Saturday, September 12, 2015

Old Fashioned Apple Fritters


First week of school is in the books. The week started off hot as Hades - 90 degrees and and 90% humidity. But I guess someone told Mother Nature that is was September and today was gray, rainy, and chilly (at least this morning while I sat in the pouring rain at my son's 8 am soccer game- Ugh!)

So after a few errands, a nice lunch out with the family, and a nap (totally justified by the early weekend wake up) I decided that we were going to have breakfast for dinner and use up some of the 30+ pounds of apples we picked last week. 

So just a quick story about these apple fritters ...

When I was a teenage my grandmother from Denmark came to America to visit for an extended stay. Now she and my mom had gone apple picking and brought home a ridiculously large number of apples....no one can eat that many apples out of hand and my mom does NOT  like to bake...at all (though she does at Christmas, but that's another post). So what to do with all these apples? 

Well, we owned (and I still have) a Pillsbury cookbook from the early '60s and in it is a variation on savory corn fritters that uses apples. It requires no rolling of dough, no waiting for yeast to rise and gives you the crunchy exterior of a fried doughnut with the ease (and similar texture) of a pancake. We were sold and they came out so well we made them nearly everyday for something like 3 weeks until all the apples were gone. I have such great memories of my grandmother and I peeling apples in my mother's kitchen. Well today while making a cup of tea this afternoon, my favorite tea from my favorite tea shoppe in Copenhagen (A.C. Perch if your ever find yourself there. It's all very old fashioned with loads of different teas, old brass scales, and a smell that takes me right back to my childhood), I decided to relieve a little bit of family history in my favorite way, through food. 
This is my take on that vintage recipe. They are super easy and I hope you enjoy them! 

Old Fashioned Apple Fritters
3 c. All purpose flour 
5 tsp baking powder
1 tsp salt
4 tbsp sugar
2 tbsp ground cinnamon 
1/2 tbsp ground nutmeg
1 cup milk
4 eggs
3 cups diced apples
Neutral oil for frying

Combine all the dry ingredients in a large bowl and sift.

 Combine the eggs and milk and mix until combined. Add the wet to the dry ingredients, mix well. Now add the diced apples 

Heat oil in a deep pan to 375F and carefully drop soup spoons full of the batter into the oil and fry until gold on each side (about 2-3 min per side). Remove to a plate lined with paper towel to drain and top with a simple glaze of powders sugar and cold water or top with loads of powders sugar and serve warm. 


Bon appetite everyone! 
Xx
K

Tuesday, September 8, 2015

Perfect Greek Diner Potatoes

Hip hip hooray! It's the first day of school and unlike last year, when I locked myself out of the house and took it easy, today I was a busy beaver. So after running around most of the day (figuratively of course, because mama doesn't run unless I am being chased...by someone with a weapon!) I am home and back in my happy place- the kitchen. 

Now, enough about me, let's get to these potatoes. I know what you are thinking. "Potatoes? Not very exciting." But here you would be wrong, well right and wrong. Potatoes are not what usually get my culinary juices flowing but these take me back to the a couple of wonderful trips to Greece and the Greek diners of my youth. They are so lovely- soft and tender on the inside and just a bit crisp in the outside. Add to that the fact they they are dead simple to make and you have side dish heaven! 




Perfect Greek Diner Potatoes

3 lbs Yukon gold Potatoes, sliced in wedges
4 cloves garlic, smashed
Heavy pinch of Kosher Salt
1/4 c. Extra Virgin Olive Oil
Juice of 1 lemon
Water

Preheat oven to 450F

Slice potatoes into wedges and add to an oven proof baking dish, no need to be neat here. Just make sure they aren't too crowded. 

Next, take out your aggression on 4 cloves of garlic and smash. Remove skins and add to the potatoes.


Drizzle the Olive oil over the top (feel free to use more- I usually do)

Add the salt and lemon juice, and then add just enough water to almost cover the potatoes, but not quite. 


Place potatoes in the oven for 1 hour 30 minutes, tossing lightly half way through.
The potatoes will have the most amazing soft, almost confited texture, with a few crispy bits. Yum!!

Serve  with your favorite roasted or grilled meat, chicken or fish. We like it with Greek marinated chicken or Mahi Mahi, or pork souvlaki. The leftovers are great for homefries or in frittatas. 


Hope you live this simple dish as much as we do! 

K





Sunday, September 6, 2015

Apple Almond Clafoutis

Ah...it's finally September, though if you check the weather here in Northern Virginia it is still summertime- hazy hot and humid! Regardless of the temperatures though apples have come into season and my kids and I headed out early to our favorite local area farm (Homestead Farms in Poolesville, VA- which you should definitely check out if you are ever in the DC area and looking for great pick your own produce, feed goats, and pat some of the friendliest golden retrievers you have ever met!) to beat the heat and the inevitable crowds to pick apples and get in that autumn/back to school frame of mind. 

Tempted by all that sweet crunchy fruit we exercised some restraint and walked away with only 35 lbs of apples! Hahaha, we should be good to go on apple for at least a few months now. 

So many things to make with apples and the recipes are everywhere but I was in the mood for a little something different, but of course not too complicateed or fussy. So....what to make? 

Ah ha! Clafoutis! Yes, I know this custard like pancake is usually made with cherries or other soft summer fruits, but I think this version will satisfy all those early fall cravings for apples, almonds and cinnamon. I also wanted to bump up the protein a bit and try a gluten free version (for my friend's daughter) and so I experimented with some almond flour I had leftover from a lemon polenta cake  and came up with this! I hope you enjoy!



Apple Almond Clafoutis 
(adapted from "The Joy of Cooking" by I. Rombauer

4 eggs
3/4 c. sugar
3/4 c. whole milk (or heavy cream, if you are feeling naughty)
3/4 c. almond flour
1 tsp pure vanilla extract
1 tbsp rum (optional)
2 apples, peeled, and diced 
1 tsp cinnamon
1 tbsp butter (for the pan)

recipe note- you can use all purpose flour in place of almond flour if you prefer. I would then add 1/4 sliced almonds to the top of the clafoutis prior to baking.

Preheat oven to 350F

In a medium bowl, whisk eggs until frothy. Whisk in sugar until dissolved. Whisk in milk or cream and then add the almond flour, vanilla, rum, and salt. Whisk to combine and set aside. 




Peel and dice the apples and sprinkle with cinnamon (I use a heavy hand with the cinnamon because I do love apples with cinnamon!)


Butter a shallow round baking dish (I used a medium cast iron pan). Sprinkle the apples all over the bottom of the pan. Pour the batter over apples and bake at 350F for 30-40 minutes until a toothpick comes out clean from the center of the clafoutis.

Let rest about 20 minutes before serving



Serve with a few strips of salty bacon for a hearty breakfast or a dust with powdered sugar and serve with a dollop of whipped cream!

Hope you enjoy...my kids devoured it! 

 
K