutes, that is. Its 15 minutes of fame, however, has only just begun).
Stir this mixture for a few minutes until everything is dissolved together.
Next, please save your heart some ache and use a funnel when pouring the jam into the jars. This will drastically reduce the amount of jam that spills onto your counter, your paper towel usage, and, of course, the amount of jam that tragically will never make it to a biscuit.
Using, a ladle, pour the jam into the jars, leaving at least at least a half an inch below the rim of the jar as the jam may expand in the freezer. Though it is tempting, filling the jars to the top with jam may lead to a misfortune similar to that warned against in the previous paragraph regarding the funnel.
Once you have successfully ladled all of the jam into the jars using a funnel, place the lids on the jars and allow allow them to sit on the counter for 24 hours before putting them in the freezer.
These keep for up to 1 year, which means you can enjoy this piece of heaven on a biscuit in the dead of winter.
Speaking of biscuits, let’s make some so we can eat what is effectively strawberry shortcake for breakfast.
(I suppose you could eat this any time of day, but I think it’s more fun to feel like you are getting away with eating dessert for breakfast. But that’s just me.)
These are Grandmother’s wonderful biscuits. They are small in diameter and relatively flat, which maximizes the surface area that develops a nice crust and minimizes any fluffy nonsense that gets in the way of the jam to biscuit ratio.
For the record, I have nothing against fluffy biscuits. I actually prefer them with sausage gravy because they sop up all of the savory wonderfulness sausage gravy has to offer. So, I guess it’s a texture thing.
ANYWAY, you would probably like me to stop blabbering on and tell you how to make the perfect strawberry freezer jam companion biscuit.
I’d be delighted.
First, measure out 1 cup of flour and dump it in a mixing bowl.
Then, please tell everyone to avert their eyes as you add 3 tablespoons of vegetable shortening (Crisco) to the bowl.
After you’ve extracted the shortening from the measuring spoon using CLEAN fingers, use your Crisco-ed finger to grease the flat cast iron skillet. This was my great-grandmother’s and it’s the only skillet I’ve ever seen Grandmother use to bake biscuits in the 23 years that I’ve been enjoying them.
Translation: This skillet is very old and results in delicious biscuits without fail. Try to find yourself one immediately.
Using a pastry blender, cut in the shortening until the mixture resembles a coarse meal.
Add about 1/3 cup of milk and stir the ingredients together until combined. It’s best to add most of the milk and hold a little bit back until you can gauge the moisture level of the dough. You want it to be moistened, but not overly sticky or wet.
Using your hands, knead the dough 4 or 5 times and add more milk if necessary. Don’t overwork it, but knead the dough until it looks right. It looks right when it looks like this.
The turn out the dough onto a floured work surface and press it down until it’s about ½” thick. Or, if you’re real fancy, use a rolling pin.
Then, use a SMALL biscuit cutter to cut out the biscuits. (See tangent above for rationale).
Place the cut out biscuit dough on the greased skillet and pop it in the oven on 425 until biscuits begin to turn golden brown, about 10 minutes.
These actually rose more than normal, but they still tasted good.
This is what the biscuit and jam (and butter if you’re absurd like me) looks like assembled and partially eaten. I had to take a bite to show you what it looked like on the inside. That, and I was so excited I forgot to take a picture until I had taken a bite.
That’s what strawberry shortcake for breakfast can do to you. Or, FOR you, depending on if you are a biscuit half-eaten or half-left-to-eat kind of person.
Y’all come back,
Sugarlump