Casserole
Tomato Mac Casserole
This is a simple casserole that can be thrown together easily. 10 minutes prep and then you wait.
Casserole
This is a simple casserole that can be thrown together easily. 10 minutes prep and then you wait.
Baking
Every cookbook needs a simple pumpkin pie recipe, so here it is. This one came straight out of The Encyclopedia of Creative Cooking. which I inherited from my Mother. Published in 1985 and 800 pages thick, it weighs about 6 pounds! Though I’ll never throw it away, a tablet is a little lighter.
The picture above is what I get when I’m not even trying. Deeeeeelicious!
Basic pumkin pie. Works every time.
After about 1/2 hour, the pie is set and still warm. I feel this is the perfect time to cut into it and chow down. Some whipped cream on top, or ice cream on the side, make a nice addition. Cover leftovers with tin foil. Refrigerate if you feel it’s necessary, but chances are slim it will survive a full day after baking.
I’ll add a picture once I get the fluting of the shell down a little better.
Baking
After many bouts of recipes that required spicy Italian sausage, we found that some of the sausages we bought tasted a bit “off”, and were probably composed of meat that was on the edge of turning, but with the comment of “picking toenails out of my food” met my ears…. well, the decision was made to make our own.
The first requirement was a satisfactory spice mix to use, and the second requirement was learning how to make the meat mixture.
The meat mixture we used was a one to one mixture of lean ground beef to regular ground pork. Our first attempt used a pound of each, with our own spice mix, to which was added 1 1/2 tsp of cayenne pepper to get the “spicy” dialed in.
General spice used for sausage, or meatballs as it were.



The first dish we tried this in was our Spinach Sausage Pasta recipe, which tasted a bit different, but was close enough to use again. The other recipe so far is Jumbalaya, and I expect the same results there. Over time the cayenne and pepper flakes will need some adjusting, but all in all, this was a bit of work for a wild success.
Baking
I’ve been making this for about 40 years now, mailing it out, and calling it my “yearly lump”. I started adding cherries a few decades ago… no complaints.
It is the only “fruit cake” that I really like, living half way between fruit cake and Stollen – the heavy bread we would slather with butter Christmas morning for breakfast. Read more “Dundee Cake” →
Recipes
What a surprise this was… our problem was reserving enough carrots from our garden to eat instead of putting it all into this soup for freezing.