Crater Banana Bread
I’ve had a lifelong love affair with banana bread. I love it straight out of my mother’s bread maker, I love it toasted with butter, I love it warmed up with ice cream. I used to bring it to school to eat with lunch, or I would take it to ballet rehearsals as a more or less healthy snack to keep my energy up. But all my life, I’ve only ever had one banana bread recipe.
Of course, I couldn’t go on living my life like that. For one thing, I have no bread maker at my apartment. So making my mother’s recipe wasn’t an option. I’ve tried a few other recipes, but I just haven’t been able to find a recipe I liked just as much as the one I grew up on. Until I found this recipe. Now, I’ve made banana chocolate chip muffins before, so the combination of chocolate and banana is one I’m very familiar with. But to make it like coffee cake? A new, and very delicious concept to me. This is the perfect breakfast bread, absolutely divine with a cup of coffee, hot chocolate, or tea (whichever you fancy). I can’t eat more than a little at a time because it is incredibly rich, but by no means is this a problem… that just means it will last a little longer! (Which doesn’t say much… I ate it for breakfast, snacks, and dessert.)
Ingredients
- 1 cup butter
- 2 cups sugar
- 2 eggs
- 1 tsp vanilla
- 3 ripe bananas (mashed)
- 3 cups flour
- 2 tsp baking powder
- 2 tsp baking soda
- 1 cup sour cream or plain yogurt
- tsp cinnamon
- 1 cup brown sugar
- 1-1/2 cups milk chocolate chips
Cooking Directions
- Cream together butter and sugar.
- Add eggs and beat until smooth.
- Add vanilla and bananas.
- Mix well till smooth.
- Sift flour, baking powder and baking soda.
- Add to banana mixture alternately with sour cream, ending with dry ingredients.
- Pour half of the batter into 9 x 13-inch pan.
- Combine cinnamon and brown sugar.
- Sprinkle 1/2 of this mixture over batter in pan.
- Top with 1/2 of the chocolate chips.
- Repeat layers.
- Bake in 350F oven for 45 – 50 minutes.
Crater Banana Bread
Onion, Asparagus, and Imitation Crab Tempura
Vegetables. They’re the bane of every parent’s existence. How to get the picky child to eat them? I may not be a parent, but I was certainly a picky child who wouldn’t eat her veggies. My poor parents tried every method to get me to eat them. They would tell me I had to eat my vegetables before I could eat anything else for dinner; I couldn’t have dessert if I didn’t eat my veggies. Any adult that had to deal with me at mealtime knew that I wouldn’t touch vegetables.
Now that I’m older, I don’t have nearly the issue with veggies that I did when I was younger. In fact, my former Girl Scouts leader saw me eating a salad a few years ago and was astonished – she couldn’t believe picky little Allison was actually enjoying something green. Like most, my tastes have matured over the years to encompass a wide variety of foods (including vegetables). But I can’t help but wonder, what could my parents have done to get me to eat better when I was a child?
One thing I know I would have eaten is tempura vegetables. I’d had them a few times when I was younger, but my parents never made it at home. I can’t imagine why, because my mother tempura-frys all sorts of things now, and I recall loving them when I was younger. Sure, it’s a little less healthy than say, steamed vegetables. But I’d argue that fried vegetables are better than none at all! Another option for those picky kids is this macaroni and cheese. You can barely tell that there are vegetables in the dish, and certain parents who have tried it tell me their kids loved it.
Ingredients
- assorted ingredients to tempura fry (shrimp, onion, carrot, broccoli, banana, etc.)
- 1 cup ice cold water
- 1 large egg
- 3/4 cup flour
- 1/8 tsp baking soda
- cooking oil
Cooking Directions
- In a medium bowl, mix the water and the egg.
- In a separate bowl, mix the flour and baking soda.
- Stir the flour mix into the egg mix. It’s okay if the batter is a little lumpy.
- Stick the batter in the fridge while you prepare the other ingredients.
- If you are using shrimp, peel, de-vein, and wash it. Make some small cuts across the belly of the shrimp, to keep it from curling when you cook it.
- If you are using vegetables, clean them and cut them into your desired size. Try not to use very soft ingredients, as they will soften as they cook (softer ingredients tend to fall apart when you take them out of the oil).
- Heat the oil in a frying pan. The oil should be hot enough that when you drip batter in it, the drops come to the top immediately.
- Coat your ingredients in the batter. Place the coated ingredients in the hot oil, turning when the bottom side is browned.
- Place the fried ingredients on a paper towel to drain. Remove any skewers. Serve immediately.
Deviled Eggs
Deviled eggs are a tradition for my family. Nearly as much as spinach dip, deviled eggs find their way to every family function I go to. Up until just over three years ago, I had never met someone who had never heard of deviled eggs.
That all changed when Son and I started dating. He had grown up in Vietnam, so many of the foods that we assume to be common in the United States were unfamiliar to him. His first encounter with deviled eggs was on the Fourth of July in 2005. We had invited him to join our family barbecue, and set off fireworks afterward. (In our city, it is legal to set off fireworks.) We had our usual barbecue fare – spinach dip, beef teriyaki, hamburgers, potato salad… and deviled eggs.
One bite and Son was in love. (Should I be jealous? Maybe…) In fact, he adores deviled eggs so much that my mom will sometimes make deviled eggs just for him. (Every woman likes a man who loves her cooking.) Every time we have them at a party, he’s the first person we tell.
And what’s not to love? (Ignoring the lack of health benefits, of course.) Deviled eggs are perfectly-sized, creamy, and slightly salty finger food – the perfect party appetizer. I haven’t yet found a person who doesn’t love them, and it’s a recipe that is very easy to scale up to feed many. Sure, they may be slightly high in fat and cholesterol, but who goes to a party expecting to eat healthy food? I certainly don’t.
I think you’ll love this recipe that my mom uses from a cookbook called “Picnics & Tailgate Parties”.
Ingredients
- 6 hard boiled eggs
- 3 tbsp mayonnaise
- 1 tsp dijon mustard
- salt and pepper
Cooking Directions
- Peel the eggs.
- Slice each egg in half lengthwise.
- Carefully remove egg yolks into a bowl; set egg whites aside.
- Mash egg yolks with mayonnaise, dijon mustard, and salt and pepper.
- Evenly fill egg whites with yolk mixture.
- Refrigerate until ready to eat.
Zucchini Bread
My mother is known for her zucchini bread. Every time she makes it, many of her friends and co-workers get a few slices, because she knows everyone loves it. Out of all the breads she makes, it has always been my favorite as well. I love the moist, cinnamon-y flavor, the faintest taste of zucchini, the texture and moisture that the zucchini adds to the bread.
When I was younger, I didn’t cook, I didn’t bake. I liked to eat, but otherwise I avoided the kitchen. I never would have thought that I would learn to love cooking and baking someday. And yet someday, I did. It was bound to happen eventually, but after I met Son, I began to enjoy cooking for him. My love for cooking grew by leaps and bounds, especially as I immersed myself deeper into the food blog world. To be around so many other people who loved food so much fostered a passion for food in my own heart… now I know more about food than I ever thought I would.
What does this have to do with zucchini bread? Three years ago, I would have never considered trying my mom’s zucchini bread. Too hard, I thought, and nothing ever turns out as well as mom makes it. Now, armed with my newfound cooking knowledge and love for food, I decided to try making zucchini bread with some zucchini I got in my CSA box. Like many of my cooking fears, the intimidation I had felt about making zucchini bread was just plain silly. Not only was it incredibly easy to make, but it ended up being delicious – Son’s co-workers
loved it. Now to go conquer my fears of fish and pies…
Zucchini Bread
Ingredients
- 1/2 cup canola oil
- 1 cup grated unpeeled zucchini
- 1 1/2 cups flour
- 2 eggs
- 1/4 tsp baking powder
- 3/4 tsp baking soda
- 1 cup sugar
- 1 1/2 tsp ground cinnamon
Cooking Directions
- Blend oil and sugar.
- Beat in the eggs one at a time.
- Place zucchini in another bowl, and fold in the egg mixture.
- Sift the flour, cinnamon, baking soda, and baking powder together.
- Gradually add the flour mixture to the zucchini mixture.
- Mix well.
- Pour the batter into two greased 8x4" loaf pans.
- Bake at 325°F for one hour.