Simple {Nearly} Messless S’mores

Simple {Nearly} Messless S'mores -- Only two ingredients and a mind-blowing technique!



S’mores are fun, but let’s face it. They’re messy!

Here’s a simpler version that won’t get quite as many stains on the shirts and goo in the hair.

Ingredients:

Simple {Nearly} Messless S'mores -- Only two ingredients and a mind-blowing technique!

  • Cookies with a hole in the middle and chocolate on at least one side. From here on out they will be referred to as “striped dainties,” because that’s what we called them when we were small and couldn’t read the boring name on the package.
  • Jet-Puffed marshmallows. This is not the time to be skimpy and buy the cheaper varieties. They are not as good! We’re talking s’mores here, people! Step up to the plate!
  • A stick or poker that will fit through the cookie hole. The double mallow roasters won’t work here, nor will the self-rotating triple or quadruple mallow contraptions.

Simple {Nearly} Messless S'mores -- Only two ingredients and a mind-blowing technique!

Directions:

1. Select the cookie that calls your name and “thread” the stick through the center hole with the chocolate-covered side facing away from you. This cookie is covered in chocolate on both sides, so use your imagination.

Simple {Nearly} Messless S'mores -- Only two ingredients and a mind-blowing technique!

2. Run the cookie down toward the handle of your roasting stick.

Simple {Nearly} Messless S'mores -- Only two ingredients and a mind-blowing technique!

3. Find just the right marshmallow…not too sticky, not too firm.

Simple {Nearly} Messless S'mores -- Only two ingredients and a mind-blowing technique!

Oops.

Simple {Nearly} Messless S'mores -- Only two ingredients and a mind-blowing technique!

Find just the right marshmallow again and spear it with the stick.

Simple {Nearly} Messless S'mores -- Only two ingredients and a mind-blowing technique!

4. Roast that marshmallow to perfection.

Simple {Nearly} Messless S'mores -- Only two ingredients and a mind-blowing technique!

5. Now it’s time for the removal and sandwiching. I like to combine this step into one smooth move, while my husband prefers to defy gravity with his impeccable balance skills.

If I were doing this, I would at this point place my second striped dainty on the stick with the chocolate side facing the mallow, and then proceed as my man indicates.

Move the striped dainty from the bottom of the stick toward the marshmallow, and slowly push it and the mallow off the end of the stick. Ignore the dog in the background saying, “Drop it, drop it, drop it.”

Simple {Nearly} Messless S'mores -- Only two ingredients and a mind-blowing technique!

Simple {Nearly} Messless S'mores -- Only two ingredients and a mind-blowing technique!

Perfect!

Simple {Nearly} Messless S'mores -- Only two ingredients and a mind-blowing technique!

6. If you haven’t already, sandwich that baby!

Simple {Nearly} Messless S'mores -- Only two ingredients and a mind-blowing technique!

Done…almost.

Simple {Nearly} Messless S'mores -- Only two ingredients and a mind-blowing technique!

There’s this one last step:

7. Eat it!

Simple {Nearly} Messless S'mores -- Only two ingredients and a mind-blowing technique!

Simple {Nearly} Messless S'mores -- Only two ingredients and a mind-blowing technique!

Simple {Nearly} Messless S'mores -- Only two ingredients and a mind-blowing technique!

Simple {Nearly} Messless S'mores -- Only two ingredients and a mind-blowing technique!

You can also eat them open-faced.

Simple {Nearly} Messless S'mores -- Only two ingredients and a mind-blowing technique!

Take s’mores to another level with other chocolate-covered cookies instead of grahams. Obviously, cookies without holes can’t be threaded onto the stick, so there’s more hand/mallow contact. I’m thinking that if you cared about hand/mallow contact, you probably wouldn’t be eating s’mores.

Simple {Nearly} Messless S'mores -- Only two ingredients and a mind-blowing technique!

Open up an Oreo and pop a mallow inside—licking the cream out first is optional. Or try mint cookies—it’s like a trip to the moon without the G-force.

Simple {Nearly} Messless S'mores -- Only two ingredients and a mind-blowing technique!

Why is this “better” than traditional s’mores?

  1. Scientifically, when compressed by the top element, the mallow has someplace to go besides oozing out the sides of the cracker sandwich. Some of it pushes up through the hole while some pushes toward the edges. This way, you have less sideways mallow displacement and better overall mallow coverage for a proper mallow/cookie/chocolate ratio in each bite.
  2. You have to buy and deal with one less ingredient.
  3. The chocolate melts every time.
  4. The chocolate does not drip out all over your daughter’s pale yellow shirt and stain it forever because you’re out of stain remover and the shirt somehow gets stuffed into the bottom of the sleeping bag and lost for three months.
  5. It’s a cookie. Cookies are good.
  6. They’re less messy…although admittedly not mess-free.
  7. It isn’t as intensely rich as a traditional s’more, believe it or not, so you can eat more. That might not be a good thing.
  8. Circles are fun.
  9. You can obtain complete cookie coverage with one mallow.
  10. Your s’mores world opens up to dozens if not hundreds of variations.
  11. It’s fun…more fun than a box of graham crackers.

Please note the unmelted chocolate, the mallowy face, and the massive sideways mallow displacement in the following pictures.

Simple {Nearly} Messless S'mores -- Only two ingredients and a mind-blowing technique!Simple {Nearly} Messless S'mores -- Only two ingredients and a mind-blowing technique!Simple {Nearly} Messless S'mores -- Only two ingredients and a mind-blowing technique!Simple {Nearly} Messless S'mores -- Only two ingredients and a mind-blowing technique!

Please note: This does not work with cauliflower.

Simple {Nearly} Messless S'mores -- Only two ingredients and a mind-blowing technique!

Special thanks to my s’mores team for enduring two nights of s’mores experimentation. I know it was a strain!

What’s your best s’more recipe or tip?

 

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Jalapeno Popper Grilled Cheese Sandwiches

In honor of National Grilled Cheese Sandwich Day (April 12), I created this amazing jalapeño popper grilled cheese sandwich after seeing this juiced-up version on Pinterest. The original uses goat’s cheese and requires me to roast jalapenos. I’m sure it’s totally fantastic, but goat’s cheese is not a part of my current reality. Also, I travel the country in a travel trailer with my hubby and eight kids; I’m not roasting jalapenos.

Jalapeno Popper Grilled Cheese Sandwich

 


My version is simpler, requires fewer ingredients, and is much faster, all making it perfect for The Simple Home. Plus, all my testers loved it…and some of them asked for seconds. After all votes were counted and recounted, it was unanimously announced a keeper!

Ingredients for four sandwiches:

  • eight slices sourdough bread (or try my simple homemade bread)
  • 1 8-ounce package cream cheese
  • 1 12-ounce package bacon (or 16 ounces…ahem)
  • 1 jalapeno
  • 4 tablespoons butter

Ingredients for Jalapeno Popper Grilled Cheese Sandwiches

 

Directions for making a jalapeño popper grilled cheese sandwich:

1. Cut the bacon into 1-inch pieces and toss it into a frying pan. I use my Cutco kitchen shears and cut it directly into the pan, but, as my teenaged daughter reminded me when I was making this sandwich, my way is not the only way, so do whatever you want, people, but you can’t have my car keys! Fry until done. Remove from pan, but leave at least a tablespoon or so of grease in the pan.  (Or fry first, cool, and crumble.)

Jalapeno Popper Grilled Cheese Sandwich

2. Mince the jalapeño. Common precautionary practices for dealing with jalapeños involve wearing gloves. I don’t wear the gloves because I’m smart enough not to touch my face after dealing with a jalapeño…at least I used to be smart enough…until today. Next time I’ll be wearing gloves.

3. Toss the jalapeño into the frying pan with the bacon grease for about 10 seconds, long enough to warm it through. The longer you heat the jalapeño, the more it releases the heat, so keep that in mind.

4. Spread one ounce of cream cheese on each slice of bread. Add a little love.

Jalapeno Popper Grilled Cheese Sandwiches

5. Divide the bacon and jalapeño between four slices of bread. Cover each with another piece of bread…to make a sandwich, ya know.

Jalapeno Popper Grilled Cheese Sandwich

6. Spread butter on the outside of the sandwiches. This is optional. Okay, it’s butter–it’s not optional.

7. Grill for about four minutes per side. (Times will vary. Don’t leave your masterpiece unattended!) On the road I pop them into a George Foreman indoor grill or “grill” them in the pan where I fried the bacon–its a good way to go. In my old life I used a griddle. You can also use a panini maker, frying pan, outdoor grill, or open fire. You could even “grill” them in the oven!

Adjust everything to your liking and feel free to play with ingredients, but don’t bother trying to go low-fat. Or at least, if you do, don’t tell me about it.

Jalapeño Popper Grilled Cheese Sandwiches go great with homemade tomato basil soup. Don’t they make a cute couple?

Jalapeno Popper Grilled Cheese Sandwich via The Simple Homemaker

Here’s the boring printable version:

Jalapeno Popper Grilled Cheese Sandwiches
Recipe Type: Sandwich
Author: Christy, The Simple Homemaker
Prep time: 12 mins
Cook time: 8 mins
Total time: 20 mins
Serves: 4
Hot, creamy, delicious! This sandwich is everything you could want in a grilled cheese. You can even pretend the jalapeno will fulfill your daily veggie requirements.
Ingredients
  • eight slices sourdough bread
  • 1 8-ounce package cream cheese
  • 1 12-ounce package bacon
  • 1 jalapeno
  • 4 tablespoons butter
Instructions
  1. Cut the bacon and toss it into a frying pan. Fry until done. Remove from pan, but leave the grease in the pan.
  2. Mince the jalapeno.
  3. Toss the jalapeno into the frying pan with the bacon grease for about 10 seconds to warm it through.
  4. Spread one ounce of cream cheese on each slice of bread.
  5. Spread the bacon and jalapeno over four pieces of bread and make a sandwich using the other piece of bread.
  6. Spread butter on the outside of the sandwiches.
  7. Grill for about four minutes per side. (Times will vary.)

Could you, maybe, make one for me?

What’s your favorite way to do grilled cheese sandwiches?

Did you know that pinning this not only helps you figure out what to make for dinner, but it helps my blog? True story! Thanks for sharing!

Jalapeno Popper Grilled Cheese Sandwich

 

How to Fry an Egg

This post contains affiliate links and an egg-frying technique. Beware. 

Embarrassing Confession: Until last month I couldn’t fry a decent egg to save my family. Life wasn’t always so grim. I used to fry eggs just fine. I didn’t really know what I was doing, but that didn’t seem to matter. I had a pretty good egg-frying track record. I temporarily thought I was endowed with a little extra magic in the kitchen or maybe a bit of beginner’s luck. Then somehow, I lost my egg-frying abilities. It was a sad day fifteen years. I now know it wasn’t beginner’s luck or talent that landed the rare identifiable egg on my hubby’s plate–it was just God offering my hungry husband a little mercy.

Now, however, I can fry an egg like a pro because I learned from the pros. You may think this is no big deal and a ridiculous post, but I can guarantee you there is a Frustrated Someone out there searching “How to fry a stinkin’ egg already!” I get you, Frustrated Someone. I totally get you.

I learned how to fry a stinkin’ egg (and do other amazing-to-me things in the kitchen) from the book my hungry husband gave me for Christmas, entitled The America’s Test Kitchen Cooking School Cookbook: Everything You Need to Know to Become a Great Cook. It’s a big title and an even bigger book.

In case you think my husband’s a big fat meanie, I requested the book after one too many broken eggs and dry roasts.

Anyway, this really isn’t about the book. It’s about how to fry a stinkin’ egg already! (This is a bad picture of my stinkin’ eggs, but when you live in a trailer and shoot with a cell phone, it’s how egg pictures look. Trust me that the rest of my eggs looked much better than the eggs in this picture, but we were so excited that I was making consistently (instead of randomly and rarely) awesome eggs that we ate the stinkin’ things with no pictures.)

How to Fry an Egg ... because some of us just can't.

How to Fry a Stinkin’ Egg

(According to America’s Test Kitchen, with some additions from l’il ol’ me)

What You Need:

  • non-stick pan–8 or 9 inches for 2 eggs, 10 inches for 4 (I just use what I have)
  • butter–about 1.5 teaspoons per 2-4 eggs (3 teaspoons is a tablespoon–memorize it)
  • stinkin’ eggs–2 per person is reasonable, eh?
  • spatula (turner)
  • timer

What You Do:

  1. Heat the pan over medium-high heat for five minutes. Set your timer.
  2. Meanwhile, crack the eggs on a flat surface, not on the edge of the bowl or pan. Why not? Because minuscule egg shell fragments may be forced into the egg, and you won’t see them and then you’re swallowing little shell shards and making your intestines cry. Nobody wants weepy intestines.
  3. Put the eggs in a cute little bowl, two eggs to a bowl. If you’re making four eggs, use two bowls. That way the eggs all go in at the same time and get done at the same time. Eggs like everything to be fair.
  4. After the pan has been heating for five minutes, toss the butter into the pan. When I say toss, you know I mean place gently, right?
  5. Tip the pan to melt the butter and coat the pan. The butter should melt in under a minute. If it takes longer than a minute, your pan is not hot enough–heat it longer. If your butter burns during that minute, your pan is too hot–start over, and, uh, it’s okay to cry a little, too. I mean, it’s butter!
  6. Gently tip the cute little egg-bearing bowls and gently deposit the eggs into the properly heated pan. Don’t plop them in from the heavens. Get down in there.
  7. Hurry scurry like a little bunny and salt and pepper those babies, unless your preschooler is eating them and doesn’t like pepper. Test Kitchen Guru says 4 parts salt to one part pepper. I just shake-a shake-a, but remember, my husband is a hungry man.
  8. Quickly cover the pan to maintain the temperature. If your pan doesn’t have a cover, do what my brother does and plop a cookie sheet on top. If your cover has a little steam vent, don’t do what younger and dumber me did and plug the vent with your finger. Moving on.
  9. Cook for 2 minutes, and then do a quick peek to check the eggs to see if they are to your liking. “Done” means the membrane over the yolk is white. If you like the yolk hard, cook it longer. I’m more of a 3.25-minute egg girl myself. I also like peanut butter on my eggs, so you shouldn’t go by my likes.
  10. At this point you have some options. My mom adds a splash of water to the pan to steam the eggs and cook the tops better. I flip some of my eggs when they’re nearly done and firmly set, because the people I feed like the yolks better that way. Test Kitchen Guru leaves them alone. You, Frustrated Someone, can choose.

That’s it. It’s really simple. Still, I’m going to talk on. These next points are embarrassingly obvious, but if you’re reading this to learn how to fry an egg, Frustrated Someone, you and I need people to point out the obvious. There’s no shame in that. No shame.

  • Please don’t overcook your eggs. You can always cook them a little longer, but you can’t uncook them, unless you call giving them to your dog and starting over uncooking.
  • Toast your bread while you’re waiting.
  • Have softened butter available to spread on your hot toast. Well-buttered toast helps ease the pain in case your egg fry fails. I like to pop my toast in the pan after I pull the eggs out.
  • Use a really good skillet. While I’m all about taking accountability for your actions, you really can blame this failure on the tools.
  • Don’t get distracted by a four-year-old and the word “eggs” and go off and read Green Eggs and Ham and forget that you’re frying eggs. That’s what timers are for! Also, seriously, never leave the stove unattended and scamper off on an outdoor adventure and have to call the house from the back 40 to ask someone to take your stinkin’ eggs off the stinkin’ burner and feed them to the stinkin’ dog who will be very sad you’re finally learning how to cook in a way that people will eat it.

In summary:

  1. Preheat pan for five minutes.
  2. Add butter.
  3. Gently add eggs.
  4. Season.
  5. Cover.
  6. Cook.
  7. Check.
  8. Serve.

Go for it, Frustrated Someone! Go fry an egg!

Now, I know you must have a cooking challenge of your own. If you share it in the comments, I would be happy to look it up in my cool fun new Cooking School book and write about it.  So happy!

Homemade Hot Cocoa Recipe

I don’t drink cocoa, because it gives me gas. I’m glad we cleared the air on that sensitive topic.

Snicker.

Moving on.

The thing I love about homemade hot cocoa is that it’s simple to put in the dairy or non-dairy products and sweeteners that you wish to meet everybody’s needs and preferences. Blah blah blah. What I really like is that it tastes so stinkin’ awesome!

Simply Delicious Hot Cocoa Recipes with Dairy-Free Alternatives

I’m giving you a basic recipe which is great as it is, because I’m all about simple, or it can be spruced up or adjusted. It’s your job to alter it to your needs and liking.

Homemade Hot Cocoa

Ingredients:

  • 1/3 cup cocoa powder
  • 1/3 to 3/4 cup sugar (to your liking) (I tend toward 1/2 cup, but most will choose more. My daughter uses honey.)
  • 1 pinch salt (optional–I use it because I look cool tossing a pinch of salt into a beverage)
  • 1/3 cup water
  • 3 cups milk (any kind–we use whole, coconut, or almond)
  • 1 cup cream or half-n-half (or an extra cup of milk)
  • 1 teaspoon vanilla (optional)

Optional add-ins:

  • whipped cream
  • chocolate chips of any variety
  • cinnamon or cinnamon sticks
  • marshmallows
  • peppermint sticks or candy canes
  • coffee or espresso
  • peanut butter

Directions:

  1. Mix all dry ingredients together.
  2. Boil the water in a heavy saucepan.
  3. Dissolve the dry ingredients in the boiling water by whisking over medium heat for about two minutes–keep it to a simmer.
  4. Add the milk and heat it until it’s hot, whisking continually. Do not boil. Pay close attention, because milk burns faster than I lose my train of thought.
  5. Remove the deliciousness from the heat.
  6. Add the cream or half-n-half and the vanilla.
  7. Divide the sweet deliciousness between four mugs, unless your cocoa drinkers are little, in which case it might stretch into six or eight, especially if you fill half a mug with marshmallows.
  8. Add more cream to cool if needed…or just wait.

I know you’re asking “Why water? Can’t I just boil the milk? Can’t I just stir the powders into the milk? Can’t I just use the packets from Swiss Miss?”

Because a very hot liquid will dissolve the sugar. No, because it might curdle or burn. Yes, but it might be a little gritty. If you like Swiss Miss, drink Swiss Miss–it’s certainly easier, and you just can’t argue with tiny little marshmallows with their tiny marshmallow cuteness.

Related Recipes:

  • This Tres Leche Cocoa looks fantabulous! Oh, yummity yum yum yum!
  • Allergic to dairy? How about this oh-so-scrumptious Almond Hot Cocoa!
  • If you’re allergic to dairy and nuts, here’s a recipe for Coconut Milk Hot Chocolate. It is sweetened with honey, but you can use the sweetener of your choice, because America is great like that.
  • If you’re not allergic to anything or you’re allergic to everything and you want to die in complete bliss, you have to try this Whipped Hot Chocolate recipe.

Homeschool Helps:

For your science studies, answer the ever-fascinating question, “Where does chocolate come from?

For your home economics class, learn this relevant skill which I hope you don’t need today: How to remove burned milk from a saucepan.

Here’s the boring printable version.

Homemade Hot Cocoa Recipe
Recipe Type: Beverage
Author: Christy, The Simple Homemaker
Prep time:
Total time:
Serves: 4 cups
This basic recipe can be adjusted to fit anybody’s needs or preferences. Don’t be afraid to experiment..a lot.
Ingredients
  • Main ingredients:
  • 1/3 cup cocoa powder
  • 1/3 to 3/4 cup sugar or other sweetener (to your liking)
  • 1 pinch salt (optional)
  • 1/3 cup water
  • 3 cups milk (any kind–we use whole, coconut, or almond)
  • 1 cup cream or half-n-half (or an extra cup of milk)
  • 1 teaspoon vanilla (optional)
  • Optional add-ins:
  • whipped cream
  • chocolate chips of any variety
  • cinnamon or cinnamon sticks
  • marshmallows
  • peppermint sticks or candy canes
  • coffee or espresso
  • peanut butter
Instructions
  1. Mix all dry ingredients together.
  2. Boil the water in a heavy saucepan.
  3. Dissolve the dry ingredients in the boiling water by whisking over medium heat for about two minutes–keep it to a simmer.
  4. Add the milk and heat it until it’s hot, whisking continually. Do not boil. Pay close attention, because milk burns faster than I lose my train of thought.
  5. Remove the deliciousness from the heat.
  6. Add the cream or half-n-half and the vanilla.
  7. Divide the sweet deliciousness between four mugs, unless your cocoa drinkers are little, in which case it might stretch into six or eight, especially if you fill half a mug with marshmallows.
  8. Add more cream to cool if needed…or just wait.

 

Very Simple Rhubarb Pie Recipe

This delicious rhubarb pie recipe is not the healthiest item on the menu, but it sure is one of the tastiest, and hey, it’s a vegetable! It’s simple, it’s pie…what’s not to love?

 

It’s rhubarb season! If you’ve got this “weedible” (edible weed) growing like crazy in your yard, I’ve got a deeelicious recipe for you.

Simple Rhubarb Pie Recipe from TheSimpleHomemaker.com

This rhubarb pie recipe uses white sugar and white flour, two things that rarely make an appearance in my kitchen. But hey, it’s got rhubarb in it, and rhubarb is a vegetable, so…there ya go.

Before we proceed, you are aware, are you not, that the leaves of rhubarb are poisonous. Just use the stalks. Pretend you knew that, if you didn’t.

The original recipe is from All Recipes. Ours is only ever-so-slightly different.

Simple Rhubarb Pie Recipe from TheSimpleHomemaker.com

Simple Rhubarb Pie Recipe

Ingredients

  • 4 (hefty) cups fresh rhubarb, cut into 1/4-1 inch pieces
  • 1 1/3 cups sugar (scant)
  • 6 tablespoons flour
  • 2 tablespoons butter
  • 1 double pie crust

Directions

  1. Position the bottom crust in the pie pan
  2. Combine sugar and flour in a small bowl. (They get along well, so this is simple.)
  3. Sprinkle a layer of flour/sugar in the bottom crust.
  4. Pile the rhubarb in the crust.
  5. Sprinkle the rest of the flour/sugar over the top.
  6. Cut the butter into little pieces and place them on the rhubarb.
  7. Add the top crust. Crimp.
  8. Bake at 450 for 15 minutes on the bottom rack.
  9. Lower the temperature to 350 and bake another 35-45 minutes, depending on your oven.

Tips

Cut your rhubarb the size you prefer. I like mine “mushy” and small, but others prefer rhubarb slightly firmer and a little bigger. Your call!

Serve warm or cold with ice cream or without. Call it a veggie and serve in place of dinner or breakfast.

A regular pie pan is sufficient; do not use a deep-dish.

If the crust starts browning too quickly, wrap aluminum foil around the edges.

Place a cookie sheet directly under the pie pan in the oven to catch any drips. If you forget to do this, be sure to offer the firemen a nice warm slice of fresh rhubarb pie.

If you’re on a diet (ugh) or a “plan,” this probably doesn’t fit perfectly…or at all…so just pin it for after you’ve fallen off the wagon your free days. Hey, I’m on a plan, but I’m a realist, so I’ve got your back. Wink.

Simple Rhubarb Pie Recipe from TheSimpleHomemaker.com

 

Reviews

A picky husband: My mouth really likes it, but my eyes can’t get past the fact that it looks like celery pie. (Our rhubarb was mostly green, not red.)

A teen: This pie is a success!

A four-year-old: I ate all the ice cream.

The Simple Homemaker: I can’t eat dairy or sugar, but snuck a sliver of this pie anyway, and oh my! Fantabulous!

Here’s the boring printable version:

Simple Rhubarb Pie Recipe

Recipe Type: Dessert
Author: The Simple Homemaker
Prep time:
Cook time:
Total time:
Serves: Me
A simple pie that sweetens the tang of rhubarb for a delicious dessert.
Ingredients
  • 4 (hefty) cups fresh rhubarb, cut into 1/4-1 inch pieces
  • 1 1/3 cups sugar (scant)
  • 6 tablespoons flour
  • 2 tablespoons butter
  • 1 double pie crust
Instructions
  1. Position the bottom crust in the pie pan
  2. Combine sugar and flour in a small bowl.
  3. Sprinkle a layer of flour/sugar in the bottom crust.
  4. Pile the rhubarb in the crust.
  5. Sprinkle the rest of the flour/sugar over the top.
  6. Cut the butter into little pieces and place them on the rhubarb.
  7. Add the top crust. Crimp.
  8. Bake at 450 for 15 minutes on the bottom rack with a cookie sheet under the pie pan to catch drips.
  9. Lower the temperature to 350 and bake another 35-45 minutes, depending on your oven. Cover the edges with aluminum foil if it gets dark too quickly.
  10. Serve warm or cold.

A great big thank you goes out to Lynn from Jackson, Wisconsin, for supplying us with rhubarb (and a rhubarb coffee cake)!

Let me know if you try this simple rhubarb pie recipe, and feel free to share your favorite rhubarb recipes here!

 

How to Make (amazing) Garlic Butter

How to Make Amazing Garlic Butter | TheSimpleHomemaker.com

This garlic butter is amazing. It’s amazing! It’s so amazing that when I make it and sit down to dinner with my family, I can’t stop talking about it. I can’t stop saying in my amazed voice, “This is amazing!”

And they can’t stop saying in their sarcastic voices, “Wow, you’re humble.”

And that’s why, at The Simple Home, we call this “Mommy’s Humble Garlic Butter.” You, however, may simply call it Amazing Garlic Butter.

The original version can be found at AllRecipes.com. The recipes are both very tweakable, so do what you like to make it work for your family, cuz that’s what cooking for the family is all about, isn’t it?

How to Make Garlic Butter

How to Make Amazing Garlic Butter | TheSimpleHomemaker.com

Ingredients:

  • 1 stick butter, softened
  • 5-ish shakes paprika
  • 2-6 cloves minced fresh garlic
  • 1/2 teaspoon salt
  • 1 teaspoon Italian seasoning

Optional ingredients:

  • 2 teaspoons garlic powder (intensify the garlic flavor with garlic powder, or replace the fresh garlic entirely)
  • 1/4 cup parmesan cheese (we like it with or without)

Directions:

1. Make sure your butter is nice and soft.

How to Make Amazing Garlic Butter | TheSimpleHomemaker.com

2. Add 4-6 shakes of paprika, or more for a deeper orange color. (If you’re four, you may wish to go with four, because four is fun.)

How to Make Amazing Garlic Butter | TheSimpleHomemaker.com

3. Add as much fresh minced garlic as you like, 1-2 cloves for a light garlic flavor, 6 for a stronger flavor. We used 6 in this batch. (See notes for more info on garlic.)

How to Make Amazing Garlic Butter | TheSimpleHomemaker.com

4. Add 1/2 teaspoon of salt. I like salt, and because I eat pretty much everything from scratch, it isn’t hiding in many of my foods. That’s why I don’t have an issue with a heaping half teaspoon. Adjust to your needs and tastes, but remember that salted butter varies in its salt content, so start low and add more if needed.

How to Make Amazing Garlic Butter | TheSimpleHomemaker.com

5. Add a teaspoon of the Italian seasoning of your choice. We usually use homemade, but for this batch we used these gorgeous Penzey’s Italian herbs gifted to us from a friend we met on our travels.

How to Make Amazing Garlic Butter | TheSimpleHomemaker.com

6. Mix with a spoon (or I suppose you could use some form of technology if you are desperate to wash something).

How to Make Amazing Garlic Butter | TheSimpleHomemaker.com

7. Taste. Adjust to your desired level of amazingness.

How to Make Amazing Garlic Butter | TheSimpleHomemaker.com

8. Serve. (See ideas below.)

How to Make Amazing Garlic Butter | TheSimpleHomemaker.com

Store your humbly amazing garlic butter in the refrigerator and use within a couple of days if you are using fresh garlic. If you are using garlic powder, store where you normally keep your butter.

Serving Ideas:

  • Spread it on warm fresh bread or biscuits and serve immediately.
  • Spread it on bread, wrap the bread in foil, and return it to the oven. Oh my! (Yeah, I know foil will kill you, but who really cares. I mean, this is amazing! I just drooled on my keyboard. Not joking.)
  • Saute mushrooms and onions in garlic butter for an easy side.
  • Use it to scramble eggs, fry eggs, or flavor cooked eggs. (It’s great for these flower or shamrock eggs.)
  • Spread it on a toasted hamburger bun for a garlicky butter burger.
  • Add it to a grilled steak. I hear angels!
  • Melt it and add it to any vegetables. Do it. I triple dog dare ya.
  • Spruce up a boring side dish of plain noodles, rice, quinoa, or other grains.
  • Adorn baked potatoes or use it to flavor mashed taters.
  • Melt it and pour it over popcorn. Oh yeah!
  • Stick it in a bowl, set it on the supper table, and watch what happens.
  • It’s so versatile, you could even wear it. Okay, maybe not.

How to Make Amazing Garlic Butter | TheSimpleHomemaker.com

Notes:

Adjust the garlic to your liking. We like garlic…I mean I personally seriously love garlic. Don’t stand right next to me. Garlic breath. Whew.

Test it with garlic powder instead of fresh garlic sometime to see how you prefer it. I like to tone down or replace the fresh garlic if I’m serving it raw, but if I’m using it to cook or on bread that’s going in the oven, I hit it hard with fresh garlic. Bam!

I almost always double this recipe, because it’s amazing. I may have mentioned that.

How to Make Amazing Garlic Butter | TheSimpleHomemaker.com

Here’s the boring printable version:

How to Make (amazing) Garlic Butter

Recipe Type: condiment
Author: Christy, The Simple Homemaker
Prep time:
Total time:
This delicious, quick, and simple garlic butter is versatile and amazing in any of its many uses.
Ingredients
  • 1 stick butter, softened
  • 5-ish shakes paprika
  • 2-6 cloves minced fresh garlic
  • 1/2 teaspoon salt
  • 1 teaspoon Italian seasoning
  • 2 teaspoons garlic powder (optional: intensify the garlic flavor with garlic powder, or replace the fresh garlic entirely)
  • 1/4 cup parmesan cheese (optional)
Instructions
  1. Measure.
  2. Combine by hand.
  3. Taste and adjust the garlic as desired, using either fresh or powdered garlic.
  4. Serve as a spread for bread and biscuits, as a flavor enhancer for sides, or on popcorn. Put on meat or use to cook eggs and veggies.
  5. Store in the refrigerator and use within a couple of days if you are using fresh garlic. If you are using garlic powder, store where you normally keep your butter.

 

Seriously, I think this is amazing…but I love butter, and I love garlic, so…there ya go.

That’s how to make garlic butter. Make it, eat it, let me know what you think!

Special thanks to my daughter Hannah of Horse Crazy Bookworm for many of the photographs, and to my  helpers, butter softness tester, and tasters. You are all that and more!

 

All-Purpose Seasoning Recipe for Chicken, Fish, Rice, Veggies, and Just About Anything Else

Sometimes I’m all about speed and efficiency in the kitchen. That’s why I like to mix up my own spice blends ahead of time. On a busy night, there’s nothing better than a handy spice mix that you can snag for just about anything. (You all know that when I say “there’s nothing better,” I’m not counting cookies and pie and salvation and family, right? Just so we’re on the same page.)

That’s why I love this all-purpose seasoning we’ve made for years and named Mama’s All-Purpose Seasoning for Chicken, Fish, Rice, Veggies, and Just About Anything Else, or Mama’s APSFCFRVAJAAE. Catchy, eh? Fine, let’s just call it APS. Happy? Good.

The Simple Homemaker's All-Purpose Seasoning Recipe for Chicken, Fish, Rice, Veggies, and Just About Anything Else

I use APS on my roasted chicken, baked fish, pan fried fish, pan-fried chicken, veggies, and plain rice or quinoa. I’ve used it with flour to make a breading. Sometimes I sprinkle it on baked taters or home fries. APS is versatile enough to be used with just about anything. The only thing I haven’t used it for yet is dessert, although it might be good on popcorn. Hmmmm.

The original recipe comes from AllRecipes.com. My version is simplified, because that’s what I do...just in case you haven’t noticed by now.

As with all recipes, adjust the seasonings to your tastes and totally make it your own.

All-Purpose Seasoning for Chicken, Fish, Rice, Veggies, and Just About Everything Else

Ingredients

  • 4 teaspoons salt (start at 2 and adjust up (or down) according to your tastes)
  • 1 teaspoon onion powder
  • a scant teaspoon pepper (adjust according to your peppery mood; sometimes I use 1/2)
  • 1 heaping huge teaspoon garlic powder (or 2)
  • 2 teaspoons paprika

Optional ingredients

  • 1/4 teaspoon cayenne pepper (adjust as desired)
  • 1/2 – 1 teaspoon thyme (I like to use this for roast meats and sometimes for other cooked dishes, but I leave it out when I make a big batch to have on hand for general sprinkling)

Instructions

1 – Measure.

The Simple Homemaker's All-Purpose Seasoning Recipe for Chicken, Fish, Rice, Veggies, and Just About Anything Else

2 – Mix.

The Simple Homemaker's All-Purpose Seasoning Recipe for Chicken, Fish, Rice, Veggies, and Just About Anything Else

3 – Taste and adjust to your liking.

The Simple Homemaker's All-Purpose Seasoning Recipe for Chicken, Fish, Rice, Veggies, and Just About Anything Else

4 – Store APS in an empty spice container or in a mason jar in your pantry.

Cooking with APS

What to do with it:

Sprinkle APS wherever you want…within reason. (I don’t think I’d like it on ice cream.) I usually put it on potatoes and meats before cooking, and grains and veggies after cooking…but that’s just me. My hubby sprinkles it on anything as a table seasoning, especially rice.

How much to use:

About 2-3 teaspoons seasons a roasted chicken before cooking. If you add the additional ingredients (cayenne and thyme) or use extra pepper, it will be closer to two. Otherwise, just sprinkle lightly as with any salt.

The Simple Homemaker's All-Purpose Seasoning Recipe for Chicken, Fish, Rice, Veggies, and Just About Anything Else

This chicken was thinly sliced, tossed in a pan with olive oil, and sprinkled lightly with APS–that’s it! It was fantastic. All the best pieces were eaten before I remembered my camera, but these leftovers don’t look too bad! I call dibs!

The Simple Homemaker's All-Purpose Seasoning Recipe for Chicken, Fish, Rice, Veggies, and Just About Anything Else

Notes and hints:

We make this in bulk so it’s on hand to sprinkle on my roast chicken or anything else we feel needs a little more flavor. The simplest way to make it in bulk is to change the teaspoons to tablespoons, or just do a little math and multiply by, say, 20. It’s good for the ol’ noggin. Don’t mix it up in bulk until you’ve tried the recipe and tweaked it to your liking.

Sometimes we add thyme, but not usually when we make it in bulk, because I don’t want it in the big container for sprinkling on already cooked food. I really like the thyme for potato dishes and roast chicken, but I leave it out when I’m in a thyme-less mood.

The Simple Homemaker's All-Purpose Seasoning Recipe for Chicken, Fish, Rice, Veggies, and Just About Anything Else

We like salt. Adjust the salt to your personal preferences. When you’re making it, start with half the amount of salt and adjust up (or down if you’re really a low-salter). Some salts (like our Redmond’s Real Salt) taste more or less salty than others (like the Morton’s sea salt my chef used this time), so keep that in mind when adding salt. You can always add more.

The Simple Homemaker's All-Purpose Seasoning Recipe for Chicken, Fish, Rice, Veggies, and Just About Anything Else

The same goes for the pepper, garlic, and cayenne. Go with your mood, or find something that works for your family. We tend to enjoy a little extra heap to our garlic, but I generally save the cayenne for my cajun spice mix.

The Simple Homemaker's All-Purpose Seasoning Recipe for Chicken, Fish, Rice, Veggies, and Just About Anything Else

Once you get it adjusted to your liking, write the recipe down on a piece of paper and attach it to the container you store it in, so you can easily replenish as needed.

Here’s the boring printable version:

All-Purpose Seasoning Recipe for Chicken, Fish, Rice, Veggies, and Just About Anything Else

Author: Christy, The Simple Homemaker
Prep time:
Total time:
An all-purpose seasoning for just about anything in your kitchen.
Ingredients
  • 4 teaspoons salt (start at 2 and adjust up (or down) according to your tastes)
  • 1 teaspoon onion powder
  • 1 scant teaspoon pepper (adjust according to your peppery mood; sometimes I use 1/2)
  • 1 heaping huge teaspoon garlic powder (or 2)
  • 2 teaspoons paprika
  • 1/4 teaspoon cayenne pepper – optional (adjust as desired)
  • 1/2 – 1 teaspoon thyme – optional (I like to use this for roast meats and sometimes for other dishes, but I leave it out when I make a big batch to have on hand for general sprinkling)
Instructions
  1. Measure, combine, and store in a spice container or mason jar in the pantry.
  2. Sprinkle on your food as desired, either before or after cooking. I like to sprinkle it on meat and potatoes before cooking, and grains and veggies after.
  3. Adjust the seasonings to your personal preferences. For example, start with half the salt and adjust up if you like food to be less salty.

 

So, I suppose, like my hubby, you’re wondering why this is better than Lawry’s (or any other brand of) season-all salt. Mine has a cooler acronym.

 

Let me know how you adjust APS to your family’s liking…and what you call your version!  I’d love to hear.