May your stuffing be tasty

Thanksgiving Wishes for you

May your stuffing be tasty,

May your turkey be plump,

May your potatoes and gravy have nary a lump,

May your yams be delicious and your pies take the prize,

and may your Thanksgiving dinner stay off your thighs!

A friend shared this poem with me and I just had to share it with you. Extra calories don’t go to my thighs, they go to my stomach. But hey, they gotta go somewhere, right?

Abby was here last night and we tried out a new recipe that’s sure to add more than just a few calories but boy is it yummy.

Putting nuts on the cookie bars

Putting nuts on the cookie bars

We had these last Sunday night at a Thanksgiving dinner before church. My good friend Cherie made them and after I ate one I new I had to have the recipe. The recipe doesn’t call for semi-sweet chocolate chips but we added some anyway, just because we love chocolate.

Neiman Marcus Brownies

Butter Pecan Cake Mix (When I went to the store they were out of butter pecan mix so I used Carmel cake mix and it was just as good)

1 stick melted margarine

1 egg

Mix and spread in the bottom or a greased 9X13 pan

1 8oz pkg cream cheese (softened)

1 stick margarine (softened)

2 eggs

Cream together

Add 1 box powdered sugar

pour over cake mix, sprinkle with 1 1/2 cup of pecans.

Bake at 300 degrees for about 55 minutes.  The edges will start to brown, but the center will still be a little jiggly.

It’s better to let them cool for awhile before you eat them but I had a house full of boys last night and they couldn’t wait.

Have a great day and remember, holiday calories don’t count!


Over the river and through the woods to grandmother’s house we go…

I suppose every family has Thanksgiving traditions and special recipes that are passed down from one generation to the next. If you asked any of my children to name their favorite Thanksgiving food I feel pretty sure they would each pick Grandma Layne’s dressing balls.

Every year for as long as I can remember she made the dressing and the gravy. My cousin Sarah and I finally realized that Grandma would not be around forever and Sarah was assigned an apprenticeship. She was to be Grandma Layne’s assistant and learn how to carry on the tradition.

Mom always did the meats, so I am the turkey and ham woman. Sarah makes the dressing balls. Sarah’s task was harder because Grandma never made it the exact same way and she never wrote the recipe down. But by being her assistant Sarah was able to copy the main ingredients and I’m glad to report that our families still fight over how many dressing balls you are allowed to eat.

I would gladly share the recipe here with you if I knew it, but I don’t. I just pour gravy over them and eat them.

Sarah, if you read this and send me the recipe I’ll gladly add at the bottom of this post!

Recipe-Sarah finally gave in and gave up the recipe!

9 cups biscuit crumbs

3 cups corn bread crumbs

1 large onion, chopped finely

1 cup celery, chopped finely

1 T. poultry seasoning

1/2 T. sage

2 eggs, slightly beaten

Lots of chicken broth–until mixture is gooey, sticky but not runny

Salt and Pepper to taste

Crumble all biscuit and corn bread (We always use homemade bread and I put mine in a food processor).  Measure after they are crumbled.  Add chopped onion, celery, poultry seasoning, sage, salt, and pepper. Mix well.  Heat broth to a simmer.  Pour into the bread crumb mixture and mix well.  It will take more broth than you think.  Add enough so that it can stirred easily.  Taste and add more seasonings to get the taste you desire.  After you are happy with the taste, add the beaten eggs and mix well.  Make sure to taste before adding the eggs!  Heat oven to 400 degrees.  Roll into golf ball size balls and place on greased sheet pan.  Bake until golden brown.  About 20 minutes.

Best served with turkey gravy over them!

Comfort food-Mom’s lasagna

My nephew, Price, loves my lasagna. So when he has a really bad day (failed his driver’s test) or a really good one (He blew the top out of ACT test) I make him some lasagna. The rest of my family loves it too, just not as much as Price.

It’s not actually “my lasagna.” Mom taught me how to make it and I’ve made it so often I can practically make it blindfolded with one spatula tied behind my back. Mom and dad got married when she was only sixteen years old and she always regretted not going to college. She waited until my brother and I were both in school and then enrolled. The closest campus was an hour away and going to class, studying and raising a family was not easy. During those years mom looked for quick, easy recipes that appealed to us. I’m not sure who gave her the lasagna recipe but from the beginning it was a winner. It’s easy, tastes great (just ask Price) and takes only 30 minutes to bake.

Mom’s Lasagna

Ingredients

One box lasagna noodles

One large container low fat cottage cheese

Two eggs

Black Pepper

3 packages shredded mozzerella cheese

2 lb. ground beef

2 cans Hunts or Ragu spaghetti sauce with meat

Instructions

Brown beef, drain, add two cans of Hunt’s spaghetti sauce with meat, bring to bubble, set aside

Prepare noodles according to package

In a mixing bowl mix two eggs, cottage cheese and lots of black pepper

In lasagna pan alternate layers of meat, cottage cheese mixture, noodles,  mozzerella cheese

Repeat layers.

Bake at 350 for 30 minutes

My three lasagna loving nephews, Thomas (left) Jackson (middle) Price (right)

My three lasagna loving nephews, Thomas (left) Jackson (middle) Price (right)

Nana’s Recipe Box–Mama Jessie’s relish

toots

This story and recipe was sent to me by one of my best buddies, Tootsie (her name is Teresa but no one that I know has ever called her that). She and I have known each other since high school. As a matter of fact, she spent the night with me the night before she eloped with her husband Mike (she didn’t tell me she was eloping and I’m still mad about that and it’s been over 30 years!) Tootsie sells real estate, has two handsome sons and is also a new nana. Thanks, Toots, for sending the story and recipe and also for being my friend. I love you!

Mama Jessie’s Relish

by Tootsie Wilson

Mama Jessie used to can everything in her garden and anybody else that had something that was going to waste. They also had hog killing time every year and that wasn’t my favorite. I wasn’t too keen on the canned sausage or what were those things (fried pig skin) cracklings?  She made the best biscuits and told me how. Every time I’d go to visit she always sent me home with something.  My favorite was her relish.

In later years I thought it must be salsa because I couldn’t find it anywhere and didn’t have her recipe. One day I was talking to a friend about our gardens and our peppers and he mentioned the relish his mother was making. It WAS as close to Mama Jessie’s as I’ve ever tasted.

I’ve made several batches and was supposed to stop by tonight and get more peppers from him. Mama Jess always had several varieties of peppers growing in the garden and in pots on the front porch.  Mother & I kept one of her favorites going for years and used it in soups, etc. Anyway, Mama’s relish was my favorite without a doubt and we are all in pinto bean, cornbread & relish heaven right now. As long as the peppers are growing I’m canning like there won’t be any more!

Here’s how you make it

3 cups apple cider vinegar          7 onions

3 cups sugar                             48 long red (cayenne or tabasco) peppers

2 T mustard seeds                     I also do a combination of jalapeno & red.

2 T. of salt

Grind the peppers, chop the onions and cook for  30-35 minutes then put into clean hot jars.

Makes it hotter if you leave the seeds of the jalapeno’s in it. I make it both ways. Most people don’t like as hot as I do.

Nana’s Recipe Box – Chicken and Dumplings

The following story and recipe were contributed by Theresa Smith.

My memories of Abbie’s  Chicken and Dumplings

by Theresa Smith

This recipe is my favorite because it was the first thing I learned to cook from my grandmother, Abbie.  I called her by her first name because she didn’t want to be considered old enough to be a grandmother.  She was always loads of fun.

Every summer I visited her and some of my best memories are of her and her friends playing cards. They all smoked cigarettes, drank a beer, and would slip in an occasional cuss word or two (if Abbie were alive today she’d croak knowing that I’ve told this story, but really it was a great lesson in life). I thought I had died and gone to sin city, because drinking, smoking, and ”wordy durds” never happened in my house and most likely not in Abbie’s either except when her friends came to play cards.

card playing

Canasta Queen

Abbie played a mean game of canasta and was the most generous person I ever knew.  My other grandmother (Meme) was just as generous, but I will save her story for another time.  Abbie had lots of widow friends and in the early afternoons we’d put on a pot of chicken and dumplings for her gal pals and they would come over for canasta and supper.  We played nickel on the corner canasta (gambling, another sin) on Abbie’s screened in front porch watching all the people go by waving to “Miss Abbie” (everyone called her that).

After I saw the movie Ya Ya Sisterhood it dawned on me that Abbie and her friends were letting their hair down.  They were good church going women, but when they stepped onto Abbie’s front porch, they were young girls again just having a little fun.  They had been friends since they were little girls and they were as close as sisters.  What a great example to me those ladies were, although smoking and beer is not part of my life, I admired them for being themselves with each other.

Abbie taught me how to cook, clean, and iron. As soon as I was tall enough to stand on the kitchen high chair (step stool), I wore an apron and was expected to learn to cook and wash dishes.

Sometimes I think back on those happy times with my grandmother Abbie in Greenville, Mississippi. In my mind we are standing side by side in her cozy  kitchen. The walls are papered with a watermelon pattern and she is wearing snazzy high heels and an apron over her dress. I’m sitting on the yellow kitchen stool, watching her with love and admiration, and wearing my apron too.

Our typical meal to go along with the Chicken and Dumplings was green beans, candied yams, cucumbers with onions, vinegar, a little sugar, salt and pepper, biscuits, ice cold sweet tea, and chocolate fudge cake.  My oh my, those were the days when I could eat anything!

Abbie’s Mississippi Delta Chicken and “Dumplins”

4-5 lb. cooked skinless chicken, or 6 boneless skinless chicken breasts

at least 6 cups of water

2 chopped carrots

2 chopped ribs of celery with leaves

1 chopped large onion

1 1/2 t. thyme

1/2 t. rosemary (can leave this herb out)

2 t. salt

1/2 t. fresh ground pepper

Cut up the chicken discarding the skin and as much fat from the chicken as possible (don’t use the gizzard, heart, and liver); cover chicken with water and boil in a large dutch oven till the meat is tender and falls off the bone; drain the chicken saving the broth for the soup; store the chicken and broth in the refrigerator several hours or over night; pull the meat off the bone and put into dutch oven; from the broth skim fat that has formed on top and discard, add to the chicken; prepare all of the vegies and add to the pot; low simmer for 30 minutes; add the herbs and spices and cook on low for 15 minutes; cover pot and turn off stove; prepare the “dumplins”

*If you use chicken breasts, boil in 6 cups of chicken broth; refrigerate for several hours or over night and pull apart chicken into bites sizes

Recipe for “Dumplins”

2 c. flour

3 t. baking powder

1 t. salt

2 T. parsley

4 T. butter or margarine

3/4 to 1 c. milk

Combine dry ingredients; cut in butter or margarine until mixture crumbles; add the milk slowly stirring with a fork until dough holds together; roll out as for a pie dough, slice and drop in with chicken mixture

cook 20 minutes. serves 8-10

If you have a favorite food memory why not share it with us? Send the recipe and your memory to us at NanaHood and we’ll share it with our readers!

Nana’s Recipe Box-Macaroni Casserole

My grandmother’s sister, Aunt Ruth, actually made this casserole first but once my mom and grandmother tasted it, they learned to make it too. We have had it at every Thanksgiving and Christmas dinner since then. It’s not hard to make and goes well with just about anything. Even my five finicky kids like it!

Boil two cups elbow noodles according to directions and drain.

Add half a chopped onion and half a chopped green pepper.

2 tbs. butter

1 can mushroom soup

1 can drained mushrooms

1/2 cup mayo

1 cup shredded mild cheddar cheese

1/2 tsp to 1 tsp salt

mix until butter, cheese and soup have well blended with other ingredients

thin mixture with a little milk

Pour into greased shallow baking pan and cook at 350 for thirty minutes.

Great with any meat and veggie!

Do you have a favorite dish that your grandmother cooked for you? Or are you a nana and you have something special you make for your grandkids? If so, please share!

Send the recipe to NanaHood  (click on the contact button at the top of the page) and tell us why this dish is special to you.  We want to hear from you!