Saturday, December 2, 2017

Slow Cooker Boiled Peanuts!

Well, our fabulous Thanksgiving Day feast and Family Reunion is well past, and I have almost a year to recover. Good thing... I'm getting pretty old now, and the preparation for that event is becoming real work!

Friday, November 17, 2017

Hot Sauce

Ever since I got into fermenting my own sauerkraut and pickles, I've wanted to try my hand at making my own hot pepper sauce. I'm particularly fond of Texas Pete® Original Hot Sauce, using it on a lot of different foods. I'm not vain enough to think I could duplicate that flavor and texture - I don't plan to use the additives that make that possible! - but I hope that I can produce a product that will make an acceptable substitute.

Wednesday, November 1, 2017

Mom's Pound Cake

Pound cake is widely-known for both its taste and its simplicity. I think Mom began making her own version of this cake about the time of my senior year in highschool.

Saturday, October 28, 2017

Mariner's Home-style Vegetable-Beef Soup

I've been making this soup, on rare occasion, ever since I retired, at which time I temporarily assumed some of the cooking chores for which my Honey would otherwise have been responsible. I don't know why I haven't already posted it, because we really like it, and so has everyone who has had any of it. Anyway, I had a need to make some today, so I decided it was time to share my recipé. If you decide to re-create this, you'll need the following:

Mom's Chocolate-Iced Layer Cake

Following the death of my father, in 1989, my Mom asked that the family begin celebrating Thanksgiving Day together regularly, in remembrance of him. She held that Thanksgiving was Dad's favorite holiday, and that it would be appropriate for the family to meet together at that time. We agreed to her request, and for nearly 28 years now - with only one exception - we have held our family reunion on Thanksgiving Day, in memory of our Dad.

Wednesday, October 25, 2017

Lonnie's Brunswick (Whatchagot) Stew

For quite some time, my brother Lonnie has been making his version of Brunswick Stew. This is a favorite dish of mine, and he traditionally brings it to our Family Reunion, after which I try to make off with all of the leftovers. It's apparently also quite popular with a whole bunch of other people, because somebody is always asking him for the recipé. After the last flurry of such requests in social media, I contacted him and asked if he would like to have me post the recipé here, allowing him to respond to such requests with a url instead of individual messages. He thought that was a good idea, so here goes:

Saturday, October 21, 2017

Mom's Old Fashioned Dark Fruitcake

Most of the time, when someone mentions fruitcake, it's a joke.  I have to tell you though, my Mom has made a tradition of baking fruitcake for many years, and I think it's wonderful!  I'm not particularly fond of any of the commercial fruitcake products - they're all too dry or doughy - but Mom's cake is very different.

Tuesday, October 10, 2017

Canning Mariner's Black Bean Soup - Revised

This post is "Canning Black Bean Soup v2.0, and revises and supplants the original post on the subject. I have changed the process to accommodate additional experience with the recipé.  The previous version was my first attempt to achieve consistency in the distribution of soup components between jars of the same batch of soup. It worked, in terms of improving consistency, but it resulted in a tremendous increase in the complexity and amount of effort.  In this version, I have abandoned that approach, opting instead for a little more care in charging the jars with product. As before, the recipé for this soup isn't radically different from the original crock pot version; it has only been slightly modified to accommodate processing with a pressure canner.

Tuesday, August 29, 2017

Dill Pickles

July 17, 2017 (this is when the story actually begins)

Some weeks ago I started a project involving fermentation - sauerkraut - and it was successful enough that I thought I might try some other fermented foods.  The choice of what to try is a no-brainer: dill pickles, of course!

Friday, August 18, 2017

Undine's Courtboullion

Mariner heard about a different way to prepare fish, Cajun/Creole style, and decided we should try it. It's called Courtboullion (pronounced kū-bĭ-yōn), and it is a kind of poached fish - usually catfish, but it can be made with pretty much any fish (some say, any kind of seafood!).

Saturday, August 5, 2017

Hummus Fail - or - Why I Can Chickpeas

My sister lives some distance away, from both me, and the area in which we grew up, and she has ever since she married a sailor and moved away, at the ripe age of... well, never mind!   Just accept that it's been a long time. I visited her in her home for the first time, a few years ago, and in addition to entertaining us, she fed us some great home-made snacks.  I had never had hummus before, but I really enjoyed spreading her hummus on some sesame crackers.  In fact, both my Honey and I enjoyed it so much, we badgered Sis until she gave us the recipé!  We've been making it ever since. I won't publish the recipé here, because it's not mine to share, but until recently it seemed nearly foolproof.

Saturday, July 22, 2017

Sauerkraut!

Saturday, April 22 2017

Everybody who knows me knows that, especially since I retired, I despise weekend traffic.  Too many people going too many places, too fast, and too rude!  Since I don't want to be seen on the 11:00 PM news, being hauled away by the police for a "road rage" incident,  I just stay home.  This may seem to have little to do with food and cooking, but it explains (at least in part) why I am able to put together this blog about making sauerkraut.

Sunday, February 5, 2017

Mariner's Quasi-Csabai

I was 13 years old when John Kennedy faced down Nikita Khrushchev, during the Cuban Missle Crisis, and I lived about 12 miles north of the Florida State Line. For my entire life, up to that point, Emergency Preparedness - or as we called it then, Civil Defense - was a significant focus in the lives and education of school children in the American South, and those conditions shaped the minds and spirits of an entire generation of Southern children. We expected "The Bomb" to arrive any day, bringing with it TEOTWAWKI (the end of the world as we know it); and the fact of Soviet imperialism simply reinforced those expectations.