Christmas is Coming–The Balls are Just Ornamental

When you collect the cookbooks I do you find an fair number of “Ball” recipes in the Appetizer section. This ball, that ball, all the balls. Let’s check the heft.

This holiday season will be very different than most we can remember. Distance and safety SHOULD make for smaller gatherings but if you and your “pod” do gather appetizers are great and the jokes about balls are easy to make. So let’s get this going and start with “Family Favorites” from the Seniority Craft Group of Indian Path Medical Center of Kingsport, Tennessee.

Sausage Balls

1 lb Sausage meat browned2 c Bisquick
8 oz grated Cheddar Cheese
Mix, roll into balls and bake at 325 for 15 to 20 minutes

Fruit Balls

16 oz Cream Cheese (soft)1 can Fruit Cocktail
3 oz pkg Instant Vanilla PuddingChopped Nuts
Graham Crackers
Mix Pudding and cream cheese. Add fruit cocktail and shape into balls. Roll in chopped nuts. Serve with graham crackers.

If you prefer real estate agents from Columbus Ohio….

Cheese Tuna Ball

1 can Tuna, drained1/4 c Parsley flakes
1 1/2 pkg Cream Cheese1/4 c Walnuts , finely chopped
1 med Onion, finely chopped
Mix tuna, cheese and onions. In separate bowl mix parsley and nuts. Add half the parsley mix to the tuna. Chill tuna for 1 hour, then form into ball. Roll ball in remaining parsley.

More to come! Yes, that’s a warning.

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Christmas is coming–and I’m not ready.

But I am looking forward to making new things to share with the small pod of people I’m allowed to mix with. I hope you and your pod are going to try something new this holiday season.

Let’s start with Charles Dickens’ Mulled Wine as presented by the wonderful How To Drink….

If you can’t get enough of Victoriana and Dickens you might also want to visit PBS’ The History Kitchen article by clicking the image

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Great Things to Know–Oven Temps and Tuna Atrocities

I have a few books in my collection that are written or assembled by Home Economics teachers. I did take Home Ec in high school. We covered cooking, sewing, child care (with one memorable day of how NOT to make a baby while still in high school).

This one has a hugely important bit of info taped to the inside cover

Very Slow Oven–250 to 275 degrees

Slow Oven–300 to 325 degrees

Moderate Oven–350 to 375 degrees

Hot Oven–400 to 425 degrees

Very Hot Oven–450 to 475 degrees

Also tucked into that book is the recipe below.

Baked Potatoes with Tuna & Broccoli in Cheese Sauce

2 medium baking potatoes1 tsp cayenne
10 oz frozen broccoli in cheese sauce1/4 c minced green onions
1 can chunk light tuna2 pcs cooked bacon, crumbled

Microwave the potatoes on HIGH for 8 minutes. Remove and wrap in foil. Let stand to finish cooking. Microwave broccoli on HIGH for 5 minutes. In medium microwave safe bowl combine tuna and cayenne. Stir in broccoli. Cover and heat 60 to 90 seconds. Cut potatoes in half length wise, top with tuna/broccoli. Sprinkle on bacon and green onions.

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Day Thirty One of the 31 Days of Halloween–The Sandwich Dark Arts

THE BROODWICH is the ultimate delicious horror.

Where did this eldrich creation come from –Aqua Teen Hunger Force.

I know you want one. Below are 3 adventurers daring enough to make one.

Andrew is a fancy cooking man
Ed here has a more laid back take on how to assemble this abomination.
Don’t lie–you wish you had that shirt.
Paco is a dragon hand puppet. So you know he’s an expert in sandwich dark arts.

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Day Twenty Five of the 31 Days of Halloween–Spooky Cookbooks part 1

Because wouldn’t it be nice to get back to cookbooks?

The Necronomnomnom

Let’s look at one that’s nearly impossible to pronounce.

Who wouldn’t want cinnamon buns with runes and sigils on them?

The recipes are for real things–buns, chowder, etc but they have a fun cosmic horror spin. If you aren’t amused by that genre this isn’t going to excite you but that only means you aren’t the audience.

Also, best review evar

The Wicked Baker

This one is very stylish

The photographs are so beautiful, as is the layout of the book itself.

I haven’t made any of the recipes here but reading them they seem to be solidly constructed. But if you don’t cook/bake and just love food photography this is still a great book.

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