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Archive for the ‘Ghost Ghouls and Goblins’ Category

Spider Bread

01 Jan

Brought to us by Jeanette

1/2 cup warm water, plus
2 tablespoons warm water (70-80F)
1/2 cup pumpkin puree, canned or cooked from fresh
1/4 cup butter or margarine
1/4 cup instant nonfat dry milk powder
1/4 cup brown sugar, packed
1 teaspoon ground cinnamon
1/2-1 teaspoon ground nutmeg
3/4 teaspoon salt
1/8 teaspoon ground ginger
2 3/4 cups bread flour
2 1/4 teaspoons active dry yeast (1 Packet)

Here are a few tips for success with your edible arachnid:

Halloween Party Sandwich Menu

——————————————————————————–
Spider Bread
Platter of Cold Cuts

Roast Turkey, Roast Beef, Baked Ham

Sliced Cheeses

Sliced Buns, Mayonnaise, Mustard

Sliced Tomatoes, Lettuce, Sliced White Onions

Basket of Crisp Apples

Mugs of Cold Cider

Baby Spider Cupcakes

Halloween Candy

Thaw the bread dough in the refrigerator overnight.

Preheat oven to 350 degrees.

Prepare the baking tray. Spritz a 14-by-17-inch baking sheet with sides with baking spray. The spider legs are going to spread out lengthwise, and the head will face crosswise on the tray. Now using your finger, trace the pattern of the spider on the greased tray just as if you were finger painting. Trace a circle about 3 inches in diameter for the spider’s head. Behind it, trace a circle about 51/2 inches in diameter for the body. Trace eight legs, curved, about 8 inches long and about 2 inches apart. One pair of legs will be under the head, one pair at the neck and another two pairs under the body, close to the neck. Yes, this spider has a neck.

If you make a design goof, smear the greasy tray with your hand, and make a new tracing with your finger. Making a pattern first is lots easier than flopping around the dough once it’s shaped.

Work on a floured board. You’ll make and place the legs first. Divide a 1-pound loaf of bread dough into 8 sections. Roll the dough between your palms until they take on a long, even worm shape, about 8 inches long. Place them on the tray. Put a roll of wadded metal foil under the spider’s “knees,” so they bend and he looks like he’s crawling. Place the head and body on the tray after the legs are in place. The doughs will stick together and all body parts will be attached; you don’t have to pinch them together.

Brush the whole body with beaten egg. Then heavily sprinkle the spider with black sesame seeds. Buy the sesame seeds in markets that sell Oriental foods. Store unused seeds in a jar in the freezer. Later, they’ll make a dramatic garnish sprinkled on salads, stir fries or appetizers. They look nifty on any creamy cheese appetizer.

Let the spider dough rise until puffed, then bake him. Let the kids peek through the oven window to watch him rise up and brown. It’s like watching a slow-motion monster movie.

There will be a pound of bread dough left over. Divide it into 6 sections and form dough blobs into buns. Let the rolls rise on another baking sheet, bake them off and use for sandwich buns.

When the spider is done, carefully transfer him to a rack set over newspapers to catch loose seeds. When cool, the spider should be transferred and displayed on a tray or carving board with a rim. Otherwise, you’ll be picking sesame seeds out of the rug into the millennium.

You can make the spider’s face express any emotion you want. We liked the look of mini-cheese sandwich-type crackers. But some eyeball contenders are Necco wafers, Nilla wafers and other bug-eye choices from cookies or crackers. For an alien look, bulging oval eggs, buried in the dough, would be neat, but this cook couldn’t get them to stay put. As for the nose, candy pieces work well, especially gummy fruit, which comes in all kinds of colors and shapes and can be sliced to any thickness you like.

Use dabs of peanut butter to glue the features in place. It sticks forever to any surface, and it’s OK to eat if some smears off onto the bread.

As for the rest of the menu, keep it simple. Most of the food should be hand held. The cupcakes look especially nice and horrible if topped with a small hairy-legged plastic spider.

SERVES 16 , 1 1 1/2 pound loaf (change servings and units)

Source: Recipezaar and Post-Gazette

 

Greg’s “Pumpkin Brains” Chili

01 Jan

Brought to us by Greg

3 chicken breasts
Grill until cooked through

1 stick butter
¼ cup vegetable oil
1 large onion, diced
1 small red pepper, diced
Put all into a large pot and sauté approx 15 minutes

¼ cup flour
2 cups chicken stock
Mix flour and stock and add into pot, lower the heat for this

Chicken breasts (from above
1 can (15.5oz) white beans
1 can (15.5oz) butter beans
1 can (15.5oz) white hominy
2 cans (4.5 oz) green chiles
½ tbsp cumin
½ tbsp chili powder
½ tbsp salt
½ tbsp pepper
10 shakes Tabasco
1 cup shredded cheddar cheese
1 cup shredded jack chees3
Add all of the above to the pot and stir
Simmer uncovered approx 1 hour, stirring occasionally

Hollow out a pumpkin and use as a serving bowl and serve along some tasty cornbread!

 

Cauldron Curry

01 Jan

Brought to us by Desiree

For the Curry Paste

1 tbsp whole coriander seeds, toasted
2 tsp whole cumin seeds, toasted
1 tsp whole black peppercorns, toasted
1 tsp coarse salt
3 serrano chiles, sliced
1/2 c fresh cilantro
1/2 c fresh lemongrass, trimmed and chopped
8 garlic cloves, minced (1/4 c)
2 scallions, chopped (1/4 c)
2 tbsp chopped peeled fresh ginger
2 tbsp fresh lime juice
1 tbsp finely grated lime zest (from 2 limes)

For the Stew
1 c spinach
1 can (14 oz) unsweetened regular coconut milk
1 can (14 oz) unsweetened light coconut milk
1 medium zucchini, quartered lengthwise and sliced 1 inch thick (2 and 1/4 c)
12 oz boneless, skinless chicken breasts, cut into 1 inch pieces
12 oz boneless, skinless chicken thighs, cut into 1 inch pieces
Coarse salt and freshly ground pepper
3/4 c fresh basil
Serrano chiles, thinly sliced, for garnish
Black jasmine rice, cooked
Lime wedges for serving

1. Make the curry paste: Grind coriander, cumin, peppercorns, and salt with mortar and pestle. Add remaining ingredients and grind until a paste forms. (Curry paste can be refrigerated for up to 2 weeks or frozen for up to 3 months.)

2. Make the stew: Puree 5 tbsp curry paste, the spinach and 1 c regular coconut milk in a blender until smooth. Reserve remaining curry paste for another use.

3. Bring remaining regular coconut milk and light coconut milk to a boil in a heavy stockpot. Reduce heat, stir in curry-spinach mixture, and simmer for 5 minutes. Add zucchini, and cook until slightly tender, about 5 minutes. Add chicken and season with salt and pepper. Cook until zucchini is tender and chicken is cooked through, about 5 minutes. Add basil, and garnish with serrano chiles. Serve with rice and lime wedges.