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    Entries in oops (4)

    Tuesday
    Mar122013

    Honey Muffin

    Taneasha has been telling me lately that I don't make enough chocolate stuff.

    So I made honey-blueberry muffins.

    Apparently I'm feeling a little contrary today. Today. Ha.

    Honey Muffins with Berries

    2 cups flour
    1-1/2 tsp baking powder
    1-1/2 tsp baking soda
    1/2 teaspoon salt
    1/2 tsp cardamom
    1/2 cup sugar
    2 eggs
    1 tsp vanilla extract
    1/3 cup honey
    1/3 cup orange juice
    1/3 cup plain yogurt (greek style if you have it)
    1/3 cup vegetable oil (peanut works)

    2/3 c berries
    1 tbsp honey
    1 tbsp orange juice

     

    Preheat oven to 400°F and line your muffin cups.

    Realize there was no honey in your ingredients pic. Honey muffins and no honey...

    In a big bowl, combine all the dry stuff: flour, baking soda, baking powder, salt, cardamom, sugar. Yes, sugar. I know it usually goes into the wet stuff, or the butter so it will dissolve first, but, as I said, I’m feeling contrary today.

    I’m a little concerned about this recipe because my yogurt is a wee bit thicker than your typical yogurt.

    Seriously, you could spread this stuff on a bagel and eat it like cream cheese.

    The yogurt, honey, and orange juice can be piled into one cup, measure by displacement.

    In another bowl, mix all the wet stuff: yogurt, honey, juice, eggs, oil, vanilla.

    Before you mix the wet and dry, make sure your berries are thawed. Even looking at the volume in the second bowl, I was still worried about the liquid content.

    So, I added a tablespoon of honey and a tablespoon of juice to a pan with them, and just melted everything. You don’t want them warm, just melted.

    And dammit, no matter how hard I tried I couldn't get a shot of the orange juice being poured into the pan.

    Stir the wet stuff into the dry until it’s just barely mixed. Hm, doesn’t look too dry. This could pass for muffins. But, I’ve got the berries all melted, so in they go.

    Again, stir until just mixed. Berries do weird stuff when you mix and bake them. If you stir them too much, they’ll actually turn green. I can't decide if these are green or purple... There's a reason I wear a lot of black.

     

    I had enough for 13 muffins.

    The 13th muffin.

    I'm still having a bit of trouble with my oven. This time, I erred on the side of too hot - probably at least 425. The muffins were golden on top after only 8 minutes, but still gooey inside. By 15 minutes, they looked like this.

    Muffin 13, despite the heat, still lost it's peak in the middle.

    I think I need new baking powder.

    But heat was definitely a factor in these.

    They are tasty though. Very caramelly in flavour as well as colour. And the honey really comes through. I think next time, I'll omit the sugar and add a bit more honey. They're really quite sweet. More blueberries too. Or maybe none?

    At least they're not green anymore?

     

    Tuesday
    Sep042012

    You Jelly?

    This is a mesquite tree.

    Mesquite trees have thorns. Be careful.

    Mesquite trees also make beans.

    Lots of them.

    Beans can be made into jelly.

    Beans?? Yup. Beans.

    When they're "ripe" you can hear the seeds rattling around inside them, but a couple green ones isn't going to hurt anything.

    Bean Jelly. Not Green Jelly, the hilarious 80s band that did a cover of "Three Little Pigs" metal style.

    And the best part is that the beans grow wild across the street from Recipe Guy's house.

    Mesquite Bean Jelly

    • About a gallon of mesquite beans
    • Water
    • 2 c sugar
    • 2 tbsp lemon juice
    • 1/2 package of dry fruit pectin

    I hate using the "package" measure, but I'm not sure how much that was... the package says 49 grams, so I guess around 25? It looked like maybe 1/6 of a cup... I think.

    Kinda.

    Um, I forgot to do an Ingredients pic with this one, so I'm just going to keep typing like I know what I'm doing.

    The best way to rinse the beans is in a sink full of water.

    This also encourages any critters who have been munching on your beans to vacate them. Yes, there will be critters. This is wild food which means it's someone else's link in the food chain, and you're going to have to out compete them if you want to eat.

    Pick through the beans and remove any that have holes in them or look like they've been nibbled on. We had about a 50% recovery: we picked about 2 gallons of beans to get 1 gallon of usable ones.

    Break the beans into pieces, cover them with an inch or two of cold water (above the bean level), and bring them to a boil.

    After about 5 minutes, it starts to smell kinda sweet, almost like chamomile tea. Once it's boiled for 5 minutes, turn the heat off, cover it, and let it steep for another 30.

    Definitely tea.

    There's a distinct floral aroma, that you wouldn't expect from beans.

    Strain the beans. You can pause here in the process and refridgerate or freeze your bean tea if you've done enough for the day.

    When you're ready to make jelly, dump the tea back in the pot and bring it back to a boil. Keep boiling until you have 1 1/2 cups of tea. The colour definitely darkens as you concentrate it. This isn't the best light, but it's a lovely reddish gold colour.

    (you can check your level by either pouring hot tea into a pyrex cup to check and then back into the pot to continue, or: before you start, put 1.5 cups of water in your pot to get an idea of what that level looks like then dump it out and put the tea in to boil)

    I think this is the point at which we made a mistake.

    Not a cataclysmic one by any means, but the end product wasn't quite what we were expecting.

    We didn't let our tea cool.

    This messed with our pectin, which needs to start out cool and then be heated, not poured into a pot of boiling tea.

    Oops.

    So, let your tea cool. Completely. Like until it's not hot.

    Neither of us have ever made jam or jelly before and had no clue ... Taneasha is laffing at us, I know.

    Okay, so with your cool concentrated tea...

    Put the tea back in the pot and add the lemon juice, sugar, and the pectin.

    Stir this gently as you bring it back to a boil. The recipe we found at Edible Austin said to boil it one minute, but looking at the pectin package... I'm seeing slightly different instructions. So, in addition not to starting with boiling tea, read the directions. (freaking engineers, think they know how to do things without instructions... )

    Keep it at a full rolling boil (this means that the boil doesn't stop or slow if you stir it) for one minute.

    Pour your supposedly thickened jelly into a large clean jar.

    You can actually see the tiny beads of solidified pectin stuck to the sides of the pot in this pic. That's where some of the missing "jelly" went, I think. Wouldn't have happened if we'd started with cold tea.

    We aren't properly "canning" the jelly because we only made a tiny test batch, and we're pretty sure it's going to be eaten quickly.

    Because although it has the consistency of syrup,

    it tastes fucking awesome.

    The floral aroma totally stayed, and there's a distinct flavour of wildflower honey. Amazing on biscuits and with late season peaches.

    This was my first attempt at using pectin to gel anything. What have you canned?