Wednesday, December 21, 2011

Christmas Sweets

Peppermint Patties

Servings 48
1 can Condensed Milk
3/4 tsp Peppermint Oil or [1 Tbl Extract]
6 cups Icing Sugar Sifted 
Dark Chocolate Melts

Cover 2 large cooking trays with baking paper & dust with icing sugar, set aside.
In a large bowl mix the milk & peppermint with a wooden spoon [do not use metal]
Mix in 1 cup at a time of icing sugar, by the time you get to 4 cups you will no longer be able to use the spoon, so put on some food grade gloves & mix the rest by hand. you may need more sugar just keep adding it till you get a stuff consistency & is no longer sticky. 
Now roll into 1/2 walnut size balls & place on your trays. Roll a few, then flatten with the bottom of a glass that has been dipped in icing sugar.
Do not do too many before flattening as they start to dry out & will crack too much. Now cover with a fly net & leave to dry for about 6 hours then turn them over & leave over night. Using a pastry brush, brush off the icing sugar & set them aside. They will keep like this in a container for a few days. Melt chocolate over a double boiler. Cover your trays with foil. Dip each patty in chocolate & pick up using a fork & tap off excess chocolate. I use a skewer to slide the patty onto the foil tray to harden.
These are a very strong peppermint flavour when you use the oil. 
I also made a second lot using Orange Extract, they taste like Jaffas.
Once hardened package as you like & store in the cupboard. They will last a good few weeks if you can resist eating them all.


Dried over night & ready to coat


Dipped in dark chocolate


Wrapped in small pieces of foil

All ready to give

If anyone makes these id love to hear about it :o)

Thursday, December 15, 2011

Wine Barrel Lights

we are having an 18th Birthday Party here on saturday for son #2, i have been busy cooking all week & took a break yesterday to make some lights. i have seen similar ones made from ladders, wagon wheels & even bicycle rims. i have used 3 steel bands from an old 1/2 wine barrel that rotted away.



here is a quick tutorial of how i made them


steel bands & also not pictured 2 lengths of rusty chain


wire, pliers, fencing clips

make a loop & twist then wrap around your chosen object, take the wire across to the other side, wrap & make another loop, wrap again & cut the wire.
now do the same again so you now have a cross. those loops will be attached to the chain to hang your lights.


now turn the whole thing upside down so the loops are facing the ground. do two more the same as the first two so it looks like the spokes of a wheel. i used a fencing clip to bring all the wires to the centre [above picture]



you can add extra loops in the gap of each spoke so you can add more lights.


i used fencing clips to attach the chain to the top loops.

large coffee jars, jam & honey jars. there is a tutorial for wiring those here i used around about the same method. tea lights in the bottom & a long handled lighter.
i made two, the other one will have to wait till i get a few more jars if i want to have three hanging chandelier lights.

Friday, December 09, 2011

Potato Casserole & Honey Mustard Sausages

Because im home, i have heaps of time on my hands so i have been trying out new recipes that i have found on Pinterest. This is the potato casserole i made last night with a couple of changes from the original recipe.


original recipe comes from  MakeLifeDelicious Below is my version

Potato Casserole

1 1/2 kg Potatoes
2 cans Cream of Mushroom Soup
300ml Sour Cream
1 1/2 cups grated Cheese
Salt & Pepper
sprinkling of Bread Crumbs
few knobs of Butter


place a clean tea towel inside a large mixing bowl or bucket


peal your potatoes


grate your potatoes into your tea towel, then bring up the corners of your tea towel, twist & then squeeze your potato ball to remove excess water. empty your bowl with the potato juice & wipe out.


place into your bowl : Potato, Soup, Cream, Cheese, Salt & Pepper, mix together.
grease your baking tin ~ casserole dish i have found butter works better than oil.


tip in your mix, add a few knobs of better & sprinkle with bread crumbs.
180 degrees on the middle shelf for about 1 hour or until brown & bubbly.
this makes a fair bit but its even better reheated the next day.
you can add extra chopped mushrooms
i dont always have sour cream so i just use a carton of long life cream from my pantry


Honey Mustard Sausages

this recipe calls for those little cocktail sausages but i just use regular thin sausages the other ones are too expensive. this recipe has no quantities

Sausages
Honey
Wholegrain Mustard

cook your sausages either in a fry pan or i usually cook them in a baking tray in the oven. remove the sausages & drain, cut each sausage into three pieces.
in a small pot add about 2 1/2 Tbl Honey & 2 Tbl Mustard [the amount will depend on how many sausages you use] heat until runny.
there are two ways to do this, you can either put the sausages back into the pan [after you have drained the fat & wiped out the pan] & then pour over the honey mix & place it back into the oven for five minutes or you can put the sausages into a serving bowl & honey mix into a dipping bowl {second option is good for party finger food]

both recipes are very yummy, especially the next day :o)

i still have some stuff over on my Flickr account for sale if you want to have a look :o)

Friday, December 02, 2011

Raspberry Bramble


we have a Raspberry Bramble down the side of our house, its shady & wet most of the time. this is our third summer here & its the first time i have gotten any raspberries, as usually the birds have stripped the bramble clean.

these pictured above will be ripe in two days.

Miss Sally Girl loves fruit she can just snack on any time she likes, here she is picking raspberries. when i go out to pick them she has to stay inside or i would get very few in my bucket :o)

the bramble is not huge, probably 2 1/2 metres wide & 3 metres long about that any way. the area was bigger but i cut them back last autumn. they are super easy to grow & need pretty much no maintenance if you dont want them to take over keep them cut back & remove all the ones that pop up around them or you can also keep them in pots.

they are not very spiky like the blackberries so are much easier to pick. the fruit hangs low under the leaf canopy away from the main spiky branches.

the bucket is a 1kg honey bucket & it is 3/4 full this is from a two day pick. pick one day then skip a day then pick the next. I have a short list of what I will do with them & ill post recipes when  I've decided.

to clean & store any berries i make up a mix of 1 part Apple Cider Vinegar to 10 parts water, swirl around & then drain [you can rinse but i dont bother].  the reason i wash my berries like this is because most berries go mouldy pretty quick & this gives them a lot longer mould free life.
store in the fridge or lay out on paper towel to dry then place on a try with none of them touching & freeze, when frozen store in tupperware or zip lock bags. If you have a dehydrater remove any stems before drying, for a quicker dry cut in half long ways.