One of my favorite old black and white Christmas movies has a scene where the star, Barbara Stanwyck, is asked to flip a pancake high in the air as she is making her trademark pancakes for breakfast for a group of House guests that have gathered in her kitchen.
She is terrified that she will be unable to make the flip high in the air because truly she isn’t a cook, unbeknownst to her House guests. After encouragement, she goes for it, eyes closed and the flipped pancake somehow leaps back into the pan. The room is filled with joy and laughter as the completed pancakes are laid out for the breakfast bounty.
Christmas in Connecticut, Making Pancakes for the first time
Pancakes have to be one of the best meals for morning or even a special evening meal. Whether you are a novice or a cooking pro in the kitchen, I hope this recipe that I found a few years ago for making pancakes, will inspire y’all to “flip them high” as you make the lightest, fluffiest pancakes ever.
Stack them high… For National Pancake Day or just any day… Dry mix ingredients… this can be prepared ahead of time and stored in pantry, ready to go when you are all set to make pancakes or even waffles. The basic recipe calls for 2 cups of the combined dry ingredients with wet ingredients added. Wet ingredients… FYI: A dash of vanilla is always a good addition to your wet ingredients, which I usually add into my pancake batter. Combine wet ingredients with the dry mix I use my favorite skillet or waffle maker to make these. ORTry something new!!! Make the Pinterest version of sheet pan pancakes!!! Find your favorite baking pan, spray with baking spray, or butter well. Preheat oven to 425. Add in pancake batter as an even layer across baking pan. Sprinkle in fruit or other toppings if desired. Bake 15 minutes.
The potential is endless! Y’all might just “flip out a bit” over how easy this recipe truly is once you make it.
Making a basic pancake or adding in a sweet addition… sprinkles, chocolate chips, or blueberries. Take your pancakes from basic to simply light and delicious with this recipe the next time you are in the mood for this breakfast treat.
Which one of these statements BEST describesthe cook in your household???? Are you the Southern cook who uses a recipe as the roadmap to the ultimate meal success making absolutely NO alterations to the recipe as you cook OR do you simply use a recipe as a reference… using available ingredients on hand??? Too hard to answer??? I think I’m both but it depends on what I preparing.
When it comes to baking, I’m always going to be a recipe reader prior to baking, and even during “the making process” of the dessert.
Here’s one of my main reference tools from my kitchen wall… family favorite recipes…thanks to chalkboard paint. Yes, you can find chalkboard paint at Wilkes County Hardware!
Casseroles… Creative Cooking:
Alternately, when it comes to making a casserole, I’m definitely the latter. I’ll make a new casserole based on ingredients on hand AND using leftovers found inside the refrigerator and pantry. My favorite phrase to describe my supper creations in this type of instance would be“creative casserole cooking”.
Pantry staples…
For the creative cook, Casseroles are a chance to experiment with different flavors, textures, and ingredients to create the ultimate family style casserole dish. That’s the ultimate beauty of a casserole, you don’t have to be a recipe follower, you have the freedom to make and create as you cook! Use the “formula” guidelines below for making the perfect casserole adding these different components. Keep on reading to make and create a new family favorite casserole.
Casserole Cookbook Fun:
I’m betting that you can find a multitude of casserole recipes in any Southern cookbook. Lol, there might be a whole section devoted to just casseroles! I would bet that you may find some casseroles that you have NEVER heard of before or maybe even have the curiosity to make them. Go and seek out your favorite church cookbook, or elementary school fundraiser cookbooks, and you can find many different versions of the same casserole recipe too!
I keep a small stash of my favorite cookbooks right on the kitchen countertop. The cute doggie cookie jar holds some of my handwritten recipes.
I’m not really sure when “The Casserole” came into existence, nor is it the purpose of this blog post today, but as the seasons begin to shift and change, and the holiday season begins soon, I have begun to think about my favorite casseroles to make and consume. AND potential new casseroles to try… Pineapple Casserole, you might be on the slate for the holiday season!
After all, casseroles are the ultimate comfort foods and have become a “Mainstay” in most Southern households. Casseroles truly hold center stage at the long table at church potlucks and are always at the forefront of family holiday meals. So let’s dig into “The Casserole”. I’m getting hungry y’all! Anyone else???
Components of A Casserole:
Casserole components are pretty simple in composition: protein, vegetables, binding ingredients such as (cheese, eggs, sour cream, cream base soups, etc) and the crunch. But, I must admit that the crux of a casserole has to be the binding… the creamy sauce brings together the ingredients formulating your casserole dish. The binding ingredients once completely warmed in the oven, creates a bubbly visual that lets the maker know that the final product is done and ready to eat and consume.
The beginnings of Chicken Casserole… a family favorite…. Starting with the chopped chicken chunks Adding the binding… cheeses and soups. I add a bit of parmigiana cheese and cheddar cheese into my chicken casserole binder … it’s an flavorful addition. Milk instead of water adds a nice touch of a boost of flavor to the binder sauce.
Now, we must discuss the last component of a casserole… the crunch. Adding a bit of crunchiness on the top layer of the hot, bubbly casserole dish takes it to a whole other dimension of flavor, complexity, and texture not previously recognized.
Classic flavors like the crunch of a chopped Ritz cracker or French fried onions to top off old favorites casseroles, like the green bean casserole. Imagine taking these classic recipes to a higher level by adding a new flavor profile and texture with Panko, nuts, bacon bits, Saltines, or even crushed potato chips, or crushed pretzels. Your choices are endless! I bet it will be a smashing success!
A staple for Chicken Casserole topping (the crunch) and Thanksgiving Dressing!!!
I would just reckon that the top crunchy layer is the distinctive part of the casserole that sets it apart from someone else’s at the church potluck… beckoning the hungry parishioners to try that crunchy, browned casserole over the soggy topped casserole carefully situated next to the beautifully browned casserole. I know which one I’m spooning out and sampling.
Defining The Casserole:
As a student of history, I would bet that casseroles were a staple in Southern homes during the First World War, The Great Depression and also during World War 2. A casserole could easily supplement OR be the main course of the meal AND extend the number of people one could easily feed during a time of rationing. Of course, the use available ingredients on hand during the cooking process was crucial during these war years. Casseroles did become very common during the 1950’s when convenient, canned goods were the central ingredients, making the evening meal a little bit easier to prepare.
Dish It Out!
As I have mentioned, casseroles are a mainstay of Southern cooking, but I’m also suggesting that the casserole dish ITSELF is important! Whether you use the classic 9 x 13 baking dish or another baking vessel, my gut tells me that most of us probably use the same casserole dish EVERY SINGLE TIME we make a casserole! Let’s face it, we all have our favorite cooking utensils, and bakeware that we routinely use more than others. I know that I have one or two “go to casserole dishes” that I always use over all the others in my kitchen.
This Lodge Dutch Oven would make some amazing casseroles! You can find this available for purchase at Wilkes County Hardware!
According to one definition, a casserole is a dish baked and served in the same dish. In Minnesota, Wisconsin, and the Dakotas casseroles are known as “hotdish”. A central ingredient of those “hotdish” recipes gravitates around the tater tot. There’s a whole debate about the hotdish vs the casserole … But for our purposes in the blog today, the dish itself is important “hotdish” or casserole!
AND remember, to never overfill to the top of your casserole dish prior to baking in the oven… are you chuckling as you read this??? It has probably happened to you at some point in your cooking experience, too much goodness in a dish overflowing everywhere all over your the inside of the oven. No one wants to be cleaning the oven as a result of the overflowing, bubbling, baking casserole. That’s definitely not magical!
Oven cleaner available at Wilkes County Hardware
Let the Casserole Magic Begin:
I firmly believe that part of the magic of the casserole has to be recipes themselves. The casserole recipes are as unique as each creative cook, using ingredients that you, as the chef, LOVE!
Enough said!! If you love it, and your family scarfs down the warm casserole goodness, SUCCESS !
Mojo Of Casserole Cooking:
There are definitely a few distinct advantages to casserole cooking, keep reading to get the casserole mojo mindset going right into the holidays.
Casseroles can feed a crowd, like the loaves and fishes in Biblical times. The spoonfuls of goodness can feed many in pinch or serve as a second meal as leftovers.
Casseroles can be prepared ahead of time… using the fix and freeze method which is a gift and a blessing to those who need a quick meal, like a sick loved one, a sleep deprived mom with a newborn baby, or even a family experiencing bereavement.
Casseroles can be the focus of the meal… breakfast, lunch or supper… yes, this dish can be served any time of the day. A versatile magical way to cook! Casseroles can also serve as a side dish, a “second fiddle”of sorts, to the main course. Have an abundance of vegetables from the garden???? Don’t be bewitched or bewildered by the excess. I bet you can find, make or create a casserole in order to use what you have! Now that’s just a bit of chef wizardry.
Casserole Comfort Food 101:
Nothing is better than on a cold, nasty day than making your favorite comfort foods. I have a few go-to dishes that I love as Comfort Foods. Casseroles fit perfectly within this description. With the ease of baking (using only ONE dish), then taking the hot, bubbly food out of the oven, casserole flavors wafting through the air, inhaling the first smells as it cools on the kitchen counter, and then finally the tasting… which warms the body, soul, and spirit. Comfort food at its best… right???Happy cooking y’all!
Summer is yet another season. Many of y’all may not enjoy the hottest months of the year, but don’t forget to savor the memories you make each and every day with those you love. Each photo I have taken has a connection to those I love, even though it may not a visible sign to you as you view each image. I hope you enjoy my favorite collection of summer 2023 photographs and remember to enjoy each day.
Summer is simply incomplete without the best fresh fruit Squash Cheddar & Rosemary Bread Summer temperatures often climb high! Light fog hanging in the trees This little zinnia was too cute not to capture, simply imperfect but stunning at the same time Love the red! Our new mural was completed this summer outside the hardware store Sunlight filtering in through the trees In bloom Lovely, large petals! Summer in Wilkes County, cut hay, roll it and putting it up Growing Grapes The Blue Ridge Mountains, storm is coming Blue Ridge Overlook Unique Heavy August Morning Fog… Foggy mornings in August could indicate the snowfall forecast for our coming winter season Good morning sunshine! Purple Crape Myrtle Canning season Growing corn fields Summertime Vacay… a walk along a pier to find this Oldie Goldie Calabash On my perch Clouds stirring in the water Pier walk Serenity Heavy clouds above the pier A quiet place Kudzu blooms Kudzu blooming is aromatic and distinctive
Did you know that Sirius XM radio name originated from the star Sirius, also known as “ The Dog Star”???
Y’all know when The Dog Days of Summer time of year has come, the weather can be intense. Once these days arrive, they can be long and sweltering. Dog Days can be an unbelievably unpleasant portion of the humid Southern summer season… akin to a dog’s wet tongue wagging endlessly to cool down or the literal feeling of being slapped in the face with a wet washcloth when walking outside.
During the Dog Days of Summer, the temperature can climb well into the 90’s with high levels of humidity too! Ugh! WCH Recommends: A good working thermometer will help you know what to expect during the hottest days of summer.
“Sirius” Facts: Things You Should Know About Dog Days of Summer
1. The Dog Days of Summer begins each year on July 3rd and extends until August 11th.
2. The Dog Days of Summer lasts for 40 days, and it can be some of the hottest days of the summer season.
3. The name, The Dog Days of Summer, refers to the time shortly after the summer solstice and the appearance of the “Dog Star”, Sirius, rising in the summer sky.
No, the name “Dog Days” truly has nothing to do with your cute little dog. It’s all about what’s happening in the morning sky. Times have changed from the perspective of the Greeks and Romans, thoughts about Dog Days but the name has lingered. Here’s my cute little dog, JoyAnd cutie pie, Cookie
“Sirius Superstitions”: Dog Days of Summer
1. Ancient Greeks and Romans believed that Dog Days were a time of bad luck, and drought. The long, hot days of summer could drive men and dogs “mad”… Here are a few superstitions that I found interesting while researching The Dog Days of Summer.
2. Snakes will strike at anything during DogDays for they are blinded. Be wary as you trek outdoors during these 40 days!
3. If it rains on July 3rd, on the first Dog Day, then more rain will follow.
4. Dogs are likely to go mad during Dog Days.
5. Wounds will not heal properly during DogDays, the old wives tale suggests that one should put off surgeries until after Dog Days have passed.
6. People are more prone to drowning during Dog Days.
Pool swimming safety is always important all summer long. Swim safely by keeping your pool water clean and sanitized, and never swim alone.
Now that the calendar has hit July 3rd, and The Dog Days of Summer have arrived, how can we all stay in “cool” state of mind all summer long??? Check out the next few sections of the blog for some helpful tips.
AC Cooling Tips: Dog Days of Summer
1. Keep your furnace filters clean! Remember to change your furnace filters once a month!
Wilkes County Hardware has a vast selection of many sizes of filters! Ask us to find your size for you.
2. Try not to place your furniture on your vents, reduced air flow will make your unit work harder. Close blinds or curtains during the day to keep the excess summer heat out.
3. Remember to keep your vents open to allow good airflow throughout your 🏡 home. This helps your AC unit to work properly.
4. Stop by into Wilkes County Hardware and buy a whole box 📦 of filters at once! Plan ahead, saving time and another trip to town🚗. If you don’t see your exact size?? Ask us to order your size!
5. Changing out your furnace filters regularly may save you a bundle in the long run… Spend the money on a filter each month to keep your unit working effectively and stay cool all summer long.
Hydrate!!! Watering tips for your flower garden: Dog Days of Summer
1. Water in early morning or evening. Rain water is ideal, but not always going to happen everyday.
2. For your beautiful container plants, watering daily might be necessary!
WCH Recommends: Zero G! This is a lightweight water hose that makes watering an easy chore in the summer.
3. New additions to your garden will need extra TLC. Be ready to monitor them closely and anticipate watering these new plants more frequently than established plants in your garden.
WCH Recommends: A good watering can goes a long way during The Dog Days of Summer
4. Water any plant thoroughly if signs of wilt begins. The plant will be under great stress and needs an immediate boost.
5. Water plants and flowers from the base not from the top. Use a watering wand, watering can, or a sprayer that can help you achieve success.
WCH Recommends: Watering wands extend the length of your hose and allows for less bending in the garden.
6. If you are using a heavier water hose to water your summer blooms, move your hose in place before turning on the water flow to make it easier to maneuver.
WCH Recommends: These hoses are heavy duty and ready to go the distance you need.
Pool Splashing Fun: Dog Days of Summer
Pools are a great way to cool off in the hot, sultry, humid Dog Days of Summer.
1. Pool maintenance is an ongoing process all summer long, even on the hottest days of summer. Chemical reagents that you use to check chlorine & PH need to be replaced each year! If your pool water seems a little bit off and you can’t seem to get a good balance of chlorine & PH, check your reagents!
WCH Recommends: Replace your test kit each year to allow for accurate testing results. WCH Recommends: Pool owners should be well stocked on various chemicals needed in order to swim safely all summer long. Stop by WCH to stock back up.
2. Your pool will take some abuse during the Dog Days of Summer with the intense summer heat and pop-up afternoon thunderstorms. PH and chlorine levels can dive down into dangerous levels if left unchecked. Stop in with a water sample for a FREE water analysis and pick up the chemicals you might need in order to keep swimming safely all summer long!
WCH tests pool water all summer long!
Tips on Beating the Heat During Dog Days of Summer… Just for Fun 😎
1. Make homemade ice cream during Dog Days. Find the link below for Homemade Ice Cream.
2. Create a Summer Playlist full of your summer favorite songs.
3. Watch your Summer Favorite Movies 🍿 or head to our local Liberty movie theater to enjoy one of the Free Movies each week. I’m definitely going to check out this movie by Al Pacino, Dog Day Afternoon that a friend just told me about.
4. Get outside and put your shades on!!! Enjoy some summer sunshine!
WCH Recommends: You can’t beat $3.99 for a pair of shades! Make sure you have bug spray and sunscreen too!
5. Take the kids or grandkids and go pick some summer fruit… blueberries, blackberries, or peaches!
6. Make a Sonker with your fruit picking finds. Find the link below for recipe for Summer Sonker.
7. Stop by and visit us at Wilkes County Hardware of course! Our doors are always open in the summer, take a seat in a rocking chair, and enjoy the breeze. We keep our drink coolers well stocked with Gatorade and bottled water as well as other drinks. Hydrate and simply relax!
Celebrating the End Of Dog Days of Summer
August 11th marks the official end of the Dog Days of Summer. Celebrate the end of the hottest days of summer! This year, I’ll play the song, The Dog Days Are Over by Florence and the Machine on August 11th, will you join me?
Front porch swings, and rocking chairs with a slight breeze blowing.. can’t you smell the fried chicken cooking inside, the aroma of homemade biscuits, a glass of sweet tea in hand or a cup of fresh squeezed lemonade and let’s add a warm slice of pound cake…. Just another Southern Summer loading in 2023.
WCH Recommends: These 2 Rocking chairs are an amazing way to rock the summer away and enjoy the breeze.
My Thoughts about Southern Pound Cake:
1. Pound cake can probably be found at family celebrations & holiday gatherings especially if they are potluck type gatherings.
2. You will always find at least one pound cake at church picnics or potlucks in the South… after all, it’s an essential Southern staple!
3. Pound cakes are a central part of any good dessert table.
4. Pound cakes are either a grand mystery of baking to some and to others.. well, they seem to navigate any pound cake recipe like a pro.
5. Pound Cakes can be baked different pans… Bundt, loaf pan, or a tube pan AND Most Southern cooks have a definite preference on which they use regularly to bake a pound cake.
WCH Recommends: Tube pans and cast iron loaf pans are great baking standard pans for baking all goodies this summer.
A Trip Back Into Time Regarding Pound Cake:
Pound cake is exactly what you think it is. It’s a fairly simplistic looking dessert. The origin is quite literally what it sounds like… the first pound cakes were made with one pound of flour, eggs, butter, and sugar! In today’s recipe equivalent… 3 1/3 cups of flour, 8-9 eggs, 4 sticks of butter and 2 cups of sugar. When you begin to think about that, most traditional pound cake ratios are slightly different today!
My favorite Pound cake recipe uses 6 large eggs
I didn’t realize until recently, that the first recipe for pound cake appeared in 1796 in the American Cookery Cookbook and Pound Cake Recipe was rooted in Northern European cuisine… Europeans measurements were by weight, hence, a pound of butter, flour, sugar. I couldn’t even begin to imagine how to stir and create a fluffy pound of butter with only using a wooden spoon😳!
Strange Things about Pound Cake:
Personally, the strangest reaction I ever witnessed about a freshly baked pound cake, I encountered a few years ago. I had made a pound cake to share with the staff at the hardware store and as we prepared to slice the cake, a former employee shouted out, “let me go find some honey or molasses to go with the cake to cut the dryness of the pound cake”. I was stunned. What on earth was this person’s perspective concerning pound cake??? I realized that they had potentially NEVER eaten a pound cake that wasn’t dry. To never have eaten an amazing piece of pound cake… moist on the inside yet with a crust on the outside.
Comfort Food 101:
Comfort Foods tend to be hearty, homey, and let’s just face it, good for your soul. The mental boost that your favorite comfort food creates, can restore your equilibrium.
As far as dessert goes, Cream Cheese Pound Cake is a family favorite comfort food. My Mom regularly makes this one for us when we visit, so frequently that my niece named Mom’s pound cake, “Nanny Cake”. The name has stuck. We all call Mom’s Cream Cheese Pound Cake, “Nanny Cake.” Now that’s truly Comfort Food 101!
My Personal Tips for Baking A Pound Cake:
1. Grease pan with Crisco /flour dusting mixture instead of using a baking spray. I have never had a great success with using a baking spray. For making a chocolate pound cake, dust with a mixture of flour and cocoa powder.
2. I always preheat my oven… before I begin to mix ingredients. One of my cake cookbooks recommends that you preheat 30 minutes before baking. This allows your oven to fully come up to temperature and allows for even baking of cake layers… I would bet that would extent to a pound cake as well! (Note: Some pound cake recipes are cold oven pound cakes and you are asked to not preheat oven)
3. Use the oven light and your nose! If it smells like it is almost done then it probably is … the oven light keeps you from peeking inside and provides a nice visual . Each time you open the oven door your temperature drops about 25 degrees and adds to the chances of your cake falling.
4. Use a cake tester after baking time elapses to check for complete baking doneness.
5. Pound cake recipes calling for a tube pan won’t always fit in a Bundt pan. (Tube pans have higher sides and will hold more, while Bundt pans are more shallow and fluted.)
6. When unsure of size of your cake pan, use a measuring cup to fill the cake pan with water to determine the pan’s capacity.
7. Read entire recipe and make sure you have all ingredients ready before beginning! Gather ingredients prior to mixing. It’s important not to overmix pound cake ingredients.
8. Bring cold ingredients to room temperature before baking… items like… eggs, butter, cream cheese, milk.
Happy Summer Baking Y’all!
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