Friday, July 19, 2013

Remembering When....

Hi all!
It's been a long time since I've spent time on this blog, but hopefully I'll be able to devote more time to it in the coming months.
I've also been having some wonderful times in a Facebook Group called Remembering When...in Lancaster... I'll have to post the link for any of you that are interested. Sooner or later, we knew it would come around to the foods and recipes of our childhoods :) I have posted a recipe there and also have posted it here as well.
I am so lucky to have been born in Lancaster, Pennsylvania in the time that I was. So many wonderful memories and special times.
That's one of the pluses to getting older I suppose LOL


Here is a link to the group.... check it out if you want to relive some incredible past days!

https://www.facebook.com/groups/182712575129551/
Cinnamon Flop Recipe by Nanny Kelley of Conestoga (b. 1897)

First Part:
1 cup granulated sugar
1 Tbs. butter
... 1 cup milk
2 cups flour
1/4 tsp salt
2 tsp baking powder

Second Part:

1 cup brown sugar
1/4 pound butter
Cinnamon and nuts to taste

Cream the butter and the sugar. Add milk, salt, baking powder and flour.
Pour into an 8 inch pan. Mix remaining ingredients to crumbs. Divide evenly over the batter and bake 20 minutes @ 425 degrees.

Monday, May 30, 2011

Calling All Reinholds Pennsylvania Fans of The Carnival!




I'm sending out some shouts to anyone who is or has been a fan or attendee of the wonderful Reinholds Fire Company Carnivals. I grew up going to The Carnival and have incredible and fond memories of those days.
What I am searching for is a recipe for the unique Pork Barbecue Sandwiches that have been served at The Carnival for many, many years. For those of you who have had them, you KNOW how different and delicious they are. For those uninitiated, they are not tomato based, I don't recall a vinegar essence either. They are comprised of tender shredded pork, in a thick, savory sauce that sticks to the meat and is in no way thin or runny. Served on a hamburger bun, there is nothing like it.
I've messed around with my best guesses to the recipe but would LOVE to be able to post the real deal here.

I'm contacting folks back home to see if they have the recipe or know someone that does. If you have any ideas, please comment me here!
The Carnival burgers are easy...thanks to Earl and Mabel Weaver :)

Friday, March 18, 2011

Welcome To Spring 2011!

Some of the first signs of Spring are the scallions, sugar peas and asparagus bounties from our gardens or at the roadside farmstands. What a welcome sight!
Winter is done. It really wasn't all that bad from this viewpoint. At least there was no blizzard this year :)
The Easter season is very special and important to me. And not for the bunnies and chocolate :)
It's time for Spring cleaning, going over the grounds and gathering up downed twigs and branches, planting some favorite things, just sprucing up overall. I do have plans for a firepit group area to relax by at night. Also I  want to work on my grill area too.

There will soon be more recipes here. I have many to go through from the family stash :)
Have a glorious Friday! It's supposed to be in the mid 70s here today!


Monday, September 27, 2010

Fall Is Here! My Nanny Is A Great Grandma, Cuttting The Carbs and Other News!

Fall has arrived and now there's more time to devote to blogging and sharing some of my favorite foods, recipes and activities that make up my sense of home, family and good stuff!
There's been quite a bit of change since I last blogged here!
We welcomed baby Stevie to our family in August :) What a precious, precious baby :) He is happy, healthy and growing in leaps and bounds. I can honestly say that I never had a clue what being his grandma would mean to me. You can't possibly comprehend, prior to having your own children, just how much love you can have for another human being. Having a grandbaby is that PLUS! :) There is no feeling like it in the world. Just holding and cuddling that sweet little baby lets me know that all is right with the world, no matter what! I won't post any pics of him here to prevent the usual risk of  internet fun and games. I believe that to alter others' photos, especially of their loved ones is virtually sacrilegious.

Another shift in the cosmos....
Fall signals the advent of comfort food cooking but with a twist here. In my ongoing and ever-present attention to health, I've been bumping up my low carb cooking and recipe research! There are thousands upon  thousands of incredible recipes with carb counts that are low enough to help anyone not only manage their blood sugar but weight also. Most recipes can be "de-carbed" with very little effort and just a tad of expense. You can substitute white and wheat flour with almond, peanut and coconut flours. The choices for sugar free sweeteners is almost open ended!
I have some incredible friends who have shared their knowledge of alternative ingredients with me and I thank them wholeheartedly for their expertise!
Each time I post a recipe that is low carb, that will be clearly indicated. You'll see them interspersed with family favorites and those that make no attempt to cut the carb level whatsoever.

I've already started the interior Halloween decorating and have the outside to finish. I love, love, love Halloween! I like to celebrate it and it's theme all October long. The feel of the spooky holiday is one I adore!



I know that my Nanny was smiling at me yesterday :) It was a day of cooking down some neck pumpkins for the season! Here in Delaware, neck pumpkins are almost nonexistent! Most folks have no idea what they are, or else they refer you to butternut squash, which is a totally different item!
I was so, so lucky to find Fifer Orchards in the Wyoming area. Micheal is a pure treasure! I was able to buy quite a few there. I also got a call from Willey Farms in Townsend. They now have them too!
To avoid this scarcity situation next year, I'm saving the seeds! I'm not sure if I'll have the time for a garden next Spring, but I do know that I will, at the very least, have neck pumpkins! Pies made with the neck pumpkins are nothing like pies made with the rounder, dark orange variety. Back home, in Lancaster County, PA, we never, and I mean NEVER, used a standard pumpkin for pies. I recall them being earmarked only for carving into Jack O'Lanterns and then given to livestock as a type of feed.

I'll be posting a homemade crust and pumpkin pie recipe here as well as a low carb tweaked version. Pumpkin is so good for you and with the right substitutions, it fits perfectly with a low carb lifestyle!


It is finally raining here on Delmarva. It's way too late to help the farmers but homeowners are starting to worry about the water table. It was such an odd and unfamiliar sound this morning, to wake up to the sound of the rain! But it sure makes it feel like Fall. We've had some days with temps in the high nineties this past week, so this is a welcome change!

On a final note, I'm making a product recommendation. If you have never tried Greek-style yogurt, I suggest you do! And if you do, please try Fage brand. It's thicker, creamier and just delicious. In keeping with low carb intakes, which recommend a high fat intake in conjunction, try to find the full fat version of the unflavored Fage. The cultures actually eat the carbs for sustanence, so the carb level is low, but the taste is fantastic. Mixed with some flax (the praises for flax will be in an upcoming post!), fresh fruit, some sugar free flavoring syrup, it's absolutely delicious! Some of the local stores here carry Fage but in the lower fat versions. It's been a struggle to find the full fat version but we're constantly tracking it down and we've contacted Fage as well.

I've been resuming my auction lists as well lately. Fall is chock full of special activities that I don't do in the Summer months. So between work, auctions, family research,  my work on the Marian Baker Story, traveling back home to Pennsylvania, visits to New Jersey and other areas, it's going to be a very, very busy season!

Sunday, August 22, 2010

Sunday, June 13, 2010

White Peaches!

We're looking forward to August, the advent of the local peach season. A very dear neighbor who has since passed on taught me about his appreciation of white peaches. There really is no comparison.
A few years before he died, he asked me if I would can some for him. I spent an entire day canning white peach halves in a medium syrup for him. We split the batch. When winter came, it was as if we had just picked them!
Once the season is here, I'll post several recipes I have using the delicious white peaches!