Thursday, September 24, 2009

Dulce de Leche

Earlier this week I made dulce de leche to contribute to Heidi's fiesta. Dulce de leche is a rich milk-based caramel flavored sauce. It's great on toast, fruit, ice cream, and even spoons! I enjoyed mine on homemade apricot scones, and had some left over for hubby to eat on bread. Untoasted, white sandwich bread. I have yet to convert him to whole wheat, but I will keep trying. Battles must be chosen wisely! I chose to make my dulce de leche in the oven as opposed to the often-used stove top method, and it could not have been simpler.













Dulce de Leche

1 (14 oz) can sweetened condensed milk
sea salt (optional)

Empty the condensed milk into a glass pie plate and add a little sea salt if desired. Cover tightly with foil and place in a roasting pan. Add hot water to the roasting pan to come halfway up the sides of the pie plate. Bake in a 425 degree oven for 1 hour - 1 hour 15 minutes, until caramelized. Remove from oven and let cool, then whisk until smooth. Store leftovers in the refrigerator, and microwave to warm before serving.

Barefoot Bloggers: Beatty's Chocolate Cake



I was very excited to see that Mary of Passionate Perseverance chose Beatty's Chocolate Cake for the second of the barefoot bloggers' September recipes. I have been saving this recipe to try for quite some time now. I decided to halve the recipe and make a one-layer cake for my RCIA class at church tonight. I purposefully signed up to bring the refreshments for tonight when the September recipes came out. It is a small class and I am taking other food, so I think the size will work out nicely, and I won't have chocolate cake tempting me at home! A win/win outcome for sure.

I baked my cake in a 9" springform pan, and I'm glad I did as it rose pretty high and may have overflowed an 8" pan of a lesser depth. I did have to make the batter twice because towards the end of the recipe, I forgot that I was halving it, and added the called for amounts of oil, coffee, and egg. My batter was very thin! I guess I don't learn from my mistakes very well; this was the second time I did this today - made the same mistake baking cookies earlier. Anyways, the second time around, the batter was fine and the cake turned out great. The icing was okay, but I am not a fan of coffee in my icing, and ended up adding more butter, vanilla and sugar to detract from the strong coffee flavor. Next time I will leave it out of the icing completely, but I like the extra depth it adds to the chocolate in the cake itself. Visit Mary's site if you would like the recipe.

Friday, September 11, 2009

Frijoles con Chorizo

Mexico's Independence Day is coming up on September 16th. Many share the misconception that Cinco de Mayo is the Mexican Independence Day; May 5th actually celebrates the victory over the French at the Battle of Puebla in 1862.



In celebration of el Día de Independencía, aromasysabores is hosting a Mexican fiesta featuring recipes and culture. I will be participating in the celebration and posting some favorite recetas the rest of this month.

To get things started, I am sharing Frijoles con Chorizo, homemade refried pinto beans with mexican chorizo. Please do not confuse mexican chorizo with the spanish variety, which is a drier, cured product. I buy Cacique brand chorizo (the most readily available around here), and always pork chorizo, never beef. I do not use an actual recipe with measurements for this (a tendency I have), so please feel free to make any adjustments.








Frijoles con Chorizo

6 oz. mexican chorizo
1-2 Tbs. vegetable oil
3-4 c. cooked pinto beans
reserved bean cooking liquid
queso fresco, for serving
hot corn tortillas, for serving


Cook the chorizo in oil in a large skillet until it resembles cooked finely ground pork and is lightly browned, about 8 to 10 minutes, breaking up the meat as it cooks. Add the pinto beans and mash to your preferred consistency with a potato masher, or the back of a cooking spoon. Stir in the reserved bean broth (a couple of cups, maybe) to reach a soupy consistency. Bring to a gentle boil and simmer for 10-15 minutes, again until it is at your desired consistency. Salt to taste (you won't need much), and serve in tortillas with crumbled queso fresco.