About That Raspberry Pie …

I finally pulled my ingredients together and made a wild black raspberry pie.  It didn’t disappoint me 🙂

June 30, 2014 Raspberry Pie 002

As far as pie making goes, I grew up in my grandparents’ house, trained early in pie making, so I don’t really use a recipe, it’s all in my head ….  I was a little lazy in cutting the lattice strips, they look a little whopperjawed.

Pie Crust

  • 1/2 cup or 1 stick salted butter
  • 1/2 t. salt
  • 2 cups flour
  • 5 to 7 tablespoons cold water

Add the salt to the flour and mix.  Mix the butter into the flour with your fingers until well mixed together.  Add the water (yesterday was rather warm and humid here, so I only used 5 T’s) and stir quickly together with a fork or your fingers.  Knead the dough together only for just a second or two to make sure the ingredients are well incorporated.  Roll out and line a pie pan and you’re good to go!

June 29, 2014 Black Raspberry 001

For the raspberries, pile them up in the newly made crust, sprinkle on about 2 tablespoons flour, 1/3 to 1/2 cup sugar (depends on how sweet you prefer it), and dot the top of this with about a tablespoon of butter, cut up in little pieces.  Top this with either a lattice prepared from leftover dough, or top it off with a complete layer of dough.  Cut out shapes work well too.

June 28, 2014 011

Bake at 350 degrees F until lightly browned.  I don’t like my pies to get too brown, so I really watch it as it’s baking.  If I see it’s browning quickly, I’ll cover it with foil to slow it down.

Next step – serve with vanilla ice cream or whipped cream and enjoy!

June 30, 2014 Raspberry Pie 002

 

Posted in Hoosier Land Cooking | Tagged , | 6 Comments

The Daily Prompt – Binding Judgment – What We Think We Hear In Text

Photo credit: salodiensis / Foter.com / CC BY-NC

Photo credit: salodiensis / Foter.com / CC BY-NC

Does it ever make sense to judge a book by its cover — literally or metaphorically? Tell us about a time you did, and whether that was a good decision or not.

In this age of the internet, we spend so much time interacting with people around the world in text whether it be on a phone, an email, or social media such as Facebook.  There is quite often no physical meeting of persons to gauge the depth and intent of our words, so we make assumptions or judgments about these persons based only on what they have typed and I am guilty of the same.

It especially gets tricky when we are trying to translate intent from one language to the other.  The person texting may think he is expressing sympathy towards his/her friend and the friend may perceive it as judgment or worse, ridicule, when that was never the intent.

So imagine my surprise, when I tried to relay sympathy to a friend in another country who had fallen upon misfortune and it was taken as being too inquisitive or ridicule.  It was not my intent at all.   I was taken as being judgmental and I felt I was also being judged unfairly.  It was a tangled mess to try to make the other person understand my intent and we have not spoken since, unfortunately.

We make judgments about people whom we have never physically met and never walked with them in their everyday life.  How can we possibly really know someone on such superficial levels?

The lesson to be learned here, I suppose, is to not make rash judgments and perhaps to sit back and gauge the conversation until one understands the situation before jumping in and offering another viewpoint.

Or better yet, keep one’s mouth shut.

http://dailypost.wordpress.com/dp_prompt/binding-judgment/

 

 

Posted in Daily Prompt, Uncategorized | Tagged , , | 1 Comment

Weekly Photo Challenge – Between

I am indeed late on this challenge, but thought of it several mornings this week as I was walking in to work.  I pass by a large cathedral-like church building downtown, it’s very old and hugging the building is a perennial garden consisting of hostas and hydrangeas mostly.  One morning as I was hobbling into work (you see, I tripped and fell last Sunday and broke a toe, hence the need to hobble), I spied a big beautiful pink/white/green hydrangea bloom.  And next to it, hiding between the leaves was another.  Because it was mostly hidden from view, it was difficult to see exactly how big it was, but I suspect it was as big as it’s companion.  Several days later, I hobbled into work with my camera and captured it.  Good thing too, because as I walked out to go home later that day, the big bloom had wilted in the heat.

 

June 28, 2014 007June 28, 2014 005June 28, 2014 006

Posted in Weekly Photo Challenge | Tagged , | Leave a comment

Nature’s Hidden Jewels – Black Raspberries

This gallery contains 17 photos.

I’ve been out for several hours picking black raspberries.  It’s a buggy weedy sticky adventure, but oh it yields such delights.  I need to make a run to the market for pie ingredients…. I started out with one bowl full, … Continue reading

More Galleries | Tagged , , , | 6 Comments

Take Off For Europe

This gallery contains 19 photos.

On April 30th, in the evening, I took off from Chicago O’Hare Airport on my first European adventure and my first international flight.  I hope I didn’t appear too goofy in my excitement as I pulled and tossed my luggage … Continue reading

More Galleries | Tagged , , , , | 6 Comments

My First Haiku Poem

Wake up tree buds soon

Wind sun together pull kites

Return geese from afar

Posted in Haiku Poems | Tagged , | 2 Comments

My First Spring in Germany and France

As some of you may have noticed, I have been absent from the blogging scene for a few weeks.  I had the opportunity to fly to Germany and France and so I did it!  I’ve returned with over 650 photos on my little camera and almost as many topics to write about!  I don’t know where to begin!  So stay tuned, as this weekend I will start writing about my great adventure!

10152002_10202833876302444_6341813440364013488_n

 

Posted in Europe Travel | Tagged , , , | Leave a comment

Happy Easter

1621678_10202314826366520_421312739_n

Posted in Easter | Tagged , | Leave a comment

Macarons! Mais Oui!

When is a macaroon not a macarons?  When it looks like this:

April 15, 2014 Macarons 008

Macarons can be tricky to prepare, so one needs to pay attention to the details.  I attempted to make them about a year or so ago and it didn’t go so well.  I ended up munching on a few and then throwing them out.  I had a photo, I thought I had deleted it, but here it is:

35223_1464779853961_1106359_n

They looked good on the cookie sheet, but after they baked, well, um, they looked pretty bad and I didn’t add any food coloring.  It helps if the weather is good, and not rainy or foggy, as it can cause the egg whites to deflate a little.

 

 

This time around, I wasn’t disappointed at all!

I finally had all of the necessary ingredients for making these delicate mounds.  The ingredients are pretty simple and basic, except for the almond meal, which is a specialty grain where I buy ingredients.  I found it in the health-food section, but it can also be found in the baking section in some stores.  Macarons can be made in all kinds of colors and flavors.  Some recipes call for a pinch of salt – I found I didn’t need it.

April 14, 2014 Macarons 001

  • 3/4 c. almond meal, finely ground
  • 1 1/2 c. powdered sugar (icing sugar)
  • 3 large egg whites (not freshly laid, better to be 5 days old or more), at room temperature
  • 4 Tablespoons granulated sugar (Castor sugar)
  • 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
  • Food coloring paste or powdered colors (not liquid)

April 14, 2014 Macarons 003

 

The egg whites need to be several days old, preferably 5 days to a week (in the shell, that is).  Let the eggs sit out and come to room temperature a few hours before you make them.  The almond meal absolutely needs to be finely ground.  If you need to, grind it finer.  The package I bought was very well ground and fine.  Measure out all the ingredients into separate little bowls so they are ready at hand.

April 14, 2014 Macarons 007

Prepare your baking sheet and parchment paper ahead of time too, as you’ll need to move quickly from prepared batter to piping on the parchment paper.  Draw 1″ circles in rows, about 1 1/2″ apart, using pencil.  I used a soda pop bottle cap, as it was just the right size.  You can draw your circles bigger, it depends on how big you want the macarons to be.  I ended up piping mine out bigger than the 1″ circles.  Also, once you draw all those circles, be sure to turn the paper over so you don’t have circles on the bottoms of all those macarons!  Did I do this?  Haha, um, I’m not telling.

April 14, 2014 Macarons 004

Mix the powdered sugar and the almond meal together, until well blended.  Set aside.

April 14, 2014 Macarons 009

 

Start beating the egg whites, and when they become foamy, slowly start adding the 2 Tablespoons of granulated sugar, and then add the vanilla extract, and your food coloring at this time, continuing to beat until the egg whites form a stiff peak.

April 14, 2014 Macarons 010April 14, 2014 Macarons 012

Remove the bowl and fold in the powdered sugar/almond meal mixture, carefully, slowly adding and folding so that the egg whites do not deflate. This is where I must have gone wrong the first time I made them.

April 14, 2014 Macarons 017April 14, 2014 Macarons 016

 

Then fold 2 or 3 times with a little more pressure until the egg whites are like a blob of lava.  At this point, oops, I realized I forgot to add the coloring, so I slowly folded it in here:

April 14, 2014 Macarons 019April 14, 2014 Macarons 020

 

Now, you’re ready to pipe onto the parchment paper. Using a piping bag (I used a 16″ Wilton bag) or a Ziplock bag with the corner cut off, spoon the mixture carefully into the bag.  You can also fit a 1/2″ tip into your bag to aid in piping.  After filling the bag, twist the top and rest the twisted portion in your palm, gripping it with your thumb, a position which helps you control the piping evenly.  I found that if I held the point in the middle of each circle and just apply pressure, the circle would fill out evenly.  Once you have piped onto all the circles on the parchment paper, take the pan (carefully) and bang it 2 or 3 times on the counter top.  This gives the bottom of the macarons that characteristic lip that you see in the photos.  Then, let the sheet of macarons sit out on the counter for 15 minutes to an hour, in order to form a skin.  If you touch them, and your finger is sticky, then let them sit out longer.

April 14, 2014 Macarons 021April 14, 2014 Macarons 023April 14, 2014 Macarons 024

 

In order to bake the macarons evenly without browning, the oven needs to be at a low temperature (280 degrees F).  My oven was a little too warm at this temperature and the macarons wanted to brown a little, which changed the color to a peach, instead of a rose.  I would lower it to 250 next time.  Adjust your oven to what you think would be best.

April 15, 2014 Macarons 002

Baking takes about an hour, after a couple of minutes, crack the door a little to let any steam out and continue baking, turning the sheets occasionally and moving them around so they bake evenly and basically, dry out into crispy wafers.  Don’t overcook or brown them, as they will lose their color.  I lightly touch them to see if they are dried solidly.  See, here, they are peachy colored and my shapes aren’t perfect, but hey, it’s my second attempt!

April 15, 2014 Macarons 003

 

When the macarons are done, remove from the oven and cool them.  They should pop off the parchment easily.  Once they are cooled completely, you can pipe or spoon on butter cream frosting or any flavored cream filling that you fancy.  Even Nutella would be great!

April 15, 2014 Macarons 005

I had on hand an edible glitter in a soft pink color, so I brushed it onto the surface of each of them, returning the cookies to the pink color I originally tinted them with.  They turned out so pretty and lustrous.

April 15, 2014 Macarons 007April 15, 2014 Macarons 008

Voila! ………….

Posted in French Food | Tagged , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Daily Prompt – Make Me Smile

When I am feeling blah, what one thing makes me smile? New born babies, spring flowers, a walk in the woods and travelling but I have to say, it’s this fairly new video:  “Happy” by Pharrell Williams 🙂

 

 

It gets a big smile out of me every time I watch it! http://dailypost.wordpress.com/2014/04/07/daily-prompt-make-me-smile/

Posted in Daily Prompt | Tagged , | 10 Comments