About this Blog and why I started it.

Some women are domestic goddesses from birth, they can cook you a mean dish! I was NOT one of them. My Mom was and is a great cook, my Grandmother was both a great cook and an even better baker and I grew up in a home where everything was made from scratch. I however didn’t learn how to turn on the stove until much later in life!


My Mother had tried to get me to come into the kitchen and learn to make something, to which I refused. She finally gave up and figured I would learn once I had to cook for myself. Nope, that didn’t happen either at 20 I moved into my own place and found that the stove could be used for extra storage! After all, who needs to learn to cook or bake when you can buy it made, defrost it or order it in?


After my husband and I moved in together, it was decided (mostly by me) he could cook, he even said he liked to do, which was great since I like to eat! I think that lasted a few months before he decided he didn’t like cooking that much after all.


But nothing made me interested in turning on the stove until the kitchen renovations. My husband and I bought a fixer upper, and the reno’s have taken a stupid amount of time. I swear I have been living in the Money Pit (the 1986 movie starring Tom Hanks and Shelley Long), where the house they thought only need a little work ends up falling apart…


Well, year after starting the reno’s from hell, hubby rips out the kitchen, it mostly had to go so we could extend the back of house, but as the saying goes it easy to tear it out, not so easy to put it back up. It took over 2 years before we had a kitchen. Now let me explain this, we had been living on a little kitchen, no counter but a stove and refrigerator, with some items to work with (such as a toaster and dishes) but at this point everything went. The refrigerator ended up in the tore down living room. We had a microwave and a toaster oven and that was IT. Oh and a temporary laundry sink for water.


Now most people can live like this for a couple of weeks, we did for over 2 years! At first it wasn’t so bad. We ordered in or bought already made or ate out. But there comes a point when you don’t want any of it. You don’t want to order anything, you have eaten it all! You don’t want ready made, you have eaten it all to death and it becomes tasteless and you don’t want to eat out anymore!


All you want to do is make a meal for yourself, to make some frakking scrambled eggs for crying out loud! And oh, even those I had to order out for…


So when our kitchen was done (well done enough to cook in) I decreed no more outside food. We will make it ourselves! Now mind you, I still didn’t like to cook but I didn’t mind it so much any more.


But what I did discover is, I actually liked to BAKE! Hmmmm who knew!


So I started this on-line account of what I make, how it turns out and the recipes I use, since I am always being asked for them. Hopefully you will enjoy this journey into the work goodies!


Wednesday, January 18, 2012

Bagels, Bagels and More Bagels!

Ok, here is the things about me. I don’t do things the easy way. Not sure way, I just manager to find the harder, most time consuming route and that the route I take!

Most people would start their journey into baking with some thing like cookies. Me, I started with bagels… I had stared wondering how to make them found a recipe and said why the heck not, might be fun!


Turns out its not that hard, takes a bit of time and its not easy to get them looking right, but not that hard.


Now I bake way more then I eat, so I shared the bagels. Hubby, co-workers and friends all liked them a lot. I on the other hand didn’t like them as much. I like my bagels dense and chewy and these came out lighter, more bread like.


Not sure how to fix that, but I invite anyone who knows to post in the comments and advise.


I didn’t have any poppy or sesame seeds, so I used flax feeds on some (hey, you work with what you have right?).



In the mean time here is the recipe. I got it from HubPage: http://bit.ly/qE7Wrd


Homemade bagel recipe:


4 cups bread flour

1 Tbls sugar

1 1/2 tsps salt

1 Tbls vegetable oil

2 tsps instant yeast

1-1/4- 1-1/2 cups of warm water.


Mix all the ingredients in a bowl. You don't have to worry about soaking the yeast when you use instant yeast (most yeast sold these days is instant yeast). The dough should feel stiff, but add the extra water if it's really stiff, or you can't get all the dry flour incorporated.


Plop the dough down onto the counter, and knead for about ten minutes, or until the dough is uniform and smooth.


Cut the dough into 8 equal sized balls, and let rest for 10-20 minutes.


Pre heat your oven to 425.


Now, take each of the dough balls and using two hands, roll it into a little snake on the counter. When the snake is longer than the width of your two hands, wrap it around your dominant roiling hand. The dough rope should be wrapped so the overlapping ends are together at your palm, near the start of your fingers. Now take the two overlapping ends, and use your palm to squish/roll these two ends together. Once the dough is fused, you should have a perfectly circular bagel-to-be! This is the only part of the process that can take a little practice before your bagels will look really professional. Don't get discouraged if they don't look perfect, it just takes practice!


Let your bagels rest on the counter for about 20 minutes, and meanwhile, bring a pot of water to boil, and grease a large baking tray lightly. You can just rub a splash of vegetable oil and rub it around.


After the 20 minute wait, your bagels will start to look puffy, and it's time to get them boiling! Add them as many at a time as you can to your boiling water without crowding them. Boil for about a minute, turn them over, and boil for another minute. Take them out a let dry for a minute and then place them on your oiled baking tray. Repeat until all the bagels are boiled.


Add the tray to the oven, and after 10 minutes, flip the bagels over, bake for another ten minutes; and they're done!


Let them cool for at least 20 minutes, get the cream cheese ready, and feast on what's got to be one of the best weekend brunch treats possible!


You can add any toppings you like to these. To make sesame, onions, poppy seed, caraway etc. etc. bagels just have a dry plate ready with the seed or spice topping spread out on it. After the bagels have come out of the boiling water, place them face down onto the seeds, and then place the seed side up onto the baking tray. Bake and flip as for plain bagels.